Bulletin Daily Paper 09-01-2014

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

MONDAY September 1,2014 4,

O Our: at:C u e Qllt: Swimmingdog s SPORTS • B1

LOCAL• A5

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

FIRE SEASON

Oregon's insurance

Messenger mission-

NASA's spacecraft has been orbiting Mercury for years, and it's now about to crash into it — an opportunity they hopeto make the most of. A3

policy kicks in again By AndrewCievenger ~The Bulletin

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — Although immigrants in the U.S. illegally represent a fraction of Oregon's

For the second straight year, Oregon has tapped

population, immigration-related offenses constitute the second-highest category for prosecution in

into its insurance coverage

to help cover the growing cost of firefighting. Acres burned by wildfires this year have already tripled the 10-year average,

Oregon's federal courts, trailing only drug crimes in number. Mouse moods — Scientists use light to help them forget traumatic experiences. A3

prosecutions initiated in Or-

CyCIOCrOSS — Thesport is growing in Bend asthe Thrilla Cyclocross Series expands. B1

egon in fiscalyear 2014has been for immigration-related charges, with illegal re-entry by far the most common charge, according

In world news — china says no to democracy in Hong Kong. A2

And a WedexclusiveFollowing TheBeast — atrain often hopped bymigrants, including minors — as it snakes its way through Mexico. bendbuffetin.com/extras

EDITOR'SCHOICE

Iraqis keep fighting for dwindling culture By Abigail Hauslohner The Washington Post

BAGHDAD — The other night I went to a charity concert at a state auditori-

um, packed with Iraqi artists, writers and actors. A group of crisply dressed young men sat on a stage

ESSAY framed by purple and gold velvet curtains, and played in an ensemble of ouds, beautiful stringed instruments from the Arab world, that to me resemble

a cross between a guitar and cello. A famous poet read a

length of verse that moved the audience to an emotional applause. We all sipped grape juice beneath the heavy crystal chandeliers.

Almost one in six federal

histories who often come

back because they have family in the U.S., he said. "(The statute is) very broad, and it's used very broadly," he said. "It's one of on the books. We all stand

figures collectedby the The Transactional Records

for the rule of law, and want

Syracuse University. Nationwide, immigration-related offenses

accounted for more than half of all federal prose-

Over the past two decades, the annual number of criminal convictions in federal courts has more than doubled. Convictions for unlawful re-entrywhich grew by 2800 percent between 1992 and 2012 — account for almost half of the overall growth.

the most insidious statutes

to Department of Justice Access Clearinghouse at

of convictions: Federal convictions Number 1992-2012

the borders secure. But on the other hand, there's no common sense to that statute."

The application of the illegal re-entry law has grown dramatically in re-

cutions initiated in April, the last month TRAC data was available. During that month, the Department

by federal judges, induding 670 for illegal re-entry. Two

of Homeland Security re-

decadeslater,the number

ferred to U.S. Attorney's of-

of total defendants had

fices almost twice as many cases resulting in prosecu-

grown to 75,867, and the

ed the top criminal offense nationwide, just as it had a

year earlier and fouryears before that, according to TRAC figures. As the law is written,

Lawyers Association. Initially, illegal re-entry was applied mostly to violent offenders who had been deported following a serious crime and then returned to

the United States, posing a serious danger to the community, he said. But in

back four decades. The

state burned through the

20K

deductible by the end of

July and now has gone through two-thirds of its $25 million policy. How much longer fire season will last is hard to

1992 1997 2002 2007 2012

predict, said Dan Postrel,

public affairs director for the Department of Forestry. Forests around the state

remaindry and thereispotential for more large fires. See Fire /A6

TYPESOF PROSECUTIONS

Putin wants east Ukraine 'statehood'

V.S.

arcotics/drugs 27%

Immigration 58% ..-- riig+s

migr

w drug traffickf g Wg'/o+

15O/

said. N. David Shamloo, a

Other 58%

Other 32%

The Washington Post MOSCOW — Seeming tobe searching for the right word during a prerecorded

gration cases, has noticed

and someone with a minor

Oregon

OEA 14'/

Putin suggested Sunday

tj.s.

FBI 18%

that one of the issues to be

resolved in the Ukrainian conflict is "statehood" for

OHS 65%

DHS-ICE 18%

the eastern regions now

controlledby separatists. That's a new idea and would raise the stakes con-

' LocaL

record." Estimates place Oregon's population of immigrants here illegally around

lgr

160,000 or 170,000, or less

recent years, it has been ap- than 4.5 percent of the plied more generally, even state's total population. to people with no criminal See Re-entry /A6

television interview, Russian President Vladimir

INVESTIGATIVEAGENGY

Defense 2% ATF 4%

Fg 9%

siderably in the Ukrainian crisis. Earlier inthe day, the European Union delayed imposingnew economic sanctions on Russia but

Other 12%

promised that if there is no

policy change from Moscow

Source: The Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University

within a week, more sanctions will be put in place. See Ukraine/A6

Greg Cross /The Bulletin

Fancy cooler a hit on Kickstaiter By Caitfin Dewey The Washington Post

Ryan Grepper invented many a dud before he made more than $13.2 million on a souped-up cooler — a cooler

But it was also a rare

They're a small bunch, and you certainly don't

of a unique large wildfire insurance policy that goes

Oregon

Two local nonprofits,

a secular, intellectual class.

40K

Office as the FBI.

Amaargi and Ghawth, had organized the event through social media to raise money for the estimated 1.3 million Iraqis displaced by recent violence. showing of an Iraqi culture that can seem odd in Baghdad these days — especially if you spend your time, like many do, focused on political infighting and bloodletting. It can also be easy to forget that despite years of turmoil and large-scale displacement, Iraq still has

million deductible as part

The majority of federal crimes prosecuted nationwide are immigration-related, and the Department of Homeland Security is responsible for referring almost two-thirds of the cases that result in prosecution. In Oregon, immigration prosecutions rank second behind only drug cases, and the Department of Homeland Security refers almost as manycases to the U.S. Attorney's

increase in cases between 1992 and 2012, the report

the increase in re-entry prosecutions during his 20year career. "What I'm seeingmore and more is that the illegal re-entry cases for non-aggravated felons or criminal aliens have gone up," he said. "(Prosecutors) are no longer distinguishing between an aggravated felon

the American Immigration

60K

Oregon andtj.S. immigration iirosecutions

re-entry cases accounted for48 percentoftheoverall

United States and returns without advance permis-

sion, said David Leopold, a criminal defense attorney from Cleveland who specializes in immigration law and is a past president of

To help with ballooning costs, Oregon has a $20

Greg Cross I The Bulletin

ton, D.C. The increase in unlawful

Portland defense attorney who specializes in immi-

a result of climate change.

80K

cent years. In 1992, 36,564 defendants were sentenced

illegal re-entry applies to anyone who has previously beenremoved from the

to become a trend as longterm droughts intensify as

Other immigration offen es Unlawful re-entry

Source: Pew Research Center

number for illegal re-entry tions as the Federal Bureau skyrocketed to 19,463, a 29of Investigation, the Drug foldincrease,accordingto a Enforcement Agency, the study published earlier this Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, year bythe Pew Research Firearms and Explosives Center, a nonpartisan orgaand the Defense Departnization based in Washingment combined. Illegal re-entry constitut-

and scientists expect that

that last week became the most

successful projectin crowdfunding giant Kickstarter's five-year history. There was the "shotslinger," a Jello shot catapult intended to

circumvent laws against public Ryan Grepper, of Portland, invented the "Coolest," which comconsumption on the San Diego bines a cooler with a blender, USB charger for devices, music play- boardwalk. ("It got me invited er and other features. Grepper's Kfckstarter project for the product to the Playboy mansion," the 39-year-old Grepper says, "so I generated the most funding in Kfckstarter's five-year history. Ryan Grepper via The Washington Post I Submitted photo

consider it a success.") There was "EZ-Mark," a picture-hanging device that Grepper could never find a buyer for. ("I still think it's a

micro-investments directly from fans. Investors donate to projects in return for goodies or special access— inthecase of the"Coolest," the rewards

good idea, but the market has

indude a cooler, a T-shirt and a

spoken," he explains.) And just last fall, there was

reusable Solo cup — but no percentage of future profits. Despite Grepper's convic-

the "Coolest" itself, which

Grepper initiallypostedto tion that the Coolest, which Kickstarter with a funding goal indudes ablender, a Bluetooth of $125,000. Kickstarter, the

speaker, and a built-in USB

first and foremost in a wave of crowdfunding sites, allows

charger, was "a really cool idea," it closed out with only $100,000 — which was actually worth nothing. See Cooler/A6

inventors, artists, video-game

designers andothercreative types to seek all-or-nothing

notice them when you're

driving the streets of this dun-colored, poverty-stricken, blast

wall-crowded and car bomb-afflicted capitaL See Iraq /A6

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly sunny High 79, Low45 Page BS

The Bulletin

INDEX Calendar A5 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope

C4 Local/State A7 Movies A7 Nation/World

A5 SportsMonday B1-8 A7 Tee to Green B1, 6-7 A2 Television A7

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 244,

22 pages, 3 sections

Q

yi/e ser uecyclednewsprint

': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

8 8 267 02329


A2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014

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HONG KONG — China's

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voting reforms in Hong Kong, pushing back against months of rallies calling for free, democratic elections.

N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

reorms or on on

f

rolea4Aw. e sil.rva Dtseuies rr

al People's Congress Standing Committee drew battle lines in what pro-democracy groups warned would be a deepening confrontation over the political future of the city

and of China. The committee demanded procedural barriers for candidates for

the city's leader that would ensure Beijing remained the gatekeeper to that position-

and to political power over the city.

Li Fei, a deputy secretary general of the committee, told a news conference in Beijing that the nominating guidelines — including a requirement that candidates "love

the country, and love Hong Occupy Central, the main Kong" — would "protect the Hong Kong group advocatbroad stability of Hong Kong ing open elections, said it was now and in the future." planning civil disobedience The movecloses one ofthe protests in the city's commerfew avenues left for gradu- cial heart. al political liberalization in Beyond its consequences China after a sustained cam- for this former British colony paign against dissent on the of 7.2 million people, the tight mainland t hi s y ea r u n d er reins on Hong Kong politics President Xi Jinping. reflecta fear among leaders Hong Kong o p position in Beijing that political congroups and politicians who cessions here would ignite have campaigned for unfet- demands for liberalization on tered voting for the city's lead- the mainland, a quarter-cener, the chief executive, said tury after such hopes were the limits set by Beijing made extinguished on Tiananmen a mockery of the "one person, Square in 1989. "They are afraid that cavone vote"that had been promised to Hong Kong. ing in to Hong Kong would "After having lied to Hong show weakness," Minxin Pei, Kong people for so many a professor of government at years, it finally revealed it- Claremont McKenna College self today," said Alan Leong, in California, said in a telea pro-democracy legislator. phone interview. "They be"Hong Kong people are right lieve that political weakness to feel betrayed. It's certain will encourage Hong Kong to now that the central govern- demand more and will give ment will be effectively ap- opponents of the party's rule pointing Hong Kong's chief in China great confidence to executive." challenge the party."

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Syria peaCekeeperS —Undercover of darkness, 40Filipino peacekeepers escaped their besieged outpost in the Golan Heights after a seven-hour gunbattle with Syrian rebels, Philippine officials said Sunday. Al-Qaida-linked insurgents still hold captive 45 Fijian troops. The getaway, combined with the departure of another entrapped group of Filipino troops, marked amajor step forward in a crisis that erupted on Thursday whenSyrian rebels began targeting the peacekeeping forces. The United Nations Security Council has condemned the assaults on the international troops monitoring the Syrian-Israeli frontier, and has demanded the unconditional release of those still in captivity. PakiStani prOteStS —A political standoff on the streets of Pakistan's capital escalated into a national crisis Sunday after clashes between the police and protesters attempting to storm the prime minister's house left three people deadand at least 500 wounded. The violence, in which the police fired rubber bullets and tear gas against protesters armed with sticks, provoked an intervention from the military, which has a long history of seizing power. OnSunday evening, the army chief held an emergency meeting. In a statement afterward, the military stressed its commitment to democracy and urged rival politicians to resolve their differences.

CyberattaCk defenSe —WhenPresident BarackObama

DOmeStiC terrOr —Leaders of the House and Senate intelligencecommitteesonSunday prodded PresidentBarackObama to take decisive action against what they say are growing threats from Islamic State militants on U.S. soil. The lawmakers, Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., and Sen. DianneFeinstein, D-calif., put bipartisan pressure on the White House to turn back the hazard of Islamist fighters who have taken control of vast swaths of Syria and Iraq. Those militants now are looking toward the United States or Western Europe for its next targets, lawmakers said. Without offering specifics on any threats or suggestions how to confront them,thelawmakerssaidObama soon needsto developacomprehensive strategy to crush the fighters.

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Iraqi Siege —Iraqi security forces and Shiite militiamen on Sunday broke a six-week siege imposed by the Islamic State extremist group on the northern Shiite Turkmen town of Amirli, as a suicide bombing killed14 people in Anbar western province, officials said. Army spokesman Lt. Gen.Qassim al-Moussawi said the operation started at dawn Sundayand the forces entered the town shortly after midday. Speaking live on state TV,al-Moussawi said the forces suffered "some casualties," but did not give a specific number. He said fighting was "still ongoing to clear the surrounding villages."

meets with other NATOleaders this week, they are expected to ratify what seems, at first glance, a far-reaching change in the organization's mission of collective defense: For the first time, a cyberattack on any of the 28 NATO nations could be declared an attack on all of them. Themost obvious target of the new policy is Russia, which was believed behind computer attacks that disrupted financial and telecommunications systems in Estonia in 2007 and Georgia in 2008, and is believed to haveused them in the early days of the Ukraine crisis as well.

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EmdaSSy in Lidya fallS —An Islamist-allied militia group in control of Libya's capital now guards the U.S.Embassyand its residential compound, a commander said Sunday, as onlookers toured the abandoned homes of diplomats who fled the country more than a month ago. AnAssociated Press journalist saw holes left by small-arms and rocket fire dotting the residential compound, reminders of weeks of violence between rival militias over control of Tripoli that sparked the evacuation. The breach of a deserted U.S. diplomatic post — including images of menearlier swimming in the compound's algae-filled pools — likely will reinvigorate debate in the U.S. over its role in Libya, more than three years after supporting rebels who toppled dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

/

Christophe Ena/The Associated Press

A French firemanand his dog search the rubble of a building after an explosion caused it to collapse, in Rosny-sous-Bois ,outsideParisonSunday. French authorities say the four-story building's collapse killed a child. More peoplewere thought to be underneath the rubble. Fire department spokesmanGabriel Plus said around10 people evacuated the building in Rosny-

sous-bois early Sunday. Plus said that about10 more could still be underneath the rubble, andemergency teams were working hard to rescuepeoplewho might be trapped. "We could still find living victims in the hours to come," he said. Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve had arrived at the scene,but couldn't confirm a theory that the explosion wascaused by agas leak.

Israel claims1,000 acresasits own in the WestBank for settlements By Isabel Kershner New York Times News Service

JERUSALEM — Israel laid

claim on Sunday to nearly 1,000 acres of West Bank land in a Jewish settlement bloc

lem, has now officiallybeen declared "state land," as opposed to land privately owned by Palestinians, clearing the way for the potential approval of Israeli buildingplans there.

near Bethlehem — a step that But the mayor of the nearcould herald significant Israeli by Palestinian town of Surif, construction in the area — de- Ahmad Lafi, said the land befying Palestinian demands for longed to Palestinian families. a halt in settlement expansion He told the official Palestinian and challenging world opinion. news agency WAFA that IsraePeace Now, an Israeli group li army forces and personnel that opposes the c onstruc- posted orders early Sunday tion of settlements in the West announcing the seizure of land Bank, said that the action Sun-

that was planted with olive and

day might be the largest single appropriation of West Bank land in decades and that it could"dramatically change the reality" in the area.

spokesman for President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, condemned the an-

nouncement and called for a reversal of the land claim, saying that it would "further deteriorate the situation." Though Israel says that it intends to keep the Etzion set-

tlement bloc under any perma-

into a 50-day war that end-

who was accused of being the ed last week with an Egypprime mover in the kidnapping tian-brokeredcease-fire. and killing of the teenagers. The land appropriation has The timing of the land appro- quickly turned attention back priation suggested that it was to the Israeli-occupied West meant as a kind of compensa- Bank and exposed the contration for the settlers and punish- dictory visions in the Israeli ment for the Palestinians. government that hamper the The land, which is near the prospects of any broader IsraeJewish settlement of Gvaot in the Etzion bloc south of Jerusa-

li-Palestinian peace process.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, a

AlaSka leCaVereS —In Fairbanks, Alaska, just 200 miles from the Arctic Circle, frost can continue into June, while summer surrenders as early as mid-August. A long growing season it is not. Partly as a result, Alaska imports about 95 percent of its food, state officials say. But local food advocates are pushing back against the widespread notion that eating food grown or raised in Alaska is impossible or too expensive. Boosted by astate program that helps school districts buy local products and food stamp incentives that lure low-income shoppers to farmers' markets, locavores are teaching small farmers how to reach the public, and consumers how and where to buy. — From wire reports

Finding

home can

cl

ar

Finding thq Mortg~ag

nent agreement with the Palestinians and that most recent

peace plans have involved land swaps, most countries consider Israeli settlements to be a violation of international law. The c ontinued construction h a s

forest trees in Surif and the nearby villages of Al-Jaba'a alsobeen a constant source of and Wadi Fukin. tension between Israel and the Interested parties h ave Palestinians, as well as Israel 45 days in which to register and its most important WestPalestinians aspire to form objections. ern allies. a state in the lands that Israel The kidnapping of the teenA State Department official, conquered in 1967. agers prompted an Israeli mil- who spoke on the condition Israeli officials said the po- itary dampdown in the West of anonymity, said the United litical directive to expedite a Bank against Hamas, the Is- States urged Israel to reverse survey of the status of the land lamic group that dominates its decision, calling it "councame after three Israeli teenag- Gaza and that Israel said was terproductive to Israel's stated ers were kidnapped and killed behind the abductions. The goal of a negotiated two-state in June while hitchhiking in subsequent tensions along the solution with the Palestinians." that area. In July, the Israeli au- IsraelGaza border erupted The last round of U.S.-brothorities arrested a Palestinian

DetrOit bankruptCy —In a trial set to open in the federal courthouse in Detroit on Tuesday, nothing short of the city's future is at stake. If Judge Steven Rhodesapproves a blueprint drawn up by Detroit officials to eliminate more than $7 billion of its estimated $18 billion in debts and to invest about $1.5 billion into the city's now dismal services, it will mark the beginning of the end of the nation's largest-ever municipal bankruptcy. In deciding whether the city's plan is equitable, feasible and in the best interest of creditors, Rhodes will send messages beyond Detroit about the rarely tested powers and limits of municipal bankruptcy.

Pou re never aEne wlien cuere Joiny yom' Eoan ...

AA.ACAD E MY M ORT GA G E C O R P O R A T I O N

kered peace talks broke down

in April. Israel suspended the troubled talks after Abbas forged a reconciliation pact with the Palestinian Authority's rival, Hamas, which rejects Israel's right to exist. American

officials also said that Israel's repeated announcements of new settlement construction

contributed to the collapse of the talks.

Casey Jones

Jennifer Edwards

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www.acacjemymortgage.com 371 SW Upper Terrace Dr., Suite 1, Bend, OR 97702 "=


MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 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, September1, the 244th day of 2014. Thereare 121 days left in the year.

SCIENCE

Using light, scientists can improve mice's bad memories

HAPPENINGS Iraq —U.K. Prime Minister David Cameronand German Chancellor Angela Merkel plan to address their respective parliaments about the country's crisis.

Ladar Day —Afederal holiday celebrates the American labor movement.

HISTORY Highlight:In1939, World War II began asNaziGermany invaded Poland. In1159, PopeAdrian IV, the only English pope, died. In1807,former Vice President Aaron Burr was found not guilty of treason. (Burr was then tried on amisdemeanor charge, but wasagain acquitted.l In1894, the Great Hinckley Fire destroyed Hinckley, Minnesota, and five other communities, killing more than 400 people. In1914, the last passenger pigeon in captivity, "Martha," died at the Cincinnati Zoo. In1923, the Japanesecities of Tokyo andYokohamawere devastated by anearthquake that claimed some140,000 lives. In1932, NewYork City Mayor James"Gentleman Jimmy" Walker resigned following charges of graft and corruption in his administration. In1942, U.S. District Court Judge Martin Welsh, ruling from Sacramento, California, upheld the wartime detention of Japanese-Americans and Japanese nationals. In1951, the United States, Australia and New Zealand signed a mutual defensepact, the ANZUStreaty. In1969,a coup in Libya brought MoammarGadhafi to power. In1976, U.S. Rep.Wayne Hays, D-Dhio, resigned in the wake of a scandal in which he admitted having anaffair with "secretary" Elizabeth Ray. In1983, 269 people were killed when aKorean Air Lines Boeing 747was shot down by a Soviet jet fighter after the airliner entered Soviet airspace. In1989, Baseball Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti died of a heart attack at his summer home in Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, at age51. Ten years ago:More than 1,000 people weretaken hostagebyheavilyarmedChechen militants at a school in Beslan in southern Russia; more than 330 people, more than half of them children, were killed in the three-day ordeal. Militants in Iraq freed sevenemployees of a Kuwaiti trucking firm after their employer paid half a million dollars in ransom. The criminal caseagainst Kobe Bryant collapsed asprosecutors in Colorado dropped a sexual assault charge against the NBA star, saying they had no choice becausetheaccuser no longer wanted to participate. Five years ago: Vermont's law allowing same-sex marriage went into effect. Poland held ceremonies marking the 70th anniversary of the start of World War II. One year ago:Syria derided President Barack Dbama's decision to hold off on punitive military strikes, while the Dbama administration countered that its case for military action against the regime of President Bashar Assadwas getting stronger, saying it had evidence that the nerveagent sarin was used in adeadly August attack. Former South African President Nelson Mandela left a hospital after nearly three months of treatment there.

BIRTHDAYS Comedian-actress Lily Tomlin is 75. Singer Barry Gibb is 68. Talk show host Dr. Phil

McGraw is 64. Singer Gloria Estefan is 57.Jazz musician Boney James is 53. Country singer-songwriter Charlie Robison is 50. — From wire reports

By Amina Khan

(some hangout time with female mice).

Los Angeles Times

Can a bad memory be Later, when the male mice turned into a good one? Sci- were hanging out in a partic-

The Messenger spacecraft has been studying the planet from orbit, but is

entists say they've been able

ular corner, the researchers

to do just that in a group of mice by activating certain light. The findings in the jour-

shone blue light to reactivate the same neurons that had just learned from that bad (or good) experience. The mice who'd gotten the shock treatment fled

N A S A 's

nal Nature show that mem-

from the blue light, while those

Messenger spacecraft has swung around its namesake

ories can potentially be modified without drugs or extra training — simply, if that's the word, by breaking the memory into its compo-

who had hung out with the female micelingered and basked in the glow. Could those bad memories be switchedto goodones — and

nents in the brain and rewir-

vice versa?In a second set of

experiments, researchers gave the bad-memory mice some

around the solar system's innermost planet brings it gradu-

ing the faulty connection. You might think of memory as something fixed, a historical recording that's as unchangeable as the

ally closer and closer as it looks

past. That's far from real-

into Mercury's mysterious volcanoes,craters and magnetic field. With dwindling fuel to counteract the dense planet's pull, the scientists managing

ity, senior author Susumu activated the old foot-shock

almost ready for its final, up-close look.

parts of their brain with

By Scott Dance The Baitimore Sun

BALTIMORE —

planet for three years, beam-

ing observations of Mercury back to Earth, but next March it will smash into the cratered

surface it has been studying from afar. The satellite's oblong orbit

tg

the mission at Johns Hopkins

Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland can only delay its fall for so long. It's now orbiting as close as planet's gray, dimpled crust — and soon, closer. Data col-

Barbara HaddockTaylor/The Baltimore Sun

A model of NASA's Messenger spacecraft, which is in orbit around lected in the final months of the planet Mercury, is kept at the operations center at the Johns the decadelong mission to ex- Hopkins Applied Physics lab in Laurel, Maryland. The actual plore the inner solar system spacecraft, which will crash next March into the surface of Mercucould help prove the presence ry, is the size of a small car.

oficein polarcratersand provide more detailed accounts of the mission was intended to its magnetic equator located last one year, but was extendmysterious depressions on about 20 percent of the way ed once for an additional year the planet's surface. toward the pole. and then again, through MesAnd they believe they have senger's crash landing, and Standingup to the heat confirmed thatsome craters then a year beyond for assessThose "bonus" observa- at the planet's poles con- ing the data. tions depend on Messenger's tain ice — the holes are deep When Messenger entered i nstruments holding u p t o enough to remain in perma- Mercury's orbit, it came withthe 800-degree heat radiat- nent shadow. in 120 miles of the planet's "In many cases, a lot of our surface. But since then, its ing from Mercury's surface during t h e s l o w-rotating original ideas about Mercury path has shifted so that with planet's prolonged days. The were just plain wrong," Nittler each eight-hour orbit cycle, planet, named for the Roman

metrical, unlike Earth's, with

told the Baltimore Sun in June

god of messages, makes one 2011, after just three months revolution around the sun ev- of data collection in orbit. ery 88 Earth days, and yet it N ow scientists h ope t o rotates so slowly that it takes prove more theories wrong, 176 Earth days for one solar or right, as the case may be. day to pass on Mercury. As long as the instruments A better look hold up, they could add detail A closer view could prove and nuance to data that is ex-

the presence of ice in the po-

pected to be used by scientists lar craters and provide greatfor decades to come, provid- er detail of what elements are ing insights into how plan- in different geographic feaetary systems form around tures. Images from the first stars across the universe. year of orbit showed, at best, "Every time we've gone 10 meters per pixel, but are somewhere in the solar sys- now approaching 2 meters tem and looked with higher per pixeL Observations of resolution, we've made new magnetic fields and elemental discoveries," said Larry Nit- composition are similarly gettler, a scientist at the Carnegie ting increasingly detailed. Institution for Science who is

deputy principal investigator of the $500 million project's science team. Since its launch in 2004, Messenger has made plenty of discoveries. Much of what was known about the planet closest to the

sun came from NASA's Mariner 10 mission, which flew

female mice. At the same time, the researchers shone blue light at the mice, which artificially

Tonegawa of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

neurons. But this time, rather than

said in a news briefing. "Recording memory is not like playing a tape recorder, but it is a creative

running away, the mice started reacting positively to the blue light. (The opposite happened with the mice who'd hung out

process — sometimes even with the female mice first and

several dozen miles above the

of what volatile elements are contained in lava flows or the

pleasant private time with the

One feature scientists are

particularly interested in getting a closer look at is what are known as hollows, irregularly shaped depressions with bright, flat floors and halo-like markings around them. They believe a combination of the planet's heat, its constant bombardment by

tiny meteors, and the powerfuleffects of charged solar particles could be causing earlysigns ofMercury's iron materials in surface rocks, core, small magnetic field and likely sulfur or potassium, to minimal atmosphere. sublimate — transforming Messenger began sending from solid to gas without first photographs and other obser- becoming liquid — leaving vations of the planet in Janu- the curious craters behind. "We've a lways had t o ary 2008, eventually catalogpast Mercury and Venus in 1974 and 1975. Mariner found

i t gets closer. Earlier t h i s month, it came w ithin 100

kilometers — about 62 miles

leading to an entirely false gotten shocked later) Here's what r esearchers memory," Tonegawa said. After all, a family vaca- think is happening in the brain: tion in the Bahamas is a In the amygdala, the positive very positive memory — un- response to the female mice less there's a swinuning ac- was overriding the negative recident, which could sudden- sponsetothe artificiallyactivatly make that same happy ed shockmemory. The neurons time seem like a very nega- weren't being rewritten — the tive one. negatively responding amygMemory, then, is mallea- dala neurons were still there. ble. And a single memory But the hippocampus neurons isn't stored in just one place were now starting to form conin the brain. The context nections with the positively of a particular memoryresponding amygdala neurons where it took place, what instead. The experiment didn't happened — seems to be overwrite the cells; it rerouted coded in a part of the brain

the connections between them.

calledthehippocampus. But There are limits to the rethat same memory's emo- searchers' light-driven techtional valence — how posi-

nique, researchers Tomonori

tive or negative that experi-

Takeuchiand Richard G.M.

ence felt — is actually coded

Morris of the University of Ed-

in a different region of the inburgh, who were not involved brain called the amygdala. in the paper, wrote in a comTo take advantage of this mentary. But, they said, "modivision, th e r e searchers lecular engineering is none-

theless shedding light on our understanding of the underlying physiological networks of memory."

observations. "We'll try to get it all down

took two groups of male mice that had been genetically modified so that neurons in the hippocampus and amygdala would respond to light. They exposed one of the groups to

right before game over," said

an unpleasant experience

Andrew Calloway, the mis-

(small electric shocks to their feet) and gave another group a pleasant experience

TOUCHMARK

— for the first time. And it

will gradually get closer, as engineers slowly use up fuel for brief propulsions that de-

lay the inevitable and prolong

sion operation manager at the Hopkins lab.

SlNCE 1980

2 locations inBend Main Center

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ing the entire surface for the

squint at the images to see the

first time. The closer it got to

details," said Nancy Chabot, instrument scientist for Mes-

— Patio Dining Sets-

senger's cameras, the Mer-

- Cha/se Lounges-

the planet, the more theories it confirmed and disproved.

When Messenger began an elongated, elliptical or-

cury Dual Imaging System. "We're getting new insights

bit around Mercury in 2011,

into the depths of these fea-

the data were even more

tures and what the edges look like in more detail."

dramatic. Scientists predicted they

would find few "volatile" elements — abundant here on Earth but with boiling points

too low to be expected to withstand Mercury's heat — in the planet's crust. But they found

astonishingly high levels of sodium and

Any more data the mission

is able to collect before Messenger crashes or is fried by the heat will be the last gath-

ered on Mercury for years. Last year, NASA signed on to the European Space Agency's BepiColombo mission, which

p o tassium, as plans to send two spacecraft

well as surprisingly low levels to Mercury in 2022 to gathof iron. They also found signs er more data on the planet's of significant volcanic activcomposition, core and magity, perhaps not as distant in netic field. the past as once expected. The past two years of MesThey mapped its magnetic senger's observations weren't field and found it to be asym- assured — the orbital portion

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A4

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER1, 2014

Cooler Continuedfrom A1 Under Kickstarter's funding rules, inventorsmustmeet their

more ofa serialentrepreneur

As Grepper was becoming

than a career man, inthetraditional sense. While his success is a testament to the power of

more confident as an inventor,

a parallel change was taking place for invention as a field:

perseverance, it'salso evidence

Kickstarter, with its promise to

goaltoget themoney. Grepper put his head down. He returned to his workshop, determinedtotuneuphispitch.

of the arrival of a new piecement of consumers and car-

New York in 2009, funding

This time he built a prototype

ried out in living rooms, coffee shops and co-working spaces. Anywhere, Grepper says, with somecaffeineand Wi-Fi. Theinventorneverimagined thatpossibilitywhenhequithis full-timejobinmedical sales 14 years ago to strike out on his own. Onlyacoupleyears outof college and alreadybored with the9-to-5,Greppermovedfrom

more than 10,000 projects its first two years. Co-working spaces, with their emphasis on entrepreneurship and creative camaraderie, began cropping up everywhere from San

and induded even more bells and whistles. Eight months later,arevamped and relaunched

Coolest — with an actual sample product for people to view — had earned more than $13 millionin donations frommore than61,000people. "It wasn't so

g l amorous,"

change"howmillions of people meal, DIY economy — one around the world connect with dependent on the direct invest- art," opened shop in Brooklyn,

Grepper laughed on the phone from Portland, where he lives 'Ibcson, Arizona to San Diego with his wife and two young and took a part-time sales job children. "There are many, at Sears. In his spare time, he

Francisco to Wichita, Kansas. Just this past year, companies

Continuedfrom A1 "Anything could happen," hesaid. The state's insurance policy softens the blow on the high coststhe statepays annuallyto

fight large wildfires. The cost is separate from funds used to fight small brush and forest

fires. It's also a means of paying for fire suppression that is somewhatuniqueto Oregon. The state's wildfire insur-

ance is similar to a driver's car insurance. The state pays a

printers to t h e m a instream market — and with them, the

seasonstillunderway. The De- standsburnedinthe Two Bulls partmentof Forestryfightsfire Fire in late Julyas it tries to reon state-held lands, as well as coup some of the value of timsome federalland and private ber holdings blackened by the timberland. blaze. The premium last year was The Department of Forestry about $923,000. This year, it uses an insurance broker each more than doubled to more year to help determine which than$2million, said Rod Nich- insurer to go with for the next ols, another Department of fire season. The state then Forestryspokesman. takes inbids frominsurers. "As an agency we are just So why did it double? Nichols went to the car insurance searching for the best insuranalogy. If a driver gets into ance at the lowestprice," Nicha couple of wrecks the car in- ols said. surance company is going to Thisyear'sfires increasethepremium.

"And that is what happened premium, orannualfee, andin return the insurance company tothe state of Oregon,"he said. offers a deductible that must "Basically we had a very exbe met before the insurance pensiveseasonin2013." coveragekicksin. The state expects its premiThe state's approach has umcoststo stayhighforseversaved Oregon about $21.7 mil- alyears. lionover38years, accordingto The state of Washington, Departmentof Forestrydata.

which sa w

inthe Northwest.

Idaho.

The 40-year-old policy is through British insurance gi-

Oregonlandownerswho are protected by the Department ant Lloyd's of London, which of Forestry help the state pay pays costs over a state-paid its insurance premium as part deductible that has risen from of their annual fees. In Central $325,000 in 1973 to $20million Oregon, timberland owners last year. For the first time in pay$3.32peracreperyearand its38 years holding coverage grassland owners pay $1.25

— the state wasn't covered in 1976 and 1985 — the state last year had its entire insurance

The state this year has al-

ready burned through most of its insurance coverage, and scientistsbelieve the trendwill

continue, especially east of the Cascade Mountains.

"We are expectingto see hotter, drier summers into the

i t s la r g est-ev- future," said Kathie Dello, dep-

Oregon's method of paying er wildfire this year, has no for fire suppression is unique wildfire insurance. Nor does

ly that he does not favor the

gest uncertainty on Putin's

breakup of Ukraine — though part as to how he wants to Continuedfrom A1 Russia seized Crimea from push ahead onUkraine. "The presidentwas talking AsPutin'sinterviewwasbe- U kraine in M a rch — b u t ingbroadcast, Dmitry Peskov, wants greater autonomy for aboutinclusivetalks," Peskov the presidential spokesman, theeast. saidoftheinterview,inwhich went i nt o

d a m age-control

mode, saying that Putin was callingfor dialogue, notsovereignty for the region, when he urged "substantive, meaningful negotiations" on questions concerningthe"politicalorganization of society and statehoodinsoutheastUkraine." Putin has said repeated-

The term "statehood" sug-

Putin also called foranendto

gests more than that, though, hostilities before winter and and if the word choice reflect-

criticized European leaders

ed a shift in policy, it would forsupporting Kiev'smilitary ratchetupMoscow'schallenge campaigns against pro-RusnotonlytoKiev,butalsotothe United StatesandWesternEu-

sian separatists. "The way, extent and

ropean nations trying to force mechanisms of this process — that's what the president

Putintobackdown.

Alternatively, it could sug- meant," Peskovsaid.

such as Makerbot and 3DSystems introduced consumer 3-D

promise of making prototypes and models, more easily, in many failures before that first welded ornate metal fences for yourownhome. "We're at a peak time in the invention. One of my mentors a hodgepodge of dients and told me once, if you can't han- sketched out his solutions to creative economy," Grepper dle disappointment and rejec- life's odd little problems: A dog said."Therearesomanythings tion,pack up your toolbox and bowl that folds up into a credit that allow people to translate card-sizedpouch, for instance. their ideas into actual, physical findanewcareer." "Career" is an odd descrip- Or a luggage scale to help trav- products. Things that weren't torforwhat Grepper does:He's elersavoidairlinefees. availableevenfiveyearsago."

Fire

Ukraine

uty director of the Oregon Climate Service. Fires have already burned three times more than the 10-

year average for acres burned perseason. The Two Bulls Fire alone, which burned near Bend in early June, cost $5.7 million to fight, Tracy Wrolson, dis-

peracre. The statealso collects

trict business manager for the Department of Forestry in

surcharges from landowners

Prineville,wroteinanemail.

and taxes from timber harvesters to help pay the insur-

"We still have some out-

run it saves landowners mon-

The Department of Forest-

Iraq

Alizzi, who saidhebecame sions. He loved America, he a U.S. citizen two years ago toldme. There'snoplacequite

Continuedfrom A1

afterheserved as atranslator

for U.S. troops in Iraq, was you can't help but be nostal- back on his first visit to the gic for that Iraq of yore, the country in five years. And Iraq that I never personally he felt both delighted by the knew but that older people concert and troubled by its talk about — back when cre- message. ativity and cultural diversity Now living in Texas and w eren't always threatened by still affiliated with the Deviolence. partment of Defense, Alizzi I went to the concert with isproudtobeAmericannow. Haider Alizzi, a c onflicted He spoke in a heavily ac27-year-old, and his uncle, cented English slang pepthe famed Iraqi playwright peredwith"y'all"s. Hamed al-Maliki (no relation Heusedthewords"us" and Butwhenthey get together,

to the recently ousted prime

"our" to describe Americans

minister).

and U.S. foreign policy deci-

RPA

RPA some welcome time to

The reprieve has brought

Continuedfrom A5 Although the state legis-

laturehas agreed to require fullper-student funds forkin-

likeit.

But as the oud players played, and the beautiful but haunting voice of a young man transfixed the audience with its sadness, Alizzi also spoke of his desire to move

backto thisplace, thisbroken country. "Imisstheculture,"hesaid.

"In Iraq, you wake up and everyone is waiting for (you) to get up so you can all eat breakfast together. In America, my girlfriend gets up to go to work. I eat breakfast alone,"hesaid.

ten in the fall of 2015 and to open Hartman in 2016. If the

keep searching, said RPAEx- extra funding doesn't look ecutive Director Jon Bullock. like it's coming through, the "One of our charges as a Hartmanplanwillbe pushed charter is to be innovative back again but kindergarten and (thinking about having willremain, he said.

dergartnersas it does other "We'll cram ourselves into students, it has not promised to move) was an i n terestthat the overall funding pie ing process for us because the existing space and by the will be increased — mean- it prompted examination of summer of 2015 we should ing the same funds may be what our needs were and knowwhatwe'll get(in fundspread thinner with the kinask what we're all about," he ing) for 2016," he said. "It dergarten changes. said."Hartmanisbiggerthan takes time to reopen a school The district stopped using we need so we didn't have so we want to be working toHartman, formerly a middle to think about those things wards that. It's easier to pull school, in 2012 when Rid- because we weren't forced the plug in the process than geview High School opened. to. So in some ways it was a it is to put it together without RPA and the district signed a good thing, but having more enough time. We're experifive-yearlease for use ofthe time to extend the process (of encing a growthmode for the building. When the district searching for new space) is first time in eight years and opted out of the lease in 2013, helpful." we need to make sure any the charter school began Accordingto McIntosh, the changes are sustainable." lookingforspace forits200- district will still move to im— Reporter: 541-548-2186, plus middleschool students. plement full-day kindergarIpugmire@bendbulletin.com

coveragepaid. standing bills, like retardant, "Lastyearwasanepicyear," ancepremium and other costs that may change the numbers Postrel said. "We used all of associatedwith firefighting. alittlebit,"hewrote. the $25 million in coverage The state's wildfire insurDepending on weather, fire andmore." ancehelpskeepthisratedown, season could run as late as Due mainly to the massive said BillSwarts, aforesterwho October, and state fire officials and expensive Douglas Com- retiredfrom Cascade Timber- arehoping thisseason doesn't plex Fire near Roseburg last lands in late July. "In the long enduplikethelastone. year, the Department of For-

ey," he said. ry last year collected federThe company owns most of al reimbursements, mainly the land burned by the 6,908- from the Federal Emergency acre Two Bulls Fire, which au- Management Agency, to trim thoritiessaidwaslikelycaused the total cost to $75 million. a month and a half to corral, by arson. By paying the state, State lawmakers then providcosting the state more than companies share th e c osts ed the $30 million between $50 million to fight. The state withthe Departmentof Forest- the total cost and the insuris still t r y ing t o d etermine ryandotherlandowners. ance through money from the how much the federal governStill, theinsurance only cov- state's generalfund. ment will reimburse the costs ers the cost of firefighting, not — Reporter: 541-617-7812, of last year's fire season, with property such as timber lost ddarIIng@bendbulletin.com accounting this year slowed in awildfire. Cascade TimberTaylor W.Andersoncontributed by the early and intense fire lands started salvage logging tothisarticle from Salem. estry spent about $122 million on wildland firefighting. The Douglas Fire burned nearly 50,000 acres on more than 75 squaremilesand took nearly

Re-entry

simply being here after a deportation," said Steve Sady, the Continuedfrom A1 chief deputyintheOregonFed"Illegal re-entry cases have eral Public Defender's Office, beenprosecutedbytheU.S. At- which handles many illegal torney's Office inthe Districtof re-entry cases. "'Here' is often Oregonforsometime,"saidBil- where the person grew up and ly Williams, criminal division where the family lives. Somechief for the U.S. Attorney's timestheyhavelivedheresince Office of Oregon."Prosecution theyweresmallchildren." of previously deported individAllegra McLeod, a law prouals who have been convicted fessor at Georgetown Univerof criminal offenses for quali- sity who has written about the fyingaggravatedfelonyconvic- convergence of immigration tions continues to be a priority and criminal law, offered two inthe Districtof Oregon." possible explanations for the Many defendants are the nationwide increase in illegal childrenor grandchildren of re-entryprosecutions. migrant workers who came Onereflect s"ageneralsocieto work farms in Oregon and tal turn towards addressing an settled down, said Shamloo. array of social problems in the The younger generations often United States through crimigrew up and went to school in nalization and punishment," the U.S., but find themselves deported after a minor brush

withthelaw,hesaid.

"They'renotwhatweusedto thinkofasundocumentedfolks

who used to be migrant workers," Shamloo said."I see them

employed in all walks of life. They'reworkingeverywhere." Afterdeportation,mostoften to Mexico or Central America,

they return to America for the same reasons that have driven

countless immigrants before them, Shamloo said: safety, family, economic opportunity, andtheAmericanwayoflife. "These are often heartbreaking cases. The federal crime is

50% of the store

serious criminal history and familytiesintheU.S.

"If we felonize the very people who are going to benefit from immigration reform, we are solidifying a class of people who have strong ties to this country, and will never come

backor willbe foreverundocumented,"hesaid.

Therelati veeaseofprosecutingillegalre-entrycasesmakes it tempting tobring as manyas possible, since caseload is a consideration when determiningbudgets,hesaid. "The prosecution case is no

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differentthanatrafficviolation. It's paperwork," he said. "U.S. Customs and Border Protec-

tion(receives) ahugeamountof money, and they've got to justify their existence. How do you she said. It could alsobe attrib- justify your existence better utableto"thedesire,onthepart than(with) statistics'?" of this administration, tocreate Leopoldurged U.S. Attorney political space for comprehen- General Eric Holder to offer sive immigration reform by guidance for what types of illedemonstrating a'get tough'ap- gal re-entry cases justify federproachonenforcement." alprosecution. "We are treating as criminal "Ihave ahardtimebelieving what is effectively a civil regu- that tax dollars are being well latoryviolation,"McLeodsaid. used when a dishwasher, waitDefense attorney Leopold ress,or construction worker is agreed thatPresident Obama felonized and removed" from wants to appear tough on the country, Leopold said."The crime, but questioned the value quality of these prosecutions of creating"an assemblyline of — meaning the type of people felonization"byindiscriminate- who areprosecuted — arebasily applying the illegal re-entry callydishwashers." law without considering addi— Reporter: 202-662-7456, tional factors, such as lack of aclevenger®bendbulletin.com

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014• THE BULLETIN

A7

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

OU Ini:

awe versiono iss o

TV SPOTLIGHT

intoning thoughts about death

"Houdini"

needed to keep pushing my limits, to keep going further. But why? What was I looking for? How far did I need to keep pushing in order to feel alive?

and his own motivations. "I

Tonight at 9, History Channel

By Neil Genzlinger New Yorrt Times News Service L

H arry Houdini spent hi s

Whatever the answer was, it

later years debunking mystics

fective at first, has worn out its welcome. The lines Brody

will have a lot to say.

T hat

on earth grand and eventful, as he did, and people will be fascinated by you long after you're gone. The History channel is the being broadcast tonight and Tuesday. A fine, Oscar-winning actor, Adrien Brody, was recruited for the title role, and he's a treat to watch. The

script, though, is less than he deserved.

Houdini (1874-1926) became an international star with his daring escapes and illusions, rising from sideshow-style schlock to performances in

t h eaters and

opera houses by combining showmanship and a knack for publicity. Once he became famous, he took to attacking spiritualists, who were thriving in the early part of the last century with claims that they

could communicate with the dead. Debunking their parlor-trick acts became a sort of second career for him, one that put him a t

o dds with,

now?" The script's flaws aside, the

miniseries is watchable for the performances — Kristen Connolly of "House of Cards" plays Houdini's wife — and for Damon Winter/New York Times News Service the historical juxtapositions. Oscar winner Adrien Brody starsin the two-part History channel movie "Houdini," premiering tonight In seeing Houdini's story, we at 9 and continuing Tuesday. see, among other things, the introduction of the airplane and the gathering storm of among others, Arthur Conan been books. pable of all sorts of subtlety World War I. (Houdini, in this Doyle, author of the Sherlock One of those, "Houdini: A and nuance, but Edel and the telling, did some light spying Holmes stories. Mind in Chains: A Psychoan- script don't respect that, or for Britain and th e U n ited Houdini's story has been alytic Portrait," is the basis for the audience. The screenplay States during his travels.) We told in film (Tony Curtis por- History's miniseries. It w as presents a Houdini who has a encounter Anastasia and the trayed him in 1953) and on- written by Dr. Bernard Mey- strong emotional attachment rest of the Russian royal famstage, including an intriguing er, a psychiatrist whose son, to his mother and an obses- ily. And, by the way, we see production by the Axis The- Nicholas, adapted this screen- sion with escaping the ordi- how some of Houdini's tricks ater Company in New York play from it, with Uli Edel nary, but instead of having were done. last winter. A stage musical directing. Brody show us these things, A better version of t h i s is in the works, though Hugh Brody, who won the Best it has him tell them to us, amazing life will surely be Jackman, who was to play A ctor Oscarfor the 2002 film repeatedly. made in one genre or anHoudini, recently dropped "The Pianist" and has done There are voice-overs ga- other, but this one's at least out. And, of course, there have television only rarely, is ca- lore, with Brody's Houdini diverting.

Da care o erator nee s timeout

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

Dear Abby:My neighbor has a registered day care business, and everyday Ihearherscreaming at young children and infants. They are all 4-year-olds and younger. We live in a rural area outside

have been hearing because they

almost all his money for the last

should be aware that their trust-

nine months. He was never alone with her, and she showed no emo-

situation is as ugly as you de-

him. In fact, a male friend of hers asked him for $800 to give as a

a small town. She uses profani-

scribe, those kids must be terri-

bribe so he wouldn't be drafted

ty and says mean things to them. It makes me want to cry when I think of how scared those

pEAR ABBY

ed caregiver loses control of her emotions and takes out her frustrations on their children. If the

tional or p hysical attraction to

fied of her. into the Ukrainian military. We If that's not possi- believe this male friend is, in fact, ble, Child Protective the girl's real boyfriend. Services should be My friend paid $300 to send notified because the f lowers to he r f o r t h ei r n i n e-

kids must be. environment is not Who do I contact emotionally healthy with this i n f ormation? I c o uld for little children.

month anniversary, for which she

expressed no thanks or appreciation. What advice can you provide

record her with my phone if evidence was needed to shut down her business. This woman has a reallybad anger management problem. She also knows I can

P.S. By the age of 4, children us here? usually have started to repeat the — Friend In Afghanistan languagethey hear around them. Dear Friend: Your friend's "ro-

hear her because we have spoken about how our voices traveL

vocabulary and questioned their little ones about where they heard

I don't think she is being physi-

I'm surprised these parents ha-

ven't noticed the change in their

mance" seems suspicious to me,

too. That he is giving all his money to someone who appears to be so emotionally distant is worri-

those "bad words." Nonetheless, some. I also have to doubt that on the chance that the parents are $800 would keep an able-bodied be damaging to those kids. Please clueless, what you have observed man from being drafted into the help me find someone to tell. should be reported. Ukrainian military since the I'm afraid the local police won't Dear Abby: I have a friend, a country is now involved in milbe able to do anything. I can't contractor working for the U.S. itary conflict. It appears your even take my own child in our government, who thinks he's in friend is being treated more like cally abusive, but her words must

backyard because she swears so much. — Day Care Drama In Indiana

Dear D.c.d.:Ideally, you should try to tell the parents what you

love with a Uk rainian girl. The

an ATM than a suitor, but he may

pay is really good. He recently have to arrive at that realization came back from a visit to see this on his own. "girlfriend." — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com He has been sending this girl or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

SEPT. 1, 2014:This yearyou openup to better communication between you and others. Your innate sense of direction mixed with your sensitivity provides a new, dynamic path if you are open to change. Infuse your life with energy and caring. If you are single, check out a potential sweetie with scrutiny and perhaps

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bitrar

tunity heading your way, and you are likely to make it become a reality. Free yourself up in order to maximize its potential. The afternoon will serve you well if you decide to network. This trend will continue for several days. Tonight: Be aduo.

Starssbowtbekind icism. Someone of dsy yoo'll bsve yo u meet easily CANCER (June 21-July22) ** * * * D ynamic could be emotion** * * * Y our creativity will be in higher ** * * Positive ally unavailable, demand than you realize. Be prepared to ** * Average whi c h could lead cover all bases at once, and you just might ** So-so to a hurtful situasucceedindoing so.Listento someone tion. You are one * Difficult

year awayfrom

else's suggestion beforeyou present your

own. Donotassume thatyouhavethe meeting someone only answers. Tonight: Play it easy. significant to your life history. If you are attached, spending time alone with your LEO (July23-Aug.22) significant other will delight both of you. ** * * Getting going might take more Love continues to blossom with your care. effort than you realize. You simply won't SAGITTARIUSgrounds you. be up for running around. Consider how fortunate you are that today is Labor Day. ARIES (Marcb21-April19) Don't worry — you will get into the holiday ** * * Deal with someone directly in pace in the evening. Tonight: Let out your the morning. A discussion might reveal inner wild child. that there is a lot of common ground that exists between you. Understand that you VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) have a problem to deal with that might ** * * You might want to say something demandsome detachment.Tonight:Look that's been on your mind. Use care, as beyond the obvious. someone could have astrong reaction. Be TAURUS (April 20-May29) calm and level-headed, and it all will work ** * * * O thers will be domineering. out. Hook up with friends in the afternoon You might not like the implications of this to join in the Labor Dayfestivities. Tonight: behavior. Maintain a calm exterior, and And the party goes on. hopefully the interior will follow. Use the LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) afternoon to have a long-overdue discus** * * Curb a tendency to be possessive sionwith someone who could bea good or jealous, as it only creates tension. It resource. Tonight: Talk turkey. also could aggravate others even more. GEMINI (May 21-June20) You might be taken aback by a revelation ** * * Act as if you have special a opporfrom someoneyou carealot about. Honor

a change gracefully. In the long run, it will work for you. Tonight: Out late.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * You'll dive into your day full of energy. It is Labor Day, after all, and you're free to do whatyou want. Use care with your spending, as it could be nearly impossible to avoid certain costs. Tonight: Let someone else pick up the tab.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21j ** * * L isten to a roommate's or loved one's thinking in the morning. An idea or two actually might appeal to you. Do adequate reflection on the matter. By the afternoon, you'll have a solid sense of what you want. Tonight: As you like it.

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * L isten to others during a meeting. Goodwill is likely to circulate among you and others. Use the afternoon for some solid reflection and decision-making. What seems irrelevant could be more significant than you might choose to believe. Tonight: Go with the flow.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Your words might hurt a friend, even if your intention was not to zero in on this person's sensitivities. Make it a point to let him or her know thatyou simply are concerned with a different matter that concerns someone else.Tonight:Join a loved one for some fun.

PISCES (Feb.19-Marcb20) ** * * Defer to someone else, and recognize that the issue is much bigger than he or she will be able to visualize. Understand thatyou are able to see the big picture, whereas others might not. Take the lead with a project. Tonight: Out till the

wee hours.

I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AS ABOVE/SO BELOW(R) 11:25 a.m., 1:45, 4:10, 6:35, 9:05 • BOYHOOD (R) 1:30, 5, 9 • CHEF (R)2:05, 6:05 • THE EXPENDABLES 3 (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 • GHOSTBUSTERS (PG) 12:20, 3:35, 7, 9:35 • THE GIVER (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 1:50, 4:20, 6:50, 9:20 • GUARDIANS OFTHEGALAXY (PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2, 4:45, 7:30, 10:10 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY IMAX3-0 (PG-13)2:30, 5:15, 8:30 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 (PG)12:10,3:50 • THEHUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY (PG)11:55a.m.,2:50, 6:I5, 9:15 • IF I STAY (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:25, 10 • INTO THESTORM(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 9:25 • ISLANDOF LEMURS: MADAGASCAR IMAX3-D (G) Noon,1:10 • LET'S BECOPS(R) 12:25, 4:30, 7:20, 9:55 • THENOVEMBER MAN (R)11:30a.m.,2:10,4:55,7:40, 10:15 • SINCITY:A DAME TO KILL FOR (R)3:40,9:45 • SIN CITY: A DAMETOKILL FOR3-D (R) 12:15, 7:10 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-13)12:05, 3:55, 6:45, 9:50 • WHENTHE GAME STANDS TALL (PG)11:40a.m.,2:25, 6,9:IO • X-MEN: DAYS OFFUTURE PAST(PG-13) 6:20, 9:40 • Accessibility devicesare available for some movies.

9p.m. on5, 8, "AmericanNinja Warrior" —The road to the win gets shorter, butsurely no less challenging, in the national finals in Las Vegas in this new episode. The victors of the regional competitiontackle Stage One ofa four-stage course patterned after Japan's "Mount Midoriyama." The Piston Road andSilk Slider are among the elements they must conquer to stay in the game and possibly leave with $500,000 at the end. Matt Iseman andAkbar Gbaja Biamila are the hosts. 9p.m.on LIFE,M ovie:"The Unauthorized Savedby theBell Story" —Robin Lippin, who was a casting director on the original "Saved by the Bell" TV series,

also pickedthe youngactors who step in as surrogates for the original cast members in this new TV movie, which chronicles how Mark-Paul Gosselaar (Dylan

Everett), Mario Lopez (Julian

Works), Elizabeth Berkley (Tiera Skovbye), Dustin Diamond (Sam Kindseth) and others adjust to life in the spotlight while appearing on their hit teen TVshow. 9 p.m. on FX, "Partners" —In a new episode called "Doug Day Afternoon," Marcus (Martin Lawrence) hires a recently paroled ex-convict to work in the office, but a nervous Allen

(Kelsey Grammer)suspects the erstwhile criminal may have some ulterior motives. 10p.m. on6, "Underthe Dome" — Not knowing something sometimes can be much better thanknowing, as Big Jim (Dean

Norris) discovers inthe newep-

isode "The Fall." Newly reunited with wife Pauline (Sherry Stringfield), he learns what happened to her — and it isn't pretty. And as if Chester's Mill hasn't had enough troubles, climate change poses new ones. Eriq La Salle, Stringfield's former "ER" co-star, directed the story. Rachelle Lefevre and Eddie Cahill also star. ©Zap2it

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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY,

even somecyn-

p a r t icular m o u t h-

is given to act are often equally obvious and cliched. When his beloved mother dies, he says into her open grave: "You always believed in me, Ma. Who's going to believe in me

latest to try telling his story, with "Houdini," a two-parter

new episode"Top6 Compete,"

ful comes early in Part 2, by which time the technique, ef-

and their seances, but he inis life after death in at least one sense: Make your time

8p.m. on10, "MasterChef" — If there's anything more unnerving than having to prepare an elegant meal flawlessly, it's probably having to do itwith Gordon Ramsay right by your side. That's the challenge for the contenders who remain in the as they supply the dinner at a well-reputed Los Angeles restaurant. Joe Bastianich and Graham Elliotare the other judges, but with his boots on the ground

was never enough."

advertently proved that there

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

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


AS

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W MLB, B3 College football, B5 Motor sports, B5 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

The week ahea

A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and elsewhere in the world of sports (all times Pacific):

Today

Thursday

Saturday

Saturday

Sunday

Golf, PGATour,Deutsche BankChampionship, 8:30n.m. (GolfChannel), 10:30n.m. (NBC):Russell Henley holds the lead going into the fourth and final round at TPCBoston in the second of four FedExCuptournaments. Rory Mcllroy is part of a three-way tie for third place, two strokes back.

NFL, GreenBnyat Seattle, 5:30 p.m. (NBC):Remember the infamous "Fail Mary" of 2012 that resulted in acontroversial last-play touchdown and avictory for the Seahawksover the Packers? No substitute officials expected for this rematch, which features two of the NFC's likely Super Bowl contenders.

College football, MichiganState at Oregon, 3:30 p.m. (Fox);OregonState at Hawaii, 7:30 p.m. (CBS Sports Network):After ringing up expected season-opening victories, the Ducksand Beavers both look to go 2-0 — No.3 Oregon against the No. 8Spartans, OSU against the RainbowWarriors.

Prep cross-country, JereBrnnsnMnmorial Ranch Stampede in Prinuvglu, 8 a.m.:Runners from eight Central Oregon high schools will be competing in this annual season-openingmeet,stagedonthe Breese Rancheast of Prineville. An open race at10a.m. follows the high schoolers. More info: http://snowydog.com/ wordpress/breese-ranch-stampede/.

Tennis, U.S. Open,1:30 p.m. (CBS): Looking for a breakfrom football? The women's singles final from NewYork City could be just the thing. And the final Grand Slam tournament of the 2014season concludes the following day with the men's singles final (2 p.m., CBS).

COMMUNITY SPORTS

RUNNING

TEE TOGREEN: CENTRAL OREGON GOLF COURSE TOUR

Coloradowoman

wins in Sunriver

MBSEF takes over

cyclocross fall series By Beau Eastos The Bulletin

Breakingdown the course

The cyclocross scene in Bend continues to grow. The Thrilla Cyclocross Series, now in its 11th season, is moving to Wednesdays

A closer lookat Big Meadow. For more information on the items below,Bg.

and has added an extra race

afterlastyear'seventsdrew almost 200 competitors each

DIFFICULTY The course hasenough defense to challenge highly skilled golfers, but enough forgiveness that a novice's day will not be ruined.

night. Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation takes

over the event from WebCyclery, the Thrilla's creator

and longtime organizer. "They know we put on

STRATEGY Off the tee,golfers should play close attention to those fairway bunkers, which often

events really well," MBSEF event coordinator Molly

Cogswell-Kelley says about WebCyclery, which willingly handed off the series after it grew too big for the Bend bike

' t.

'?

punishing off-mark shots. VERDICT Mountain views and alayout that is welcoming to most skill levels makeBigMeadow amongthemust-play courses in Central Oregon.

shop to handle. "We have the infrastructure, we have the

expertise, and we have the support and volunteer base."

Racing, which will again be held at the Athletic Club of Bend this year — the

venue has moved several times since its debut in 2004

Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

A golfer tees off on No. 10 while his playing partner watches at the Big Meadow course at Black Butte

Ranch on Wednesday afternoon.

— starts this Wednesday

evening. Juniors, beginners and category C riders go off at 5:15 p.m. and all other

racersstartat6 p.m .Cogswell-Kelley says cyclists will notice little to no change with how the event is run under MBSEF's direction. Prizes will be awarded to the top

finishers in all categories in the overall series. SeeThrillacross/B4

NBSEF Thriiia Cyclocross Series When:Wednesdays, Sept. 3- Oct. 1, 5:15 p.m. Where:Athletic Club of Bend Cost:$90 for the series or $20 per race for adults; $40 for the series or $10 per race for juniors (OBRA license required) Wnb:www.mbsef.org/ events/mbsef-thrillacyclocross-series Note:Juniors, Beginners and Cat Criders compete in 30-minute races at 5:15 p.m.; all other categories compete in 45-minute races, which start at 6 p.m.

hint to the ideal route while

• The resort's original course,built in 1972 and revamped in2007, still offers plenty Inside • Ernst wins in Portland,B6 • Golf scoreboard,B7

The dasics Number ofholes:18 Status: Openseasonally location:Eight miles northwest of Sisters on U.S. Highway 20 Tnn times:541-595-1545 Course stats:Par 72, 7,002 yal'ds

Green fees:Through Sept. 30, $77daily; Oct.1 and HALL after, $47 Off-pnak rates:Through drop for a fairway that turns right and disappears behind Sept. 30: $67 daily before Editor's note: This is another aspens and ponderosa pines. 7:30 a.m. andafter1 p.m., installment in a seasonlong Off in the distance is a fairway $52 after 2 p.m., $57 for series inwhich Bulletin golf bunker eager to doom the ball Deschutes County resiwriter Zack Hall visits each of an overly aggressive golfer. dents ($67 with cart) on public and semiprivate golf The scene requires a moMondays, Tuesdaysand course in Central Oregon. mentary pause to take it all in. Wednesdays.Nine holes: "1 am glad1came out today," A foursome of golfers on Big $37 after 3 p.m.; $27 after BLACK BUTTE RANCHEric, my friend and playing Meadow's18th green. 5 p.m. he back nine at Big partner, said on aclear,warm Power cart:Single $22, Meadow — Black Butte and breezy afternoon last $32 to share Ranch's original golf week. "I forgot how beautiful it coursein CentralOregon for Director of golf:Jeff course, built in 1972 — always is out here." more than 40 years, when Rob- Fought offers the same greeting. The 535-yard, dogleg-right ert Muir Graves' design about 8 Head golf professional: From the tee box of the par-5 10th hole features all the charmiles northwest of Sisters first Terry Anderson 10th hole, unobstructed views acteristics that have made opened to the public. of NorthSisterserveasaback- Big Meadow a must-play golf See Big Meadow/B6 Course designer:Robert Muir Graves (1972) Extras:Two driving ranges, putting greens, chipping and bunker practice areas H ole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 in To t a l atBi g Meadow andGlaze Par 4 4 5 3 4 4 5 3 4 3 6 5 4 4 3 4 4 5 3 4 36 72 Meadow courses Ynrds* 385 365 555 190 427 439 583 243 3963,583 535 409 379 185 401 349 514 234 413 3,419 7,002 Wuhsitu: * All distances from back tees www.blackbutteranch.com

ZACK

'il;"

T

Scorecard

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

For first-yearcoaches,it's win now ... or else • Recent successes mean more pressure By Sam Farmer Los Angeles Times

More than ever, NFL owners are long on expectations

and short on patience with new coaches. Tony Delak i The Associated Press

Mike Pettine is the eighth Cleveland Browns coach since1999.

And can youblame them'? Consider the success last

year's newcoaches had, with Philadelphia's Chip Kelly, Kan-

sas City's Andy Reid and San Diego's Mke McCoydirecting their teamsbackto the playoffs, Arizona's BruceAriansguiding

If head coaches aren't quickfix artists, it's three years and a cloud of pink slips. "The nature of the league now, with free agency and the draft, you can turn things

around pretty fast," former Chicago finishing a half-game NFL coach Brian Billick said. "In the old days, when you out of firstplace in the NFC Northunder Marc Trestman, were bad, you were bad for a albeit winningtwo fewer games long time." than theyear before. SeeCoaches/B8 the Cardinals to 10victories, and

Inside • Seahawks hope offensive roll keeps going,BS

SUNRIVER — A pair of 26-year-olds were the overall winners of Sunday's marathon, the featured race onthe second and final day of the fourth annual Sunriver Marathon for a Cause. Laura Tabor, of Boulder, Colorado, won the race at Sunriver Resort in a time of 3 hours, 2 minutes, 41 seconds. First overall for the men was Portland's Ben Paynter; his time was 3:04:13. A total of 71

entries completed the marathon, which served as a Boston Marathon qualifier. In the masters division, Ron Hockley, 49 and of Gresham, placed first among the menin 3:20:19. In the women's masters division, Bend's Jennefer Lloyd placed first with a time of 4:08:29. Lloyd, 48, completed a successful weekend double, asshe also was the women's masters winner in Saturday's half marathon. In Sunday's half marathon, RobRussell, 36 and of Redmond, was the overall winner in1:18:56, and Kristen Yax, 32 and of Bend, was the women's overall winner in 1:38:04. Masters winners wereKendall Sawa, 42 and of Long Beach, Washington, in 1:29:04, and Julia Carpenter, 51 and ofHappy Valley, in 1:43:40. More than 800 runners and walkers took part in the 2014Sunriver Marathon for a Cause, which included ahalf marathon, 10K, 5Kand kids races onSaturday. Proceeds from the weekend event support the Oregonand southwest Washington affiliate of the Susan G. KomenFoundation, raising awarenessand promoting prevention of breast cancer. — Bulletin staff report

Inside • Sunriver Marathon for a Cause results,B4 • Community sports calendar,B4

COLLEGE FOOTBALL OSU GameWatch set for Saturday A Central OregonOSU Beaver Football Game Watch is set for Saturday at McMenamins Old St. Francis School in downtown Bend. Beaver fans areinvited to watch the Oregon State vs. Hawaii game on the big screen in the McMenamins theater; doors open at6:30 p.m., game time in Honolulu is 7:30 p.m. PDT. A $5 donation to Beaver Nation athletes will be asked at thedoor. Food will be available from the restaurant menu. Thosewho attend will receive free orange and black leis. — Bulletin staff report


B2 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY TENNis U.S. Open, men'sandwomen's fourth round U.S. Open, men'sandwomen's fourth round U.S. Open, round of16

Time TV/Radio Ba.m. CBS 12:30 p.m. CBS 4 p.m. E SPN2

GOLF

PGA Tour, DeutscheBankChampionship PGA Tour, DeutscheBankChampionship

8:30 a.m. Golf 10:30 a.m. NBC

BASEBALL MLB, Philadelphia at Atlanta MLB, Detroit at Cleveland

1 0 a.m.

ES P N

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m.

E S PN Roo t MLB

5 p.m.

E S PN

MLB, Seattle at Oakland MLB,WashingtonatL.A.Dodgers FOOTBALL

College, Miami (Fla.j at Louisville

TUESDAY TENNis U.S. Open, men's round of16, women's quarters 8 a.m. U.S. Open, Men's round of16, women's quarters 4 p.m.

E S PN E S PN

BASKETBALL

World Cup, New Zealand vs. United States

8:30 a.m. ESPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, Boston at N.Y.Yankees MLB, Seattle at Oakland

4 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB Roo t

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis notresponsible forlate changesmadebyTVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL EIISdury Still habbled by ankle SPrain —JacobyEllsbury's left ankle passed asignificant test late Sunday afternoon, but that doesn't meanhe ortheYankeesareyetoutofthewoods.TheMadras native sprained theankle sliding into the plate Friday night and missed Saturday, having difficulty walking without a limp both days. But Sunday hefelt much better and, after jogging in the outfield and taking BP,tried to talk his way into the lineup. He wasunsuccessful but Joe Girardi did call on the center fielder to pinch hit with one out in the ninth inning. Ellsbury blooped a double down the right-field line and didn't appear to befavoring the ankle as he ran. "I was going as hard as I could," Ellsbury said. "My adrenaline waspumping." Still, Ellsbury wasn't running at the speed hewas before the injury and was scheduled to undergo anMRIafter returning to NewYork. "I'm really happy with the progress that I've made," hesaid. "I was pleading to play Sunday ... Hopefully I'll be out there starting after the off day."

FOOTBALL 49ers DTMcDonaldarrested for domestic violenceSan Francisco 49ers defensive tackle RayMcDonald wasarrested early Sunday onfelony domestic violence charges after officers respondedtoahomeinanupscaleneighborhood,policeinSanJose, California, said. McDonald, 29, was released from jail after posting bail. NFLCommissioner Roger Goodell announced tougher penalties this past weekfor players accused of domestic violence.

ChiefS reaCh 4-year deal with QBSmith — TheChiefs have agreed to a newfour-year contract extension with quarterback Alex Smith worth $17 million a season, the KansasCity Star reported Sunday. Theagreement includes $45 million in guaranteed money. Smith, 30, had oneyear left on a contract that was set to pay him $7.5 million this season.

FOur OPtianSfar POStPOned Flarida-IdahO game —Saturday's season-openinggame betweenIdahowaspostponedbecause of unsafe field conditions following heavy rain. Game officials, athletic directors and theSoutheastern Conference called thegameandoffered four possible outcomes:Theteams could resumethe gameat a later date. Theycould endthe gamewith a determined final score. They could forfeit the game. Or they could declare a"no contest." Athletic directors from both schools, in consultation with the coaches,must agree on oneof thefour options. The agreement will include thefinal score if the game isterminated. Athletic directors from both schools, in consultation with the coaches,must agree onone of the four options.

SOCCER Summit grad SCOreS winner fOr DuCkS —Kristen Parr,a junior from Bend, scored off a corner kick in the 84th minute, the only goal in Oregon's1-0 women's soccer win over Loyola Marymount on Sunday in Eugene.Parr, a forward out of Summit High School, scored on ashot abovethe goalkeeper's headfollowing a corner kick by teammate Ljlly Archer for the Ducks (3-1).

FC KanSaSCity winS NWSLtitle — AmyRodriguezscored twice and KansasCity held onduring awild finish to capture the NWSL championship with a 2-1 win over Seattle Reign FCat Starfire StadiuminTukwila,W ashington,onSunday.MeganRapinoecapped a crazy sequence —onethat saw ashot hit the crossbar andanother blocked in the box —with a goal in the 87th minute for Seattle to make for a frantic final few minutes in which two attempts at anequalizer went wide. It is the first title for KansasCity, which knocked off the league's defending champion, the Portland Thorns, in thesemifinals.

BASKETBALL U.S. SurviveS SCare againSt Turkey —KennethFarjed scored 22 points, Anthony Davis hadall of hjs19 in the second half, and the United States rebounded from arare deficit at halftime to beat Turkey 98-77 onSunday in the Basketball World Cup in Bilbao, Spain. The U.S.trailed 40-35 at halftime and Turkey led by sjx early in the third before theAmericans could finally get the gameinto the quicker tempo they prefer and pull away to win the rematch of the 2010 gold-medal game in Istanbul. TheAmericans are off today before continuing pool play Tuesdayagainst winless NewZealand.

CYCLING Quintana takeS Vuelta lead —ColumbianNairo Quintana took the overall lead of the Spanish Vuelta from Movistar teammate Alejandro Valverde on arainy andmountainous ninth stage won by Winner Anacona ofColombia onSunday. It was the 26-year-old Anacona's first career stage win. A lateattack further back by Alberto Contador that only Quintana andJoaquim Rodriguez managedto match left Valverde andChris Froome struggling to keep upand crossing around 20seconds behind the other favorites.

ON DECK Tuesday Girlssoccer: Canbyat Ridgeview,3 p.m. Volleyball: TheDallesatRidgeview,6:30 p.m.

Thursday Beys soccer:RedmondatTheDalles,4p.m.;Summit at Sheldon,7p.m.; MadrasatRidgeview,4:30p.m. Girl ssoccer.SheldonatSummit,4p.mcTheDages atRedmond,4p.m.;Ridgeview atMadras,4:30 p.m.;GladstoneatSisters, 4:30p.m. Volleyball:RidgeviewatCulver,6:f5 p.m.;Redmond at DavidDouglas,6 p.mcLaGrande, Sisters atMadras, 4p.mcLaPineat Chiloquin, 6:15p.m. Cross-cou ntry: Madras at Darrel Deed on Cascade InvitationalTBD , Friday FoelbalkBendat Central, 7 p.m.;MountainViewat Wilsonville, 7p.mcPendletonat Summit, 7 p.m.; Ridgeview at Baker,7 p.mcFranklin at Redmond,7 p.m.; SweetHomeatCrookCounty,7p.m.;Burns at Sisters, 7 p.m.; MadrasatJunction City, 7p.m.; Culver at LaPine, 7 p.m.;Gilchrist vs. Alseaat 6-ManClassicin Dufur, f p.m. Boyssoccer:Mountain Viewat North Medford,4 p.m.; Bend atSouthMedford, 6 p.m.; Philomathat Sisters,4:f5 p.m. Girls soccer. SouthMedford at Bend, 4 p.m.; North MedfordatMountainView,4 p.m. Volleyball:Marist, TheDag es at Bend, 4;30 p.m.; Gilchrist atButteFalls, 4 p.mcTrinity Lutheranat Triad, 5p.m.

Saturday BeyssoccerBendat North Medford, 11amcMarist at Summit, f1a.m.;Mountain Viewat SouthMedford, ff am.; IrrigonatCulver,I p m. Girls soccer: Summit at Marist, 11a.m.; NorthMedford at6end,ff a.m.; SouthMedford atMountain View, ff a.m. Volleyball:Summ it at Central Catholic Invite, 6a.m.; Bend,Redmond, MountainViewatMountain View Tourname nt, TBD;Culverat BurnsTourney,TBD; La Pine,Gilchrist, Trinity Lutheranat LaPineTournament,6a.m. Crosscountry:Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Summit, CrookCounty, Sisters, La Pine,Culver at JereBreeseMemorial RanchStampede in Prineville, 6a.m.

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Oral-B USA BOB SundayatAtlantaMotorSpeedway, Hampton,Ga. Lap length:1.54 miles (Btart positionin parentheses) 1. (fg) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 335laps,f05.2 rating, 47points, $310,965. 2. (5) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 335, 116.6, 43, $264,741. 3. (17) DennyHamlin, Toyota, 335, f14.9, 42, gf62,705. 4. (16) JimmiJohnson, e Chevrolet, 335,f05.7, 40, $196,516. 5. (f f) CarlEdwards,Ford,335, fgf.3,39, gf47,505. 6. (27) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 335, 61.3, 36, $133,095. 7. (4) RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 335, 94.2, 37, gf27,545. 6. (3) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 335, 91.1, 36, gf50,640. 9. (7) AricAlmirola,Ford,335, 63.6, 35,$f51,506. 10. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,335,63.7, 34, $)54,470. 11. (20)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 335,63.6, 33, $f 19,660. 12. (15)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 335,76.2,32, $144,049. 13. (22) Kurt Busch,Chevrolet, 335, 91.9, 32, $110,135. 14. ()4) Joey Logano, Ford, 335, f05.2, 30, gf45,f26. 15. (19) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 335, 92.3, 29, $141,710. f6. (6) KyleBusch,Toyota, 335,66.7, 26,$f5f,75f. 17. (9) Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet, 335, 111.4, 27, $149,546. f6. (33) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 335, 79.6, 26, gf32,624. 19. (1) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 335,132.4, 27, $158,216. 20. (26) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,334,62.9, 24, $141,010. 21. (25) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 334,59.2, 23, $)21,343. 22. (24) CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 334, 51, 22, $126,416. 23. (6) MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, 334,Zf.2, Zf, gf29,393. 24. (13) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 334, 62.9, 20, gf46,096. 25. (29)TyDilon, Chevrolet, 332,55.6, 0,gf I f,4f6. 26. (3f) Justin Allgaier,Chevrolet,332, 53.4, 16, gf fg,of6. 27. (36)DavidRagan, Ford, 331,496, I7, gf f6207. 26. (37) David Gilliland, Ford, 330, 46.5, 16, $105,935. 29. (43) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 330, 41, f5, $97,660. 30. (40)ColeWhitt, Toyota,329, 41.7, 14,$99,010. 31. (42) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 329, 36.2, 0, $96,660. 32. (4f) J.J.Yeley,Ford,326, 32.9, 0, $94,165. 33. (36) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 326, 3ZB, ff, $94,010. 34. (35) Brett Moffitt, Toyota, 327, 33.7, 10, gfOf,660. 35. (30)AlexBowman,Toyota, 326,36.6, 9,$93,665. 36. (39)RyanTruex,Toyota, 326, 32.5, 6,$93,560. 37. (34)JoeNemechek, Ford, 324,27.3, 0, $93,39f. 36. (Zf) ClintBowyer,Toyota, 3f4, 60.2,6,$f22,756. 39. (2) BradKeselowski, Ford,accident, 296, 91.4, 6, $f30,173. 40. (23) AJ Allmendinger,Chevrolet, vibration,256, 51.4, 4, $79,765.

41. (f2) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, accident,170, 66, 3, gf 09,923. 42. (32)MarcosAmbrose, Ford,engine,122, 46.9, 2, $96,110. 43. (26) MikeBliss, Chevrolet,vibration,23, ZZB, 0, $66,265.

Race Statistics Average Speed of RaceWinner: 131.512 mph. TimeofRace:3hours,55minutes,24seconds. Margln ofVictory:0.574seconds. Caution Flags:10for 56laps. LeadChanges:21among6drivers. Lap Leaders:K.Harvick1-60; D.Hamlin Bf-64; K.Harvick65;D.Hamlin 66-107;K.Harvick f06-f16; D.Hamlin ff9-f22; M.Kensethf23-f35; Ku.Busch 136-f57; M.Kensethf56-f64; K.Harvick f65-f70; B.Keselowski fTf-173; D.Hamlin174; M.Kenseth f75-f82; K.Harvick f83-2f0; M.Kenseth Zff-227; K.Harvick 226-258; D.Hamlin259-260; K.Harvick 261-298; D.Hamlin 299-302; K.Kahne303-325; M.Kenseth326-333;K.Kahne334-335. Leaders Summ ary (Drlver, Times Led, Laps Led):K.Harvick, 7 times for f95 laps; M.Kenseth, 5times for 53 laps; D.Hamlin, 6 times for 37 laps;K.Kahne,2timesfor 25laps; Ku.Busch, 1timefor 22laps; B.Keselowski,1 timefor 3 laps. Wins:D.EarnhardtJr., 3; J.Gordon,3; J.Johnson, 3; B.Keselowski, 3; J.Logano,3; C.Edw ards, 2; K.Harvick, 2; A.Allmendinger, f; A.Almirola, 1; Ku.Busch,1; Ky.Busch, 1;D.Hamlin, 1;K.Kahne,f. Top 12 inPolnts:f. J.Gordon,672;2. D.Earnhardt Jr., 65f; 3. M.Kenseth, 794; 4. J.Logano,791; 5. B.Keselowski,762; 6. J.Johnson,766; T. C.Edwards, 755; 6.K.Harvick,746; 9. R.Ne wman, 747; fg. G.Biffle, 726; ff. K.Kahne,706;12. C.Bow yer, 705.

BASKETBALL WOMEN'S NATIONALBASKEIBALLASSOCIATION

Poland'S WlodarCZyk dreakS hammer reCOrd — Poland's Anita Wlodarczyk broke theworld record in the women's hammer throw Sunday at anISTAFmeet with 79.58 meters (approxjmately 261 feet, 1 inch) on hersecond attempt to knock16 centimeters off Betty Heidler's previous mark from 2011.TheEuropean champion and Olympic silver medalist continued threatening the 80-meter mark with her next efforts at the IAAFWord Challenge meet. — Fiom wire services

In the Bleacherscv2014 steve Moore. Dist. uy Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

Wednesday Boys soccer.LaPineatMadras,4:30p.mcCulverat MadrasJV,4:30 p.m. Girl ssoccer.MadrasatLaPine,4:30p.m. Volleyball:Summit, MountainView,Wilamette and Churchill atMountainView,4p.m.

WNBA Playoffs

TRACK & FIELD

IN THE BLEACHERS

All TlmesPOT CONFERENCE FINALS

(Best-of-3;x-if necessary) Bunday'sGame Minnesota 62, Phoenix 77,seriestied I-1 Today'sGame Indiana atChicago, I p.m.,Indianaleadsseries f-g Tuesday'sGame Minnesotaat Phoenix, 7p.m. Wednesday'sGame x-Chicago atIndiana, 4p.m.

"Psssst! I forget. Are we 'Xs' or 'Os'?"

FOOTBALL

NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE

Ame rica's Line

All TimesPOT

Favorlte OpenCurrent (0/U) Underdog (Hom eteam incaps) COLLEGE Today LOUISVILLE 3 3'/2 (53'/2) Miami-Florida Friday Pittsburgh 4 4 BOSTON COLL Wash St 2 2 NEVADA Saturday ALABAMA 41 4f Fla Atlantic Kansas St f2r/z f2'/z IOWA ST N TEXAS NL NL Smu I OWA f7 f7 Ball St N'WEST ERN 5'/z 51/2 No lginois PURDUE 2'/z 21/2 CMichigan ARMY 3 3 Buffalo 6'/2 Missouri 6/z TOLEDO N avy 3r / z 31/2 TEMPLE TENNE SSEE NL NL Arkansas St ILLINOIS 6'Iz 61/2 WKentucky 26'Iz MISS ST 26r/2 Uab I'/2 GEORG IAST I'/z NewMexico St Colorado I Zr/2 IP/z UMASS KENT ST PK PK SAlabama U TAH 9 ' I z 91/2 Fresno St 31/2 STANFORD 3'/z Usc f6'/z PENN ST f6r/2 Akron KENTUCKY 9'Iz 91/2 Ohio FLORIDA 3IP/2 36'Iz EMichigan Mississippi fgr/~ 19'A VANDER BILT Nc STATE f6r/~ 16'A Old Dominion OREGON ff ff MichiganSt UL-MONROE f4 14 Idaho MINNES OTA f 7 f7 Mid Tenn St LOUISIANA f2'/~ 12'A La Tech 26'A Arizona St 26r/~ NEWMEXICO Duke fB 16 TROY SCAROLINA f4 14 ECarolina AUBURN 31 31 SanJoseSt Ga Tech IOr/~ f0'A TULANE Maryland f0 fo SFLORID A NOTRE DAME 5 5 Michigan 31/2 TEXAS 3'A Byu N CAROLIN A f4' I~ f4'A SanDiegoSt OHIO ST f2r/~ f2'A Va Tech Oklahoma 25 25 TULSA UCLA 2 5 r/~ 25'A Memphis WYOMING PK PK Air Force BOISE ST Igr/~ IO'A Colorado St Oregon St f3 f3 HAWAII tgr/2 UTEP Texas Tech fgr/2 NFL

Thursday SEAHAW KS 5 5 1 /2 (4fp/2) Packers Sunday,Sept. 7 2'/2 3 Saints (52) FALCON S RAMS 5 4 (441/2 Vikings ) STEELE RS 51/2 61/2 (4tp/2) Browns EAGLE S II I 0 (5Z/z) Jaguars 4'/2 4'/2 JETS (4O) Raiders Z Z r/2 (43r/z) Bengals RAVEN S BEARS 6'/z 6'/2 (46'/z) Bigs TEXANS Zr/g Zr/2 (45</z) Redskins CHIEFS 5'/2 4'/2 (43'/z) Titans 3'/2 4'/2 (47) DOLPHIS Patriots N BUCS 2/z f (3gyz) Panthers 49ers 3'/2 5'/2 (5IP/z) COWB OYS BRONC OS 7 7 (551/z Colts ) Monday,Sept.B 31/2 41/2 LIONS (4tp/2) Giants 3 3 ' / 2 ( 44'/2) Chargers CARDS

College All TimesPDT

Bunday'sGames No. 10Baylor45, SMU0 Tennessee 36, UtahSt. 7 Pac-12Standings NorthDivision Conf. O veraII PF PA W L W L 0 0 1 0 31 24

California Oregon 0 0 1 0 0 1 OregonSt. Stanford 0 0 1 Washington 0 0 1 WashingtonSt. 0 0 0 SouthDivision W L W Arizona 0 0 1 ArizonaSt. 0 0 1 UCLA 0 0 1 ulah 0 0 1 SouthernCal 0 0 1 Colorado 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 1

62 13 29 14 45 0 17 16 36 41

L 0 0 0 0 0 1

PF PA 58 13 45 14 26 20 56 14 52 13 17 31

Thursday'G same Anzona at UTSA, 5pm Frlday'sGame Washmgto nStatNevada730pm Saturday'sGames Sacramento St. atCalifornia, noon EasternWashingtonatWashington, noon FresnoSt.atUtah,noon ColoradoatUMass,noon SouthernCalat Stanford,12:30 p.m. MichiganSt. atOregon, 3:30p.m. ArizonaSt.at NewMexico,4 p.m. Memphisat UCLA,7p.m. OregonSt.atHawai, 7:30p.m. TOP 25

Saturday'sGames No.1 FloridaSt.vs. TheCitadel, 4:30p.m. No. 2Alabama vs. FloridaAtlantic, 9 a.m. No.3Oregonvs.No.6MichiganSt,.3:30p.m. No.4OklahomaatTulsa,9a.m. No. 5OhioSt. vs.Virginia Tech, 5p.m. No.6 Auburn vs. SanJoseSt.,4 p.m. No.7UCLAvs.Memphis,7p.m. No. 9SouthCarolina vs. East Carolina,4 p.m. No. 10Baylorvs. Northwestern St.,4:30p.m. No. tf Stanfordvs.No.15SouthernCal, f2:30 p.m. No.13LSUvs.SamHoustonSt.,4:30p.m. No. 14Wisconsinvs.Westernfflinois, 9 a.m. No. 16Clemson vs. South CarolinaSt.,930am. No. f7 NotreDamevs.Michigan, 4;30p.m. No. I 6Mississippi atVanderbilt,1:30 p.m. No. 19Arizona St,at NewMexico,4 p.m. No. 20KansasSt, atlowaSt., 9a.m. No.ZfTexasA&Mvs.Lamar,4;30p.m. No. 22Nebraskavs. McNeeseSt., 9a.m. No. 23NorthCarolinavs. SanDiegoSt., 5 p.m. No. 24Missouri atToledo, 9a.m. No.25Washingtonvs.EasternWashington,noon

Thursday'sGame Green Bayat Seattle, 5:30p.m. Sunday,Sept.7 MinnesotaatSt. Louis,10am. Buffaloat Chicago, 10a.m. Washingtonat Houston, 10a.m. Tennessee atKansasCity,10 am. NewOrleansatAtlanta,10a.m. Cleveland atPittsburgh, 10a.m. JacksonvilleatPhiladelphia,10a.m. Oakland atN.Y.Jets,10 a.m. Cincinnatiat Baltimore,10a.m. NewEnglandatMiami, tga.m. SanFranciscoat Dallas, f:25 p.m. Carolina at TampaBay,I:25 p.m. IndianapolisatDenver, 5:30p.m. Monday, Sept. 6 N.Y.Giantsat Detroit,4:f0 p.m. San Diego atArizona,7:20 p.m.

TENNIS U.S. Open Sunday atNewYork Men Third Round Gilles Simon (26), France,def. DavidFerrer(4), Spain,6-3,3-6, 6-1, 6-3. MarinCilic(14),Croatia,def. Kevin Anderson(16), SouthAfrica,6-3, 3-6,6-3, 6-4. TomasBerdych(6), CzechRepublic, def.Teymuraz Gabashvili,Russia,6-3, 6-2,6-4. RogerFederer(2), Switzerland,def.Marcel Granollers, Spain4-6, , 6-1, 6-1,B-f. DominicThiem,Austria, def. FelicianoLopez(19), Spain,6-4,6-2, 6-3. RobertoBautistaAgut(17), Spain,def.AdrianMannarino,France,7-5,6-2, 6-3. Gael Monfils (20),France,def. RichardGasquet (12), France, 6-4,6-2,6-2. Grigor Dimitrov(7), Bulgaria, def.DavidGoffin, Belgium,0-6,6-3, 6-4,6-1. Women FourthRound SaraErrani(f3), Italy, def. MirjanaLucic-Baroni, Croatia,6-3, 2-6,6-0. Caroline Wozniacki (fg), Denmark,def. Maria Sharapova (5), Russia, 6-4,2-6, 6-2. PengShuai, China,def. LucieSafarova(14), Czech Republic,6-3,6-4. BelindaBencic, Switzerland,def. JelenaJankovic (9), Serbia,7-6(6),6-3.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPOT

EasternConference W L T Pls GF GA D .C. United

14 6 4 46 4 2 3 0 SportingKansascity f2 6 6 4 2 3 7 29 N ewEngland f g f2 3 3 3 3 4 3 6 TorontoFC 9 9 6 3 3 35 39 Columbus 6 9 9 3 3 35 34 NewYork 7 6 10 3f 39 36 P hiladelphia 7 9 9 30 40 4 1 Chicago 5 6 1 4 29 32 37 Houston 6 13 4 2 6 2 6 4 6 Montreal 5 15 5 2 0 2 7 4 5 WesternConference W L T PtsGF GA Seattle f5 7 3 4 6 44 33 Los Angeles 13 5 7 46 46 27 RealSaltLake 1 1 5 10 43 40 3f FC Dallas 12 6 6 4 2 45 34 Portland 6 6 f o 34 44 43 Vancouver 7 6 f 2 3 3 33 34 Colorado 6 12 6 3 0 37 40 SanJose 6 10 6 2 6 29 33 ChivasUSA 6 13 6 2 4 2 f 4 0

Sunday'sGames

D.C.United2, NewYork0 Los Angeles3, ChivasUSA0

Wednesday'sGames

TorontoFCat Philadelphia, 4p.m. SportingKansasCity at NewEngland,4:30 p.m. Seattle FC at ChivasUSA, 7;30p.m.

Friday'sGame

Color adoatLosAngeles,7:30p.m.

Saturday'sGames PhiladelphiaatToronto FC,11a.m. SportingKansasCity at NewYork, 4:30p.m. MontrealatHouston,5:30 p.m. D.C.Unitedat Vancouver,7p.m. FC Dallaat s RealSalt Lake,7 p.m. Sunday,Sept.7 Chiva sUSAatColumbus,noon SanJoseatPortland, 2p.m. Chicag oatNew England,4p.m.

PHILADELPA HIPHILLIES— ReleasedRHPJason Marquis. ST.LOUIS CARDINALS — RecalledLHPKevin Siegrist andINFPeteKozmafrom Memphis (PCL). Opti oned LHPs Marco Gonzales,NickGreenwood and Tyler Lyonsto Springfield (Texas). Assigned RHPsMichaelWachaandJasonMotte to Springfield on 30-dayinjury rehabilitationassignments. FOOTBALL NationalFootball League ARIZONACARDINALS— ClaimedLBThomas Keiser off waiversfrom SanDiego. Released WR Walt Poweff.Signed LBJonathan Brown,WR6rittanGolden,TEAndreHardy,CBJimmyLegree,OT KelvinPalmerandG-CAnthonySteentothe practice squad. ATLANTA FALCONS—ClaimedLBNate Stupar off waivers from Jacksonvile. ReleasedLB Tim Dobbins.SignedCBRicardoAllen, SSean Baker, G Harl andGunn,OTTerrenJones,WRBernardReedy, DT Tr avianRobertson,LB JacquesSmithandRB Jerome Smith to thepractice squad. BALTIMORERAVENS — Signed CB Tramain Jacobs, OLRyanJensen,DTJamieMeder,CBDeji Olatoye,DTA.J. Pataiali'i,OL6JohnSimon,TEPhillip Supernaw,RBFitzgerald ToussaintandQBKeith Wenningto thepractice squad. BUFFALO BILLS—Signed S Deon Broomfield, LBJimmy Gaines,WRCalebHolley,DEIkponmwosa Igbinosun,DEBryanJohnson, SKennyLadler and QB JeffTueltothepractice squad. CAROLINA PANTHERS—SignedCBCarrington Byndom,LBAdarius Glanton,WRTavarres King, S Robert Lester,WRMarcusLucas, OLAndrew McDonald, RBDarrin Reeves, DTMicanor Regis, LB D.J. Smithand DTCasey Walker to the practice squad. CHICAGOBEARS— Waived LS BrandonHartson. CINCINNATI BENGALS—SignedDESamMontgomery,TEKevin Greene, CBOnterio Mccalebb, HB JamesWilder Jr., WRColin Lockett, DTDavid King, OT DanFrance, CTrevor Robinson andDTDevon Still to thepracticesquad. CLEVELANDBROWNS — ClaimedW R LaRon Byrd offwaiversfromDalas, OLCaylin Hauptmann off waiversfromSeattle, OL RyanSeymour andRB Glenn Winstonoff waivers from SanFrancisco. Signed OLJamesBrown,DLJacobbiMcDaniel,TE Emmanuel Ogbuehi,LB Kei thPoughandLBJustin Staples tothe practice squad.Terminated thecontract of QB RexGrossman.WaivedOL Karim Barton, WR CharleJohnson s andOLMartin Walace. DALLAS COWBOYS— Signed WRTimBenford, S MicahPefferin, DEKenneth Boatright, C Ronald Patrick, LBKeith Smith, LBWil Smith,andRBRyan Williams to thepractice squad. ReleasedTjohn WetzelWere . awardedGDonald Hawkins offwaivers fvromCleveland. DENVERBRONCOS — Signed LB ShaquilBarrett, RBKapri Bibbs,SJohnBoyett, QBZac Dysert, WR BennieFowler,GVinston Painter, WRNathan Palmer, CMatt ParadisandTEGereff Robinson to the practicesquad. DETROITLIONS — SignedG Rodney Austin, FB Emil Igwenagu,S NateNess,WRAndrew Peacock, DTXavierProctor,CBMohammedSeisay,L6 Julian Stanford, TE Jordan Thompson, OTMichael WilliamsandRBGeorgeWinnto thepractice squad. GREENBAYPACKERS— SignedSChrisBanjo, WR KevinDorsey,CGarth Gerhart, WRAlex Gilett, RB MichaelHill, LBAdrian Hubbard,TEJustin Perillo, DELutherRobinson, OTJeremy Vujnovich and WRMylesWhiteto thepractice squad. HOUSTON TEXANS— Claimed TJeff Adams, WR Dam aris JohnsonandCBDarryl Morris. Released QB Case Keenum, WRMike Thomas and CB JoshVictorian. PlacedTWil Yeatmanon the reserve/injured list. SignedWRTravis Labhart, DE Keith Browner,LBMaxBulough, TEAnthony Denham, OTMatt Feiler, CJames Ferentz, GAlex Kupper, WR UzomaNwachukwu, FBTobenOpurumand CB MarcusWiliams to thepractice squad. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS—Claimed CA.Q. Shipley off waiversfromBaltimore.WaivedCThomas Austin. Signed TTyler Hoover, LBAndrewJackson, WR Ryan Lankford,WRJoshLenz,S Dewey McDonald ,DTNnamdiObukwelu,CBSheldon Price, TE ErikSwoopeandGJoshWalkerto thepractice squad.Agrredto termswith QBJeffMathewson a practicesquadcontract. JACKSO NVILLEJAGUARS— Claimed TEMickey Shuleroff waiversfromAtlanta. WaivedTEMarcel Jensen. KANSAS CITYCHIEFS— Claimed DTDamion Squareoff waiversfrom Philadelphia. ReleasedTE RichardGordon. MIAMIDOLPHINS— ClaimedS Brandian Ross off waiversfromOakland andCBSammy Seamster off waivers fromBaltimore. ReleasedWRDamian WilliamsandSDonJones. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—ClaimedTEMaroueis Gray offwaiversfromClevelendandOTMikeHarris off waiversfromSanDiego. ReleasedLBLarry Dean and OTAustin Wentworth. SignedR6JoeBanyard, WR KainColter, DTIsameFaciane, TEChase Ford, WR Dont eFoster,CBKendaffJames,C ZacKerin, OT MikeRemmersandDEJustin Trattoutothe practice squad. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — TradedQB Ryan Mallett to Houstonfor an undiscloseddraft pick. ClaimedDLBruceGaston off waiversfromArizona and DLKelcyQuarles offwaivers fromthe NewYork Giants.ReleasedLBChris White. NEW YORKGIANTS— SignedRBMichaelCox, WR JulianTalley,DBChandler Fenner, LBDanFox, CB BennettJackson,DEJordanStanton andOTNick Bentonto thepractice squad. NEW YORKJETS — Claimed CB Leon McFadden off waiversfrom Cleveland. ReleasedCB LeouanLewis. SignedDLTevita Finau, DLKerry Hyder, SRontezMiles, TEChris Pantale,OTBrent Qvale, RB Daryl RichardsonandQBMatt Simmsto the practicesquad. OAKLANDRAIDERS — Claimed DE Benson Mayowaoffwaivers fromSeattle. Waived/injured LB KaelinBurnett. PHILADEP LHIAEAGLES—SignedLBEmmanuelAcho,OLJoshAndrews,OLKevinGraf,DTWade Kelikipi, WRWill Murphy, WRQuaron Pratt, RB MatthewTuckerandSEdReynolds to thepractice squad. PITTSBURGHSTEELERS — Signed WR C.J. Goodwin, TE Rob Blanchflower, DB Shaquiffe Richardson, DBRossVentrone, RBJosh Harris, OL AlejandroVilanueva,DLJosh Mauro, DLNick Williams, LB Howard JonesandWRDerekMoyeto the practicesquad. SAN DIEGOCHARGERS — Signed QBRyan Lindley, WR Javontee Herndon, WRTorrenceAllen, TJeremiahSirles, GCraig Wats, DLChasAlecxih, OLB CordarroLaw,CBGreg Ducre andS Adrian Phillips SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS— SignedOT Carter Bykowski ,TE AsanteCleveland,WRLance Lewis, DL Lawr enceOkoye,NT MikePurcell,LBShayne SkovandLBChaseThomastothepracticesquad. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — SignedTE RaShaun Allen, RB Demitrius Bronson,QBB.J. Daniels, OT Nate Isles, WR Chris Matthews,S Terrance Parks, DT Jimmy StatenandSStevenTerreff tothe practice squad. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS— SignedTECameron Brate,RBJef Demps, QBMikeKafka,LBBrandon Magee,DTMatthewMasifilo andWRSolomon Patton tothepracticesquad. TENNESSEETI TANS — Claimed WR

NWSL Playoffs NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE All TimesPOT CHAMPIONSHIP

Sunday'sGame FC Kansas City 2,Seattle I

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague

BOSTON RED SOX—Activated INF-OFJemile

Weeks. CLEVELANDINDIANS — Recalled RHP Zach McAllister fromColumbus(IL). PlacedRHPJosh Tomlin on the3-day paternity list. KANSAS CITYROYALS—Selectedthe contract of OFTerranceGorefromOmaha(PCL) andoptioned him toNorthwestArkansas(TL). LOSANGELES ANGELS— OptionedRHPCory Rasmusto Salt Lake(PCL). Reinstated INFGrant Green fromthe f5-day DL. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Acquired1B-DHAdam Dunn fromthe ChicagoWhite Soxfor RHPNolan Sanburn. NatlonalLeague MILWAUKEE BREWERS — AcquiredRHP JonathanBroxtonfrom Cincinnati Redsfor twoplayers to benam ed.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wallhd B onneville Z,)29 Z 4 7 2 ,54f 6 6 4 TheDaff es 5, 394 549 f,gfg 396 John Day 2,046 22 0 6 3 6 25 8 McNary 1,569 2 7 3 556 216 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wallhd Bonneville 433,9)5 61,679 214,992 97,709 TheDaff es 3f5,945 46, 661 90, 605 47,f06 John Day 265,151 40,263 51,364 25,360 McNary 240,667 35,996 46,614 23,004


MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014• THE BULLETIN

B3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL four errors by the Tigers to salvage a four-gamesplit.

cntandingS All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division

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

W L 79 56 70 65 69 67 66 71 60 76

CentralDivision W L

74 61 74 62 70 64 62 75 59 77

West Division W L 83 53 78 58 73 62 59 79 53 83

.585 .519 9 .507 10'/r .482 14 441 19t/r

Pct GB .548 544 '/t 522 3'/t

.453 13 .434 15'/r

Pct GB .610 .574 5 .541 9'/r .428 25 .390 30

Sunday'sGames

Toronto4, N.Y.Yankees3 Baltimore12,Minnesota8 Boston3, TampaBay0 Chicago WhiteSox6, Detroit 2 Houston 3, Texas2 LA. Angels8, Oakland1 Seattle 5, Washington3 Cleveland atKansasCity,ppd.,rain

Today'sGam es Boston(R.De LaRosa4-5)atTampaBay(Smyly9-10), 10:10a.m. Minnesota(PHughes 14-9) at Baltimore(Gausman 7-6),10:35a.m. Detroit(Price12-10) atCleveland(Kluber13-8),1:05 p.m. Seattle (C.Young 12-6) at Oakland(Hammel 1-5), 1:05 p.m. Texas(Lewis9-11) at KansasCity (Ventura 10-9), 5:10 p.m. Tuesday'sGames Bostonat N.Y.Yankees,4:05 p.m. Cincinnatiat Baltimore,4:05p.m. Detroit atCleveland,4:05 p.m. TorontoatTampaBay,4:10p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxat Minnesota, 5:10p.m. L.A. Angelat s Houston, 5:10p.m. Texasat KansasCity, 5:10p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 7:05p.m.

Washington Atlanta Miami NewYork Philadelphia Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago

LosAngeles SanFrancisco SanDiego Arizona Colorado

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L 77 58 72 65 66 69 64 73 62 74

CentralDivision W L 73 63 73 63 71 65 66 71 61 76

West Division W L 77 60 74 64 57 54

62 71 79 82

Pct GB .570 .526 6

.489 11 .467 14 .456 15r/r

Pct GB

.537 .537 .522 2

482 7r/t

.445 12'/r

Pct GB .562 .544 2r/t

.474 12 .419 fgr/t 397 22r/t

Sunday'sGames

N.Y.Mets6, Philadelphia5 Cincinnati 3,Pittsburgh2 St. Louis9,ChicagoCubs6

SanFrancisco15,Milwaukee5 Arizona 6,Colorado2 L.A. Dodgers 7,SanDiego1 Seattle 5, Washington3 Atlanta1,Miami0 Today'sGam es N.Y.Mets(Za.Wheeler9-9) at Miami(H.Alvarez10-6), 10:10a.m. Philadelphia(Hamels 7-6) at Atlanta(Teheran13-9), 10;10a.m. Pittsburgh (Cole7-4) at St.Louis(Lynn14-8),11:15 a.m. Milwaukee(J.Nelson2-5) at ChicagoCubs(Ja.Turner 4-8),11:20a.m. Colorado2,SanFrancisco 2,tie, 6innings, comp.of susp.gam e,1:10 p.m. Arizona(Cahil 3-9) at SanDiego(T.Ross 12-12), 1;10 p.m. San Francisco(Hudson9-9) at Colorado(F.Morales 5-7),1:10p.m. Washington(G.Gonzalez6-9) at L.A.Dodgers(R.Hernandez 8-9),5:10 p.m. Tuesday'sGames Cincinnatiat Baltimore,4:05p.m. N.Y.MetsatMiami, 4:10p.m. Philadelphia atAtlanta, 4:10 p.m. Milwa ukeeatChicagoCubs,5:05p.m. PittsburghatSt. Louis,5:15p.m. SanFranciscoatColorado, 5:40p.m. Arizonaat SanDiego,7:10 p.m. Washington at L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m.

ab r hbi ab r hbi R Daviscf 4 1 1 0 Eatoncf 5 2 2 0 Kinsler2b 4 1 1 1 CSnchz2b 5 2 2 1 TrHntrrf 4 0 2 0 JAreudh 4 0 1 1 V Mrtnzdh 4 0 1 1 AGarcirf 4 1 2 2 JMrtnzlf 4 0 0 0 Gillaspi3b 5 0 1 1 Cstgns3b 4 0 1 0 Viciedolf 4 0 1 0 D.Kelly1b 2 0 0 0 Sierrapr-If 0 0 0 0 Suarezss 3 0 0 0 Wilkins1b 4 0 0 0 Holadyc 3 0 0 0 Flowrsc 4 0 2 0

LeGarcss 4 1 1 0 Totals 32 2 6 2 Totals 3 9 6 12 5 Detroit 000 002 GOO — 2 Chicago 230 001 ggx — 6

Cincinnati Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi BHmltncf 5 0 1 0 JHrrsn3b 4 1 2 1 Negron3b 3 0 0 0 Lamborf 4 0 1 0 Phigi ps2b 4 0 0 0 AMcctcf 4 0 2 0 Frazier1b 4 0 1 0 NWalkr2b 3 0 0 0 B.Penac 4 0 0 0 I.Davis1b 4 0 1 0 Ludwcklf 3 1 1 0 SMartelf 4 0 1 0 Brucerf 0 0 0 0 Mercerss 4 1 2 1 Heiseyrf-If 4 2 2 3 CStwrtc 3 0 0 0 RSantgss 3 0 1 0 RMartnph 1 0 0 0 Cuetop 1 0 0 0 FLirianp 2 0 0 0 Hannhnph 1 0 1 0 Morelph 1 0 0 0 Leakepr 0 0 0 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 3 7 3 Totals 3 42 9 2 C incinnati O g g0 2 8 001 — 3 P ittsburgh 1 1 8 O gg 000 — 2 DP — Cincinnati1. LOB —Cincinnati 7, Pittsburgh

E—D.Kelly (2), Suarez(9), Holaday(6), Casteganos (13). DP —Chicago1. LOB —Detroit 4, Chicago 11. 28—R.Davis (25), Kinsler(35), Eaton2 (23), A.Garcia (5), Flowers(14). SB—C.Sanchez (1), J.Abreu (2), Sierra(3). IP H R E R BBSO Detroit PorcelloL,15-9 6 2-3 11 6 3 1 7 Coke 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 E.Reed 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Chicago QuintanaW,7-10 7 6 2 2 1 3 Putnam 1 0 0 0 0 2 Petricka 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—byE.Reed(J.Abreu). WP—Quintana. T—3:04. A—26,336(40,615).

Orioles12, Twins8 BALTIMORE — J.J. Hardy hit his t rjr

fourth career grand slam during a seven-run sixth inning, Nelson Cruz connected for his major league-leading 35th home run and Ryan Flaherty also homered, leading Baltimore over Minnesota. Caleb Joseph had acareer-high four hits for the Orioles, who extended their AL East leadover the second-place NewYork Yankees to nine games. Minnesota Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi DaSntncf 4 2 1 2 Markksrf 5 1 3 0 D ozier2b 5 2 3 0 Loughlf 5 2 3 0 Mauerdh 4 1 1 0 A.Jonescf 4 1 1 2 KVargs1b 5 0 1 0 N.cruzdh 4 1 1 1 Plouffe3b 4 1 2 3 C.Davis1b 2 2 1 0 Parmelrf 5 0 3 2 JHardyss 4 2 1 4 Nunezss 5 0 1 0 Pareds3b 5 0 2 1 Fryerc 4 1 1 0 Flahrty2b 5 2 2 3 JSchafrlf 4 1 2 1 CJosphc 5 1 4 1 Totals 4 0 8 158 Totals 3 9 121812 M innesota 0 0 0 2 0 0 303 — 8 Baltimore 004 0 0 7 1 0x — 12 E—K.Vargas (2). DP—Minnesota 2, Baltimore 2. LOB —Minnesota 8, Baltimore11. 28—Dozier

(31), Plouffe(39), Nunez(5), Fryer(3), A.Jones(26), C.Davis(15), Paredes(2). 38—Flaherly (1). HRDa.Santana (7), Plouffe(12),N.cruz(35), J.Hardy(9), Flaherty(6).SB—J.Schafer (11).S—Lough. IP H

Minnesota NolascoL,5-10 5 Swarzak 1 Thielbar A.Thompson

2-3 2 1

c•

Mark J. Terriii/The Associated Press

Los Angeles Angels' Josh Hamilton, left, and Mike Trout celebrate after defeating Oakland 8-1 on Sunday in Anaheim, California. The Angels earned a four-game sweep of the Athletics.

1 2

2 1 1

11 - 3 1 0 0 0 1 Baltimore W.chenW,14-4 6 2-3 8 4 4 0 7 Brach 1-3 4 1 1 0 0 Matusz 1 1 0 0 0 1 UJimenez 13 1 3 3 3 1 Tom.Hunter 0 1 0 0 0 0 Z.BrittonS,31-34 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Brachpitchedto1 batterin the8th. Tom.Hunterpitchedto 1batterin the9th. Nolascopitchedto4 batters inthe6th. HBP—byNolasco(A.Jones,C.Davis). WP—Brach. T—3:33.A—40,905(45,971)

Miami

TORONTO —Jose Bautista, Edwin Encarnacion andMelky Cabrera each hit a solo homer,andToronto erased a three-run deficit to beat the NewYorkYankees. Derek

SAN FRANCISCO — Pablo Sandoval hit a two-run homeramong his three RBls andfinished a double shy of the cycle, powering San Francisco past Milwaukeeto match a season high with its sixth straight win. Madison Bumgarner (16-9) followed up his one-hit gem Tuesday against Colorado with seven strikeouts in six innings to win his third straight start. The left-hander finished August at 4-1 Gattis(21).

the sellout crowd of 45,678 on its feet, Jeter popped upwith a runner on third for the final out in his last

regular-season at-bat in Toronto. Brett Gardner finished asingle shy of the cycle, but NewYork lost its second straight.

with a1.57 ERA.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -

Clevel and'sgame atKansas City has beensuspended due to rain with the Indians leading 4-2 heading into the bottom of the 10th inning.

The gamewill resume on Sept. 22 in Cleveland before the start of a threegame series betweenthe AL Central rivals. — The Associated Pess

Interleague

Mariners 5, Nationals 3

WRamsc 3 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 1 0 Espinospr 0 0 0 0 Denorfidh 4 0 0 0 Loatonc 1 0 0 0 Enchvzrf 4 0 1 1 Acarer2b 3 0 0 0 Zuninoc 4 0 0 0 Schrhltrf 4 1 1 1 BMigerss 3 2 3 0 Totals 34 3 6 3 Totals 3 4 5 12 5 Washington 011 100 BOO — 3 Seattle 001 030 81x — 5 DP — Washington 2. LOB—Washington 6, Seatle 6. 28 —Span(36), Werth (31),EnChavez(11), 8 Miler (11). HR —Harper 2 (10), Schierholtz(7), Ackley (11). SB —J.Jones2(22). IP H R E R BBSO Washington RoarkL,12-9 61- 3 11 4 4 0 4 Blevins 1 0 1 1 1 0 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Stammen Seattle Iwakuma W,13-6 6 5 3 3 0 6 FurbushH,17 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBSO FarquharH,12 2 - 3 MedinaH,20 1 0 0 0 1 2 R odney S, 3 9-42 1 1 0 0 0 0 6 2 - 3 91 1 1 6 WP — Farquhar. 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:57. A—26,221(47,476). 1 2 0 0 0 3

Atlanta ab r hbi ab r hbi Yelichlf 4 0 1 0 Heywrdrf 4 0 0 0 Solano2b 4 0 2 0 Gosseln3b-2b4 0 3 0 Stantonrf 4 0 0 0 FFrmn1b 3 0 2 0 McGeh3b 4 0 1 0 J.Uptonlf 4 0 1 0 J eBakr1b 3 0 1 0 Gattisc 4 1 1 1 GJonesph 1 0 0 0 LaSte02b 3 0 0 0 Ozunacf 3 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 1 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 0 0 ASmnsss 4 0 2 0 Mathis c 3 0 0 0 Bupton cf 4 0 2 0 Eovaldip 2 0 1 0 A.Wood p 3 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Doumitph 1 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 0 6 0 Totals 3 5 1 111 Miami Ogg Ogg 000 — 8 Atlanta 018 Ogg Ogx — 1 DP — Atlanta1. LOB —Miami 5,Atlanta11. HR-

Giants 15, Brewers5

Jeter had a chance to tie it for the

Indians-Royals gamesuspended in 10thinning

SEATTLE —Dustin Ackley homered and drove in four runs and 6. 28 —Lambo(1). HR—Heisey2(7), J.Harrison(13), Seattle averted a three-game Mercer(8). SB—B.Hamilton(54). CS—S.Marte(9). sweep, beating Washington. Bryce S—Cueto2. IP H R E R BBSO Harper homered twice for WashCincinnati ington and NateSchierholz also CuetoW,16-8 8 9 2 2 1 6 connected. TheNLEast-leading A.chapman S,29-31 1 0 0 0 0 2 Pitlsburgh Nationals homered 10times in F.Liriano 7 5 2 2 3 5 the series, one short of the Safeco J.Hughes L,6-5 1 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Field record set by Cleveland in Ju.Wilson WP — F.Liriano. 2009. The Mariners trailed 3-1 T—3:01.A—37,591 (38,362). in the fifth when Ackley hit a three-run homer off Tanner Roark Braves1, Marlins 0 (12-9). It was his 11th homer this ATLANTA — Alex Woodstruck season. out12 in eight dominant innings Washington Seattle and EvanGattis homered to help ab r hbi ab r hbi Atlanta beat Miami. TheMarlins Spancf 4 0 1 0 AJcksncf 4 1 3 0 R endon3b 4 0 0 0 Ackleylf 4 1 2 4 hadgone60games withoutgetW erthdh 4 0 1 0 Cano2b 4 0 1 0 ting shut out, the longest active LaRoch1b 3 0 0 0 KMorls1b 3 0 1 0 Dsmndss 4 0 0 0 J.Jonespr 0 1 0 0 streak in the majors. Harperlf 4 2 3 2 Morrsn1b 0 0 0 0

Blue Jays4, Yankees3

R E R BBSO Yankees in the ninth inning. With

12 8 8 2 3 3 3 1

Reds 3, Pirates2 PITTSBURGH — Chris Heisey hit two home runs, including a tiebreaking shot in the ninth inning, and JohnnyCueto overcame an early jolt to earn his16th win as Cincinnati beat Pittsburgh. Heisey's solo drive with oneout in the ninth off Jared Hughes(65) helped the Redsavoid getting swept at PNCPark.

Chicago

Detroit Pct GB

ANGELS FLYING HIGH

Miami EovaldiL,6-10 Hatcher A.Ramos Atlanta A.WoodW10-10 8 5 0 0 0 12 KimbrelS,41-45 1 1 0 0 0 1 T—2:33.A—45,754 (49,586).

Milwaukee San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi New york Toronto CGomzcf 2 1 1 0 Pagancf 512 1 ab r h bi ab r hbi GParr acf 3 0 0 1 MDuff y3 b 0 0 0 0 Leaders Gardnrcf 5 2 3 1 Reyesss 3 0 0 0 Lucroy1b 5 0 1 0 Panik2b 4 2 1 2 Jeterdh 5 0 1 0 Mecarrlf 4 1 1 1 T hrough Sunday's Games P rado2b 4 1 2 0 Bautistrf 4 1 1 1 Braunrf 4 1 1 1 Pencerf 5 3 4 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE T eixeir1b 4 0 0 0 Linddh 4 0 1 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 2 0 Sandovl3b 4 3 3 3 BATTING — Al t uv e, Houston, .336; VMartinez, Beltran rf 4 0 0 0 Pillar pr-dh 0 0 0 0 EHerrr3b 0 0 0 0 Linccmp 0 0 0 0 Diamondbacks 6, Rockies 2 Detroit, .327; Cano, Se at t l e , .324;Beltre, Texas, .324; KDavislf 4 0 0 0 Morse1b 2 0 0 1 Headly3b 3 0 2 0 Encrnc1b 4 1 1 1 JAbreu,Chicago,.320; Eaton, Chicago,.313; Brantley, Red Sox3, Rays0 RWeks2b 4 1 2 0 Ishikaw1b-If 1 2 1 0 C ervellic 4 0 2 1 DNavrrc 2 0 1 0 Cleveland,.311. PHOENIX —ChaseAnderson Drewss 4 0 0 0 StTllsnpr-2b 0 1 0 0 Maldndc 3 2 1 1 GBlanclf-cf 4 0 1 0 RUNS —Dozier, Minnesota, 97; Trout,LosAngeSegurass 3 0 0 0 Susacc 5 1 3 3 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Clay ZeWhlrlf 3 0 0 0 CIRsmscf 3 0 0 0 pitched six strong innings to help les, 92; Kinsler,Detroit, 87;Micabrera,Detroit, 82; Lohsep 1 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 4 2 0 1 Ellsuryph 1 0 1 0 Valenci3b 3 0 1 0 Buchholz threw a three-hitter to ey, Cleveland,81; Donaldson, Oakland, 81; Arizona beat Colorado. Anderson Brantl Dukep 0 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 2 0 0 0 ISuzukipr 0 0 0 0 Kawsk2b 3 0 1 1 Gardner,NewYork,81. stop his string of seven starts 0 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 (8-6) gave up five hits and one run T holec 0 0 0 0 Overayph RBIWAbreu, Chicago,99; Trout, LosAngeles, MrRynlph 0 0 0 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 without a win, leading Boston Totals 37 3 112 Totals 3 0 4 7 4 97; Ortiz,Boston,95; Micabrera,Detroit, 91; Ceswhile matching his career high Figarop 0 0 0 0 Ariasph-1b 2 1 1 1 New york 100 1 1 0 ggg — 3 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 pedes,Boston,89;Ncruz, Baltimore,89;Donaldson, over Tampa Bay. Buchholz (6with eight strikeouts. Toronto GOO 802 2gx — 4 Oakland,88;VMartinez,Detroit,88. E—Reyes (17). DP—New York 1, Toronto1. Kmtzlrp 0 0 0 0 8) walked none and struck out HITS — Altuve,Houston,189; Mecabrera,Toronto, LOB —New York 8, Toronto 4. 28—Gardner (20), Gennettph 1 0 1 1 Colorado Arizona six. Only one runner reached 169; Cano,Seatle,161; Kinsler,Detroit,160; MarkaTotals 34 5 9 4 Totals 3 8 15 1614 ab r hbi ab r hbi Headley(6), Ellsbury(26). 38—Gardner (8), Cervegi kis, Baltimore,159;Brantley,Cleveland,157; AJones, second base during his second (1). HR —Gardner(16), Me.cabrera(16),Bautista(29), Milwaukee 1 g g ggg 112——166 B lckmncf 4 1 2 1 Inciartcf 4 2 2 0 Baltimore,157. San Francisco 813 821 71x E ncarnaci o (2 n 8). SB — D .N av ar r o (2), S t . T oge so n (3). LeMahi2b 4 0 0 0 Pnngtn3b 3 0 0 0 shutout this season and sixth DOUBLE S—Micabrera,Detroit, 42;Plouffe,MinIP H R E R BBSO E—Maldonado(6). DP—San Francisco1. LOBMornea1b 4 0 1 0 A.Hill2b 4 2 3 2 nesota,39;Altuve,Houston, 37;Brantley, Cleveland, of his career. The right-hander's New york Milwaukee 6, San Francisco 6. 28—Ar Ramirez(19), M assetp 0 0 0 0 Trumolf 3 0 2 1 36; Kinsler,Detroit, 35;Trout,LosAngeles,35; Me(17), Pence2 (28), G.Blanco (10), Susac 2 Arenad3b 4 0 1 0 Pachec1b 4 0 1 1 Cabrera,Toronto, 34. 5 4 4 2 4 R.Weeks previous win came over Kansas MccarthyL,5-4 6 Betances 2 2 0 0 0 4 (3), Arias(7). 38—Panik(2), Pence(10), Sandoval C Dckrslf 3 1 0 0 DPerltrf 4 0 1 0 TRIPLES —Bourn, Cleveland,9; Eaton, Chicago, City on July18, five days after 3). HR — Braun(18), Maldonado (4), Sandoval (15). Barnesrf 4 0 1 0 Gswschc 4 0 0 0 Toronto 8; Gardner,NewYork, 8; Rios, Texas,8; AJackson, 8—Pagan(14).S—Lohse, Bumgarner.SF—Morse. Culersnss 3 0 1 1 Gregrsss 3 1 1 0 tossing a three-hitter in an11-0 HappW,9-8 7 9 3 3 0 6 Seattle, 6; Ki e rmaier, TampaBay, 6; LMartin, Texas,6; IP H R E R BBSO JWllmsc 4 0 1 0 CAndrsp 2 0 0 0 American League Cecil H,20 1 1 0 0 1 2 DaSantana,Minnesota, 6; Trout, LosAngeles,6. winagainstHouston.Hewas0-3 Janssen S,20-24 1 1 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee JDLRsp 1 0 0 0 EMrshlp 0 0 0 0 HOME RUNS —Ncruz, Baltimore, 35; JAbreu, LohseL,12-8 52 - 3 9 7 7 2 3 Belislep 0 0 0 0 Reimldph 1 1 1 2 Angels 8, Athletics1 in that span. Mccarthypitchedto 2batters inthe7th. Duke 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 M cBridph-1b1 0 0 0 Harrisp 0 0 0 0 Chicago,33;Carter,Houston, 33; Trout, LosAngeles, T—2:28.A—45,678(49,282). 31; Ortiz, Boston, 30; Bautista, Toronto,29;EncarnaFigaro 0 2 3 3 1 0 TampaBay AIMartph 1 0 0 0 Bostoti ANAHEIM, Calif.— Mike Trout cion, Toronto,28. W.Smith 2-3 3 4 4 1 1 S titesp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi STOLEN BASES—Altuver Houston,49; Egsbury, homered anddrove in three runs, National League Kintzler 1 1-3 2 1 1 1 1 Totals 3 2 2 7 2 Totals 3 36 116 NewYork,37;RDavis,Detroit,32;JDyson,Kansas B.Holt2b 4 1 1 0 Kiermrcf 4 0 1 0 San Francisco Colorado O g g1 gg 001 — 2 City Matt Shoemaker pitched seven B ettscf 4 1 2 1 Guyerlf 4 0 0 0 , 3 0 ; AE s c obar,KansasCity,26;Andrus,Texas,24; Dodgers 7,Padres1 BumgarnerW,16-9 6 5 1 1 1 7 Arizona 181 Ogg 40x — 6 .Ortizdh 3 0 1 1 Joycerf 3 0 1 0 Lcain ,KansasCity,24;Reyes,Toronto,24. shutout innings of five-hit ball, and D Kontos 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 E—Culberson (4). DP—Colorado1. LOB—ColCespdsIf 4 0 1 0 Longori3b 3 0 0 0 PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit,15-5; Weaver, Los J.Lopez 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 orado 6, Arizona7. 28—Barnes (14), A.Hill (24), the Los AngelesAngels completed Napoli1b 4 0 0 0 Loneydh 3 0 0 0 SAN DIEGO— Hyun-Jin Ryu Angeles,15-7;Porcego,Detroit,15-9; Wchen,BaltiLincecum 2 3 3 2 0 0 G regorius (5). 38 — A .H i g (3). HR — B lac km on ( 17), Navarf 4 0 1 0 Forsyth2b 3 0 0 0 more, 14-4; Shoe maker, LosAngeles, 14-4; Kazmir, a masterful four-game sweepof came off the disabled list to pitch Figaropitchedto 3batters inthe 7th. Reimold(1). SB—Inciarte (13). S—J.De La Rosa, Oakland,14-7;PHughes, Minnesota, 14-9. Mdlrks3b 4 0 0 0 YEscorss 3 0 0 0 HBP—by Lincecum (Maldonado). WP—Figaro. Pennington.SF—Culberson. Oakland. TheAngels won their four-hit ball over seven innings, Bogartsss 4 1 2 0 JMolinc 3 0 1 0 ERA —Sale, Chicago, 2.11; FHernandez, Seattle, PB — Susac. IP H R E R BBSO 2.23; Kluber,Cleveland,2.52; Lester,Oakland,2.55; 4 0 1 1 SRdrgz1b 3 0 0 0 sixth in a row andownthe best re- Vazquzc and Matt Kempsingled in the T—3:14. A—41,935(41,915). Colorado Totals 35 3 9 3 Totals 2 9 0 3 0 Lester, Oakland,2.55;Richards, LosAngeles, 2.61; cord in the majors at 83-53. They Boston go-ahead run to help the Los J.DeLaRosaL,13-10 6 7 4 4 3 5 Iwakuma, 0 01 010 810 — 3 Seatle, 2.90. Belisle 1 3 2 2 0 0 Tampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 0 BOO — 0 shut out the A's for 29 consecutive Angeles Dodgers beatSanDiego STRIKEOUT S—Price, Detroit,224; Scherzer,DeCardinals 9, Cubs 6 Masset 1 1 0 0 0 1 troit,220;Kluber,Cleveland,213;FHernandez, Seattle, E — C obb (4). DP — B os ton1, T am pa B ay1. LO B innings while opening afive-game Boston6, Tampa Bay2. 28—Betts(5), Bogaerts (23), and avoid a three-gamesweep. Arizona 205; Lester, Oa kl a nd, 186; Darvish, Texas, 182; Sale, ST. LOUIS —Matt Holliday hit his C.AndersonW,8-6 6 5 1 1 0 8 Chicago,178. lead atop the ALWest heading into Joyce(23).SB—B.Holt (11). Ryu (14-6) struck out sevenand E .Marshag H,18 1 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO third home run in two gamesand SAVES — Holland,KansasCity,40;Rodney,SeatSeptember. Trout had a two-run walked nonewhile allowing one Harris 1 1 0 0 0 2 tle, 39;DavR Bostoti obertson, NewYork, 35;Perkins, Minnebroke an eighth-inning tie with a single during a six-run second Stites 1 1 1 1 1 0 sota, 32; Britton,Baltimore,31; Nathan,Detroit, 28; BuchholzW,6-8 9 3 0 0 0 6 run in his first start since a lossat two-run single, rallying St. Louis J.De La R o s a pi t c hed to 2 ba tt e rs i n the 7t h . TampaBay Uehara,Boston, 26. inning. Chris lannetta homered Atlanta on Aug. 13,when hehurt WP—J.DeLaRosa,C.Anderson. L,9-7 61-3 7 2 1 1 6 past the ChicagoCubs. Holliday and had three hits for Los Angeles, Cobb T—3:04.A—22,948 (48,633). Jo.Peralta 1 2 1 1 0 1 his right hip. Ryu improved to 4-0 NATIONAL LEAGUE had three hits and four RBls for Balfour 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 lifetime against the Padres. The which has won 15 of19.TheA's BATTING —Morneau, Colorado, .311; JHarrison, Yates 1 0 0 0 0 2 Pittsburgh,.310;Revere, Philadelphia,.308;AMccutchthe Cardinals, who beganthe day Mets 6, Phillies 5 have lost14 of 20. seven runs wereone morethan T—2:52. A—16,822(31,042). en, Pittsburgh,.307;DanMurphy, NewYork, .301; Arthe Dodgers scored in their previ- one game behind first-place MilRamirez,Milwaukee,.301; Goldschmidt, Arizona,.300. Oakland LosAngeles NEW YORK — Anthony Recker waukee in the NL Central. St. Louis RUNS —Rendon, Washington, 97; Pence,San ousthreegames combined.They Astros 3, Rangers2 ab r hbi ab r hbi snapped asixth-inning tie with a Francisco,95;Mcarpenter, St. Louis, 89;FFreeman, F uldcf 3 1 0 0 Calhonrf 3 1 0 1 lost by one run in extra innings in second basemanKolten Wongleft Atlanta,86;CGomez, Milwaukee, 85;Span,WashingR eddckrf 4 0 1 1 Troutcf 4 1 2 3 HOUSTON — Matt Dominguez in the top of the eighth after falling three-run homer in arare start, the first two games of the series. ton, 83;Stanton,Miami, 83. Dnldsn3b 4 0 2 0 Puiols1b 4 0 0 1 and the New York Mets held off RBI — Stanton, Miami, 98;AdGonzalez, Los Anhit a tying homer andJose backward when hetried to catch a Adrian Gonzalezhadfour hits. He Vogt1b 4 0 0 0 JHmltnlf 4 1 1 0 geles,91;JUpton, Atlanta,91;Howard, Philadelphia, Philadelphia to avoid dropping into Mosslf 4 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 3 1 0 0 Altuve's fourth hit drove in the popup in short right field. also scored the first of the Dodg86; Desm ond,Washington,81; Byrd,Philadelphia, 78; DNorrsc 4 0 2 0 Freesedh 4 0 0 0 last place. go-ahead run asHouston rallied Hogiday,St.Louis, 78. ers' four runs in the eighth against Chicago Cagasp dh 4 0 0 0 Aybarss 4 1 1 1 St. Louis HITS — Pence, SanFrancisco, 164;DanM urphy, in the eighth inning to beatTexas. S ogard 2b 3 0 1 0 lannettc 3 2 3 1 three relievers. ab r hbi ab r hbi Philadelphia NewYork NewYork,159;Span,Washington, 157; FFreeman, Parrino ss 3 0 0 0 GBckh 3b 3 1 1 1 Dominguez connected off reliever Coghlnlf 4 0 3 2 Mcrpnt3b 2 3 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Atlanta,152;McGehee, Miami,152; Revere, PhiladelTotals 33 1 6 1 Totals 3 2 8 8 8 J.Baez2b 5 0 0 0 Grichkrf 5 0 0 0 LosAngeles San Diego Reverecf 5 0 2 0 Lagarscf 4 1 1 0 phia,152;SCastro, Chicago,151. Neal Cotts (2-8) with one out in Oakland Ogg Ogg 010 — 1 Scastross 3 1 1 0 Hollidylf 4 2 3 4 ab r hbi ab r hbi DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 dnDkkrlf 4 1 1 1 DOUBLE S—Lucroy, Milwaukee,46;Goldschmidt, Los Angeles 068 Ogg 11x — 8 the eighth to make it 2-all. Puig cf 5 1 1 0 Solarte 3b 4 1 2 0 Valuen 3b 5 1 3 2 JhPerlt ss 4 0 3 2 Rollinsss 5 2 3 1 DWrght3b 4 0 2 1 Arizona,39;FFreeman,Atlanta, 37;Span,Washington, E— Vogt(2).LOB— Oakland 6,LosAngeles4. HRmrzss 3 1 0 0 AAlmntlf-cf 3 0 0 0 Alcantrcf 5 1 1 1 YMolinc 5 0 2 1 U tley2b 4 0 0 0 Duda1b 4 0 0 0 36; AdGon zalez, LosAngeles, 35; KDavis, Milwaukee, HR—Trout(31),lannetta(7). Texas Houslon AdGnzl1b 5 1 4 0 Gyorko2b 4 0 0 0 W atknsrf 4 0 1 0 Jaycf 4010 Howard 1b 5 1 2 2 Flores ss 4 1 3 0 34; DanMurphy,Ne wYork, 34; JhPeralta, St. Louis, IP H R E R BBSO ab r hbi ab r hbi Kemprf 4 1 2 1 Grandlc 4 0 1 1 Stropp 0 0 0 0 Wong2b 3 1 1 1 GSizmrrf-cf 3 0 1 1 Niwnhsrf 4 1 2 0 34; Rendon, Washington,34. Oakland DnRrtscf 3 1 1 0 Grssmnlf 3 0 0 0 VnSlyklf 3 0 1 1 RLirianrf 3 0 1 0 Castigoc 1 0 0 0 Kozma2b 1 1 1 0 DBrwnlf 5 1 4 1 DHerrr2b 3 1 1 1 TRIPLES —DGordon, Los Angeles, 12; Pence, KazmiL,14-7 r LMartnph-cf 1 0 0 0 Altuve2b 5 0 4 1 Crwfrdph-If 1 2 0 0 Maybincf 3 0 0 0 Valaika1b 3 1 1 0 Descals1b 3 2 1 0 N ievesc 3 0 0 0 Reckerc 4 1 1 3 San Francisco,10; Bcrawford,SanFrancisco, 9; Otero Andrusss 4 0 1 0 Carterdh 4 0 1 0 U ribe3b 5 1 2 2 Hahnp 0 0 0 0 JoBakrc 3 1 1 0 Lackeyp 1 0 0 0 B yrdph-rf 1 0 0 0 Geep 3 0 0 0 HechavarriaMi , ami,9; Puig,LosAngeles,9; DPeralta, J.chavez Riosrf 3 1 2 1 Fowlercf 2 0 1 0 A.Ellisc 3 0 0 0 Medica1b 3 0 0 0 Villanvp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Arizona,8;BHamilton, Cincinnati, 7; JHarrison, PittsAsche3b 4 0 0 0 Evelndp 0 0 0 0 Scribner ABeltre3b 2 0 0 0 Jcastroc 4 1 1 0 Barney2b 4 0 1 2 Amarstss 2 0 0 0 TWoodp 1 1 0 0 Taversph 1 0 0 0 A Brnttp 2 0 0 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 burgh, 7;Span,Washington, 7. LosAngeles Rua1b 4 0 1 1 Singltn1b 3 0 0 0 R yup 2 0 0 0 Stultsp 1 0 0 0 Grimmp 1 0 0 0Neshekp 0 0 0 0 Galvisph 0 1 0 0 Campgph 1 0 0 0 HOME RUNS—Stanton,Miami,33; Rizzo,ChicaShoemaker W,14-4 7 5 0 0 0 7 Arenciidh 4 0 0 0 MDmn3b 4 1 2 2 Ethierph 1 0 1 0 Venaleph 1 0 0 0 Wrghtp 0 0 0 0 MAdmsph 1 0 0 0 B astrdp 0 0 0 0 Meiiap 0 0 0 0 go,30; Duda,NewYork,26;JUpton,Atlanta,26;Byrd, Morin 1 1 1 1 1 0 Chirinsc 4 0 0 0 Mrsnckrf 3 1 0 0 Szczurrf 1 0 0 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0 P hiladel p hi a,25; Frazier,Cincinnati, 23; Desmond, P Baezp 0 0 0 0 Boyerp 0 0 0 0 Ruizph-c 0 0 0 0 YHerrera 1 0 0 0 0 0 Odor2b 3 0 1 0 G.Petitss 4 0 1 0 Totals 36 6 115 Totals 3 4 9 139 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Totals 37 5 125 Totals 3 5 6 116 Washington,22. WP —Shoemaker. ggg ggg 188 — 6 STOLEN BASES—DGordon, Los Angeles, 58; Choicelf 3 0 0 0 G oeertlf 1 0 0 0 Chicago P hiladelphia Ogg 181 111 — 6 T—2:54.A—44,205 (45,483). Totals 3 1 2 6 2 Totals 3 23 103 Totals 3 6 7 126 Totals 2 9 1 4 1 St. Louis ggg 1 3 8 23x — 9 BHamilton,Cincinnati, 54;Revere,Philadelphia,40; New York O g g0 2 3 01x— 6 E — La ck e y ( 3), M. c arpe nter (14). DP — C h ica go 2, E — R ecker 2 (4). DP — N ew Y ork 2. LOBCGomez, Mi l w aukee, 29; Rogins,Philadelphia,28; Texas 100 001 BOO — 2 Los Angeles 100 810 841 — 7 —Chicago 9, St. Louis8. 28—Val- Philadelphia10, NewYork 6. 2B—Howard (16), EYoung,NewYork,28;Span,Washington,27. Houslon 010 000 82x — 3 San Diego 1 0 0 BOO ggg — 1 St. Louis1. LOB White Sox 6, Tigers2 DP — Texas1, Houston2. LOB—Texas6,Houston DP — Los Angeles 1, SanDiego1. LOB—Los buena (25), M.carpenter(32),Hogiday(32), Kozma(1). D.Brown(21), den Dekker(5), Nieuwenhuis (9). PITCHING —Kershaw, LosAngeles,16-3; Cueto, Howard (20), D.Brown(8), Recker (5). SBCincinnati, 16-8; Bumga rner, SanFrancisco, 16-9; 12. 28—Dan.Robertson(7), Rios(29), Altuve2(37), Angeles10,SanDiego3. 28—Puig (33), Kem p (31), HR—Valbuena(15), Alcantara(7), Holliday (16),Wong HR — CHICAGO — Jose Quintana alWPeral t a, Mi lwaukee,15-9; Wainwright, St. Louis, J.castro(18). HR —M.Dominguez(15). SB—Andrus Uribe(19),Solarte(2), Grandal(13). S—A.Almonte. (10). SB —Watkins(1). S—Jo.Baker,TWood, Lackey. Revere (40), Lagares(6), Flores(1), Nieuwenhuis IP H R E R BBSO 15-9; Ryu, Los A nge le s,14-6; Lynn,St. Louis,14-8. (24), Mari s ni c k (1). IP H R E R BBSO 2 (3). lowed two runs over seveninnings Chicago —Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.73; Cueto,CinIP H R E R BBSO LosAngeles IP H R E R BBSO ERA to earn his first win in more than a Texas 42-3 6 4 4 3 2 cinnati, 2.26;Wainwright, St. Louis, 2.59;Ham els, RyuW,14-6 7 4 1 1 0 7 T.Wood Philadelphia 51-3 6 1 1 3 4 P.Baez month, and theChicago White Sox N.Martinez 2 0 0 0 1 2 Grimm 1 1 0 0 0 0 A.BurnettL,7-15 6 9 5 5 1 8 Philadelphia2.59; , TRoss, SanDiego, 2.64; Greinke, M endez H,6 1 1 3 1 0 0 2 2 San Diego WWright H,9 2 3 0 1 1 1 0 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 1 Los Angel e s, 2.72; HA l v arez, Mi a mi , 2.75. beat Detroit after trading Adam Cotts L,2-8BS,7-7 1 1 2 2 0 0 Stults L,6-15 6 5 2 2 5 4 StropBS,4-6 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 De Fratus 1 2 1 1 0 0 STRIKEOUT S—Strasburg, Washington, 210; Dunn on Sundayafternoon. The Feliz 13 2 0 0 1 0 Boyer 1 2 2 2 0 1 Villanueva L,5-7 1 4 3 3 1 2 New York Cueto, Cincinnati, 205;Bum garner, SanFrancisco, Houslon A.Torres 0 1 2 2 1 0 St. Louis GeeW,6-6 6 7 3 3 3 7 199; Kershaw,LosAngeles, 194;Greinke,Los AnWhite Sox sent Dunn toOakland 6 1-3 9 5 2 1 6 Keuchel 7 5 2 2 2 3 Hahn 2 4 1 1 2 3 Lackey EvelandH,2 1 2 0 0 0 2 geles, 182;Kenne dy, San Diego, 182;TRoss,San before the game,ending a disap2-3 1 1 1 0 2 VerasW,3-0 1 1 0 0 1 2 Boyerpitchedto 2batters in the8th. Choate FamiliaH,16 1 1 1 1 1 1 Diego,176. 0 0 0 0 1 A.Torrespitchedto 2batters inthe8th. NeshekW,7-1 1 1 0 0 1 0 Meiia S,21-24 1 2 1 1 0 0 SAVES —Kimbrel, Atlanta, 41;Rosenthal, St.Loupointing four-year run in Chicago QuallsS,16-20 1 —by Cotts (Marisnick), by Keuchel (Odor). WP — Hahn. PB—Grandal. RosenthalS,40-45 1 0 0 0 1 0 Geepitchedto1batter in the7th. is, 40; FrRodriguez, Milwaukee,39; Jansen, LosAnfor the veteran slugger. Then, they HBP HBP—by Strop(Hogiday), byLackey(S.castro). WP — Keuchel. T—3:04.A—37,169 (42,302). HBP —byMeia (Utley). geles,38;Papelbon, Philadelphia, 33;AReed, Arizona, tookadvantageofaseason-high T—3:18. A—19,024(42,060). T—3:26.A—45,148(45,399). T—3:14.A—27,159 (41,922). 31; Cishek,Miami,31.



MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014• THE BULLETIN

B5

MOTOR SPORTS NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE ROUNDUP

Seahawks hope o ensive roll will continue By Tim Booth

ahawks offense.

The Associated Press

How much that can

RENTON, Wash. — Throughout the

carry into the regular

preseason, quarterback Russell Wilson

season is one of the

He directed Seattle to touchdowns on

Fj~~tgp y at Seattle

nine possessions, two field goals and Kasey Kahne celebrates after winning the Sprint Cup

p.m. Thursday During one stretch in the second and TV:NBC thirdpreseason games, Seattle scored

race at Atlanta on Sunday.

on nine consecutive possessions with

John Bazemore/The Associated Press

I(ahne holds off I(enseth

just one punt in those 13 opportunities.

Wilson under center and the streak was only broken when a lengthy field goal attempt hit an upright. It's was an impressive rate of success, even for games that don't have much meaning or have opponents game planning to try and stop the Se-

Miller said. "Obviously we practice against a very good defense so that helps. "Almost every chance we've gotten the football we've put points on the

biggest questions for Seattle headed into Thursday night's sea- board so with the way Russell is just son opener against growing and becoming a better player Green Bay. I think our offense that's the expecta-

and the starting offense of the Seattle

Seahawks were never really stopped. Wilson was on the field for 13 possessions in the four preseason games.

into the year," Seattle tight end Zach

The

Sea h a wks tion when we get the football."

their final 53-man roster. While that's

likely to be in flux throughout the season, it's the most pass catchers coach Pete Carroll has kept on the initial ros-

ter to start any of his five seasons as Seattle's coach.

Consider Green Bay coach Mike McCarthy among those that believe what Seattleshowed during the preseason could be the Seahawks reality on the

have a pretty good Seattle returned to practice on Sunidea of what they are day to begin prepping for the Packers going to get from a with wide receiver Percy Harvin on the defense that was the best in the NFL a field after missing the final preseason season ago and returns mostly intact. game at Oakland last week for per-

offensive side. "I think you have to be very impressed with their offense," McCarthy said. "On Russell Wilson and their

But if the offense can be more consis-

sonal reasons. Not that Seattle missed Harvin in Oakland with the starters

distance and keep the mix of the run and the pass. They've always been

getting only a handful of plays.

outstanding running the football, but

tent than a year ago, the Seahawks could look like the team that dominat-

ability to stay in favorable down and

ed the Super Bowl. "I think we expect it to. That's the

they look like they're a lot more baltheir offense, the Seahawks kept seven anced now,and very dynamic in the

only thing we have to look at going

wide receivers and three tight ends on

As a nod to the potential potency of

perimeter."

SOCCER

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

in Atlanta

Ducks, Spartans talk about

Thje Associated Press HAMPTON, Ga. — Ka-

sey Kahne's "downer" year received a n

imp o r t ant

boost when he overcame his struggles with restarts with a big power move when he needed it the most.

Kahne charged past Matt Kenseth and D e nny H a mli n i n a two-

lap shootout to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup race

at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday night. Kahne's first win of the

season earned him a spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup. "I struggle with restarts

a gg ®q®I ®®aagg

IIIOM~ ~~ S

things you have to be good Meanwhile, Tony Stewart's

much - anticipated

return to racing ended a

The Associated Press Coaches and players from Oregon and Michigan State refused to talk about their impending matchup before their respectiveseason openers this week.

'~®aaa

a lot and that's big," Kahne said. " That's one of t h e at. It worked really well tonight."

big game

lhtt

Now that the No. 3 Ducks

and No. 8 Spartans easily dispatched their outmatched op-

Iaw

little more than halfway through the race. Stewart hit the wall for

ponents? Game on. The Ducks I

raatt ss ee ~yggges g

~~

right front tire blew out on

Lap 172, ending his night with a 41st-place finish.

Mark

over South jl ext j gp Dakota.

first win of the season.

" We've had kind o f a

t i mes,"

Kahne said. Kenseth, who f i n ished

second, also qualified for the Chase on points. He began the second restart in

first place, but couldn't stop the charge from Kahne. "I was able to get alongside him and get a good run down the back stretch," Kenseth said. "... I got back to the gas as soon as

Andrew Testa/ New York Times News Service

Aston Villa goalkeeper Brad Guzan, left, is now the No. 1 goalkeeper for the United States after Tim Howard announced he was taking a year off from the U.S. national team.

• After years as backup, a 29-year-old Brad t uzan is the United States' top goalkeeper

20-year-old Kevin Ward Jr.

an opportunity that is quite big," Guzan

"When I've been given the opportunity In 2008, he left Major L eague Soccer, in the past, I feelthat I'vebeen able to benwhere he was named efit the team," he added. "You just want the league's goalkeeper to continue that path of helping the sport of the year, for the En- and helping the national team do well. jljext gp glis h club Aston Villa,At the moment, there's going to be a void but he discovered that in the goalkeeping position, and that is International p l a ying time was toughsomething I want to step in and fill." friendly: USAat to find. For several "The guys have known that Brad has Czech Republic years, Guzanwas Aston been fighting for that spot," said U.S. When:11 a.m. Villa's s econd-choicemidfielder Stuart Holden. "Tim was, Wednesday g o a l keeper behind thewithout a doubt, the No. 1, but Brad has Ty. .NBCSN veter a n American Brad been pushing him every step of the way. Friedel. A big reason why Tim has been so good Four years later, weary of the sitting is because Tim knows that if he slips up, and a few slights, Guzan nearly left En- Brad is right behind him, in terms of takgland. But an injury gave him an opening ing his spot."

in an Aug. 9 race at a dirt

said last week. "It's an exciting time, not

to become Aston Villa's starter in 2012,

track in upstate New York. The fatal wreck is still un-

only for myself but for other goalkeepers. and he played well enough that season to I just want to do my part to show myself be named the dub's player of the year. "To be No. 2 for 'X' amount of years, it's to the staff and the coaches that I can be counted on." all about proving that you belong there,"

I could. I just didn't have

enough muscle to clear him." Hamlin was third, fol-

lowed by Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards and Danica Patrick. It was Stewart's first race

since the sprint car he was driving struck and killed

der investigation. Also on Sunday: John Force earns win in Traxxas Nitro Shootout: BROWNSBURG,

Ind.

John Force earned $100,000 when he beat teammate Robert

H i g ht

with a 4.061-second run at 317.19 mph in a

Mustang.

F ord

Hel -

frich quipped following the 62-13 victory

Kahne took his third career win in Atlanta and his

downer year at

afternoon at Autzen Stadium.

"Now you guys can talk about Michigan State," Oregon coach

sal

the second time after his

host the Spartans on Saturday

By Brian Sciaretta The Associated Press

When the U.S. national team takes

the field against the Czech Republic on Wednesday in Prague, it will do so without its most recognizable and valuable

player from the World Cup: goalkeeper Tim Howard, who announced last week that he was taking a year off from inter-

national play. Howard's decision opened the door for his understudy, Brad Guzan, who has

been the team's backup for nearly eight years. "Obviously, with Tim stepping away from the national team for a little bit, it's

Guzan is no stranger to the national team, and he has turned in some strong

performances. When Howard was out with a back injury in 2013, Guzan filled in for World Cup qualifiers against Costa Rica and away at Mexico, posting shutouts in both. But in a career that, at times, has been a test of his perseverance, Guzan is also familiar with waiting his turn.

Guzan, who will turn 30 in the week

after the Czech Republic game, will need to make the most of his chance during the next year if he wants to see all his patiencepay off. "It's always exciting when you start Guzan said. "I think over the past couple of years while playing at Villa, I've prov- a new cycle," Guzan said. "We always en that I do belong and I can be counted on. When you go with the national team,

1110-AM

"We are very excited. It pos-

es a good challenge for us. It poses a good challenge for the entire team," Oregon quar-

terback Marcus Mariota said. "They're coming in as one of the best defenses in the coun-

try and any offense would love to face that challenge. It helps you see where you stack up." While Oregon is known for theirhyper-drive offense, Michigan State's success last

season — the Spartans went undefeatedin conference play — came in large part because of their bruising defense. The Spartans lost standouts Max Bullough and Darqueze Dennard from that defense, but they still have lineman Shi-

lique Calhoun, considered one of the top players in his league, and linebacker Taiwan Jones,

who looked promising in the opener with Bullough gone.

you just want to do your best to help the ments between now and then that are team and make it difficult for the manag- going to be important for the U.S. To er to make a team selection. Obviously, build on what we were able to accomwhen you have two good goalkeepers, it plish this past summer is going to be makes it a bit tricky. very important."

By Rachel Cohen

Sharapova 6-4, 2-6, 6-5 in the fourth round of the U.S. Open in New York on Sunday.

opener on Friday night.

World Cup. There are a lot of tourna-

Wozniaki outlastsSharapovato reachquarters

Kathy Willens/The Associated Press

45 7 m therr

know it is a long process until the next

TENNIS: U.S. OPEN

Caroline Wozniacki reacts after defeating Maria

No. 8 Michigan fending Bi g S tate at No. 3 Ten champi- Oregon on Spartans When: 3:30 handled vis- p.m. Saturday iting J a c k- Ty:Fox sonville State RaNe:KBND

tle bit up and down," she said in quite The Associated Press an understatement, "and it's so nice NEW YORK — Caroline Wozni- to kind of start feeling like I'm playacki trusts her stamina so much that ing the way I want to." she plans to return to New York in Because of the heat, the players

cluding her come-from-behind sec-

two months to run a marathon.

Slx.

received a10-minute break before

ond-round victory here.

The fi fth-seeded Sharapova'sloss leaves No. 1 Serena Williams as the only woman remaining of the top

Maria Sharapova, usually the the final set. Wozniacki mixed in just After a sloppy first set with 21 unone wearing down opponents in the enough aggression with her signa- forced errors, Sharapova was paintthird set, sure couldn't keep up on turedefense to keep the pressure on ing the lines in the second. Woznia steamy Sunday atthe U.S.Open. Sharapova in the final set. acki seemed to spend most of the set "She's very good at getting a lot of watching in dismay as one of SharaWozniacki won 6-4,2-6, 6-2 in 2 hours, 37 minutes to get back to her balls back and making you hit an- pova's 22 winners whizzedby. first Grand Slam quarterfinal in other one," Sharapova said. "In the Wozniacki said she told herselfbemore than two years — and get back end, I went for a little too much." fore the third set to go for her shots. "If I'm going to lose," she recalled in the headlines for reasons other She insisted the conditions didn't than her personal life. bother her. Sharapova had been 17-6 thinking, "at least I'm going to do it "The season for me has been a lit- in three-set matches this year, in- with dignity."

"You want to have high con-

fidence coming out of Week 1," quarterback Connor Cook said. "Playing the way we did, making the plays we made, especially with the defense playing the way they played too, is obviously a big confidence booster for all of us, going into a big-time game in a big-time environment against a bigtime opponent."

jljL 1jjBayjor

blanksSMU

WACO,Texas — Bryce Petty threw for two touch-

downs and ran for another score, helping No. 10Baylor beat SMU45-0 Sunday night.

Big 12 champion Baylor led 24-0 after one quarter. It had a 6-yard TDdrive after an SMUfumble and a 4-yard drive after Levi Norwood's 45-yard punt return. — The Associated Press


B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014

T EE TO

REEN

ROUNDUP

rns scores 0 an a ssic win in a o The Associated Press

PORTLAND Austin Ernst won the LPGA Tour's Portland Classic on Sunday

capitalized. At the par-4 18th, Kim missed the green long with her

the final round. This one in-

cludes Rory McIlroy. The world's No. 1 player had a 64.

s econd shot, but

chipped to three feet and made with a par on the first hole of a the par putt to force a playoff. playoff against South Korea's Ryu, at 14 under heading into I.K. Kim. 18, made double bogey after It was the first profession- hitting her second shot from a al victory for the 22-year-old fairway bunker into a greenErnst, who shot a 5-under 67 side pond.

McIlroy was two shots off the lead at the TPC Boston head-

in the final round to get to 14

ing into the Labor Day finish. Jason Day (69) and Chris Kirk (64) also were two behind. Ten players were separated by four shots.

under atColumbia Edgewa-

minutes before Kim and Ryu.

Couples' 61 leads to Champions Tour victory: CAL-

ter. Kim, the first- and sec-

First thing Ernst did, after

GARY, Alberta — Fred Cou-

E rnst f i nished about

20

ond-round leader, carded a 68. signing her card, was call her Kim missed a n e i ght- father, Mark. "Those are probably two foot par putt in the playoff t hat handed the win to t h e American.

A year ago as a rookie in Portland, Ernst shot a thirdr ound 62 on th e way t o a ninth-place finish. In Ernst's

mind, Columbia Edgewater was a likely place for her first career win. "A lot of good memories coming into this year. I was very confident coming in, knowing I could make a lot of birdies," Ernst said. "I knew that I didn't have to do any-

ples won th e C hampions Tour's Shaw Charity Classic, chipping in for eagle for a course-record 9-under 61 and beating Billy Andrade with a

of the hardest holes on the

course. When I talked to my dad, he said if you made those bogeys anywhere else in the round, no one would say anything different. So, really solid

tap-in birdie on the first hole

of aplayoff.The 54-year-old Couplesalso eagledthe par-5 11th and had five birdies in his

bogey-free round at Canyon Meadows. Andrade closed

round," Ernst said.

In the playoff, Ernst rolled a 35-foot putt to w i t hin 18

with a 62, making a short ea-

inches. Kim missed the green with her second shot, chipped to within eight feet, and then

gle putt on the par-5 18th to match Couples at 15-under

missed the par putt. Kim, a t h ree-time LPGA

Cauley wins W eb.com Tour Finals opener: FORT WAYNE, Ind. — Bud Cauley

195.

winner, was bidding for her thing special today because I first victory since 2010. After had three really good rounds playing the entire final round to start with. Coming down without a bogey, Kim made the stretch, I was very proud of one during the playoff. "I've been missing quite a how I handled everything." Ernst pulled into contention with a 5-under 31 on the

front nine, highlighted by a chip-in eagle at the par-5 fifth. Kim made four birdies and no bogeys. South Korean's So Yeon Ryu and Chella Choi tied for third at 12 under. Ryu, last

week's Canadian Women's Open winner, shot 70, while Choi had a 68. Ernst was in control after she converted a longbirdie putt

won the Hotel Fitness Champi-

onship to regain his PGA Tour card, earning $180,000 in the Web.com Tour Finals opener. Cauley closed with a 7-under

few of those. I think it's just the

65 at Sycamore Hills for a one-

speed of the green," Kim said. "I played in a lot of playoffs, but I haven't won one yet. So

stroke victory over Colt Knost. The 24-year-old former Alabama player birdied five of the

it was in the back of my mind. But she deserves it."

first six holes and finished at 20-under 268.

At 18, Ryu was in position to win the tournament outright

Otto wins Italian Open; Gallecher comes up short: TU-

or earn a spot in the playoff,

RIN, Italy — Hennie Otto of South Africa held on to claim a

but her tee shot landed in a

bunker. It got worse when Ryu hit her approach into the water. "These days I have been Timmothy J. Gonzalez/The Associated Press struggling with hitting fair- Austin Ernst hits her drive off the18th tee during the final round of the Portland Classic at Columbia at the par-4 14thto get to 16un- way bunker shots. As you saw, Edgewater Country Club on Sunday in Portland. Enrst won her first title on the first playoff hole. der and a two-stroke lead. But my result was really bad," Ryu she stumbled down the stretch, said. "It feels great to be in missing the green at Nos. 17 contention again, and I saw a with my result." Mass.— Russell Henley made Deutsche Bank Championand 18, resultinginbogeys. lot of positive things this week, Also on Sunday: five birdies in a s even-hole s h ip. For the second straight That opened the door for so honestly, I'm disappointed Henley takes a 1-shot lead stretchand had a 6-under 65 week, a FedEx Cup playoff Kim and Ryu, but only Kim with my finish, but still happy at Deutsche Bank: NORTON, to take a one-shot lead in the event is wide open going into

Big Meadow Like the 10th, the entire

course is in a gorgeous setting that at times gives you the

feeling that the surrounding mountain peaks are there to watch over your golf game. In fact, No. 10 is just the beginning of a stretch of holes with views as breathtaking as you would find at any course in Central Oregon.

ner, in lieu of the tree, but reback nine.

course's irrigation system. Still, the irrigation is working again, and those greens are not in such bad shape that they detract from the overall experience. Big M e adow's d e sign strikes a nice balance of be-

ing forgiving for novices yet challenging for lower handicaps — and being all things to all kinds of golfers is not an easy task. One way that Big Meadow keeps better players in check is with the course's 65 bunkers, many of them mounded

and particularly difficult to escape. The fairway bunkers — which are present on the

vast majority of holes — are

featuresa fullba r and restauarchitect Robert Muir Graves.

Where a golfer ends up off

box. "Big Meadow has some beautiful settings," said Jeff Fought, Black Butte Ranch's The18th green at the Big Meadow course at Black Butte Ranch. longtime director of g olf,

ic boardsused to operate the

off David Howell, who surged up the leaderboard with a 63 to finish second.

Big Meadow's $77 peak rate is roughly on par with many of score. The course's heavy the other high-end, public-acbunkering acts as a guide cess golf courses in Central for low-handicap golfers to Oregon.And its$57Deschutes choose the best route to the County rate ($67 with cart), hole, while punishing wild tee which is good during primeshots. time on Mondays, Tuesdays The varied distances at Big and Wednesdays, is a bit more Meadow often allow for more affordable.

the tee will often dictate the

the 14th hole's elevated tee

(Black Butte Ranch's second course)." Of course, mountain views are only so appealing to a golfer. Big Meadow, which was revamped in 2007, has stood the test of time because it is also a joy to play. Currently, some greens on the back nineare mending after lightning struck last month and destroyed some of the controllers and electron-

won the event in 2008, shot a 4-under 68 to finish with a 20-under total of 268 and hold

How to approach the course Verdict

on the par-4 11th hole almost appears as if it sits at the base of North Sisters. And jagged Three Fingered Jack towers over the 14th green, which itself is framed by aspens and pines, offering the signature view of the golf course from

ed views are a result of the

an automatic Ryder Cup spot after finishing third. Otto, who

gardless, the hole makes for rant area called Robert's Pub, quite a start to the engaging which is named after course

From a distance,the green

terrain, which "is so m uch flatter than Glaze Meadow

lacher came up just short of

that is protected by two bun- cluded area on the far corner kers and is gorgeously framed of the range. by aspens. Another short-game pracBut even without the tree tice area is located just bethere is still risk off the tee, as hind the ninth green. And Big bombers can run theirdrive Meadow's practice putting through the fairway and into green rests mere steps away a bunker or worse. Black Butte from the first tee. Ranch has plans to add some Big Meadow's clubhouse bunkering to protect the cor- includes a large pro shop and

Continued from B1

adding that the unobstruct-

second Italian Open victory by two shots, while Stephen Gal-

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

conservative tee shots, and

in many cases a 3-wood will take the fairway bunkers out of play. And mostly roomy "You'd think I would be better shots into the greens to avoid greens take some of the risk often set at a distance that some golfers cannot reach out of the sand." the deep bunkering around away from playing a longer " Yeah, with a s m uch a s the greens. Save for the 12th iron into a green. with a driver. And while doglegs abound, few produce an you've been in the sand," Eric and 13th greens, which both Still, Big Meadow does presawkward turn. interrupted before letting me slope aggressively from back ent chances for longer hitters "Robert Muir Graves was a finish my thought. to front, the putting surfac- to make a run at birdie or betgreat designer," Fought said We both laughed. es are generally roomy and ter with four reachable par 5s. of Graves, a Central Oregon For the most part, Big predictable. But be forewarned: Shots that resident who also designed Meadow's bunkers are n ot stray into those fairway bunThe Greens a t R e d mond meant to punish. But they do, Favorite hole kers are not so easy to dig out. and Bend's River's Edge and apparently, punish bad golf. I go back and forth on Widgi Creek courses before whether I p r efer th e p ar-5 Off the course his death in 2003. "I love his Difficulty of course 10th hole or the par-4 14th, Big Finding a place to practice stuff, and he really put toThe course is of average Meadow's signature hole that at Big Meadow should not be gether a masterpiece (at Big length, and six combinations perfectly frames Three Fin- difficult. Big Meadow's roomy Meadow)." of tees (ranging from 5,485 geredJack.Both holesfeature driving range, which sits just Of course, my respect for yards to 7,002 yards) give golf- exceptionally beautiful moun- acrossthe entrance road from Graves did not stop me from ers ample choices. Heavy bun- tain views, but the 535-yard the clubhouse, is backed with cursing those bunkers. On my kering and some challenging dogleg right (No. 10) gives ag- a majestic view of Black Butte. recent visit, I spent more time green complexes are harder gressivegolfers a realoppor- And the short-game practice in sand than a 3-year-old at a on a better player's scorecard tunity at an eagle. area, which includes practice day-care recess. than it might first appear. But The dead tree that once bunkers, sits in a relatively seRepeatedly I hit either an novices will find the course's guarded the right corner of the errant drive or a sloppy ap- few water hazards freeing, fairway fell (naturally, Fought proach shot that landed deep especially considering the says) two years ago, which has in one of those bunkers. course is without a forced taken away some of the risk of Perhaps out of frustration carry. cutting the corner. Now a golfafter finding my ball buried The fairways are spacious er can set up a manageable in a greenside bunker on the d espite being l ined w i t h approach with a long iron into 349-yard, par-4 15th holehomes, ponderosa pines and a treacherous green complex Plan Well, Retire Well the third consecutive hole in aspens. But fairway bunkers which I reached the sand — I are often present, and out-ofmuscled up a sand wedge and bounds markers are typically sent my ball flying over the not far from the tree line for green. I then muffed a chip, shots that stray too far from leading to a double bogey. the mark. 716 SW11th Sl. Walking off the green, my Once in the fairway, golf775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend Redmond 541.923.4732 541-728-0 321swww.elevationcapitalstrategies.com head shaking, I mumbled, ers will have to play precise

Most who play the course

will not be disappointed. In the end, Big Meadow is an idealcourse for golfers of varying skill levels to play together. And some of the most awe-inspiring mountain views anywhere can be found all along the way. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.

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Kids snowmobile, 1986 Antique sideboard/ Yamaha Invi t er, buffet:Walnut, FREE! 541-379-3530 beautiful detail. Early 1900's. Exterior has 208 top drawer & 3 doors Pets & Supplies with original key. Inside has 2 shelves and a drawer. MeaThe Bulletin recomsures 71x21x36 Exmends extra caution cellent cond. Pick-up when purc h asonly.$800OBO. ing products or ser- 415-279-9893 (Bend) vices from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be Appliances subjected to fraud. Black, new to exFor more informacellent c o ndition! tion about an adverMaytag Jet Clean tiser, you may call dishwasher, $250. the O r egon State Whirlpool gas conAttorney General's ran g e , Office C o n sumer v ection $500; Wh i r lpool Protection hotline at

microwave hood. $125. 541-420-8636

Broken Top Furniture Moving Sale Drexel Her i tage queen sofa sleeper $ 1100. 2 Dre x e l Heritage great room lounge chairs $ 1050/pair. 2 D e signer marble top entry chests $750/pair. H o oker S even Seas h a l l chest $375. Stanley c herry stor a ge cocktail table $535 Stanley 30" r ound end table $275. Designer sq. end table $275. Oak antique dining side b oard $875. Cane Rocker $150. Many accessories. Photos avail.

English Bulldog/Boxer 949-278-7624 pups, 11 wks old, 2 boys, 1 girl left. Asking $300 obo. Great SOM E family pets, G ENERATE 541-460-3026 EXCITEMENT in your neighborhood! Plan a Free neutered male cat, garage sale and don't to good home only, forget to advertise in 541-318-1060 classified! 541-385-5809. German Shorthair AKC pups, parents on site, Hide-a-bed by Basset, $550. 541-306-9957 while, mattress good Jack Russell Terriers, shape. good shape, pups, pure, B&W girls, $75. 541-382-6773 $400. 541-588-2287 and chairs, solid POODLE puppies,toy, Table oak, pedestal table, 4 loving companions. windsor style chairs. 5«rf -475-3889 Great condition. $350. 541-382-6773 QueensfandHeelers Standard & Mini, $150 8 up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor The Bulletin recommends extra ' dpress.com

r

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across the country! Sept 14, 2014

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For Tickets: Kollectible-orKeepsake.com 541-420-3387 Benefitting Assistance League® of Bend "Helping Local People in Need" The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

The Bulletin 216

• C oins & Stamps Private collector buying postagestamp albums & collections, world-wide and U.S. 573-286-4343 (local, cell phone). 241

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RANS Stratus XP 2011 Recumbent LWB; exc. cond. 27 gears SRAM X9

CHECK YOURAD

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Santana

Sage Rodw/Tioga reel, $225. Custom TFO rodwith Redington reel, $200. Simms waders, men's Lg, worn once, $200; ladies small, new in box, $175. Simms boots,men's 13, used once, $100; ladies 9, new in box, $100.Simms wading stick,new, $50. Fishpond chest pack,$50. 541-382-6664

Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items 8 upscale bamboo fly rods. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746 on the first day it runs 247 to make sure it is corSporting Goods rect. "Spellcheck" and human errors do oc- Misc. cur. If this happens to your ad, please con- Complete camp kit, tact us ASAP so that t ent, l antern e t c corrections and any $100. 541-221-8226 adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

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Guns, Hunting & Fishing Bend local pays CASH!!

for all firearms 8

ammo. 541-526-0617 CASH!!

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EAA Tangfolio Witness Hunter .45 ACP long-slide. One powerful tack driver! 6-inch barrel, blued steel frame & slide, textured wood grips, & low-profile adjustable sights. Three hi-cap mags & hard case. $800 obo. 541-977-3173

Firewood, approx 1/2 cord, cut to apprx 16" $75 obo. 541-408-8346 Generator small, runs reat, exc. c ond. 160. 541-221-8226 Rooftop cargo box, newer, $125. 541-221-8226.

NOTICE TO Found BlackLab mix in All YearDependable ADVERTISER Firewood: Seasoned; La Pine area. Call Since September 29, Lodgepole, split, del, 541-536-5814 1991, advertising for B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 FOUND: small ladies used woodstoves has or 2 for $365. Call for flask a t J e fferson been limited to mod- multi-cord discounts! Park off Whitewater els which have been 541-420-3484. Trail. 541-548-0388 certified by the Oregon Department of Grade A split/del. $190 LOST black I-phone with Environmental Qual- cord; Grade B $160/ hot pink rubber case at ity (DEQ) and the fed- cord, within 15 miles Pioneer Park Mon. 8/25, Wanted- paying cash eral E n v ironmental of La Pine. Call Rod, Reward! 541-518-1009 for Hi-fi audio & stu- Protection A g e n cy 541-876-7426 dio equip. Mclntosh, (EPA) as having met JBL, Marantz, Dy- smoke emission stan- Seasoned Juniper fire- REMEMBER: If you naco, Heathkit, San- dards. A cer t ified w ood delivered i n have lost an animal, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. w oodstove may b e Central Ore. $190 per don't forget to check Call 541-261-1808 identified by its certifi- c ord, or $ 18 0 f o r The Humane Society cation label, which is rounds. 541-419-9859 Bend Need to get an permanently attached 541-382-3537 to the stove. The Bulad in ASAP? 269 Redmond letin will not know541-923-0882 You can place it ingly accept advertis- Gardening Supplies Madras & Equipment online at: ing for the sale of 541-475-6889 uncertified www.bendbulletin.com Prineville woodstoves. 541-447-7178 BarkTurfSoil.com or Craft Cats 541-385-5809 267 541-389-8420. PROMPT D ELIVERY Fuel & Wood 261 541-389-9663 Where can you find a Medical Equipment helping hand? WHEN BUYING From contractors to Craftsman lawn mower Summit Lift Chair, FIREWOOD... self-propelled, $50 obo. yard care, it's all here for 6 stairs, $800. To avoid fraud, 541-408-8346 541-788-7149 in The Bulletin's The Bulletin "Call A Service 263 recommends payment for Firewood Tools Professional" Directory only upon delivery and inspection. Craftsman 282 Craftsman pr e ssure cord is 128 cu. ft. washer, needs work. $75 • A riding lawn Sales Northwest Bend 4' x 4' x 8' obo. 541-408-8346 mower,24hp, • Receipts should Northwest C r o ssing Briggs motor, include name, 265 Estate sale 9-4, Sat., 42" deck, 44 hrs, phone, price and Building Materials Sun. & Mon., 828 NW kind of wood $1000. Fort Clatsop. purchased. 541-416-3705 La Pine Habitat • Firewood ads RESTORE BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS MUST include Building Supply Resale Search the area's most species & cost per Quality at comprehensive listing of cord to better serve For newspaper LOW PRICES classified advertising... delivery, call the our customers. 52684 Hwy 97 real estate to automotive, Circulation Dept. at 541-536-3234 merchandise to sporting 541-385-5800 The BuHetin Open to the public . Bulletin Classifieds To place an ad, call goods. appear every day in the 541-385-5809 Prineville Habitat print or on line. or email ReStore Just bought a new boat? classifiedobendbulletin.com Call 541-385-5809 Building Supply Resale Sell your old one in the www.bendbulletin.com 1427 NW Murphy Ct. classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin Super Seller rates! se««rnr«centralor«rronsince e«e 541-447-6934 The Bulletin 541-385-5809 Open to the public. $«l««llgr«««««l Of««OII «IIK« f9ta

4kk44).-4

Golf cart Club Car, 4 new batteries, $900.

twist shifters; seat

"Sovereign Yorkie pups AKC, 1 girl & chasing products or • 1998" Tandem 2 boys, beautiful! Shots, services from out of I aluminum road potty training, health quar. ~ the area. Sending ~ • cash, c hecks, o r • bike, size Medium, $1100. 541-777-77430 low usage, disc l credit i n f ormation 210 brakes, good condimay be subjected to tion. New, was Furniture & Appliances l FRAUD. For more $5000; selling now information about an g for $1 500. 6 l ight wood d ining advertiser, you may l chairs, excellent cond, / call t h e Or e gon / Call 541-923-2468 ' State Atto r ney ' $30 ea. 541-548-4601

I

Callawav X-12 graphite, 3-lob, $100. Big Bertha graphite fairway metals, 3-13, $40 each. Lady Callaway graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 metals, $100. Lady TaylorMade Miscelas graphite, 7-SW, driver-7 wood, $100. (2) Sun Mountain Speed Carts, $75 ea. 541-382-6664

appraisers from

r«««lnrrcentral oregon sincefae

Like new Necky Eskia 16' kayak with rudder. B ulkheads water tight. Seat like new. Hatches, deck lines and grab loops all in perfect condition. Orig i nally $1450, asking. $850. Please call 541-312-2435. 255

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Get rej 'Itilast witHout r Spending 4i.let,Of CySh.

257

gegch8~+®

Musical Instruments Pair 18" P.A. speakers, no cabinets, $30 obo. 541-408-8346 leave msg

Qge Qo~ g

geQe< S01e

260

Misc. Items

<«~ 80ILt' j4

stock Sale: $109. for one tote, 2 to 5 totes a t $99.95/ea., 6 or more at $89.95 ea. GloryBee Foods Eugene, OR. 541-689-091 3 or 1-800-456-7923

~

$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355

I

~

6 ?'8 $

I

Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers

r

«'

541-389-6655

BUYING Lionel/Amencan Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.

BUYING & S E LLING

18' SAILBOAT

I

~ith trailer, V-berth,

works great. Sell or trade. $2900 080. 541-000-000

Item Priced ai: YourTotal Ad Costonl . • Under $500....................................................................... $29 • $500 fo $999...................................................................$39 • $1000 to $2499.............................................................. $49 • $2500 and over............................................................... $59 Includes: 2" in length,with border, full <olorphoto, boldheadlineand price. *Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)

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l

e Q)Q5

275 Gallon Like New Plastic Totes, Over-

All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, Ed Brown Custom 1911 class rings, sterling silK obra Carry, N I B ver, coin collect, vinnever fired, .45 ACP, tage watches, dental Gen III coating, Coco- gold. Bill Fl e ming, bolo grips. (MSRP 541-382-9419. $ 2745) $2200 . C emetery Spac e 541-977-3440 Double depth interl General's O f fi ce 'James Bond Classic' ment g r ave space 242 Consumer Protec- • semi-auto, P. Beretta with outer burial contion h o t line at I Exercise Equipment (mdl 418) 6.35 Gar- tainer built-in. At Desi 1-877-877-9392. done VT, made in chutes Memorial near Pilates Power Gym Pro, Italy 1954, (B+/A- Pond Mea d ows. > serving TheBulletin > new! $250 or best of- cond.) and h olster, NEVER BEEN USED cen«ral oregon since e03 fer. 541-408-0846 $450. 541-604-0451 $1200. 541-771-4800.

l l

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e 7 7 0 2

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Antique Appraisal Show with well known

Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. Cans for Cats trailer at Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 E; West Bend Pet Express, 14th St; or donate M-F at Smith Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or CRAFT, 78th St, Tumalo. Leave msg. for pick up of large amts, 541-389-8420. www.craftcats.org

o r e g o ~

212

Free Apples - You pick! Bring containers. Call 541-548-2879

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210

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s

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C4

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEP 1, 2014

DAILY B R I D G E

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

C L U B M onday,september1,2014

LOgiCal thought By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

A woman had two sons born on the same day, yet they were not twins (nor was either adopted). How come? If you're good at solving puzzles in logic or m ath, you'll b e g ood at bridge, which demands an aptitude for problem-solving. In today's deal, West leads the deuce o f s p ades against 3NT, and South puts up dummy's queen. When East's king covers, South holds up his ace. He wins the third spade and leads the king of diamonds. East takes the ace, and the defense cashes a spade. East then exits with a diamond, and when South takes the jack and queen, West discards a heart. Declarer must then guess the clubs for his contract. Can he reason out the winning play? FIVE HEARTS

clubs, he bids two hearts and you try 2NT. Partner next bids three spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner shows extra strength and has six spades. He wouldn't need to rebid the suit with only five after you didn't support the spades at your second turn, and if his values were minimum, he w o uld have rebid two spades to suggest a minimum. You should raise to four spades. South dealer Both sides vtdnerable

NORTH 4Q5

QQ4

0Q543 4 AJ8 6 2 WEST 43 J982

EAST 43 K1073

(4«109

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South knows that West had four spades and two diamonds. If he had as many as five hearts, he would have led a heart against 3NT. So West has at least three clubs, and South should take the king and lead to dummy's jack. As to the logic puzzle, the woman had triplets. This week: reading the cards.

QK962

SOUTH 43 A64

9 A107 OKJ6 4K1095 South 1 NT

DAILY QUESTION

We s t Pa s s

North 3 NT

East All P a ss

You hold: 4k Q 5 «4' Q 4 Opening lead — 432 0 Q 5 4 3 4 A J 8 6 2. Y o u r partner opens one spade, you respond two (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.prg. BIZARRO

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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 to 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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09/01/14


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 2014 870

llllotorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

860

Motorcycles & Accessories

880

880

881

882

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, Allegro 32' 2007, like HD FXSBI 2006 new 18.5' Sea Ray 2000 professionally wintercond., low miles, only 12,600 miles. Mercruiser, low new, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 ized every year, cutStage I download, ex- 4.3L hrs, 190 hp Bowoff switch to battery, transmission, dual extras, bags. $7900 obo. rider w/depth finder, haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- plus new RV batter541-447-0887 radio/ CD player, rod eling system, 5kw gen, ies. Oven, hot water heater & air condiholders, full canvas, power mirrors w/defrost, tioning seldom used; EZ Loader trailer, 2 slide-outs with awcond, $9500. nings, rear c a mera, just add water and it's HD Softtail Deuce 2002, exclnt ready to go! 707-484-3518 trailer hitch, driyer door broken back forces w/power window, cruise, $22,000 obo. Serious (Bend) sale, only 200 mi. on inquiries, please. exhaust brake, central new motor from Har- 1997 Reinell 18.5 ft. ski vac, satellite sys. Asking Stored in Terrebonne. ley, new trans case 541-548-5174 $67,500. 503-781-8812 and parts, s p oke boat, in/out Volvo eni ne, e x c . co n d . wheels, new brakes, n early all o f b i k e 8000. 541-389-6256 brand new. Has proof of all work done. Removable windshield, T-bags, black and all chromed out with a Ready to makememories! willy skeleton theme Beaver Marquis, Top-selling Winnebago 19' Pioneer ski boat, on all caps and cov1993 31 J, original owners, non1983, vm tandem ers. Lots o f w o rk, smokers, garaged, only 40-ft, Brunswick heart and love went trailer, V8.Fun & 18,800 miles, auto-levelfloor plan. Many ing jacks, (2) slides, upinto all aspects. All fast! $5800 obo. extras, well maindone at professional 541-815-0936. graded queen bed, bunk tained, fire supbeds, micro, (3) TVs, shops, call for info. pression behind sleeps 10! Lots of storMust sell quickly due refrig, Stow Master age, maintained, very to m e d ical bi l l s, 5000 tow bar, clean!Only $67,995! Ex$8250. Call Jack at $23,995. tended warranty and/or fi541-279-9538. 541-383-3503 nancing avail to qualified buyers!541488-7179

gkZrZ

2002 Harley Fat Boy 14,000 original miles. Excellent cond. Vance & Hines exhaust, 5 spoke HD rims, wind vest, 12" rise handle bars, detachable luggage rack w/ back rest, hwy pegs 8 many chrome accents. Must see to appreciate! $10,500. In CRRarea call 530-957-1865

2005 HD Heritage SoftTail, Big Bore kit, lots of extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt cond., $9750 firm 541-318-8668

2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours,

FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684

HD Sportster, 2001 exc cond, 1 owner, maint'd, original owner, lots new t i r es , cu s t om of extras; Tenneschrome, leather saddle see tandem axle bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. trailer. Excellent Tom, 541-382-6501 condition, $23,500 503-646-1804

HONDA SCOOTER 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. cond., $975 obo. (541) Harley Davidson 2003 593-9710 or 350-8711 Anniversary Road King, 865 Stage 1, pearl white, excellent condition, lots of ATVs c hrome 8 extr a s. $13,999. 541-279-0846 REDUCED!

Harley D a vidson 2006, FXDLI Dyna Low Rider, Mustang seat w/b a ckrest, new battery, windshield, forward controls, lots of chrome, Screamin' Eagle exhaust, 11K mi. Sen ior owned, w e ll maintained! $7950

H onda Big R e d UTV. Like new with just over 40 hours use. Includes winch, 5-foot snow blade, hard roof, half windshield. L ists over $14,000; will sell for b est o ffe r o ver $11,000. Located in J ohn Day. Cal l 541-575-4267

LaPine (928)581-9190

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boat . For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5609

Heartland P r owler Holiday Rambler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', Alumascape 28' like new, 2 slides-liv2003,1-owner. i ng area & l a r ge Self-contained, closet, 15' power aw13' slide, 80W solar ning, power hitch & walkaround s tabilizers, 1 8 g a l . panel, queen + sofa/bed, water heater, full size loads of storage queen bed , l a r ge throughout. Excellent shower, porcelain sink cond., licensed 2015. & toilet. Must see!$13,700. $25,000or make offer. 541-389-9214 541-999-2571

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's Fleetwood D i scovery "Call A Service 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, Professional" Directory satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 miles. Wintered in h eated shop. $82,000 O.B.O. 541-447-8664 I

J%

Keystone Raptor, 2007 37 toy hauler, 2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system,sleeps 6,many extras. $29,999. In Madras,

541-447-4805

RV CONSIGNIIIIENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

call 541-771-9607 or 541-475-6265

Kit Companion '94 26', 1 slide, new stove/fridge, comes with gen. Reducedto $4000.

Redmond: 541-548-5254

Winnebago Adventurer 2005 35~/~', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with al l o p tions, $62,000 / negotiable. Call 5 4 1-306-8711or email a ikistu@bendcable.com

F,i

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $18,000or best offer. 541-316-6049

Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds 5 41-385-580 9 870

Harley Davidson 883 Sportster

Boats & Accessories

1996, 20,200 miles, exc. cond.,

$3,800.

541-548-2872.

HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 &

16' West Coast Aluminum, $3950, 65 hp Mercury, Shoreline Trailer, 2014 Stickers, Fish Finder. 541-596-5111

2 Vance & Hines pipes, $12,500. 541-306-0166

HDFatBo 1996 v

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

$15,000

541-548-4807

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. 916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

condition, 1 owner, $16,000. 541-480-9277

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 25,000. 541-820-3724

Jumping Jack tent trailer, many extras, storage cover, short w heel b as e hig h clearance. Carry your ATVs, boats, other toys to places others cannot go. Low mileage, used one hunting season, $5500. 541-548-3363

932

Antique & Classic Autos

o

Laredo 30' 2009

0 0

Buick Skylark 1972 Unrestored! Unmolested! Without compare! Photos at hemmings.com $20,900. 541-323-1898

00 overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

ssf-

The Bulletin

Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' bed, with ramps. $700 obo. 541-549-4834 or 541-588-0068

541-447-5184.

Bigfoot 11.5' 2003 Onan generator, queen bed, microwave, dry shower, double paned windows, always stored indoors excellent

541-389-5788

Looking for your Gulfstream 24' BT next employee? Cruiser, 2004,2nd Place a Bulletin help owner, 25K miles. Induservin Central Ore on since 1 wanted ad today and $25,500 trial V-10, 4-spd transmis541-419-3301 reach over 60,000 sion with overdrive. 35 hrs 875 on gen.; stove 8 oven readers each week. Watercraft Your classified ad have never been used. New micro, new LED TV, will also appear on BlueRay/DVD, all new bendbulletin.com tires, back-up camera, which currently re= new awnings. Excellent! ceives over 1.5 milUnable to travel anymore lion page views evdue to health. ery month at no — 'W ~ Live, Work, Travel extra cost. Bulletin 16' Old Town Canoe, $35,000. 541-548-3595 in this rare 38' 2009 Classifieds Get Respruce, cedar, fiberglass, Anniversary Edition sults! Call 385-5809 Winnebago C 22' Lake model, 1 owner, Montana M o d el or place your ad 2002 - $30,500 very good cond, w/extras. 3665RE. Located in on-line at Big engine, heavy $1000. 541-388-3386 Bend, it's in e xc. bendbulletin.com duty, many extras, cond., includes satAds published in "Wa ellite TV , q u e en 21,000 miles, like tercraft" include: Kay new. Please call for Tempurpedic matHOLIDAY RAMBLER ks, rafts and motor 882 tress, wine cabinet, details zed personal VACATIONER 2003 Fifth Wheels 4 slides and much, V8 Gas, 340 hp, 541-280-3251 atercrafts. Fo 8.1L much more. Priced workhorse, Allison 1000 'boats" please se 5 speed trans., 39K, to se l l . Ava i l . I lass 870. 11 Winnebago Sightseer NEW TIRES, 2 slides, turn-key furnished ••8 g 541-385-5809 27' 2002. workhorse and ready to roll. Onan 5.5w gen., ABS as motor, Class A, brakes, steel cage cock$37,500. ' slide living rm/dipit, washer/dryer, fire541- 410-8363. lace, mw/conv. oven, nette, new tires. spare tire carrier, HD trailer 880 ree standing dinette, 5th Wheel Transwas $121,060 new; now, hitch, water heater, port, 1990 Motorhomes micro/oven, genera- Low miles, EFI 460, $35,900. 541-536-1008 tor, furn/AC, outside 4-spd auto, 10-ply 1997 Bounder 34' shower, carbon dioxtires, low miles, alw/slide. $17,900. ide & smoke detector, most new condition, Excellent condition, fiberglas ext., elect. Sell for $3500. must see! Ford 460 step, cruise control, MONTANA 3585 2008, w/Banks, new tires, OR For Hire CB radio, 60k miles, exc. cond., 3 slides, dual A/C, rear camCall for quote awning, TV antenna w king bed, Irg LR, era, triple axle, Onan Providence 2005 Ask for Theo, booster, flat screen Arctic insulation, all gen, 63k miles. 541-260-4293 23" TV. AM/FM/CD Fully loaded, 35,000 options - reduced by 541-306-9897 stereo. $2 7 ,500. miles, 350 Cat, Very $3500 to $31,500. 541-548-2554 clean, non-smoker, 2007 Tioga Class C 30' 541-420-3250 CHECK YOUR AD 3 slides, side-by-side motorhome, 17,000+ 881 refrigerator with ice miles, excellent cond., professionally wintermaker, Washer/Dryer, Travel Trailers ized every year. Flat screen TV's, In $35,000. 541-604-9352 motion satellite. $95,000 on the first day it runs 541-480-2019 to make sure it is corOPEN ROAD 36' rect. "Spellcheck" and 2005 - $19,995 2007 Jayco Jay Flight Tick, Tock human errors do ocKing bed, hide-a-bed 29 FBS with slide out 8 cur. If this happens to sofa, 3 slides, glass Tick, Tock... awning - Turn-key ready your ad, please con- shower, 10 gal. wato use, less than 50 totact us ASAP so that 2007 Winnebago ter heater, 10 cu.ft. ...don't let time get tal days used by current corrections and any fridge, central vac, Outlook Class "C" owner. Never smoked in, away. Hire a adjustments can be 31', solar panel, Cat. satellite dish, 27" TV no indoor pets, excellent made to your ad. heater, excellent /stereo system, front professional out cond., very clean. Lots of 541-385-5809 condition, more exbonus items; many have The Bulletin Classified front power leveling of The Bulletin's jacks and s cissor tras. Asking $58K. never been used. Price "Call A Service stabilizer jacks, 16' Ph. 541-447-9268 now reduced to $18,500 awning. Like new! Can be viewed at which is lower range of Professional" 541-419-0566 Western Recreation Kelly Blue Book. Call Directory today! (top of hill) Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r in Prineviiie. more info / more photos. RV RV CONSIGNMENTS CONSIGNMENTS Dutchman Denali Garage Sates Fleetwood Prowler WANTED 32' 2011 travel WANTED 32' - 2001 We Do the Work, We Do The Work ... trailer. 2 slides EvGarage Sales You 2 slides, ducted You Keep the Cash! erything goes, all Keep The Cash! heat 8 air, great On-site credit On-site credit kitchen ware, linens Garage Sales condition, snowbird approval team, etc. Hitch, sway approval team, ready, Many upweb site presence. web site presence. bars, water & sewer Find them grade options, fiWe Take Trade-Ins! hoses. List price We Take Trade-Ins! nancing available! in $34,500 - asking $14,500 obo. BIG COUNTRY RV The Bulletin BIG COUNTRY RV $26,800 Loaded. Bend: 541-330-2495 Bend: 541-330-2495 Must see to appreciClassifieds Call Dick, Redmond: Redmond: ate. Redmond, OR. 541-480-1687. 541-546-5254 541-548-5254 541-604-5993 541-385-5809

he Bulleti

Canopies & Campers Airc r aft, Parts & Service 1995 Lance Camper, 11.3 ft., sleeps 6, self contained very lightly used, exc. cond., TV, VCR, micro, oven, fridge, 3 burner stove, q ueen o ve r ca b , $8000. 541-389-6256 Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

P

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KeystoneLaredo 31' Rt/ 20 06 w ith 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E as y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service II „

Chevelle II!falibu 1966 Complete

J

restoration, $32,900.

1/3interestin

(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located © Bend) 541-288-3333

Corvette Coupe 1964 530 miles since frame off restoration. Runs 1/3 interest in welland drives as new. equipped IFR Beech Bo- Satin Silver color with nanza A36, new 10-550/ black leather interior, prop, located KBDN. mint dash. PS, PB, $65,000. 541-41 9-9510 AC, 4 speed. Knock www.N4972M.com offs. New tires. Fresh 327 N.O.M. All Corvette restoration parts in & out. Reduced to $57,950. 541-410-2870 1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Jeepster Commando 1968 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, comBend. Excellent performance & affordpletely restored. $12,000 obo. 808-430-5133 or able flying! $6,000. 541-382-6300

541-410-6007

Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 155 K m i les, $11,500. 541-549-6407

1974 Belfanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

In Madras, call 541-475-6302 3300 sq.ft. Hangar Prineville Airport 60'wide by 55' deep with 16' bi-fold door.

Upgrades include, T-6 lighting, skylights, windows, 14' side RV door, infra-red heating, and bathroom, $155,000, Call Bill 541-460-7930

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.

Dry walled insulated and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546

Studebaker C h a mpion 1957, all orig., C lean t i t le , r u n s/ drives, easy restore. $2900. 541-639-5360 933

Pickups T=

p ~ WA,

2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

Add color photos and sell yeum stuff fast. In Print and Online With The BL!Iletin'S ClaSSifiedS. A dd color photos for pets, real e s t a te , a ut o 8

more! I I

I

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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 all the quiet can haul jt all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwillnaed. Roomtogrowinyoijr a t ough V8 engine will get the Job OWn little ParadiSe! Call noW. call right away. $500 dOne On the ranCh. *SPBCial PriVate Party rateS aPPly to

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merchandise and automotive categories.

www.bendbulletin.com

To place your photo ad, visit us online atwwnv.bendbulleti n. com

C5

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or call with questions, 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8

09


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

C6 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 2014 •THE BULLETIN 933

935

Pickups

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

935

975

975

975

975

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Ford Fusion SEL

Kia Forte EX 2011

~ H I se

• hISS

Dodge Ram 1500

Ford Expedition

~ss

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BMW X3 2011 A5.7L, V8, 4WD, auto. ¹546813

$24,977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN ~

ahaaaa

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 8/31/1 4

Kia Sorrento2011, AWD, Fully Loaded. VIN ¹141365. $27,888

2 0 07, 99K

miles, premium package, heated lumbar supported seats, panoramic moo n roof, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xenon headlights, tan & black leather interior, n ew front & re a r brakes O 76K miles, one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. 541-388-4360

2001 4x4 and lots of room! Vin A41537

(exp. 9/7/I 4)

$6,977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN ~

I M ROR

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Bargain

2000, VIN ¹163136. $5,888 (exp.'9/704)

SMOLICH

SMOLICH

m oto r s

m oto r s

H YUN D A I

H YUN D A I

541-749-4025

541-749-4025

smolichHyundai.com DLR ¹366

Corral pricing good

Cadillac Eldorado

smolichHyundai.com DLR ¹366

thru 8/31/14

2012 2.5L 4 cyl.,

automatic.

Vin¹248502

$19,977 ROBBERSON L Llhhhhll ~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 8/31/14

2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, automatic, ¹448537 $12,977

ROBBERSON hINChhll ~

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— ~~,"~If @ 1

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very

Dodge Ram 1500 2012, Crew Cab, 4x4 VIN ¹2314'I 8. $28,998

2004 Extra nice and clean. Vin¹A40718 6,977

clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-91 5-9170

(exp. 9/7/14)

SMOLICH

m oto r s H YUN D A I

541-749-4025

smolichHyundai.com DLR ¹366

• ~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205.

Bargain Corral pricing good thru 8/31/1 4

Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Automatic, 6-cylinder, tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyless entry, 69K miles. Excellent condition; tires have 90% tread. $11,995. Call 541-598-5111

$5,977 ROBBERSON'L oh ~

maaaa

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Bargain Corral pricing good thru 8/31/1 4

541-385-5809

(exp. 9/7/I 4)

SMOLICH

m oto r s

Chevy Malibu 2012,

Lots of options; sunroof, 6 speed trans Hyundai Genesis 2009, with manual option, Every Option, 9K Miles. bluetooth, o n Star, VIN ¹633309. Sirius satelite, $21,888 heated seats, pw, (exp.9/7/I4) pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech SMOLICH engine, 20 MPG city, m ot o r s 35 MPG hwy, USB H YUN D A I port, Ipod r eady, 541-749-4025 $14,900 OBO. smolichHyundai.com 541-504-6974 DLR ¹366

Nazda NX-5 2010

'10- 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

541-420-3277

ways garaged, all

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Subaru Outback 2012 Professional" Directory 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, is all about meeting auto. trans., AWD, yourneeds. leather heated seats, AWD, power moon Call on one of the r oof, a n d mo r e ! professionals today! 25,600 miles. Below KB @ 2 6 , 0 00

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Infiniti i30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900 obo.

maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

541-344-5325

18k miles. 2.0L, 4 cyl, RWD. Vin ¹208304 18,977 ROBBERSON hI hC0 hN ~

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

541-389-2426.

Need to get an ad in ASAP?

VolvoXC 70 2010, Cross Country, AWD. VIN ¹084513. $27,888 (exp.9/7/I4)

SMOLICH

m ot o r s

H YUN D A I

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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

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2011, 3.5L V6 AWD. vin¹154119

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$25,977 ROBBERSONL ~

x-cab, long wheel base, brush guard, tool box,

$3000. 541-771-1667 or 541-633-3607

Honda Ridgeline RTL Crew Cab

C J5

1978

AWD, Loaded. VIN ¹002252.

$27,998

(exp. 9/7/I 4)

V-8 ,

Lockers, new soft top, power steering, oversized h e ater, many extras. $6,000 obo. 541-519-1627

SMOLICH

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2007 Extra nice 4x4,

great mpg. ¹541238 $19,977 ROBBERSON'L

Dodge Nitro 201 1, AWD. VIN ¹604462. $22,888 (exp. 9/7/14)

mam a

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t ended cab , d a r k g reen, V6, 4 x4, 5 speed automatic, TRD off road, silver Snug top, one owner, high mileage, car e fully maintained, runs well. $7,250. 541-576-2030

SMOLICH

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JEEP WRANGLER 2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt &

cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged. $22,500. 541-419-5980

Ford Edqe 2012

JeepWrangler

Limited 3.5L V6, AWD.¹A81606

Unlimited 2011, VIN ¹623762. $27,888

$30,977

(exp. 9/7/I 4)

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SMOLICH

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 8/31/1 4

H YUN D A I

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1 955 C h e vy, c l a s s ic . R e a l beauty. Powerful engine. 15,000

miles. Always garaged. $4,000. 555-9999

BSSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com

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1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Subaru Forester 2010, NOTICE 34,000 m e t iculous LEGAL following units miles. Manual, One The be sold at Pubowner. No smoking, will Auction on Tuesno Pets, Clear Title. lic day, September 16, $17,000. 2014 at 11 a.m. at 541-419-7390. Bend Mini Storage, 1 00 SE 3 r d S t . , 940 Bend, OR 9 7702. Vans Unit¹ B18 — Jeff E rickson, Unit ¹ C160 William Hansen & Jessica Stubbs, Unit¹ B68Sarah Hays, Unit¹ C199 — Rachel Kais er, Unit¹ B 3 3 Chrysler Town & Michael Ray Perry. Country LXI 1997, LEGAL NOTICE beautiful inside & T RUSTEE'S N O out, one owner, nonT ICE O F S A L E. smoker,. Ioaded with Reference is made options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds to that certain Deed available. $4 , 950. of Trust made by Richard W. Perry II Call Mike, (541) 815and Kristy M. Perry, 8176 after 3:30 p.m. husband and wife, 3020 SW P e ridot Avenue, Redmond, OR 9 7 7 56 , as Grantors, to Rural Housing Service or its successor agency, 1201 NE DodgeGran Caravan Lloyd Blvd., Suite 2012, 801, Portland, OR VIN ¹241776. 97232-1274, as $15,888 Trustee, in favor of (exp. 9/7/I 4) U nited States o f SMOLICH America acting through the Rural m ot o r s Housing Service or H YUN D A I

rh

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541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205. Pricibng good trhu 8/31/14

Honda Pilot 2011,

Ford F250 4x4 1996,

Volkswagen 1981 diesel pickup, 5-spd, great gas mileage, canopy, Serious inquiries oniy $3200 obo. 541-420-0366

Nissan Nurano SL

DLR ¹366

Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags,$5995. 541-610-6150

T OYOTA LIMITED

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

Honda CRV 2007, AWD. VIN ¹046676. $16,888

Ford F250 1984 4x4 King Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift kit, 90% tires, good wood truck! $2000 or best offer. 541-279-8023

~

See: www.wildernessdirect.com for photos and details or phone: 541-388-6795

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I a. a t '

¹A71612

Mileage: 10, 930

Price: $28,500

ROBBERSONL

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Mazda CX-9 2012 Grand Touring AWD.

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-

541-312-3986 dlr¹0205. Pricing good thru 8/31/14

Find exactly what you are looking for in the

Ford Explorer XLT

Mini Cooper 2005. One owner Hatchback, 23,000 miles. Chrome wheels, two-tone black over silver, automatic. $12,500.

113 $ 5 .h$00

charges i n the amount of $90.54, for a t o tal d elinquency of $5,700.24. By reason of the default, the Beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust immediately due and p ayable, thos e sums being the following, to-wit: As of May 21, 2014, purs uant to t h e A s sumption A g r eement, unpaid principal i n the amount of $ 141,572.91, a c crued interest in the amount of $ 18,387.90, s u b sidy recapture in the of amount $11,064.48, assessed fees in the amount of $3,455.02, and interest on fees in the amount of $141.66, for a total amount of $174,621.97, p l us interest continuing to accrue at the rate o f $ 20.8481 p e r day, including daily interest on fees at the rate of $0.5088, until paid, plus any successor agency, unpaid pr o perty United States Detaxes, plus fee s , partment of A g ri- a ttorney's culture, as Benefiforeclosure costs, ciary, whose a nd s u m s ad address i s R u r al vanced by the benHousing S e rvice, eficiary pursuant to c/o Centralized Serthe terms of said v icing Cent e r , Deed of Trust. FurUnited States Dether, as of May 21, partment of A g ri- 2014, pursuant to c ulture, P O B o x the Pro m issory 66889, St. L ouis, Note, unpaid princiMO 63166, dated pal in the amount of November 17, 2008, $39,765.70, acrecorded November crued interest in the of 21, 2008, as Instruamount ment No. $5,164.89, subsidy 2008-46562, Offi- r ecapture i n t h e cial Records of Deamount of schutes County, Or$3,186.43, for a toegon, covering the tal am o un t of following described $ 48,117.02, p l u s real property situinterest continuing ated in Deschutes to accrue at the rate County, O r e gon, of $5.8559 per day t o-wit: Lot 109 o f until paid, plus any OBSIDIAN ESunpaid pro p erty TATES, NO. 3, City taxes, plus of Redmond, Desa ttorney's fee s , chutes County, Orforeclosure costs, egon. C o mmonly and s u m s adreferred to as 3020 vanced by the benSW Peridot Avenue, eficiary pursuant to Redmond, OR the terms of said 97756. A l a n N. D eed o f Tru s t . WHEREFORE, noStewart of H urley Re, P.C., 747 SW tice is hereby given M ill V ie w W a y , that t h e un d e rBend, OR 9 7702, signed Trustee will was appointed Suco n O ctober 2 8 , cessor Trustee by 2014, at the hour of the Beneficiary on 11:00 o'clock, A.M., May 22, 2014. Both in accord with the the Beneficiary and s tandard of t i m e Trustee have established by ORS elected to sell the 187.110, o n the said real property to front steps of t he satisfy the obligaDeschutes County tions secured by Courthouse (grey said Deed of Trust building), 1164 NW and a Notice of DeBond, in the City of fault has been reB end, County o f corded pursuant to Deschutes, State of Oregon R e v ised Oregon, sell at pubStatutes 86.735(3); l ic auction to t h e highest bidder for the default for which the foreclosure is cash the interest in made is Grantors' the said described failure to pay when real property which the Grantors have due the f ollowing sums: As of May 21, or had power to convey at the time 2014, pursuant to the Ass u mption of the execution by Agreement dated Grantors of the said November 21, 2008, Deed of Trust, tothe a m o unt of gether with any in$ 24,790.97, p l u s terest which the obligations t h e reby late charges in the amount of $322.59, s ecured and t h e costs and expenses plus fees due in the amount of $134.25 of sale, including a for a t o tal d elin- reasonable charge quency of by the Trustee. Notice is further given $25,247.81. Also, as of May 21, 2014, that an y p e rson pursuant t o the named i n OR S P romissory N o t e 86.753 has the right, dated November 21, at any time prior to 2008, the amount of five (5) days before $560970 plus late the date last set for

the sale, to h ave this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Deed of Trust reinstated by payment t o the B eneficiary of t he entire amount then due (other t h an such portion of the principal and interest as would not then be due had no default o c c urred) and by curing any other default complained of h e rein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Deed of Trust, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance n e cessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Deed of Trust, together with Trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by s a i d ORS 86.753. In a ccordance with the Fair Debt Col l ection Practices Act, this is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that p urpose. This c o m munication is from a debt c ollector. In c o nstruing this Notice, t he s i ngular i n cludes the p lural, the word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Deed of Trust, a nd t h e wo r d s "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include its respective successors in interest, if any. DATED: May 30, 2014. Alan N. Stewart, Successor Trustee, Hurley Re, P.C., 747 SW Mill View Way, Bend, OR 97702, Telephone: 541-317-5505 LEGAL NOTICE T RUSTEE'S N O T ICE O F SA L E .

Reference is made to that certain Trust Deed made by Gordon Gayle Gribling, Jr. an d R o berta Lynn Gribling, husband and wife, as Grantors, to Western Title & Escrow Company, as Trustee, in favor of Harold J. J e ffers and Jo Ann Jeffers, as Trustees of the Harold and Jo Ann Jeffers Trust dated 12-30-1996, as Beneficiary, dated May 10, 2000, rec orded Ma y 1 1 , 2000, as Instrument No. 20 0 0 -18497, Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, c overing the following described real property situated in Deschutes Cou n ty, Oregon, to-wit: Lot 55 and that portion of Lot 56 lying South and West of a line d rawn f ro m th e Northwest corner of said Lot 56 to the Southeast corner of Lot 56, R A ILWAY ADDITION, recorded February 18, 1947, in Cabinet A, P age 86 , De s chutes County, Or-

egon. C o mmonly referred to as 352 SE Franklin Street, Redmond, OR

97756. A l a n N. Stewart of H u rley Re, P.C., 747 SW M ill V i e w Wa y , Bend, OR 9 7702,

was appointed Successor Trustee by the Beneficiary on June 2, 2014. Both the Beneficiary and Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said Trust Deed and a Notice of Default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised S t a tutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is Grantors' failure to pay when due the following sums: As of May 29, 2014, unpaid principal in the a m o unt of $64,295.30, accrued interest in the amount of $ 70,196.57, p l u s interest continuing to accrue at the rate o f $ 17.6152 p e r day, less payments received i n the of amount $ 23,918.00, for a t otal a m ount o f $110,573.87. By reason of the default, th e B e neficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the Trust Deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to-wit: As of May 29, 2014, unpaid principal in the a m ount of $64 295 30 ac crued interest in the amount of $ 70,196.57, p l u s interest continuing to accrue at the rate o f $ 17.6152 p e r day, less payments received i n the amount of $ 23,918.00, for a t otal a mount o f $110,573.87, p l us any unpaid property taxes, plus a ttorney's fee s , foreclosure costs, and s u m s advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said Trust Deed. WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given t hat t h e und e rsigned Trustee will o n O c tober 2 8 , 2014, at the hour of 10:30 o'clock, A.M., in accord with the s tandard of t i m e established by ORS 187.110, o n

the

front steps of the Deschutes County Courthouse (grey building), 1164 NW Bond, in the City of B end, County o f Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at publ ic auction to t h e highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantors have or had power to convey at the time of the execution by Grantors of the said T rust D eed, t o gether with any interest which the obligations th e reby s ecured and t h e costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that an y p e r son named i n ORS 86.753 has the right,

at any time prior to five (5) days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire a mount then d ue (other than s uch portion of the principal and interest as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the p erformance r e quired under the obk gation o r Tr u s t Deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the pe r f ormance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and T rust D eed, t o gether with Trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts p rovided by s a i d ORS 86.753. In a c cordance with the Fair Debt Col l ection Practices Act, this is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that p urpose. This c o mmunication is from a debt c ollector. In c o n struing this Notice, t he s i ngular i n cludes the p lural, the word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Trust Deed, a nd t h e wo r d s "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include its respective successors in interest, if any. DATED: June 4,2014. /s/ Alan N. S tewart. Alan N . Stewart, Successor Trustee, Hurley Re, P.C., 747 SW M ill View Way, Bend, OR 97702. Telephone: 541-317-5505

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Bend Park & Recreation District Board of Directors will meet in an executive session pursuant to ORS 192.660(2)(i) for the purpose of reviewing and evaluating the job performance of public officers and employees at 5 : 3 0 p . m., Tuesday, September 2 2014 at the district office,799 SW Col umbia, Bend, O r egon. The board will convene a r e g ular business meeting at 7:00 p.m. to consider approval of a Riley Ranch cont r a ct amendment, a permit p olicy s pecific t o Drake Park and assignment of the Bend Elks lease. The board will not c onduct a work session.

T he a genda a n d s upplementary r e ports are posted on the district's website,

www.bendparksandrec.org. For more information call 541-389-7275.


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