Bulletin Daily Paper 10-27-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

MONDAY O~ober 27,2014

Nn ormonserso a

NBApreview

SPORTS • B1

SPORTS • B5

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Eye on theelectionLocal voters weigh in onwhat races most interest them.AS

Plus: Rockchucks inRed-

CONTROLLED BURNS

DESCHUTES COUNTY

ow omana e esmo e? Meetings • State and federalofficials meet in Central Oregon todiscussrestrictions

County commissioners sent a letter to the heads of the Ore-

The burns are intended to reduce the likelihood of wild-

gon Department of Forestry

fires. The commissioners

By Dylan J. Darling

egon to talk about controlled

and Oregon Department of Environmental Quality ask-

contended that more smoke from prescribed burns is

The Bulletin

burns, particularly the amount

State and federal officials met last week in Central Or-

of s moke from the fires that dri f t s into local cities.

ing the state to loosen smoke restrictions when it comes to

wildfires.

Earlier this year, Deschutes

prescribed fires near towns

such as Bend and Redmond.

better than more smoke from

See Smoke /A6

aim to ease

propertytax confusion By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

metld —Redmondarts group considers using rockchuckart as part of a fundraiser.AS

Deschutes County property owners are receiving their tax statements, and

some may be seeing a

Stinky comet —Everwon-

sharp increase as the real

dered what acomet smells like? The one tracked bythe Rosetta mission puts out apungent mix of aromas.A3

estate market continues tobounce back from the Great Recession.

Although the increasing sale value of properties is beneficial lnside to owners, • The it doesn't meetings always trans when and late well to where,AS property

ChanginghisgareBend pro golfer AndrewVijarro reworks his swing.B1

And a Wedexclusive

taxes after

— Some daring delicacies, straightfrom the mouth of the AmazonRiver. benttbullettn.cam/extras

prices took a dive following 2007. Last year, Deschutes

County created a video called "Graph It!" describing the intricacies of Oregon's often confusing property tax system. In the

EDITOR'SCHOICE

next two weeks, Deschutes

County Assessor Scot

In ColdWar,

Langton will hold town hall meetings in the coun-

ty's four cities to provide

U.S.spy

additional information

about why bills might be increasing.

agencies used Nazis

"We've got a lot of tools

on the Web," Langton said. "We also wanted to get out in the community if that

worked better for them." See Property taxes/A6

By Eric Lichtblau New Yorh Times News Service

WASHINGTON — In the decades after World War II, the CIA and other United States agencies em-

Farmers observe sabbatical, with a wink

ployed at least a thousand Nazis as ColdWar spies and informants and, as

recently as the 1990s, concealed the government's ties to some still living in

America, newly disclosed records and interviews show. At the height of the Cold War in the 1950s, law enforcement and intelli-

By Daniel Estrin

gence leaders like J. Edgar

The Associated Press

Hoover at the FBI and Allen Dulles at the CIA

rael — Every seven years,

aggressively recruited one-

according to the Bible,

time Nazis of all ranks as secret, anti-Soviet "assets,"

Israeli farmers must give their lands a rest for a year. So how do modern-day growers reconcile the

BNEI NETZARIM, Is-

declassi fiedrecords show. They believed the ex-Nazis'

intelligence value against the Russians outweighed

ancient spiritual practice with a need to feed

what one official called

"moral lapses" in their ser-

the country's 8 million

vice to the Third Reich.

mouths?

See Spies /A6

Most market their produce thanks to a clever workaround: they tem-

A community group harvests a batch of carrots for Rainshadow Organics' winter Community Supported Agriculture program in

porarily sold their farms, valued together at $33 billion, to a 25-year-old non-Jewish telemarketer named George. "I own all those lands, and I don't even own an apartment," joked George Shtraykhman, an immigrant from St. Petersburg,

Terrebonne on Sunday. In this successful carrot year, harvesting began in June and will continue through the end of October.

Russia.

TODAY'S WEATHER i~'~~

C louds, sunshine High 56, Low36 Page BS

INDEX Calendar A5 L ocal/State A7-8 C lassified C1-6 Movies A 7 Comics C3-4 Nation/World A2 Crosswords C4 Sports B1-7 DearAbby A7 TeetoGreenB1,6 Horoscope A7 Television A7 The Bulletin

An Independent Newspaper

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

See Sabbatical /A6

3usticesreturn to school, speak of lessonslearned

Voi. 112, No. 300,

By Adam Liptak

Samuel Alito Jr., who can

22 pages, 3 sections

New York Times News Service

appear a little dour during arguments, revealed a lively wit. Justice Sonia Sotomayor

Q i/l/e use recyc/ed newsprint

'I : IIIIIIIIII o

88 267 02329

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut

— Justice Clarence Thomas, who has not asked a question

said she was working to tem-

from the Supreme Court bench since 2006, was expansive and gregarious. Justice

per a combative questioning style "that has held me in bad stead."

The justices returned to Yale Law School on Saturday

dancing and spittoons. As is so often the case at

for reunion weekend, and reunions, some of the alumni they were part of a rare three- were nicer than remembered. way public conversation that Thomas, 66, has apparently touched on Supreme Court mellowed the most. He actraditions, the court's resisknowledged being a "cynical tance to new technology, salsa and negative" law student,

blaming immaturity and the unsettled political climate of

the early 1970s. "I cannot say we were thinking straight about a lot of things, even if we were not using illegal substances," he said. SeeSCOTUS /A6


A2

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NATION Ee ORLD

oa uaran ineS ares irrin u e ae By Benjamin Weiser and J. David Goodman

and the first person to be detained under the new protocol,

New YorJz Times News Service

a nurse who was quarantined It was nearly 100 years ago in New Jersey upon returning that an influenza pandemic from Sierra Leone, lashed out led to sweeping quarantines Sunday at Gov. Chris Christie in U.S. cities, and it was more as her lawyer said he would than two decades ago that pa- mount a legal challenge to her tients in New York were forced confinement. into isolation after an outbreak Christie on Sunday defendof tuberculosis. ed his policy, and Florida and In modern America, public Illinois have ordered similar rehealth actions of such gravity strictions. In Connecticut, nine are remarkably rare. So the de- people who may have been excisions by New York and New posed to Ebola have been conJerseyon Friday to quarantine fined to their homes under an some travelers returning from order signed by Gov. Dannel the Ebola zone in West Africa Malloy on Oct.7. have taken public officials into But on Sunday night, bareunfamiliar legal and medical ly two days after his joint anterritory. nouncementwith Christie, Gov. From public health advo- Andrew Cuomo of New York cates and civil liberties lawannounced his state would not yers has come sharp criticism, go as far as New Jersey has.

Ukraine eleCtiOnS — Ukrainians overwhelmingly backed several pro-Western parties in alandmark parliamentary election Sunday,another nudge inthe former Soviet republic's drift awayfrom Russia.Two exit polls released as voting closed indicated that President Petro Poroshenko's party will secure a narrow win in the parliamentary election, falling substantially short of anoutright majority. Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk's Popular Front followedclose behind. Althoughthey lead rival parties, PoroshenkoandYatsenyuk sharepro-Western sentiments and havecampaigned onreform agendasaimedat pulling Ukraine back from the brink ofeconomic ruin. Theparties are expected to join forces with other reform-oriented groups toform abroad pro-Europeancoalition. Talking to supporters at his party headquarters, avisibly ebullient Poroshenkosaid coalition talks will start today andwill last no longer than 10 days.Almost 3 million people wereunable tovote in eastern regions still gripped with unrest asgovernment troops continue to wage almost daily battle against pro-Russianseparatists.

The nurse, Kaci Hickox, gave a critical interview to CNN

on Sunday. Later, in an email to The New York Times, she

wrote, "My human rights have been violated, and we must react in order to ensure that other

health care workers do not endure such injustice."

BraZil eleCtiOIIS —Brazil's President Dilma Rousseffhas been re-elected to asecondterm to leadthe world's fifth-largest nation. Official results releasedSunday by Brazil's top electoral court showthat the left-leaning Rousseff beatopposition contenderAecio Neves.With 98 percent of thevote counted, Rousseff hadwon 51.5 percent of the ballots. Therearenot enoughoutstanding votes left to becounted to allow her rival to catch upwith her. Rousseff's victory extendsherWorkers' Party rule, which hasheldthe presidency since 2003. During that time, they've enactedexpansivesocial programs that havehelped pull millions of Brazilians out of poverty andinto the middle class

Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said the most restrictive protocols are

far toobroad. "The current order is sweep-

ing in individuals who are asymptomatic and who may never develop symptoms," Li-

Afghan handOver —Britain has ended combat operations in the Helmand province in Afghanistan, defense officials said Sunday. They said U.K. troops havewitnessed the lowering of the Union flag for the last time at the CampBastion complex in Helmand. U.S. and Afghan soldiers also witnessed the ceremony, which marked the end of operations for the Southwest Regional Command, aU.S. and U.K. coalition operating under NATO'sInternational Security Assistance Force, British officials said. CampBastion has beenthe center of U.K. operations in Afghanistan since 2006. Thehandover of the base to Afghan control ends an important chapter in the13-year Afghan campaign, which started after the terrorist attacks on the United States in 2001. U.K. DefenseSecretary Michael Fallon said the end of combat operations is being announced "with pride" and that Britain has helped give Afghanistan "the best possible chance of astable future." He said Britain's commitment to support Afghanistan will continue "through institutional development, the Afghan National Army Officer Academy, anddevelopment aid." Britain suffered 453 fatalities during the campaign.

eberman said."I thinkthere is a

serious question as to whether the governor has the authority

to impose the broad quarantine that he has imposed," she added.

VIOLENCE IN KOBANI

Si sil.AvL

Dtseuiesrs

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Hawaii vOICanO evaCuatiOn COnCernS —Dozensof residents in a rural area of Hawaii were placed onalert as flowing lava from an erupting volcano continued to advance. Authorities on Sunday said lava flow on the Big Island of Hawaii had advancedabout 250 yards since Saturday morning andwas moving at the rate of about10 to 15 yards anhour, consistent with its advancement in recent days. The flow front passed through a predominantly Buddhist cemetery, covering grave sites in the mostly rural region of Puna, and was roughly a half-mile from PahoaVillage Road, the main street of Pahoa. Darryl Oliveira, director of civil defense for Hawaii County, told reporters during a late Sundaymorning teleconference that the nearest homewas at least 300 yards from the flow front. He planned to get better coordinates during a flight later in the day.Residents in the nearest homesaid they could seethe flow front from their balcony and were prepared to evacuate whenthe time came, Oliveira said.

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.=-jISWII

— From wire reports

Vadim Ghirda I The Associated Press

Syrian Kurdish refugees from Kobaniwatch fighting across the border in Kobani from a hilltop on the outskirts of Suruc, Turkey, nearthe Turkey-Syria border Sunday.Kobani, also known asAyn Arab, and its surrounding areas, hasbeenunder assault by extremists of the Islamic State group since mid-September and is being defended byKurdish fighters.

LEARN ABOUT TODAY'5 SOLUTIONS

FOR YOUR HIP/ICNEE PAIN

Hospital: Teenwounded in school shooting dies By Manuel Valdes and Martha Bellisle

tribes.

"Our legs are still wobbly," said Tony Hatch, a cousin of

The Associated Press

MARYSVILLE,

W a s h in- one of the injured students.

gon — One of the teenagers "We're really damaged right wounded in a Washington now." state high school shooting Of the wounded students, died Sunday night, raising only 14-year-old Nate Hatch the number of fatalities from showed improvement, though when a student opened fire in he remained in serious condia cafeteria to three. tion in intensive care at HarOfficials

at

::C

Pro v i dence borview Medical Center in Seattle. Fifteen-year-old An-

Regional Medical Center Everett confirmed the death of 14-year-old Gia Soriano. Another girl was killed during the shooting Friday by a popular freshman at Marysville-Pilchuck High School north of Seattle. The shooter, Jaylen Fryberg, died of a self-inflicted wound. Three other students remain hospitalized, two in crit-

ical condition and one in serious condition.

drew Fryberg also remained in critical condition in intensive care. Both are cousins of

Jaylen Fryberg. Meanwhile,

1 4 -year-old

S haylee Chuckulnaskit r e mained in critical condition in

intensive care at Providence Regional Medical Center. The girl killed in the shooting Friday hasn't been officially identified. Fryberg died in the attack, aftera first-year teacher in-

At a news conference, Dr. Joanne Roberts read a state- tervened. It's unclear if he inment from Soriano's family. tentionally killed himself or if "We are devastated by this the gun went off in a struggle senselesstragedy. Gia is our with a teacher. beautiful daughter, and words The makeshift memorial cannot express how much we on a chain link fence by the will miss her," the statement school, which will be closed sard. this week, kept growing SunRoberts said Soriano's fam- day. Balloons honoring the ily was donating her organs victims and the shooter adorn for transplant. the fence along with flowers, Earlier Sunday, parents stuffed toys and signs. and students gathered in a The close-knit community, gymnasium at the school for meanwhile, on the nearby Tua community meeting, with lalip Indian reservation strugspeakers urging support and gled with the news that the prayersand tri bal members shooter was a popular teenagplaying drums and singing er from one of their more wellsongs. Fryberg was from a known families. prominent Tulalip I n dian A tribal guidance counselor tribes family. said no one knows what motiYoung people hugged each vated Fryberg. "We c an't a n swer t h a t other and cried and speakers urgedpeopleto come together question," said Matt Remle, during the gathering Sunday. who has an office at Marys"We just h ave t o r e ach ville-Pilchuck High School, for that human spirit right which is 30 miles north of now," said Deborah Parker, a member of the Tulalip Indian

Seattle. "But we try to make

sense of the senselessness."

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014•THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Monday, Oct. 27, the 300th

day of 2014.Thereare 65days left in the year.

SCIENCE

HAPPENINGS

O ~Omp(~ gmp ~ p7 Campaign ads might

Torontomayoral election

— Voters head to the polls to elect a successor to RobFord, who announced lastmonth that he would not seek re-election as he battles a rareand difficult form of cancer.

STUDY

Not good, according to the findings of the Rosetta mission, which has been chasing comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko for the last decade.

shows that outside spending in judicial races has been on WASHINGTON — The the rise in recent years and influx of money into state such groups tend to buy more judicial elections may be attack ads than candidates bad news for those accused or parties. More money and of crimes. more attack ads have flowed A new study, sponsored in as justices have veered inby the American Constitu- creasingly in their rulings tion Society for Law and against those accused of Policy, finds that the more

— From wirereports

crimes.

ads aired during state suThis year alone, TV ad preme court campaigns, spending in Michigan and the more likely justices North Carolina has surpassed are to rule against crim- $1 million. More than $1.4 inal d efendants — poten-million was spent in the retially from fear of appear- tention campaign for t h r ee ing "soft on crime." That Tennessee Supreme Court finding is the result of an justices this summer; all three analysis of 3,000 state su-

held on to their seats. In that

preme court criminal ap-

election, the largest share of spending against them came

peals from 2008 to 2013 and is the latest in a string

il///jjz

II//yyy g~

/s

In1947, "You Bet Your Life,"

Actress Nanette Fabray is 94. Actor-comedian John Cleese is 75. Author Maxine Hong Kingston is 74. Country singer Lee Greenwood is 72. Producer-director Ivan Reitman is 68. Country singer-musician Jack Daniels is 65. Rock musician Garry Tallent (Bruce Springsteen 8 the EStreet Band) is 65. Actor Peter Firth is 61. Actor Robert Picardo is 61. World Golf Hall of FamerPatty Sheehan is 58. Internet news editor Matt Drudge is 48. Rock singer Scott Weiland is 47. Actor Sean Holland is 46. Actress Sheeri Rappaport is 37. Violinist Vanessa-Mae is 36. Actress-singer Kelly Osbourne is 30.

The Washington Post

Highlight:In1914, author-poet Dylan Thomaswasborn in Swansea,Wales. In1787,the first of the Federalist Papers, aseries of essays calling for ratification of the United StatesConstitution, was published. In1858, the 26th president of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, was born inNew York City. In1880, TheodoreRoosevelt married his first wife, Alice Lee. In1904, the first rapid transit subway, the IRT,wasinaugurated in NewYork City. In1922,the first annual celebration of NavyDaytook place. In1938, Du Pontannounced a name for its newsynthetic yarn: "nylon."

BIRTHDAYS

can l ates eclsions •

By Niraj Chokshi

HISTORY

starring GrouchoMarx, premiered onABCRadio. (It later became atelevision showon NBC.) In1954, U.S. Air Force Col. Benjamin DavisJr. was promoted to brigadier general, the first black officer to achievethat rank in theUSAF.Walt Disney's first television program, titled "Disneyland" after theyet-to-be completed themepark, premiered onABC. In1962, during theCuban Missile Crisis, a U-2reconnaissance aircraft was shot down while flying overCuba, killing the pilot, U.S.Air Force Maj. Rudolf Anderson Jr. In1978, Egyptian President Anwar Sadatand Israeli Prime Minister MenachemBegin were named winners of theNobel Peace Prizefor their progress toward achieving aMiddle East accord. In1989, opera star Beverly Sills gave herlast public performance during afarewell gala at New York's Lincoln Center. In1995, a sniper killed one soldier andwounded18 others at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. (Paratrooper William J. Kreutzer was convicted in theshootings,andcondemned todeath; however, thesentencewas later commuted to life in prison.) Ten yearsago:The Boston Red Sox won their first World Series since1918, sweepingthe St. Louis Cardinals in Game 4, 3-0. New York City'ssubwaysystem marked its100th anniversary. Bandleader Lester Lanin died in New Yorkatage 97. Five yearsago: Eight American troops were killed in two separate bombattacks in southern Afghanistan. MichaelJackson's last work, the documentary "Michael Jackson:This Is It," opened. One yearago:TheBoston Red Sox beat theSt. Louis Cardinals 4-2 to tie theWorld Series at two gamesapiece;thegame finished with a pickoff play, a first in postseason history. Lou Reed, 71,who radically challenged rock's founding promise of good timesand public celebration as leader of theVelvet Underground and a solo artist and was afounder of indie rock, died in Southampton, New York.

be affecting judicial

from a committee formed by

of recent research that suggests increased campaign spending, by pro-business groups in m any cases may be distorting judicial rulings. "It's obviously paying off," says Dr. Joanna Shepherd, an Emory Law School p r ofessor

the state's Republican Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey who said in a Facebook post after the elec-

and economist who wrote the report, "Skewed Jus-

with high-cost campaignswhich, Shepherd and Kang's findings suggest, come at a

tice," with fellow professor Michael Kang. The two examined ruling data involving 470 justices in 32 ESA via TheAssociated Press

The image, composed oftwo differentimages provided bythe European Space Agency, shows parts of the spacecraft Rosetta in front of the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

By Deborah Netbum It turns out that the comet the Rosetta mission has been

Carbon disulfide would add who was not involved in the rejust a touch of sweetness, the search. "In general, you don't scientists say.

In all-eau d u

want to breathe in comets," he

C h uryu- said.

chasing for the last decade is a mov-Gerasimenko would be stinker. Literally.

Researchers from the University of Bern in Switzerland say that if you could take a

"They are mostly water, but

they also have a lot of primitive The research team used the organics that might smell like

pretty unpleasant.

two mass spectrometers in Rosetta's ROSINA instrument to determine what the comet

the La Brea tar pits."

ry for the people of Tennessee because, "For the first time in

decades, we had a real election for the Supreme Court." Those three states are just the latest in a trend of states

price for

d efendants. Dou-

bling the number of campaign ads was associated with a sizable decline in favorable rul-

states and compared it to

data on ads aired over the ings for criminal defendants. same time period, collected Doubling ads airedfrom 2,000 by the Brennan Center for

Los Angeles Times

tion that it represented a victo-

to 4,000 was associated with a

Justice, a nonpartisan pub- 2 percent decline in rulings in lic policy and law institute favor of criminal defendants, at the New York University they found. But doubling the Law School. number of airings from 10,000 From that research and

to 20,000 was associated with

a subsequent analysis, they concluded that favorable rulings for criminal

a decline in favorable rulings ofbetween 7 and 8 percent.

defendants declined both

The researchers at Bern said whiff of the cloud of gas surthey were surprised to find so rounding the icy nucleus of would smell like. many different types of moleccomet 6 7P/Churyumov-GerThe spectrometers allowed ular materials in the comet's asimenko you would smell the team to see the chemis- coma, especially because it is a pungent mix of hydrogen try in the gas cloud, or coma, still three times the distance sulfide (rotten eggs); am- around the comet's nucleus. from the sun as the Earth. monia (horse stable); and In Churyumov-GerasimenT hey expect that a s t h e ko's defense, most comets comet moves closer to the sun, formaldehyde. There would also be a hint probably have a similar smell, more gases will be released, of vinegar (sulfur dioxide) and said Carey Lisse, a scientist and the comet will smell even a whiff of alcohol (methanol). at Johns Hopkins University, worse.

as the number of campaign ads increased and in

Pure. &m/6 r"o.

the wake of the Supreme Court's 2010 Citizens Unit-

aj. B~ dU

ed ruling. The report also

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POLL

Neighborskeyto copingwith disasters By Emily C. Dooley The Associated Press

HOBOKEN, N.J. — Neighbor helping neighbor. Trust in a community. Looking out for each other. An A s s o ciated P r e s sNORC Center for Public Af-

fairs Research survey suggests that those factors — col-

"People, if they are individually prepared, can also the storm, while 57 percent make sure they are individsaid local government assist- ually safe and their commued them and 55 percent cited nities are safe," Mayor Dawn federalgovernment agencies Zimmer said. as helpful. The survey has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.3 percentage points. Experts say fostering that type of bottom-up help is just as crucial as addressing infrastructure needs and policy dents said they got help from neighborsin recovering from

lectively termed "social resilience" — have a big impact on how prepared communities feelfordisasters such as Superstorm Sandy, and are seen makers should take heed.

"Having that level of trust,

as more valuable in a crisis than even government.

that preexisting level of trust

The survey polled more

means you sort of have this

than 1,000 residents in a doz-

reservoirto draw from in times of need," said the survey's principal researcher 2012 hurricane in New York a nd New J ersey. It f o u nd Kathleen Cagney, a Univerthat, regardless of income, sity of C hicago sociology residents in areas where peo- professorand director of the ple say their neighbors ac- Population Research Center tively seek to fix problems in at NORC at the University of the neighborhood are three Chicago. "Money doesn't buy times more likely to say their these informal reservoirs. community is extremely or You need to foster this." very prepared for a disasIn Hoboken, New Jersey, ter than people in commu- where the survey revealed nities without such social high community trust levels, resilience. government officials and resL ikewise, 37 p e rcent o f idents are focusing on ways residents in areas report- to foster social resilience. ing high levels of neighbors The city is launching a pilot helping each other are very program in a public housing or extremely confident their development that will designeighborhood would recover nate floor captains on each quickly from a disaster, com- level to collect information pared to 22 percent in areas on who is staying during with lower levels of neighbor- a storm and what medical ly cooperation. needs they may have. If sucThe survey also showed cessful, Hoboken's budget inresidentsrely more on neigh- cludes $25,000 to expand the bors than government. Six- program to public and senior ty-nine percent of respon- housing throughout the city. en communities hit by the

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A4 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014•THE BULLETIN

oc c uc roe

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

BALLOTS • County election offices are reporting the following ballot returns: Crook................... 16.3% Deschutes............14.0% Jefferson..............174% Oregon .................12.4% • Mail your ballot by Thursday, Oct. 30.

By Leslie Pugmire Hole

hate them. As a theme, it's a bit

The Bulletin

different."

REDMOND — Redmond's Commission for Art in Public

Places is workingtoward an unusual fundraiser to benefit its public art mission, using the likeness of arockchuck, a critter endemic in and outside the city, as an attention-getting

tool. "I thinkwe all like the whimsical element," said Deborah

Cook, the commission's vice chairwoman. "I sure hope it

Yellow-bellied marmots are

known locally as rockchucks, and their rockdens, burrowing and garden-munching habits arebothreviled orendearing, depending on the person. The commission for art has

been discussingthe rockchuck idea for nearlytwoyears. Although early discussions induded the ideaof a citywide celebration, a"Rockchuck Festival" of sorts, the panel has since

takes off. It would be great

tohave somethinglikethat in Redmond, somethingto celebrate everyyear. The rockchuck is so controversial here; people either love them or

scaledbackits focus — at least for now — to an art project. nitially, the idea was to create

an event akinto Eugene's Slug Festival or Lakeview's Mosquito Festival. Now, members

BRIEFING Teen injured in dirt dike accident

o r aise un s ora

havebeen concentratingonthe creation of life-size plastic rockchucks that would be decorated

by local artish and auctioned off as a tool to fund public art. The idea is not new — al-

though the mckchuckpart might be. Other communities have created and auctioned

farm animals, lizards, fishwhatever they feel is representative of their town or region.

Twelve years ago, Portland's Kows for Kids raised $2.5 million. Realizing pocketbooks and the population are considerably smaller in Redmond, the art commission is thinking on a smaller scale.

SeeRockchucks/A6

"-.' e '--.: - " -' *

Pc,. ~

Leelie Pugmire Hole/The Bulletin file photo

Redmond's Commission for Art in Public Places is using the yellow-bellied marmot, also known as a rockchuck, to raise funds.

CIVIC fNft= NOV.4

A 17-year-old boysustained injuries that were not life-threatening Sunday after crashing his

~

CALENDAR

ELEC TION

TODAY

bendbnlletin.com/elections

Deschutes County Commission — The

dirt bike in the Millican

Valley Recreation Area southeast of Prineville. Crook County Sheriff's Office deputies were dispatched to thearea at about1:30 p.m. after hearing reports of a crash in theoff-highway vehicle recreation area. Deputies weretold the boy had beenriding in the Millican Plateauarea when he crashed. It was reported that hehad possible headinjuries and his exact location was not known. Deputies located a friend who hadbeen with the17-year-old. He led the responding deputies and paramedics from BendFire 4miles before they found the crash victim. Officials determined the boyhad been riding in the area when he lost control of his Kawasaki dirt bike and crashed. The17-year-old was wearing a helmet atthe time of the crash. He and the rest of the group he was riding with were transported from the area by aparent of oneof the riders. Therewereno citations issued.

Man shot in hunting accident A Bend manwasaccidentally shot in theback of the leg Sundaymorning while duck hunting near Sunriver, according to the DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office. Colton Nye,21, was walking in front of Jesse Derrick, 22, also of Bend, when Derrick's12-gauge shotgun dischargeda single round atclose range, officials said in a news release. The two wereduck hunting along anestablished trail parallel to the Deschutes River. Nye was in the lead asthe two walked single file. He crossed over adowned tree and continued up the pathway,according to the sheriff's office. When Derricktried to cross the sametree, the shotgun went off striking Nye in the back ofhis left leg, according to the Sheriff's Office. Derrick immediately called 911, reported the incident and begangiving first aid. Deschutes County Sheriff's deputies, the Sunriver Police Department, Sunriver Fire and U.S.Forest Service law enforcement responded to the scene. Nye was treated on the scene bySunriver medics, then flown by air ambulance to St. Charles Bendwith injuries that are not life-threatening. The incident is still under investigation by the DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office. — Bulletin staffreport

A5

county commissioners are scheduled to hold a regular business meeting at10 a.m. at the Deschutes Services Building, 1300 NWWall St. Bend. The board will hold a public hearing to amend asection of the Deschutes County zoning map to addthe zoning districts for the Bend Airport. TUESDAY

Bend-La Pine School Board — The Bulletin staff report

Oregon voters this election will weigh whether to legalize recreational marijuana, label food

been mailed out and the election is Nov. 4. What ballot measures and races have piqued

containing genetically modified ingredients and

the most interest in Central Oregon? We asked

keep Gov. John Kitzhaber in office. Ballots have

voters what they think.

Brittaine Hunter, 27, Bend

alcohol.

Hunter said she's marked

down some candidates she wants to vote for, including

up with the Democrats more," he said.

her grandmother's doctor, but hadn't sent in

Olivia Wilson, 50, Bend

her ballot yet.

said she wouldn't

She said she thinks more candidates should use social networks to connect to

smoke recreii

While Wilson

ational marijuana, she has decided to vote for it.

H unt e r

young voters and is turned off by negative campaigning. "You should just focus

before filling out Shuman his ballot.

negative publicity of late, Hill

said he's the right choice for Oregon.

Megan Marie,28, Bend

"I think he's a great states-

M arie said she's w orried

SBld.

"It makes me

stood out were pot legalization and GMO food

labeling. When consideringthe Dun ham food labeling, she said she weighed knowing more about what is in food with increased food costs. "I just didn't vote on that one

because I wasn't sure," she said

Tom Tucker, 72, Bend

que~onif Iwant

Pete Martin, 78, Bend

to make a home

here," she said. "I

concerned with

reasonable to expect I could do

ed in the U.S.

that here."

Senate race. He

aboutthe marijuana measure,

saying he doesn't support the recreati onaluseofthe drug, but has similar feelings toward

with both parties, but I'm fed

Deschutes County Commission — The

said he agrees

Larry Deciero, 72, Bend Deciero said he's most concerned with Measure 91 this 'h November, wlnc wouldlegalize marijuana use

Ma r tin

Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon. "It's really important to see Merkley win," he said.

for adults 21

Linda Rock, 56, Redmond

years and older.

Rock said marijuana use seems to be more acceptable

He said the state

Tucker said he'd already

leaning toward Republicans. "Quite frankly, I'm fed up

WEDNESDAY

national politics and is interest-

with incumbent

voted and hadn't missed a vote

vote. As for candidates, he's

council is set to meet at 6:30 p.m. at Council Chambers, 777 SWDeschutes Ave. Theagenda includes a vote onan ordinance that would establish a sales tax on marijuana aswell as a resolution approving the financing of energy conservation measures at the Redmond Airport.

Martin said he's most

want to put roots M a rie down and have a home, but I don't know if it's

will likely not get Deciero as muchtaxreveWeber said he since he was 21. He said he saw nue from legalization as they're is still reading many familiar topics on the expecting and he's worried up on Measure ballot, includingthe food-label- about the state government 92, which would ing issue. beingmore permissive with "It's pretty much the same require labeling drug use. "Good luckwith what hapon foods conold things," he said. taining genetiWeb er pens with that," he said."It's the cally modified oldadage:Becarefulwhatyou organisms, or GMOs, and had Nicholas Nielsen,25, Bend wish for." yet to decide which way to Nielsen said he's conflicted

Scott Weber, 66, Bend

Council —The Hill

ity of housing.

"I haven't really started

looking into it," he said.

SBld.

RedmondCity

and the availabil-

The issues that

and candidates

makes sense," he Nielson

John Kitzhaber has had some

lems," she said.

Dunham said she's already sent in her ballot.

Shuman said

Although Gov.

man, and Oregon has benefited fromhisgreatservice,"she

want to bring," she advised candidates.

he plans to research the issues

attention to.

tion now, which I'm not sure

about the cost of living in Bend

jane Dunham,54, Bend

Having just recycled a stack of political mailings,

a lot like prohibi-

"Alcoholcauses Wilson alotmoreprob-

on the positives that you

Eric Shuman,45, Bend

ant and one she is paying close

"Essentially it's

board is expected to hold a regular meeting at 6 p.m. in room 314of the Education Center, 520 NW Wall Street, Bend. Board members are expected to hold a public hearing on surplus property and vote on architect contracts for projects at Bend High School, La Pine High School and Highland Magnet School.

Barbara Hill,84, Madras Hill said the state's gubernatorial race is the most import-

now than when she was grow-

ing up. She said she hopes marijuana legalization does pass and ends up being a positive, with fewer

people being arrested for using the drug and law enforce-

Rock

ment having more time to deal with other crimes. "I think tt's a cultural

change and a positive for the better," Rock said.

county commissioners are scheduled to hold a regular business meeting at10 a.m. at the Deschutes Services Building, 1300 NWWall St., Bend. The board is expected to vote on an ordinance creating an intergovernmental entity known as the Central Oregon Workforce Consortium and consider an intergovernmental agreement between Deschutes County and the city of La Pine regarding the marketing and sale of property in the La Pine Industrial Park. Contact:541-383-0354, newe©bendhulfetin.com. In emaile, please write "Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication ie noon Thursday.

EVENT CALENDAR TODAY

PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock

Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or

541-548-1432. CIRQUE ZUMAZUMA: An African-style circus troupe performs; SOLD OUT; 3 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "FREE FALL":Film

screening for LGBT Stars and Rainbow Movie Night; $5; 6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.ladyvalorfilm.com or 541-323-1881.

classic tale of Dr. Victor Frankenstein and his creation; $15; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. "NATIONALTHEATRE CIRQUE ZUMAZUMA: LIVE: FRANKENSTEIN": An African-style circus Danny Boyle directs troupe performs; $27this version of the

$42 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. TUESDAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free

admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. CLASSIC BOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Tale of Genji" by Murasaki Shikibu; 6

p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. deschuteslibrary. org/bend, kevinb@ deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1046. Contact:541-383-0351, oommunitylife@hendbulletin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbufletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.


A6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

Rockchucks

part of her inventory, not creture in downtown Redmond, ated for the city, so there is no Continued from A5 offered to sell the commis- obligation. "The foundational objective sion a model she used for a Commission member Ethan of the project is fundraising," lifelike bronze of a crouching Stelzer, who supervised many said Heather Richards, the rockchuck, but the costs have of the students who created the city's community develop- caused the commission to re- city's recently unveiled roundment director. Various RCAPP thinktheproject. about sculpture, suggested projects over the years have During a recent commission that creating a model might be put only $2,000 in the public meeting, members discussed possible for student artists. In art fund, she said. "But that's the pros and cons of hitting the addition, Graham suggested nothing to sneeze at because reset button. the commission consider an"If we have no contract with we have to nickel and dime other method for creation of the everything. But we want to Ms. Chavez, I suggest we look rockchucks besides fiberglass creator of the "Ravens" sculp-

know what we can achieve in

at whether we can create our

Redmond — maybe something more." Finding an artist to create a model for the figures and a

own model. That way we can see if we can get avertical rockchuck standing on its hind legs, which will be more fun for the

method to cast them within a

very tight budget has bedev-

artists, I think," said commission member Frank Graham.

iled commission members for months. Artist Kim Chavez,

Richards told the commission that Chavez's model is

Smoke

According to Richards, while fundraising is the ultimate goal for the rockchuck art, building

Continued from A1 Under its smoke man-

awareness of public artin the city of Redmond

agement plan, the state can order federal agen-

cannot be discounted.

cies, such as the U.S. For-

perhaps as a public art pur-

for the rockchuck art, building awareness of public art in the

chase. The painted rockchuck

city of Redmond cannot be dis-

in Chavez's bronze rockchuck,

est Service, to halt controlled burns if winds are likely to send smoke into

populated areas. And although the state isn't going to change the plan, it is working with the federal agencies to allow for more burning, said Dan Postrel, a Department of Forestry spokesman.

project timeline goal is to have counted. Nor can the idea of usthem created and back from ing the art as a springboard to a the artists by fall of 2015 to larger community celebration. — which is the most common present them for auction at a "Hopefully people will get "gala" fundraiser. material for aproject like this. excited by something so fun," "We're also developing a she said. "Larger events often "ABS plastic is much more durable," he said. "And I'm hav- marketing plan and talking to build from one effort and as ing trouble finding any local artists who might be interest- it generates excitement it will fiberglass companies that can ed or businesses who want to come on its own. But we've got do this kind of work." After sponsor one," he said. a shoestringbudget right now." the meeting, Graham said the According to Richards, while — Reporter: 541-548-2186, commission is still interested fundraising is the ultimate goal Ipugmire@bendbulletin.com

"We think under the ex-

isting smoke management plan there is enough flexibility," he said. Greg Svelund, D EQ spokesman, agreed. "I think the burning can

SCOTUS

firmative action and that she

found her time here intimidatContinued from A1 ing and inspiring. She has been "I wish I came here at a time a frequent visitor and honoree, when I could have been more often drawing huge crowds, positive," he added. "There is so particularly after the publicamuch here that I walked right tion of her own memoir, "My by." Beloved World." For years, Thomas had reOn Saturday, she said she is a fused to return to Yale. In his poor dancerbut loves salsa and 2007 memoir, "My Grandfa- does well with a strong partther's Son," he wrote that his ner. "I have a facility that some law degree had been tainted by of my colleagues would find affirmative action. He had, he very strange," she said. "I can wrote, "learned the hard way follow." that a law degree from Yale Alito looked shocked. "It's meant one thing for white grad- a revelation to me that Sonia uatesand another for blacks, likes to follow," he said. "I think we're going to start dancing at no matterhow much anyone denied it." conference." He added that he had "peeled The justices were questioned a 15-cent price sticker off a by Kate Stith, a law professor at package of cigars and stuck it Yale. She asked Alito what he on the frame of my law degree had been reading. to remind myself of the mistake

I'dmadebygoingto Yale."

His 1991 confirmation hear-

ingonpaper,notbyemail.Faceto-facediscussions arerare. "The communications about cases are almost all written ex-

cept when we're in conference,"

Property taxes town

technology. One was tradition.

halls will give an overview of the tax system and impacts on people's specific properties. "There's a lot of moving parts to the whole piece," he

"The other," she said of some

sald.

of her colleagues, "is they don't

Property owners can attributeincreasesto M easure 50, which Oregon voters passed in 1997. The ballot measure established a "maximum as-

Alito said. Sotomayor cited two reasons for the court's reluctance to use

know how." And the decor is from anoth-

er era. "We still have spittoons by our seats," Alito said. Thomas said he was content

sessed value" for property tax

with the way things are. "I like formality," he said.

purposes. A property's "real

But the three justices agreed

that the court could use more diversity, mentioning geography, religion, professional background and education. "I think we have to be con-

Prope® tax tlwn hallmeetings

Continued from A1 L angton said th e

s aid

Wall St.

air quality monitoring. "So there are a lot of

She said finding a way to allow for more burning isn't simply about watching the winds; it a l so i nvolves b e t ter forecasts and

she said. While recognizing that the smoke can cause poor

cent increase to the maximum

assessedvalue eachyear.

provision. As home values are shooting back up, prop-

air quality, county commissioners do want to see

erty taxes are increasing to

m ore

ing when conditions are right, said Tony DeBone,

inspirational," he responded. from two law schools," Thomas "I keep them on a table by my sald.

1997 was determined the

the now lower maximum assessed value.

same way: the real market

"We had a lot of properties

a Deschutes County com-

missioner. He said he's pleased to see coopera-

Jr., who has two Harvard degrees, was once asked whether it was healthy for the Supreme

es property taxes on whichever value is lower. During the

and federal agencies; ... a lot of people are talking

tended Harvard Law School, although Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg transferred to and

graduated from Columbia Law School. Chief Justice John Roberts

Court to consist of only justices with degrees from elite institutions.

"First of all, I disagree with your premise," he responded.

tion among state and fed-

eral agencies the county spurred with its letter. "I am very excited that

we have started a conversation wit h

at the county assessor's web-

site, ww w .deschutes.org/ years following the recession, graphit. many owners' property tax— Reporter: 541-617-7820, es were lower because of the tshorack@bendbulletin.com

Continued from A1 rent andformer government The agency hired one for- officials, show that the governmer SS officer as a spy in the ment's recruitment of Nazis 1950s,for instance, even after ran far deeper than previousconcluding he was probably ly known and that officials guilty of "minor war crimes." sought to conceal those ties for And in 1994, a lawyer with at least a half-century after the the CIA pressured prosecutors war. to drop an investigation of an

In 1980, FBI officials refused

ex-spy outside Boston impli- to tell even the Justice Departcated in the Nazis' massacre ment's own Nazi hunters what of tens of thousands of Jews in they knew about 16 suspectLithuania, according to a gov- ed Nazis living in the United ernment official. States. The bureau balked, Evidence of the govern- memos show, because the 16 ment's links to Nazi spies be- men had all worked as FBI ingan emerging in the 1970s. formants, providing leads on But thousands of records from

Communist "sympathizers."

declassified files, Freedom of One SS officer, Otto von Information Act requests and Bolschwing, was a mentor and

m a n y s t ate

about it now," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

"Not all of the justices went to elite institutions. Some went to Yale." ® • •

s

•®• interviews with scores of cur-

c o n trolled b u r n -

value of the property the year that did that," Langton said it was built subtracted by 10 about last year's taxes. percent. The m eetings b e gin But because of the Great Wednesday in La Pine and Recession, the real market will take place in Sisters, value for many homes dipped Bend and Redmond through b elow th e m a x imum a s - Nov. 6. Information about sessed value. Measure 50bas- property taxes can be found

The six other justices all at-

other sources, together with

top aide to Adolf Eichmann, architect of the "Final Solution,"

a

• a

and wrote policy papers on how to terrorize Jews. Yet after the war, the CIA

not only hired him as a spy in

Europe, but relocated him and

his family to New York City in 1954, records show.

• •

4

In all, the U.S. military, the CIA, the FBI and other agen-

cies used at least 1,000 ex-Nazis and collaborators as spies and informants after the war,

according to Richard Breitman, a Holocaust scholar at

American University who was on a government-appointed team that deciassified war-

crime records. None of the spies are known to be alive today.

Sabbatical

marketer into one of Israel's thin white troughs connected biggest private landowners. to an automated grid that cirContinued from A1 Technically, the yearlong culates the enhanced water to The seventh-year sabbat- sale is legally binding. In feed the plants the nutrients ical, called "shmita" in H epractice, it is symbolic. He they need. brew, began last month on didn'teven take home a copy His greenhouse follows the Jewish New Year, and ex- of the contract. specific guidelines that certends through the fall of 2015. S htraykhman, who h a s tify the produce kosher for Though only a minority of Jewish roots, said he spent t he sabbatical year: t h e the Israeli population abides time in a religious seminary troughs are raised high and by strict Jewish religious when he moved to Israel and the ground is covered in dark law, nearly all Israeli Jewish considered formally convert- tarp. "There's no relationship befarmers choose tofollow the ing to Judaism. "In the end, I d ecided it biblical directive, in part so tween the land and the root," they don't lose their Ortho- wasn't for me because I like Fine said. "So we are keeping dox customers' business. cheeseburgers," he said in the shmita in a certain way, R abbi Yaa k o v A ri e l , jest, referring to Jewish di- by not using the land." who helped write the gov- etary rules banning the mixThe most devout Jews do ernment's d etailed h o w -to ture of dairy and meat, "and not accept these loopholes, pamphlets for farmers and because not everyone needs preferring to import produce gardeners, said the prac- to be Jewish. I can be a good from abroad or from Palestice serves a s a s p i r i tual person and that's it." tinian farmers. reminder. He maintained good ties What eases the concerns "We are not owners of the with a rabbi from the semi- of Fine's most pious Jewish land. There is a master of the nary who introduced him to consumers is the fact that, deuniverse," Ariel said. Israel's chief rabbinate for the spitethe lengths he has gone Out of some 6,700 Jewish sale. He said he "paid" 2,000 to satisfy the biblical requirefarmers in Israel, only about shekels, or about $540, for the ments, perhaps the biblical 50 ignored the religious rules, land, with money gifted to rules don't fully apply to him. while only about 450 aban- him by an official involved in His greenhouse is in a tumdoned their farms altogether the ceremony. bleweed-swept corner of the this year, said Efraim AntSome farmers employ an- country between the southman of Israel's Religious Ser- other clever solution to avoid ern tip of the Gaza Strip and vices Ministry. tilling the soil: they use hy- the Egyptian border. Most of the rest opted for droponics, growing produce According to religious traGeorge Shtraykhman. not in soil but in nutrient-en- dition, it's an area that was They sold their farms to the

hanced water.

government, and last month, Gilad Fine, 40, a skullover cookies and orange cap-wearing farmer in the juice, the government sold small desert community of the lands to Shtraykhman, Bnei Netzarim, grows organturning the non-Jewish tele- ic romaine lettuce and kale in

i m p roved

pieces that play into this,"

the maximum assessed value. The law established a 3 per-

S

Spies

u n d er-

standing of what is being burned, better weather

Redmond: Nov. 6, Redmond Fire Hall,341 NW Dogwood Ave.

market value" for 1995 was subtracted by 10percent to get

K a s sidy Ke r n ,

spokeswoman for the Deschutes National Forest.

The maximum assessed value for homes built after

ings — which were rocked by bed, and I try to read a little bit accusati ons of sexual harass- of them every night. It's 'My ment from Anita Hill, a for- Grandfather' sSon'and'My Bemer colleague and fellow Yale loved World.'" Law graduate — did not help Alito, 64, has been a loyal son matters. of the law school. In 2005, as he Relations between the justice prepared for his confirmation and thelaw school are much hearings, he wrote an apologetwarmer these days, and Satur- ic note to the dean for missing day's big public event was the his 30th reunion. "I believe," he wrote, "that culmination of the reconciliation. "This is certainly far more this is the first five-yearreunion special to me," he said of the I have not attended." ceremony, "than at the time of Alito and Sotomayor sugmy graduation." gested that the Supreme Court Sotomayor, 60, has written may be too formal, isolated and that she was admitted to the technologically backward. The law school with the help of af- justices communicate in writ-

d iscussion a b ou t co n trolled burns and smoke,

Ail meetings 5-6:30 p.m. La Pine: Wednesday, La Pine City Hall, 51340 U.S. Highway 97. Sisters: Nov. 3, City Council Chambers, 520 E Cascade Ave. Bend: Nov. 5, Deschutes Services Center, Barnes/ Sawyer Room, 1300NW

cerned that almost all of us are

"I have two books that are

be done under the existing plan," he said. The meeting last week was part of a continuing

not under

s i

p w+* S

J e wish c o ntrol

2,000 years ago during the time of th e second Jewish

Temple in Jerusalem — partially exempting it from the biblical law.

I I' I

>I

I' I

S



AS

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W NFL, B3 NBA preview, B5 Motor sports, B7

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

The week ahea

A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:

Wednesday

Friday

Saturday

Saturday

Saturday-Sunday

NBA basketball, OklahomaCity at Portland, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN): Damian Lillard, LaMarcus Aldridge andthe rest of the Trail Blazers openthe 2014-15 season at the ModaCenter against the Thunder, who will be without injured star Kevin Durant. Portland last seasonwon a playoff series for the first time since 2000 and is looking for a fast start to the new campaign.

Prep football, 7 p.m.:Intracity rivalry games highlight the final week of the regular season. In Bend,Mountain View can clinch the Intermountain Conference title outright with a win at BendHigh in the annual Civil War game. InRedmond, Ridgeview entertains RedmondHigh in the first football meeting ever between the Ravensandthe Panthers.

Cross-country, Oregonhighschool state championships iuEugene, 10 u.m.:The all-classifications meet at Lane Community College openswith the Class 3A/2A/1A girls race andconcludes with the Class 6Aboys race at 3 p.m. In between, at1:15 p.m., the Summit girls make their bid for a seventh consecutive Class 5A state title.

College football, Stanford atOregon, 4:30 p.m., (Fux);California at Oregon State, 7:30 p.m. (Pac-12Network): At Autzen Stadium in Eugene,the Ducks hope to avoid being derailed by Stanford — again — in their bid for a Pac-12 championship. At ReserStadium in Corvallis, the Beavers will be looking to end a two-game slide with the first of three consecuti vehome games.

Cyciucress, HalloweenCrossCrusade iuBend,8:40a.m.tu4p.m.:Cross Crusade's annual Halloween raceseries is back in Bend,again at the Deschutes Brewery production facility across from the Old Mill District. More than1,000 racers are expected to compete during thetwo-dayevent.Racesignupscanbe found at www.crosscrusade.com.

COMMUNITY SPORTS

TEE TO GREEN

PREP VOLLEYBALL

Three SAteams

A run for monsters both great and sma

in postseason

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

Clifford Swift's training for "American Ninja Warrior" officiallybegan this week. The 5-year-old Bend speedster finished the Little Mon-

sters' Mile on Sunday morning in high spirits dressed in a sweet sweatsuit and headband in honor of his favorite reality television show. Clifford and

his younger brother, Theodore, ran the 1-mile course around Bend's Mirror Pond with their mom, Kelsey Swift,

as the boys' dad, Tanner Swift, cheered on his ninjas in

training. "The part where you ran downhill after the bridge, that

was the best part. You speed up a lot then," said Clifford, who performed one-arm

pushups between interview questions. More than 140 runners of

all ages, including the Swifts, participated in Sunday morning's Monster Dash 5K, 10K and Little Monsters' Mile.

The third annual running of the Halloween-themed event started and finished

at Highland Elementary School, taking runners on an out-and-back route just

Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin file photo

Andrew Vijarro, of Bend, practices in 2013. The 25-year-old professional golfer spent the summer overhauling his swing with Bend pro Jim Wilkinson.

• Bend professionalVijarro takesthe seasonoff to change, improvehis swing

past Columbia Park — also known as the Pirate Ship Park

to anyone with kids — and then through Drake Park on a

By Zack Hall

counterclockwise loop before concluding at the Highland parking lot. "This is the best family run in Bend," saidWonder Wom-

The Bulletin

"I could have kept getting better, but I don't

Andrew Vijarro felt like he could still improve without reworking his swing.

think I could have gotten as good as I will be in the next year or two (after) making those changes. It was definitely a decision I had to

an, aka Ali Emerson, who ran the Little Monsters' Mile

with Superman (husband Rob Emerson), Wonder Girl (3-year-old daughter Karsyn) and Buzz Lightyear (5-yearold daughter Kamryn). "We've done this race everyyear they've had it."

See Monster /B4

B ut two

y e ars i nt o h i s

professionalgolf career,the 25-year-old Bend golfer wondered if he could boost his play enough to reach his end goal of playing on the PGA

make for the future."

Toul.

doing something few play-

"I obviously didn't want to have to change things, because I was comfortable where I was at," Vijarro says. "But in order for me to get to

the top and play with my buddies (on the PGA Tour), I had to be in a different position."

So in late May, the selftaught golfer considered

Inside • Offseason update: Tetherow Golf Club,B6 • Streb wins McGladrey Classic in a playoff. Roundup,Bg

make a drastic change that would all but wipe out a golf season.

On the suggestion of Brian Whitcomb, the owner of Lost Tracks Golf Club in Bend and a family friend of Vijarro's, the former University of Oregon standout golfer

sought the help of Bend teaching pro Jim Wilkinson. Vijarro was reluctant, at first. Still, Wilkinson — a for-

mer Champions Tour player and awell-respected teacher who has helped the swings of golfers such as 2009 PGA Champion Y.E. Yang — was

swing. But to advance further, Wilkinson believed, Vijarro needed refinement.

"I could have kept getting

better, but1don't think I

could have gotten as good as I will be in the next year or two (after) making those changes," Vijarro says. "It was definitely a decision I had to make for the future."

SeeVijarro/B6

able to convince Vijarro that

WORLD SERIES

Bumgarner's shutout gives Giants lead Meg Roueeoe/The Bulletin

Alli Emerson, left, of Bend, hold hands with her daughter,

Karsyn, 3, dressed in costumes during the Little Monsters' Mile

in Bend on Sunday.

Inside • More photos from the Monster Dash, sports news from around the community, and acalendar ofupcomingevents,B4

By Ben Walker

the mound, Bumgarner

The Associated Press

was simply untouchable-

SAN FRANCISCOWith every pitch, Madison

again. As "MVP! MVP!" chants broke out from each

Bumgarner etched his place among the World Series greats. The long, tall lefty kept slinging away and put the

packed corner of AT8 T Park, Bumgarner finished

San Francisco Giants just

one win from yet another championship, throwing a

some reason, I keep getting four World Series starts with really lucky this time of year, an 0.29 ERA? Throw in only so I'll take it," Bumgarner 12 hits in 31 innings, along

four-hitter to beat the Kan-

sald.

sas City Royals 5-0 Sunday nightfora 3-2 Seriesedge. Hardly menacing on

off the first World Series

shutout in 11 years. "You know what'? For

It must be more than luck. Because by the time the

25-year-old from Hickory,

uled to begin at 5:30

p.m.Tuesday. — Bulletin staff report

NFL

he had advanced through — Andrew Vijarro the ranks because his talent trumped the flaws in his

ers on any level want to do:

Bend High, Summit and Mountain View will represent the Intermountain Conference in the Class 5Avolleyball postseason. The Oregon School Activities Association 5A rankings froze at the conclusion of regular-season play Saturday night. As a result, the Lava Bears, No. 2 in 5A, earned the top seed from the IMCand receive anautomatic bid to the state playoffs, which are slated to begin Saturday. Bend High booked a 7-1 IMC record with only a loss to No. 4Summit preventing the Bears from securing the outright league title. The Storm, who split the IMC crown with Bend and aim toadvance to the state tournamentfor the eighth time in nine years, went 7-1 in league playand will host a North play-in contest against Liberty of Hillsboro on Tuesday at 6 p.m. TheFalcons compiled a 6-10mark to finish sixth in the Northwest OregonConference. The No. 14Cougars, who went4-1 in IMC action and havefallen in the first round of the state playoffs each of the past two years, hits the road fora North play-in matchup at Sandy. The Pioneers finished fourth in the NWOCand were No.13 in the final regular-season rankings after going 11-5 in conference play. That contest is sched-

North Carolina, closed out his second win in a week, he

GIANTS 3,ROYALS2

had evoked memories of Bob

Gibson, Sandy Koufax, Curt Schilling and the top October aces of all-time.

Joinedthem, and maybe even passed them. Who else has gone 4-0 in

with 27 strikeouts, and that

adds up to the very definition of Big-Game Pitcher. SeeGiants/B7

Game1: Giants 7,Royals1 Game 2: Royals 7,Giants 2 Game 3: Royals3,Giants2 Game 4: Giants11, Royals 4 Game 5: Giants5,Royals0 Tue. at KansasCity 5 p.m. x-Wed. atKansasCity 5 p.m. x-ifnecessary

Lions Falcons

21 2

Chiefs Rams

3

exans Titans

3 16

7

lngs

Buccaneers 13 (OT) Seahaw s Panthers

9

Bengal Ravens

2 24

Dolphins Jaguars

2 13

Patriots Bears

51 23

Bills Jets

4 23

ar lnas Eagles

20

Browns Raiders

2 13

Steelers Colts

51 34

Saints Packers

4 23


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

ON THE AIR

COHKBOARD

TODAY SOCCER England, QueensPark vs Aston Villa

Time 1 p.m.

T V /Radio N B CSN

FOOTBALL

NFL, Washington at Dallas

5:15 p.m. E SPN

TENNiS

BNP Paribas Masters

3a.m. (Tue.j Tennis

TUESDAY BASEBALL

World Series, SanFrancisco at Kansas City

5 p.m.

Fox

BASKETBALL

NBA, Dallas at SanAntonio NBA, Houston at LosAngeles Lakers

5 p.m. 7 :30 p.m.

TNT

TN T

VOLLEYBALL

Women's college, OhioState at PennState

5 p.m.

Bi g Ten

HOCKEY

NHL, Minnesota at Boston

4 p.m.

NB CSN

Listings are themostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.

ON DECK Today Boyssoccer. LaPineat Cresw ell, 4 p.m.; Class 3A/2A/1ASpecial District 6 playoffs, Damascus ChristianatCentral Christian,3:30p.m. Volleyball:Class4Aplay-in,ScappooseatMadras,6 p.m.;Harrisburgat LaPine,6p.m.

Tuesday Boys soccer: Bend at Sisters, 4 p.m.; Summit at MountainView,7 p.m.; Madrasat CrookCounty, 4p.m.;IrrigonatCulver, 4 p.m. Girls soccer.Redmond at Bend, 3 p,m.; Summit at MountainView,5p.m.;LaPineat Creswel, 4p.m. Volleyball:Class5Aplay-in, MountainViewat Sandy, 5:30p.m.; Liberty atSummit, 6p.m. Sistersat Bend,5:30p.m.

ATP World Tour

IN THE BLEACHERS

iTSmiRDnHbgVe.l ~r

lo/c,'+

Swiss Indoors Sunday atBasel, Switzerland Championship RogerFederer(1), Swilzerland,def. David Goffin(7), Belgium,6-2,6-2.

YoUTo HRC oFFTo ... n

w

B

UI/(Ot/I. 9$RY, CÃf-A. Y00R IVY lG AL%'-VY TR@|Ly)QIy Olkl 7ÃiTT% ~t>TW

h

Thursday Boyssoccer:Sistersat Summit,4 p.m.

Ce6FAQU5 iS THIEtThlE.

Friday FoolbaH: MountainViewatBend, 7p.m.; North Salem at Summit7, p.m.; Redmondat Ridgeview,7p.m.; La Pine at PleasantHil, 7 p.m.; Stanfield atCulver, 7p.m.;ButteFals atGilchrist, 2 p.m.

gtI00C pu)4pXam©Y!

3

m' Qt n w I

n

AH TimesPDT

WORLD SERIES

8-5 Sunday to claim second placeamong eight teams in the North Salem Tournament. TommyBrewer scored four goals for the Storm in Sunday's contest at the KrocCenter in Salem. InSaturday games, Summit beat North Eugene17-5 anddowned Westview11-2, then lost 8-4 to LakeOswego.For thetournament, Baxter Halligan led the Storm in scoring with12 goals, and goalkeeperKyleAlhart recorded 30 blocks.

Summit girlS SiXth at NOrth Salem — TheStorm posted a

1-3 record to finish sixth in the eight-team North SalemTournament, which ran Friday through Sunday attheKroc Center in Salem. Annie Jarvis led Summit with nine goals for the tourney, including four in a 10-3 win over South Salem onSaturday. TheStorm fell 9-3 to Tualatin on Fri day,8-2toLakeOswegoonSaturday,and9-5toAshlandon Sunday. Other scorers for Summit wereEdenVanderHock with four goals, Emily Touchette andCaroline Richelsenwith two apiece, and Cassi Wettstein, PaigeMiller and JennaWimmer with one each. Backup keepersTouchette andKacie Bohmewere in goal for the Storm.

BASEBALL Cardinals player killed in car accident —sb Louiscardinals outfielder OscarTaveraswas killed in acar accident Sunday. He was 22. Nationalpolicespokesman Jacobo MateoMoquetesaidhe was told by the mayor of Sosuathat Taveras lost control of his vehicle and went off the road. Edilia Arvelo, 18, whowas inthe car with Taveras, also died in theaccident. The Cardinals' top prospect for several years, Taveras madehis major-leaguedebut this past season. Hehit .239 with a.312 slugging percentage, and hewasa contributor as a pinch-hitter during the postseason. Hehadspent the previous three seasonsatoptheteam'srankings,andTaveraswasconsideredone of the finest hitting prospects in the minors since his debut at rookie-level as ateenager.

RODEO Alves wins PBRWorld Championship —silvano Alves won the world title and theaggregate crown Sunday in the Professional Bull Riders World Finals. Alves, from Pilar DoSul, Brazil, was the only cowboy to ride all six of his bulls. He remained onthetop of the event leaderboard with an 85.5-point effort on HokeyPokey inthefifth round and an87.25 on Asteroid in the sixth. Alves wonthe event title with 501 points. Defending world champion J.B. Mauney of Mooresville, North Carolina, wassecond at 453.5, andJ.W. Harris third at 361. Alves also wonworld crowns in 2011and 2012.

TENNIS WilliamS beetS Halep fOrWTAtitle — SerenaWiliams beat Simona Halep6-3, 6-0 on Sunday in Singapore to win her third-successive title at the WTAFinals and herfifth overall. Halep easily beat Williams just four days earlier during the group stage of the tournament, but Williams won 11 ofthe last12 games in the match to join Martina Navratilova andSteffi Graf as the only players to havewon five titles in the season-ending championships. Thematch was the most one-sided championship match in theWTAFinals since Kim Clijsters beat Amelie Mauresmo6-2, 6-0 in 2003.

Murray SaVeS 5matChpOintS te Win ValenCia —Andy Murray saved five match points before fighting back to beatTommy Robredo 3-6, 7-6 (7), 7-6 (8) in a grueling Valencia Open final on Sunday in Valencia, Spain. Last month, Murray also savedfive match points against the Spaniard on his way to winning the final in Shenzhen, China. This time, hehad to do it in front of Robredo's home fans, who ended upapplauding the effort made by both players on Valencia's indoor hard court. Robredo came from a break down in the second set to force a tiebreaker that could haveearned him his first win against Murray since 2007. Federer WinS 6th SWiSS IndOOrS — Top-seeded Roger Federer won a sixth Swiss Indoors title on Sunday,comfortably defeating David Goffin of Belgium in straight sets to end arun of two successive final defeats at his hometown tournament in Basel, Switzerland. Federer took just 52 minutes to win 6-2, 6-2, delighting the partisan crowd as he inflicted what wasonly Goffin's third defeat in 46matches. The first set lasted 23 minutes asFederer dropped just one point in the final three games.Thesecond-ranked Federer also moved astep closer to clinching the year-endNo.1 spot for a record-equaling sixth time as he moved to less than500 points behind Novak Djokovic.

SKIING Ligety10th at WOrldCupGS—Overall championMarcel Hirscher held on tohis first-run lead towin the season-opening World Cup giant slalom by ahugemargin on Sundayat Soelden, Austria. The Austrian finished in an aggregate 2 minutes, 28.09 seconds. TedLigety, the Olympic andworld champion in GS,wassecond after the opening leg but dropped to10th, trailing Hirscher by3.02 seconds, following a disappointing final run in which helost a lot of speed inthe finish section. Hirscher became the first Austrian winner in Soelden since Hermann Maier in 2005. Ligety hadwonthe race in the past three seasons.

FOOTBALL DuCkS up tO 6th in AP pall —Mississippi's first loss of the season dropped the Rebels four spots in TheAssociated Press college football poll to No. 7and left Mississippi State, Florida State, Alabama and Auburn in the top four as theCollege Football Playoff selection committee prepares its first rankings. No.1 Mississippi State (46 first-place votes) andNo. 2Florida State (14) are the only unbeaten team left in the Big Fiveconferences. Alabama, which lost 23-17 at Ole Miss earlier this month, moved up a spot, as did No. 4 Auburn, No. 5 OregonandNo. 6 Notre Dame. — From wire reports

Bunday'sSummary

y- clinched conference Thursday'sGames Troy atGeorgia Southern, 4:30 p.m. FloridaStateat Louisvile, 4:30p.m. FridaytsGames TulsaatMemphis, 5p.m. CincinnatiatTulane,5 p.m.

Saturday'sGames EAST

Air Force at Army,11:30 a.m. Marylandat PennState, 9a.m. DukeatPittsburgh,9 a.m. KansasCity Ban Francisco Wisconsin at Rutgers,9a.m. ab r h bi ab r hbi EastCarolinaat Temple, 9a.m. AEscorss 4 0 0 0 GBlanccf 5 0 0 0 UCFat UConn,9a.m. AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 Panik2b 3 0 1 0 NC StateatSyracuse,noon L .cainrf-cf 4 0 1 0 Poseyc 3 0 1 0 TCU atWest Virginia, 12:30p.m. Hosmer1b 4 0 1 0 Sandovl3b 4 2 2 0 Notre Damevs.NavyatLandover,Md.,5p.m. S.Perezc 3 0 1 0 Pencerf 4 2 2 0 SOUTH M ostks3b 3 0 0 0 Belt1b 4 0 1 0 Rice atFIU,9a.m. Infante2b 3 0 1 0 Ishikawlf 3 0 2 0 NorthCarolinaatMiami, 9:30a.m. KHerrrp 0 0 0 0 J.Perezpr-lf 1 1 1 2 BostonCollegeatVirginia Tech, 9:30a.m. WDavisp 0 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 2 3 W.KentuckyatLouisianaTech,noon JDysoncf 2 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 4 0 0 0 GeorgiaStateatAppalachian State,12:30p.m. BButlerph 1 0 0 0 Floridavs.GeorgiaatJacksonvile, Fla.,12:30p.m. A okirf 0000 Virginia atGeorgiaTech,12:30p.m. Shieldsp 2 0 0 0 BYUatMiddleTennessee,12:30p.m. Nix2b 1000 HoustonatSouth Florida,1 p.m. Totals 3 1 0 4 0 Totals 3 55 125 SouthAlabamaat Louisiana-Lafayete, 2 p.m. Kansas City BOO BOO BBB — 0 UABat FAU, 4p.m. Ban Francisco B10 100 B3x — 6 Old Dominion atVanderbilt, 4 p.m. E—A.Escobar (1). DP—Kansas City 1. LOB AuburnatMississippi, 4or4:15 p.m. KansasCity 4, SanFrancisco8. 28—Infante (2), Arkansas at Mississippi State,4 or4:15p.m. J.Perez(1). Tennessee at SouthCarolina,4:30 p.m. IP H R E R BBBO MIDWEST KansasCity Northwestern at lowa,9a.m. ShieldsL,0-2 6 8 2 2 1 4 Oklahoma at lowaState, 9a.m. K.Herrera 1 2 2 2 1 0 Cent.Michiganat E.Michigan, 10a.m. W.Davis 1 2 1 0 0 3 W. Michigan at Miami(Ohio), 2:30p.m. San Francisco Indiana atMichigan,12:30p.m. BumgarnerW,2-0 9 4 0 0 0 8 Purdueat Nebraska,12:30 p.m. K.Herrerapitchedto 2battersinthe 8th. Kentucky at Missouri,1 p.m. WP — Shields. Oklahoma StateatKansasState,5 p.m. T—3:09.A—43,087 (41,915). lginois at OhioState,5 p.m. SOUTHWE ST Louisiana-Monroe atTexasAAM,9a.m. FOOTBALL Kansas at Baylor,1 p.m. TexasatTexasTech,4:30 p.m. College SouthernMiss.at UTEP,5 p.m. FAR WEST Polls Washington atColorado,10a.m. AP Top 25 R ecord Plc P v TexasStateatNewMexico State,1 p.m. 1 . MississipState pi (46) 7-0 1 ,486 1 SouthernCalatWashington State, 1:30p.m. 2. FloridaState(14) 7 0- 1, 453 2 ArkansasStateatIdaho,2p.m. 3. Alabam a 7 -1 1,290 4 NewMexicoat UNLV,2:30 p.m. 4. Auburn 6 -1 1,267 5 ColoradoStateatSanJoseState,4 p.m. 7 -1 1,199 6 StanfordatOregon,4:30p.m. 5. Oregon egoStateatNevada,7:30p.m. 6. NotreDame 6 -1 1,161 7 SanDi 7. Mississippi 7 -1 1,095 3 CaliforniaatOregonState,7:30 p.m. 8. Michigan State 7 -1 1,086 8 Arizonaat UCLA,7:30 p.m. 9. Georgia 6 -1 1,074 9 WyomingatFresnoState, 7:45p.m. Utah atArizonaState,8 p.m. 10. TCU 6 -1 1,030 10 11. Kansas State 6-1 93 0 11 UtahStateatHawai,8 p.m. 12. Baylor 6-1 83 9 12 13. OhioState 6-1 67 6 13 America's Lin 14.Arizona 6-1 66 9 15 15. Arizona State 6-1 6 6 7 14 NFL 7-2 16. LSU 574 24 Favorite OpenCurrent 0/U Underdog 17. Nebraska 7-1 53 5 16 Today 18. Utah 6-1 52 4 19 Cowboys 9 9 v 2 49vz Saints 19. Oklahoma 5-2 4 3 0 17 Thursday 20. West Virginia 6-2 3 7 9 22 PANTHE RS Saints 21. EastCarolina 6-1 36 6 18 Sunday,Nov.2 22. Clemson 6-2 26 5 21 DOLPHIN S 1 'A 1'A 4 4 Chargers 23. Marshall 8-0 1 8 4 23 BENGAL S 12'/z 12'Iz 43'Iz Jaguars 24. Duke 6 -1 1 2 1 N R BROW 6 6 43' / z NS Bucs 25. UCLA 6-2 1 0 6 25 VIKINGS Washington Othersreceivingvotes: ColoradoState29, South- Eagles 3 3 48V x TEXANS ern Cal22,Wisconsin14,Stanford9, Louisville 8, CHIEFS 10 1 0 4 1 Vx Jets Missouri 7,NorthDakotaState3,OklahomaState2. COWB OYS Cards 49ERS 9'/2 9'/2 43'/z Rams Top 25CoachesPoll 3 3 54 PATRIO TS Record Plc Pvc Broncos EAHA WKS 15 1 5 43 Raiders 1. MississippiState(41) 7-0 1 528 1 S RS 1 v2 1v2 47vz Ravens 2. FloridaState(21) 7 015 0 8 2 STEELE Monday,Nov.3 7-1 1351 4 3. Alabam a Colts 3'/~ 3'/~ 5ty/z GIANTS 6-1 1276 6 4. Auburn 7-1 1269 5 5. Michigan State College 7-1 1217 7 6. Oregon Thursday 6-1 1170 8 7. NotreDame G A SOU T H E R N 23'/z 23'Iz Troy 6-1 1069 9 8. Georgia 7 7 LOUISVILLE 7-1 1067 3 FloridaSt 9. Mississippi 6 -1 1057 1 0 Friday 10. TCU 6-1 97 9 11 MEMPHIS 21V~ 21Vx Tulsa 11. Kansas State 4 4 TULANE 12. Baylor 6-1 84 8 13 Cincinnati 13. OhioState 6-1 8 1 7 12 Saturday 14. Arizona State 6-1 71 2 14 NotreDa me 15 15 NAVY 15. Arizona 6-1 6 5 2 15 VA TEC H 5 5 BostonColl 7-1 16. Nebraska 623 16 ECarolina 7A 7'A TEMPLE 17. LSU 7-2 45 5 23 C Florida 12'/z 12'Iz CONNE CTICUT 18. Utah 6-1 45 4 19 Wisconsin 11 11 RUTGE RS 19. EastCarolina 6-1 4 4 8 17 SYRACU SE 4 4 Nc State 20. Oklahom a 5-2 4 4 4 18 PITTSBU RGH 1 'Ii 1 / 2 Duke 21. Clemson 6-2 30 4 20 PENN ST Maryland 3 3 22. West Virginia 6-2 2 9 0 25 MIAMI-FLA 12 12 NCarolina 23. Marshall 8-0 2 1 7 22 APP'CHIAN ST 7 7 GeorgiaSt 24. Duke 6 -1 13 4 N R Air Force 4 4 ARMY 25. UCLA 6 -2 1 0 7 N R CMichigan 16Vz 16Vx EMICHIG AN Othersreceiving votes:Wisconsin44, Colorado IDWA 5 5 Northwestern State35, Missouri22, Minnesota14,GeorgiaTech TEXAS TECH Texas 13, Stanford10,SouthernCal8, BoiseState4, Lou- NEBRA SKA 23v2 23'/z Purdue isville3, TexasA&ML BAYLOR Kansas WMichigan 6v2 6v2 MIAMI-OHIO Pac-12 MISSISSIPPI 3 3 Auburn AH TimesPDT MISSOU RI 7 7 Kentucky MISSST 11 Vg Arkansas North Division LATECH 5 5 WKentucky Conf Overall TEXAS A&M 31V~ 31Vz Ul-Monroe W L W L PF PA 7 7 MID TENN ST Oregon 4 1 7 1 364 207 Byu LINA Tennesse e Stanford 3 2 5 3 206 100 SCARO 12'/z 12rA Florida California 2 4 4 4 332 328 Georgia 7A 7'A WASHST Washington 1 3 5 3 239 197 Usc N tt'A t t'Iz Stanford OregonState 1 3 4 3 178 184 OREGO 15'A 15'A Oklahoma IDWA ST WashingtonState 1 4 2 6 282 304 KANSAS ST 13v2 13'A Oklahoma St South Division Indiana W L W L PF PA MICHIGAN IPA 8'Ii 4 4 Virginia Arizona State 4 1 6 1 256 177 GATECH St 15 15 IDAHO Arizona 3 1 6 1 284 198 Arkansas U L-LAFA Y E T T E Br/2 Br/2 SAlabama Utah 3 1 6 1 251 151 V ANDE BIL R T 10 10 Old Domi nion SouthernCal 4 2 5 3 270 186 7 7 FLORIDA INTL ' UCLA 3 2 6 2 286 242 Rice COLOR ADO Colorado 0 5 2 6 255 310 Washington 5v2 5v2 4'/z 4'/z OREGO NST California UCLA 41/2 41/2 Arizona Saturday'sGames Colorado St 7 7 S ANJOSES T Washingtonat Colorado,10 a.m. ARIZONA ST 4 4 Utah Southern CalatWashington State,1:30 p.m Tcu 4v~ 4v~ WVIRGINIA StanfordatOregon, 4:30p.m. Houston 9v2 9v2 SFLORIDA Arizona at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. F LA ATL A N T IC Uab Californiaat OregonState, 7:30p.m. UTEP 5 5 So Miss Utah at ArizonaSt.,8 p.m. Saturday,Nov.8 UNLV 1 1 NewMexico TexasSt Bv2 Bv2 EWMEX ICOST NotreDam eat ArizonaState, TBD OHIO ST 28'/z 28'Iz glinois UCLAatWashington,TBD WashingtonStateat OregonState, TBD FRESNO ST 11 11 Wyoming OregonatUtah,TBD NEVAD A 5 5 SanDiegoSt Coloradoat Arizona,TBD UtahSt 2 2 HAWAII

Giants 5, Royals 0

EasternConference W L T Pls GF GA y -D.C. United 1 7 9 8 59 5 2 3 7 x-NewEngland 17 1 3 4 5 5 5 1 46 x-Columbus 14 1 0 1 0 52 52 42 x-NewYork 13 1 0 1 1 50 55 50 x-Sporting KansasCity14 13 7 49 48 41 Philadelphia 10 1 2 1 2 42 51 51 T oronto FC 11 15 8 4 1 4 4 5 4 Houston 11 17 6 39 39 58 Chicago 6 10 18 36 41 51 Montreal 6 18 10 28 38 58

WesternConference W L T Pls GF GA y-Seattle 20 10 4 64 65 50 x-LosAngele s 1 7 7 1 0 6 1 69 37 x -RealSaltLake 15 8 1 1 5 6 54 39 x -FCDallas 16 12 6 5 4 5 5 4 5 x-Vancouver 12 8 14 5 0 42 40 Portland 12 9 13 49 61 52 C hivas USA 9 19 6 33 2 9 6 1 Colorado 8 18 8 3 2 43 62 SanJose 6 16 12 30 35 50 x- clinched playoff berth

MLB playoffs

StOrm dOyS SeCOndin tOurney — Summit defeatedAshland

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AH TimesPDT

l ll O n

Saturday Cross-coun try: State championships at LaneCommunity College,Eugene,Class4A girls, 11:15 a.m.; Class 4A boys, 11:50a.m.; Class5Agirls, 1:15 p.m.;Class5Aboys,1:50 p.m. Volleyball: Class5Aplayoffs: Bendvs. TBD.Class4A playoffs:CrookCounty, Sisters vs.TBD

(Bost-of-7; x-if necessary) Sunday'sGame SanFrancisco5, Kansas City 0, San Francisco leads series3-2 Tuesday'sGame San Francisco (Peavy 6-4) at Kansas City (Ventura 14-10),5:07p.m. Wednosday'sGame x-San FranciscoatKansasCity,5:07p.m.

MLS

O 0

MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

WATER POLO

SOCCER

ru

BASEBALL

SPORTS IN BRIEF

ValenciaOpen Sunday afValencia, Spain Championship Andy Murray(3), Britain, def.Tomm y Robredo, Spain,3-6,7-6(7), 7-6(8).

BASKETBALL NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

Sunday'sGames Columbus 2, Philadelphia1 ChivasUSA1, SanJose0 NewYork2, Sporting KansasCity 0 End regular season

AU TimesPDT

Tuesday'sGames OrlandoatNewOrleans, 5 p.m. Dallas atSanAntonio, 5p.m. Houston at LA. Lakers, 7:30p.m. Wednesday'sGames Milwaukee atCharlotte,4 p.m. Philadelphiaat Indiana,4 p.m. Brooklyn at Boston, 4:30p.m. Washington at Miami,4:30 p.m. AtlantaatToronto, 4:30p.m. Chicago at NewYork,5 p.m. Minnesotaat Memphis, 5p.m. Detroit atDenver, 6p.m. Houstonat Utah,6p.m. GoldenStateatSacramento, 7p.m. LA. Lakers at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Portland, 7:30p.m.

PLAYOFFB Wild CardRound

Wednecday'sGame

Vancouverat FCDallas, 6p.m.

Thursday'sGame SportingKansasCity atNewYork,5 p.m.

CONCACAF Women's Championship AH TimesPDT

Sunday'sGames Third place Mexico 4,TrinidadandTobago2,OT Championship UnitedStates6,Costa Rica0

MOTOR SPORTS

HOCKEY

NASCAR Sprint Cup Goody's HeadacheRelief Shot BBBResults Sunday afMartinsvine Speedway, Ridgeway,Va. Lap length: .626miles (Starl position in parentheses) 1. (23) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 500laps,127 rating, 47points, $155,125. 2. (13) Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet, 500, 135.8, 44, $169,67L 3. (9) Ryan Newam n, Chevrolet, 500, 96.1, 41, $113,785. 4. (4) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 500, 107.6, 41, $143,418. 5. (2) Joey Logano,Ford,500,1164,40, $137491. 6. (3) MattKenseth, Toyota,500,98.5, 39, $138,326. 7. (12)Clint Bowyer, Toyota,500,101.6,38, $123,881. 8. (5) Denny Hamlin, Toyota,500,1186,37,$97 140. 9. (15) AJAllmendinger, Chevrolet, 500,89.2, 35, 3111,298r 10. (29)DavidRagan,Ford, 500,59.7, 34,$112,898. 11. (8)KyleBusch,Toyota, 500,98,33, $129,931. 12. (19) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 500, 68.6, 32, $131,801. 13. (21)GregBiffle, Ford,500,838, 31,$125940. 14. (14) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 500, 79.4, 30, $112,329. 15. (18) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,500,62.7, 29, $122,340. 16. (1) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 500,105.5,29, $135,029. 17. (22) JustinAggaier,Chevrolet, 500, 67.9, 28, $106,373. 18. (36)ColeWhitt, Toyota,500, 54.6,26, $83,590. 19. (28) LandonCassig, Chevrolet, 500, 56.3, 0, $82,865. 20. (11)CarlEdwards,Ford,500, 72.9,24,$99,315. 21. (27)AricAlmirola,Ford,500,79, 23,$119,201. 22. (34) David Gilliland, Ford, 500, 48.9, 23, $101,648. 23. (25) MarcosAmbrose, Ford, 499, 72.2, 21, $108,060. 24. (37) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 499,43.9, 20, $9L012. 25. (35)JoshWise,Chevrolet,499,44.3,19, $8L790. 26. (43)MikeWallace, Toyota,499, 40,0, $89,015. 27. (17) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 496, 66.1, 17, $112,415. 28. (42)KyleFowler, Ford,491, 34.2,0, $77,690. 29. (32)AlexBowman,Toyota,490,44.6,15, $77,565. 30. (16)KyleLarson,Chevrolet, accident,487,60,14, $105,335. 31. (6) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 472, 73.5, 13, $122,773. 32. (7) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 459,77.4, 12, $131,201. 33. (33) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 457, 65.2, 11, $118,173. 34. (30)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, accident,451,61.3, 10, $85,090. 35. (31) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 442, 35.5, 9, $77,040. 36. (10)KurtBusch,Chevrolet, 438,89.1, 9,$76,990. 37. (20)CaseyMears, Chevrolet, accident, 436,53.7, 7, $84,923. 38. (26) MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, accident,436, 48.6,6, $100,138. 39. (40)J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 436,30.4,0, $68,230. 40. (24)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet, accident, 403,53.1, 4, $83,630v 41. (39)TravisKvapil, Chevrolet, engine,280, 30.6, 3, $60,230. 42. (41) Timmy Hil, Chevrolet, brakes,30, 26.9,2, $56,230. 43. (38)ClayRogers, Toyota, overheating, 25,24.8, 1, $52,730. Race Statistics Ayorago SpeedofRaceWinner:70.725mph. TimeofRace:3hours,43minutes,7seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.344 seconds. Caution Flags:15for105 laps. LoadChanges:24among11drivers. Lap Leaders :J.McMurray 1-8;M.Kenseth 9; J.McMurray10-77; D.Gigiland78;J.McMurray7984; J.Gordon 85-167; J.McMurray168-169; J.Gordon 170-191;D.EarnhardtJr. 192-204;M.Kenseth205; D.Earnhardt Jr. 206-212;J.Logano213-256; J.Allgaier 257-260;TStewart 261-274; J.Logano275-290; D.Hamlin291-296;D.EarnhardtJr. 297-313;Ku.Busch 314-334;J.Gordon 335-358;D.Hamlin 359-420; C.Bowyer421-453; D.Earnhardt Jr.454-491;J.Gordon 492; TStewart 493-496; D.Earnhardt Jr.497-500. LoadersSummary(Driver, TimesLed, Laps Lod):J.Gordon,4timesfor130 laps;J.McMurray,4 timesfor84 laps; D.Earnhardt Jr., 5timesfor 79laps; D.Hamlin,2timesfor 68laps;J.Logano,2timesfor 60 laps; C.Bow yer, 1time for 33laps; Ku.Busch, 1 time for 21laps;TStewart,2 timesfor18 laps;JAllgaier,1 time for 4laps; M.Kenseth, 2timesfor 2laps; D.silliland, 1timefor1 lap. Chase Loaders: 1. J.Gordon,4,044; 2. R.Newman,4,041;3.J.Logano,4,040; 4. M.Kenseth, 4,039; 5.D.Hamlin,4,037;6.C.Edwards,4,024;7.B.Keselowski,4,013; 8. K.Harvick,4,011.

TENNIS WTA WTAChampionships Sunday atSingapore Championship SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates, def.Simona Halep(4), Romania, 6-3,6-0.

NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPDT

EaclernConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA

Montreal

8 9 8 10 7 7 8 9

Tampa Bay Detroit Boston Ottawa Florida Toronto Buffalo

5

7 5 4 4 2 3 2

1 3 2 5 2 2 4 7

0 1 2 0 1 3 1 0

14 25 22 11 27 23 10 18 17 10 26 24 9 17 15 7 10 16 7 21 25 4 11 29

MetropolitanDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.Y.Islanders 8 6 2 0 12 32 27 Washington 8 4 2 2 10 25 19 NewJersey 8 4 2 2 10 25 25 Pittsburgh 7 4 2 1 9 25 19 Columbus 8 4 4 0 8 23 25 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

WesternConference Central Division L OT 1 2 2 1 2 2 2 0 3 1 4 3 5 0

Pls GF GA 12 19 16 11 22 14 10 29 29 8 19 6 7 16 15 7 20 29 6 15 21

GP W L OT Anaheim 8 7 1 0 Los Angeles 8 6 1 1 Calgary 10 5 4 1 Vancouver 8 5 3 0 SanJose 9 4 4 1 Arizona 7 3 3 1 Edmonton 8 3 4 1

Pls GF GA

Nashville Chicago Dallas Minnesota St. Louis Colorado Winnipeg

GP W 8 5 8 5 8 4 6 4 7 3 9 2 8 3

Pacific Division

14 29 15 13 22 12 11 26 22 10 27 26 9 28 27 7 18 25 7 23 32

Sunday'sGames Winnipeg 2, Colorado1, DT Los Angele5, s Columbus2 Chicago2, Otawa1 SanJose4, Anaheim1 Vancouver4,Washington2 Today'sGames MinnesotaatN.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. Montrealat Edmonton,6:30 p.m. Tuecday'sGames MinnesotaatBoston, 4p.m. Winnipegat N.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. Los Angeleat s Philadelphia, 4p.m. NewJerseyat Pittsburgh,4 p.m. Ottawaat Columbus, 4p.m. BuffaloatToronto, 4:30p.m. Ariz onaatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Anaheim atChicago,5:30 p.m. St. Louisat Dallas,5:30p.m. SanJoseat Colorado, 6p.m. Montrealat Calgary, 6p.m. CarolinaatVancouver, 7p.m. Leaders ThroughSaturday'sGames TylerSeguin,Dal CoreyPerry,Anh SidneyCrosby,Pit RyanGetzlaf, Anh JohnTavares, NYI JasonSpezza, Dal Jakub Voracek,Phi 9tiedwith10pts.

GP 8 8 7 8 8 8 8

G A P TS 6 7 13 9 3 12 5 7 12 3 9 12 3 8 11 2 9 11 2 9 11

DEALS Transactions FOOTBA LL National Football League WASHIN GTON REDSKINS — Signed S Akeem Davis fromthepractice squad.ReleasedSJamarca Sanford. HOCKEY

National HockeyLeague

COLUMBU SBLUEJACKETS—ActivatedGCurtis

McElhinney off injured reserveand DRyanMurrayoff the injurednon-rosterlist. AssignedGAntonForsberg and FAlexander Wennbergto Springfield (AHL). TORONTOMAPLELEAFS— SentD StuartPercy to Toronto (AHL).

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd WsUhd Bonneville 28 4 95 199 118 The Daffes 395 1 3 6 83 8 38 2 McNary 5 9 8 114 839 325 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Btlhd WsUhd Bonneville1,149,336185,868 322,340 129,060 The Daffes770,213 132,831 252,509 99,512 JohnDay 647,178 115,699 195,784 74,383 McNary 603,713 108,459 203,488 72,509


MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014• THE BULLETIN

B3

Roet is er er's ms ea s teeers The Associated Press

NFL ROUNDUP

Bengals 27, Ravens 24: Andy

PITTSBURGH — Ben Roethlis-

Dalton made up for his two sec-

berger set franchise records with 522 yards passing and six touch-

ond-half turnovers by scoring on a down pass to Luke Willson with 1-yard sneak with 57 seconds left, 47 seconds left. It's the third downs and the Pittsburgh Steelers rallying Cincinnati to a win over straight year Wilson has brought raced by the Indianapolis Colts 51- Baltimore that tightened the AFC the Seahawks (4-3) back from a 34 on Sunday. North race. second-half deficit to beat the PanRoethlisberger's yardage total Lions 22, Falcons 21: LONDON thers on the road. was the fourth highest in NFL his- — Matt Prater kicked a 48-yard Patriots 51, Bears 23: FOXBORtory. He became the first player to field goal on the last play of the OUGH, Mass.— Tom Brady threw go over 500 yards passing twice as game, lifting Detroit after trailing five scoring passes and streakthe Steelers (5-3) won consecutive by 21 points. Prater capped a sec- ing New England crammed three games for the first time this season. ond straight late winning drive for touchdowns into the last two minAntonio Brown caught 10 pass- the Lions (6-2), who also rallied to utes of the first half. es for 133 yards and two scores. beat the Saints last week. Vikings 19, Buccaneers 13: Heath Miller caught seven passes Cardinals 24, Eagles 20: GLEN- TAMPA, Fla. — Anthony Barr for 112 yards and the clinching TD DALE, Ariz. — Carson Palmer forced a fumble on the first play of with 5:14 remaining. lofted a 75-yard touchdown pass overtime and returned it 27 yards Andrew Luck passed for 400 to rookie John Brown with 1:21 to toscoreforM innesota. yards an d t h r e e t o uchdowns, play to give Arizona a stunning Chiefs 34, Rams 7: KANSAS but also threw two interceptions. victory in a matchup of two of the CITY, Mo. — Jamaal Charles ran NFL's four one-loss teams entering for two touchdowns, Knile Davis He handed the Steelers a safety when he was called for intentional

this week.

Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger

grounding in the end zone midway

passes in the fourth quarter of Sunday's game

through the fourth quarter.

Seahawks 13, Panthers 9: CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Russell

Don Wright/The Associated Press

turned for touchdowns, costly mistakes that helped Miami win. Bills 43, Jets 23: EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Kyle Ortonthrew

four touchdown passes and Buffalo forced six turnovers, three each

by Geno Smith and Michael Vick. Browns 23, Raiders 13: CLEVELAND — Brian Hoyer threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Andrew

Hawkins early in the fourth quarter and Cleveland avoided asec-

ond straight embarrassing loss. Texans 30, Titans 16: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Arian Foster ran for 151 yards and two touchdowns

and also caught a pass for a score in Houston's 200th game.

Saints 44, Packers 23: NEW ORLEANS — Drew Brees completed 27 of 32 passes for 311 yards and

er score and Kansas City trounced threetouchdowns, and New Orletheir cross-state rival. ans ended Green Bay's four-game Wilson threw a 2 3-yard touchDolphins 27, Jaguars 13: JACK- winning streak.

Also on Sunday:

against Indianapolis in Pittsburgh.

returned a kick 99 yards for anoth-

SONVILLE, Fla. — Rookie Blake Bortles had two interceptions re-

NFL SCOREBOARD American Conference

Summaries Sunday'sGames

East

Cardinals 24, Eagles 20 Philadelphia Arizona

7 0 10 3 — 2 0 0 7 7 1 0 — 24 First Quarter

Phi — Maclin 21 passfrom Foles(Parkeykick),

4:39.

SecondQuarler

Ari — Ellington1 rnn(Catanzarokick),13:45. Third Quarler Ari — Fitzgerald 80passfromPalmer (Catanzaro kick), 14:07. Phi — FGParkey54, 7:19. Phi — Maclin 54 passfrom Foles(Parkeykick),

NewEngland Buffalo Miami N.Y.Jets

W 6 5 4 1

L 2 3 3 7

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .7 5 0 .6 2 5 .5 7 1 .1 2 5

Ari — Jo.Brown75passfromPalmer (Catanzaro kick), 1:21. A—61,789.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Pnnts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Timeof Possession

Phi Ari 27 17 5 21 400 26-110 23-71 4 11 32 9 2 -25 3 - 16 1-26 0-0 0 -0 2 - 58 36-62-2 20-42-0 0-0 0-0 6-48.0 8-42.9 1-1 1-1 11-103 10-95 31;10 28:50

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Philadelphia: McCoy21-83,Foles 2-14, Pol3-13. k Arizona:Ellington 23-71. PASSING —Philadelphia: Foles36-62-2-411. Arizona: Palmer20-42-0-329. RECEIVING —Philadelphia: Maclin 12-187, J.Mat thews6-47,Cooper5-88,Ertz5-48,McCoy 3-14, Celek2-8, Huff 1-12, Maehl 1-6, Polk 1-1. Arizona:Fitzgerald 7-160,Jo.Brown5-119, Ellington 3-14,Carlson2-16, Hughes2-13, Ja.Brown 1-7. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.

Browns 23, Raiders13 Oakland Cleveland

0 6 0 7 — 13 8 3 0 1 4 — 23 First Quarter Cle — FGCundIff 52,9:54. Cle — FGCnndiff 33,2:28.

SecondQuarler

Cle — FG Cnndiff 26,5:46. Oak— FGJanikowski46,1:50. Oak— FGJanikowski38,:00.

Fourlh Quarler Cle — Hawkins 4 passfrom Hoyer (Cundiff kick),

14:17. Cle—Tate 5 run(Cundiff kick), 2:26.

Oak —Holmes10passfromCarr(Janikowskikick),

:07. A—67,431.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards

Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

D ak

Cle 19 15 3 87 306 22-71 25-39 3 16 267 4-24 2-7 1-21 0-0 0 -0 1 - 35 34-56-1 19-28-0 3-12 1-8 7-44.0 7-46.3 4-2 1-0 8 -54 6 - 30 34:52 25:08

L 3 4 6 7

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .6 2 5 .5 0 0 .2 5 0 .1 2 5

4- 0 -0 2 - 2-0 1 -2-0 1 - 4-0

2- 2 -0 3 -1-0 3 -1-0 0 -3-0

4-2-0 2-3-0 3-2-0 1-4-0

2-0-0 3-0-0 1-1-0 0-3-0

Cincinnati Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland

PF PA

SecondQuarler

1 - 3-0 1 - 3-0 2-4-0 0-2-0 1-2-0 1 -3-0 0 -4-0 1-5-0 0-2-0 0-2-0

0 0 0

.6 2 5 .6 2 5 .7 51

W L 6 1 5 3 4 3 0 7

T 0 0 0 0

P ct .8 5 7 .6 2 5 .5 7 1 .0 0 0

P F P A H o m e Away 2 2 4 14 2 5- 0- 0 1 - 1-0 2 0 5 14 9 3 - 1-0 2 -2-0 1 7 6 12 8 2 - 1-0 2 -2-0 1 0 5 18 1 0 - 4-0 0 - 3-0

AF C 4 - 0-0 4 -2-0 3 -2-0 0 -6-0

MFC 2 -1-0 1 -1-0 1 -1-0 0 -1-0

Di v 2-0-0 1-2-0 1-1-0 0-1-0

W 6 5 3 2

L 1 2 4 5

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .8 5 7 .7 1 4 .4 2 9 .2 8 6

PF PA

H ome Away M FC AFC 3- 1 -0 3 - 0-0 4-1-0 2-0-0 4 - 0-0 1 -2-0 3-2-0 2-0-0 2 - 1-0 1 -3-0 2-4-0 1-0-0 2 - 2-0 0 -3-0 0-4-0 2-1-0

196 147 203 156 154 169 151 183

Div 1-0-0 2-0-0 1-2-0 0-2-0

South W L T P c t PF PA 3 4 1 .4 3 8 167 208 3 4 0 .4 2 9 199 188 2 6 0 .2 5 0 192 221 1

6

0

H ome Away M FC AFC D i v 2 - 2-0 1 -2-1 3-2-0 0-2-1 1-0-0 3 - 0-0 0 -4-0 3-3-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 2 - 2-0 0 - 4-0 2-4-0 0-2-0 2-0-0 0 - 4-0 1 - 2-0 0-5-0 1-1-0 0-3-0

.1 4 3 133 223

North Detroit

GreenBay Chicago Minnesota

NYJ—FGFolk 55,:00.

3 3 3

5 5 4

East

Carolina NewOrleans Atlanta TampaBay

Buf — Summers2 run(Carpenter kick),11:50. Buf — FGCarpenter 53,6:16. NYJ —Ivory 2rnn(Folkkick),1:50.

W L T Pct 4 2 1 .6 4 3

National Conference Dallas Philadelphia N.Y.Giants Washington

Detroit Atlanta

NYJ—Ivory 2run(Folkkick),14:22.

West Denver SanDiego Kansas City Oakland

Lions 22, Falcons 21

Miami Jacksonville

14 10 6 13 — 43 0 17 0 6 — 2 3 First Quarler

Div Buf — Woods22 passfromOrton (Carpenter kick), 2-1-0 2-1-0 9:37. Buf — Smith 1 passfrom Orton(Carpenter kick), 1-1-0 0-2-0 4:36.

H ome Away A FC MFC D i v 3 - 1-0 2 - 2-0 5-2-0 0-1-0 3-0-0 2 - 1-0 2 -3-0 3-2-0 1-2-0 1-1-0

250 187 185 166 137 202 118 218

Dolphins27, Jagnars13

Buffalo M.y. Jets

Third Quarter Buf — FGCarpenter 36, 8:31. Buf — FGCarpenter 29,1;11. North Fourlh Quarler Buf — Chandler 12 passfrom Orton (Carpenter PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC D i v 161 164 3 - 0-1 1 -2-0 3-2-0 1-0-1 2-0-0 kick), 14:11. Buf — Watkins 61passfromOrton (kick failed), 217 131 3 - 1-0 2 -2-0 2-3-0 3-0-0 2-2-0 205 196 3 - 1-0 2 -2-0 4-2-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 9:46. NYJ—B.Powell 3 run(passfailed), 4;06. 163 152 3 - 1-0 1 - 2-0 3-3-0 1-0-0 1-2-0 A—78,160.

W L T Pct P F P A H o m e Away MFC A F C D i v 6 2 0 .7 5 0 1 6 2 12 6 3 - 1-0 3 - 1-0 5 -1-0 1 -1-0 2-0-0 5 3 3 5 3 5

0 0 0

West W L T Pc t PF PA Arizona 6 1 0 .85 7 164 139 S an Francisco 4 3 0 . 5 71 158 165 Seattle 4 3 0 .571 172 150 St. Louis 2 5 0 .28 6 136 210

Thursday'sGame Denver35,San Diego21 Sunday'sGames Detroit22,Atlanta21 Kansas City34,St.Louis 7 Houston30,Tennessee16 Minnesota19,TampaBay13,OT Seattle13,Carolina9 Cincinnati27,Baltimore24 Miami27,Jacks onvile 13 NewEngland51,Chicago23 Buffalo43,N.Y.Jets23 Arizona 24, Philadelphia20 Cleveland23,Oakland13 Pittsburgh 51,lndianapolis34 NewOrleans44,GreenBay23 Open: N.Y.Giants,SanFrancisco Today'sGame Washington atDallas,5:30p.m.

H ome Away 4 -0-0 2 -1-0 2 - 1-0 2 -2-0 2 - 1-0 2 -2-0

M FC AFC 4-0-0 2-1-0 3-2-0 1-1-0 3-2-0 1-1-0 1 - 3-0 1 - 2-0 2-4-0 0-1-0

Thursday,Dct. 30 NewOrleansatCarolina,5:25p.m. Sunday,Nov.2 Arizona atDallas,10a.m. Philadelphia atHouston,10 a.m. NYJetsatKansasCity,10a m. Washington at Minnesota, 10a.m. TampaB ayat Cleveland,10am. JacksonvileatCincinnati,10 a.m. SanDiegoat Miami,10a.m. St. LouisatSanFrancisco,1:05p.m. OaklandatSeattle,I:25p.m. DenyeratNewEngland,I:25 p.m. BaltimoreatPitsburgh,5:30p.m. Open:Atlanta,Buffalo, Chicago,Detroit, GerenBay, Tennes see Monday,Nov.3 Indianapoliat s N.Y.Giants, 5:30p.m.

SecondQuarler Min — FGWalsh46,: 00. Div Third Quarter 1-0-0 Min — Jennings 17 passfrom Bridgewater (Walsh 1-1-0 kick), 7:09. 0-1-0 Fourlh Quarler 1-1-0 TB — FGMurray54, 14:12. TB — FGMurray45, 7:19. TB — Seferian-Jenkins7passfromGlennon(Murray kick),2;02. Min — FGWalsh38,:00. Overtime Min — Barr 27fumble return, 14:43. A—56,577.

AH TimesPDT

Steelers 51, Colts 34

Patriots 51, Bears23

Indianapolis Pittsburgh

Chicago f fewEngland

3 17 14 0 — 34 7 28 7 9 — 6 1

0 7 8 8 — 23 7 31 7 6 — 6 1

First Quarter First Quarler NE — Gronkowski 6 passfrom Brady(Gostkowski Pit — Wheaton18passfromRoethlisberger(Suishkick), 9:41. am kick),7:13. SecondQuarter SecondQuarter NE— FG Gostkowski23,14:57. Pit—Bryant5 passfromRoethlisberger(Suisham NE — Wright1 passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), kick), 14:57. 8:09. Pit — Gay 33 interception return(Suishamkick), Chi — Forte 25 pass fromCutler (Gouldkick), 14:16. 5:32. Ind—Allen 21passfromLuck (Vinatieri kick), NE — Gronkowski 2 passfrom Brady(Gostkowski 11:36. kick), 1:52. Seahawks13, Panthers 9 Pit — A.Brown8 passfrom Roethlisberger (SuishNE — LaFeff9 passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), 1:07. Seattle 0 3 3 7 — 1 3 am kick),8:33. Pit — A.Brown47passfrom Roethlisberger(SuishNE — Ninkovich 15 fumble return (Gostkowski Carolina 3 3 0 3 — 9 am kick),5:08. kick),:55. First Quarter Ind — H i l t on 28 pass from Luck (Vi n ati e ri ki c k), Third Quarler Car—FGGano31, 6;21. 1:56. NE — Gronkowski 46 passfromBrady(Gostkowski SecondQuarler Ind — FGVinatieri 23,:00. kick, 12:42. Car — FGGano26,13:23. Third Quarler hi —Bennett 20passfrom Cutler (Rosario pass Sea —FGHanschka58, 11:00. Pit — B r yant 2 pass from R oe thl i s berger (Sui s ham from Cutler),:54. Third Quarler kick), 9:59. Fourth Quarter Sea —FGHauschka29, 7:13. Ind — Bradshaw12run(Vinatieri kick),3:38. NE— FGGostkowski27,9:59. Fourlh Quarler Ind — M onc ri e f 31 pass from Luck (Vi n ati e ri ki c k), Chi — Je ffery10 passfromCutler (Fortepassfrom Car—FGGano46, 4:37. Cutler),5:16. Sea —Willson 23 passfromWilson (Hauschka 2:35. Fourth Quarter NE— FGGostkowski39,2:09. kick),:47. Pit — Teamsafety,12:34. A—68,756. A—74,042. Pit —Miler11 passfromRoethlisberger (Suisham Chi NE S ea C a r kick),5:14. A—62,479. First downs 27 32 First downs 19 17 TotalNetYards 3 84 48 7 TotalNetYards 3 10 266 Ind Pit Rushes-yards 26-153 32-122 Rushes-yards 26-119 31-114 26 34 Passing 2 31 36 5 Passing 1 91 15 2 First downs TotalNetYards 4 48 6 3 9 PuntReturns 1 -10 3 - 57 1-0 1-0 PuntReturns 10-63 32-117 KickoffReturns 5-94 0-0 KickoffReturns 2 -73 3 - 99 Rushes-yards 0-0 1-0 3 85 5 2 2 Interceptions Ret. InterceptionsRet. 1 -24 1 - 27 Passing Punt Ret u rns 1 -16 3 1 6 Comp-Att-Int 21-35-1 33-38-0 Comp-Att-Int 20-32-1 12-22-1 5 -122 2 - 15 Sacked-Yards Lost 3 -18 1 - 11 1 -8 3 - 1 9 KickoffReturns Sacked-Yards Lost 0 -0 2 - 3 3 Punts Ret. 4-47.3 1-46.0 Punts 3-40.0 2-39.0 Interceptions 1-1 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 26-45-2 40-49-0 Fumbl e s-Lost 2-1 4-1 Fumbles-Lost 2-15 0-0 Penalties-Yards 5 -41 7 - 38 Penalties-Yards 7 -41 4 - 20 Sacked-YardsLost Pnnts 3-51.0 3-29.7 Time ofPossession 27:17 32:43 Timeof Possession 29:00 31:00 1-0 2-2 Fumbles-Lost Penal t i e s-Yards 5-43 10-59 INDIVIDUAL ST AT I S TICS INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 20:17 39:43 RUSHING —Chicago:Forte19-114, Carey6-33, RUSHING —Seatlle: Lynch14-62,Wilson6-35, Time ofPossession Cutler1-6.NewEngland: Gray17-86,Vereen5-22, Michael 4-12,Turbin2-10. Carolina: Stewart16-79, INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS J.White 6-17,Brady2-0, Garoppolo1-(minus1), Newton12-24, Ogbonaya1-9, Avant1-1, Reaves RUSHING — Ind ianapolis: B radshaw 6-35, Luc k Wright1-(minus 2). 1-1. PASSING —Chicago:Cutler 20-30-1-227,ClauPASSING —Seatlle: Wilson20-32-1-199. Car- 3-26, Herron1-2. Pittsburgh:Bell 24-92, Blount 6-21, A.Brown1-5,Roethlisberger t-(minus1). sen 1-5-0-22.NewEngland: Brady30-35-0-354, olina: Newton 12-22-1-171. PASSING — Indianapolis: Luck26-45-2-400. Garoppol3-3-0-22. o RECEIVING —Seaffle: Baldwin 6-61, Turbin Pittsburgh: Ro e thl i s berger 40-49-0-522. RECEIVING —Chicago: Bennett6-95, Forte 3-32, Lockette2-22, Richardson2-20, Kea rse 2-15, RECEIVING — Indi a napol i s: Moncrief 7-113, 6-54, Jeffery 5-59, Marshall 3-35, Rosario 1-6. Norwood 2-13, Wilson1-23, Helfet1-11, Lynch1-2. Carolina: Benjamin4-94, Cotchery3-33, Stewart Bradshaw7-52, Hilton 6-155,Whalen2-23, Nicks New England:LaFell 11-124,Gronkowski 9-149, 1-27, Allen 1-21,Herron1-5, Fleener1-4. Pitls- Wright 7-61,Vereen3-23, Amendola2-5, Edelman 3-15, Olsen 1-16,Dickson1-13. burgh:A.Brown10-133, Miler7-112, Bell6-56,Bry- 1-14. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. ant5-83,Wheaton5-56,Moore2-33,Johnson2-22, MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None. Blount2-11,Heyward-Bey1-16. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Ind —FGVinatieri 31,11:56.

0 1014 3 — 27

0 3 3 7 — 13 SecondQuarler Mia — Delmas81interception return (Sturgis kick), 14:46. Jax — FGScobee30, 6:28. Mia — FGSturgis 43,:58. Third Quarler Mia — Gnmes22 mterception return(Sturgis kick), 12:16. Jax—FG Scobee40, 7:55. Mia—Matthews 3 passfrom Tanehil (Stnrgis kick), 2:18. Fourlh Quarler Mia — FGSturgis 29, 3:54. Jax—A.Robinson48 passfromBodles(Scobee kick), 2:19. A—65,633.

M ia Ja x First downs 17 19 TotalNetYards 3 26 37 7 24-148 30-176 Rushes-yards Passing 1 78 201 2 -10 5 - 28 B uf M YJ PuntReturns 1 -32 2 - 52 First downs 12 22 KickoffReturns 2-103 1-0 TotalNetYards 2 80 31 2 InterceptionsRet. 32-67 33-175 Comp-Att-Int 16-29-1 18-34-2 Rushes-yards 3 -18 4 - 20 Passing 2 13 1 3 7 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-42 2-2 5-51.0 4-46.8 PuntReturns Pnnts 2-19 6 -144 0-0 1-1 KickoffReturns Fumbles-Lost 4 -71 0-0 7 -52 6 - 37 Interceptions Ret. Penalties-Yards Comp-Att-Int 10-17-0 20-44-4 Time ofPossession 27:37 32:23 4 -25 4 - 2 1 Sacked-YardsLost 6-41.5 5-45.2 Punts INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 1-0 4-2 Fumbles-Lost RUSHING —Miami: Miller 14-78, Tannehil 7-49 10-90 5-48, Dan.Thoma s4-18, Landry1-4.Jacksonville: Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession 27:43 32:17 D.Robinson18-108, Bortles6-48, Gerhart 4-10,Todman2-10. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS PASSING —Miami: Tannehill 16-29-1-196. RUSHING —Buffalo: Dixon 22-44, B.Brown Jacksonville:Bortles18-34-2-221. 7-15, Orton 2-6,Snmmers1-2. M.Y.Jets: Vick8-69, RECEIVING —Miami: Landry 3-23, Miler 3-21, Ivory13-43,Harvin4-28, B.Powell 4-28, C.Johnson M.Wall ace 2-59, Sims 2-51, Dan.Thomas 2-12, 3-7, Smith1-0. Hartline 1-19,Gibson1-7, Matthews1-3, Clay1-1. PASSING —Bulfalo: Orton10-17-0-238. N.y. Jacksonville:A.Robinson5-82, Hurns3-49, Shorts I I 3-41,Harbo r 2-27, Todman2-0, D.Robinson1-10, Jets:Vick18-36-1-153,Smith 2-8-3-5. RECEIVING —Buffalo: Watkins 3-157,Woods Lee1-9,Gerhart 1-3. 3-50, Smith2-5, Hogan1-14, Chandler 1-12. N.y. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Jacksonville:ScoJets:Decker7-40, Amaro 5-51, Harvin3-22, Kerley bee 48(BK). 2-25, C.Johnson 2-13, Owusu1-7. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Bengals 27, Ravens24

3- 0- 0 2 - 3-0 3 - 3-0 2 -0-0 2-1-0 Vikings19, Bnccaneers13 (DT) 0 - 3-0 3 - 2-0 2 -2-0 1 -3-0 0-1-0 0 8 7 3 6 — 19 1 - 2-0 2 - 3-0 3 -3-0 0 -2-0 0-2-0 Minnesota TampaBay 0 0 0 13 0 — 13

.6 2 5 2 2 2 19 1 .3 7 5 1 8 0 22 2 .3 7 5 1 3 9 17 3

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS

RUSHIMG —Oakland: McFa dden12-59,JonesDrew 6-8,Thompkins1-7, Olawale1-0, Carr2-(minus 3).Cleveland:Tate15-26, West7-11, Hoy er 2-1, Crowel1-1. l PASSING — Oakland: Carr34-54-0-328,McFadden 0-1-0-0, Schaub0-1-1-0. Cleveland: Hoyer 19-28-0-275. RECEIVING—O akland: Rivera 7-83, J.Jones 6-62, Holmes5-69,Reece5-34,Thompkins4-34, McFadden 4-26, Butler1-9, Jones-Drew1-6,D.Moore 1-5. Cleveland:Hawkins7-88,Cameron3-40,Gabriel 2-60,Austin2-34,Dray2-27, West1-10, Crowell 1-8, Tate 1-8. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.

H ome Away A FC MFC

South W Indianapolis 5 Houston 4 Tennesse e 2 Jacksonvile 1

2:22.

Fourlh Quarler Ari — FGCatanraro28,9:01. Phi — FGParkey20,1:56.

PF PA

238 177 178 165 174 151 144 228

Bills 43, Jets23

Min 22 3 32

TB 15 225 22-97 23-66 2 35 159 4 -25 2 - 17 3 -79 2 - 45 1-0 0-0 24-42-0 19-28-1 1 -6 5 - 12 8-44.8 7-43.1 0-0 2-1 6 -59 8 - 52 30:34 29:43

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Timeof Possession

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —Minnesota: McKinnon 16-83, Patterson1-10, Bridgewa ter 1-3, Asiata4-1. Tampa Bay:Martin10-27, Rainey8-25, Glennon3-13, James1-1,Herron1-0. PASSING —Minnesota: Bridgewater 24-42-0241. Tampa Bay: Glennon19-28-1-171. RECEIVING —Minnesota: Patterson 6-86, Ford 6-61,Asiata4-26,Jennings3-38,Charle.Johnson 2-18, Wright2-13, Mcignnont-(minus 1). Tampa Bay:Rainey6-41, Evans4-78, Seferian-Jenkins 3-26, MurphyJr. 2-11, Martin 2-(minus1), Jackson 1-13, Mvers1-3. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Minnesota: Walsh

56 (WL).

Chiefs 34, Rams7 St. Louis

Kansasciiy

7 0 0 0 — 7 0 10 10 14 — 34

Firsl Quarler SIL — Kendricks 1 passfrom A.Davis (Zuerlein kick), 11:56.

SecondQuarler KC—Charletsrun(Santos kick), 1200. KC—FG Santos 53,:01. Third Quarter KC — Davis 99kickoff return (Santoskick), 14:48. KC — FGSantos28, 8:46. Fourth Quarter KC — Charles36 run(Santoskick),14:18. KC — Davis 3rnn(Santoskick), 6:28. A—75,972.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

81L KC 13 23 2 00 36 1 19-84 34-143 1 16 21 8 2-42 42- 7 3 -68 1 - 99 0 -0 1 - 10 15-25-1 24-28-0 7-44 2-8 6-54.0 4-45.5 0-0 2-1 8 -68 7 - 5 1 24;22 35:38

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHIMG —St. Louis: Mason7-32, Cunningham4-27, Stacy5-17,Austin 2-7, A.Davis1-1. Kansas City:Charles13-73,Davis16-49, A.Smith 4-24,

Thomas1-(minus 3). PASSING —St. Louis: A.Davis 15-25-1-160. Kansas Ciiy:A.Smith24-28-0-226. RECEIVING —St. Louis: Stacy3-20, Britt 2-52, Bailey 2-33,Austin 2-12,Givens1-12, Cook1-11, Quick1-10,Cunningham1-8, Kendricks 1-1, Mason 1-1. Kansas City: Bowe6-64, Kelce4-45, Charles 4-44, Fasano4-19, Thomas3-17, Sherman1-24, Hammond Jr.1-9, D.Harris1-4. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—St. Louis: Zuerlein 38 (WR ).

0 0 10 12 — 22 14 7 0 0 — 21 First Quarter

Atl — Freeman 7 passfrom Ryan (Bryant kick), 9:25. Atl —Pascoe1 passfromRyan(Bryantkick), 2:53.

SecondQuarler Atl — S.Jackson1 run(Bryant kick), 3:45. Third Quarler Det — FGPrater 22,7;54. Det—Tate59 passfromStafford(Praterkick),4:38. Fourth Quarter Det — FGPrater 20,14:10. Det—Riddick 5 passfrom Stafford (pass failed), 3:56. Det — FGPrater 48,;00. A—83,532. First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Det At l 22 22 3 85 291 23-60 26-78 3 25 21 3 0 -0 1 - 20 0 -0 2 - 44 1-45 1-0 24-47-1 20-27-1 0 -0 2 - 15 3-41.3 4-38.3 2-0 3-0 8 -85 5 - 39 30:55 29:05

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Detroit: Bell 14-39,Stafford 3-9, Riddick 3-5, Collins 2-5, Winn1-2. Atlanta: S. Jackson18-60,Ryan 1-6,Freeman 3-5,Smith 3-5, Rodgers1-2. PASSING —Detroit: Stafford24-47-1-325.Atlanla:Ryan20-27-1-228. RECEIVING —Detroit: Riddick8-74,Tate7-151, Fuller 3-43, Ross3-31, Bell 2-22,Broyles1-4. Atlanta: White5-66,Jones4-58,Douglas3-42,Rodgers 3-28,Toilolo2-26,Freeman1-7, Pascoe1-1, DiMarco 1-0.

MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Saints 44, Packers 23 GreenBay Neworleans

10 6 0

7 — 23 10 6 1 4 14 — 44 First Quarter GB — Cobb70 passfromA.Rodgers(Crosbykick), Baltimore 0 6 8 1 0 — 24 Cincinnati 7 0 10 10 — 27 12:57. NO—Cooks4run(S.Grahamkick), 9:20. First Quarter Cin — Dalton1rnn (Nngentkick),10:01. GB — FGCrosby31,6:08. NO — FGS.Graham31,1:42. SecondQuarler Bal — FGTucker 45, 9:15. SecondQuarler Bal — FGTucker 50, 1:02. GB—FG Crosby49,13:08. N O—FG S.G ra ham29, 5:52. Third Quarler Cin — Bernard1run (Nugentkick), 956. GB—FG Crosby27,1:51. Cin — FGNugent32, 6:29. NO—FG S.Graham37,:00. Bal — Taliaferro10 rnn(Forsett rnn),1:58. Third Quarler NO — C ook s50 passfrom Brees(S.Grahamkick), Fourlh Quarler Cin — FGNugent33, 11:24. 5:35. Bal — Taliaferro 8run(Tuckerkick), 6:31. NO—J.Graham 22 passfrom Brees(S.Graham Bal — FGTucker 53, 3:59. kick), 2;06. Cin — Dalton1 rnn(Nngentkick),:57. Fourth Quarter A—55,711. NO — Hil 2passfromBrees(S.Grahamkick),9:51. GB — A.Rodgers14 run(Crosbykick),5:07. NO — Ingram21 run(S.Grahamkick), 3:16. B al Cin First downs 18 19 A—73,146. TotalNetYards 2 94 350 26-107 34-111 Rushes-yards GB NO Passing 1 87 23 9 First downs 23 28 2-17 1-6 PuntReturns TotalNetYards 4 91 49 5 5-122 3 - 93 19-89 31-193 KickoffReturns Rushes-yards 1 -5 2 - 1 7 Passing InterceptionsRet. 4 02 302 Comp-Att-Int 17-34-2 21-28-1 PuntReturns 0-0 0-0 1 -8 2 2 7 0 -0 0-0 Sacked-Yards Lost KickoffReturns 1-50.0 3-52.0 0 -0 2 - 10 Pnnts Interceptions Ret. 1-0 2-1 Comp-Att-Int 29-40-2 27-32-0 Fumbles-Lost 7 -51 6 - 4 0 Sacked-YardsLost 4-24 2-9 Penalties-Yards 0-0.0 0 -0.0 Timeof Possession 29;16 30:44 Punts 1-1 1-1 Fumbles-Lost 8 -84 4 - 35 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Penalties-Yards RUSHING —Baltimore: Forsett17-68, Taliaferro Time ofPossession 28:21 31:39 7-27, Flacco 2-12. Cincinnati: Bernard16-45,Sanu 2-27, Hill 10-25,Dalton6-14. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS PASSING —Baltimore: Flacco 17-34-2-195. RUSHING —GreenBay: Lacy 13-59, A.Rodgers 2-21, Starks 2-5, Harris 2-4. NewOrleans: Ingram Cincinnati:Dalton21-28-1-266. 24-172, Cadet1-7, Brees1-6, Cooks1-4,Lorig 2-3, RECEIVING —Baltimore: Campanaro3-40, SmithSr.3-35, Forsett3-17,Taliaferro 2-42,Gilmore Johnson 2-1. 2-23, Aiken 2-15, Juszczyk1-21,M.Brown1-2. CinPASSING —Green Bay: A.Rodg ers 28-39-2cinnali:Sanu5-125, Gresham4-34, Hil 4-28,Little 418, Flynn 1-1-0-8. NewOrleans:Brees27-32-03-42, Tate 2-30, Bernard 2-2, Hewitt1-5. 311. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. RECEIVIN G— GreenBay:Lacy8-123,D.Adams 7-75, Cobb5-126, R.Rodgers4-58, Nelson 3-25, Quarl ess2-19.NewOrleans:Cooks6-94,J.Graham Texans 30, Titans16 5-59, Stills4-57,Colston4-49,Cadet 4-40, Lorig 1-5, I n gram1-3, Hil 1-2,Johnson1-2. Houston 0 13 14 3 — 30 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. 3 0 6 7 — 16 Tennessee First Quarter Ten —FGSuccop35,10;23. NFL LEADERS SecondQuarler Week8 Hou —FGBullock 30,7:36. LEADING SCORERS Hou —Foster 34run(Bnllock kick), 6:00. MDMKICK ERS Hou—FGBullock 29,:19. TD RusRec Ret X2 Pts Third Quarter G ates, SND 9 0 9 0 0 54 Hou —Foster 5passfromFitzpatrick(Bullock kick), Ju. Thomas, DFN 9 0 9 0 0 54 12:35. Cobb,GBY 8 0 8 0 1 50 Hou —Foster1 rnn(Buffockkick), 5:42. Bradshaw,IND 7 1 6 0 0 42 Ten —Walker 6 pass from Mettenberger (run D. Murray,DAL 7 7 0 0 0 42 failed),2:12. D em. Thom a s,DEN 6 0 6 0 1 38 Fourlh Quarler A. Foster,HOIJ 6 5 1 0 0 36 Hou —FGBullock 49,14;12. 3 0 0 36 Ten—Hunter12pass fromMettenberger(Succop M. Lynch,SEA 6 3 J. Nelson,GBY 6 0 6 0 0 36 kick),:56. T er. Wi l i a ms, DAL 6 0 6 0 0 36 A—69,143. D. Allen,IND 5 0 5 0 0 30 . Benjamin,CAR 5 0 5 0 0 30 H ou Ten K An. Brown,PIT 5 0 5 0 0 30 First downs 24 13 F orte, CHI 5 3 2 0 0 30 TotalNetYards 4 05 326 5 0 0 30 40-212 13-36 B. Marshall,CHI 5 0 Rushes-yards 4 1 0 0 30 Passing 1 93 29 0 L Miller, MIA 5 5 0 0 30 2 -18 2 - 5 7 G. Olsen,CAR 5 0 PuntReturns R oyal, SND 5 0 5 0 0 30 0-0 37 -7 KickoffReturns A. Smith,ATL 5 2 3 0 0 30 1-25 0-0 InterceptionsRet. 5 0 0 30 Comp-Att-Int 19-35-0 27-41-1 M. Wallace,MIA 5 0 5-34 2-9 Sacked-Yards Lost LEADING SC O R ERS 6-44.8 6-51.7 Pnnts ICKERS 0-0 1-1 Fumbles-Lost PAT FG Lg Pls 4 -35 6 - 6 1 Penalties-Yards GostkowskiNW , E tg/19 18/tg 53 73 Timeof Possession 35;22 24:38 Vinatieri, IND 24/24 14/14 50 66 Novak,SND 23/23 14/14 50 65 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS ucker,BAL 20/20 15/18 52 65 RUSHING —Houston: Foster 20-151,Blue 14- T D. Bai l e y, DA L 22/22 14/15 56 64 42, Fitzpatrick 4-12,Grimes2-7. Tennessee: San- Snisham,PIT 16/16 14/15 45 58 key 9-35,McCluster2-1, Greene1-1, Mettenberger Parkey,PHL 21/21 12/13 51 57 1-(minus1). atanzaro,ARI tf/ft 15/15 51 56 PASSING —Houston: Fitzpatrick 19-35-0-227. C D awson, SN F 17717 13/16 55 56 Tennessee: Mettenberger27-41-1-299. G ano, CA R 15/15 13/15 53 54 RECEIVING — Houslon:A.Johnson7-55,Hop- Bullock,HOU 17/17 12/14 55 53 kins 5-95,Foster4-22, D.Johnson2-33, Blue1-22. D. Carpenter,BUF tf/ft 14/16 58 53 Tennessee: N.Washington 4-68,McCluster4-39, Walsh,MIN to/10 14/16 55 52 Walker4-37, Hunter 4-31,Sankey4-25, Wright3-53, Folk, NYJ to/fo 13/14 52 49 LWashington 3-40, Hagan1-6. Forbath,WA S 16/17 ft/12 49 49 MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. Hauschka,SEA 16/16 ft/12 48 49 Stnrgis,MIA 16/16 ft/14 51 49 Crosby,GBY 23/23 8/9 55 47


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

O M M U N IT Y BASKETBALL BEND HIGHCOBO GIRLS TRYOUTS: Tryouts for the Bend High COBO girlsyouth teams; Grades 5-6 tryout on Nov. 4; Grades 7-8 tryouts onNov. 6;All tryouts run from 7-8:30p.m;free;;Bend High School,230 NE Sixth St.; 541-383-6290 or allison.gardnerO bend.k12.or.us COBO MV BOYSHOOPS TRYOUTS: Tryouts for fifth-, sixth-, seventh-, and eighthgrade junior Cougar COBO Mountain View basketball teams; free; Grades 4-6, 6-7:30 p.m.onOct.29 and 3-5 p.m.on Nov.2. Grades7-8,7:30-9 p.m .onOct.29 and 5-7 p.m. onNov. 2.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; 541-383-

6360 or creid©bendcable.com MOUNTAINVIEW GIRLS COBO TRYOUTS: Mountain View Girls Basketball will hold COBO team tryouts for girls in grades 5-8 that reside in the MVHSattendance area. At the Mountain View High School west gym. Parents need to sign tryout waiver and attend a parent meeting on Nov. 3. Pre-registration is available at www. mvgirlsbasketball.com; Nov. 3-4, 5-8 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or steve.riper© bend.k12.or.us SHOOTINGCLINIC: Nov.1; Shooting clinic presented by Gary Hull of Noah Basketball;

PORTS

clinic includes shooting arc and shot depth evaluations, training on obtaining optimal arc and depth, and a science of shooting presentation; free; noon; Redmond High School, 675 SW Rimrock Way; 541-9234800 or www.noahbasketball.com YOUTH GIRLSBASKETBALL OPEN GYM: Oct. 26;Bend High girls COBOwill be holding open gym Tuesday night for girls in grades 5-8; free; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; 541-383-6290 or allison .gardner@bend.k12.or.us HOOPS FORTHE HOUSE: Nov. 21;A basketball game between the Harlem Ambassadorsand the Ronald McDonald House Defenders to benefit the Bend Ronald McDonald House; $10-$12, $8-$10 for seniors, $8-$10 for students, $5 for children ages 4 and older, free for children 3 and younger; 6:30-8 p.m.; Trinity Lutheran Church & School, 2550 NEButler Market Road, Bend; 541-318-4950, tsherryO rmhcofcentraloregon.org or www.rmhccor. ejoinme.or g/hoops4house

E

Email events at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.

ND

BEND ENDURANCEDEVELOPMENT CLIMBINGTEAM: Mondays, Tuesdays;For ages 9 and older; developmental climbing team; $480; 4 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy,500 S.W. BondSt.,Suite142; www.bendenduranceacademy.org

RUMMIMG LORD'S ACRE DAY: Nov.1; Featuring a craft sale, baked goods,live music,a barbecue dinner, an auction, 10K run, 5K walk and more; proceeds benefit Powell Butte Christian Church projects; free admission, $15 in advance, $20 day of for race; registration required; 7:30 a.m. registration, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. events; Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 S.W. State Highway126; 541548-3066 or www.powellbuttechurch.com COCCTURKEYTROT: Nov. 22; Central Oregon Community College's15th annual Turkey Trot; day of race registration at Mazama Gym; 3-mile run or1-mile walk; $10 for the public and free for COCC and OSU Cascade students; 10 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7700 or bdouglass©cocc.edu CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUNS: Thursdays;Locations vary. Call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more info; 5:30 p.m.;Bend.

CLIMBIMG BEND ENDURANCE COMPETITION CLIMBINGTEAM: Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays;Competitive climbing team; $1,600; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy,500 S.W. Bond St.,Suite142; www.bendenduranceacademy.org

FLEETFEET WEDNESDAY RUNS: FleetFeet's Runthi sTown runsonWe dnesdays,usually 3-5 miles; free; 6 p.m.; Fleet FeetSports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 GROWLER RUN:Oct.30;Group runof3-5 miles on Thursday from Fleet Feet. Share a growler of beer from Growler Phil's after the run; free; 6 p.m.; Growler Phil's,1244 NW Galveston Ave,Bend,OR 97701,Bend; 541-390-3865 MOMS RUNNING GROUP: Rainor shine, 3 to 4.5 miles everyThursday,9:30 a.m; free; 9:30a.m.;FootZone,842 N.W .W allSt.,Bend; 541-317-3568 or angela@footzonebend.com

REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP: Tuesday group runs in Redmond. Meet at 314 SW Eleventh St. All abilities welcome; free; 6:30 p.m.; Downtown Redmond; www. runaroundsports.com RORK SATURDAY RUNS:Weekly run or walk with the Redmond Oregon Running Klub.Saturdaysat 8 a.m. Email Dan Edwards for more info; free; 8 a.m.; Downtown Redmond; rundanrun19©yahoo. com or www.raprd.org

TABLE TEMMIS

or lisa.nasr©me.com

TABLETENNIS EVENING PLAY: Monday evenings, hosted by BendTableTennisClub; drop in fees are $3 for adults and $2 for youths and seniors; 6-9 p.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Central Oregon (Bend), 500 NWWall St Bend, OR97701; www.bendtabletennis. com

MOVE ITMONDAYS:First and third Mondays of each month. Carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled. All other runs start and finish at FootZone. Usually 3-5 miles, paces 7-12 minutes per mile; free; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3173568 or melanie©footzonebend.com NOON TACORUN:Noon tacorunon Wednesdaysfrom FootZone. Order food from the TacoStand it will be ready upon

VOLLEYBALL OREGON VOLLEYBALLACADEMY MEETING:Oct. 27; Informational meeting about the Oregon Volleyball Academy and the upcoming club volleyball season. This is for girls currently in the 5th - 8th grades. Discussion will include programs, costs, schedules and tryout dates; free; 6:30-7:30 p.m.; Pappy's Pizzeria, 20265 Meyer Dr, Bend;www.oregonvolleyballacademy.com

your return; free(tacos notincluded); noon;

FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3173568 or teague@footzonebend.com PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP WITH MAX KING:Interval-based running group; Tuesdays; Locationsvary;free;5:30p.m .; FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3173568 or max@footzonebend.com

Monster

LEFT" Fawn Sybrant runs during the Little Monsters Mile in Bendon Sunday. BOTTOM LEFT: Matt Wright and Katie Ford run with their costumes, "cowboy and granny." BOTTOM RIGHT:Jessica Robinson

Continued from B1 Sunday's run was t he first ou t o f t h e

stroller for the younger Emerson girls. "They did great and ran the whole way," Rob Emerson said.

runs in costume. Nearly all of the more than 140 runners participated in some sort of

"Better than expected,

costume.

actually. I thought I'd have to carry them a

Photos by Meg Roussos i The Bulletin

little bit."

N early all o f t h e 142 finishers Sunday cruised through Bend's west-side neighborhoods in

.--"' MO,'ISINI.,

some sort of costume.

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet 1000's Of Ads Every Day

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Super heroes mingled with Groucho Marx, a

dragon, the Energizer Bunny, cowboys, cops,

• =- YOujjlifr---

and an entire prison

gang that was on the lam. One of the more m emorable f in i s h es featured the Grim

Reaper outrunning the devil and the Big and

Cl™assifjeds

Little Dippers.

www.bendbulletin.com

Times were k ept for those interested in

being fast and funny. Bend's Renee Baillie won the 10K in 36 min-

I

utes, 40 seconds. (Full results can be found at www.eclecticedgeracing.com.) For the most part, though, compet-

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young American Ninja Warriors: "It's just fun to get the kids running and involved." — Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastes@bendbulletin. com.

COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF

COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD Bowling

TRACK & FIELD COTC annOunCeS fall and Winter PrOgramS —TheCentral OregonTrack Club is now accepting signups for its youth track and field programs this fall and winter. For children ages6-10, the COTCCheetahs will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays, Nov. 3 through March19 at Summit High (through Feb.26) and Pilot Butte Middle School (March 6-19). TheCheetahs program will focus on the fundamentals of track and field and will include gamesand competition. COTCwill also sponsor a fall and winter junior program for athletes ages11-18. This middle andhigh school program will be held Mondays, Tuesdays,WednesdaysandThursdaysfrom Nov.3toFeb.12.A parentandathlete meeting for the junior program is scheduled for 5:30 p.m., today at Summit High's library. For more information on both programs, go to www.centraloregontrackclub.com or send anemail to centraloregoncheetahs@gmail.com.

RUGBY COCC rOIIS again —Alex Esselstrom scored a try and Dalton Chambers had aconversion and two penalty kicks to leadCentral Oregon Community College to a13-10 road victory Saturday over PugetSoundUniversity in Tacoma,Washington. "One of the best rugbymatchesI'veeverseen,"COCC coachWoody Bennettsaid.TheBobcatsarenow 3-0 with the win. COCC next plays OregonState in Corvallis on Friday. — Bulletin staff report

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014• THE BULLETIN

B5

NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION SEASON PREVIEW Western Conference NORTHWESTDIVISION OklahomaCity Portland 59-23

Qenver

54-28

Minnesota Ut ah

36-46

40-42

SOUTHWEST DIVISION

PACIFIC DIVISION L.A. Go l den L.A. Clippers S t at e Pho enix Sacramento Lakers 5 7-25

25-5 7

51-3 1

48-34

28-54

New Qallas Houston Memphis Orleans

San Antonio

27-55

62-20

49-33

54- 28

50-32

34-48

qflllllly I /

O ffense Defense C oaching Bench

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(out of 20) Haveto LaMarcus Were ruined KevinLoveis TheJazz Steve Ro o kie T h e NBA's Kings will Kobe Bryant is With Tim An o ther Cou ldn't Ano t her A n thony avoid falling Aldridge, by ba d out , No. 1 smartly kept Ballmer coach Steve biggest h o pe the ba ck and Duncan, Tony season cash inwith seasonin Davisis too far back Damian Lillard health and pick Andrew Gordon spent $2 Kerr takes surprise experience healthy, but Parker and where the another star which the already a in the West and a strong bad defense Wiggins and Hayward billion to o v er a la st season DeMarcus team could Manu Ginobili Mavs look during free question is star and when they starting five last season, coach Flip after their top buy the W arriors fe l l just Cousins and struggle again,still around like a solid agency; will whether will only open the will try to help and enough Saunders are players had Clippers, team that s hort of Rudy Gay got especially with and NBA team that need huge Grizzlies can get better, season t he Blazers i mprove- i n for a team been leaving and they is talented the thi s summer Steve Nash out Finals MVP just has too seasons find enough and sowill without b u ild on a ment in both hoping its recently, so might be and deep p layoffs with the U.S. for the season Kawhi Leonard many better from Dwight offense to his young MVP Kevin solid run to could land changes get they have a good e n ough to and will try national team with a back only getting t eams H oward and go with their team Durant, who the second them in the them moving good piece enough to take the next to find its will pay off injury and his better, they ahead of J a mes sup erb has a ro u nd last pl ayoffs in the right surrounded reward him step in the way in now for their NBA career in doubt have a chance them in the Harden in defense broken foot season direction b y youth with a title postseason squad for fifth title W es t th e rugged West

-"."

• When James left Miami for

w:-.-. Cleveland in the offseason, it set in motion afree agent frenzy

I

By Michael Leeo The Washington Post

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u4$,:', ja a:;-'r f„' 'hr

• • •

• •

eBron Jamesisoften described

Afte r the Miami Heat lost in • five games to theSanAntonio Spurs in iast season's NBAFinals, Chris Bosh assumed hewould chase a

as a freak of nature because of •

the influence his rare athletic

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feW m Ore tltleS Wlth JameS and DWyane

leSS ambltlOUS after

ge t ting spurned by • B osh • •• •••• • •

exceeds his ability to attack the rim

The Rockets let

C h andler ParSOnS oo

• l eave to sign with Dallas • and made amorefinancially conservative move by luring Trevor Ariza • from Washington.

Wad e — and anticipated taking a pay cut to make it happen. But whenJamesfled without much warning, the Heatscrambled to keep its remaining talent, and that meant giving • Bosh a five-year, $118million deal to '4:; ', make sure hedid not leave to form anothertalentedall-startrioin • Houston with Dwight Howard and JamesHarden.

basketball court. But his impact far

The Rockets • • c r e ated caP sPace • for a third star by deaiing JeremYLin and Omer • • Asik but becameslightly

.•

.

gifts and intelligence can have on the

or set up a teammate with a perfect

Th W. rd •

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pocket pass. Off the court, players

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then rePlaced • • o 4 Arizaand with Pierce, a10-time •

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take cues from him on how to

• •

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structure their contracts and

matc hed Ch a rlotte's • $63 mi l lion

•••• • • • • • •

build their individual brands, and ',

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eY Gordon Hayward • visited Cleveland asa The Tim• o restricted freeagent with berwolveswere • Loueenteredthe • , theh opehewoutd getan unsuccessfulatpersuadsummer thinking • • o f fer sheet. When the Cavaliers • i n g Golden State to surrender • his desire to leave • Kiay stalled to make aplay for • Thompson butknew Wiggins • ', J~m~~, the restrlcted free ~~~ld be headed thelr way, wlth the t hree-timeall-star o • a gentfoundawillingbid- • The • Cievelandlookingtoappease land in a bigger market oo Hornets der in Charlotte. • Ja mes. Love eliminated the need • o • such as NewYork, Chi• inst ead slgned fora big market becauseteam- • • cago, Boston or Los • Lance Stephen ing with James brought the • Angei es. •

companies look to him to sell the

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James proved in the offseason that he |il ' could alter the NBA like an agitated fault line, shaking up the foundations for more than half of the league's teams. Y ou may have heard by now, but . ' 5 , Qg "

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.

.

, .' ...,"::;::-:,:-; .":::

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James decided to leave the fiesta in

how that move helped Chris Bosh

make an extra $30 million, directed Paul Pierce toward Washington, and allowed the Minnesota Timber-

o

Miami to have a homecoming dance in Cleveland. You might not realize

Cavaliers took him No. 1 overall, Andrew Wiggins made a recruiting pitch for • James to return home. • Jamesmade nomentionof Wiggins in his first-person essay with Sports • •

wolves to rebuild after trading Kevin Love. The lasting effect of James' lat-

Six weeks later, the19-yearold was traded to Min• nesota to becomethe first top pick since Chris Webber •• • in 1993 to get traded without • ever suiting up for a regu- • lar-season gamewith the • tea m that drafted • •

On the nlght the

lllustrated.

est move will not be known for some time, but the tremors have been felt

from Ohio to Florida to California to

o o~

• • •

••

Massachusetts and nearly all parts in between, with almost 50 players

POWER RANKINGS

ATLANTIC DIVISION Brooklyn 44-38

37-45

25-5 7

19-63

48-34

33-49

56-26

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TOTAL (««f 20)

Cleveland indiana

SOUTHEAST DIVISION

CENTRAL DIVISION Philadelphia Chicago

Big- name

By Brian Toro nto Mahoney, The 48-34 Associated Press (2013-f4 records)

New York Boston

Eastern Conference

affected.

only players whosesummers were affected by James. Scotty HopsonandAlonzoGee • became trade pawns to help •• tea ms clear up cap room; they were passed on to four and • • thr e e teams, respectively, until both were finally waived.

• •

him.

••

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D etroit M i lwaukee M i ami W ashington Charlotte Atlanta Or l ando 29-53

15-67

54-28

44-38

43-39

38-44

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B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

T EE TO

Offseason update: Tetherow Golf Club By Zack Hall The Bulletin

This is the first installment

of a weekly Tee To Green feature in which we check in via

email with Central Oregon golf facilities for an offseason update. This week we contact-

ed Louis Bennett, head golf professional at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend.

Bennett, who grew up in Bend, has been helping to run Tetherow's golf operation for more than a year. This is what he had to say about the state of golf and about Tetherow, a

celebrated semi-private course that opened in 2008 in southwest Bend:

Q

• How was business in

• 2014'? • Tetherow had i ts b est

A• season to date in terms of both number of rounds and

revenue.

Q

• Were any changes of • note made to the facility

during the last year'?

A• room boutique-style hotel and Tetherow's version of • The addition of our 50-

a pub, The Row, were our two

major facility changes over the last offseason.

Q

• Are any changes and/or • improvements to the fa-

cility scheduled for 2015'?

already begun A•• We've some remodel work on Hole No. 17, increasing the

size and shape of the green. We plan to make similar changes to the seventh green, as well, and continue to add some waste bunker areas on some holes.

Q

• Much has been made • about n ew i n i t i atives

to grow the game (FootGolf, 15-inch holes, Speedgolf, etc.). What, if any, of those initia-

tives would you consider the most promising?

A • tually change the nature of our game (e.g., FootGolf • These initiatives that ac-

and 15-inch holes) will not have any effect in moving the needle to grow our game. I appreciate the efforts of the PGA

of America and fellow PGA professionals in trying to be creative, but I see those as fads

that are not sustainable and are completely new and separate games altogether (like Frisbee golf) that will have no contribution to the growth we

are actively seeking.

R EEN GOLF ROUNDUP

GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its THEGREENSATREDMOND weekly local golf results lislings andevents Ladies of theGreens, Oct. 21 calendar. Clearly legible items should be Fewest Putts faxed to the sporls deparlment, 541-385Flight A —1, Michelle Oberg,16. 2, LynneEk0831, emailed to sportsdbbendbulletfn.com, man,16. 3,LynneHolm,17.4,KayWebb,20. ormailedtoP.O.BoxBO20;Bend,OR97708. Flight 8 — 1,NormaCarter,17. 2,RuthBackup, 17. 3,VivienWebster,18. 4, LindaJohnston,18. Flight C — 1, PeggyRoberts, 17. 2, Dagmar Club Results Haussler,18.3, BobbieMoore, 20.4, Judi VanderBENDGOLFANDCOUNTRY CLUB pool, 20. Men'sDailyGame,Oct.16 Flight D — 1,AnitaEpstein,19. 2, KaeVelmeden, BestSide 20. 3,JackieHester,23. 4,Evelyn Kakuska,23. Men's Club,Oct.22 Firsl Flight(10handicaporless)—Gross: 1, SpencerSanvitale, 35. Nel:1, TomBaty, 33. 2, Devil's Ball, StrokePlay BrettEvert,33.5. 3,Jeff Puffinburger,34. 1, Rob Kimball/RonJondahl/GregShipley. 2, SecondFlight (11-14) —Gross:1(tie), Mike Mike Frier/Ted Brunot/GeneCartwright/Rich Blakely. Groat,38;JackSealock,38. Net:1,JimRodgers,31. 3,KenEnnor/KentLeary/GaryDuff /BobHaak. 2,MacRyder,32.5.3(tie),RonTokuyama,33;Jay Bennett,33. JUNIPER Third Flight (15 andhigher) —Gross:1, Joe Ladies Club,Och22 Miller, 43.Net:1, Gil Ward,32.5. 2(tie), Bill Cam pFive Clubs bell, 33.5;ChipCleveland,33.5. AFlight (0-26handicaps) —Gross:1, Rosie Cook,76. 2,ShanWattenburger, 88. Net: 1, Pam BROKEN TOP Garney,69.2(tie), JanCarver,72; JanetKing, 72. Central Oregon Winter Series, Oct.17 B Flight (27 andup)— Gross:1, Adrienne Better Ball Castle, 99. 2 (tie), CarolynHoughton, 103; Shar Firsl Flight — Gross:1, EricCarmichael/Ben Wanichek,103. Net:1, DarlaFarstveldt,71. 2, CherGrieb,64. 2, RogerEichor/DonOrrell, 65. 3,Zach eeJohnson,73. Lampert/JimMontgomery, 66. Net:1, Jeff Wilson/ LDs — 0-20: Rosie Cook.21-24:PamGarney. 25Eric Knapp, 63. 2 (tie), ScottBrown/DonOlson, 64; 31: Dea nnaCooper.32andhigher; ChereeJohnson. Scott Barton/HarryPaik, 64.4 (tie), PatHufer/Marc KPs — DeannaCooper, No.3. Beebe, 65;VerlSteppe/LeeDempsey,65. Birdies — RosieCook,Nos.10, 13, 18; Shan Second Flight—Gross:1, CraigJohannesen/ Wattenburger, No.12. CaseyJones,73. 2, Hector Vijarro/Kory Cagantine, Chip-ins —BarbSchreiber, No.5; DeannaCoo74. 3 (tie), TomMacDonald/Jim MacDonald, 77; per, No. 14. StinkyCowgil/Lyle Zurflu,77.Nek1, DeweySpringer/RonMeredith, 63.2, MikeWarshauer/DennisNevLOSTTRACKS eras, 64. 3,DaveBarnhouse/Steve Spangler, 66.4, Men's Club,Oct.15 MarkScott/RogerPalmer, 67. 1-2-3 BestBall Third Flight —Gross:1, PhilGarrow/Darrell Gross:1, Beau Johnson/Kim Kelenberg/Ed WilHjeresen,75. 2, Bill Daw/MikeKuykendall, 77.3, lard/AlDerenzis,158. 2, MikeReuter/SteveAnderson/ Tim Swo pe/ReedSloss,82. Nel:1rHerbParker/Gary Bob Killion/StanBrock, 171.3, DaveFiedler/Roger Johnson ,61.2,RonAnderson/Jim Wilcox,62.3, Bean/DaveBlack/Bill Cole, 178.4, ChuckGeschke/ RustyBodine/BobDeane, 66. 4, DebraWarren/Anne Dave Bryson/FrankSpernak/Keith Wood,185. Net:1, Goldner,67. Mike Reuter/Steve Anderson/BobKilion/Stan Brock, KPs —0-10 handicaps:DanFrantz, No.5. 11- 136;2,BeauJohnson/Kim Kegenberg/Ed Wigard/ 15: Bill Daw.16andhigher:TomHatch, No.2. Al Derenzis,137.3, DaveFiedler/Roger Bean/Dave Skins —Gross:1,Wilson/Knapp, No.8; Barton/ Black/BillCole,142.4, ChuckGeschke/DaveBryson/ Paik, No.18.Net:1, Meredith/Sprmger,Nos.7, 10; FrankSpernak/KeithWood,145. Orio/ Wickham,No.3;Wilson/Knapp,No.8. KPs —BilC lole,No.5;BeauJohnson,No.8; SteveAnderson, No.11; DaveFiedler, No.16. CROOKED RIVERRANCH Men'sClub, October22 Men's Club,Oct.21 Shamble Tombstone Gross: 1,BeauJohnson/Chuck Geschke,70. 2, 1, GaryOlds,16'1yr fromNo.2. 2, GaryJohn- Mike Reuter/Dave Bryson, 71.3, JoeWestlake/Jeff son, 163 tr/r from No.2.3, VeneDunham,33 yards Templ eton,73.4,SteveAnderson/RogerBean,74. from No.2. 4, JackMartin, 39yardsfromNo. 2. 5 5, Al Derenzis/Tom Archey,77.6, StanBrock/Dieter (tie), Bill Daw,holedout No. 1. HalJamison, holed Haussler,78.7, KimKeffenberg/BobKilion, 81. 8, out No. 1. 7,RogerProvost, 1'fromNo. 1. 8, Bob DaveBlack/FrankSpernak, 84. 9,Guy Inglis/Ed WilHoffoway,9'fromNo. 1. 9, Wylie Harreg,19'from lard, 90.10RichNikl/Big Cole,93. Nek1,Mike ReNo.1.10,PaulNemitz,32 yardsfromNo.1.11, Herb uter/Dave Bryson,57.2, StanBrock/Dieter Haussler, Parker,72yardsfromNo.1. 12, Bil Buit, 119yards 59. 3, Steve Anderson/Roger Bean, 61. 4 (tie), Kim from No.1.13,NickTrudeau,162yardsfromNo.1. Kellenberg/Bob Kilion, 62;Al Derenzis/TomArchey, 14, ChrisFerrara,200yardsfromNo.1.15, JoeGrif62; Dave Black/Frank Spernak,62. 7,BeauJohnson/ fin, 246yardsfromNo. 1. 16,TedCarlin, 365yards ChuckGeschke,63. 8(tie), JoeWestlake/Jeff Temfrom No. 1. 17, Dennis Glender, 271yardsfromNo. pleton, 64;RichNikl/Bill Cole, 64.10,GuyInglis/ 1. 18, JaySnavely, 275yardsfrom No. 1. 19Herb Ed Wilard,71. Koth,305yardsfromNo. 1. KPs —BeauJohnson, No.5; Jeff Temp leton, No. 16. DESERTPEAKS Thursday Men'sClub,Oct.16 MEADOW LAKES Best Ball Men's Association, Oct. 18 1, RobbieEarnest/Joe Stanfield/DonKraus, 58. Horse RaceResults 2, MikeFunk/Ge rry Ellis/DickPliska,59. 3, Dean 1, PatrickAndrade.2, SteveReynolds. 3, Dave Ditmore/Don Lupinacci/Val Paterson,65. Barnhouse. 4, LesBryan.5,Jeff Storm. KP —JoeStanfield. LD —DonLupinacci. SUNRIVER RESORT SundayGroupPlay,Oct.19 Men's Club,Oct.16 Blind Draw at Meadows Course Gross:1, KenBlack/DennyStory,151. 2,Spud Two NetBestBalls Miller/GaryBurtis,158. NetrI, SidBenjamin/Al Du1, ScottBrown/TorBjornstad/MikeSpaniol/Blind pont,136. 2,RichVigil/Gerry Ellis,140. Draw,128.2, DanWeybright,Tim Swezey/PatEchaKP —DennyStory. nis/Don Larson,129. LD — GaryHopson. Individual —Gross:1, DonOlson82.2, Scott SundayCouples, Oct. 19 Brown 84. Nek1, DaveLong69.2, TimSwezey70. Chapman KPs — HannesSpintzik, No.16. 1, ScottDitmore/Vicki Moore,332. 2,JimWyzard/ Skins —Gross:HannesSpintzik 3,GregCotton, Phyllis Rice,33.6. 3,Bruce/Jeanette Houck, 34. DonWright.Net:Virgil Martin2,TimSwezey2, Don Olson,GregCotton, DonWright, RandySchneider. EAGLECREST Men's Club,Oct.22 Women's Club,Oct. 21 at MeadowsCourse at RidgeCourse Two NetBestBalls Par 4s 1, DanWeybright/TimSwezey/DaveReynolds/ Firsl Flight — 1,SandyAustin, 40.2(tie), Al- Gerry Stearns,126.2, GrantSeegraves/Charlie Welice Gomm ol,40.5; KathleenMooberry,40.5; Carole nitz/Randy Schneider/Pat Echanis,129. Fhnn,40.5. Individual Gross: 1,DanWeybright 83.2, Second Flight — 1, SandraMartin, 41.5.2, GrantSeegraves,— JoeyDupuis,43.3,RitaJeff ries,45.4,NancyDolby, AllanCrisler,73. 83. Net:1, DaveReynolds69. 2, 46.5. KPs — CharlieWellnitz, No.4; Charlie Wellnitz, Men's Club,Oct.16 No.8;DanWeybright,No.13;DaveReynolds,No. at ChallengeCourse 16. Alternate Shot A Flight — 1,RickMangels/Ron Wolfe, 56.2, Kelly Paxton/JoeKosanovic,62. 3(tie) HankMcCauHole-In-One Report ley/HelmutBloo,65;TimSwope/DonWyat, 65;Jim Oct. 22 French/Reed Sloss, 65. 6,MarkScott/Jerry Volf, 67. LOSTTRACKS B Flight — 1, KenWalters/Dick Wald,61.2, Mike Reuter,Bend Ralf Schmidt/lanWalton-George, 63. 3 (tie) Daye No. 8.........................175 yards......................5-iron McKinney/MichaelMooberry,66; GaryStone/Ernie Brooks,66.4, Peter Brown/Terry Black,67.5, Don Greenma n/BillMcCugough,68. Calendar Men's Club,Oct.22 at ResortCourse The Bulletin welcomes contributions to Net Stableford its weekly local golf eventscalendar. Items A Flight — 1(tie)JimHawkes,33;Jerry Coday, shouldbe mailed to P.O.Box BO20,Bend, 33; TimSwope, 33. 4, RonWolfe, 32. 5 (tie), Fred OR 97708;faxed tothe sporls deparlment at Duysings,31;MikeBessonette,31.7, ReedSloss,29. 541-385-0831; or emailed to sportsdybendB Flight — 1,BiffMartin,40.2, DanMyers,38. buffetin.com. 3, PatMoore,36.4, DaveMcKinney,33. 5(tie), Dick CLINICSORCLASSES Wald, 32;DonGreenman,32.7,RonCox,31. OcL 30:PerformanceSeries Clinic attheTetherow

Golf Acad emy inBendbegins at6 p.m.Titleist PerformanceInstitute-certifiedfitnessinstructorsAdamHuyckeandChris Cooper,whoisaBendphysicaltherapist, will host aone-hourclinic onthesimilarities between the physicalrequirementsof golf andsking. Clinicwil include exercises, a PDFfile of all exercises,andbeverages.Costis $10andclasssizeis limited. Formore informatioor nto register: ccooper@aiweb.com. TOURNAM ENTS Oct. 31: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at Widgi Creek Golf ClubinBend.Shamble tournament beginswithan11a.m. shotgun.Two-personteams withnomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team. Cost is$30for professionals, $50for amateurs. Cost includesgrossand net skinscompetitions. Cart costsextra.All playersmustsignupbynoononthe Wednesday before the event. Toregister or for more information, call PatHufer, headproat CrookedRiver Ranch,at541-923-6343or email himat crrpat@ crookedriverranch.com . Nov. 7: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat AwbreyGlenGolf Clubin Bend.Beter-ball tournament beginswithan11 a.m.shotgun. Two-person teamswith nomorethan oneprofessional allowed per team. Cost is $30for professionals, $50for amateurs.Costincludesgrossandnet skinscompetitions. Cartcosts extra. All playersmustsign up by noon ontheWednesdaybeforetheevent.Toregister or for moreinformation, call PatHuffer,head proat Crooked River Ranch,at541-923-6343oremail him at crrpat@crooke driverranch.com. Nov. 8:TheTurkeyShootOpenatMeadow Lakes Golf Course inPrinevigeis abest-ball tournament for two-person teams. Event teesoffwith a9a.m.shotgun. Cost is$40plus$25 per-persongreenfee. Formore informatioor n to register,call theMeadowLakes pro shop at541-447-7113. Nov. 14: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at Lost Tracks Golf Clubin Bend. Scrambletournament beginswithan11a.m. shotgun.Two-personteams withnomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team. Cost is$30for professionals, $50for amateurs. Cost includesgrossand net skinscompetitions. Cart costsextra.All playersmust signupbynoononthe Wednesday beforetheevent. Toregister or for more information, call PatHuffer,headproat CrookedRiver Ranch,at541-923-6343or email himat crrpat© crookedriverranch.com .

Professional PGATour McGladreyClassic

Sunday At Sea IslandResorl, SeasideCourse St. SimonsIsland, Ga. Purse: $6.6million Yardage: 7zgg5;Par: 70 Final (x-wononsecondplayoffhole) x-R. Streb(500),$1,008,000 69-66-68-63—266 B. deJonge(245), $492,800 68-64-69-65—266 Will MacKenzie(245),$492,80065-68-65-68— 266 KenDuke(109),$220,500 67-69-66-66—268 RusselHenl l ey(109),$220,50068-63-68-69—268 Chris Kirk(109),$220,500 68-67-66-67—268 KevinKisner(109), $220,500 69-68-66-65—268 KevinChapeg(78), $156,800 67-67-70-65—269 FabianGomez(78), $156,800 67-66-68-68—269 AndrewSvoboda(78), $156,80066-66-66-71—269 MarkWilson(78),$156,800 67-66-69-67—269 AndrewPutnam(63), $123,200 68-67-66-69—270 HudsonSwafford(63), $123,20070-67-66-67—270 TonyFinau(56),$100,800 71-67-67-66—271 DavidLingmerth(56), $100,80068-67-70-66—271 DavidToms(56), $100,800 73-66-67-65—271 JamesHahn(52), $78,400 71-69-65-67—272 BenMartin(52),$78,400 70-68-65-69—272 SeanO'Hair (52),$78,400 69-71-64-68—272 Carl Pettersson (52), $78,400 68-67-69-68—272 Scott Piercy(52), $78,400 67-67-68-70—272 StuartAppleby(45), $46,760 71-67-66-69—273 Eric Axley(45), $46,760 67-70-68-68—273 DanielBerger(45), $46,760 68-69-69-67—273 Bill Haas (45), $46,760 6 9-66-69-69—273 Matt Kuchar (45), $46,760 67-70-68-68—273 John Peterson (45), $46,760 66-71-72-64—273 D.A. Points(45), $46,760 70-70-66-67—273 RorySabbatini (45),$46,760 67-70-66-70—273 N. Thomp son(45), $46,760 70-69-66-68—273 Cameron Tringale(45), $46,76068-68-67-70—273 StevenAlker (35), $29,058 69-67-71-67—274 ZacharyBlair(35), $29,058 71-68-68-67—274 TommyGainey(35),$29,058 67-73-68-66— 274 Chesson Hadley(35),$29,058 66-70-70-68—274 TomHoge(35),$29,058 70-68-68-68—274 SungJoonPark(35), $29,058 66-71-68-69—274 D. Summ erhavs(35),$29,058 68-68-68-70—274 StewartCink(35),$29,058 69-69-63-73—274 WilliamMcGirt (35), $29,058 68-67-68-71—274 RobertAffenby(27), $19,600 69-71-68-67—275 ChadCampbell (27),$19,600 68-68-71-68—275 BrianHarman(27), $19,600 65-67-73-70—275 Andrew Loupe(27),$19,600 71-69-67-68—275 DavisLoveIII(27),$19,600 71-68-70-66—275 WebbSimpson(27),$19,600 67-70-69-69—275 ShawnStefani (27),$19,600 66-69-71-69—275 AaronBaddeley (21), $14,075 67-73-66-70—276 MarkHubbard(21), $14,075 68-67-71-70—276 JohnHuh(21), $14,075 72-68-68-68—276 Jeff Overton (21), $14,075 70-69-69-68—276 Erik Compton(21),$14,075 65-70-70-71—276 BrendonTodd(21),$14,075 67-70-67-72—276 MarkAnderson(13),$12,544 70-70-67-70—277 JasonBohn(13),$12,544 71-67-67-72—277 Jon Curran(13),$12,544 70-70-69-68—277 DerekErnst(13), $12,544 68-67-70-72—277 PattonKizzire,$12,544 6 6 -71-70-70—277 Bill Lunde(13),$12,544 71-69-67-70—277

KyleReifers(13), $12,544 71-68-69-69—277 CamiloViffegas(13),$12,544 67-72-69-69—277 CoryWhitsett,$12,544 7 0 -70-66-71—277 Jerry Kelly(7), $11,872 70-68-69-71—278 CameronPercy (7), $11,872 68-70-70-70—278 AndyPope,$11,872 72-66-70-70 —278 JasonKokrak(4), $11,536 66-72-69-72—279 Justin Leonard (4), $11,536 72-65-72-70—279 MichaelThompson(4), $11,53665-71-67-76—279 RobertoCastro(2), $11,256 68-72-68-72—280 MartinFlores(2), $11,256 67-73-68-72—280 Justin Thomas (1), $11,088 74-66-67-75—282 Made Cut-DidNotFinish Martin Laird(1), $10,976 6 8 -71-71 210— BrianDavis(1), $10,472 71 - 68-72 211— BriceGarnett(1), $10,472 7 3-67-71 —211 LucasGlover(1), $10,472 7 3 -67-71 —211 AndresGonzales (1), $10,472 70-70-71—211 CharlesHowell ffl (1), $10,472 72-66-73—211 ScottPinckney(1), $10,472 68-71-72 —211 JohnRollins(1), $10,472 7 0 -67-74 —211 SteveWheatcroft (1), $10,472 67-73-71—211 RyanArmour (1), $9,800 6 7 -72-73 212— AdamHadwin (1),$9,800 7 0 -69-73 —212 Jim Renner (1), $9,800 66-74-72 —212 JohnsonWagner (1), $9,800 70-69-73 —212 NickWatney(1), $9,520 71 - 69-73 213— GonzaloFdez-Castano (1),$9,296 70-69-75—214 WheeKim(1), $9,296 71-69-74 —214 NickTaylor(1),$9,296 73-66-75 —214

ChampionsTour AT&TChampionship Sunday At TPC SanAntonio, ATSTCanyonsCourse San Anton lo Purse: $1.95million Yardage:6,923; Par 72 Final MichaelAlen(293),$292,500 70-65-66—201 MarcoDawson(172),$171,600 65-67-71—203 WoodyAustin (140),$140,400 68-65-71—204 68-67-70—205 ScottHoch(104),$104,325 TomPerniceJr. (104),$104,325 72-66-67—205 67-68-71 —206 Jay Haas (74), $74,100 Bernhard Langer (74),$74,100 71-66-69 —206 70-67-70—207 FredFunk(54),$53,625 74-65-68—207 Jeff Maggert(54), $53,625 67-67-73—207 WesShort,Jr. (54),$53,625 Kirk Triplett(54),$53,625 67-69-71—207 72-70-66—208 RoccoMediate(0), $40,950 69-71-68—208 Esteban Toledo(0), $40,950 70-72-67—209 Olrn Browne (0), $33,150 66-74-69 —209 ScottDunlap(0), $33,150 69-73-67 —209 LeeJanzen(0),$33,150 73-67-69—209 StevePate(0),$33,150 70-72-67—209 Gene Sauers(0),$33,150 67-73-70—210 GuyBoros(0),$23,563 67-74-69—210 Bart Bryant(0),$23,563 65-72-73—210 JohnCook(0),$23,563 67-72-71—210 TomLehman(0), $23,563 68-70-72—210 KennyPerry(0), $23,563 69-72-69—210 Willie Wood (0), $23,563 Tommy ArmourIff(0), $17,388 73-67-71—211 73-68-70—211 FredCouples(0), $17,388 67-76-68—211 GaryHaffberg(0), $17,388 72-67-72—211 Jeff Hart(0), $17,388 SteveLowery(0), $17,388 68-73-70—211 PeterSenior (0), $17,388 67-73-71—211 69-70-73—212 DougGarwood(0), $14,333 71-69-72 —212 John Inman (0), $14,333 74-72-67—213 Bill Glasson (0), $12,285 CoreyPavin (0), $12,285 69-74-70—213 LorenRoberts (0), $12,285 68-78-67—213 JoeySindelar(0), $12,285 70-70-73—213 RodSpittle(0),$12,285 73-67-73—213 TomByrum(0), $9,750 68-74-72—214 DavidFrost(0), $9,750 68-70-76—214 LarryMize(0), $9,750 71-70-73—214 MarkO'Meara(0), $9,750 71-75-68—214 KevinSutherland(0),$9,750 71-73-70—214 GrantWaite (0),$9,750 73-71-70—214 Joe Durant(0), $7,995 69-75-71—215 JohnRiegger(0), $7,995 71-72-72—215 DuffyWaldorf (0), $7,995 70-74-71—215 Stephen Ames(0), $6,045 72-73-71—216 RussCochran(0), $6,045 74-70-72—216 Joel Edwards (0), $6,045 73-71-72—216 ChienSoonLu(0), $6,045 72-69-75—216 Colin Montgom erie (0), $6,045 68-76-72—216 Nick Price (0), $6,045 73-70-73—216 LanceTenBroeck(0),$6,045 74-72-70—216 HaleIrwin(0), $4,583 73-69-75—217 69-74-74—217 ScottSimpson(0), $4,583 72-75-71—218 PaulGoydos(0), $4,290 68-74-77—219 DanForsma n(0), $3,900 PeterJacobsen(0), $3,900 70-71-78—219 73-72-74—219 BobbyWadkins (0), $3,900 72-73-75—220 BruceFleisher(0), $3,120 77-76-67—220 MikeGoodes(0), $3,120 75-71-74—220 MarkMcNulty (0), $3,120 70-74-76—220 TomPurlzer(0), $3,120 73-70-77—220 Hal Sutton (0), $3,120 72-69-80—221 BobbyClampett (0), $2,161 72-73-76—221 JoseCoceres (0), $2,161 71-72-78—221 BradFaxon(0), $2,161 71-73-77—221 Skip Kendaff (0), $2,161 72-74-75—221 TomKite(0), $2,161 77-70-76—223 BenCrenshaw(0), $1,716 78-72-74—224 MarkBrooks(0), $1,599 MarkCalcavecchia(0), $1,336 77-72-76—225 75-77-73—225 BobTwa y(0), $1,336 73-75-77—225 D.A.Weibring (0), $L336 74-76-75—225 MarkWiebe(0), $1,336 BlaineMcCallister (0), $1,092 75-76-75—226 74-76-76—226 Gil Morgan (0), $1,092 77-72-79—228 Billy Andrade (0), $936 75-77-76—228 BenBates(0),$936 77-72-80—229 BobGilder(0), $839 75-78-77—230 Jim Thorpe(0), $800

Q

• Has your club either

initiatives? • Tetherow is always try• ing to think outside of

A

the box, and has always been a forward-thinking operation. We feel that products like the GolfBoard and continuing to foster a fun and easygoing culture are more sustainable enterprises that will continue to allow us — and the game as

a whole — to grow. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhrzllibendbulletirLcom.

Tetherow Golf Cluh Numder of holes: 18 Status: Openseasonally Location: 61240 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend Tee times:541-388-2582 Hew te play:Available to members and their guests, with limited play for the general public Course stats:Par 72, 7,298 yards Head golf professional: Louis Bennett Course designer:David McLay Kidd (2008j Extras:Driving range (with short-game course), two putting greens, indoor golf academy, clubhouse,hotel, tvvo restaurants and snack bar Website:

vvwvv.tetherovv.com

in playoff The Associated Press ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — Robert Streb made the last of his 10 birdies on

the second extra hole, winning a three-way playoff in the McGladrey Classic on Sunday for his first PGA TOUI'vlctory.

Streb rallied from a fiveshot deficit in the final round with a 7-under 63. He waited

90 minutes to see if anyone could catch him, and then outlasted Will MacKenzie

and Brendon de Jonge inthe playoff at Sea Island. The victory sends Streb to the Masters in April. The

27-year-old from Oklahoma has never played in am ajor. Streb never felt more pressure than over his final two putts. On the first play-

off hole at No. 18, Streb ran his 35-foot birdie putt about

4 feet bythe hole a

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Streb takes PGA victory

Vijarro

G allery - B e n d

the improvement. "He needs reps in compeand day out, I need to be able Continued from 61 to rotate (my body). Rotation tition and then he will be a Wilkinson suggested form- of my body is what squares way, way better player," says ing better posture, reposition- the dub face up." Wilkinson, adding that, in ing his right knee, and alterAfter playing in early June his opinion, Vijarro is already ing the top of his backswing to in a PGA Tour Canada event hitting his short irons at a

its qualifying school after the

open up the club's face. More

Vijarro is eager to get started. "I am getting close to a po-

tion to where I can do it day in

in Victoria, British Columbia,

PGA Tour level. "I don't like to

drastically, the longtime in- where he made the cut before use the word 'consistent,' but structor advised Vijarro to fading into a tie for 49th place he'll be able to go out on the change the grip he had spent at 2 under par, Vijarro decid- golf course now and hit the his whole life using. ed to take the summer off to golf ball a lot more solidly and "His posture was bad, his work on his swing at home in a lot straighter. He'll just be a club face was really, really Bend. way better player. He's a real shut at the top (of his backA natural athlete, Vijarro hard worker. "He's got more than enough swing), and so he would either absorbed the lesson quickly. hit it dead right, hit it straight, He spent nearly two months talent to make that next step or hit a big pull hook," says practicing each day, the ses- from where he's a Canadian Wilkinson. "Not knowing sions lasting as long as eight Tour, mini-tour player movwhich oneofthose shots were hours, he recalls. ing on to the Web.com Tour "Within two weeks the grip (the PGA Tour's main develgoingto come up on a given time it's really difficult to play felt good, and that was basi- opmental circuit)." the game at a higher level." cally the biggest thing," VijarVijarro hurt his back in late Vijarro had spent his golf ro says. "The swing changes, summer, an injury he attrilife — developing from late those are gradual. But hold- butes to his new swing and bloomer to high school star ing the club differently than how it taxes his lower back. at Bend High, then to college you have the last 10 years, He has improved his diet and standout and, now, budding that's a big deaL" started a new workout regipro — with a "strong grip" The seeds of success seem men to help compensate. (positioning his hands to the to have be sown. Now back i n A r i zona, right of center on the club). In July, he played six con- where he has spent the past But his grip forced him to sub- secutive rounds in which he three winters since turning consciously control his swing scored no higher than 67. pro in 2012, he is ready for "I was so excited this sum- a schedule full of mini-tour more with hi s h ands than mer," Vijarro says. "I was events in the Phoenix area. with his body. Wilkinson suggested he playing the best golf of my If he plays well early, he weaken his grip, setting his life." will attempt to qualify for hands more down the center His teacher likewise saw PGA Tour Latin America at of the dub. Vijarro bought in completely to Wilkinson's advice. "I just had really good swing timing, and that was what allowed me to be suc541 382-6447 i 2090 NE Wyatt Court i Suite 101 cessful," Vijarro says. "But Bend OR 97701i bendurology.com e~sndUmlo basically for me to be in a posi-

new year. If not, he will wait

until April to play in the PGA Tour Canada's qualifying school. Teeming with confidence after his swing adjustments, sition where I don't have to think about it anymore and

I just start playing," Vijarro says. "I'm close. I'm really close. And I'm really looking forward to starting to compete.

"I know that you've gotta make it (in golf) or you've gotta do something else. But

where I am at right now, I couldn't be more optimistic." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@ bendbulletirLcom.

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014• THE BULLETIN

NASCAR SPRINT CUP

B7

SOCCER

Earnhardt's win bringsout emotion By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press

MARTINSVILLE, V a .

Dale Earnhardt Jr. recognized

Dale Earnhardt Jr.,

win of the season and the first of his career at Martinsville,

center, cele-

and came a week after he was eliminated from N A SCAR's

brstes with his pit crew after winning the NASCAR

the emotional impact his win

at Martinsville Speedway had on Rick Hendrick when he

Sprint Cup race in

met his boss in Victory Lane.

The team owner embraced the driver who delivered the

championship race. No longer a participant in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship, he had nothing on the line when he raced hard

Virginia.

in the closing laps with teammate Jeff Gordon.

Martinsville was Hendrick's

Steve Helher/The

home track as a child growing up in Virginia, the place where Hendrick Motorsports had it it was to him and his embrace first career victory. when he hugged me," EarnBut it was 10 years ago this hardt said. "There's a genuine weekend thatan HMS plane hug and there's a hug. His was

Associated Press

Chase, settled for second in a

Msrtinsville,

win at the trackthat has caused

so much heartbreak and joy.

Gordon, who is still in the

anniversary and E arnhardt

A victory would have earned

Jr. had to grieve with a rabid fan base watching his every

him an automatic berth into the finale.

"Losing my dad was diffi-

killing all 10 on board. Lost on anniversary. It's more diffi-

cult. I can't even imagine that loss that he w ent t h rough,

that day were Hendrick's son, brother, twin nieces, the team

cult. The 10th a n niversary

"I will say that it makes me

move.

the real deal. This is the 10th

on its way to the race crashed,

1-2 finish for Hendrick. But it was the win that he wanted:

sort of has you reflecting and his family went through, the general manger, head engine remembering." whole organization, all those builder, a key sponsor repreI t was fitting that it w a s people at one t i me," Earnsentative, two Hendrick pilots Earnhardt who carried the hardt said. "I was so proud to and a pilot for Tony Stewart. Hendrick banner on this dif- be able ... win this race on this His four drivers try desper- ficult day. He lost his father, challenging weekend for the ately to win at Martinsville for Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt, company. They're very hurt Hendrick, for the organiza- in a fatal accident on the final and it's a heavy heart that they tion, for those who died that lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. carry all weekend, but they October day. All of NASCAR mourned want to win the race." "I could feel how important for an entire season, on every It was Earnhardt's fourth

feel a little bit better about

finishing second that it was second to somebody that's not in the Chase," Gordon said.

"Had that been somebody in the Chase, it would have been hard to swallow.

Gordon was the highest finishing Chase driver. Chase driver Ryan Newman was third, and Stewart

finished fourth. Chase drivers Joey Logano and M att Kenseth were fifth and sixth.

Rich Schultz/The Associated Press

United States forward Abby Wambach moves past Costa Rica defender Wendy Acosts (20) to set up s goal in the second half during the CONCACAF championship soccer match in Chester, Pennsylvania, on Sunday. The U.S. defeated Costa Rica 6-0.

U.S. routsCostaRica in CONCACAF final By Anne M. Peterson

er was in trouble. There hadn't

slightly off. I think she did all right tonight." CHESTER, Pa. — Abby W ambach now ha s 1 8 Wambach has been con- goals in World Cup qualifyc erned r e cently a b o u t ing, breaking Michelle Akers' overthinking headers. team record (17). Wambach She seemed to have it already has the career record all worked out on Sunday for goals with 177, and she night when she scored leads the team with 14 goals four goals — three with this year.

been a shutout in the Series

her head — in a 6-0 victory

since Josh Beckett's dinching gem for the Florida Marlins in

over Costa Rica that gave player has scored four goals the World Cup-bound U.S. in a C O NCACAF women's

2003 at Yankee Stadium. The Giants' work isn't done

n ational team their f i f th championship title match. "All you can do when C ONCACAF Wom e n 's

The Associated Press

Giants Continued from B1 On this evening, he fanned eight without a walk and nev-

yet. To lock up their third crown in five years, they will need to win in Kansas City. "We're looking forward

It was the first time a single

Championship title. " Thankfully, toda y my teammates put me in positions where I really

Abby Wambach is playing

to getting back to our home

couldn't think," she said af-

Garabet.

crowd, where it's going to be absolutely wild and crazy," Royals manager Ned Yost

terward. "I was set up to be

sald.

already secured a trip to next year's World Cup in Canada with a victory over Mexico in the semifinals

'. ) iI

Q sl~~~ ) ~i

successful." The U.S. women h ad

Jake Peavy gets the first chance to seal it for San Fran-

cisco when he starts Game 6 at Kauffman Stadium on Tues-

of the eight-team, four-city tournament.

day night against rookie Yordano Ventura.

Wambach scored on a

If the Giants don't win then,

that is pray — pray that the

ball doesn't get to her," said Costa Rica coach Avedissian Sydney Leroux scored in the 73rd minute for the final

margin. The top three finishers in the championship for the North,

C e ntral A m e r ican

and Caribbean region earned World Cup bids: Mexico secured a berth with a 4-2 victo-

ry over Trinidad and Tobago

header in the fourth min-

in the third-place match earli-

there is always this possibility: Bumgarner out of the bullpen

ute, and fed Carli Lloyd one in the 17th to put the

er on Sunday. Trinidad and Tobago will

in Game 7.

United States up 2-0. It was

still have a chance with a two-

"This guy was right on tonight. He was strong all night," manager Bruce Bochy said. "You know when this guy is

Lloyd's fifth goal of the tournament. Wambach scored with

leg series against Ecuador starting next month.

on, it's fun to watch. I mean, he

her head again off a cross from Lloyd in the 35th

was hitting his spots, had great

minute and added anoth-

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Ahead by five, Bochy let Bumgarner bat in the eighth inning. "Sure I thought about may-

She added her fourth, this time a chip, in the 71st

be taking him out, but he was

throwing too good," Bochy SBld.

Hunter Pence once again

was in the middle of things for the Giants. He singled off

Matt Slocum/The Associated Press

Ssn Francisco catcher Buster Posey shakes hands with pitcher Madison Bumgarner after beating Kansas City 5-0 in Game 5 of the World Series. Bumgsrner pitched s shutout Sunday night to give the Giants a 3-2 series lead.

minute. It was her second career four-goal game; she scored five goals in a match against Ireland 10 years ago. " I think

h e r f o cus t s

crazy good. She's really

James Shields in the second

locked down an d w o r k-

and scored on a groundout by ed with 15 straight runs. San ter than he did in winning the Brandon Crawford, who had Francisco won t h a t g a m e, opener in Kansas City. three RBIs. putting aside concern that And on the rare occasion Later, the enigmatic Pence Bumgarner should have been when the 6-foot-5 Bumgaraccidentally threw his bat past moved up to pitch on short rest. ner made a mistake, failing to the mound while striking out, B umgarner won for t h e cover first base on a grounder and appeared to apologize to fourth time against one loss to the right side, his defense Shields. Pence added anoth- in this postseason, and this bailed him out. er hit in a t hree-run eighth, blanking bookended the fourToward the late innings, it making him 9 for 19 in the five hit shutout he threw at Pitts- appeared that only a lightning games. burgh in the NL wild-card strike could rescue the Royals, Postseason star Pablo San- game. Durable, he has thrown perhaps a home run out of nodoval also singled twice. Juan 47 '/s innings this O ctober, where. Not happening — this Perez broke it open with a two- trailing just Schilling's 48 8 in was the third straight game run double off the top of the 2001 for the most in a single without either team hitting a center-field fence in the eighth postseason. homer, the longest streak in off Wade Davis and scored on Given a n e a rl y l e a d, the World Series since 1948 a single by Crawford. Bumgarner was in control. He when the Boston Braves and Since trailing 4-1 in Game surely didn't need much of a Cleveland began with a three4, the Giants have respond- cushion, and looked even bet- game drought, STATS said.

Exactly why the man nicknamed MadBum is so dominant isn't easily apparent. Royals cleanup hitter Eric Hosmer

said before the game that Bumgarner's "cross-body" delivery is tough to pick up. Bumgarner definitely has an impressive whip, along with an imposing WHIP in

the World Series. His walksplus-hits ratio per inning is incredible. Bumgarner certainly excels at keeping hitters swinging at shadows by changing speeds. Kansas City batters chased balls that bounced as well as

high ones out of the strike zone.

Canucks 4, Capitals 2:VANand Tommy Wingels scored COUVER, British Columbia Toews and Brent Seabrook Ottawa's C r ai g A n d erson, power-playgoals, and San Jose — Nick Bonino and Radim scored, Scott Darling made from Park Ridge, Illinois, emphatically snapped a four- Vrbata both had a goal and 32 saves in his NHL debut, stopped 43 shots, including a gamelosingstreakwith a fight- an assist, and Vancouver beat and the Chicago Blackhawks second-period penalty shot by filled victory over Anaheim. Washington. snapped a two-game losing Andrew Shaw. streak with a 2-1 victory over Also on Sunday: Finding Senior Housing can be complex, the Ottawa Senators on SunKings 5, Blue Jackets 2: day night. LOS ANGELES — Jeff Carbut it doesn'thaveto be. Patrick Kane assisted on ter scored during a two-man Toews' goal for his 500th NHL advantage in Los Angeles' "You cantrust point. three-goal second period, and A Plece for Nom Milan Michalek scored a the Kings completed a sweep to help you.' 4 r short-handed goal for the Sen- of a six-game homestand with -

Jonathan

ators, who have dropped two

Illinois, was steady as he faced

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NHL ROUNDUP

The Associated Press

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W EAT H E R

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014

Forecasts and graphics provided by ACCU WeaUter, Inc. ©2014 R

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59' 40'

60' 41'

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Yesterday Today Tuesday

48 contiguousstates) National high: 95

53' 35'

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shownistoday's weather.Temperaturesaretoday'shighs and tonight's lows. Umatiaa Hood 60/38 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

Cily Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W High Abilene 88/64/0.00 90/59/s /43 lington 59/37 Portland Akron 61/42/0.00 68/60/pc Low Meac am Losti ne 9/ Albany 53/44/0.15 56/40/s • W co 6 /40 dl + 4 9/ 2 51/ 2 8 Enterprise PRECIPITATION he Oaa Albuquerque 76/51/Tr 71/44/s • 5 0/28 Ttgamo • • 57/ 1 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace CENTRAL:Coolwith andy • Anchorage 31/24/0.00 36/21/s 61/43 Mc innvie • Joseph Atlanta 84/57/0.00 85/59/s Record 0.34ein 1956 /49 Gove • He ppner Grande • times of clouds and nt • upi P P Condon 6/36 Atlantic City 65/55/0.00 64/53/s • 57 53 33 Month to date (normal) 0.43 (0.46 ) sunshine today.Partly Lincoln Union R R Austin 85/52/0.00 85/63/pc 49/ Year to date (normal ) 6.16 (7.63 ) cloudy tonight. A pass Sale 59/53 Baltimore 69/51/0.00 66/48/s e • pray Graniten B arometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30. 1 1 ing shower tomorrow. 62/4 • 7/40 Billings 65/49/Tr 52/28/pc 'Baker G Newpo • I/37 Birmingham 83/54/0.00 86/60/s SUN ANDMOON 2/49 60/53 • Mltch 8 49/25 Bismarck 73/43/0.00 56/34/pc Camp Sh man Red WEST:Mostly cloudy 54/36 Today Tue. n g Boise 55/48/0.02 54/35/pc 55/35 • John MU Sunrise 7:35 a.m. 7: 3 6 a.m. today. Rather cloudy Yach 63/48 Boston 58/43/s 58/53 • Prineville Day 2/26 tario Bridgeport, CT 59/51/Tr a couple ofshowSunset 6:03 p.m. 6: 0 1 p.m. with 62/50/Tr 61/49/s 57/34 • Pa lina 54/34 5 29 Buffalo 51/48/Tr 60/52/pc Moonrise 11: 19 a.m. 1 2 :14 p.m. ers tonight. Breezy Floren e • Eugene ' Se d erofhers Valen 59/53 Burlington, VT 50/47/0.15 53/38/pc with rain tomorrow. Moonset 9 : 08 p.m. 10:08 p.m. Su iVern 56/36 55/29 Caribou, ME 48/40/0.25 46/32/pc Nyssa M 5 3/ Ham ton MOONPHASES e Charleston, SC 86/51/0.00 85/61/s • l.a Pine untura 54/ 3 0 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 83/48/0.00 78/53/s First Fu l l Last New • Burns J54/28 OREGON EXTREMES /44 Chattanooga 82/51/0.00 83/58/s • FortRock Riley 49/23 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 53/30 Cheyenne 72/44/0.00 50/27/sn 49/26 53/33 Chicago 64/42/0.00 75/54/pc High: 62' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 70/42/0.00 79/64/pc Oct 30 Nov 6 N ov 14 N ov 22 at Hermiston Jordan V Hey 62/54 Beaver Silver 53/29 Frenchglen 66/48 Cleveland 59/48/0.00 69/61/pc Low: 30' 51/33 Marsh Lake 54/33 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 78/47/0.00 53/29/sh at Lakeview 54/31 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 83/56/0.00 80/52/pc T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 61/ a Columbia, SC 87/46/0.00 84/56/s • 53/29 Mercury 6:04 a.m. 5: 3 0 p.m. • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 86/54/0.00 86/57/s Medfo d 5 3 / 29 Gold ach Rome Venus 7:38 a.m. 6 : 0 8 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 65/39/0.00 75/63/pc 59/ 53/27 Mars 12:28 p.m. 9 : 0 2 p.m. n 40 Klamath Concord, NH 57/39/0.01 56/33/s • Ashl nd • FaNS Jupiter 1:06 a.m. 3 : 1 7 p.m. • Lakeview Mcoermi Corpus Christi 85/60/0.00 86/70/pc Bro ings eo/3 5 3/28 Saturn 9:12 a.m. 7: 0 3 p.m. 58/5 52/24 53/30 Dallas 88/63/0.00 85/67/s Dayton 68/43/0.00 78/64/pc Uranus 5:13 p.m. 5: 5 7 a.m. Denver 79/51/0.00 56/30/sh Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Dss Moines 73/50/0.00 71/46/I city H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 62/42/0.00 70/60/pc 59/46/0.42 62/51/sh61/50/r Ln Grande 55/43/0.02 53/33/pc 56/40/sh Portland 60/5 0/0.1160/50/c 60/52/r 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asturin Duluth 58/33/0.00 56/39/t Baker City 54/37/Tr 49/25/pc52/30/sh Ls Pins 42/34/0.21 53/33/pc 58/42/c Prinsviiis 50/ 3 6/0.0057/34/pc58/40/c El Paso 86/55/0.00 81/53/s 1 N(~ 2 ~ 2~ N 1 srnnkings 60/50/0.26 58/50/pc 59/56/r Ms d fnr d 57/4 7 /0.08 62/40/pc 67/52/sh Redmond 51 / 33/Tr 57/35/pc 65/42/c Fairbanks 22/3/0.00 27/13/pc The highertheAccuWssthsrxmmIIVIndex number, sums 52/31/Tr 4 9/23/pc 59/31/c Ne wport 59/4 6 /0.17 60/53/c 60/54/r Rnssburg 60 / 48/0.36 66/48/pc 65/56/r Fargo 65/35/Tr 60/38/c the greatertheneedfor syssndskin protscgon.0-2 Lnw, Eugene 60/47/0.45 63/48/pc 61/51/r N o r th Bend 61 / 48/0.19 62/53/pc 62/55/r Salem 59/49/0.25 62/49/c 61/53/r Flagstaff 64/42/0.00 62/29/s 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exirsms. Klsmsth Falls 49/34/0.10 53/28/pc 60/38/c Ontario 60/48/0.01 55/29/pc 56/35/c Sisters 48/38/0.17 56/35/pc63/44/ sh Grand Rapids 60/41/0.00 72/57/r Laksvisw 50/30/0.08 52/24/pc61/33/pc Pendleton 58/48/Tr 57/41/pc 63/46/sh The Dnllss 61 / 47/0.1861/43/pc 57/46/sh Green sny 61/35/0.00 63/47/I Greensboro 78/53/0.00 76/52/s Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-clnudy, sh-shnwsrs,t-thundsrstnrms,r-rsin, sf-snnwflurries, sn-snnwl-ics,Tr-tracs,Yesterday data nsnf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 66/53/Tr 65/46/s G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hnrffnrd, CT 58/46/0.02 60/40/s Absent Ab s ent Abs e nt Helena 55/44/0.01 48/27/sn Source: OregonAiisrgyAssociatss 541-683-1577 87/75/0.09 86/73/s ~ t es ~2 08 ~sos ~dos ~50s ~eos ~709 ~aos ~90s ~toos ~ttos Honolulu ~ tos ~os ~ o s Houston 85/56/0.00 84/64/pc ; d d d Huntsville 85/55/0.00 83/59/s * * * * 'd d d d CM19M * * * * NATIONAL Indianapolis 68/42/0.00 78/61/pc As of 7 n.m.yesterday IMAI Odde R d x R 43/24 x P * „ * „ * R *5 /35 SO/3 Jackson, MS 84/56/0.00 85/59/s Ld • der aay Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES R RSS/50 R/4dIdI d • R R R Jacksonville 83/47/0.00 85/57/s (for the C rane Prairie 313 4 8 57% YESTERDAY g l Port

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014 •

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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate ait onl

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Call for package rates

Packages starting at $140for28da s

Call for prices

Prices starting at $17.08 erda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months

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contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

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e

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

B u I l e t i n :

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

1 7 7g

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood 208

210

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Australian S h epherd puppies. AKC/ASCA A1 Washere&Dryere $150 ea. Full warExcellent Bloodlines. ranty. Free Del. Also Born 10/1 4/1 4. wanted, used W/D's $650-$1200. Reserve 541-280-7355 Now 541-815-9257 202

Want to Buy or Rent

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C h a n d l e r

A v e . ,• B e n d

O r e g o n

9 7 7 0 2

210

212

246

246

246

257

Furniture & Appliances

Antiques & Collectibles

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Musical Instruments

King Bed and mattress set,Sleep Comfort massager, includes linens, and electric blanket, $800 obo 541-516-8578

HOH'IISTHIS T i"'.

¹11948 giuilt in 1870 by New England Organ Co. ITytrORKS! Beautiful carved cabinet. In 1878, it took 2nd place in Sydney, Australia. Was presented to a minister after his service in the Civil War. $350. 541-385-4790

CA King Henredon Sleigh Bed with Organic Mattress and Bedding. It's magnificient. $4500 Cash only. 541-390-7109

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 oi'

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King size mattress, exc. cond. fits on pedestal The Bulletin Classifieds b ed, $ 3 0 0 obo . 541-382-0217

Microwave, GE slide-in, 541-385-5809 white, good cond, works well. $35. 541-633-0563 The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin SOFA - dark brown leather, Hit a c hi newspaper onto The brand, l i k e n ew, Bulletin Internet website. $500; and matching chair and ottoman Bulletin like n ew , $ 3 0 0. The Servlng CentralOregon sfncef$8 541-280-0892 240

Crafts & Hobbies Long Arm Quilting Machine, HusqvarnaNiking, 10-ft bed, computerized, $8500. 541-416-0538

Tempur-Pedic® Contour Elite King size mattress & foundation, BRAND NEW. New cool model. Purchased; then spent summer in Alaska, and it was past time to return to store. Paid $3600; sell for $2600.

241

Bicycles & Accessories

CASHfor wood dressers & wood bar stools. 541-420-5640 Cavalier King Charles Antique table: Spaniel Pups, AKC TURN THE PAGE engraved with sailChampion Pedigree, ing ship on top and For More Ads health guarantee, Tri, has an old oak capBlenheims. $1000541-548-3810 LA Beach Cruiser The Bulletin stan base. very $1800. 541-848-7605 Custom made, heavy, Very unique Good classified adstell Wanted: $Cash paid for Chihuahua pups, 2 girls one of a kindpiece. Asking $500 the essential facts in an vinta(Ie costume jew- long hair, parents on site no 2 alike! 541-419-6408. interesting Manner. Wri t e elry. o dollar paid for $250 each.541-420-9474 Excellent condition. from the readers view not Gold/Sirver.l buy bt the Fun, fun, fun! the seller's. Convert the Estate, Honest r3t ist Donate deposit bottles/ $850. MOreP iXatBendb(ileti).CO m facts into benefits. Show Elizabeth,541-633-7006 cans to Iocal all vol., 541-749-8720 the reader howthe item will non-profit rescue, for 205 help them insomeway. feral cat spay/neuter. Items for Free 242 This T railer a t Jak e ' s advertising tip D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Exercise Equipment Burgundy leather love- Petco (near Wal-Mart) brought to you by seat & 0/S chair w/otto- in Redmond; or doPilates performer man, in good condition, nate M-F a t S m ith The Bulletin Aero wl rebounder, DVD's. Sernng CentralOregon smce19tB FREE. 541-815-2042 Beautiful Oval Table Sign, 1515 NE 2nd $200 541-610-6035 Solid walnut, handClean moving boxes, & Bend; or CRAFT in The Bulletin Schwinn 20-yr old exercrafted by an Amish Tumalo. Can pick up materials, keep checkrecommends extra ' cise bike, like new, $120 artisan for Schanz large amts, 389-8420. ing! 541-791-1934 obo. 541-410-3425 Furniture Co. Excellent i caution when purwww.craftcats.org condition w/lovely patina. chasing products or • 208 245 27" H, top 30" L and 20" services from out of I German Shepherds Pets & Supplies Golf Equipment www.sherman-ranch.us wide. Graceful curved t the area. Sending t legs with 2-1/2" ' cash, checks, o r ' Quality Germans. hand-turned center 541-281-6829 CHECK yOURAD i credit i n f ormation The Bulletin recomsupport. Orig. $649; may be subjected to mends extra caution sell $350. i FRAUD. For more when purc h as- Purebred Labs, not pa 541-385-4790 pered, 1st shots and information about an s ing products or serwormed, vet checked, you may I vices from out of the Couch, black leather wi I advertiser, b londe an d b l a ck call t h e Ore g onI area. Sending cash, 2 recliners, like new. ' State $400. 541-416-1175. Atto r ney ' on the first day it runs checks, or credit in$400 obo. 541-408-0846 i General's O f f i ce formation may be make sure it is corQueensland Heelers Dania teakoffice desk, Consumer Protec- • to subjected to fraud. rect. "Spellcheck" and 8 Mini, $150 tion h o t line a t i For more informa- Standard 54"wx23"d, keyboard human errors do oc& up. 541-280-1537 tion about an adver- www.rightwayranch.wor cur. If this happens to p ullout tray an d 2 i 1-877-877-9392. tiser, you may call drawers; 2-drawer leyour please condpress.com I tact usad,ASAP the O r egon State so that gal size Dania teak I TheBulletin Serving Cenrral Oregon sincetem Attorney General's Rottweiler pup, female, file c abinet. T e ak corrections and any Office C o n sumer parents on site. $550. sectretary chair, very adjustments can be 212 Protection hotline at comfortable all items made to your ad. Call 541-923-2437. 1-877-877-9392. Antiques & in exc. condi. $180 all 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Scotty AKC pups, ready 3 items. 541-3887397. Collectibles The Bulletin now! Mom/Dad on site, senlnr central oregon sincefRB 1st shots. 541-771-0717 Electrolux Affinity Frigid- Cabbage Patch doll; por- Custom made golf clubs & bag, call for details, aire front loading washer, celain "baptismal" doll, Adopt a rescued cat or Shih Tzu, AKC female red, 5 yrs old, needs $50 $50. 541-617-7486 both. 541-617-7486 kitten! Altered, vaccielectrical part. $ 375. puppy, $300. 246 nated, ID chip, tested, KitchenAide 3-bowl elec. 541-390-4478 Call 541-788-0234 mixer, old, but works more! CRAFT, 65480 Guns, Hunting or 541-548-0403 7 8th St . , Ben d , Freezer, used upright, great! $40. 541-617-7486 & Fishing 1-5. Standard Poodle AKC Sat/Sun, $250 or best offer. Mahogany Glass China 541-389-8420 541-639-8944 male pup 8 wks, choc. Closet, 68"H x 39"W x Bird hunting in Condon, www.craftcats.org 1st shots, de-wormed, 16"D, 3 dra w ers, OR - 2014. Also big G ENERATE SOM E $800 5 4 1-754-9537 front d o ors, game hunting access EXCITEMENT in your glass Corvallis. del. poss. neighborhood! Plan a good shape. $425. in 2015. 541-384-5381 Aussie pups mini/toy, Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, garage sale and don't 541-382-6773 CASH!! all colors, 1st shots, 2 boys, baby dolls! Shots, forget to advertise in National Geographic For Guns, Ammo 8 $360 cash. potty training, health guar. classified! mags from 70s-80, Reloading Supplies. 541-678-7599 541-385-5809. 541-408-6900. $700& up. 541-777-7743 $50 all. 541-617-7486

SPINET PIANO 1973 Fayett S Gable

247

• New, never fired made by Everett 8 Sporting Goods Weatherby VanSons, excellent con- Misc. guardS2, synthetic dition, recently stock, cal 30-06.$550. tuned. sounds great! • New, never fired Easy Rider Kayak, $1000 Howa,wood stock, cal $150. 541-385-8367 .300 Win Mag.$725 541-593-0312 Must pass background check. Please Huffy fre e s t anding call 541.389.3694, basketball hoop. $75 leave message. obo. 541-382-6806

Ad must

include price of

What are you looking for? You'll find it in

Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items & upscale bamboo fly rods. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746

si ~ le t e o f 85DD or less, or multiple items whose total

Oregon Trail

255

Gun Show Computers Central Oregon's Wurlitzer Original & Largest Ultra Console T HE B ULLETIN r e Gun Show does not exceed Model ¹2636 quires computer adNov. 8th & Nov. 9th $500. Serial ¹1222229. vertisers with multiple SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 Made in USA. Deschutes Co. Fairgrounds ad schedules or those Call Classifieds at selling multiple sys- Genuine maple wood. Buv - Sell - Trade 541-385-5809 Includes matching temsl software, to dis$8 Admission, www.bendbuiietin.com bench.$1,100. 12 & under free! close the name of the For info: 541-404-1890 business or the term (541) 598-4674 days, or (541) 923-0488 Elk Hunters tent 5' walls, "dealer" in their ads. evenings. sheepherder stove, exc. Private party advertisRemington 11-87 $500 541-546-7144 ers are defined as semi-automatic those who sell one It's hunting season and I 260 Police 12gauge computer. have 2 new rifles for sale: with rifle sights, Misc. Items 1) Ruger Hawkeye 7mm $700. 257 Rem Mag. s t ainless Baikal Bounty Buying Dlamonds matte finish, grey lamiMusical Instruments Hunter 12 gauge, /Gold for Cash nated stock, VXII 3x9 Saxon's Fine Jewelers scope. Gun has never 20" double barrels 541-389-6655 with screw-in been fired; asking $850. 2) Browning X-bort hunter chokes, $350. BUYING 325 WSM, beautiful wood AII like new! Lionel/American Flyer gun, blued finish, fired 541-550-7189 trains, accessories. maybe 10 rounds. 40 rds 541-408-2191. ammo included;asking Rem. Wingmaster 870, $750. 541-419-8901 2009 Beautiful BuylNG & SELLING 12 ga. w/Poly-Choke, Lowrey M arlin 917V 1 7 c a l reat condition, 1951, Adventurer All gold jewelry, silver u Organ and gold coins, bars, H MR, 3x9 scop e 350. 541-419-5126 Absolutely perfect rounds, wedding sets, custom thumb hole condition, not a class rings, sterling silstock, 5 magazines scratch on it, about ver, coin collect, vin3 750 rounds of 1 7 ThompsonContender 4-feet wide, does istol w/2 barrels: 44 tage watches, dental HMR ammo. $2000. em Mag/Gen1 with everything! Includes gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-728-1900. Bushnell scope & carry a nice bench, too. 541-382-9419. case; & 22 LR match $450 obo. Get your with Bushnell scope & 541-385-5685 CRYPT at Deschutes carry case, $850. Memorial G a r den business SavageMod. 116 .300 Meadow Pond space Win Mag, stainless Back to School SALE! 4D4 - dbl depth lawn 25% - 35% OFF steel w/scope & case, crypt, full grave for 2. a ROW I N G $550. all music equipment. B uyer w il l ne e d Mossberg300A 12Ga Bend Pawn 8 Trading Co. granite & bronze dbl with an ad in with 2 barrels: one 22" 61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend interment m a r k er modified; & one 541417-5099 The Bulletin's plus interment costs. 181/2", $250. "Call A Service $1500. For more info Background check Casio piano keyboard, c all K e l li e Al l e n Professional" required. Please call lap model, $400. 541-382-5592 or 541.389.3694, Iv msg. 541-385-9350 Directory seller, 207-582-0732

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The Bulletin

Item Priced af: YourTotal Ad Coston • Under $500 $29 • $500 fo $999...................................................................$39 • $1000 to $2499.............................................................. $49 • $2500 and over............................................................... $59 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.

Serving Central Oregon since 1%8

541-385-5809 Some restncsans app/y

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Yourad will a/so appear in:

he Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace

• he Central Oregon Nickel Ads • endbulletin.com

*private party merchandise only excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories.


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

C2 MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014•THE BULLETIN

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • •• 11:00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• 3:00 pm Fri. Place a photo inyour private party ad for only $15.00 parweek.

Starting at 3 lines

*IJNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Speclal

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

*llllust state prices in ad

MX

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 260

266

269

266

Misc. Items

Heating & Stoves

Gardening Supplies • & E q uipment

Sales Northeast Bend

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER 541-617-7486 Since September 29, BarkTurfSoil.com advertising for Mikasa "Just Flowers" 6 1991, woodstoves has PROMPT DELIVERY piece place setting for 12, used been limited to mod541-389-9663 over 80 pcs total, $300 els which have been cash. 541-389-7170 certified by the OrNew Schulte ventilated egon Department of wire closet shelving wl Environmental Qual- Want to impress the relatives? Remodel hardware, $450 val; make ity (DEQ) and the fedreas. offer. 541-382-4028 eral E n v ironmental your home with the Protection A g e ncy help of a professional Wanted- paying cash (EPA) as having met The Bulletin's for Hi-fi audio & stusmoke emission stan- from "Call A Service dio equip. Mclntosh, dards. A cer t ified JBL, Marantz, Dyw oodstove may b e Professional" Directory naco, Heathkit, Sanidentified by its cerlifisui, Carver, NAD, etc. cation label, which is Call 541-261-1 808 permanently attached For newspaper the stove. The Buldelivery, call the Wilson golf clubs RH, 3 to letin will not knowCirculation Dept. at drivers, 8 irons, putter, accept advertis541-385-5800 carry cart, g l oves, ingly ing for the sale of To place an ad, call mens shoes sz 10, uncertified 541-385-5809 balls & tees, $100. woodstoves. 541-549-9383 or email

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit 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!"

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

The Bulletin

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267

Fuel & Wood

C ommercial Delt a Unifence table saw, WHEN BUYING e xtended ben c h , FIREWOOD... router, new lift, complete g ri p m a ster. To avoid fraud, Many extras. $1500. The Bulletin 541-923-6427 recommends payment for Firewood 265 only upon delivery Building Materials and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' La Pine Habitat • Receipts should RESTORE Building Supply Resale include name, Quality at phone, price and LOW PRICES kind of wood 52684 Hwy 97 purchased. 541-536-3234 • Firewood ads MUST include Open to the public . species & cost per cord to better serve Natural gas Ruud our customers. tankless water heater, brand new! The Bulletin 199 BTU, $1600. servfntrcentral creyon sace fas

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction chasing products or I Silverado 2001 5th I services from out of e 421 - Schools andTraining wheel 3-horse trailer I the area. Sending 454- Looking forEmployment 29'x8', deluxe showc ash, checks, o r I 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions man/semi living I credit i n f ormationI 476 - EmploymentOpportunities quarters, lots of ex- I may be subjected to 486 - Independent Positions tras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277

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Lo s t & Found

Found: bunch of tools. Call 541-548-4950 and describe.

FRAUD. I more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI e Office C o n s umer e

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I 1-877-877-9392.

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421

Schools & Training 11TR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.I1TR.EDU 476

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any 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 H otline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.

The Bulletin Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulfetin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.

326

Hay, Grain & Feed

Center is seeking a qualified Youth Swim Coach for the winter season November-March. 1-3 years previous swim coaching preferred. $2,000 per month plus reimbursement for mileage, meals & lodging. Please send cover letter, resume & letters of reference to MAC Executive Director Joe McHaney: ~mehane e maca uatic.com or 1195 S Kemper Way, Madras, OR 97741. For more information, visit www.maca uatic.com Position open until filled.

1st Quality mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. REMEMBER:If you Call 541-549-3831 have lost an animal, don't forget to check Patterson Ranch, Sisters The Humane Society Premium orchard grass, Bend barn stored no rain, 541-382-3537 1st cutting $225, 2nd Redmond $250, delivery avail. 541-923-0882 Call 541-420-9158 or Madras 541-948-7010. 541-475-6889 Quality Orchard/Mixed HOTEURESORT Prineville The Riverhouse Grass hay, between 541-447-7178 is seekinga Bend & Redmond. or Craft Cats House Person $230/ton, small bales. 541-389-8420. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 candidate will Wheat Straw For Sale. Qualified be able to lift 50 Ibs, In Sunriver area. Call a Pro also weaner pigs work flexible shifts and 530-938-3003 541-546-6171 All YearDependable have a friendly and Whether you need a Firewood: Seasoned; fencefixed,hedges positive attitude. ExpeNew Schulle ventilated Lodgepole, split, del, Looking for your rience preferred but not wire closet shelving w/ B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 trimmed or a house required. $10.75/hr. next employee? hardware, $450 val; make or 2 for $365. Call for built, you'll find Place a Bulletin reas. offer. 541-382-4028 multi-cord discounts! professional help in help wanted ad 541-420-3484. Apply in person at: today and Prineville Habitat The Bulletin's "Call a 3075 N Hwy 97, Bend reach over ReStore or apply online at Service Professional" 60,000 readers Dry split delivered Building Supply Resale www.riverhouse.com Directory each week. 1427 NW Murphy Ct. $160 cord (La Pine) 541-447-6934 Your classified ad Maintenance Tech for 541-876-7426 541-385-5809 Open to the public. will also Mobile Home Comappear on munity in Bend - Must have carpentry, bendbulletin.com h ousekeeping, a n d which currently grounds kee p ing receives over skills. Fax resume to 1.5 million page Call54 I385580f to promoteyourservice• Advertise for 28deit startingat'l40 pta Vssl factrtrt natsiirbir onourertstri

Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Serving Central construction work to businesses that adOregon Since 2003 be licensed with the verrise t o p e r form Residental/Commercial Construction Contrac- Landscape Constructors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Sprinkler active license p lanting, deck s , BIOIN-Out means the contractor fences, arbors, Sprinkler Repair is bonded & insured. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of irMaintenance CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e • Fall Clean up contractor.com Landscape Contrac- •Weekly Mowing or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit & Edging The Bulletin recom- number is to be in- •Bi-Monthly & Monthly mends checking with cluded in all adver- Maintenance the CCB prior to con- tisements which inditracting with anyone. cate the business has ~Landsca in Some other t rades a bond,insurance and •Landscape also req u ire addi- workers c ompensa- Construction tional licenses and tion for their employ- •Water Feature certifications. ees. For your protec- Installation/Maint. tion call 503-378-5909 •Pavers or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to •Renovations Debris Removal check license status •Irrigations Installation before contracting with Senior Discounts the business. Persons Bonded & Insured JUNK BE GONE doing lan d scape 541-815-4458 I Haul Away FREE maintenance do not LCB¹8759 For Salvage. Also r equire an LC B l i Cleanups & Cleanouts cense. Painting/Wall Covering Mel, 541-389-8107

Handyman I DO THAT!

Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768

ALL AMERICAN Where can you find a PAINTING helping hand? Interior and Exterior From contractors to Family-owned Residential & Commercial yard care, it's all here 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts in The Bulletin's 5-vear warranties FALL SPECIAL! "Call A Service Call 541-337-6149 Professional" Directory CCB ¹193960

I

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com Need to get an ad in ASAP?

Fax It to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds

~

Can be found on these pages: FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans and Mortgages 543- Stocks and Bonds 558- Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

I • •

L •

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616 - Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

NEWSPAPER

Part-time Prep Sports Assistant The Bulletin is seeking a sports-minded journalist to join our sports staff as a part-time preps assistant. Duties include taking phone and email information from sources and generating concise accounts of local high school sports events. Hours vary; must be available to work weeknights and Saturdays. Interpersonal skills and professional-level writing ability are essential, as are a sports background and a working knowledge of traditional high school sports. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment drug screen required.

To apply, please emailresume and any relevant writing samples to: s ortsassistant@bendbulletin.com No phone inquiries please.

The Bulletin

5erving Central Oregon since 1903

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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740-Condos & Townhomesfor Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747-Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757 - CrookCounty Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763- Recreational Homesand Property 764- Farms endRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land II C ej

Apt./ M ultiplex Generall CHECKYOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and Loans & Mortgagee human errors do occur. If this happens to WARNING your ad, please conThe Bulletin recomtact us ASAP so that mends you use caucorrections and any tion when you proadjustments can be vide personal made to your ad. information to compa541-385-5809 nies offering loans or The Bulletin Classified credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or Senior Apartmentcompanies from out of Independent Living state. If you have ALL-INCLUSIVE concerns or queswith 3 meals daily tions we suggest you Month-to-month lease, consult your attorney check it out! or call CONSUMER Call 855-435-1284 HOTLINE, 628

1-877-877-9392.

Instructor, Exercise IbSport Science, Part-Time, Term-to-Term AQUATICS The Madras Aquatic OSU-Cascades in Bend invites applications for

classitiedelbendbulletimcom

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541-385-5809 PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Men's M suede / sheepskin coat, like new, $100.

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one or more f ixed-term, non-tenure-track part-time Instructor positions in Exercise & Sport Science to teach on a term-by-term basis for the 2014-2015 academic year.

S ome of t h ese a ppointments may b e reviewed for renewal or transition to an instructional position on an annual basis at the discretion of the Dean of OSU-Cascades. Courses to be taught may include EXSS 385 Therapeutic Exercise and/or EXSS 399 Musculoskeletal Disorders. Salary is commensurate with education and experience. Required qualifications: MS, Ph.D. in Exercise Science/Kinesiology (or closely related field such at physical therapy or athletic training) and evident commitment to cultural diversity & educational equity. Preferred qualifications include teaching experience at the college or university level and a demonstrable commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity.

BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party

will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

Houses for Rent Redmond

Nice NW Redmond location! Neat & clean 2 bedroom, 1 bath manufactured home. Carport and 2 storage bldgs. W/S/G included. $690/mo+ dep. LOCALMONEY:We buy 541-419-1917 secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13. Bsdl 5aRmaw USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

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Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

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Homes for Sale

NOTICE

All real estate advertised here in is subTo review Instructor pool posting and apply, ject to th e F ederal go to website: Fair Housing A c t, http://oregonstate.edu/jobs which makes it illegal posting ¹0012324. to advertise any prefFor full consideration for Winter 2015, erencet limitation or please apply by December 1, 2014. discrimination based OSU is an AA/EOENets/Disabled. on race, color, reli605 gion, sex, handicap, familial status or naRoommate Wanted tional origin, or intenFuel Transport Driyer Eds Trucking is looking for a regionalTRANS- Awbrey Butte beautiful tion to make any such l imitaPORT TRUCK AND TRAILER DRIVER for home in-law unit down- preferences, or discrimination. pickup and safe delivery of propane gas, fuel stairs includes furn., TV tions We will not knowingly and/or other products as directed. Follow DOT WiFi, storage, parking. accept any advertis625 plus 1 / 3 u t il. and company safe driver guidelines while $ ing for real estate performing duties. Performs daily inspections 541-706-9084 which is in violation of as required by DOT to ensure that assigned this law. All persons 630 equipment is in safe and compliant operating are hereby informed condition. Ensure all required paperwork Rooms for Rent that all dwellings adincluding certifications, logs, etc is completed are available 541-617-1578 or and is in compliance with company and Furn. room quiet home, vertised views every on an equal opporluno drugs, alcohol or email mhc a dallO g overnment regulations. Adheres t o a l l month at no smoking. $450/mo. 1st & nity basis. The Bulleoutlook.com company safety policies and procedures. extra cost. tin Classified last . 541-408-0846 Bulletin The ideal candidate must meet DOT requireClassifieds Roofers Wanted ments, possess a valid Class 'A' CDL with NEWSPAPER Get Results! Call River Roofing, Hazmat and Tankerendorsement and have 541-383-3569 Call 541-385-5809 tractor/trailer experience. or applyin person at or place your ad 697 SE Glenwood on-line at We offer competitive pay, new equipment, Drive, in Bend. bendbulletin.com ability to be home most nights, medical and The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and endental plan, 401(K), Profit Sharing, paid thusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to holidays and vacation, and Safety Bonus. join a staff that covers the wide range of comls petitive and recreational activities for which our Email employment@edstaub.com region is famous. to get an application or you can fax resume to 877-846-2516 We are seeking a reporter who can cover everything from traditional sports to the offbeat and extreme, with particular emphasis on comGeneral munity (participation) sports and preps. NecesThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satursary skills include feature writing, event coverHelp Desk Analyst day night shift and other shifts as needed. We age, and the ability to work well on deadline. A currently have openings all nights of the week. college degree is required. Reporting experiResponsible for providing support services to Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts ence, polished writing skills and a track record Company-wide IS u sers. Duties include start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and of accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of responding to calls regarding computer hardend between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. All pothe duties of this position require evening and ware and software related issues, training sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. weekend availability. users on new technology and technical Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a processes and providing technical knowledge minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Also important is the ability to conceptualize the to assist with projects. are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of multimedia components that might complement loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackstories, including video, audio and slide show Requires a CIS or MIS degree and 1 year ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup elements. Experience using social media sites, e xperience or a m i n imum of 3 ye a rs and other tasks. For qualifying employees we including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred. experience working in technical support. Must offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, have strong knowledge of computer hardware, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned software, terminology and iSeries. Requires vacation and sick time. Drug test is required newspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 surstrong analytical and problem solving skills, prior to employment. rounded bysnow-capped mountains and home excellent verbal and written communication to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a skills, ability to work in a fast paced environPlease submit a completed application attendrug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity ment with multiple priorities and excellent tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available employer. Pre-employment drug screening is customer service skills. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanrequired prior to hiring. dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent obtained upon request by contacting Kevin To apply, please email cover letter, resume customer service and over 400 stores in the Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). and writing samples to: western United States. We offer competitive No phone calls please. Only completed applis ortsre orter©bendbulletin.com pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash cations will be considered for this position. No bonus.Please go to www.lesschwab.com to resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reNo phone inquiries please. apply. Applications will be accepted through quired prior to employment. EOE. November 7, 2014. No phone calls please.

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Community Sports/ Preps Reporter

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LesSchwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.

The Bulletin serving cenrrar oregons/nce rsw

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5ervl ng Central Oregon since 1903



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By FRANK STEWART "You've heard of banks being too big to fail?" Cy the Cynic grumbled. "I guess my p artner thought the w inning o p ening l ea d w a s t o o obvious to be right." Cy was today's East. When NorthSouth got to five clubs, bidding every suit except hearts, West led ... a trump. South drew trumps and took t hree high d i amonds. When C y discarded, South ruffed dummy's last diamond and exited with a h eart. West took two hearts but had to lead a spade next, else South would get a ruff-sluff. Dummy played low, and the defenders' spade trick vanished.

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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 Io download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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By Jeffrey Wechsler ©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

10/27/14


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745

Homes for Sale

860

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY OCTOBER 27 2014 860

880

880

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

870

Itot o rcycles & Accessories Motorcycles & AccessoriesBoats & Accessories

vii

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West Side - 4 BR, 1 bath, 2006 Bayliner 185 1242 sq ft ranch home. open bow. 2nd owner Wood stove, fenced yard, HD Softtail Deuce 2002, — low engine hrs. covered porch, rear alley broken back forces — fuel injected V6 BOATS 8 RVs AUTOS& TRANSPORTATION access, 50'x100' lot. 3 sale, only 200 mi. on — Radio 8 Tower. 908- Aircraft, Parts snd Service 805 - Misc. Items blocks to Columbia Park. 2005 HD Heritage SoftGreat family boat new motor from HarAllegro 32' 2007, like Motorhome+ Dinghy! 850 - Snowmobiles 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment $309,900. Broker owned. Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of ley, new trans case Priced to sell. new, only 12,600 miles. 2011 Georgetown 34' by 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 925 - Utility Trailers Call 541-389-3364 or $11,590. extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt and p arts, s p o ke Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Forest River. 14,900 mk 541-408-3393 541-548-0345. cond., $9750 firm wheels, new brakes, 927 - Automotive Trades transmission, dual ex- 2 slides, 5.5 KVA gen- 865 - ATVs 541-318-8668 n early all o f b i k e 929 - Automotive Wanted 750 haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- erator, In Motion satellite, 870 - Boats & Accessories brand new. Has proof eling system, 5kw gen, auto leveling, 7-yr/50K mi 875 - Watercraft 931 - Automotive Parts, Service Redmond Homes of all work done. Repower mirrors w/defrost, ext'd warranty. Irnmacand Accessories movable windshield, 880 Motorhomes 2 slide-outs with awlate, always garaged. 932 - Antique and Classic Autos T-bags, black and all nings, rear c a mera,2007 Jeep Wrangler, 47K 881 - Travel Trailers Looking for your next 933 - Pickups chromed out with a trailer hitch, driver door mi, exlnt cond, tow ready. 882- Fifth Wheels emp/oyee? willy skeleton theme 935- Sport Utility Vehicles w/power window, cruise, Both for $83,000Place a Bulletin help 885 Canopies and Campers on all caps and cov- 2007 Bennington exhaust brake, central or motorhome only, 940 - Vans wanted ad today and ers. Lots o f w o rk, vac, satellite sys. Asking $71,000. 541-420-5139 890 - RVs for Rent reach over 60,000 Pontoon Boat 975 - Automobiles Harley Davidson heart and love went $67,500. 503-781-8812 readers each week. 2275 GL, 150hp 2001 FXSTD, twin into all aspects. All 881 881 882 Your classified ad Honda VTEC, less cam 88, fuel injected, done at professional will also appear on than 110 hours, Vance & Hines short Travel Trailers Travel Trailers Fifth Wheels shops, call for info. bendbulletin.com shot exhaust, Stage I original owner, lots Must sell quickly due which currently rewith Vance & Hines of extras; TennesCHECK YOUR AD to m e d ical bi l l s, RV ceives over fuel management see tandem axle $8250. Call Jack at CONSIGNMENTS 1.5 million page system, custom parts, trailer. Excellent 541-279-9536. Providence 2005 WANTED extra seat. views every month condition, $23,500 Fully loaded, 35,000 We Do The Work ... at no extra cost. $10,500 OBO. 503-646-1804 miles, 350 Cat, Very Beaver Marquis, You Keep The Cash! Call Today Bulletin Classifieds clean, non-smoker, 2007 Jayco Jay Flight On-site credit 541-516-8684 1993 Get Results! 29 FBS with slide out & on the first day it runs 3 slides, side-by-side 2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like 40-ft, Brunswick approval team, Call 385-5809 or refrigerator with ice awning - Turn-key ready to make sure it is cornew, ActiV hull, safe web site presence. floor plan. Many place your ad on-line maker, Washer/Dryer, to use, less than 50 torect. "Spellcheck" and lock canister, 15HP We Take Trade-Ins! at extras, well mainGarage Sales Flat screen TV's, In tal days used by current human errors do ocYamaha w/ t r olling tained, fire supbendbuUetin.com owner. Never smoked in, HONDA SCOOTER motion satellite. cur. If this happens to plate, 6 gal Transom BIG COUNTRY RV pression behind Garage Sales 60cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. tank, no indoor pets, excellent your ad, please conless 30 hrs, 2 $95,000 541-330-2495 cond., very clean. Lots of Bend:Redmond: 775 cond., $975 obo. (541) chest seats, full Bimini refrig, Stow Master 541-480-2019 tact us ASAP so that Garage Sales 5000 tow bar, bonus features; many 593-9710 or 350-8711 541-548-5254 corrections and any Manufactured/ top, Transom wheels, have never been used. $22,995. adjustments can be cover, RV's special. Mobile Homes Find them RV Asking $18,000. C a l l 541-383-3503 made to your ad. $5500. 541-923-6427 KAWASAKI CONSIGNMENTS Lisa, 541-420-0794 for in 541-385-5809 Looking for your New Dream Special WANTED more info / more photos. KLX125, 2003, Ads published in the The Bulletin Classified next employee? 3 bdrm, 2 bath The Bulletin good condition. We Do The Work ... "Boats" classification Place a Bulletin help $50,900 finished You Keep The Cash! $1100. Classifieds include: Speed, fishDutchman Denali wanted ad today and on your site. On-site credit 541-593-8748 ing, drift, canoe, 32' 2011 travel J and M Homes reach over 60,000 approval team, 541-385-5809 house and sail boats. trailer. 2 slides Ev541-548-5511 readers each week. web site presence. For all other types of erything goes, all Your classified ad We Take Trade-Ins! Yamaha V-Star, 250cc watercraft, please go kitchen ware, linens will also appear on Fleetwood D i scovery 2011 motorcycle, new to Class 875. etc. Hitch, sway bendbulletin.com Harley Davidson 40' 2003, diesel, w/all BIG COUNTRY RV : I. custom seat for rider, 541-385-5609 Freightliner custom I bars, water & sewer which currently reoptions - 3 slide outs, Bend: 541-330-2495 883 Sportster vinyl coating on tank, hoses. List price 5th wheel puller, ceives over 1.5 milsatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Redmond: 1998, 20,200 miles, 2 helmets included. $34,500 - asking sleeper cab, rebuilt lion page views ev541-548-5254 exc. cond., etc., 32,000 m iles. Gets 60mpg, and has Serving Central Oregon since 1903 engine with 20k miles, $26,800 Loaded. ery month at no Wintered in h eated 3,278 miles. $3,800. Must see to appreci6.5 generator, 120 cu. 875 extra cost. Bulletin shop. $82,000 O.B.O. Asking $4700, firm. 541-548-2872. ft. storage boxes - one ate. Redmond, OR. Classifieds Get ReWatercraft 541-447-6664 Call Dan 541-550-0171 8' long. Gets 10.9 541-604-5993 sults! Call 385-5809 mpg, many more or place your ad ds published in "Wafeatures. All in good 850 865 on-line at tercraft" include: Kayshape. See to apprebendbulletin.com ATVs Snowmobiles aks, rafts and motorFour Winds 2008 ciate (in Terrebonne Ized personal 18' travel trailer area).$24,000. Winnebago 22' 4-place enclosed InterYamaha 350 Wolverine, watercrafts. For 882 used very little 503-949-4229 2002 - $28,500 state snowmobile trailer, 2006, excellent cond, "boats" please see Fifth Wheels $8500. $8500. 541-379-3530 $2100. 541-548-4667 Chevy 454, heavy Class 870. Harley Fat Boy 2002 Freightliner 1994 Hitchhiker 26' 1995, w/ duty chassis, new 541-403-2465 14k orig. miles.. Ex541-365-5809 860 Custom slide-out, good cond.; batteries & tires, cab cellent cond. Vance & 870 1996 Ford pickup ext'd Motorcycles & Accessories 8 roof A/C, tow hitch Motorhome Hines exhaust, 5 Boats & Accessories Serving Central Oregon since 190 cab, diesel, $10,500 for w /brake, 21k m i ., Will haul small SUV spoke HD rims, wind Need to get an both. 541-389-9352 1985 Harley Davidson vest, 12" rise handle more! 541-280-3251 or toys, and pull a 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, ad in ASAP? 880 1200C with S portster bars, detachable lug- like new, 135hp I/O, low trailer! Powered by frame and '05 Harley You can place it Motorhomes 6.3 Cummins with 6 gage rack w/back time, Bimini top, many crate motor. Rat Rod rest, hwy pegs & many Alpenlite 26 ft. 1987, speed Allison auto online at: extras, Karavan trailer look, Screaming Eagle chrome accents. Must with trans, 2nd owner. new appliances, swinq neck current www.bendbulletin.com tips, leather saddlebags, see to appreciate! everything works, Very nice! $53,000. registrations. $7000. e xtras. S acrifice a t $10,500. /n CRR area 541-350-4077 good shape. 541-350-2336 $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, 541-385-5809 call 530-957-1865 Includes queen 458-206-8446 (in Bend). Keystone Raptor, 2007 bedding, micro, Ready to makememories! 37 toy hauler,2 slides, DVD, hitch, tripod. Top-selling Winnebago generator, A/C, 2 TVs, $4500. 31J, original owners, nonHDFatBo 1996 2007 Winnebago satellite system w/auto 541-977-5587 smokers, garaged, only seek, in/out sound sysOutlook Class "C" 18,800 miles, auto-leveltem,sleeps 6,m any ex31', solar panel, Cat. ing jacks, (2) slides, uptras. $29,999. In Madras, heater, excellent 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Have an item to graded queen bed, bunk call 541-771-9607 or condition, more exHOLIDAY RAMBLER Heartland P rowler 2001 Honda Goldwing Wakeboard Boat beds, micro, (3) Tvs, sell quick? 541-475-6265 tras.Asking $58K. VACATIONER 2003 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 1600cc w/2005 Calisleeps 10! Lots of storI/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Ph. 541-447-9268 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, like new, 2 slides-livIf it's under fornia side car trike age, maintained, very tons of extras, low hrs. Completely workhorse, Allison 1000 clean!Only $67,995! ExCan be viewed at i ng area 8 la r g e conversion, 40K acFull wakeboard tower, Rebuilt/Customized Western Recreation 5 speed trans., 39K, tended warranty and/or fi- closet, 15' power aw- '500 you can place it in tual miles, every oplight bars, Polk audio 2012/2013 Award NEI/I/ TIRES, 2 slides, nancing avail to qualified ning, power hitch & (fop of hill) The Bulletin tion imaginable! CD, speakers throughout, Winner Onan 5.5w gen., ABS buyers!541-388-7179 in Prineville. s tabilizers, 16 g a l . AM/FM, cruise, has 5' completely wired for Classifieds for: brakes, steel cage cockCondition water heater, full size amps/subwoofers, unHrake,siderails, some Showroom Many Extras pit, washer/dryer, fire- Just bought a new boat? queen bed, l a r ge derwater lights, fish riding gear. Well serCheck out the lace, mw/conv. oven, Sell your old one in the '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Kit Companion 26', '94 Low Miles. finder, 2 batteries cusshower, porcelain sink viced. Iocated in Mt. classifieds online ree standing dinette, classifieds! Ask about our 8 toilet. 1 slide, new stove/fridge, $15,000 tom black paint job. '16 3 lines, 14 days Vernon, OR. Trailer $121,060 new; now, for hunting/camping! Super Seller rates! 541-548-4807 $12,500 541 41 5-2523 www.bendbulletfrLcom was $25,000or make offer. (Private Party ads only) Gd optional.$22,500. $35,900. 541-536-1008 $2500 541-389-5788 541-385-5809 Updated daily 541-999-2571 541-350-5050 •

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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck

are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and ajj the quiet can haul jt ajj! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for 8 caring home. Please youwijjneed. Roomtogrowinyour 8 t ough V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.

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*SpeCjal priVate party rateS apply to

merchandise and automotive categories.

The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com To place your photo ad, visit us online at ww w . b e n c i bu l l e t i n . c o m or c a ll with questions,

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