Bulletin Daily Paper 10-01-13

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75l t

TUESDAY October1,2013

ross-counrs owcasein en

Chris Hoj'nej's crash

SPORTS• C1

SPORTS• C1

bendbulletln.com

TODAY'S READERBOARD

IN SALEM

ll

Smarter switches —A

Bend-based companyhopes to soon bring a programmable

k

home-electrical system to the market.C6

Maps long gone —Explor-

By Lauren Dake

ing how Greeksand Romans

The Bulletin

thought about the world as well as tracing the roots of

SALEM — Gov. John Kitzhaber envisioned a one-day special legislative session: Lawmakers would come to the Capitol, vote on a package of bills that would send more money to public schools and head home. That's not how Monday went.

modern mapmaking.A3 Roh Kerr i The Bulletin

Blazer optimism —Revamped roster has Blazers looking forward to new sea-

House Republican Leader Mike McLane, middle, talks with Democratic House Speaker Tina Kotek in Salem on Monday, as lawmakers continued to try to hash out a deal.

Instead, it was a day of delays and rescheduling. Late Sunday, some thought the deal had imploded. Monday began with Iavtnnakers behind closed doors. Then, slowly, it appeared that the

"grand bargain" was back on

track; lawmakers are scheduled to vote today.

The governor's spokesman

said "good progress" was made. Although a "framework" had been agreed to, the language of some bills was not drafted until Monday. Lawmakers are expected to vote today on the package, which includes five bills. See Bargain/A5

son.C1

IN WASHINGTQN

Better with deer —Recipes that pair well with American

red ale ... andrecipesthat usea little ale in the cooking.01

The cost of cash —Using money runs up atab of $200 billion a year, according to a recent study.C6

In national news —Two Marine generals fired for security lapses.A2

And a Wed exclusiveOn the front lines of Florida's campaign against mosquitoes. bendbulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

CNN and NBC scrap Clinton projects By Amy Chozick and Bill Carter New York Times News Service

The ideas seemed simple enough: a documentary on CNN and an NBC miniseries that would capitalize on the popularity of one of the world's most visible public figures. But nothing is simple when it comes to Hillary Clinton. Both sides of the political aisle registered objections to the projects, which would have explored the life of the former first lady and potential 2016 presidential candidate. Members of the news divisions at NBC and CNN publicly protested the decision by their networks to go ahead with them. On Monday, the networks said they were abandoning their projects, bringing to an end two initiatives that were announced with much fanfare over the summer. See Clinton/A4

Impasse unbroken, government Coses

Health care law moves forward, Obamasays

By Andrew Clevenger

By Karen Tumulty

The Bulletin

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Congress lurched to a government shutdown Monday, with the House of Representatives and Senate continuing to disagree on a continuing resolution to keep government operations funded past midnight. The two chambers • Walden could not and reach an Merkley agreement, offer their and the law takes,AS authorizing funding for most government functions expired when the fiscalyear ended and the first government shutdown in 17 years began. After trying unsuccessfully to make changes to the Affordable Care Act, the House instead moved to appoint members to a conference committee to negotiate a budget deal. Shortly before midnight Monday, the Office of Management andBudget issued a memorandum initiating the shutdown. SeeShutdown/A5

WASHINGTON — As Washington entered a shutdown, President Barack Obama is betting that today will be remembered in history for what he believes cannot be stopped. "The Affordable Care Act ls movlng forward. That funding is already in place. You can't shut it down," Obama warned Republicans as the final hours before the shutdown deadline ticked away. The day has arrived when millions of uninsured Americans have their first chance to sign up for what the administration says will be highquality, affordable health coverage, achieving what presidents of both parties sought unsuccessfully for more than 60 years. The coming monthsand years will show whether the new health care law, known as Obamacare, lives up to its aspirations. Those who sign up now, for instance, will not begin to receive benefits until January. See Health care/A5

Airlines promise perks to passengers — for a fee By Scott Mayerowitz

Inside

The Associated Press

• Possible shift on electronic devices,A6

NEW YORK — Airlines are introducing a new bevy of fees, but this time passengers might actually like them. Unlike the first generation

of charges which dinged fli-

Correction

Top: The Associated Press; left and right: New York Times News Service

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: President Barack Obama, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., speak Monday about the budget battle in Washington.

ersforonce-free services like checking a bag, these new fees

plan to go one step further, using massive amounts of personal data to customize new offersforeach flier. "We've moved from takeaways to enhancements," says John Thomas of L.E.K. Consulting. "It's all about personalizing the travel experience." Carriers have struggled to

raise airfares enough to cover costs. Fees bring in more than $15 billion a year and are the reason the airlines are profitable. But the amount of money coming in from older

INDEX

The Bulletin

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

At Home 01- 6 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries B 5 C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope 06 Sports D6 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 Tv/Movies

Vol. 110, No. 274, 30 pages,

promise a taste of the good life, or at least a more civil flight. Extra legroom, early boarding and access to quiet lounges were just the beginning. Airlines are now renting

Apple iPads preloaded with movies, selling hot first class meals in coach and letting passengers pay to have an empty seat next to them. Once on the ground, they can skip baggage claim, having their luggage delivered directly to their home or office. In the near future, airlines

charges like baggage and reservation change fees has tapered off. SeeAirlines/A6

The sudoku puzzle that ap-

peared Saturday, Sept. 28, on Page F4was incorrectly formatted. The entire puzzle ap-

pears today on PageA5. The solution to the puzzle appears on Page A6. The Bulletin regrets the error.

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 55, Low 30

Page B6

AnIndependent Newspaper

5 sections

:: IIIII o

88 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

The Bulletin How to reach Lls STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

541-385-5800 Phone hours: 5:30 a.m.- 5 p.m. Moni-pri., 6:30 a.m.-noon Sat.-Sun.

GENERAL INFORMATION

541 -382-1811 ONLINE EMAIL

bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

541-383-0367 FAX

541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M

EM A IL

Business ..... business©bendbulletin.com City Desk...........news©bendbulletin.com CommunityLife communitylife©bendbulletin.com Sports..............sports©bendbulletin.com

OUR ADDRESS Street

arine enera s ire or semri a ses WO

By Rajiv Chandrasekaran

the largest single loss of allied materiel in the almost 12-year The commandant of the Afghan war. Marine Corps o n M o n day T he c o mmandant, G e n . took the extraordinary step James Amos, said the two genof firing two generals for not erals did not deploy enough adequately protecting a giant troops to guard the base and base in southern Afghanistan take other measures toprethat Taliban fighters stormed pare for a ground attack by the l ast year, resulting i n t h e Taliban. The two, Maj. Gen. deaths of two Marines and the Charles Gurganus, the top Madestruction of a half a dozen rine commander in southern U.S. fighter jets. Afghanistan at the time, and It is the first time since the Maj. Gen. Gregg Sturdevant, Vietnam War that a general, the senior M arine aviation let alone two, has been sacked officer in the area, "failed to for negligenceafter a success- exercise the level of judgment ful enemy attack. But the as- expected of commanders of saultalso was unprecedented: their rank," Amos said. "It was unrealistic to think Fifteen insurgents entered a NATO airfield and destroyed that a determined enemywould almost an entire squadron of not be able to penetrate the peMarine AV-8B Harrier jets, rimeter fence," Amos said. The Washington Post

www.bendbulletin.com

N EW S R O O M

NATIoN 4% ORLD

1 7 7 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

The incident brings i nto stark relief the unique challenges of waging war in Afghanistan. The withdrawal of thousands of U.S. troops over the pasttwo years has forced commanders to triage, sometimes leading them to thin out defenses. The U.S. military also has been forced to rely on other nations' troops, who often are not as well trained

NetanyahII On Iran —Despite soothing assurances from lran's new leaders, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu implored President Barack Obama on Monday to keep punishing sanctions in place against Tehran — and even tighten them if the Islamic republic

advances its nuclear programs while negotiating with the U.S.Netanyahu nevertheless signaled he would not block Obama's efforts

to seeka diplomatic resolution to the nuclear impasse, even as he expressed skepticism about the lranian government. "If diplomacy is to work, those pressures must be kept in place," Netanyahu said of the sanctions during an Oval Office meeting with Obama.

ImmigratiOn prOteSt —Nearly three dozenmigrants marched across the U.S.-Mexico border without papers Monday, the latest

group of a younger generation brought to the U.S. illegally as children that seeks to confront head-on immigration policies they consider

unjust. Wearing a colorful array of graduation-style caps andgowns, 34 young people whospent long stretches of their childhoods in U.S. cities like Phoenixand Boston chanted "undocumented and unafraid"

as they crossed the RioGrandeinto Texas. Customs officials separated them from regular pedestrian traffic and the rest of their entourage before beginning lengthy interviews.

or equipped, to safeguard

North Carolina voting —North Carolina's Republican governor

A merican

is vowing to fight a lawsuit by the U.S. Justice Department challenging the state's tough new elections law on the grounds it dispropor-

p e r sonnel a n d

supplies. T he attack o c curred a t Camp Bastion, a British-run NATO air base in Helmand province that adjoins Camp Leatherneck, a vast U.S. facility that serves as the NATO headquarters for southwestern Afghanistan.

tionately excludes minority voters. Gov.Pat McCrory said Monday he has hired a private lawyer to help defend the new law from what

he suggested was apartisan attack by President Barack Obama's Democratic administration. "I believe the federal government action is an overreach and without merit," McCrory said at a brief media conference during which he took no questions. "I firmly believe we

have done the right thing. I believe this is good law." COIOradO trail deathS —Five hikers were killed by a rock slide on a trail in south-central Colorado onMonday,and another was pulled out with injuries and flown to a hospital, authorities said. The Chaffee County Sheriff's Department said recovery would wait until today to

simuooAw.

2 POPES MAY ATTEND CANONIZATION

make sure thearea is safe.Theslide occurred at about11 a.m. onthe trail to Agnes Vaille falls in the Pike and San Isabel National Forest, an easy day hike about a 2/~ hour drive southwest of Denver.

Dcsuuigsi e

y ADMINISTRATION

Kenya mall aftermath —Jewelry cases smashed.Mobile phones ripped from displays. Cashregisters emptied. Alcohol stocks plundered. For thesecond time in two months, poorly paid Kenyansecurity forces that moved in tocontrol an emergency arebeing accused of rob-

r

Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337

bing the very property they were supposed to protect. First the troops

rt Qi~1@t' 'llltp i'u .

were accused of looting during ahugefire in August at Nairobi's main

.

DEPARTMENT HEADS

airport. Now shop owners at Westgate Mall are returning to their stores after last week's devastating terrorist attack to find displays ransacked

I

I

and valuables stolen. One witness told TheAssociated Press that he

Advertising Jay Brandt.......................... Circulation and Operations.................541-385-5805 FinanceHolly West ...........541 -383-0321 HumanResources Traci Oonaca......................541-383-0327

saw a Kenyan soldier take cigarettes out of a dead man's pocket.

NeW JerSey gay marriage —Gov.Chris Christie movedMonday to block same-sex marriages that are supposed to begin in late

'1

p

October after a judge's ruling last week that the New Jersey Constitullk

Business Tim Doran..........541-383-0360 City Desk Joseph Oitzler.....541-383-0367 CommunityLife, Health Julie Johnson.....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe......541 -383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson................541-617-7860 News EditorJan Jordan....541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 SporlsBill Bigelow.............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou ............541-410-9207

REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address....P.o.Box788 Redmond, OR97756 Phone.................................541-504-2336 Fax .....................................541 -548-3203

CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0358.

4 ertnlr

riages from happening. Hoffman also said that it intended to ask the court, the state's highest, to hear the appeal immediately. State Democratic leaders who have been fighting Christie to allow same-

sex marriages said that they, too, would press to havethe Supreme Court hear the case immediately.

One mOnth: $17IPrintoniy: Sfs>

By mail in DeschutesCounty: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:Onemonth: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-385-5809 Advertising fax ..................541-385-5802 Other information.............541-382-1 811

OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints....................541-383-0358 Obituaries..........................541-617-7825 Back issues .......................541 -385-5800 All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the

drop box atCity Hall.Check paymentsmay be converted to anelectronic funds transfer. The Bulletin, USPS ¹552-520, is published daily by WesternCommunications Inc., l777S.W.ChandlerAve.,Bend,OR 97702. Periodicals postage paid at Bend,OR.

Postmast er:SendaddresschangestoThe Bulletin urculation department, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR97708. TheBulletin retains ownership andcopyright protection of all staff -prepared news copy,advertising copy and news or ad illustrations. Theymaynot be reproducedwithout explicit pnor approval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:

fo OaOsOfrOs Oso The estimated jackpot is now $10.5 million.

— From wire reports

L'Osservatore Romano via The Associated Press

Pope Francis stands with cardinals during a consistory at the Vatican, which announced Monday that Popes John Paul II and John XXIII will be declared saints on April 27 at a ceremony that might see two living popes

honoring two deadones.

Is'*'-.MIBiS

The Vatican on Monday said retired Pope Benedict XVI might join Pope Francis in the saint-making ceremony for their predecessors, not-

ing that there was noreason why Benedict should have to watch the ceremony onTV. "There's no reason — either doctrinal or institutional — that he

couldn't participate in a public ceremony," the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi said. "I don't have any reason to exclude it." He noted there was still time before the ceremony and that Benedict

was free to decide what to do. Benedict became the first pope in 600 years to retire when he stepped down in February. — The Associated Press

TO SUBSCRIBE

Home deliveryandE-Edition:

tion requires the state to allow them. In aletter, Christie's appointed interim attorney general, John Jay Hoffman, told the State Supreme Court that the administration would seek a stay to prevent such mar-

TALK TO AN EDITOR

Weaponsexperts kickoff complexSyriamission by Albert Aji and Zeina Karam The Associated Press

DAMASCUS, Syria — Ins pectors charged w it h t h e enormous task o f o v erseeing the destruction of Syria's deadly c h emical w e apons stockpiles kicked off their mission Monday, racing to meet tight deadlines against the backdrop of civil war. The Syrian regime lashed out at th e r ebels, claiming government forces are fighting mostly a l -Qaida-linked m ilitants an d r e f u sing t o talk with the main Westernbacked opposition group — a blow to U.S.-Russian efforts to hold a peace conference by November. New splits within the opposition group, the Syrian National Coalition, also emerged on the conditions for attending the planned conference in Geneva. After meetings with U .S. officials in Ne w Y o rk last week, the group's leader expressed readiness to attend talks aimed at establishing a transitional government with full executive powers, leaving open the question of whether President Bashar Assad could stay on. But other coalition members expressedastonishment, saying they would participate only if they have prior guarantees that Assad would step down. "Geneva should be the road toward salvation and not the road to r escue Assad and

his gang," said Mohammad

Sarmini, a Turkey-based coalition member. All previous efforts at bringing the warring sides together for talks have failed, and it was unclear why the regime would come to the table now that it has the upper hand in the war and the threat of an imminent U.S. military strike has been lifted. The Russian initiative that averted the strike led to the adoption of a U.N. Security C ouncil resolution t o h a v e Syria dismantle its estimated 1,000-ton chemical a r senal by mid-2014. The resolution, passed after two weeks of negotiations, marked a breakthrough in diplomatic efforts since the Syrian uprising began in March 2011. On Monday, 20 inspectors from the Netherlands-based Organization for the Prohibition of C h emical Weapons landed in Beirut on a private jet on their way to Syria. The group is to travel to Damascus today to begin its ambitious task — a complex and p o tentially e x p l osive mission fraught with security challenges. They are expected to meet with Syrian Foreign Ministry officials on arrival. Inspectors at Th e H ague said Sunday the inspectors' priority is to achieve the first milestone of helping the country scrap its ability to manufacture chemical weapons by a Nov. I deadline, using every means possible.

.. %I Wf'LRUX <FX Cascadia High Desert Branch Presents

13th Annual

HIGH DESERT BRANCH COLLABORATIVE

www.livin9-future.or9/cascadia

CASCADIA GREEN BUILDING COU N C IL O REGON I H gh D

t

OUI FEATURING 10 SITES PACKED WITH GREEN AND SOLAR FEATURES

SATURDAY, OCT. 12, 2013 8:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. KICK-OFF COCC Health Careers Center

10:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. Free Tour of Homes and Buildings

WWW.GreenAndSOlarTOur.org

iH ko

pa pa Qa www.greenandsolartour.org

Title Sponsor

IEnergyTrust of Oregon


TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, Dct.1, the 274th day of 2013. There are 91 days left in the year.

SCIENCE Q&A

DISCOVERY HAPPENINGS

Mall gulls? Why isthat?

Dbamaoare —Openenrollment for President Barack Dbama's signature health care law is set to begin.A1

DiplOmaCy —U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry travels

to Tokyo where hewill meet

Crossing ancient borders and cultures, a new exhibit explores how the Greeks and the Romans

By C. Claiborne Ray New York Times News Service

thought about the world's size and shape as well as tracing the roots of modern mapmaking.

Why do sea gulls like Q ..suburbanmallparking

up with Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel for the U.S.-Japan

Security Consultative Com-

By John Noble Wilford

mittee meeting over the next

New York Times News Service

two days.

NEW YORK — Long before people could look upon Earth from afar, completing a full orbit every 90 minutes, the Greeks and the Romans of antiquity had to struggle to understand their world's size and shape. Their approaches differed: The p h i losophical Greeks, it has been said, measured the world by the stars; the practical, road-building Romans by milestones.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1908, Henry Ford introduced his Model T automobile to the market. In1861, during the Civil War, the Confederate navy captured the Union steamer Fanny in North Carolina's Pamlico

Sound.

A

i

'l "

As the Greek geographer

In1910,the offices of the Los

Angeles Timeswere destroyed by a bombexplosion andfire; 21 Times employeeswere killed. In1932, Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees made his supposed called shot, hitting

a home runagainst Chicago's Charlie Root in the fifth inning of Game 3 of the World Series, won by the New York Yankees 7-5 at Wrigley Field. In1936, Gen. Francisco Franco

was proclaimed theheadof an insurgent Spanish state. In1937,Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black delivered a radio address in which he acknowl-

edged being aformer member of the Ku Klux Klan, but said he had dropped out of the organi-

zation before becoming aU.S. senator. In1940,the first section of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, 160

miles in length, wasopened to the public.

In1949, MaoZedongproclaimed the People's Republic

of China during aceremony in Beijing. A42-day strike by the United Steelworkers of America

began over theissue of retirement benefits. In1961,Roger Maris of the New York Yankees hit his 61st

home run during a162-game season, compared toBabe Ruth's 60 homerunsduring a154-game season. (Tracy Stallard of the Boston Red Sox

gave up theround-tripper; the Yankeeswon1-0.) In1962, Johnny Carson debuted as host of NBC's "Tonight

Show," beginning anearly 30year run; after being introduced to the audience byGroucho Marx, Carson received his first guests, actor-singer Rudy Vallee, actress Joan Crawford, singer Tony Bennettandcomedian Mel Brooks.

In1964, the FreeSpeech M ovement was launched at the University of California at

Berkeley. In1972,the book"The Joy of Sex" by Alex Comfort was first published by Mitchell Beazley

of London. In1982,Sony beganselling the first commercial compact disc player, the CDP-101, in Japan. Ten years ago:The United States took over the month-

long presidency of theU.N. Security Council at a time when

it was campaigning for approval of a new resolution aimed at getting more countries to

contribute troops andmoney to Iraq. Five yearsago:After one spectacular failure in theHouse,the $700 billion financial industry

bailout won lopsided passage in the Senate, 74-25, after it was loaded with tax breaks and

other sweeteners. One yearago:Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem, addressing the U.N. General As-

sembly, accusedsome Security Council members of supporting "terrorism" in his country.

BIRTHDAYS Former President Jimmy Carter is 89. Actress-singer

Julie Andrews is 78. Actor Randy Quaid is 63. Retired MLB All-Star Mark McGwire

is 50. Actor ZachGalifianakis is 44. — From wire reports

Strabo wrote at the time: "We may learn from both the evidence of our senses and from experiences, that the inhabited world is an i sland, for wherever it has been possible for men to reach the limits of the earth, sea has been found, and this sea we call 'Oceanus.' And whenever we have not been able to learn by the evidence of sense, there reason points the way." Strabo's words will g reet visitors to a new exhibition, "Measuring a n d Ma p p i ng Space: Geographic K n owledge in Greco-Roman Antiquity," which opens Friday at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World. The show runs through Jan. 5. Roger Bagnall, director of the institute, an affiliate of New York U n iversity, said the exhibition would not only cross ancient borders and cultures but also modern disciplines. "Our exhibitions and digital teams," he said, "present a 21st-century approach to the ancient mentality con-

lots so much, even when they are nowhere nearthe ocean? • The birds that ornithol• ogists call gulls, not sea gulls, do not strictly live by the sea and often find the open spaces of parking lots a bounteousrefuge,said Jessie Barry of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Barry, who leads the Merlin Project to develop a better online bird-identification tool, said there are more than 50 species of gulls worldwide, with many found hundreds of miles from the nearest ocean. Indeed, some live primarily inland, including the ring-billed gull, which thrives in suburban settings around the United States. "Gulls are opportunistic omnivores," Barry said. Traditionallythought of as

.C

P

scavenging along beaches or swooping to the ocean surface to catch fish, they eat many things, including insects,earthworms, rodents, grains "and of course French fries," she said. For species like the ringbilled gull, a mall parking lot offers the chance of a handout, a left-behind takeout meal and Dumpsters filled with food scraps.

New York Public Library via New York Times NewsService

A15th-century Latin translation shows Ptolemy's "Geographia." Work by Ptolemy, the foremost scholar at the Alexandria library in the second century A.D., provided ample information on locations of ancient lands and cities, enabling Renaissance cartographers to prepare the first fairly modern world maps.

lands, and some of the earliest efforts to measure long itude and latitude and t o divide the world into climate zones. From north to south, both the Greeks and the Rom ans identified th e f r i g i d Arctic Circle, the northern temperate hemisphere, the torrid Tropic of Cancer, the southern temperate zone and the South Pole. The two temcerning geographic space peratezones were believed to and how it is represented." be the only habitable regions, The show brings together but contact between the two more than 40 objects that pro- was thought unlikely. vide an overview of GrecoAcross the wall of the first Roman geographical thinkgallery is projected a digital ing — art and pottery, as well replica of the Peutinger Map, as maps based on classical more than 22 feet long and texts. (Hardly any o r i ginal 2 feet high, illustrating how maps survive; the ones in the Roman mapping was at once exhibition were created in the practical and magnificent. It Middle Ages and the Renais- charts the empire's roads, citsance from Greek and Roies, ports and forts from Britman descriptions.) ain to India. Sketches of trees " Geography i s n o t ju s t mark forests in Germany. Tomaps," said the guest curator, pography is minimal, roads Roberta Casagrande-Kim, a are off-scale wide, towns scholar of classical concepts are indicated by s y m bolic o f the underworld that g o walls or towers — more of a back well before Dante took traveler's guide but much too his journey through the nine large to serve as a handy road circles of hell. "There is also map. the cognitive side underlying In a study of the map, Richmapping," she said. ard Talbert, a historian at the University of North Carolina Global scale who specializes in c a r togM aking s e ns e o f the raphy of the Greeks and the w orld's d i m ensions m u s t R omans, noted that in o n e h ave seemed daunting a t sense itwas an example of first. Plato wrote of Socrates common Roman "journey" saying the world is very large charts, much like the Greek and those who dwell between "periploi" — mostly written Gibraltar and the Caucasus descriptions o f l a n d marks — in hi s memorable imag- and portsmariners were likeery — live "in a small part of ly to encounter. it about the sea, like ants or The rarely exhibited matefrogs about a pond, and that rial is on loan from several m any other people live i n A merican i n stitutions, i n many other such regions." cluding the Morgan Library An early advance in Greek a nd Museum, t h e M e t r o thinking was Aristotle's dis- politan Museum of Art, the covery, in the latter half of the New York P u blic L i b rary, fourth century B.C., that the the A m erican N u mismatic world must be spherical. He Society and the libraries at based this on o bservations Columbia and Harvard. The of lunar eclipses, ships disap- s how is s upported by t h e pearing hull first on the horiLeon Levy Foundation. zon, and the changing field of All in all, whether guided stars observed as one travels by the stars or by i mperial north and south. r oads, the Greeks and t h e T hen Eratosthenes, a l i Romans did well in preparbrarian at Alexandria in the ing the way t o g eographic third century B.C., employed knowledge of worlds known the new geometry to mea- and unknown, real and imags ure the w orld's size w i t h inary. They anticipated mods imultaneous angles of t h e ern concepts of mapmaking: sun's shadow taken at widely anything that can be spatially distant sites in Egypt. That conceived can be mapped. yielded a remarkably accuThe most influential of the rate measure of Earth's cirancient Greeks was Claudicumference: It was clear that um Ptolemy, the f o remost the world they knew — the scholar at the Alexandria lithree connected continents brary in the second century of Asia, Europe and Africa A.D. Two of his books, one — was only a part of lands on astronomy, and another unknown, out of sight but not on geography, were finally out of mind. t ranslated into Latin in t h e Other artifacts on view ilMiddle Ages. lustrate ancient methods of N otes accompanying t h e surveying and m easuring exhibition point out that Ptol-

emy's "Geographia" provided ample information on l ocations of ancient lands and cities,enabling Renaissance cartographers to prepare the first fairly modern world maps, the "Mappa mundi" style that was followed for the next couple of centuries.The maps were decorated with the eight classical headwinds; symbols taken from Aristotle's conception of the primary elements of fire, earth, water and air; and a scattering of zodiac signs around the edges.

mapping conventions came to an end." New discoveries and technologieshad made Greco-Roman geography obsolete. But its influence helped shape the way we still look at the world.

/ STUDIO

EVERGREEN

In-Home Care Servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

Fostering exploration

We're Cutting

Even Ptolemy's errors were influential. Instead of sticking t o E r atosthenes' more accurate estimate of Earth's size, Ptolemy handed down a serious underestimate that later apparently emboldened Columbus to think he could sail west to reach China or Japan. Instead, he reached landfall in what became known as the West Indies — about the distance from Europe that Ptolemy had led him to expect, but with no "Grand Khan" in sight. So it was perhaps no coincidence that the rediscovery

R R D

Q D L F '

of Greco-Roman geography

play smart

fostered the age of Western exploration. After 1492, there were new worlds to measure and map. Within two centuries, exhibition notes remind us, "the primacy of ancient

' I

• •

geographic knowledge and

lllg

,' IUY Oi NE GAllOi N i NE GAllOi N , 'GET O

EgP

P AIN T C O . S INC E 1 8 9 0

Iii~®«ii

I I

I I

I

I I l (Miller ColorsOnly) Limitonefreegallon oi equalorlesservalue. Nocashvalue. Excludesquarts, 5qal. pails, and special orders.Limitone l gallon per househo Not ld. valid withanyotheroffer. Offer goodSept. 29 • Oct. 17, 2013.

I I l I

To redeem this offer, bring this coupon to Denfeld Paints NAMi: ADDRESS I I

EMAIL:

I L ~

~

~ ~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~ ~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~ ~

~

~

~

~

~

~ ~

~

~

2121 NE DIVISION • BEND, OR 97701

~

~

~

~

Qa.•

~ ~

~

Qa

541-382-4171 641 NW FIR AVE• REDMOND, OR 97756

$ p "+perfectcolorssince1975

541-548-7707

MON-FRI 7:30- 5 :30, SAT 8:00-3 :00 •

8

S Q

W W W . D ENFELDPAINTS.COM

Is


A4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 20'I3

Clinton

refuseto partner with CNN or NBC on any presidential primaContinued from A1 ry debates if the network moved CNN h a d c o m missioned forward with the projects. Charles Ferguson, an OscarBut as Republicans publicly winning documentary maker, worried that the projects would to examine Clinton's life on film. cast Clinton in a favorable light, NBC announced this summer aides trying to guard her image at a conference in Beverly Hills, privately grumbled about the Calif., that it had approved a projects, according to a person mini-series about Clinton, a for- close to Clinton who would not mer secretary of state, in which discuss private conversations Diane Lane would portray her. for attribution. Both ideas quickly became The aides expressed conlightning rods. Reince Priebus, cern to CNN that a for-profit the chairman of the Republican documentary, which would be National Committee, called the released theatrically and broadplanned films a "thinly veiled cast on CNN, would pose a attempt at putting a thumb on potential conflict with its news the scales of the 2016 presiden- coverage, especially since the tial election." He threatened to cable channel had no creative

control over it. They believed the NBC mini-series, while not a direct conflict with the separately run NBC News division, would try to enhance ratings by focusing on the more melodramatic aspects of Clinton's life. Over coffee at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Georgetown, Ferguson met with Nick Merrill, a press aide to Clinton. Ferguson requestedaccess and interviews to make his documentary. But what was supposed to be a cordial get-together quickly became confrontational, said the person close to Clinton, who was briefed on the meeting. Fer-

about Wall Street's role in the 2008 financial crisis, and a 2007 film, "No End In Sight," about the American occupation of Iraq. (Clinton has strong support on Wall Street, and as a senatorin 2002 she voted to authorize the use of force in Iraq.) Merrill had not seen Ferguson'sfilms, bu texpressed skepticism about his intentions after he complained to Merrill that Clinton aides had told potential sources not to cooperate with his documentary. Ferguson said he felt Merrill had "interrogated" him and was dismissing the projectbecause of Ferguguson aggressively promoted son's history of tough coverage. his resume — which included Both men left the meeting feelthe documentary "Inside Job" ing uneasy.

THAN K

What followed was a threemonth tug of war between Clinton aides and Ferguson, who had planned to explore Clinton's lifeand career from her days working at the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock, Ark. On Monday, Ferguson abandoned the documentary and CNN said it would not find another filmmaker to continue the project. In a commentary on The Hufflngton Post, Ferguson said pressure from Clinton aides who did not want the film made became too intense. "I decided that I couldn't make a film of which I would be proud," he wrote. "And so I'm canceling." The premature deaths of the film and the mini-series (which

did not yet have a script) reflect the sensitive territoryboth CNN and NBC had entered in starting the projects. Though Clinton has repeatedly said she has not decided whether she will run, she is at this early stage widely considered the Democratic front-runner for the 2016 p residential nomination. A s such, she would draw waves of positive and negative attention that would inevitably surround any projects devoted to her. In addition to Priebus' complaints, David Brock, a Clinton ally and president of the liberal media watchdog group Media Matters for America, published an open letter protesting the CNN and NBC projects.

V O U t e a l l e u m'

N ew s p a p e r I n E d u c a t i o n S p o n s o r s ! s

e • •

BELFOR(0) P R0 P E R T Y R E S v 0 RA T I 0 N

1117 SE Centennial St., Bend

503-408-8880

Kelly J.Witt Construction 19430Apache Rd.Bend 541-40B-56&3 Van HandelAutomotive, Inc. f27 W.SistersParkDr.Sisters 54f-549-04f6 GaryGrunerChevrolet 2000 SW Highway 26, Madras 54f-475-2238 LeadingEdgeAviation Inc. 63048PowellButteRd.,Bend 54f-383-B825 Big CountryRV 63500 USHwy97, Bend CentroPrint Solutions 629f5NEf&th,Bend 54f-382-3534 Greg &Patty Cushman Bf370Tam McArthurLoop,Bend 54f-389-3044 MSTCorporation f659 SW Baldwin Rd.,Prinevile 54f-4f6-9000 Mt. ViewHospital 470 NEASt., Madras 541-460-4039 ChristmasValley Market 87497Christmas Valley Hwy, SilverLake 54f-576-2200 SuperiorService 827 Business Way Ste. Mf, Bend 54f-38B-B&39 TrailerWorld 6460f BaileyRd.,Bend 54f-389-9849 UBSFinancialServices, Inc. 600SW ColumbiaSt.Ste.6200,Bend 54f-617-7020 Birkenstockof Bend 836 NW Wall St., Bend 54f-389-46&8 CenturyInsuranceGroupLLC 695 SWMil ViewWay Bend 54f-382-4211 DesertSkyRealEstate 636 NW CedarAve.Redmond 54f-504-9792 HongKongRestaurant 53OSE3rd,Bend 54f-389-BBB O ShevlinSand&Gravel 632&5 NWSkyline RanchRd.,Bend 54f-3f2-4730 SoundsFast 142 NERevereAve., Bend 541- 312-4332 The Pony Express f 60 S.Oak,Sisters 54f-549-f538 AvionWaterCompanyInc. 608f 3Parrell Rd.,Bend 54f-382-5342 CanalBargeCruises.com 2f 50CondorCourt, Redmond 54f-504-6264 Fireside Inc. 424NE&rdSt,Bend 54f-382-2597 Five Pine Lodge f02f Desperado Trail, Sisters 54f-549-5900 LaPinePetBed&Bath 5f590 RusselRd., l LaPine 541-536-5355 TetherowGolfClub Bf240 SkylineRanchRd., Bend 54f-389-5857 Blockbuster 2ff NE Revere,Bend 54f-385-1033 NorthwestBenefits Group 64745SylvanLoop,Bend On PoinCom t munity Credit Union 950 NW BondSt., Bend BOO-52F-&932 Robinson &OwenHeavyConstruction 750 Buckaroo Trail, Sisters 54f-549-f848 Sunray Vacation Rentals 56870VentureLane,Sunriver 541-593-3225 WarmSpringsMarket 2f32 Warm SpringsSt., WarmSprings 54f-553-f597 Tim Underwood Productions 777 NW Wall Ste. 1OB , Bend 54f-382-B2&9 Cascadia Vehicle Tents Bf5fOAmerican LaneSte. f40, Bend 54f-3f2-B368 High DesertAssistedLiving 2660 NeMary RosePlace, Bend 54f-31P-2003 Mid Oregon Credit Union f386 NE Cushing, Bend 54f-382-f795 BrentWoodardInc. 3743 N.Hwy97, Redmond 541-504-5538 GFPEnterprises P.O.Box639,Sisters 54f-549-B167 Midstate Electric Cooperative 16755FinleyButte Road,LaPine 541-536-7232 Mr. RooterPlumbing P.O.BOX 9504,Bend 54f-3&B-BS BB Satterlee JewelryRepair&DesignCenter 513 N.W. FirAve., Redmond 541-54B-B7& 8 SunWest Builders 2642SW 4thSt.,Redmond 54f-54B-7341 BendSwimClub 800 NE 6thSt., Bend 54f-317-B462 AttorneyBrianHemphil 339 SWCentury Dr., Bend 54f-382-2991 HSW Builders 730SW BonnettWay,Suite3000,Bend Neil KellyCompany f90 NE Irvine Ave,Bend 54f-382-75&6 SouthSidePubInc. Bf 660 S.Hwy.97, Bend 54f-383-7672 Mill PointDentalCenter 770S.W.BonnettWaySte100,Bend 54f-3&B-0078 WT EquipmentInc. 63075CorporatePlace, Bend 541-31B-1716 PhilgoodContractors Inc. www.philgoodcontractors.com 54f-526-f8fg RV Outfitters 629&O BoydAcresRoad, Bend 54f-312-9758 U.S.Market 2625 N.E. Butler MarketRd.,Bend 54f-3&B-Bf&9 WalkerStructural Engineering 2&63 NW Crossing Dr.,Bend 54f-330-6869 ACaringFamily ChildCareHome 2660 NE Hwy20, Ste. 610-343, Bend 54f-382-2122 *", Bend AllianceWelness Center Inc. gff NE4th St. Ste.2 541-38B-4822 Baregreen Ellingson 63-046LaytonAve, Bend 54f-Bfy-9400 BendPropertyManagementCo. 405 NE Seward, Ste.4, Bend 54f-382-7727 Capst oneWeathManagementGroup f05f NEBondSt. Ste.200,Bend 54f-330-0266 CentralServiceInc. 62968ClydeLane, Bend 541-420-2977 ChinaDoll 547 NEBelview Pf13, Bend 54f-3f2-9393 Fitnessf4 401569 NE 2nd St., Bend 54f-389-2009 PhoenixAsphalt 63066PlateauDr., Bend 54f-647-2356 ProCaliberMotosports of Bend 3500 N.Hwy97, Bend 54f-382-5731 Quality Inn 20600GrandviewDr,Bend 54f-3fBOB4B ReliableMaintenanceService 2660 NE Hwy20, Bend 54f-389-6528 Rigoberto's fgf3 NE3rd St., Bend 54f-3&B-67&3 SchillingColarCity Gardens 64640OldBendRedmond Hwy, Bend 54f-38B-46BO Springtime Landscape& Irrigation 62990PlateauDr., Bend 54f-389-4974 ValuePlumbing 55 NE 6thSt., Bend 54f-322-6928 YellowknifewirelessCo. f36 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend 54f-385-Offf Pilot ButteDrive-In -Westside 320 SW Century Dr.Ste.410,Bend 54f-323-3272 2B Sports 2ff7NE KimLane, Bend 54f-3&B-3892 BendPineNursery 190f9 BakerRoad, Bend 54f-977-B733 Benham Falls Asphalt LLC. 20-583ShanikoLn., Bend 54f-3fB-B328 Central Or.Leasing&Mgmt.Residential 1250 NE 3rd St., Bend 54f-385-6830 ColimaMarket 228 NE GreenwoodAve., Bend 54f-Bfy-9250 DanielAutomotive 204 NE LaFayette Ave., Bend 54f-389-9912 DeschutesDogSalon f225 NE 3rd St., Bend 54f-749-4001 ExquisiteLimousineLLC 3939 S. 6th ST.,KlamathFals 54f-3&P-2977 Gustafson Construction Inc. 20650 E.HighDesert Lane¹3Bend 54f-94B-2146 LearningTymes NurseryRhymes 20003ChrisRhodesDr., Bend 54f-312-2765 LifetimeVisionCare 90f NWCarlon Ave., Bend 54f-382-3242 Mountai nSkyLandscapingInc. 64604OldBendRedmond Hwy, Bend 54f-389-B474 Sun CountryWater 22648NelsonRd.,Bend 54f-382-5103 TheCentralOregonBreeze 62995PlateauDr., Bend 54f-389-7469 BeaconHilProperties 22f&8 NeffRoad,Bend 54f-389-0606 BendPlasticSupply& Fabrication 61505AmericanLane,Bend 541-38B-1525 Car Kare Inc f092 SE Centennial St, Bend 54f-382-4896 CarlsengDesigns- LandscapeDesign f133 NW Knoxville Blvd, Bend 54f-610-6961 DappleE darth Designsto NurtureLife PowellButte 54f-350-7436 Floyd ABoydCo. 1223 N.E. 1st.St., Bend 541-633-7671 GlasweldBend 54f-3&B-f156 Hillside lnnBed& Breakfast 54f-389-9660 Hull's ConstructionSisters 54f-3f2-2344 LandonConstruction 633fgJohnson RanchRd,Bend 54f-94B-2568 M.C.SmithSign&Graphics f5f5 NE2ndSt., Bend 54f-389-2471 Miracle-Ear 3fBB NHwy97dff8, Bend 54f-330-5503 Mt BacheloVi r lageResort f97f7 MtBachelorDr,Bend 54f-322-f265 NewportAvenueMarket f12f NWNewportAve,Bend 54f-3&P-&940 Nik's Diesel Repair 20475BrandisCt,Bend 54f-389-f295 OlsenDaines 141 NW Greenwood, Bend 54f-330-5044 OpportunityFoundation PO Box 430, Redmond 54f-54B-26ff Oregon WholesaleHardwareInc 653 NE 1st St., Bend 54f-382-337f PaigeElectrical WireandCables 3607 NW FalconRidge, Bend 54f-385-58f2 Paul Humphrey Construction Inc Bend 54f-610-5798 PelicanBayForestProducts P.O.Box6958,Bend 54f-54B-26ff PineTavernRestaurant 967 NW BrooksSt, Bend 54f-382-55&1 York BuildingandDesign PO Box Bf59, Bend 54f-280-77&1 Above& BeyondHomeFurnishings 1435 SW Hwy 97, Madras 54f-475-1112 LongButteMetal Roof Products, Inc 6526f 97th St,Bend 54f-4fg-f202 Lowe's 20501CooleyRd,Bend 54f-693-0560 AmyAndersonFarmers Insurance f208 NE 4thST.Suite B,Bend 54f-3f2-f143 Beem Construction 60351ArnoldMarketRd.,Bend 541-3&P-&064 BendChamberofCommerce 777NW WallST.,Bend 54f-382-3221 BigfootBeverages 2440 NE 4th, Bend 54f-382-4495 Brian'sCabinets Bf -527American Loop, Bend 54f-382-3773 CascadeInsuranceCenter 336 SWCyberDr., Bend 54f-382-2241 HolaRestaurant www.holabend.com 54f-389-4652 Lulu's Boutique 150NW MinnesotaAve.,Bend 54f-617-B948 Parilla Gril 635 NW14thSt., Bend 54f-Bfy-9600

GIIARQ

875 SVVSimpson Ave Bend

503-584-3885

v •

I

470 NE A St., Madras 541-460-4039 CENTRAL OREGOH

EzE 62995 Plateau Dr., Bend 541-389-7469

erurr oaurvav ~a u n u sae<~ 3MISW ~

CI , ~

f I N RI L I RS I

2000 SWHighway 26, Madras 541-475-223B

63500 USHwy97, Bend 541-330-2495

KEY PROPERTIES 431 NWFranklin, Bend 541-72B-0033 u e>ne communny

51600 Huntington Road, LaPine 541-536-3435

8k

ScHwABE~ WILLIAMSON

& WYATT'

A TT O R N E Y S

AT

L AW

360 SW Bond St., Bend 541-749-4044

COAR~ 2112 NE 4th St., Bend 541-382-3452

H OM E S 1690 N Hvvy97, Redmond 54 I -548-55 l1 Postal Cohnections 2660 E Hvvy 20, Bend 541-382-IBOO

8Springleaf Lending made personal

f 1 20 SE 3rd Street, Ste.100, Bend 54f-31B-4209

a

Re/Max KeyProperties 431 NW Franklin, Bend 541-72B-0033 SunriverBooks& Music Building25C,Sunriver 54f-593-2525 Sherwin Wiliams f25 NEFranklin, Bend 54f-389-2536 Advanced Cabitnetry Inc. 2&53S.W.High Desert, Prinevile 54f-447-7024 SuperiorService 827 SEBusiness Way, Bend 54f-38B-B&39 Allen ClarkTreeService 13-661 SE Cayuse Rd., Prinevile 54f-447-B2&3 TheGarnerGroup 2762 NW Crossing Dr.A'100, Bend 54f-383-4360 AlternativeConstruction Inc. 60003MinnetonkaLane, Bend 54f-Bfo-58ff 9th StreetRVStorageCenter 169 SE 9thStreet, Bend 54f-389-6740 AmeripriseFinancial 2f4 SEVineLane,Bend 54f-389-2528 BendPlumbingandHeating Inc. P.O.Box5203, Bend 54f-382-B577 BachelorRealty 65-260TweedRd., Bend 54f-389-55f6 Big Mountain Guters 63506VogtRd,Bend 54f-3&B-18&5 BrianHemphil Attorney 339 SWCentury Dr.PfOf, Bend 54f- 3&2-2991 Blondie'sPizzaTwoCountry Mal P.O.Box 4839,Sunriver 54f-593-fofg CentralWindowWashing&Janitorial 20490WoodsideNorth Dr.,Bend 54f-389-0490 Consolidated Towing Inc. 1000 SE 9th ST., Bend 54f-389-BO BO C hezChienneHouseof DogsGrooming Bf405 SHwy97Ste.f, Bend 54f-383-5909 Dairy Quee n Bf331 S.Hwy97-PO.Box9459, Bend 54f-385-68BO Gogenolconstructi a on f9058 Choctaw Rd., Bend 54f-383-7155 DaysInn 849 NE 3rd St., Bend 54f-382-6&ff NAPA Auto Parts 5f477 Hwy 97,LaPine 54f- 536-2192 Del Barber Excavation P.O.Box6554,Bend 54f-54B-0998 PahlischHomes 63088 NE f BthSt. Ste.100,Bend 54f- 3&5-6762 FiveTalentsoftwareInc. 404 SWColumbia St.P150, Bend BOO-770-1868 BalzerPainting,Inc. 20676CarmenLoop,Bend 54f-330-0756 Hutch'sBicycles 725NW Columbi aSt.,Bend 54f-382-9253 Belfor PropertyRestoration fff7 SE CentennialSt.,Bend 503-4OB-B BBO LaRosa Authentic MexicanKitchen 19570AmberMeadowDr., Bend 54f- 31&-72f0 BlueSageConstruction 59745CalgaryLoop,Bend 54f-306-4771 LaRosa Authentic MexicanKitchen 2763 NW Crossing Dr.,Bend 54f- 647-f624 CentralLakesMarine 74f SEGlenwoodDr., Bend 54f-385-7791 Les Schwabe Amphitheater 15 SWColoradoAvek10, Bend 54f-322-93&3 Central OregonPathologyConsultants f34& CushinSt.200, g Bend 54f-389-7490 Merlot Mortgage 2&40 NE Sedalia Loop,Bend 54f-3fB-5246 CentralOregonSeeds f747 NW Mil St., Madras 54f-475-7231 NCMMediaNetwork Bf 1 NE Tracker Ct., Bend 54f-389-6609 ChesterCabinets P.O.Box7994,Bend 54f-389-B130 O'DellLakeResort P.O.BoxI f59, CresentLake 54f- 433-2840 ClassicMotorCarCo. f &3 NWWalSt., l Bend 54f- 317-3403 OnTo Technology 63221ServiceRd.Ste.F,Bend 54f-389-7897 CulverRealEstate &Expresso 701 1stAve,Culver 54f-546-63&2 OptimaFootandAnkle f506 NE WiliamsonBlvd., Bend 54f-383-3668 Diamond Tree 2669 NE TwinKnolls Dr.Ste.208, Bend 54f-706-9340 PremierPrintingSolutions 920 SWEmkayDr., Bend 54f-617-9899 EnergyconservationInsulation Co. P.O.Box7772,Bend 54f-67B-5566 StephenAGrimmGrading&Excavating f7735 Old WoodRd., Sunriver 54f-593-f455 J.L.WardCo.- Back 9 Golf Course 60650ChinaHat Rd,Bend 54f- 3&2-049f Swan'sAutomotive 20664CarmenLoop,Bend 54f-385-B948 JefersonCountyTitle Co. PO.Box 51,Madras 54f-475-7201 The VilageBarandGril P.O.Box 42f3, Sunriver 54f-593-f100 LaPineCommunity Health Center 5f600 HuntingtonRoad, LaPine 54f-536-3435 UBSFinancialServices, Inc. 600SW ColumbiaSt.Ste.6200,Bend 54f-322-6122 McMurray & SonsRoofing 920 SE 9thSt., Bend 54f-385-0695 WWWest Inc. Publishers 20875SholesRd.,Bend 54f-385-Bgff PrecisePlumbing PO.Box3456,LaPine 54f-536-2464 www.shipmate.com PO.Box787,Sisters 54f- 370-3600 Stephen 54f-94&-OBIO AGrimmGrading&Excavating f7735OldWoodRoad,Bend NobleBuildersLLC fg-B97 SW HollygrapeAve,Bend 54f-420-2494 Allen DesignGroup 60762Radcliff Circle,Bend 54f-330-OO &3 Erickson'sThriftway 315 NW3rdSt., Prinevile 54f-447-6291 Barnes & NobleBooksellers 2690 NE Hwy 20, Bend 54f-31&-7242 BendGarbage& Recycling 20835 NE MontanaWay, Bend 54f-323-4069 BendTechSupport LLC 205&5BrinsonBlvd Suite3, Bend 54f-3BB-240f Deja Vu Interiors 225 SWCentury Dr., Bend 54f-317-9169 Bows&Britches KidsConsignment f210 NMaink2, Prinevile 541-362-5604 BajaFresh BfBNE&rdSt., Bend 54f-Bfy-B7&1 Caldera 54f-3&9-BB99 Grile 927 NW Bond, Bend CR Fabrication,LTD. 833 SEIst. St., Redmond 541-54B-4369 CentralOregonPerio PC. f569 SW Nancy Ste-3, Bend 541-317-0255 Clinic Pharma cy f f 03 NE ElmPA, Prinevile 54f- 447-4fff 54f-923-f63& Complements HomeInteriors 70 SW Century Suite145, Bend 54f-322-7337 CinderRockVeterinary Clinic 2630 S.Canal Blvd., Redmond 54f-3&2-949& Clinic Inc. 20664CarmenLoop,Bend Ladybug FlowersandGifts 209SW5thSt.,Redmond 54f- 548-BfBB Cleaning Davis & Cl a rk Aut o moti v e Re p ai r f56 NE Se w ard A ve, B e n d 54f-3BB-2BB B Mongol ianBBQ Bf -535 S.Hwy97, Bend 54f-31B-B500 541-546-5222 Chemical Co. 505 CSt., Culver Ogden Construction Inc. PO.Boxf123, Bend 54f-647-f130 Helena fOOO SWDiskDr., Bend 54f- BBB-4444 PrecisionApplianceRepair 6042 NW GreenValleyRd., Prinevile 541-447-7098 High DesertBank f63 NE UnderwoodAve., Bend 54f-3&2-6636 PrinevilleInsurance Agency 297 NW 3rd, Prinevile 54f-447-6372 IndustrialAppliedElectric 54f- 312-4070 RanchCountry Outhouses PO.Box B67,Sisters 54f-480-9058 JuniperPaperandSupply Co. f02&SEPai uteWay,Bend RedmondWalMart 300 NW OakTreeLane, Redmond 54f-923-5972 LifetimeMemoryAlbums&Trophies 94B SE Douglas, Bend 54f-31&-079& SunrisePool& Patio Inc. 405 A NW 3rd., Prinevile 54f-447-2005 Longboard 54f-3&3-5B&9 Louie's 62OBODeanSwiftRd.,Bend TownePump&Pantry Bf2 NW MadrasHwy, Prinevile 54f-447-0504 Loomis Armored 6645 N.EnsignSt., Portland 503-2&9-&47& VikingProperty 799 NW 2ndSt., Prinevile 541-416-Ofgf MaxineHoggan f707 SW Parkway, Redmond 541-526-0969 Les Schwab PO.Box 2209,Sisters 54f-549-f560 Melvin'sFirStreetMarket 541-549-07ff f60 S. FiSt., r Sisters The Pennbrook Co. 250 NW Franklin Ave.Suite204, Bend 541- 617-3456 Merit Wealth Management LLC 404 SW ColumbiaSt. Suite 214,Bend BBB-516-374& AbneySolarElectrix ff244NWKingwoodDr.,Redmond 54f- 923-6000 Mid Oregon 54f-3&2-f795 Credit Union f&BB NE Cushing, Bend Advanced PrecastProducts 1f 1 f NE1fth St., Redmond 54f-923-3272 Middleton Septic &PortableToilets 2&76 SW Hwy 97, Madras 54f- 475-5322 Arco Construction 5792 NE 5th St., Redmond 54f-54B-2655 f245S Hwy97Ste.Cf, Bend 54f- 317-5577 DryCanyonIndustrialControls&Comm. 4585 SW21stStSuite102, Redmond 541- 504-5491 More Ink SurgeryCenter 244 NW RedmondAve., Redmond 541-316-2500 Everson Family Dentistry 49f E MainSt., Sisters 54f-549-20ff Redmond be,Williams&Wyatt-Att. AtLaw 360 SW BondSt., Bend 541-749-4044 LongHollowRanch 71105HolmesRd,Sisters 54f-923-190f Schwa Co tonwoodRd.k222,Sunriver 54f- 593-Bf13 MidstatePowerProducts f&f&S.HWY97,Redmond 54f- 548-6744 SunriverCountry Store&Marketplace18160 Bend 54f-3&9-7229 Sabor A Mi 304 SE Third St, Bend 54f-7&B-935f SuperiorMobileAutoGlass ColoradoAve. Suite2&0,Bend 54f-617-OBB B SatterleeJewelry Repair&DesignCenter 5f3NW FirAve.,Redmond 54f-54B-BTB B AdvisoryServices&Investments, LLC15 SW Allen Reinsch 1451f6 Lanewood Dr., LaPine 541-536-1294 AmbientArchitectureLLC 92ONWBondSuite204,Bend 541-647-5675 BrentWoodardInc. 3743 N.Hwy97, Redmond 54f-504-5538 BirtolaGarmynHigh Desert Realty 101NEGr eenwoodAve k'fOO,Bend 54f- 312-9449 Carpetco Flooring 154& S.Hwy97, Redmond 54f-54B-33&3 CS ConstructionLLC 541-617-9190 f506 NE1st St., Bend Crooked RiverSanitory 13-gt8SWCommercial LpRd,CrookedRiver 541- 54B-f542 CentralOregonAssoc. ofRealtors 2112 NE 4thSt., Bend 54f-3&2-3452 HarvestMoonWoodworks 66224BarrRd,Bend 54f-330-3960 C.S.I. Computer Solutions 230 SE 3rdSt. SuitefOO,Bend 541-306-6700 Jeld-Wen 3737 LakeportBlvd.,KlamathFalls BOO-JELD -WEN Cooper 54f-59&-9170 Racing 56&57EnterpriseDr., Sunriver Les Schwabof Madras 2& NE Plum, Madras 541-475-3834 CulverMarket 411 W.st f St., Culver 541-546-6032 Little Enterprises Painting Service 633ff CarlyLn,Bend 54f- 815-356f RiveraBrothersLandscapingCo. fBO4NW BTH St.,Redmond 541-923-2704 Little Pizza Paradise Cascade Vilage, Bend 54f-312-2577 SitzmanEquipment Sales&Rental 6526094thSt., Bend 54f-3&9-9743 Pro-Vend Service 625 SE 9thSt., Bend 54f-389-9999 QuiltersAttic Bf541fth St.,Redmond 54f 54B-Bf19 SkrubzMedical&Supply LLC 636NWBthSt. Suite C,Redmond 54f- 526-5674 54f-330-599& 629&O NHwy 97, Bend RealtyProsLLS 850NW 55thSt,Redmond 54f- 4&0-9567 SugarloafMountainMotel ARC Docum ent Sol u ti o ns f 1 5f SE Cen t e nni a l Court, Bend 541-749-215f RogersBuildingCo. 1515 NE10thSt., Bend 54f-Bf5-4072 541-316-15ff I462 S. Hwy97, Redmond Sagewood Grocery 87164 ChristmasValleyHwy, ChristmasValley 54f-576-2500 CentralOregonGlass ClineFallsHwy,Redmond 54f-54&-f455 SerenityLane 601 NW harmonBlvd., Bend 54f-383-0844 ClineButeRockPit-SteveFoxConstruction67-5&5 gnsCustom Designs 615 SW Umatila, Redmond 54f-54&-7226 SmolichMotors f&65 NE Hwy20, Bend 54f- 3&9-ff77 DanaSi WellsFargoBankN.A. Bf 7 S.6thSt., Redmond 54f-54B-4595 Elliott ScottHoldings,L.L.C. 325 NW Vermont -Suite I05, Bend541-647-1000 WildernessGarbage&Recycle 5f420 RusselRd., l LaPine 54f-536-f834 J & MHomes I690 N Hwy97, Redmond 54f-54&-55ff BendMailingService 1036 SE Paiute Way, Bend 54f- 3BB-07&9 PremierAutobody&Paint 54f-52&-2299 950 NE 5th St., Redmond Bend RV Repair 62-980BoydAcres RdPA2, Bend 54f-3&B-5448 Professional Heating&CoolingInc. 41BSW BlackButeeBlvd,Redmond 541-923-3366 DrakeRestaurant 801 NW Wall St., Bend 54f-306-3366 RedmondFi tnessf440 3&53SW2fst, Redmond 54f- 504-6050 El RanchoGrande 63455 NHwy97, Bend 54f-3f2-2022 SavorySpinceShop 375 SW Powerhouse Dr., Bend 54f-306-6&55 IT onDemand 477 NE Greenwood, Suite C,Bend 541-323-357f Shoebox Bookkeeping 20965LimestoneAve., Bend 54f- 3&2-4795 Kelleher Group-Caldwell BankerMorris www.soldonbend.com 54f- 322-24f6 StanleySteamer 20727HighDesert Ct. unit f, Bend 541-706-9390 LeaderBuilders,LLC 1f7 NEGreenwoodAve, Bend 54f-480-3547 SunriverResort f7-600 CenturyDrive,Sunriver 541-593-1000 Linda MackLMFT/LPC 745 NW Mt.Washington Dr.Ste30f, Bend 54f-Bfy-9198 &065 fth 1 St., Terrebonne 54f-54&-&707 Lumberman'sInsurance 965 SWEmkay Dr., Bend 54f-3&B-0374 TerrebonneHardware 54f-54&-f009 539NW 6thSt.,Redmond Mother'sCafe 2locationsin Bend 54f-3fB-09&9 TexacoFoodMart TK Ja c ob s o n I n v e s t me n t s , I n c . 23-45f Butterfield Trail, Bend 54f- 3&3-&502 Pack,Ship& More WagnerMall-CenturyDrive, Bend 541-38&0389 54f-3&5-0534 Farrens f5SWColor ado d22O,Bend PrecisionCountertops 6305f CorporatePlace,Bend 54f- 3BB-7830 Mode 516SW5thSt, Redmond 54f-54&-f225 Pro SteelFabrication&Consulting 10-460Cornett Loop,Powell Butte 54f- 447-5532 Moe'sFoodMart 26BO NEhwy 20, Bend 54f-3BB-Bg& 7 RedmondCentral OregonKOA 2435 SW Jericho Ln,Culver 54f-546-3046 Pacific Video Regan ErtleWilliamette Financial Group 2514 NE Division, Bend 54f-330-7454 SpringleafFinancialServices 974 SW VeteransWay, Ste. 5, Redmond 541-923-3697 RHRHeating 3989 NW Xavier, Redmond 54f-923-0800 The TutoringClubof Bend 745 Mt.WashingtonDr.,Bend 541-617-9473 RichardW.Little Jr.CPAPC 742 SWForest Rd.,Redmond 54f- 923-0231 VillageInteriors Design 541-549-343f 3&2 E. HoodAve., Sisters Soni cDrive-InBend,Redmond&Madras 63076 NHwy97, Bend 54f-306-7279 TableTops I645 NELytle St., Suite1, Bend 54f-3&2-21f& TozerDesignLLC 724 NW Federal St., Bend 54f- 3&3-9015 Dr. KeithKrueger I475 SW ChandlerAve.¹f, Bend 541-322-5717 US Bank f442 NE 3rd St., Bend 54f-389-5331 BendSurgeryCenter 54f-31&-OB 5& f303 CushingDr.d200, Bend WagnerMal NE 3rd& Revere,Bend 54f-382-9423 WebformixHighSpeed Internet 67 NWHawthorneAve, Bend 54f-385-B532 AmadaHorner HomeCare 2475SW 26thSt.,Redmond 541-526-56&f AvionWaterCompany Inc. 60&f3 ParrelRd., l Bend 54f-382-5342 BendAnimalHospital 63-240ServiceRoad, Bend 54f-389-7778 BendSpine& PainSpecialists 929 SW SimpsonAveÃ250,Bend 54f-647-f645 Dano'sCleaning Bend 54f 3&B-B35f Diane'sRidingPlace 65535ClineFalls Rd.,Bend 54f-385-7933 DunesMotel f515 NE 3rd St., Bend 54f-382-6811 Furnish 76f NWArlzonaAve., Bend 54f-Bfy-Bgff GSIWaterSolutions, Inc. 147 SWShevlin HixonDr.A'201, Bend 541-67B-5117 HarrigonPriceFronk&Co. LLP 975SW Colorado-Suite200,Bend 54f-382-4791 HongKongRestaurant 530 SE 3rdSt., Bend 54f-389-BBB O Paul theComputer Guy 244 NE Franklin Ave.Ste.2, Bend 54f-330-06fo PilatesConnection Bf2 NESavannahDr., Suite 4, Bend 541-420-2927 PostalConnections 2660 EHwy20, Bend 54f- 3&2-f800 ABCFenceCo. 421 NW 10th, Prinevile 54f-447-67BO Airgas 6305f Plateau Dr., Bend 54f- Bf7-0450 Newspapers in Education BendConstruction SupplyInc. 2&O SEBridgeford Blvd., Bend 54f- 3&2-9200 BendSpay& Neuter Project Bf0 SEWilsonSte. B-f, Bend 54f-Bfy-fofo CentralOregonNutrition Bf456 ElderRidgeSt., Bend 54f-3&B-0694 Concrete Mobile Mix,Inc. 44ff NWElliottLn.,Bend 54f-447-f378 H20 Sportswear f50 NEBend River Mall Dr.k250, Bend 54f-389-5590 Spectrum BuildingandRestoration 90 SE Bridgeford Blvd.,Bend 54f-385-0752

With yourhelpwe're ableto provide newspapersto our local classrooms as aneducationaltool for thousandsof Central Oregon students. ThankYoufor

your generous support!

eNIE

The Bulletin


TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S

Health care

Granddargain

Continued from A1 It faces challenges that are both substantive and political, and a degree of difficulty that has no historical parallel. Social Security and Medicare, programs whose main function is to make payments to and for those who are eligible, look almost simple compared with the system that will be put into place with the Affordable Care Act. Obamacare seeksto establish new health insurance marketplaces and transform how care is delivered, while giving states significant leeway in determining how that will be done. Not only must the comp licated operation work a s

The legislative dealbrokered bystate legislative leaders andthe governor incorporates five different bills. Gov. John Kitzhaber has

said he'll sign noneinto law unless they all pass bothchambers. SENATE BILL 861 Changes the Public Employees Retirement System:

• Caps the annualcost-of-living adjustment at1.25 percent for benefit supto$60,000and0.15percentonanypaymentsabove that. • Allows the PERS board to make a supplementary payment to

retirees whoearn lessthan $20,000. SENATE BILL 862 Changesthe Public EmployeesRetirement System: • An employeewhoreceives asalary boost in his or her final three years of employment, in place ofinsurancebenefits, could not factor that amount into his or her final average salary, which is used to

calculate amember's final pension. • A retiree convicted of a crime could lose someof his or her benefits. • Future lawmakers could not join PERS.

HOUSE BILL 3601 Revenue andsmall-business tax cut: • Raises the rate C-corporations payto 7.6percent on incomeabove $1 million. • Increases the rate of revenueinto the Rainy DayFundfrom 6.6

Shutdown

percent to 7.5 percent.

• Eliminates the $183personal exemption for incomesgreater than $100,000 (couples, earning more than $200,000). • Narrows eligibility for the senior medical deduction based on adjusted gross income. • Increases Oregon earned income tax credit from 6 percent of the federal credit to 8 percent.

Todacco taxes: • Increases cigarette taxes13cents in 2013-15,14 cents in 2015-17 and15 cents in 2017-19. • Dedicates new cigarette revenue to mental health programs. Small-business tax break: • For some S-corporations, LLCs, LLPs and partnerships, tax rate is reduced to 7 percent if less than $250,000. Includes a tax reduction

for companies inexport business. HOUSEBILL 5101 • Sends $100milion to K-12 schools. • Allocates another $40 million to community colleges and universities.

• Dedicates $41 milion to senior programs, $20 million to mental health programs and $12 million to support low-income families.

SENATE BILL 863 • Prohibits local counties from banning genetically modified

organisms andworks toward astatewide policy ongenetically engineered crops.This concept hasyet to bedrafted.

Bargain

ments for retirees has drawn particular criticism. Continued from A1 Several public employees The so-called "grand bar- testified last week and late gain" would trim public pen- Monday night. sions, raise taxes, give small Rob Sisk, the president of businesses a tax break, and the Service Employees Intackle the i ssue of g eneti- ternational Union Local 503, cally engineered organisms. echoed the sentiments that It would also f unnel more many public employees testimoney to the state's public fied to. "This bill affects real peoschools. Kitzhaber has made clear he will o nly sign the ple who have worked hard in bills into law if all pass both public service and mapped chambers. out their l ives based on a On Thursday, Friday and promise that was m ade to late Monday night, lawmak- them," Sisk told lawmakers ers listened to testimony from Monday night. the public on t h e d i fferent Another element of the bill provisions. that has drawn considerable "This is a hard package to criticism would prohibit local get done," House Republican counties from regulating geLeader Mike McLane, R-Pow- netically modified organisms. ell Butte, said Monday. The bill would no longer allow There will be some hard counties to ban GMOs. votes cast, he said. He's hopeS upporters said it w o u ld ful the package will succeed help prevent a patchwork of but noted it's unlikely anyone different ordinances throughcan fully support every ele- out the state. Critics have said it's bad public policy and will ment of the package. "We came hereto vote on a decrease transparency, and package," McLane said. "We they question why it's part of need to vote on a package." an overall package dealing Jared Mason-Gere, spokes- with schools and taxes. man for Speaker of the House Last week, when the goverTina Kotek, D-Portland, said nor was testifying on behalf M onday was t y pical fo r a of the grand bargain to lawcomplex negotiation involv- makers, he said the state has ing many moving parts. a chance to show it's different " All i n a l l , t h i n g s r a n from what's happening at the smoothly," he said. federal level. At the heart of the packThe state, he said, has a age is a provision that would chance to show it can "come raise taxes and another that t ogether and d o t h e r i g ht would trim public pensions. thing for Oregonians." The measure that focuses on — Reporter: 541-554-1162, capping cost-of-living adjustldake@bendbullettn,com

Correction: Saturday'ssIIdoku Solution on Page A6. Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

5 814

8

9 7

281 3 9 2

Read all of The Bulletin's

Continued from A1 "Agencies should now execute plans for an orderly shutdown due to the absence of appropriations," it said. Not all government services will come to a screeching halt. Social Security checks will still g o o ut, the U.S. Postal Service will continue to deliver the mail and Veterans Administration hospitals will stay open. But there will be disruptions as federal agencies furlough hundreds of thousands of "nonessential" employees. Any e m ployee d eemed necessary to protect national security, life and property will still be on duty. So air traffic controllers, border patrols and law enforcement will still be on thejob. Some services, however, will cease, such as the issuing of new Social Securitycards or changing the mailing address for Social Security beneficiaries. The Veterans Benefits Administration will stop processing rehabilitation and education benefits, and the Board of Veterans' Appeals will not convene any

hearings.

coverage on this topic at denddulletin.com/healthreform Obama has said it will, but it must survive a continued assault by Republicans, who demanded repeal or delay of the law as the price of keeping the government open and the nation solvent. They also are certain to seize on every technical glitch and misstep. "I've n ever seen a l a w implemented with so many delays, mistakes and problems," House Small Business Committee Chairman Sam Graves, R-Mo., said last week, after the administration announced that online enroll-

ment in the new marketplaces for small businesses would not proceed on schedule. The Treasury Department has also delayed by a year the requirement that businesses with 50 or more full-time employees provide coverage for their workers or face a fine — a move that the administration said was proof of its flexibility but one that opponents contended was an early warning of disaster. Implementing a bi g n ew law "is not sexy. It's not exciting. But it's critically important, and it's incredibly hard," said Gautam Mukunda, author of the book "Indispensable: When Leaders Really Matter." In the case of the Afford-

"I think people expect the government to get funded and operate, but they also — especially on the Republican side and independent voters — are pretty concerned about the effects of Obamacare, their access to health care and costs.... One way you change a lawis to use vehicles that are available to force a vote on changes in that law. And that's what this does." Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River

"TOnig/It'S failure iS rOOted in the determination of some in Congress to use the threat to drive the American economy over the cliff as a lever to win policy positions on health care that were

lost during regular congressional debate and in the presidential election." — Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-ore.

When the Affordable Care Act passed in 2010, thenSpeaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., would not allow votes on any Republican amendments, Walden said. The act passed without a single Republican vote in the House.

a "clean" continuing resolution, or one that continues funding at current levels without any other legislative changes.

Merkley's take: U.S. held hostage

Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., in a statement at midnight, said "One way you change a the shutdown was a manufacMany of the 21,580 federal employees in Oregon will law is to use vehicles that are tured crisis that hurts Amerilikely face furloughs. The Bu- available to force a vote on can families. "Tonight's failure is rooted reau of Land Management, changes inthat law. And that's which has 1,826 employees in what this does," Walden said in the determination of some Oregon, projects that it would of the plan passed Monday by in Congress to use the threat to f urlough 10,200 out of i t s the House, which would have drive the American economy 10,800 employees nationwide, delayed the implementation over the cliff as a lever to win according to its contingency of the individual mandate by policy positions on health care plan. The U.S. Forest Service a year. It would also have re- that were lost during regular would maintain staff needed quired members ofCongress congressional debate and in the to fightfires, protect federal and their staff, as well as the presidential election," he said. lands, respond to floods and president and White House Earlier Monday, Merkley, other emergencies. employees, to buy insurance already the veteran of four budIn part, the impasse arose on th e o n l ine e xchanges get standoffs during his first out of the confluence of the without a n y go v ernment term in office, said he found deadline to extend operation- subsidies. the developments leading to the al funding for the government The Senate rejected the government shutdown "deeply and the launch of several House plan almost immedi- disturbing." key provisions of the Afford- ately Monday night. A funding resolution is not "They will be accountable the proper place to have a polable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, including online for their votes like we are for icy debate, he said. The Senate exchanges where individu- ours. And in the process we could easily argue that it had als and employers can com- would hope that they would twice passed a farm bill that parison shop for health insur- negotiate with us, we would the House had not acted on, or ance. Under a provision of the hope they would have some that the House had ignored its law known as the individual discussion, some recognition immigration bill, but it would mandate, individuals must that there are problems with be wrong of the Senate to try to enroll in a health care plan Obamacare and work with attach those bills to legislative by March 31 or face financial us to solve them," Walden action required to keep the govpenalties. said. "But that generally has ernment running. "You don't hold America and House Republicans, partic- not been the case throughout ularly conservatives elected their legislative process." the American economy and in 2010 in a groundswell of As chairman of the Nation- American citizens hostage over sentiment against the health al Republican Congressional a policy debate," he said. "It'd care act, view a continuing Committee, Walden is tasked resolution that would extend with getting as many Repubthe government's funding as licans elected to the House in one of their last chances to 2014 as possible. He said polls II alter what they consider a bad indicate that voters are more 1n 5BewI I I law. concernedaboutthe effectsof ANPIIITlltB[I the health care act than a poWalden's take: tential government shutdown. Obamacare a concern "These are big issues with a "Our goal is not to shut lot of divisions in the country, A ND down the government," said and in the districts that are Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood going to be competitive, each River, who was first elected to side will have the opportunity Congress in 1998, two years to explain their views. And afterthe most recent govern- frankly, Obamacare is losing ment shutdown, which lasted support, not gaining support; 21 days. "I think people expect the president'snumbers are the government to get funded falling not rising, and I think and operate, but they alsothat people are rightfully conespecially on the Republican cerned, and they expect us side and independent voters to do something about it," he — are pretty concerned about said. the effects of O bamacare, The Democratic majority their access to health care and in the Senate has remained costs." steadfast in its insistence on

Workers in Oregon

able Care Act, implementation is made all the more difficult by how many moving parts are outside the president's reach. "He has significant but not total control over the federal bureaus; he has no control whatsoever over the states," said Mukunda, who teaches at Harvard Business School. "But he's going to get t he blame for anything that goes wrong." "The president has to continue to focus," said Robert Blendon, a professor of health policy and political analysis at Harvard University. He added that the launch of the new health care system "is a historic evolution of events. It is not a day."

be unacceptablefor the Senate to do that, and it's unacceptable for the House to do this, to basically hold hostage the success of job creation in America. There's a strong inclinationthat we don't want to encourage this type of blackmailing" After the House moved late Monday to appoint members to a conferencecommittee, Merkley noted that members of the Senate GOP have prevented the Senate from doing the same many times this year. "My Republican colleagues have come to the floor 18 times to block a budget conference over the past six months," he said. "It is positive that they have changedtheirperspective, but it makes no sense to negotiate while the pain of a shutdown is inflicted on America." Even if Congress resolves the budget impasse quickly, it will soon face another possible standoff over raising the debt ceiling, which would allow the government to borrow funds

to pay for money Congress has already spent. According to the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington-based think tank, the U.S will hit the debt ceiling at some point between Oct. 18 and Nov. 5. "We have todo allwe can to break this pattern so that it doesn't happen again with the debt ceiling," said Merkley. Walden said he w ouldn't rule out making changes to the health care act as part of a deal to raise the debt ceiling. "We're going to take things one at atime, and see where we can make changes," he sa>d. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger~bendbulletin.com

E HIGH DESERT BANK

III

I

I

r- c s

Q$NQRTHWEsT Featured Busmess

of the week:

portello winecafe 541-385-1777 2754 NW Crossing Dr. www. portellowinecafe.com

'

I

I

STEVE HARTIN T4 E

p~ QII~ II II +tM ~ Q~

Batteries ~ Crystal ~ Bands

4 :

928 31 5 9 7 DIFFICULTY RATING: 6+ 4+ 6+ 6+ 4+ 4+

=.

WATCH BATTERY

ss

f lllS ,

yalO4+. tlX AVAIL

g©W ~ Av pooR

F RIDRY OCT O BE R 4

INFINITY WATCHREPAIP 503-887-4241 61405 S. Hwy. 97, Bend OR 97702 Office: 541.728.0411• Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner

S tem & Cr o wn s

Mo ve m e n t s

R ll R G E S • OEN E RA I R D M I S S I O N 4c RESERVED SEATIN O

/ BRBNO NEW 4LBUM

T ICRETS STILL AVM L A R L E O N L I N E NOW AN D AT TllE BOX OFFICE CoPE N S R T41'M,JLCCL'PTSCILSHJWDCIIEDlTCRRDS)

AVAILABLEHDWI

w ww

(

' •

S T E Y E MA RT I H C O M


A6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

Airlines

Together,the fees account for 10 percent of U.S. airlines' Continued from A1 revenue. Revenue from bag fees in Fees provide airlines with April, May and June fell 7 another advantage: The Interpercentcompared to the same nal Revenue Service has said period last year, according to since they aren't directly refigures released by the gov- lated to transporting passenernment Monday. gers, they aren't subject to the So now the airlines are sell- 7.5 percent excise tax travelers ing new extras and copying pay on base fares. Taxing fees marketing methods honed by would give the government retailers. an extra $1.1 billion a year Technological upg r a des to fund the Federal Aviation allow airlines to sell prod- Administration, runway upucts directly to passengers at grades and air traffic control booking, in follow-up emails improvements. as trips approach, at check-in Without the fees, experts and on mobile phones min- say fares would be 15 percent utes before boarding. Delta higher. Air Lines recently gave its flight a t t endants w i r e less d evices, allowing t he m t o sell passengers last-second upgrades to seats with more legroom. And just like Amazon.com

"You're either going to go out of business or find a way to cover" your costs, says Robert Jordan, Southwest Airlines' executive vice president and chief commercial officer. Southwest ha s h el d o ff charging for m ost checked bags. But it sells plenty of other add-ons. Recently, it i n t roduced a way for people at the back of the boarding line on some flights to cut to the front for $40. It's not a b l o ckbuster

set up last year to revise current policies.

Airline passengers should beallowed to use their personal electronic devices to read, play gamesorenjoy moviesandmusic,evenwhen

but it is now up to the FAA's administrator, Michael P. Huerta, to decide whether and when to

feet, according to recommendations anadvisory panel sent to the FederalAviation Administration on Monday. But the panel said that restrictions should

remain on sending text messages, browsing the Web or checking email after the plane's doors

report and determine next steps." The panel would maintain restrictions on de-

vices like smartphones andtablets with data com-

havebeen closed.Passengerscandothatonly when the aircraft's Wi-Fi network is turned on,

munication features that could potentially disrupt

typically above10,000 feet. The use of cellphones to make voice calls, which was not part of the review, will still be prohibited throughout the flight.

every two flights — but with 3,600 daily flights, that nets $70,000in extra daily revenue or $25 million a year.

It provides a roadmap tochanging the policy, do so. "The FAAreceived the report and recommendations today on theexpanded use of personal electronic devices," said LesDorr, aspokesman for the agency. "Theadministrator will review the

planes are on the ground or flying below10,000

seller — one person pays up

The review wasthe work of a28-member panel

Panel proposes easing restrictions on passengers' electronics

some airplane systems. For that reason, those devices shouldbeusedonlyon"airplanemode," which disables their transmission capability. — New York TimesNews Service

offers suggested readings based on each buyer's past purchases, airlines soon will be able to use past behavior to target fliers. "We have massive amounts of data," says Delta CEO Richard Anderson. "We know who you are. We know what your history has been on the airline. We can customize our

offerings." Other airlines are experimenting with t racking passengers throughout the airport. In the future, if somebody clears security hours before their flight, they might be offered a discounted day pass to the airline's lounge on their phone. Airlines have yet to find the right balance between being

"' Atg

$!

e ',J

helpful and being creepy. So, for now, most of the data is being used to win back passengers after their flight is de-

layed or luggage is lost. "We want to get back to a point where people feel like travel isn't something to endure but something they can

~50 or

enjoy," says Bob Kupbens, a former Targetexecutive and Delta's current v ic e p r esident of marketing and digital commerce. Most passengers select flights based on the lowest base fare. The online travel industry plays up that price sensitivity with sites named CheapOair.com, CheapTickets.com and InsanelyCheapFlights.com. When airlines try to raise f ares, they a r e m e t w i t h resistance. "Customers are very quick to either change travel plans, or use another carrier or not travel at all," says Jim Corridore, an airline analyst with Standard & Poor's Capital IQ. In the p ast t h ree years, a irlines have tried t o h i k e fares 48 times, according to FareCompare.com. During 29 of those attempts, bookings fell enough that airlines abandoned the increase. Most fares today don't cover the cost of flying. While the average domestic roundtrip base farehas climbed 3 percent over the past decade to $361.95, when adjusted for inflation, the price of jet fuel has nearly tripled. When oil prices spiked in 2008, airlines added checked baggage fees. Passengers still bought tickets on th e base price and didn't think about the extra expense until the day of travel. Now airlines are recasting fees as trip enhancements. Travelers like Nadine Angress, of M a nsfield, Mass., see the value. Her recent latenight US Airways flight home landed past 6-year-old son's b edtime. She had t o w o r k early the next morning. So for

Save on your grocery purchase of $50 or more with your Safeway Club Card and this Savings Award. *Use this savings Award on any shopping trip you choose at any oregon safeway store (except MiltonFreewater) and S.w. washington stores serving clark, wahkiakum, cowlitz, skamania and Klickitat counties by 10/08/13. This $10.00 Savings Award excludes purchases of Al«oholic Beverages, Fluid Dairy Products, Tobacco, US Postage Stamps, Trimet Bus/Commuter Passes, Money Orders, Container Deposits, Lottery, Gift cards, Gift certificates sales, All pharmacy pres«ription purchases, safeway club savings, safeway store coupons and sales Tax. Qne savings Award redeemable per household.

SAFEWAY() COUPON v alid aama thmaesnz . 'SAFEWAY () COUPON

~.J

IIIII II

o

COUPON CANNOT BE DOUBLED. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.

0 0 000 78008

v a lid aezn3 thrusesn3 . S A F EWAY( ) COUPON

Safeway~ Farms . Thick Sliced Bacon

lucerne® large Eggs

Sold in 3-lb. package.

18-ct Grade AA.

99

99

ea

Navel Oranges

WITH CARD ANDCOUPON

ea

3-lb. bag.

512.99 ea aus mK:E wrrvoUT coupoN WITH CARD ANDCOUPON

IIIIl

This couponmustbepresented at time of purchase.OfferValid with Card and Coupon.COUPONCANNOTBE D0UBLED. couponvslidthru10/8/13. p

WITH CARD ANDCOUPON

ll

0 0000 7734 9

v a l id aowsthrusesn3

• Thiscouponmustbepresentedat

a

SAFEWAYQQ COUPON V a l i d1$2/13 thru10/8/13

time of purchase. OfferValid with Card and Coupon.COUPONCANNOTBE ' .D0UBLED.couponvalidthru10/8/13. p

0 0000 77g1 y

p '.

SAFEWAYQ) COUPON V a l i d 10/2/13 thru 188I13

This couponmust bepresentedat time of purchase. OfferValid with Card and Coupon.COUPON CANNOTBE 00UBLED. coupon validthru10/8/13.

o

SAFEWAYQQ. COUPON V a l id 10/2/13 thru 118I13

Shanghai DinnerforVwo

Open Nature™ Sandwich Bread

c

2 RegularEntrees

i

24-0z.

-',+p' ~

99 Ib

Wild Alaskan Pollock Fillet Previously frozen.

IIIII

1 regular ChowMein 1 regular FriedRice 2 Egg Rolls or 4PotStickers

99 ea

WITH CARD ANDCOUPON

WITH CARD ANDCOUPON

WITH CARDAND COUPON

This couponmustbepresented at tlme of purchase.Offer Valid wlth Card and Coupon.COUPONCANNOTBE DOUBLED. Gouponvalldthru10/8/13. p

0 0 000 77386

l

il

0 0000 7740 3

g

• Thiscouponmustbepresentedst tlme of purChase.OfferValid with Card and Coupon.COUPONCANNOTBE D0UBLED.cauponvalldthru10/8/13. p

II 0000 0

• This coupon must be presentedat tlme of purchase.Offer Valld wlth Card and Coupon.COUPONCANNOTBE

5 ' D0 UBLED.couponvalidthru10/8/13.o

77 4 6 9

IIIII III I

0 0 0 0 0 1 4 846

r -

$30 she bypassed the baggage carouseland had the suitcase delivered. "That was a very reasonable price to pay," Angress says. "It's making your life easier." U.S. airlines collect more than $6 billion a year in baggage and reservation change fees. They also collect $9 billion more from selling extras like frequent flier miles, early

I

elch's jg

~glchs I

BUY 2

Welch's Frozen juice

GET 1 FREE

Saturday's sudoku solution

WITHCARDAND COUPON

I

~4 , BUY1 ~

e a Cti ~a

iBUY 4

Safeway Dry Beans, ' Peas or Lentils 16az.

iGET 1 FREE

~2-pad; 3.5-oz.PlasticTubs

IGET 2 FREE WITHCARDANDCOUPON

"

"

,

' .

"

I Coupon valld thru 10/8/I3.

~ 00000 77003

Prices in this ad are effective 6 AM Wednesday,October 2 thru Tuesday,October 8, 2013 (unless otherwise noted) in all Safeway stores in Oregon (except Milton-Freewater) and S.W. Washington stores serving Wahkiakum, Cowlitz, Clark, Skamania and Klickitat Counties. Items offered for sale are not available to other dealers or wholesalers. Sales of products containing ephedrine, pseudoephedrine or phenylpropanolamine limited by law. Quantity rights reserved. SOMEADVERTISINGITEMS MAY NOT BEAVAILABLE IN AU STORES. Some advertised prices may be even lower in some stores. On Buy One, Get OneFree("BOGO") offers, customer must purchasethe first item to receive the second item free. BOGOoffers arenot 1/2 price sales. If only a single item purchased, the regular price applies. Manufacturers' coupons may beused on purchaseditemsonly — not on free items. Limit one coupon per purchased item. Customer will be responsible for tax and deposits as required by law on the purchased and free items. No liquor sales in excessof 52 gallons. No liquor sales for resale. Liquor sales at licensedSafeway stores only O 2013 Safeway Inc. Availability of items mayvary by store. Online and In-store prices, discounts and offers maydiffer.

po

~ Mission Yellow Thin CornTortillas ~Safeway' Farms I Peeled Baby-Cut f r ~ Canots I

I ":."" . .. 1IIIIIIII1 IIIIII u weoT St OouSLE D. 0

i BUY1

IGerber

WITHCARDAND COUPON

"

CANNOTBEDOUBLE D. 0 ~'OOOOO 77324' Caupon valld Ihru 10/8/I 3

Puzzle on PageA5.

I

rW~

II

boarding and seat upgrades.

1 63 5 9 8 4 7 2 l 7 28 1 4 6 9 5 3 9 54 3 7 2 8 1 6 8 4 9 7 2 5 3 6 1 ;2 16 4 8 3 7 9 5 . 3 7 5 6 1 9 2 8 4 =:. 5 9 2 8 6 4 1 3 7 '.=687 2 3 1 5 4 9 :4 3 1 9 5 7 6 2 8 .'

1-lb. bag.

This couponmustbe I presented at timeot pUICh8SI!. OIISf V8lld Wlth

I Card andCoupon.COUPON CAHNOTBEDOUBLED. 0 I coupon valid thru 10/Bfl3.

wlTH cARDANDcoUpoN

16-oz.

i GET1 FREE WITHCARDANDCOUPON

Safeway Brown Rice

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII:";;"-:".:;:,-.",. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII '00000 77388"

Ingredients for life.

a C ANNOT BEDO UBLED. o

'00000 77021


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

BRIEFING

Hidden camera case update A man accused of planting a hidden

camera in bathrooms entered anot guilty plea in Deschutes County Circuit Court Monday to

25 counts of invasion of privacy andsevencounts of attempted invasion of

privacy. Richard EugeneIpsen, 60, of Tualatin, allegedly

planted acameradesigned to look like an AC adapter in a Starbucks

bathroom in Sherwood in June. After the camera

was discovered bySherwood Police, BendPolice executed asearch warrantfora house belonging to the IpsenFamily

CITY OF BEND

Sti time n icense usinesses an issue to et a us ot

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

Bend officials are looking fornew ways to enforce the requirement that most companies purchase a city businessli cense, after a greater number of businesses than expected failed to renew their licenses this summer. City employees already knew that some of the estim ated 8,000 businesses in Bend were unlicensed, but they were surprised in recent months when they issued fewer licenses than budgeted and evenfewer licenses than during the same period of

time in the last two years. "We missed our mark in July by quite a bit," said Bend Business Advocate Carolyn Eagan. That month, city business license revenue was nearly $6,700 lower than budgeted, according to

analysis offiguresprovided by the Finance Department. That means the city issued roughly 130 fewer $50 business licenses than it expected that month. The problem is that many existing businesses are not renewing their licenses, Eagan said. By contrast, Eagan said the numbers of

new business licenses issued in recent months increased approximately 100 percent from theprevious year. Revenue from the business

This year, officials also decided to give $10,000 of the business license revenue to the nonprofit Economic Development for Central Oregon, on top of the $70,000 annual contribution to the group from the city general fund. Officials built the business advocacy budget on the assumption that more of the businesses in Bend will obtain licenses this year, so the budget includes an expectation that license revenue will increase by $40,000 this year, to nearly $300,000, according to the Finance Department. SeeLicenses/B5

licenses pays for Eagan's job, as an ombudsman to local businesses. The city also uses data from the licenses to notify businesses of city projects and changes in the law that might affect them, and the city is working to share the information with firefighters and police so they know what to expect when they respond to potential emergencies at various businesses.

Trust at 2325 N.W. Lolo Drive. According to the

search warrant affidavit, Bend police officers were

o ens Or

able to match photos

from the camerato the guest bathroom at the

residence. Ipsen entered anot

guilty plea in Washington Countyto eight counts of

Health Department officials from Crook, Jefferson and Deschutes counties all said predicting whether or not we're going into a severe flu season is impossible. "I wish I had a crystal ball, but we just don't know until after the season starts," Kaisner said. "Last year, we thought we were going to have a normal year, but then we got all those cases so late in the season." Sarah Decker with the Jefferson County Health Department agreed that last year was much worse than 2011-12. Of those who don't receive the vaccine, about 50 percent of people carry the flu virus without being symptomatic, though they're able to transmit the virus to others, she said. See Flu shot/B2

~

t. t

I

Judicial Information Network. A six-person trial is

t

iR

set for Dec.3. Ipsen's trial in Deschutes County is set for Jan. 16, 2014. — Bulletin staff report

II

1,

'

More briefingand News of Record, B2

reader photos

With the colder, wetter weather upon us and children returning to school, it's time to start thinking about getting your family prepared for the upcoming flu season. uNow is a good time to get a flu shot, but anytime in October is fine, too," said Heather Kaisner, immunization coordinator with the Deschutes County Health Department. "Definitely get one before the holiday traveling season arrives. Airplanes and airports

many people."

two counts of attempted 'u

The Bulletin

transfer because there are so

I

invasion of privacy,according to theOregon

By Shelby King

are a greatplaceforgerm

'tt I

invasion of privacyand

Well shot!

www.bendbulletin.com/local

BUZZING WITHSTUDENTS.•• C'

• We want to seeyour photos of foliage for another special version of Well shot! that will run

Photos by Andy Tulhs i The Bulletin

Students move through a busy campus on the first day of the fall term at the Bend campus Monday morning. COCC spokesman Ron Paradis said that parking is always hectic at the beginning of the fall term but that things should settle down in a few weeks.

in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work

atdenddulletin.com/ foliageandwe'll pick the

Fall enrollment at all COCC campuses is expected to be around 6,800 credited students-

best for publication.

students who are seeking college credit — according to COCC spokesman Ron Paradis. Official

• Email other goodphotos

enrollment numbers will be counted in the fourth week of the fall term. Although enrollment

ofthe great outdoors

toreaderphotos© denddulletin.com andtell

peaked in fall 2011 when 7,286 students attended, this year's enrollment will be well above, for

usabitaboutwhereand when you tookthem. All

example, fall 2006's enrollment Of 4,371.

visit www bendbulletin com/updates.

and we'll choose the best for publication in print.

Mathematics Instructor Donna Raymond hangs a painting in her new office in the newly renovated Grandview Hall on the Bend campus. College officials decided to consolidate the mathematics department into

Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide end 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

STATE NEWS

a single space, which was previously home to the college's culinary program. Grandview Hall first opened in 1967.

• Baker City:Memorial

held for Baker City boy killed by pit bull. Story on B3

•• •INSTRUCTORS. •• y' r /

The intersection of Riverside Boulevard and Tumalo Avenue, which is

• ..AND STAFF

undergoingimprovements for pedestrians and cyclists, is partially open, allowing traffic to move between the Galveston corridor and downtown by way of Drake Park. Traffic

Wa

may be reduced toone

I-'I

' @P,,~-.-

Riverside Blvcl

' open

*

AN-

remain closedsouth of

, Partially

s

iq

lane at times while work continues. Riverside will the intersection, as will Tumalo to the east.

~w

+-,; '

/

jy j - -.::n

II

Nalvest n Ave.

Remains closed

Andy Zeigert / rhe Bulletin

Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@ bendbulletin.com.

O To follow the series,

entries will appearonline,

Riversideopen to Galveston

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ...

Bill Douglass, left, and Lars Ellefson, both with the COCC sports and recreation department, put in hole No. 2 of the campus disc golf course last week.

I

Grounds department employee Ramiro Terrazas paints crosswalk lines atthe Bend campus last week in preparation for another year of heavy foot traffic. — Staff reports

Grant fuels Marshall's academic turnaround By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Three years ago, Marshall High School was offered millions to turn itself around, a talltask fora schooltha ttargets struggling students. After an infusion of $2 million that ended last academic year,the alternative school finds itself with higher test scores and a new curriculum to support future growth. The money came from a U.S. Department of Education School Improvement Grant, which brought $32.9 million to 10 high-poverty, low-performing Oregon schools. Marshall has about 170 students, nearly 80 percent of whom qualify for free or reduced lunch. Since the 2010-11 school year, the number of students who met state standards in math jumped 30 percent and increased 13 percent in reading. "It is my opinion that alternative schools have wanted to help with social and emotional issues first," said Marshall Principal Julie Linhares. "At times, though, I feel academicssuffers as a w icked stepchild. I tried to put equal focus on social and emotional supports as well as providing

challenging academics." See Marshall/B6


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

E VENT TODAY PUMPKIN PATCHANDMARKET: Featurin g pumpkincannons,zoo train, pony rides, archery and more; $2.50 for most activities; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. WilcoxAve., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco. com. FEAST ATTHEOLDMILL: Featuring a riverside reception, four-course dinner with specialty wine pairings, a silent auction and raffle; proceeds benefit the Cascade Culinary lnstitute; $100 per ticket, reservations requested; 6 p.m.; Anthony's at the Old Mill, 475 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3183783 or foundation©cocc.edu. HOW TOBENDFILM: Orit Schwartz talks about her top picks for BendFilm 2013; free; 6 p.m.; Cowgirl Cash, 924 Brooks St., Bend; 541388-3378 or www.bendfilm.org. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A screening of the film "Bidders 70" about an activist protesting the auction of gas and oil drilling rights; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. WORLD SERIESOF HOLD 'EM FORHABITAT:A poker tournament; proceeds benefit Habitat for Humanity; $50, $10 for pre-qualified players; 6:30 p.m., 5 p.m. registration; Jake's Diner, 2210 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-419-6021. ROBERTEARLKEEN:TheTexas folk singer-songwriter performs; $31-$49; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.

WEDNESDAY PUMPKIN PATCHANDMARKET: Featurin g pumpkincannons,zoo train, pony rides, archery and more; $2.50 for most activities; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. WilcoxAve., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco. com. BEND FARMERSMARKET:Free

Flu shot Continued from Bl "There is an in c ubation period between the time a person becomesinfected and when they begin to s how symptoms," said Mindy Stomner with the Crook County Health Department. "If you come into contact with a person during the in cubation period, and you're not vaccinated,you can still get sick." Flu season in Central Oregon usually peaks sometime in January or February, but flu shots are now available at most pharmacies and private practitioners' offices. Local health department officials recommend getting vaccinated as soon as possible. "Once kids go ba ck t o school, we start to see an increase in flu cases," Decker said. "We recommend getting kids in, the earlier the better, for th eir fl u sh o ts. Schools are petri dishes of

admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. "48 HOURS TO FAME": A screening of the documentary about what it takes to be the World's Greatest Athlete featuring Olympic gold medalist Ashton Eaton and Olympic silver medalist Trey Hardee followed by Q-and-A with Ashton Eaton; proceeds benefit the Sparrow Club of Central Oregon; $25, $15 for children 18 and younger; 4:30 and 7 p.m., doors open 30 minutes prior to show; Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court; 541-549-6878 or www.sistersmoviehouse.com/. BATTLEDECKS: Contestants improvise conference presentations from previously unseen PowerPoint slides, presented by Ignite Bend; free; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. DOWN NORTH:The Seattle alternative soul and rock band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. "WAY OFLIFE": A screening of Teton Gravity Research's 2013 ski film and prizes; $12 in advance, $15 at the door, plus fees; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. THEAUTONOMICS:The Portland rock band performs, with Victory Swig and The Rumand the Sea; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.volcanictheatrepub. com.

THURSDAY PUMPKIN PATCH ANDMARKET: Featurin g pumpkin cannons,zoo train, pony rides, archery and more; $2.50 for most activities; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco. conl.

"We recommend getting kids in, the earlier the better, for their flu shots. Schools are petri

dishes of germs." — Sarah Decker, Jefferson County Health Department

year, Decker said. Stomner sa id ev e ryone should get vaccinated, but said it's especially important for yo u n g c h i l d ren, pregnant w o men, p e ople with chronic health conditions like asthma, diabetes or heart and lung disease and people 65 ye ars and older because t h ey're a t higher risk of complications from the flu. She also recommends people who work in close contact or live with those at an increased risk get vaccinated. "It's estimated that only 30 germs." percent of people get vacciThe Centers for Disease nated," Decker said. "I think Control recommends every there is a Iot of misinformaperson over 6 months of age tion about the effectiveness get vaccinated every year and a lot of people think that against the flu. The vaccina- the vaccine actually causes tion provides protection for the flu, but it doesn't." more than six months, but its — Reporter: 541-383-0376, potency diminishes after a sking@bendbulletin.com

BRIEFING Continued from Bf

Cyclist dreaksleg incrash A cyclist crossing Northeast Third Street on Monday broke his leg after riding into the path of a

i~P%,

+

I~

Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo

Meyee Cha, right, helps Dita Keith assemble a bouquet of flowers from her booth at last year's Bend Fall Festival. This year's event runsFriday through Sunday in downtown Bend. WILD & SCENICFILM FESTIVAL: A screening of environmental and adventure films; proceeds benefit the Oregon Natural Desert Association; $6 in advance, $9 at door; 4 p.m., doors open at 3:30 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-330-2638, corie@onda.org or www.onda. org/wild8 scenic. MEET YOURFARMER DINNER: Students prepare the foods of local farmers in Elevation, the fine dining area; $35, reservation requested; 6-9 p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, 2555 N.W. Campus Village Way, Bend; 541-420-8603 or centraloregonlocavore.com. "UNSTOPPABLE":A screening of the Kirk Cameron film investigating the moral origins of good and evil; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 54 I-312-2901. LUCREZIO:The Chicago-based acoustic soul duo performs; free, artist donations accepted; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740N.W. Pence Lane,Suite 1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www. btbsbend.com. REEL ROCK TOUR8: A screening of four climbing and adventure films, raffles and giveaways; $10 in

POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

ambulance to St. Charles Bend with

non-life threatening injuries.

Lt. Chris Carney: Michael Keener, 43, was northbound either in the bike lane or on the sidewalk when

each of11 schools inCentral Oregon, allowing the principal of each

Wells Fargo donated $1,000 to

institution to decide how the money will be spent.

The schools toreceivedona-

Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at9:57 a.m. Sept. 29, in the 20000 block of Elizabeth Lane.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat1:12 a.m. Sept. 28, in the area of Northwest BelknapStreet.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT

OREGON STATE POLICE

Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:31 p.m. Sept. 26, in the 61300 block of Rocks Bluff Lane. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at8:59 p.m. Sept. 26, in the 21200 block of Capella Place. DUII —Ernie John Golen, 27, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:10 p.m. Sept. 26, in theareaof Northeast 18th Streetand SockeyePlace. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:56 p.m. Sept. 27, in the area ofNorthwest Bond Streetand Northwest Oregon Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:11 p.m. Sept. 25, in the1200 block of Northwest West Hills Avenue. Burglary — A burglary, an act of criminal mischief and atheft were reported and anarrest made at10:36 a.m. Sept. 26, in the1600 block of Northeast Eighth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:39 p.m. Sept. 28, in the1000 block of Northwest Bond Street.

Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at7:44a.m. Sept. 27, in the area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost 115 in Terrebonne. DUII —Jason Alan Melton, 37, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:56 p.m. Sept. 27, in the area ofU.S. Highway 20 near milepost14. DUII —Terry Allen Martin, 58, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:59 p.m. Sept. 28, in the area of Sixth Street and Dorrance MeadowRoadin La Pine. DUII —James Matthew Johnson,23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:33 p.m. Sept. 29, in the areaof Brookswood Boulevard and Pinebrook Boulevard in Bend.

Elementary in Bend-La Pine Schools;

Keener was not wearing a helmet

advance, $15 at door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-923-6207 or www.reelrocktour. com. "THE DIXIE SWIM CLUB":A comedy about five Southern women who met on their college swim team and get together once a year; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC SERIES:The Los Angeles-based group Thies Consort performs a special program featuring the chamber sonatas of Sergei Prokofiev; $35, $10 students and children 18 and younger; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m., pre- concert talk at 6:45; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. highdesertchambermusic.com. SOPHISTAFUNK:The NewYorkbased funk act performs; free; 7:30 p.m.; Riverfront Plaza, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-389-3216 or www.p44p.biz. WILD & SCENICFILM FESTIVAL: A screening of environmental and adventure films; proceeds benefit the Oregon Natural Desert

winter with live music, ski swag, ski and snowboard footage, art from Cathleen Powers, the return of seasonal beer Jubelale and signed posters from the label artist, Avlis Leumas;free;5-10 p.m.;Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-9242 or www.deschutesbrewery.com. MAKERECHAPMAN:The New Zealand elder shares the world of the Waitaha (Nation of Peace) and its ancient culture; $20 suggested donation; 6-8:30 p.m.;The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-325-3000 or lisa©bendreiki. FRIDAY com. "FIREARMS:STORIES OF STEVE MARTIN &THESTEEP CANYONRANGERS:An evening SURVIVALANDDEFENSE" EXHIBIT OPENS:Featuring historic of comedy and bluegrass with the photographs, artifacts, artwork and famous comic actor, the North Carolina band and special guest Edie more than 50 firearms; included in Brickell; $44-$85 plus fees; 6 p.m., the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, doors open at 5 p.m.; Les Schwab free ages 4 and younger; 9 a.m.; Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-322-9383 or Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754. www.bendconcerts.com. PATCHWORKANTIQUES &FALL "THE PEOPLINGOF THE FAIRE:Featuring antiques, fall AMERICAS" SERIES:Oregon State wreaths, homespun crafts, baked Parks resource specialist Paul goods and more; free admission; 9 Patton discusses the "Solutrean a.m.-6 p.m.; Private residence, 797 hypothesis"; free, $5 day-use pass C. Ave.,Terrebonne;541-419-8637. permit; 7-8:30 p.m.; Smith Rock State Park Visitor Center,10260 N.E. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN Crooked River Drive, Terrebonne; PATCH:An eight-acre corn maze 541-923-7551 ext. 21 or www. with pumpkin patch and market oregonstateparks.org. featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo "42":A screening of the 2013 train, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5 and film about the life story of Jackie younger for corn maze; $2.50 for Robinson (PG-13); free; 7:30 p.m.; most other activities; noon-7 p.m., Rodriguez Annex Jefferson County pumpkin patch open until 6 p.m.; Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541jcld.org. 504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. "THE DIXIE SWIM CLUB":A BEND FALL FESTIVAL: Featuring comedy about five Southern fall-themed activities, homebrew women who met on their college competition, live music, art and food; swim team and get together once free admission; 5-11 p.m.; downtown ayear; $19, $15seniors,$12 Bend; www.c3events.com. students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. artist talks, live music, wine and cascadestheatrical.org. food indowntown Bend and the TWANGSHIFTERS: ThePortland Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; Americana band performs, with throughout Bend. Long Tall Eddy; $8 in advance, $10 at door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 FIRSTFRIDAY SNOW DANCE AND JUBELALE CELEBRATION: p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. A celebration of the coming of Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

Weekly Arts & Entertainment Inslde MAG A Z I NE

NEWS OF RECORD

a compoundfracture in his left leg.

11 area schools receive donations

enue. A Chevrolet pickup driven by

'I

tions areBearCreekElementary, Ensworth ElementaryandRosland

and was transported viaground

Association; $7 in advance, $10 at door; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-330-2638, corie©onda.org or www.onda. org/wild&scenic. THE GIFT OF GAB: The indie rapper from Blackalicious performs, with Landon Wordswell, Tim Hoke and more; $10 plus fees in advance; $10 at the door; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; www. j.mp/giftofgabinfo.

,

David Wiersema, 60, was in the left lane when it struck Keener, causing

pickup truck, according toBend Police Department. According to police spokesman

he "darted" across Northeast Third Street nearNortheast Marshall Av-

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vvvvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

AL E N D A R

Lynch ElementaryandVern Patrick Elementary in the Redmond School District; Paulina Elementaryand Ochoco Elementary in the Crook County School District; and Warm

t

61147 CraIg Place. 7:25 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 20225 Sturgeon Road. 24 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 27 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 3:58 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 65250 94th St.

•<

F LEVATIO N

15 —Medical aid calls.

mplements Hd ML '3 e 1 I'Cv'id.a"$

Elevation Capital Strategies 775sw Bonnetw ay suite lzo Bend

70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com

Main: 541-728-0521 www.elevationcapital.biz

• R,ePairs • Remodelinrf

• Additions • New Construction • Green Builder

C-

BEND FIRE RUNS

John Fiocchi 503-319-4348

I

johnC<wehehomes.com WeEeConstruction, Iec CCEb'69084

Friday 1:49 p.m.— Smoke odor reported,

Serving Oregon since 1990

tutuw. Iuebehomes. com

cc McKenzie SHOES & APPAREL

Springs Elementary,Buff Intermediate, Madras Primaryand Metolius Elementary inthe Jefferson County School District. AII11 schools qualify for Title I funding, indicating thatat least40 percent of their students are low-

income. — Bulletin staff reports

PUBLIC OFFICIALS

NA

For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials. "

CONGRESS U.S. Senate • SeII.Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 PhoneI202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208

Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • SeII. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

TheBulletin

U.S. House ofRepresentatives • Rell. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. Bond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408

-

"

4

, rIakar. ••I


TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

Baker Ci remembersboykilled by dog

AROUND THE STATE COuple StuCk 2 dayS On OregOn rOad —A search team has rescued a California couple and their 23-foot motor home from the

By Terri Harber

Jordan in his lap once and the boy was very loving. Many of the people there

as well as some of those sent WesCom News Service skyward. A huge bundle of bright and The pain Ryan i s g o ing colorful balloons was released. cried softly during large por- through right now is someAs they floated upward and tions of the gathering and they thing "I couldn't imagine," said away, at least one person was were saying very little. Most Cassie Glerup, one of the orgaheard to say, "Bye, Jordan." were parents who had brought nizers. "It kind of hit home." Then a few tiny children's their children along. This is why she wanted to do voices, like echoes, were heard King hugged and comforted something for Jordan's family to say the same thing. the boy's grieving father, Na- and the rest of the community, Once theballoons were en- than Craig, his own grandson, she explained. veloped by the dark sky, some- at one point. Glerup, Autumn Brooks and one started singing "Amazing Jordan's mother, Michelle Michelle Fouts moved quickly Grace" andthe entire assemR yan, a l s o a t t ended t h e to get the event together. blage joined in. memorial. They began working on SatAbout 150 people braved A small tent allowed them urday morning. cold, wet weather Sunday eve- and other close relatives some Social media was used to ning to remember 5-year-old p rivacy an d s h elter f r o m spread the word about the Jordan Micheal Ryan, who the rain after King finished event. It did so w idely and died as a result of a pit bull at- speaking. quickly, Glerup said. tack at a family friend's resiIt also served as a dry spot But she waited until Saturdence on Friday morning. for Jordan'spicture and other day to break the news to her This public memorial to cel- d ecorative items to b e d i s- daughter, Madison. ebrate his short life was held played alongside candles. The girl, in the same kinderoutside the kindergarten he The weather made it difgarten class as Jordan, was attended in a wing of Baker ficult for everyone outside to among the young cheerleaders High School. keep their candles lit but there who performed during Friday "We have the memories," w eren't an y a u d ible c o m- night's Baker High f ootball said Han k K i n g , J o rdan's plaints. People just simply lit game. great-grandfather. them again. Glerup didn't want to ruin it King also led the group in Next to the tent was a fence for her. Brooks talked about someprayer, then asked for people that served as a memory wall. to sharetheir experiences and It contained toys, balloons and thing unusual that occurred as thoughts about Jordan. ribbons. Children were signshe went about various tasks One person said he had held ing the balloons hanging there ahead of the gathering.

"When I went to print off a poem and picture of Jordan the most amazing thing happened," she wrote afterward. "The poem printed and at the bottom it said 'In memory of Jordan.' I never put that on the picture. I didn't write it. "Our world is a wonderful world. I can't explain how it got there," she added. "This type of thing — people coming together to help one another — is so important at times like these, to help with the grieving and help people see what we mean to one another," said Desteni Felton, in a written message afterward.

Canine will be euthanized The District Attorney's office stated that the state medical examiner determined that 5-year-old Baker City youth Jordan Ryan "suffered extensive injuries, which caused him to bleed to death" from a pit bull attack that occurred on Friday morning at a home in the 1900 block o f 1 4th Street. "As a result of the incident the dog will be euthanized," according to a press release.

mud of a Southern Oregon logging road after the couple followed GPS instructions and got stuck two days ago. The Douglas County Sheriff's Office says 73-year-old Charles Garton of Ridgecrest, Calif.,

called Saturday night to report he wasstuck behind fallen trees and about four miles short of Oregon 42, the highway leading to his destination on the Oregon coast, Coos Bay. He'd left lnterstate 5 north

of Grants Passand struck off northwest on U.S. Bureau of Land Management roads. The Sheriff's Office said the man and his wife had provisions and heat from the vehicle, which they wouldn't leave.

A tow truck couldn't get them out Sunday,but a search and rescue team succeeded Monday in winching them free.

Man drops gun, bullet lodges in his neck —TheYamhil County Sheriff's Office says a 52-year-old man fumbled a handgun when he pulled it from a holster, the weapon hit the floor, and a bullet

traveled through his torso into his neck. The Sheriff's Office said in a statement that man was reported in good condition after surgery Sunday and is expected to recover. He lives in the town Yamhill but

was not identified. Theweaponwas described as a.45-caliber black powder pistol. The statement said the man was taking the weapon from a gun safe to show a friend when the accident happened.

Military plane makes emergency landing —Portland officials say a military plane with17 people aboard landed safely

at Portland International Airport after reporting a problem during flight. No one was hurt. The Oregonian says Portland Fire & Rescue spokesman Lt. Rich Chatman reports that a Dornier 328 turboprop

plane indicated late Mondayafternoon it was having hydraulic failure related to its brakes. Port of Portland spokesman Steve Johnson says the plane landed around 5:30 p.m., about an hour after the problem

was reported. Neither man knewthe branch of military involved or the plane's flight path.

Record rainfall —A big storm on the last weekendof the month helped make for the wettest September on record in parts of Oregon. National Weather Service meteorologist David Elson says the 6.82

inches recorded through 5p.m. Monday in downtown Portland was

Hearing Soggy harvestawaits Oregonvintners for man who killed police officer By Nigel Duara The Associated Press

PORTLAND — The Grant County district attorney argued a confessed murderer is unredeemable. The v i ctim's brother said the killer is unrepentant. But the convict said he has changed since bludgeoning a police officer to death in a drunken rage in 1992. The Oregon Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision heard from each side Monday in reconsidering the release of Sidney Dean Porter, who has spent 19 years in prison after pleading guilty to the murder of John Day police officer Frank Ward. Ward was responding to a call about screaming and loud music when he confronted the 6-foot, 5-inch Porter inside Porter's home. The ex-logger hit Ward with enough force to soak his own socks in blood. The hearing on Monday addressed the facts of the night in question and whether Porter had changed. The board seemed to think so when it granted his release at a February hearing, bu tthe releasewas

challenged by prosecutors, police and Ward's family. Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber intervened and asked the parole board to reconsider, and to allow law enforcement more input into the decision — they were notpresent at the February hearing. Parole board chair Kristin Winges Yanez said the board would take two to three weeks to make a decision. Porter had a blood-alcohol content of nearly four times the legal limit to drive at his home on April 8, 1992, during a disturbance with his wife, which Porteradmitted happened frequently. Ward knocked on the door and Porter's wife yelled for him to come in. At this point, Porter's story diverges from the police version of events. Police say Porter beat Ward with a 17-inch piece of firewood, a piece of evidence which Grant County District Attorney Ryan Joslin pulled from a plastic box and held over his head, miming Porter swinging the wood down onto Ward's head. "Frank Ward wa s s truck (while) on his feet, on his knees and on the ground," Joslin said. "(Porter) could not have intended anything other than to end the life of Mr. Ward." Porter said before pleading guilty — and maintained Monday — that he dove at Ward and the two crashed into a wood stove, where Ward struck his head and was mortally wounded. P o r te r ac k n owledged Monday that his recollection of events was affected by his drunkenness.

The Associated Press EUGENE — Oregon's wine grape season started warm and dry but is ending wet, threatening a soggy harvest and raising questions about the quality and quantity of this year's vintages. "It just starts going sideways a bit when you have this adverse weather," says Robin Pfeiffer of P feiffer W inery near Junction City. In the southern Willamette Valley, with heavy precipitation the past two weeks, September rainfall is more than four times the local average, the Eugene Register-Guard reported. That threatens grapes with mildew, rot, dilution and splitting. Cold days and nights shut some vines down for the winter, causing leaves to turn orange and vines to be-

gin leaching sugars from the grapes. The conditions are especial-

ly tough on Oregon's prized but finicky pinot noir grapes.

the most since record-keeping began in 1872. The previous record was 5.52 inches in September1927. At Portland International Airport,

where records havebeenkept since1940, the total by Mondayevening was 5.57 inches, beating the old record of 4.30 inches set in Sep-

tember 1986. Elsonsays Eugenealso seta September rainfall record of 6.93 inches, eclipsing the old record of 5.21 inches, set in1927. Deputy SaVeS Medferd WOman —A sheriff's deputy driving by a south Medford housesaw fire and rescued an 88-year-old woman and her three dogs. The Medford Mail Tribune reports that Brendan Dodge banged on the front door Saturday night and when

he got no response broke it open. Inside hefound Margret Schwartz asleep. Onceawakened,shesaid,therewasso muchsmokeshe thought there was a glaze over her eyes. She wasn't hurt. She sal-

vaged somebelongings, and is staying with her son. Brian Fish of the Medford Fire Department says the fire started near the garage and burned through the roof above it. He says determining the cause and

estimating the damage will require an investigation.

Vandal ripS heartS Out Of lidrary bOOkS —TheClackamas County Sheriff's Office says avandal at a county library has been cutBrianDavies/ Eugene Register-Guard

Steve Girard, owner of Benton-Lane Winery, says this year's pinot noir vintage was looking perfect after a warm, dry summer. But a cool, wet September has the winery near Monroe scrambling to get the grapes off the vine.

ting or tearing pages from the middle of books, mainly mystery and science fiction volumes. Librarians say those books are farthest from

the main desk at theOakLodge Library at OakGrove and hardest to monitor. The Sheriff's Office said Monday that122 books have been found damaged in the past few weeks. It said the librarians believe

the damage is being done in the library itself rather than to books checked out. The damage is estimated at more than $2,700.

"Most other grapes don't change as rapidly, but the pinot has a lot thinner skin," said Pfeiffer. "Cabernet has a skin that's much thicker and tougher. Pinot absorbs more water when it r a ins (and) starts to get a little weaker."

Steve Girard, owner of Benton-Lane Winery, told the paper he normally doesn't start harvesting until early October but has begun rushing to get the last of his 145 acres of pinot varietals off the vines as

Portland suicides 3 times national rate —Thesuicide rate in Portland is three times the national rate, according to a report the Portland Police Bureau released Monday. KATU reports the rate is

about 34 people per100,000 population. Therewere 202 suicides in Portland from April 2011 through June 2013 or about one every four

days. There werenearly twice as manysuicides as homicides and traffic fatalities combined. — From wire reports

quickly as possible.

There's never been a better time to stay on the central Oregon Coast. Stroll the long sandy beaches, explore lighthouses and hidden tide pools, or watch for whales. Hike, fly kites, play golf or blow your own glass float. Visit galleries and museums. Discover unique shops and exceptional dining. At day's end stay in one of these fine hotels, each with a spectacular view. Through December 23, 2013 take advantage of a special "2nd Night Free" discount on stays Sunday through Thursday. Some restrictions apply.

Inn AtSpanishHead R ESOR T H O T E L

E" Kd Q

Lincoln City, OR SpanishHead.com

Newport, OR ElizabethStreetInn.com

800-452-8127

877-265-9400

Gleneden Beach, OR Salishan.com

800-452-2300


B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

AN LNDEPENDENT NEWEPAPEB

nvestment return uarantee awe

BETsY McCooc

Chainromnn

Goaaott BEAEE

PalllIAIIer

JOHH COSTA RICHAHD COE

Fditur in-Cltirf Editor ofEdttorials

lW5 g-PFYAOUR.' AllTH BVERY9-loT

5 lQeEJII,,

OP

You eazg

C~

ER.

n what may look like a brave switcheroo, the Public

II ll I Co'~~d fl ~~fl-I A

Employees Retirement Board on Friday lowered its projected rate of return. The board formally voted that the projected rate of return on investments for the state workers' retirementplan should be 7. 75 percent,down from 8 percent. It may be a more accurate bet than 8 percent, but make no mistake. This is just another wheeze in the perpetuation of a flawed retirement system. One way of looking at the PERS system is as a roughly $61 billion promise to pay out future retirement benefits. The fund has been about $14 billion short of having enough to do so. The money to pay for t h at promise comes from two places — earnings on investments and the employer contributions from schools and local and state governments. If investment earnings aren't enough, employer contributions have to make up for it. The "assumed rate of return" number, then, is one of the most important assumptions in calculatinghow well Oregon will be able to pay off the promise. It also helps determine the benefits PERS pays out for earlier PERS members. The Legislature saw fit in 1975 to ensure early PERS members would get favorable investment returns by giving them a guaranteed rate of return. The accounts could never fall below this "assumed rate of return" set by the PERS board. Inotherwords,benefitswouldn't fluctuate like a 401(k), according to actual earnings. There was a guarantee. It was one of the low points of the system's evolution.

The PERS Board reviews and adopts the assumed rate every two years. The board looks at what has happened and tries to project what will happen. Since the 1970s, the assumed rate of return has changed in only one direction — up. It was 5 percent in 1971 and climbed. Since 1989, it has been at 8 percent. W hen you l o o k b a c k f a r enough, the PERS fund has been doing very well in earning returns. Over the past 20 years, its average earnings have been about 10 percent. That's about the same as the 25-year average for the S8EP 500.

„, Irl llllllllIIfffIllfff/II'

M Nickel's Worth Infuriated with Republicans

But in recent years, the bond market and the stock market have been much more volatile. For instance, if you look at the S&P 500 average return for five years, it's only 1.66 percent. How can the PERS board be expected to guess right? It can't. If it were really good at guessing, it wouldn't have a multibillion-dollar shortfall. So should we all leap to congratulate the board at going from 8 to 7.75? Far from it. If there is any hope of improving the situation with the PERS system, it didn't happen at the PERS board meeting on Friday. It may only happen through the action of the Legislature, the courts, or an investment market that flies through the roof.

Regulate e-cigarettes he latest craze among nonsmoker wannabes is the electronic cigarette, a device that allows the user to inhale vaporized nicotine without taking in the tars that help make old-fashioned cigarettes so dangerous. Yet e-cigarettes come with their own set of problems, and the federal Food and Drug Administration is expected to issue regulations governing them next month. Rules are needed. E -cigarettes are new t o t h e American scene,only about a decade old and just now gaining real popularity. They're touted as an improvement on tobacco cigarettes because usersdo not inhale tars, but that doesn't necessarily make them safe. In fact, according to the Oregon Health Authority and others, partly because e-cigarettes are unregulated in Oregon, they may contain all sorts of nasty things, from formaldehyde to benzene to cadmium to lead. At the same time, and for the same reason, nicotine levels in ecigarettes can vary dramatically. Worse, because they come in flavors like bubble gum, chocolate and cookies-and-cream, they're particularly attractive to kids. In 2011, the Oregon Poison Control Center handled at least a dozen

T

calls regarding the accidental poisoning of children by e-cigarettes, and it seems clear their manufacturers had young people in mind when choosing flavors for their product. Unfortunately, young people are responding. According to the Centers for Disease Control's NationalTobacco Survey, e-cigarette use by middle and high school students doubled from 2011to 2012. About 20percent of kids who use them never have smoked traditional cigarettes. The truth is that there's not nearly enough known about e-cigarettes to assure their safety, and until there is, their sale and marketing should be controlled by the FDA. Forty attorneys general, including Oregon's Ellen Rosenblum, have asked the agency to do just that. Meanwhile, private businesses, including Starbucks and Fred Meyer, include e-cigarettes in broader smoking bans. We don't know if e-cigarettes will prove as dangerous as tobacco, but until we do, we should err on the side of safety. It simply does not make sense to allow children, in particular, to purchase a drugdelivery product, particularly one the safety of which has yet to be proved.

river froze from bottom to top and flooded neighborhoods all alongthe river. Uncontrolled siltation raises Between the Republicans hold- the bottom of the river and more ing the government hostage to the flood waters could be pushed into repeal of funding for the health adjoining neighborhoods. Lawsuits care law and their attempt to imcould be expected because somepose work requirements on food one failed to properly maintain the stamp recipients, I a m o f f icially pond. Removing the silt seems to be infuriated. This was the essence the best all-around option. of my conversation this morning One aspect of the siltation issue with a friend as we walked up Pilot I don't understand is this: If Pacific Butte. Power built the dam that resulted in I spent 30-plus years working in the buildup of silt, why is the comsocial services, primarily with anti- pany not totally responsible for its poverty programs, and I can tell you removal'? The cost of silt removal that no one wants or chooses to be is directly related to the income poor. There are too many reasons benefit from producing electricity. to elaborate why poverty exists in Pacific Power could write off the this letter. Yet, to place it at the in- expense over time and trickle those dividual level is to lack the aptitude costs on to ratepayers over the to fully comprehend the cause and years and we'd hardly know it. As effects of poverty on a thriving so- a Pacific Power patron, I'm already cietyand the consequences on the paying for dam removals in other individual and future generations. places, so why not add the expense My resolve and anger were rein- of silt removal to the list? That way, forced on my drive home as I wit- all Pacific Power customers would nessed the police helping a home- share in maintaining Mirror Pond less man who had urinated on him- and we'd hardly feel the pinch. self and could barely walk into their Rich Fleming patrol car. I hope they were taking Bend him to the employment office to get a job so he could continue to eat. Bulletin wrong on Horner My hope is that U.S. Rep. Greg Walden or his staff reads this letter I am writing in response to Mark and stops playing political football Morical's article about Bend-based with the poor in this country. He is pro cyclist Chris Horner and his the only member of the Oregon del- s pectacular Vuelta victory. In i t , egation that backs the Nutrition Re- Morical says The Bulletin could not form and Work Opportunity Act. conduct an interview with him beHolly Hutton cause Horner asked that there be no Bend questions regarding doping. I think The Bulletin is wrong in this matMirror Pond silt ter. First of all, Horner has gone on the recordelsewhere saying that he must be removed never doped. Why does The BulleI believe there are no choices re- tin need to ask this question again? garding the future of Mirror Pond; How would it tell more of this story'? the silt must be removed. Here's Second, the cycling community why: 1.) Whether the dam is re- and sports fans here in Central Ormoved or not, the silt cannot be egon are interested in what Horner flushed downriver; 2.) Letting the has to say, even without questions silt accumulate until "equilibrium" about doping. Why couldn't Moriis achieved in th e p ond simply cal have asked him to tell the demeans you'll be flushing all future tailed story of his Vuelta victory? silt down the river. You could ex- How did the 41-year-old win? Did pect lawsuits from the irrigation the short racing schedule this seaand environmental interests. son help? What was he thinking I remember when the Canadian when he dropped his rivals on the Express rolled into Bend and the steep climbs or when he was losing

time in the individual time trial'? I think we could have learned much more about the win, whether it was fueled by cheating or not, if we had heard directly from the racer. In the end, we don't really know whether Horner doped and cheated. But would another question and denial further our understanding? I don't think it would. Much better would have been a detailedbackand-forth with th e athlete about the race and his career, without questions about cheating. I, and I suspect many local cyclists, athletes and sports fans, would have welcomed the opportunity to read Horner's story and then judge for ourselves.

Ethan Singer Bend

Sane Syria policy WOW! What a revelation. After all this time, we find out Obama isn't the messiah; he's just a human being. If all you folks out there who are now criticizing Barack Obama for changing his mind about bombing Syria wanted a hawk, you should have voted for John McCain or Mitt Romney. Yes, Obama has made the horrible mistake of exposing his human frailty by not beginning a war with Syria and accepting a trade-off with Russia to avert that war. I think, at t hi s p oint, Obama would have been damned if he bombed Syria and now he's being damned becausehe didn't.You can't have it both ways, folks. Be glad Obama had thecourage to accept the Russians' offer; no matter, it's a bitter pill. It's a hell of a lot better than starting another war that would be as endless and fruitless as all the others in the Middle East. Begrateful we have a president who doesn't believe it's a crime to change your mind if a better alternative comes along. It's called

diplomacy. And, by the way, this decision just may have saved the life of someone you love. Like maybe your son or daughter.

Diana Hopson Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters

In My View submissions should

should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include

be between 550 and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone

Please address your submission to

personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those

either My Nickel's Worth or ln My View and send, fax or email them to number and address for verification. The Bulletin. We edit submissions for brevity, Write: My Nickel's Worth/In My View grammar, taste and legal reasons. P.O. Box 6020 We reject those published elsewhere. Bend, OR 97708 In My View pieces run routinely in Fax: 541-385-5804 the space below, alternating with

appropriate for other sections of The

national columnists. Writers are

the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste

and legal reasons. Wereject poetry,

Bulletin. Writers are limited to one

limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece

letter or Op-Edpieceevery 30 days.

every 30 days.

Email: bulletin©bendbulletin.com

Now is not the time for U.S. to ignore Latin America By Andres Oppenheimer

may just as well change his title to U.S. Secretary of the Middle East, because residentBarack Obama's state- that's where he's virtually living these of-the-world speech before days. Kerry's first seven foreign trips the U.N. General A ssembly after taking office on Feb. I were to last week did not mention any Latin Europe and the Middle East, and only American country, an d v i r t ually two of his 14 trips abroad so far have omitted the region as a whole. It was been to Latin America, according to a major mistake, but it shouldn't sur- the U.S. State Department's website. prise us. (Cautionary note: if by some miraDespite its flip-flops and occasional cle Kerry pulls off a lasting Israeli-Palblunders, Obama's foreign policy has estinian accord, I'll eat my words and been a great improvement over for- pray that nobody remembers these mer President George W. Bush's ar- lines.) rogant diplomacy, but it won't win any Obama's speech at the U.N. Genprize for its interest or commitment to eral Assembly was entirely devoted Latin America. to the Middle East and North Africa. U.S. Secretaryof State John Kerry He only mentioned Latin America The Miami Herald

p

tangentially when he said that "from Africato the Americas" democracies have proven to be more successful than dictatorships, and that "the same will hold true for the Arab world." By contrast, several of Obama's predecessorsoften referred to theirgrand plans for the region during their U.N. speeches. But Obama, unlike former Presidents George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, has not proposed regional trade or investment plans with Latin America. The Obama administration has launched negotiations for a Trans-Pacific Partnership with mostly Asian countries, and a Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership with Eu-

ropean countries, but no Trans-American Partnership with Latin America. Mexico asked Obama to be part of the Trans-Atlantic trade deal, but the U.S. answer has been somewhere between "no" and "later." Obama's most ambitious regional initiative has been the 100,000 Strong in theAmericas program to increase college student exchanges to and from Latin America. It's a great program, but it would be better if it were part of a bigger Trans-American economic agreement. Granted, Obama has made six trips to the region, and he recently asked a key figure — Vice President Joe Biden — to be his point man for U.S.-Latin

American relations. While U.S. officials continue to say publiclythat Latin America is the land of the future, many show a growing case of "Latin American fatigue." My opinion: Now is not the time for the U.S. to ignore Latin America. On the contrary, the decade of commodity-based authoritarian populism will soon come to an end — populism only works when there's money to give away — and a new generation of more responsible Latin American leaders are preparingthemselves to be voted into office. — Andres Oppenheimeris a Latin Americacorrespondent forThe Miami Herald.


TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

NORTHWEST NEWS

Tornado touchesdown near Seattle By Doug Esser andMike Baker

DEATH N O T I CE S Betty "Carolyn" Stemm, of Burns Aug. 29, 1946 - Sept. 21, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned at this time.

Mamie King, of Bend Nov. 27, 1912 - Sept. 26, 20 I3 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: Family is planning a memorial at a later date.

Marjorie Lynn Welker Williams, of Bend Nov. 4, 1925 - Sept. 21, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A public viewing and visitation with the family will take place at Heritage Memory Mortuary in Prescott, Arizona, on Saturday, October 5, from 9:30 to 10:30 AM with a graveside service to follow at 11:00 at Mt. View Cemetery. Contributions may be made tcc

St. Bonaventure Indian Mission and School 25 Navarre Blvd. West PO Box 610 Thoreau, New Mexico 87323. ViCtOr nVion V.

Bokums, of Bend Aug. 5, 1925 - Sept. 24, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will take place on Sunday, October 13, 2013, at noon at Latvian Lutheran Church located at 5500 SW Dosch Road in Portland. Contributions may be made tcc

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

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific g Uidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Oscar Castro-Neves, 73: A Brazil-born guitarist who helped to create the cool, sensuous rhythms of bossa nova and orchestratedmusic for movies like "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels." Died Friday in Los Angeles. Marcella Hazan,89:Astraighttalking cookbook author and teacher who made her life's work to preserve and innovate recipes that reflected the best of regional cooking in Italy. Died Sunday in Longboat Key, Fla. — From wire reports

F E ATURED OBITUARY

A.C. Lyles went from mail boy to producer

The Associated Press

SEATTLE — A r are tornado d amaged i n dustrial buildings south o f S eattle as an early w i nter storm dumped record amounts of rain and knocked out power for thousands in the Pacific Northwest. The tornado at 7:20 a.m. Monday hit t h e i n dustrial area of Frederickson, tearing a hole in the roof of the Northwest D o o r fa c t ory, blowing out car windows at a nearby Boeing factory, and

damaging a building where By John Rogers The Associated Press

L OS ANGELES — A . C . Lyles, who rose from mail boy to producer at Paramount Pictures and became the studio's longestserving employee during a tenure that lasted more than three-quarters of a century, has died at age 95. Lyles, whose most recent title Lyles with Paramount was ambassador of goodwill, died Friday at his Los Angeles home, longtime family f riend Ben W h eeler told The AssociatedPress on Monday. He was just 18 when the lifelong movie fan arrived in Hollywood from his native Florida, going to work in Paramount's mailroom in 1937. There, as the person who delivered their fan letters, the outgoing Lyles became friendly with most of the major stars of the era, including Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lamour and William Holden. "He was extremely close with Jimmy Cagney and Ronald Reagan,"Wheeler recalled Monday. His celebrity contacts would become invaluable when Lyles startedproducing such Westerns as "The Young and the Brave," "Stage to T h under Rock," "Apache Uprising" and "Johnny Reno" in the 1960s. He persuaded friends such as Joel McCrea, Randolph Scott, Jane Russell, Pat O'Brien and Dana Andrews to appear in his films, even talking Cagney into directing one of them, the gangster movie, "Short Cut to Hell." It marked Cagney's only directing effort, and Lyles remarked years later, "I don't think he liked telling actors what to do." Studio executives had recognized Lyles' breezy manner years earlier and promoted him to the publicity department. Soon he was named publicity chief for Pine-Thomas, Paramount's B-picture arm. The studio was named for Bill Pine and Bill Thomas, dubbed the "Dollar Bills" for their skill at making movies on the skimpiest of budgets. After Pine-Thomas folded in the 1950s, Lyles convinced Paramount's bosses he could produce salable films with wellknown if slightly faded stars on budgets the Dollar Bills had taught him how to squeeze. Other production credits included "Law of the Lawless," "Young Fury," "Red Tomahawk," "Arizona Bushwhackers," "Fort Utah" and "Hostile Guns." Hewas also credited as associate producer on nine episodes of the hitTV series"Rawhide." His last producer credit was for the 2005-2006 HBO Western series "Deadwood." As Paramount's ambassador

of goodwill, Lyles appeared regularly in his later years at film festivals, colleges and nostalgia conventions to talk about the studio's legacy and its currentproduct.He also welcomed visiting notables to the studio a nd conducted tours of t h e Paramount lot, which he knew intimately. He worked well into his 90s, operating out of a suite once occupied by Fred Astaire and bedecked withscores of photographs of the many stars Lyles had been friends with. It was only in the past year, Wheeler said, that he stopped going to the office regularly. Throughout his life, Lyles went just by the initials A.C., explaining that was the name his father had used as well. It was an old Southern tradition, he said, to just use initials rather than a full name. The full name, Wheeler said Monday, was Andrew Craddock Lyles. Lyles was married to Martha French in 1955, in a ceremony attended by Reagan and Cagney, among others. She survives him.

sections of a downtown Seattle tunnel project were being assembled. A team from the Weather Service office in Seattle went to the scene and confirmed the tornado f ro m e y ewitness accounts, meteorologist Johnny Burg said. There were no injuries. The damage, including a

jagged 40-by-40-foot hole in the r oo f a t N o r t hwest D oor, stopped work at t h e factory that makes garage doors. About 100 workers evacuated. "It looked from the inside like a wave going along. You could actually see the roof f lexing," N o r thwest D o o r President Jeff Hohman said. Work at the Boeing plant resumed while repairs were

tions well off shore that were very reminiscent of late fallearly winter," said Dana Felton, meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Seattle. With Monday's precipitation still to be added, it's been the wettest September on record in Olympia and the second-wettest in Seattle. Nearly eight inches fell in Olympia, topping a 1978 record and swamping the usual 1.7 inches that fall in that Ted S Warren/The Associated Press time, the National Weather Trees were uprooted and fell when a tornado hit Monday in the Service said. Frederickson neighborhood near Puyallup, Wash. Several dozen Sea-Tac Airport's Septemhomes were damaged in the storm. ber total of 5.6 inches came second to a 1 9 7 8 r ecord, while downtown P o rtland u nderway. There w a s n o welding rebar cages for use saw 6.2 inches — the most damage to parts or equipin the tunnel project under since record-keeping began ment, B oeing s p okesman downtown Seattle. in 1872. Doug Alder said. Project manager KasanPuget Sound Energy had The tornado blew out the dra Paholsky said the dam- about 12,000 customers out of windows of about two dozen age forced work to halt but service late Sunday, the Belcars in the Boeing parking ultimately w i l l n o t a f f e ct levue-based utility reported. lot. the schedule for digging the Seattle City Light reported Several thousand employ- Highway 99 tunnel. it had about 3,200 customers ees work at the Frederickson Washington may get a tor- out of service overnight. site, which makes parts and nado or two every year, but Portland General Electric sections for just about every they are usually small. One had more than 90,000 cusBoeing airplane, including of the largest was an F3 in tomers out of power since the the vertical tails for the 777 1972 in Vancouver that killed storm began. and 787. six people. T he storm b r ought t h e The tornado also ripped Parts of t h e N o r t hwest first significant snow of the off one-third of the roof and g ot more rain in a day or season to t h e m o u ntains. destroyed a m e tal g a rage two over the weekend than Forecasters expected 6 to 12 door at a tent-like structure typically falls in the entire inches by Tuesday morning i n Frederickson w h ere a month. in the Olympics and 10 to 20 "We basically had condi- inches in the Cascades. c ompany called EnCon i s

WEST NEWS

California getting moreof its crudeoil by rail By Ralph Vartabedian Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Oil extracted from m assive new fields in North Dakota and other states is rolling into California in growing quantities aboard long-haul freight trains, paralleling a surge in crude moving on rail across North America. More than 200,000 barrels of crude per month were imported into California this summer, a fourfold increase from early 2012, according to data compiled by the California Energy Commission. Though the total amount is still small, it marks a littlenoticed departure from the state's reliance on its own declining oil patches, the Alaskan North Slope and foreign nations, led by Saudi Arabia. But the use of rail to move oil amid rapidly expanding U.S. production is coming un-

der growing regulatory scrutiny after the horrific explosion of an oil train in Canada's Lac-Megantic, Quebec, killed at least 42 residents in July. A n unattended train w i t h 72 tank cars hauling crude from North Dakota's Bakken Shale fields rolled downhill into the city and ignited an inferno that destroyed half of downtown. Canadian investigators and U.S. oil experts have identified a number of grievous safety lapses tied to the accident. In its aftermath, the Federal Railroad Administration issued an emergency order that requires new safety proce-

Licenses

in the w orld," said Valero spokesman Bill Day. "California is at a disadvantage because it doesn't have pipelines that can bring in crude from North Dakota or Texas." — Eric Smith, associate director It is widely expected that a of the Tulane University Energy Institute large new rail terminal somewhere in the Central Valley dures for hauling crude. And in recent years, moving oil on will be built to tie into Califorthe Pipeline and Hazardous tank cars is still only about nia's pipeline network, which Materials Safety Administra- half as safe as in pipelines, mainly serves the state's own tion said it may demand more according to Eric Smith, as- crude oil industry, according puncture-resistant tank cars. sociate director of the Tulane to Philip Verleger, an oil inHauling crude into CaliforUniversity Energy Institute. dustry consultant. "You can make the argunia involves traversing some The import o f s h ale oil of the most challengingmoun- ment that the pipeline fights from North Dakota, Colorado tain passes in the nation. And have forced the industry to and other states is something though runaway freight trains revert to rail that is less safe," of a teaser for the California are rare events, they have the Smith said. oil industry, which is focused potential to cause big damage. The shift to rail is not en- on its massive resource, the A 31-car train rolled downhill tirely the result of the inability Monterey Shale. The vast forfor about 30 miles in 2003, to build pipelines, however. mation under the Central Valcrashing in Commerce with a Refiners increasingly like the ley contains an estimated 15 load of lumber that damaged flexibility o f b u y ing c r ude billion barrels of oil, three to property and injured a dozen even when there isn't a pipe- four times larger than North people. If it had been highly line to carry it. Dakota's Bakken field. volatile Bakken crude, which Tesoro and Valero Energy, T hough C a l ifornia s t i l l can burn like gasoline, the both based in Texas, say they ranks as the third-largest oil damage would have been far plan to start or increase their producing state, its output is greater. use of crude brought in by rail only half as much as it was The rise in rail shipments at their California refineries. two decades ago. in part reflects successful op- Valero is seeking a permit to Exploiting the deposits by position to new pipelines to build a new rail terminal at its hydraulic fracturing, known accommodate U.S. oil proBay Area refinery. as fracking, would face sharp duction, which has jumped Some North Dakota crude opposition by environmental 41 percent since 2006. Envi- is also being shipped aboard groups, and recently enacted ronmentalists have f o ught barges down the West Coast state legislation on the practhe construction of new pipe- to California, after arriving tice could throw a chill on its lines, such as the Keystone on rail i n S eattle. Phillips development when new reguXL that would link Canadian 66, which owns refineries in lations are implemented in and North Dakota production Northern and Southern Cali- two years. "We have the opportunity fields to refineries in Texas. fornia, said it had received R ailroads, meanwhile, ar e barged shipments of Bakken to develop oil domestically carrying25 times more crude crude. and we should avail ourselves "Right now, North Ameri- of it," said Western States Pethan they were five years ago. T hough r a i l roads h a v e can crudesare the lowest cost troleum A ssn. s p okesman sharply improved their safety and highest quality anywhere Tupper Hull.

"You can make the argument that the pipeline fights have forced the industry to revert to rail that is less safe."

emphasized in an interview Monday that officials have not m ad e a n y d e c i sions about the l i censes. Eagan said she and the Bend Economic Development Advisory Board want input from businesses, as they discuss how to get more businesses to comply with the license requirement. Bend has the legal authority to cite businesses that do not purchase licenses, but the city has never done so. At a recent meeting, members of the economic development advisory committee

needs to enforce the license requirement. The city recentContinued from B1 ly hired a contractor to enThe city charges $50 ansure that owners of vacation nually for a business license. rental homes pay the city Officials set that amount artourism tax. If the contracbitrarily when they enacted tor succeeds in enforcing the the license program in 2006, tourism tax, officials should according to a recent memoconsider doing s omething randum from Eagan. similar with the business liEagan is researching the censes, Chudowsky said. "It's a city ordinance, it was actual cost to issue new licenses and renew them, and meant to apply to everyone so far she has found it takes fairly," Chudowsky said of longer for city employees to the business license requireenter new businesses in the ment. "If we're going to have city license system. an ordinance on the books, "Once the costs of processwe have to enforce it." ing each license is known, I said charging a higher fee Chudowsky said the city recommend that we add the for new b u siness licenses is a friendlier place for busicost of processing each lib ecause it c o sts m ore t o nesses, thanks to the Bend cense to the initial business enter them into the system Economic Development Adlicense," Eagan wrote in the and then offering a lower re- visory Board and the busimemorandum. "Based on my newal fee might make sense. ness advocate job that ofinitial calculations, we would If businesses were slow to ficials created several years add $15 to each new license, renew, the city could make ago. "It's become a r eally making a new license $65." them start the process again good pro-business voice inThe city should also create and pay the higher initial side city government," Chuan incentive for businesses to fee, c o mmittee m e mbers dowsky said of the program. renew their licenses quickly, suggested. Eagan also earned a fan because the city wastes time City Councilor Victor Chu- during her recent work with sending s e cond r e n ewal dowsky saidthe license fees local music f estival o r ganotices to businesses, Ea- pay for valuable services to nizers. Bend Roots Revival gan wrote. However, Eagan local businesses, and the city founder Mark Ransom said

Eagan was one of the few people who thought his plan to move the festival to the cluttered home improvement resale yard at Pakit Liquidators in southeast Bend would work. "There were so many different people, people close to me like family members and close friends, people who have known me for a really long time, and they really thought I was crazy," Ransom said. "They could not see the vision at all, and so a lot of them kind of jumped

ship."

Eagan did a good job conveying the vision for Bend Roots Revival to other city employees who would review the festival site and plans, and Eagan also clearly laid out what organizers needed to accomplish in order for the city to permit the event, Ransom said. "She saw what I was talki ng about, through all t h e clutter, before I even started," Ransom said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com



IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 NF L , C3 Sports in brief, C2 M otor sports, C4 MLB, C3

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

MLB

PREP SPORTS COMMENTARY

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Cubs fire Sveum as manager CHICAGO — Theo Epstein is proud of the talent in the Chicago

Cubs' minorleague

system. The president

of baseball operations thinks Dale Sveum is

going to be a successful manager one day. He just doesn't think

Pl@NA

556

tlf

Sveumis

508

522

the right

188

5r3 26

guy to help all those prospects become successful major leaguers. The Cubs fired

Sveum onMonday after finishing last in the NL Central for the first time

in seven years, ending a two-year run that produced morelossesthan

6.

By Kevin Hampton Corvaiiis Gazette-Times

any other stretch in the

team's cursed history.

"It's absolutely imperative that we create the best environment

possible for young players to come up here, continue to learn,

f' r

r

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file

Some of the top teams in the Northwest are set to compete in the Oxford Classic cross-country race at Drake Park in Bend on Friday.

continue to develop and thrive at the big

league level and win, ultimately," Epstein said during an afternoon

news conference. "And that's not an easy thing to do. "A big part of the

reason why we're here todayis because we took a good hard look at that and we decided that we needed to try to get it right before they

come up." Sveum was among Epstein's first hires after the executive came over from the Boston Red Sox in 2011.

Sveum, who had one year left on his contract, said he thought he was fine before Epstein said during Chica-

go's trip to Milwaukee in mid-September that

the manager was being evaluated. "That was about when things got started,n Sveum said. — The Associated Press

• Bend High hosts the 23rd running of theevent at DrakeParkon Friday isa Nye grew up running at Drake Park. The feeling of being in the middle of the city as she cut across the rolling green terrain or as she trod over the footbridge crossing the Deschutes River — what wasn't to love? She frequented the park in downtown Bend through her high school crosscountry career at Mountain View in the mid-1980s and continues to do so today as the cross-country coach at Bend

L

High.

GRANT LUCAS There is something special and unique about Drake Park, Nye says, something that cannot be matched by other crosscountry venues around the state. And that, among other things, makes Friday's Oxford Classic one of the premier high school meets in Oregon. Eight Central Oregon programs, as well as 25other schools from around Oregon and from California and Idaho, will flock to Drake Park, where the annual Oxford Classic — formerly known

Rays advance, hold off Rangers Tampa Baymakesthe playoffs after beating Texas in a wild-card tiebreaker,C3

New rules,newroles, andcan'Hawks repeat. The Associated Press

CYCLING

Enjoy the Stanley Cupbanner raising ceremony for

Horner leaves race due to crash

as long as possible, Chicago.

— Bend's Chris Horner reportedly crashed and did not finish the 169-

mile road race at the cycling world champi-

onships Sunday. Horner"suffered

over the years as the Puma Classic/Bend High Cross Country Classic/Lava Bear Classic — has been staged 23 times dating back to 1987. (In 2000 and 2001 the meet was held at Widgi Creek Golf Club, and the event did not take place in 2002.) The Oxford Classic, hosted by Bend High, will boast some of the top crosscountry programs in the state, such as Class 6A South Eugene, 4A Klamath Union of Klamath Falls, and 3A/2A/IA Valley Catholic of Beaverton. It welcomes four schools from Idaho, including Boise's Bishop Kelly High, whose boys and girls teams finished third and sixth, respectively, in the Idaho 4A state championships last season. SeeOxford/C4

NHL' 2013-14 PREVIEW

By John Wawrow

FLORENCE, Italy

eavers ona ro as e wee arrives

Once the puck drops to usher in the new National Hockey League season in Chicago, Montreal and Edmonton tonight, recent history suggests that someone other than the Blackhawks will be hoisting the Cup in June. The 1997-98 Detroit

Red Wings stand as the league's last franchise to repeat as champions. "You've got players moving all the time now. The competition level is good or better than ever before," TV analyst and former coach Pierre McGuire said. "And the ultimate thing is we haven't had NHL expansion in almost 12 or 14 years now. "And because of that, the talent bucket is full."

Despite that, McGuire thinks Chicago has a reasonable chance to repeat fresh off a lockout-shortened season. "I believe we can start to use the 'D' word with Chi-

cago's dynasty," he said of a

franchise that has won two of the past four titles. Former-player-turnedbroadcaster Eddie Olczyk, however, noted several ob-

stacles facing Chicago.

Namely? The Olympics. Chicago could have as many as 14 players competing at the Winter Games in Sochi, Russia. "When you throw in the Olympic break," Olczyk said, "it's going to be very taxing." One step at a time, said Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews, whose team opens against Washington. SeeNHL/C4

CORVALLIS — You cannot beat the timing of Oregon State's bye week. The Beavers are coming off a 44-17 win over Colorado and, for the first time this season, put together a pretty strong game on both sides of the ball. It is a big lift for the team, which now has two weeks of practice before taking on Washington State in Pullman. "It is great," OSU coach Mike Riley said of going into the bye week after a win. "You have to think about all the scenarios. Everybody always wants you to think about winning, but I also have to be prepared for what if we don't and I can tell you this, it's a long two weeks if you've lost a game. So it's much nicer to come in after a win." The Oregon State defense came together for its best performance of the season, holding the Buffaloes to a total of 124 yards and three points through the first three quarters. The Beavers sacked Colorado quarterback Connor Wood once but kept him under constantpressure and forced two interceptions. OSU also recovered two Buffalo fumbles. "I think it's a good confidence thing for that group in particular," Riley said. "I think there's no doubt about it, they know it and everybody knows it, that we've gotten a lot better since that first game. That is, in itself, a very good thing for us. I'm anticipating them wanting to continue to grow because I think they feel it a little bit. I think we're better on the line, we're better on assignments, we're better in coverage. They're gaining some confidence, which will be important in getting better." See Beavers /C4

Nextup

J

Oregon St. at Washington St.

• When: Saturday, Oct12, 7:30 p.m.

• Tv:ESPN2 or ESPNU

some pain to his ribs,"

according to his team's website, radioshack-

NBA

leopardtrek.com. Rain throughout

most of the race made the difficult and techni-

cal course evenmore so, with many crashes taking out riders during the 7f/~-hour event, ac-

cording to the website. The 41-year-old

Horner — who won the Spanish Vuelta last month — was one of

four grand tour champions to abandon the race. Australian Cadel Evans and Britain's

Bradley Wiggins and Chris Froome were

among other riders who crashed out. Rui Costa of Portugal

ended up winning the race, edging Joaquin Rodriguez of Spain in a two-man sprint finish.

Costa's winning time was 7 hours, 25 min-

utes, 44 seconds. — From staff wire reports

Portland Trail Blazers guard Wesley Matthews signs one of approximately 350 basketballs during the Trail Blazers media day in Portland on Monday.

Revamped roster hasBlazers looking forward to new season By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

PORTLAND — At the end of last season, Portland Trail Blazers guard Wesley Matthews had one word to describe how he felt: Empty. And now? Matthews thought about it for several moments. "Optimistic," he replied. The Blazers held their annual media day on Monday, a day before the team opens training camp with a revamped roster that includes some much-needed depth and a real center in Robin Lopez. "We've goteverything. We've got every piece we need," Matthews said. "Now we just have to put it all together." The Blazers concluded last season with a 13game slide to finish 33-49 and out of the playoffs for the second straight season. Portland was still in the playoff picture after the All-Star

2013-14Blazers KEY DATES Today —Preseason camp opens Oct.7— Preseason openervs.L.A.Clippers at Moda Center

Oct.30— RegularseasonopeneratPhoenix Nov. 2 —Regular season homeopener vs. San Antonio at Moda Center

break, but then injuries struck down the stretch and the Blazers simply had too little depth to overcome them. This season, thanks to several notable offseason moves, the Blazers have more to work with. SeeBlazers/C4

h

f

Don Ryan/The Associated Press


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY Time

SOCCER

COREBOARD

TV/ Radio

UEFAChampions League, Celtic FC vs. FC Barcelona

11:30 a.m. Fox Sports1

ON DECK

UEFAChampions League, AFC Ajax vs. AC Milan

11:30 a.m.

UEFAChampions League, Steaua Bucuresti vs. Chelsea FC (tapedj

4 p.m. Fox Sports1

BASEBALL MLB, wild-card playoff, Cincinnati at Pittsburgh HOCKEY NHL, Washington at Chicago

Root

5 p.m. 5 p.m.

TBS NBCSN

WEDNESDAY SOCCER

Time

UEFAChampions League, Juventus FCvs.GalatasaryAS

11:30 a.m.

HOCKEY NHL, Buffalo at Detroit BASEBALL MLB, wild-card playoff,

5 p.m.

TampaBay atCleveland

5 p.m.

VOLLEYBALL Women's college, Stanford at UCLA

7:30 p.m.

TV/ Radio Root NBCSN

TBS Pac-12

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF GOLF CSU-MontereyBayuPdig in Sunriver —Brandon Hortt of California State University-

Monterey Bayshot asecondround 4-under-par 68 at Sunriver Resort's Crosswater Club to take the clubhouse lead at the Golfweek Division l)Men's Fall Invitational. Hortt finished the first two

Channing Frye is back with the

Phoenix Suns. Suns officials say they decided over the weekend that Frye should re-join the

team after he wasunanimously cleared by several doctors, including some from Johns Hopkins and Columbia universities.

Frye has beeninactive for a year while treating an enlarged heart

apparently caused by avirus. As

rounds, both playedMonday, at even par, oneshot ahead of teammate DylanJackson. Jackson andHortt helped CSU-

he put it, his "heart had a cold for a year and now it's better."

MontereyBay to acommanding

BXt8llSIOll —Vivek Ranadive has made a fortune in the soft-

26-stroke leadover secondplace Dallas Baptist heading into today's final round at Crosswater.

KingS SignCOuSinSto

right people. The new owner of

lineman eXPeCted to return to SeahaWkS — Defensive lineman Michael Bennett

is expected to beable to practice this week for the Seattle Seahawks after being carted off the

field on a stretcher in Houston. Coach Pete Carroll said Monday

that Bennett has somesoreness in his back, but wasfeeling better

ins. The Kings signed Cousins to

a four-year maximum contract extension worth a reported $62 million Monday, saying the 23year-old center is the foundation the franchise will build on to lead a struggling team into a

new era. Sacramento hasn't had a winning season since 2006, butthe new Kings management is comfortable investing in a

player considered one of the

and should be cleared to practice

NBA'sbestyoung big men but who also has drawn multiple

team hopes he will be able to

and the league for his behavior.

play on Sunday at Indianapolis. Carroll also said that right tackle

Ex-NBA player convicted

on Wednesday.Carroll said Bennett was "really scared" but the

suspensions from both the team

Breno Giacomini had minor knee

Of fraud —Aformer NBA

surgery on Mondaymorning. Carroll said doctors believe

tournament buzzer-beater for

Giacomini can return quickly from the surgery, which was to

cleanupsome "loosebodies"in his knee. Carroll is still uncertain

whether center MaxUnger(triceps) will be able to gothis week. Unger missed Sunday's game.

player best known for his1990 the University of Connecticut

was convicted Monday of four counts of federal wire fraud in a Ponzi scheme that netted him $2 million. Authorities said Tate

George carried out a profitable scheme that lined his pockets from 2005 to early 2011, even

locker released from

though his purported real es-

hOSPital —A person familiar

tate development firm — The George Group — had virtually

with the situation says Titans

quarterback JakeLocker has

no income-generating opera-

been released after spending the night in a hospital after injuring

tion.

HOCKEY NIL players approveicing

tion of anonymity because the Titans have not updated the

I'UIB —Hybrid icing will be in effect for the start of the NHL

quarterback's status or condi-

regular seasonafter it was ap-

tion since shortly after the game

proved by the players. The NHLPA gave the go-ahead for the

ended. TheTennessean reported Monday that Locker will miss at least a month and will not need

surgery.

Chargers-Raiders game mOVed to night —This

rule change that makesicing a race to an imaginary line across the faceoff dots instead of the

puck, which was given atrial run during the preseason. Thegoal is to prevent serious injuries, such as the onethat sidelined Carolina Hurricanes defenseman

weekend's gamebetween the San Diego Chargers andOakland Raiders has beenmoved to a night game because of the

Joni Pitkanen for the entire sea-

baseball playoffs. The Raiders said Monday that kickoff

bone in eight places on an icing touch-up in April.

son. Pitkanen broke his left heel

for Sunday's gamewill be at 8:35 p.m. PDT instead of the originally scheduled1:25 p.m.

game time. The reason for the switch is the Oakland Athletics are playing Game 2 of their divi-

TeXaS AD toretire — Long-

sion series on Saturday night

DeLoss Doddswill step down

and it takes too long to convert the Coliseum from baseball to

in August 2014 and move into

football to playan afternoon game. The Raiders are the only NFL team that still plays in a sta-

time Texas athletic director

a consulting role at the nation's wealthiest college athletic program, a person with knowledge of the decision told The Associat-

diumsharedbyaMajorLeague

ed Press onMonday. Theschool

Baseball team. The game will be televised by NFL Network instead of CBS.

is expected to make a formal an-

nouncement today,according to the person whospoke oncondi-

tions of anonymity because they did not want to pre-empt a state-

BASKETBALL Frye returnS toSunS

— Almost exactly a yearafter a routine physical uncovered a heart condition that threatened

his career, and maybeworse,

NFL

ment from university officials. Dodds could not immediately be

reached for comment. Dodds vigorously denied areport earlier

this month that he was stepping down on Dec. 31. — From wire reports

VVNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION Playoffs All Times PDT

STRcKEl..., St@KE.-

STRoKE THE 04Rg jI

FINALS

(Best-of-5)

Sunday,Oct.6: Atlantaat Minnesota, 5:30p.m. Tuesday,Oct.8:Atlanta atMinnesota, 5p.m. Thursday,Oct. 10: MinnesotaatAtlanta, 5:30p.m. x-Sunday,Oct.13: MinnesotaatAtlanta, 5p.m. x-Wenesday,Oct. 16:Atlanta atMinnesota, 5p.m.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT

Today'sGames Toronto at Montreal, 4p.m. WashingtonatChicago,5p.m. WinnipegatEdmonton,7p.m.

Wednesday'sGames

Friday's Games

NATIONALFOOTBALLLEAGU AIITimes PDT

FAR WEST BYU atUtahSt.,5p.m.

AMERIC AN CONFER ENCE East L T P c t PF PA NewEngland 0 0 1 .00089 57 Miami W 2 I 0 . 7 5091 91 3 4 N.Y.Jets 2 0 . 5 00 68 88 Buffalo 2 0 . 50088 93 South L T P c t PF PA Indianapolis 1 0 . 7 50105 51 Tennessee W 0 1 0 . 7 50 98 69 2 3 Houston 2 0 . 5 0090 105 4 0 . 0 0031 129 Jacksonville North L T P c f PF PA Baltimore 2 0 . 5 0091 87 Cleveland W 0 2 0 . 5 00 64 70 2 Cincinnati 2 0 5 0 0 81 81 Pittsburgh 4 0 . 0 0069 110 West L T P c t PF PA Denver 0 0 1 .000179 91 KansasCity W 1 0 0 1 .000102 41 2 4 San Diego 2 0 . 5 00108 102 Oakland 3 0 2 5 0 71 91 NATIONA LCONFERE NCE East L T P c t PF PA Dallas W 21 2 0 . 5 00104 85 Philadelphia 3 0 . 2 5099 138 Washington 1 3 0 . 2 50 91 112 0 4 0 0 0 0 61 146 N.Y.Giants South L T P c t PF PA NewOrleans W 11 0 0 1.000108 55 4 Carolina 2 0 . 3 33 68 36 Atlanta 3 0 . 2 5094 104 TampaBay 0 4 0 . 0 00 44 70 North L T P c f PF PA Detroit 1 0 . 7 50122 101 Chicago W 11 1 0 . 7 50127 114 3 GreenBay 2 0 . 3 3396 88 Minnesota 3 0 . 2 50115 123 West L T P c t PF PA Seattle 0 0 1 .000109 47 SanFrancisco W 1 2 0 . 5 0079 95 2 4 Arizona 2 0 . 50069 89 St. Louis 3 0 . 2 5069 121

Monday's Game

Thursday's Game Buffalo atCleveland,5:25 p.m.

Sunday'sGames

Detroit atGreenBay,10 am. NewOrleansatChicago, 10a.m.

Kansas CityatTennessee,10a.m. Jacksonville atSt Louis,10a.m NewEnglandatClncinnati, 10 a.m. Seattleatlndianapolis, 10a.m. Baltimore at Miami,10a.m. Philadelphiaat N.Y.Giants,10 a.m. CarolinaatArizona, I:05p.m. Denver at Dallas,1:25 p.m. Housto natSanFrancisco,5:30p.m. San Diego atOakland, 8:35p.m. Open:Minnesota,Pittsburgh,TampaBay, Washington Monday,Oct. 7 N.Y.JetsatAtanta, 5:40p.m.

Monday's Summary

Saints 38, Dolphins17 Miami New Orleans

3 7 0 7 — 17 7 1414 3 — 3 8

First Quarter NO — Sproles5 run(Hartley kick), 11:52. Mia — FGSturgis 34 7:16.

SecondOuarter NO — Graham 27pass fromBrees(Hartley kick), 8:01. Mia — Miler 5 run(Sturgis kick), 3.35.

COLLEGE ATHLETICS

BASKETBALL

Friday Football: Bendat Summit, 7 p.m.; CrookCounty at Redmond, 7 p.m., Pendletonat Mountain View,7 p.ms Ridgeviewat TheDales Wahtonka, 7 p.m.; Sisters at Junction City,7 p.m.; LaPineat Cotage Grove,7 p m.;Regis atCulver 7pm.;CamasValley at Gilchrist, 4p.m. Boys soccer: l.ong CreeklUkiah at Central Christian, 4 p.m. Volleyball: Camas Valey atGilchrist, 6 p.m. Cross-country: Bend, Mountain View, Summit, New Orleans:Brees30-39-0-413. Redmond,CrookCounty, Ridgeview,Sisters, La RECEIVING —Miami: Gibson6-71, Clay6-42, Pine atOxfordClassicatDrakePark,11 a.m. Hartline3-34,Wallace3-24, Thigpen1-50, Matthews Boys waterpolo: MadrasatSummit, TBA 1-21, Miller 1-6, Dan.Thomas1-1. New Orleans: Girls water polo:MadrasatSummit, TBA Sproles7-114, Colston7-96, Thomas 5-37, Graham 4-100, Stills 4-38, Toon1-18, Collins 1-6, Watson Saturday 1-4 Football: Molaga vs. Madrasat Culver,1 p.m. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—New Orleans: HartBoys soccer: Riverside atCulver, 1 p.m.; Crook ley 43(WL). CountyatSweet Home,1p.m. Girls soccer:CrookCountyat Sweet Home,1 p.m. Volleyball: l.a Pineat Junction City, 9a.mzCulver College at Waldportiloledoat Santiam,TBD;SouthWasco Schedule County atCentral Christian, 4p.m.,Bend,Crook All Times PDT CountyatMt. HoodTourney,8 a.m.;Trinity Lutheran (Subiect to change) at Paisley,2:30p.m.; Gilchrist at Gilchrist TournaThursday'sGames ment, 9a.m. SOUTH Cross-country: Madras at Harrier Classicin Albany, WKentuckyat Louisiana-Monroe,4 30p.m 9:30a.m. MIDWEST TexasatlowaSt., 4:30 p.m FAR WEST FOOTBALL UCLAatUtah,7p.m.

NewOrleans36,Miami17

his hip. The person says Locker was released before midday Monday. Theperson spoketo The Associated Press oncondi-

In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www. gocomics. comlrnthebreachers

Thursday Boys soccer: Bendat Mountain View,3 p.m.; RidgeviewatRedmond,3p.m.; Sistersat Sweet Home, 4:30 p.m.;Madrasat Molala, 6 p.mcLaPineat CottageGrove, 4:30 p.m.; CrookCounty at Summit,3 p.m. Girlssoccer:RidgeviewatRedmond,4.30p.m.; Sweet Home atSisters, 4:30 p.m.;Molalaat Madras,4:30 p.mz Cottage Groveat LaPine, 4:30 p.m.; Bendat MountainView,4:30p.m.; CrookCounty atSummit JV, 4:30p.m. Volleyball: RedmondatRidgeview,6:30p.m.;Sisters at JunctionCity, 6:45p.m.; Madrasat Molala, 6 p.ms LaPineat Sweet Home, 6:45 p.mc Culver at Kennedy,6p.mcCrookCounty atSummit, 6:30 p.mJ Mountain ViewatBend,6:30p.m. Boys water polo: MountainViewatRidgeview,TBA

ware industry by betting on the the Sacramento Kings is now betting big on DeMarcus Cous-

FOOTBALL

Today Boys soccer:Redmondat BendJV, 3p.m.; Ridgeview at CrookCounty, 3 p.m.; Sistersat LaPine, 4:30 p.m.; La Salle atMadras,4:30 p.mzSummit at MountainView,3p.m. Girls soccer: Ridgeview at CrookCounty, 4:30p.m.; La PineatSisters, 4:30p.m.; Madrasat LaSale, 4 p.m.; Summiatt MountainView,3p.m.; Redmond at Bend,4:30p.m. Volleyball: CrookCountyat Ridgeview,6:30 p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 6:45p.m.; La Salle at Madras,6p.mJLaPine atJunction City, 6:45p.m., Central Linn atCulver, 6p.m.; MountainViewat Summit,6:30p.m.; Central Christianat Sherman, 4p.m.;BendatRedmond,6.30p.m.;CraneatTrinity Lutheran,5:45p.m.; Gilchrist at NorthLake,4 p.m. Boys water polo: MountainViewatSummit, TBA

TorontoFCat Philadelphia, 4:30p.m. Fc Dallasat RealSalt Lake,6p.m. SeattleFcat Colorado, 7p.m. Sunday's Games ChivasUSAat LosAngeles,2p.m. PortlandatVancouver,5 p.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

NO — Sproes 13 passfrom Brees(Hart eykick),

:55.

Third Quarter NO — Watson 4 passfrom Brees(Hartley kick),

9:44.

NO — Graham43 pass fromBrees(Hartley kick),

8:12.

Fourth Ouarter Mia — Clay 3 passfrom Tannehil (Sturgis kick),

13:48. NO — FGHartley 29,7:15. A—73,118.

First downs Total NetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Mia

NO

19 23 3 31 46 5 19-115 24-68 2 16 39 7 1 -5 3 - 44 3 -68 2 - 36 0 -0 3 - 28 22-35-3 30-39 0 4 -33 2 - 16 4-52.0 3-47.3 1-1 1-1 5 -25 6 - 45 26:11 3 3:49

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Miami: Miller 11-62, Tannehil 4-48, Dan.Thomas 4-5.New Orleans: K.Robinson 12-37,Sproles4-28,Brees4-2, Thomas4-1. PASSING —Miami: Tannehil 22-35-3-249

NevadaatSanDiegoSt., 6p.m.

Saturday'sGames

EAST Air ForceatNavy,8:30 a.m. E. MichiganatBuflalo, 9a.m. Lehigh atFordham,9a.m. Valparaiso at Marist, 9 a.m. Louisville atTemple, 9a.m. NewHampshireat Towson,9a.m. WestLibertyatDuquesne,9:10a.m. Colgateat Cornell, 9:30a.m. ArmyatBostonCollege,10a.m. St. Francis(Pa.)atCCSU,10a.m. HarvardatHoly Cross,10a.m. RobertMorrisatMonmouth(NJ),10a.m. DartmouthatPenn,10a.m. Columbiaat Princeton,10a.m. Wagnerat SacredHeart,10 a.m. William SMaryat Viganova, 10a.m. Bucknell atLafayette,12:30p.m. DelawareatMaine,12:30 p.m. Clemsonat Syracuse,12:30p.m. RhodeIslandat Brown,3 p.m. Bryant atStonyBrook, 3p.m. SOUTH NorthGreenvilleat CharlestonSouthern,8 am. Marylandat FloridaSt., 9a.m. Ball St. atVirginia, 9a.m. Gardner-Webb at Charlotte, 9 a.m. GeorgiaSt.atAlabama,9.21a.m. NorthCarolinaatVirginia Tech, 9:30am. MoreheadSt.atCampbell,10 a.m. NC CentralatHoward,10a.m. Florida AB Mat MorganSt., 10a.m. Savannah St.at Norfolk St.,10 a.m. SouthAlabamaat Troy,10 a.m. Elon atFurman,10:30a.m. Albany(NY)atJamesMadison,10 30a.m. PresbyterianatWoford,10:30 am. MVSUatAlabamaA8M, 11a.m. Bethune-Cookman at DelawareSt.,11 a.m. UTSAat Marshall, 11a.m. AppalachianSt.atTheCitadel, 11a.m. Wamerat AlcomSt., noon GeorgiaSouthematSamford, noon FAUatUAB,noon JacksonvilleSt.at UT -Martin, noon GeorgiaTechat Miami, 12:30p.m. EastCarolinaatMiddle Tennessee,12:30 p.m. NC AS Tvs. SCStateatAtlanta,12'30 p.m. Georgi aatTennessee,12:30p.m. NorthTexasat Tulane, 12:30p.m. NC StateatWakeForest,12:30 p.m. Tennessee Techat MurraySt.,1 p.m. FIU atSouthernMiss.,1 p.m. UCF atMemphis,1 30p.m. WCaroinaatChattanooga,3p.m Austi nPeayatE.Kentucky,3p.m. Liberty atOldDominion, 3 p.m. Mississippi atAuburn,4 p.m. ArkansasatFlorida, 4p.m. Ark.-PineBluff atJacksonSt., 4p.m TexasSt.at Louisiana-Lafayette,4p.m. LSU atMississippiSt., 4p.m. Cincinnati atSouthFlorida,4 p.m. SE MissouriatTennesseeSt.,4 p.m. KentuckyatSouthCarolina, 4:30p.m. Missouri atVanderbilt, 4:30p.m. Incarnate Word atSELouisiana 5p.m. MIDWEST PennSt.at Indiana,9a.m. MichiganSt. atlowa,9a.m. TexasTechat Kansas,9 a.m. lllinois atNebraska,9a.m. Stetsonat Butler,10a.m. Davidsonat Dayton, 10a.m. Cent. Michigan at Miami(Ohio),10 a.m. OhioatAkron,11a.m. Jacksonville atDrake,11a.m. W. Illinois atlllinois St., noon S. Illinois atS.DakotaSt., noon Missouri St atSouthDakota, noon W. Michigan atToledo, noon YoungstownSt.at IndianaSt.,12.05 p.m. UMassat Bowling Green,12:30 p.m. N lllinoisatKentSt 1230pm MinnesotaatMichigan,12 30p.m N. Iowaat N.DakotaSt., 12:30p.m. Ohio St.at Northwestern,5p.m. SOUTHWES T Rutgersat SMU,9a.m. KansasSt.atOklahomaSt.,12:30 p.m. Rice atTulsa,12:30 p.m. McNeese St.at Cent. Arkansas, I p.m. TCUatOklahoma,4p.m. PrairieViewvs. Grambling St.at Dallas,4p.m. Alabama St.atTexasSouthem,4 p.m. LouisianaTechat UTEP,4:30p.m. Notre Dame vs. ArizonaSt. atArlington, Texas,430 p.m. WestVirginiaatBaylor, 5p.m. FAR WEST UC Davisat S.Utah,12:05p.m. PortlandSt. atMontana,12:30p.m. WashingtonSt.at California,1 p.m. MerceratSanDiego,I p.m. NorthDakotaat IdahoSt.,1:05 p.m. N.ArizonaatMontanaSt.,1:05p.m. FresnoSt.at Idaho,2 p.m. Yale atCalPoly,2:05p.m. OregonatColorado,3p.m. NewMexicoSt.at NewMexico, 4p.m. WeberSt.atE.Washington, 4:05p.m. N. Coloradoat SacramentoSt., 6:05p.m. Washington atStanford 730 pm San JoseSt atHawai,8:59 p.m.

Betting line

Torontoat Philadelphia, 7:30p.m. Buffalo atDetroit, 8p.m. Anaheimat Colorado,9:30 p.m.

DEALS Transactions

NFL

(Home teamsin CAPS) Favorite Opening Current Underdog Thursday BROWN S

4

Chiefs DOLPHINS RAMS BENGAL S Seahawk s PACKER S BEARS GIANTS Panthers Chargers Broncos 49ERS FALCON S

Bills

4.5

Sunday

25 NL 13 1 3 65 NL 2.5 15 5 6 .5 7

9

2.5 NL 12 1 3 6. 5 NL 2.5 2 4.5 7 7

TITANS

Ravens Jaguars Patriots COLTS Lions Saints Eagles

CARDINAL S RAIDER S COWBO YS Texans

Monday

9

Jets

College Thursday

IOWA ST 7.5 UL-MONR OE 5.5 Friday UTAH ST 5.5 6.5 Byu 4.5 Nevada SANDIEGOST 4.5 Saturday NAVY NL NL Air Force IOWA 15 15 Michigan St Louisville 33 34 TEMPLE TOLEDO 2 0.5 20 WMichigan BUFFALO 1 3.5 1 3 .5 E Michigan ALABAMA 5 6.5 56 GeorgiaSt 115 Army BOSTON COL 1 2 MIAMI-OHID CMichigan 35 3 VIRGINIA 5 5.5 Ball St 15 15 Maryland FLORIDA ST MIAMI-FLA 5 5 GeorgiaTech 1 3.5 1 3 Clemson SYRACU SE REST Nc State 95 9. 5 WAKEFO NEBRAS KA 10.5 1 0 5 I linois MARSHA LL 1 3.5 14 Tx-SanAntonio N.Texas 3 2.5 TULANE Oregon 3 8.5 3 8 .5 COLOR ADO 1 1.5 11 TENNE SSEE Georgia FLORIDA 11 105 Arkansas ST Lsu 95 9. 5 MISSISSIPPI TULSA 3 3 Rice VIRGINIA TECH 7 7.5 N. Carolina OKLAHO MA 11 10 . 5 Tcu Cincinnati 12 12 S. FLORIA D OKLAHOM AST 14.5 1 4 5 Kansas St VANDE RBILT 15 2 Missouri Minnesota MICHIGAN 20.5 2 0 .5 C. Florida 10 10 . 5 MEMPHIS Rutgers 6.5 6.5 SMU 2 4.5 25 IDAHO FrensoSt UL-LAFA YETTE 10 10 Texas St TROY 35 3 SAabama NEWMEXICO 8.5 8.5 NewMexicoSt CALIFOR NIA NL NL Washington St STANFO RD 7 7 Washington N. Illinois KENTST 9.5 9.5 Mississippi AUBURN 3 2.5 S CAROL INA 21.5 21 Kentucky S. MISSISSIPIP 1 5 1 5 . 5 FloridaInt'I BOWLINGGREEN 25.5 2 5.5 Massachusetts 5 4 Fla. Atlantic UAB NL NL KANSAS TexasTech E. Carolina 7 7 5 MID TENN ST AKRON Ohio U 6 6 a-Arizona St 5 5 NotreDam e BAYLOR 27 27 . 5 W. Virginia La Tech UTEP 1 (U) 1 WESTERN OhioSt 5.5 5.5 NORTH PennSt INDIANA 35 3. 5 SanJoseSt 45 5 HAWAII a-Arlington,Texa 3 = Note:(U) UTEP opened asthefavorite

Texas WKentucky

9 45

TENNIS Professional China Open Monday At The Beiling TennisCentre Beiiing Purse: Men,$3.57million (WTBOO); Women, $5.19 million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men First Round BernardTomic, Australia, def. ZhangZe, China, 7-6(4), 6 4. Fabio Fognini, Italy,def.Tomm y Robredo, Spain, 7-5, 4-6,6-3. Philipp Kohlschreiber,Germany, def. Albert Montanes,Spain,7-5,1-6, 7-6(4). LleytonHewitt, Australia, def. Tomm y Haas (7), Germany, 7-6(6), 6-3. RobertoBautistaAgut, Spain,def. GrigorDimitrov, Bulgaria,6-4,6-2. Women First Round Ana Ivanovic(14), Serbia,def. Flavia Penne ta, Italy, 7-6(9), 6-1. JelenaJankovic(8), Serbia,def. AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova, Russia,1-6 6-4, 6-0. BoianaJovanovski, Serbia, del. SoranaCirstea, Romania6-3, , 6-2. Eugeni eBouchard,Canada,del.MagdalenaRybarikova,Slovakia,6-4, 6-1. Galin aVoskoboeva,Kazakhstan,def.SharonFichman,Canada,6-4, 6-3. Zhang Shuai,China,del.PengShuai,China,6-3, 6-3. SvetlanaKuznetsova, Russia, def.HsiehSu-wei, Taiwan,6-1,6-1. AndreaPetkovic, Germ any, def. Victoria Azarenka (2), Belarus,6-4, 2-6,6-4. PolonaHercog,Slovenia,def. MonicaPuig, Puerto Rico, 6-1,6-4.

SecondRound

Sara Errani(5), Italy, def. Misaki Doi, Japan,6-3, 6-2. Lucie SafarovaCzechRepublic, def. KaiaKanepi, Estonia,6-3,6-3.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

Friday's Games

ChicagoatD.CUnited,5p.m. MontrealatHouston,530pm Saturday's Games NewEnglandatNewYork,4p m. SporlingKansasCity atColumbus, 4:30p.m.

BASEBALL MAJORLEAGUE BASEBALL— Promoted executive vicepresident for economics andleagueaffairs RobManfredto chiel operating oflicer. American League CHICAGOWHITESOX— Assigned C MiguelGonzalezoutright toCharlotte (IL). MINNES OT ATWINS—Agreedto termswith managerRonGardenhire onatwo-year contract. TEXASRANGERS—Reinstated OFNelson Cruz from therestricted list. DesignatedOFJoeyButler for assignment. National League CHICAGOCUBS— Fired managerDaleSveum. NEWYORKMETS—Agreedtotermswith manager Terry Colins onatwo-year contract PHILADEL PHIA PHILLIES—Announced the contract ol pitching coachRich Dubeewil not be renewed. SAN DIEGOPADRES Reinstated SS Everth CabreraIromthe restricted list. DesignatedC Chris Robinson forassignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MILWAUKE EBUCKS—Promoted Chris Gilmartin to director ofNBAscouting. NamedLukeSteele advancescout. NEW YORK KNICKS—Exercised the 2014-15 contractoptiononcoachMikeWoodson. SACRAM ENTO KINGS—Signed C DeMarcus Cousins toafour-yearcontract extension. FOOTBALL NationalFootball League CLEVELANDBROWNS— Cl aimed RB FozzyWhittaker off waiversfromSanDiego. WaivedWRJosh CooperandRBMontario Hardesty. GREEN BA Y PACKERS—Signed RBMichael Hil from thepracticesquadandWRReggie Dunnto the practicesquad. INDIANAPO LIS COLTS—Signed FB Robert Hughes.ReleasedWRGriff Whalen. JACKSONVILL E JAGUARS Signed G Jacques McclendonandQBRickyStanzi. ReleasedWRsJeremyEbertandTobais Palmer. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS— ReleasedS Kanorris Davis. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague ANAHEIMDLICKS —Assigned RW Brad Staubitz, C RichardRakell, LWJohnKurtz andD Nolan Yonkmanto Norfolk (AHL)and G Igor Bobkovto Utah (ECH L). PlacedLWEmerson Etem, RWJakob SilfverbergandDLucaSbisa andSheldon Sourayon injuredreserve. DALLASSTARS Designated FsScott Glennie and RichPeverleyandDAaron Rome injured nonroster players. DETROIT REDWINGS—AssignedFsMitch Callahan, Luke Glendening, Calle Jarnkrok, Tomas Jurco, GustavNyquist, TeemuPulkkinen andRiley Sheahan,DsAdamAlmquist andRyan Sproul andG Petr Mrazek to GrandRapids(AHL). Recalled DXavier Ouellet and GJared CoreaufromGrand Rapids. PlacedCDarren Helm andRWPatrick Eavesonlongterm injured reserveandGJonasGustavssonandRW Jordin Tootooon 7-day injured reserve.ReleasedF Jeff Hoggan andDNathan Paetschfromtheir prolessional tryoutagreements. EDMON TONOILERS—Assigned GTyler Bunzto Bakersfield(ECHL). FLORIDAPANTHERS— LoanedD ColbyRobakto SanAntonio(AHL). LOSANG ELES KINGS LoanedDJeff Schultz to

Manchester(AHL) NASHVILLEPREDATORS— Signed F Simon Moser to a one-year,entry-level contract. NEW JERSEYDEVILS Assigned RW Cam Janssento Albany(AHL). PlacedLWPatrlk Eliason inlured reserve.DesignatedRWMattias Tedenby an injurednon-rosterplayer. NEW YORKISLANDERS— Loaned Fs Chris Bruton, JoeDiamond,Brett Gallant, MikeHalmo,Kirill Kabanov,Anders Lee,John Persson,Alan Quine, RyanStrome and Johan Sundstrom;D Joe Finley, Calwn deHaan, Scott Mayfield andAaron Ness, and GAndersNilsson to Bridgeport (AHL). ReleasedF Justi nJohnson,D RadekMartinekandG KenReiter Iromprofessional tryoutagreements andF Riley Wetmorefroman amateur tryout agreement andassignedthemto Bridgeport. ReturnedFRyan Pulock to Brandon (WHI.). NEW YORKRANGERS— Reassigned D Samuel NoreauandFsJoshNicholls, MichaelSt.CroixandJason Wilson fromHartford (AHL)toGreenvige(ECHL). DTTAWASENATORS— Assigned D Ben Blood, Mark Borowiecki, Cody Ceci, Fredrik Claesson, Tyler Eckford,DanielNew,Troy Rutkowski, Michael SdaoandChris Wideman, Fs Corey Cowick, Jakub Culek,DavidDziurzynski, DerekGrant, WaceyHamilton, DannyHobbs, Mike Hoffman, LudwigKarlsson, DarrenKramer, Jim O'Brien, AndrePetersson, ShanePrince, MattPuempel, BuddyRobinson, Cole Schneider,MarkStoneandMika Zibaneiad; andGs Scott Greenham , AndrewHammondandNathanLawson toBinghamton (AHL). Returned FCurtis Lazarto Edmonton(WHL). PHOENIX COYOTES—Named Avik Deychief linancialofficer,JeffMoranderexecutive vicepresident of ticketsalesandstrategy andMikeHumesexecutive vice presidentofcorporate andsuite sales. PITTSBU RG H PENGUINS—Placed DKris Letang and GTomas Vokounon the injured list. AssignedF Andrew EbbettandDSimonDesprestoWilkes-Barrel Scranton(AHL),FBeau Bennet to Wheeling (ECHL) and DerrickPouliot toPortland(WHL). WINNIPEG JETS—Re-assigned FPatrice Cormier and D ZachRedmond to St John's (AHL). Placed D Grant Clitsome on injured reserve, retroactiveto Thursday. TENNIS WTA NamedRyanSandilands regional CEO, Asia Pacific. COLLEGE NCAA —Granted Florida men'sbasketball G Eli Carter immediateeligibility NamedJon Levinson secretary-rueseditor for women'sbasketball. FLORIDA —Announced DTDominique Easley wil enter theNFLdraft. CONNE CTICUT—Fired football coach Paul Pasqualoniandoffensive line coachGeorge Del.e-

one.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement ofadult chinook,jackchinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselectedColumbia RlverdamslastupdatedonSunday.

Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 5,286 1,033 1,063 3 9 8 TheDages 6,760 7 3 0 5 ,365 2,213 John Day 5,942 9 3 9 2 ,886 1,127 M cNary 11,202 7 2 8 3 ,362 9 2 8 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadandwild Fridayat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,050,610 158,609 224,657 96137 The Dalles 683,927 128,895 162,542 66,814 John Day 506,662 124,749 114,143 46,547 McNary 484,134 80,164 97,612 37,179


TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MLB SCOREBOARD

MLB

Postseason Glance

a searn a 0

All Times PDT WILD CARD

Both games televised by TBS

Today,Oct.1 NL Cincinnati(Cueto5-2) at Pittsburgh (Liriano16-8),5:07p.m. Wednesday,Oct. 2: AL:Tampa Bay (Cobb 11-9) at Cleveland (Salazar2-3), 5:07p.m.

ARLINGTON, Texas — David Price, Evan Longoria and the Tampa Bay Rays are going to the playoffs again, getting there with a victory in their final regular-season game for the second time in three years. They needed an extra game this time. Price threw his fourth complete game of the season, Longoria had a two-run homer and the Rays beat the Texas Rangers 5-2 in the AL wild-card tiebreaker game Monday night, the 163rd game for both teams. Luckilyfor manager Joe Maddon and the Rays, they weren't done in by another blown call in Texas — though this one did cost them at least one run. The Rays f ace a nother m ust-win s ituation Wednesday night at Cleveland in the AL wild-card game — the winner faces Boston in the division series. Tampa Bay, in the playoffs for the fourth time in six years, won four of six from the Indians during the regular season.

Friday,Oct.4:Cleveland-TampaBaywinnerat Boston, 12:07 p.m. Saturday,Oct.5:Cleveland-TampaBaywinnerat Boston, 2:37p.m. Monday,Oct. 7: BostonatCleveand-TampaBaywinner x-Tue sday,Oct.8:Boston atCleveland-TampaBay winner x-Thursday,Oct. 10: Cleveland-TampaBaywinner at Boston Oakland vs. Detroit

Friday,Oct.4: Detroit atDakland,6:37 p.m. SaturdayOct.5: Detroit at Oakland,6:07 p.m. Monday,Oct.7: Oakland at Detroit x-Tuesday, Oct. 8:Oaklandat Detroit x-Thursday, Oct.10. Detroitat Oakland National League St. Louis vs. Cincinnati-Pittsburgh winner

Thursday,Dct. 3: Cincinnati-Pittsburghwinnerat St. Louis, 2:07p.m. Friday, Oct. 4: Cincinnati-Pittsburghwinner at St. Louis,10:07a.m. Sunday,Oct. 6: St. Louis at Cincinnati-Pittsburgh winner x-Monday,Dct. 7: St. Louisat Cincinnati-Pittsburgh winner x-Wednesday Oct. 9. Cincinnati-Pittsburghwinner at St. Louis

Price (10-8), the reigning AL Cy Young winner, had a 10.26 ERA in four previous starts at Rangers Ballpark. He was superb in this one, striking out four and walking one. He picked off two runners while allowing seven hits and throwing 81 of 118 pitches for strikes. "When you can get outs without throwing pitches that's always huge," Price said. "If I don't get those two outs on the pickoff moves, I have to get the next guys out. It forces me to throw at least 10 more pitches." The 28-year-old lefty reached 10 wins for the fifth straight season. He missed more than six weeks because of a triceps strain but is 9-4 in his 13 starts since returning July 2 from his first career stint on the disabled list. Longoria had three hits, continuing his stellar play in the last game of regular seasons. He is hitting .579 (11 for 19) in those finales with seven homers and 10 RBIs, according to STATS. Texas had won seven in a row, needing every one of those wins just to force the majors' first wild-card tiebreaker since 2007. Even with the return of All-Star slugger Nelson Cruz from his 50-game drug suspension, the Rangers missed a chance to get to the playoffs for the fourth year in a row. "I'm disappointed. We didn't get it done," Rangers manager Ron Washington said. "I've got no excuse for that."

Atlanta vs. Los Angeles

Thursday,Oct 3:LosAngeles atAtlanta, 5:37p.m. Friday,Oct.4: LosAngeles atAtlanta, 3:07p.m. Sunday,Oct.6:Atlanta atLosAngeles x-Monday,Oct.7:Atlanta atLosAngeles x-Wednesday Oct. 9: LosAngeles atAtlanta LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES

(Bestwf-7; x-if necessary) American League

Saturday,Oct. 12:Oakland-Detroit winnerat Boston or Cleveland-Tampa Baywinnerat Oakland-Detroit winner Sunday,Oct. 13:Oakland-Detroit winnerat Bostonor Cleveland-Ta mpa Baywinner at Oakland-Detroit winner Tuesday, Oct. 15:BostonatOakland-Detroit winneror Oakland-Detroit winner at Cleveland-TampaBay winner Wednesday, Oct. 16: Bostonat Dakland-Detroit winner or Oakland-Detroitwinnerat Ceveland-Tampa Baywinner x-Thursday,Oct. I7: Boston at Oakland-Detroit winner or Oakland-Detroitwinnerat Cleveland-Tampa Baywinner x-Saturday, Oct. 19:Dakland-Detroit winnerat Boston or Cleveland-Ta mpa Baywinnerat Oakland-Detroit winner x-Sunday,Oct. 20: Oakland-Detroit winnerat Boston or Cleveland-Tampa Baywinnerat Oakland-Detroit winner National League

Friday, Dct. 11: Atlanta-l.os Angeleswinner at St. Louis or Cincinnati-Pittsburghwinnerat AtlantaLos Angelewi s nner SaturdayOct.12:Atlanta-Los Angeleswinner at St. Louis or Cincinnati-Pittsburghwinnerat AtlantaLos Angeleswinner Monday,Oct. 14: St. I.ouis at Atlanta-LosAngeles winner orAtlanta-LosAngeleswinner at Cincinnati-Pittsburgh winner Tuesday,Oct. 15: St. Louis at Atlanta-LosAngeles winner orAtlanta-LosAngeleswinner at Cincinnati-Pittsburghwinner x-Wednesday, Oct 16 St. LouisatAtlanta-LosAngeles winner orAtlanta-LosAngeeswinnerat Cincinnati-Pittsburgh winner x-Friday,Oct.18. Atlanta-LosAngeleswinner at St. Louis or Cincinnati-Pittsburghwinnerat AtlantaLos Angeleswinner x-Saturday, Oct. 19:Atlanta-LosAngeleswinnerat St. Louis or Cincinnati-Pittsburghwinnerat AtlantaLos Angelewi s nner

By Tim Booth

Wednesd ay,Oct23:atAL Thursday,Oct24 atAL SaturdayOct.26: atNL Sunday,Oct.27:at NL x-Monday,Oct.28:at NL x-Wedne sday,Oct.30:atAL x-Thursday, Oct 31:at AL

Summary Monday's Game

Rays 5, Rangers 2 TampaBay Texas ab r hbi ab r hbi DJnngsct 3 1 1 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 2 1

Fuld cl-rl 1 1 1 0 Andrus ss 3 1 1 0 W Myrsrl 3 1 0 0 Riosri 4011 Kiermr cl 0 0 0 0 ABeltre 3b 4 0 1 0 Z obrist2b 5 0 1 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 Longori3b 4 2 3 2 N.Cruzdh 4 0 0 0 Dyongdh 3 0 0 1 Morlnd1b 3 0 1 0 S Rdrgzlt 2 0 0 0 Gentryg 3 1 1 0 Dedessph-Il 2 0 1 1 LMartncl 3 0 0 0 Loney 1b 3 0 0 0 YEscorss 2 0 0 0 JMoinc 4 0 0 0 T otals 3 2 5 7 4 Totals 3 22 7 2 T ampa Bay 1 0 2 0 0 1 001 — 5 Texas 0 01 001 000 — 2

E Scheppers (2). LOB TampaBay8, Texas 4. 2B—Longoria(39), Dedesus(10), Kinster(31), Rios (33), A.Beltre(32). HR —Longoria(32). SB—Fuld(8), Andrus(42). CS—Kinsler (11).SF—D.young. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BBSD 7 2 2 1 3 3 2 1 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0

Cruz, who had 27 homers and 76 RBIs in 108 games before his suspension, was zero for 4 with a strikeout while hitting sixth as the designated hitter. His groundout to shortstop ended the game. The Rays had runners at first and second with two outs in the seventh when Delmon Young, who put the Rays ahead to stay with a sacrifice fly in the first, hit a soft flyball. Center fielder Leonys Martin made a running, diving play to catch the balL Replays showed clearly that the ball bounced into Martin's glove. But third base umpire Ron Kulpa, looking at the play from the side, ruled it an inning-ending catch. Young rounded first base with his arms spread out signaling safe. Maddon went out to talk to Kulpa, though the conversation didn't appear heated. When the Rays played at Texas on April 8, the fourth game of the season for both teams, their 5-

4 loss ended when plate umpire Marty Foster called a third strike against Ben Zobrist on a pitch low and outside. The ump later admitted the 2-2 curveball wasn't a strike and he wouldn't call that pitch a strike if he could do it again. The Texas win and closerJoe Nathan's 300th career save stood. Maddon said after that game that such calls "can't be made in a MajorLeague Baseball game." The Rays still had a runner on base and Longoria on deck when Zobrist was called out. MLB intends to use expanded video review next year. The Rangers had beaten Tampa Bay in the AL division series in 2010 and 2011 on the way to their only two World Series. It was the second year in a row their season ended in a do-or-die game at home — they lost to Baltimore in the first AL wild-card game last October.

status beyond next year is unknown because the team has gone silent SEATTLE — Another offseason. other than confirming that he will Another Seattle Mariners managereturn. rial search. get an opportunity to manage again. On the field, Seattle has plenty of That's something I hope to do." By now, the Mariners should be hope but few certainties going foradept at this process. They will spend Wedge was brought to Seattle to ward. Rookies Brad M i l ler, N i ck the early part of this offseason hiring shepherd a young franchise in the Franklin and Mike Zunino showed their eighth manager or interim man- hope of recreating the kind of success flashes of major league ability, but ager since 2002. he had in helping rebuild Cleveland they alsosuffered the swoons expectYet the indictment of the franchise into a contender. But the rebuilding ed of young prospects summoned to that came from manger Eric Wedge's never seemed toend in Seattle,where the majorsprobably before they were decision not to return for 2014 might there was a constant influx of young ready. Those three, along with third be the most damaging they have ever prospectsand some veterans failing baseman Kyle Seager, are the likely received after Seattle went 71-91. to meet expectations. anchors of Seattle's lineup going into Wedge essentially quit on his chance Ultimately, Wedge failed to receive nextseason. "It was a tough year. We didn't get to continue with the Mariners' rethe assurances from m anagement — CEO Howard Lincoln, club presi- where we wanted to, but there is a lot building process rather than stick it out with what he considered an un- dent Chuck Armstrong and general to like with this team," Seager said. tenable situation with a poor working manager Jack Zduriencik — that ev- "I think there is a good nucleus here, environment wherevisions were not eryone was on the same page in re- a good core to continue to move forequal and commitment was lacking. gard to how the Mariners were going ward and can definitely feel good goThey were blunt statements from about the rebuilding plan. ing into next year." a manager firm o n h i s p r i nciples Wedge finishedhis three seasons Justin Smoak may h ave f inally and not known as a quitter. And they in charge with a record of 213-273. solidified himself as the Mariners' leave the Mariners in a tenuous state Seattle went a 12th straight season everyday first baseman after hitting going into another offseason where without reaching the playoffs and .238 with 20 homers and 50 RBIs, but the fanbase and general interest con- continued to look up at Oakland, Tex- Seattle's outfield is a mess. tinues to erode. as and the Los Angeles Angels in the As remarkable as Raul Ibanez was "I wanted to see this thing through American League West standings. in 2013, he is not a long-term option Wedge's replacement in S eattle for Seattle as designated hitter or but there were factors involved that became obviously clear to me that will have to be convinced that he will in left field. Michael Saunders and were not going to allow that to hapbe given time. Zduriencik is believed Dustin Ackley showed only flashes pen," Wedge said last week after to be under contract for 2014, but his that they can hit w ith th e needed The Associated Press

(Best-of-7)

9

Tim Sharp I The Associated Press

The Tampa Bay Rays celebrate after beating the Texas Rangers 5-2 at an American League wild-card tiebreaker baseball game on Monday in Arlington, Texas. The Rays advance to face the Cleveland Indians in the American League wild-card playoff on Wednesday.

Finding newmanager No. 1priori for Mariners

WORLD SERIES

M.PerezL,10-6 5 1-3 4 Ogando 2-3 2 Frasor 2-3 0 0 Soria 1-3 0 0 Cotts 1 0 Scheppers 1 1 T—3:08.A—42,796(48,114)

, ea a n erS

The Associated Press

(Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Bostonvs.Cleveland-Tampa Bay winner

Texas

e

By Stephen Hawkins

DIVISION SERIES

PriceW,10-8

C3

4 5 0 0 0 1 2

notifying the team that he was not returning. "I had to make the decision I made and now I'll move on to the next adventure and hopefully I'll

consistency to be locks for the lineup. Franklin Gutierrez remained an in-

jury risk. Seattle will also need to make decisions on whether to bring Ibanez back — the 41-year-old said he would entertain playing another season in the right situation — or if they can afford to re-sign designated hitter Kendrys Morales after he hit .277 with 23 homers and 80 RBIs. About the only situation with any certainty is the starting pitching. Felix Hernandez and Hisashi Iwakuma will be at the top of Seattle's rotation with youngsters James Paxton, Taijuan Walker, Brandon M aurer and Erasmo Ramirez battling to fill out the back end. Seattle could use a veteran No. 3starter as a bridge between the established players and the younger ones, and they need to find consistency in the bullpen. On his way out, Wedge was thankful for the commitment his young team made. "Their effort, t heir w o rk , t h eir preparation, it's been a given," Wedge said. "You don't ever take it for granted and when you see it done each and every day, and a lot of that is a credit to our coaches, too, you get into your routine and stick to it and hope it pays off in this game."

NFL ~

esnans w

rrt

I

Saints stay perfect, cruise past Dolphins By Brett Martel The Associated Press

j

,

4~4g P

Bill Ferg /The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — Drew Brees reminded a national audience why he's becoming Mr. Monday Night, and gave the Miami Dolphins another reason to regret not making a harderpushto sign him when they had the chance seven years ago. Brees passed for 413 yards and four touchdowns, and the Saints turned a clash of unbeaten teams into a lopsided affair, beating the Miami Dolphins 38-17 on Monday night. "I felt like we found our rhythm," Brees said. "Every time we touched the ball it felt like we were going to go down and score points." Two of Brees' touchdowns went to Jimmy Graham for 27 and 43 yards as the tight end had at least 100 yards receiving for the third straight game. Brees' other scoring strikes went to Benjamin Watson and Darren Sproles, who also rushed for a touchdown. "We mix up where we put him a lot to try to find him favorable matchups," Brees said of Sproles. "It goes that way for

all our guys."

New Orleans Saints tight end Jimmy Graham (80) carries on B S proles' 5-yard scoring run o n t h e touchdown reception as Miami Dolphins strong safety Chris Clem- game's opening series gave the Saints a ons (30) tries to tackle in the second half of Monday night's game lead they would not relinquish en route to in New Orleans. their first 4-0 start since their Super Bowl

championship season of 2009. The Saints started last season with four losses. "We like this a lot better," Breesa said of the 4-0 start. "Everything that could have gone wrong for us went wrong. Fortunately we're having the ball bounce our way this year. We're playing good football." Ryan Tannehill passed for 249 yards and a touchdown to Charles Clay, but his four turnovers on a fumble and three interceptions hurt Miami (3-1). The Saints have won their past nine Monday night games, all with Brees at quarterback and often putting on some of his most memorableperformances in the process. There was his 307-yard, four-TD performance against Atlanta late in the 2011 season, the same game in which he broke Dan Marino's 27-year-old record for yards

passing in a season. Earlier that same season, Brees threw for 363 yards and four scores in a 49-24 Monday night win over the New York Giants. The Saints' Super Bowl campaign of 2009 was highlighted by Brees' 371 yards and five touchdowns in New Orleans' stunning 38-17 rout of Tom Brady and the New England Patriots. Now his 10th 400-yard outing since he joined the Saints in 2006 delivered a sobering blow to a Miami team that came in

riding a surprising start. When Brees was a free agent, he drew the most interest from New Orleans and Miami, but the Dolphins, fearful of the effects of reconstructive surgery on Brees throwing shoulder, did not pursue the quarterback as enthusiastically as thenSaints rookie coach Sean Payton. Since then, Breeshas become one of the most prolific quarterbacks in NFL history. Brees was 30 of 39 against Miami without an interception. Sproles caught seven passes for 114 yards. Marques Colston had seven catches for 96 yards. Miami's Lamar Miller had 62 yards rushing on 11 carries, including a 5-yard scoring run late in the second quarter that made it 14-10, but the Saints began to run away with the game after that. Brees completed his first three passes for 70 yards. He followed up his long pass to Sproles with an 18-yard completion to rookie Kenny Stills. Soon after, Sproles ran it in, untouched, on a draw play. During the drive, Brees became only the seventhquarterback to pass for more than 47,000 yards. He ended the drive with 47,030, surpassing Fran Tarkenton's 47,003 for sixth most yards passing all-time. Later, Brees' eighth completion gave him 4,124 in his career, one more than John Elway for fourth all-time in that category.


C4

TH E BULLETIN•TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 20'I3

Blazers

ton in a February trade. In the 2013 draft in June, Continued from C1 the Blazers acquired guard "We're going to be a better C.J. McCollum with the 10th team, there's no question about overall pick out of Lehigh. The that," Portland coach Terry team also landed guard Allen Stotts said. "How that transCrabbe, the 31st pick out of lates into playoff seeds? That's California, via a d r aft-night why you play the season." trade. The Blazers' nucleus still General manager Neil Olincludes All-Star forward Lashey got exasperated at one Marcus Aldridge, along with point on media day when he point guard and r eigning was asked about Aldridge and Rookie of the Year Damian the unsubstantiated rumors "I'm really focusing on de- that the current face of the Lillard an d f e llow s t arters Matthews and Nicolas Batum. fense," Lopez said Monday. Portland franchise had asked Lillard led all National Bas- "I want to be somebody who to be traded. "Oh dear God, could you ketball A ssociation r ookies m akes people t hin k t w i c e with an average of 19 points about driving to the basket." guys get over it'?" Olshey said. and 6.5 assists per game. He Aldridge settled the matThe Blazers also signed g u a rd/forwardter, saying he was happy to be broke the rookie record for 3- free-agent pointers with 185, and he led Dorell Wright, a n i n e-year with the Blazers and excited the entire league in minutes NBA veteran, who averaged about the season. "The people who know me," played with 3,167. Aldridge, 9.2 points, 3.8 rebounds and who was named an All-Star 1.9 assists off the bench for the he said, "knew I never said any for thesecond straight year, Philadelphia 76ers last season, of those things." averaged 21.1 points and 9.1 as wellas free-agent guard Also new this season, the Earl Watson, a 12-year NBA Blazers will be playing in the rebounds per game. Batumaveragedcareerbests veteran who played the past Moda Center — the arena forwith 14.3 points, 5.6 rebounds three seasons with the Utah merly known as the Rose Garand 4.9 assists per game. Jazz. den. The team announced in "I don't think we're in that mid-August a 10-year agreePortland acquired forward rebuilding mode anymore," Thomas Robinson in a trade ment with insurance provider Aldridge said. "We've got with Houston. Robinson was Moda Health to rename the guys who can make it happen. t he fifth overall pick in t h e arena, which has served as Now we just have to make it 2012 draft by the Sacramento home to the Trail Blazers since Kings but was dealt to Houshappen." 1995. A dditions i n c luded t h e 7-foot Lopez, acquired in a three-team trade with N ew Orleans andSacramento. The Blazers lacked a realcenter last season, instead using forward J.J. Hickson up f ront with Aldridge and Batum. As a result, Portland never had a big shot-blocking presence. Lopez averaged 11.3 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.56 blocked shots in 82 starts last season with New Orleans.

PORTLANDTRAIL BLAZERS2013-14 SCHEDULE Oct. 30 at Phoenix, 7 p.m.

Dec. 26 L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.

Feb.23 Minnesota,6 p.m.

Nov.1 at Denver,6 p.m.

Dec. 28 Miami, 7 p.m.

Feb. 25 at Denver, 6 p.m.

Nov. 2 San Antonio, 7 p.m. Nov. 5 Houston, 7 p.m.

Dec.30 atNew Orleans,5 p.m . Dec. 31 at Oklahoma City,

Feb. 26 Brooklyn, 7 p.m.

Nov. 8 Sacramento, 7 p.m.

5 p.m.

Nov.9 atSacramento, 7 p.m . Nov. 11 Detroit, 7 p.m.

Jan. 2 Charlotte, 7 p.m. Jan. 4 Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Jan.7 atSacramento,7 p.m . Jan. 8 Orlando, 7 p.m. Jan. 11 Boston, 7 p.m.

March 3 L.A. Lakers, 7 p.m. March 5 Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. March 7 at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.

Nov. 13 Phoenix, 7 p.m. Nov. 15 at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Nov. 17 at Toronto, 10 a.m. Nov. 18 at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Nov.20 atM ilwaukee,5 p.m . Nov. 22 Chicago, 7 p.m. Nov. 23 at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 25 New York, 7 p.m.

Nov. 27 at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Dec. 1 at L.A. Lakers, 6:30 p.m.

Dec. 2 Indiana, 7 p.m. Dec.4 Oklahoma City,7 p.m . Dec. 6 Utah, 7 p.m. Dec. 7 Dallas, 7 p.m. Dec. 9at Utah, 6 p.m. Dec. 12 Houston, 7:30 p.m. Dec. 14 at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Dec. 15 at Detroit, 3 p.m. Dec. 17 at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Dec. 18 at Minnesota, 5 p.m.

Dec. 21 NewOrleans, 7 p.m.

March1 Denver, 7 p.m.

March 9atHouston,4 p.m. March11 at Memphis, 5 p.m. March12 at San Antonio,

Jan. 15 Cleveland, 7 p.m.

6:30 p.m.

Jan. 17 at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m.

March14 at New Orleans, 5 p.m. March16 Golden State, 6 p.m. March 18 Milwaukee, 7 p.m. M arch 20 Washington, 7 p.m . March 22 at Charlotte, 4 p.m.

Jan. 18 at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Jan. 20 at Houston, 5 p.m. Jan. 21 at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Jan. 23 Denver, 7:30 p.m. Jan.25 Minnesota,7 p.m . Jan. 26 at Golden State, 6 p.m.

Jan. 28 Memphis, 7 p.m. Feb. 1 Toronto, 7 p.m. Feb.3 atW ashington,4 p.m . Feb. 5 at New York, 4:30 p.m. Feb. 7 at Indiana, 4 p.m. Feb.8 atM innesota,5 p.m .

Feb. 11 OklahomaCity, 7 p.m. Feb. 12 at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.

Feb. 19 San Antonio, 7 p.m. Feb. 21 Utah, 7 p.m.

March 24 at Miami, 4:30 p.m. March 25 at Orlando, 4 p.m. March 27 at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. M arch 28 atChicago,5 p.m . March 30 Memphis, 6 p.m. April 1 at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m.

April 4 Phoenix, 7 p.m. April 6 New Orleans, 6 p.m.

April 9 Sacramento, 7 p.m. April 11 at Utah, 6 p.m. April 13 Golden State, 6 p.m. April 16 L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.

All Times Pacific

Beavers

w ith B r andin C o ok s n i n e needed rest. times for 168 yards and two Riley said r u nning back Continued from C1 scores. Storm Woods, fullback TyTypical big numbers were That keeps both players at ler Anderson and l i nemen put up in the passing game by the top of the NCAA. Grant Enger, Josh Mitchell "The No. I stat you always and Gavin Andrews all have a the Beavers' offense, but Riley pointed out that the engine have to keep in mind so you chance to be back on the field was not exactly purring all don't get mixed up in what soon. you're trying to do is winning, "We are excited," Riley said. game. "We had 1 1 e x p l osive and you have to look at what "We got to this point and won plays, which is a lot in a game you need to continue to do to some games and we have a — gains over 20 yards," Riley win or to improve your team," chance now to have additional said. "So there was some re- Riley said. "But that fact that linemen. We had guys that ally good football played, but we are throwing the ball and have stepped in and we have it wasn't real crisp throughout. those guys are being produc- still been able to win, which We had poor third-down per- tive, then that's an indicator is very, very good. And we centage because we dropped that's all going pretty well." should get stronger." some balls and we had more The Beavers have spent the Injury report: Riley said three-and-outs than we've had season banged up at a f ew tight end C o nnor H a mlett all year. We weren't perfect positions, but they are on the has been bothered by a knee in the red zone. But the good brink of getting a few players problem for a couple of weeks thing is, I'll point that out to healthy. now and will go in for an MRI them and they'll get it." Now they have two weeks to today. Middle linebacker Joel Even so, Sean M a nnion heal up and get back to prac- Skotte, of Bend, has turf toe passed for 414 yards and six tice speed while some of the and couldmiss some practice touchdowns and c o nnected veterans can get some much- time.

Oxford Continued from C1 It is a cross-country showcase, Summit coach Carol McClatchie says, as local runners compete against some of the Northwest's best in their own backyard. It is also, as Nye points out, an event that helps teams gauge their development midway through the season. "For our team, it's huge," Nye says. "The Oxford's really our first opportunity to come out and see where we are and really fine-tune training and get a few things fixed. I think the timing's perfect for all the teams." With 5A S pecial District I members Bend, Mountain View, Summit and Redmond High slated to compete on Friday — as well as Sisters and La Pine of the 4A Sky-Em League and Ridgeview an d C r ook County of the 4A Greater Oregon League — the Oxford Classic provides an opportunity for teams to measurethemselves against one another. It allows runners to stack their times

GAME OF THEWEEK An intense, back-and-forth Intermountain Conference match was pushed to the limits on Thursday, with Bend High edging visiting Summit in five sets for a 25-17, 20-25, 25-19, 17-25, 15-10 volleyball victory. The Lava Bears finished with 87 digs and ran off seven straight points in the deciding set to claim the win.

PLAYER OFTHE WEEK With Summit still searching for an every-down quarterback after losing its starter in the season opener, Bransen Reynolds stepped up. On Friday, during a 48-20 intermountain Conference football

win against visiting RedmondHigh, the sophomore QBcompleted 13 of14 passes for 215 yards and six touchdowns.

STAT OF THEWEEK It was a pretty consistent week for Sisters, as the Outlaws posted

back-to-back 6-0 girls soccer wins against Sky-Em League foes Junction City andCottage Grove to improve to 3-0 in leagueplay and 6-0 overall. In each, five different players scored. In all, seven Outlaws finished with at least one goal, paced by Liz Stewart and

Natalie Ambrose, each of whom loggedthree scores. against others in preparation for the district meets coming at the end of October. Mountain View, for example, is looking to inch closer to crosstown rival Summit, whose boys and girls teams are multiyear reigning state champions. "What we hope to do is cut the gap between us and Sum-

mit," says M ountain V i ew coach Don Stearns. "If we get close enough, come Nov. 2 (the s tate championships in E u -

gene), we hope to get a shot at it if we stay healthy." Perhaps more noteworthy about the Oxford Classic, however, is the meet's location. Five of the eight Central

MOTOR SPORTS COMMENTARY

Earnhardtdisappointedafter loss By Jenna Fryer

have won the race. It would have been hard to get by us, just like it was to get by Jimmie." CHARLOTTE, N.C. That's part of the reason why Earnhardt ale Earnhardt Jr . c h ased Jimmie took Sunday's defeat so hard. You don't have Johnson around Dover International to be perfect to win races, but you have to be Speedway, only to see his teammate pretty darn close. Self-inflicted errors are gograb his record-setting eighth victory at the ing to hurt every single time. Monster Mile. Johnson, with his five Cup titles, doesn't Earnhardt settled for second, his winless make many mistakes. Especially not when streak swelling to 48 races. For those keep- the stakes are at their highest. He pounced ing track, that's just two wins in the 207 races when Earnhardt erred, and when a debris since Earnhardt joined Johnson at Hendrick caution with 29 laps to go sent everybody to Motorsports in 2008. pit road one last time, a strategic call by LeSo as Johnson grabbed that milestone vic- tarte still didn't make a difference. tory, pulling within eight points of leader Johnson crew chief Chad Knaus called for Matt Kenseth in the Chase for the Sprint Cup only two new tires, but Letarte gave Earnchampionship, more than one skeptical fan hardtfour.The No. 88 crew made the change wondered if Earnhardt had given less than fast enough to get Earnhardt off pit road in 100 percent in the closing laps to allow his fourth, and the excitement in their voices was teammate to win. palpable as they realized they were the first Not a chance. car with four new tires. Disappointment oozed from Earnhardt imMaybe, just maybe, Earnhardt could run mediately after the race. It was in his voice as down Johnson for his first victory since Michhe crossedthe finish line, and he sounded de- igan in 2012. "I thought that four tires were going to be flated as he radioed the No. 88 team. "He's just so damn fast around here. I don't enough to get him," Earnhardt said. "But he is know what else I could have done," Earnhardt just that fast around here." said. "I hate losing 'em like that." The upside is that it was the second consecHe should. utive strong run for Earnhardt, who opened He doesn't get many chances like he had the 10-race Chase with a blown engine at ChiSunday. cago. He rallied last week with a sixth-place Prior to Sunday, he had led only 165 laps finish at New Hampshire, where he led 17 laps, this season and had just five other top-five and his runner-up finish at Dover has moved finishes. him to 10th in the 13-driver Chase field. But at Dover, crew chief Steve Letarte gave He won't win the championship this year. him a fast Chevrolet from the very start: Earn- But there's no shame in that — it's practically hardt was the surprising pole-winner and was a three-driver race already, with Kenseth, in control the first half of the race. Earnhardt Johnson and Kyle Busch in a different league led 80 laps at Dover and clearly had a car ca- from the rest of the field. pable of winning. But this is Earnhardt's 14th full season Then came his own error — one that cost at NASCAR's highest level and he will celhim dearly. ebrate his 39th birthday next week qualifyEarnhardt was headed to pit road for a ing at Charlotte Motor Speedway, where he routine stop under green when he missed the couldn'trace last season because of a concommitment cone to pit lane, and was unable cussion. He's got a lot of pride, and he knows to make his scheduled stop. He had to take an the clock is ticking on a career that has failed extra lap around the track, and the miscal- to live up to the expectations set by his rabid culation dropped him from first to eighth, a fan base. Earnhardt, though, is never going to be a whopping 9.3 seconds behind Johnson. "We had the lead, gave up the lead. Jimmie seven-time champion like his father, the 76had the lead and was able to take advantage of race winner. He's just going to be Dale Earnhardt Jr., a that clean air when it counted," Earnhardt lamented. "If I had not given up that track posi- guy who fights hard for what he can get on tion, had a smart enough race to keep the lead the race track, and shows us just how much it when it counted right at the end, we might hurts when he comes up short. The Associated Press

-

D

NHL

ion. And the NHL introduced a form of no-touch icing. Continued from C1 The league used the pre"We want to put ourselves, season to test a hybrid icing come playoff time, to be that rule, by which linesmen can team that can compete for it whistle a play dead by deteragain," Toews said. "There's mining which team's player a lot of things that play into reaches the far-end faceoff t hat. That's ou r g oa l f o r dot. The rule is being connow." templated in a bid to reduce Here's five more things to the chance of injuries that watch out for as the NHL en- can occur when players colters its 96th year: lide at the end boards. Familiar faces, new places: Sabres forward Steve Ott Vinny's in Philly, Alfie's in does not like it. "I think it's terrible," he Motown, and Tim Thomas ended his one-year sabbati- said. "There's too much hesical to land in Florida. tation from the referee to the T hese were among t h e players going to get the puck, more significant moves inand that h esitation slows volving the NHL's old guard down the game." In other changes, players this offseason. Vincent Lecavalier start- with fewer than 25 games of ed the ball rolling, when the NHL experience must wear former Tampa Bay captain a visor. signed a f i v e-year, $22.5 Players will also not be m illion contract w it h t h e permitted to tuck their jerFlyers. seys into their pants to exD aniel A l f r edsson, t h e pose any protective padding. long-time Senators captain, Goalie shuffle: T here i s jumped ship to sign with the a spotlight on goalies who switched teams and on some Red Wings. His departure prompted the Senators to ac- who stayed put. quire forward Bobby Ryan Cory Schneider is out of Roberto Luongo's shadow in in a deal with Anaheim. And then there is Thomas, Vancouver to become Marwho re-emerged last week tin Brodeur's heir apparent by signing a one-year deal in New Jersey. The Toronto with the Panthers. Maple Leafs made a bid to New rules: Untucked jer- shore up their crease by acseys and visors are in fash- quiring Jonathan Bernier in

Oregon teams set to take on the 5,000-meter Drake Park course on Friday began the 2013 season at the Jere Breese Memorial Stampede in Prineville in early September. But truly, with teams now having several meets under theirbelts, the Oxford meet will be their first competitive event this close to home. "It's definitely an i m p ortant meet, a special meet," Stearns says. "For one thing, it's a chance for our athletes to get to shine here locally — running in front of their parents and teachers and al l t h eir friends. That's a pretty cool thing right there." The spectator-friendly course adds to the unique nature of the Classic, as the track winds through Drake Park and slices through onlooking crowds, rarely taking the runnersfarfrom the fans. Friday will mark the 24th running of the Classic at Drake Park. And over the years, the competition level, the atmosphere and the significance of the meet have not dwindled.

"I think it's really important for our kids, especially, and even for every kid in Bend," Nye says of the Oxford Classic. "I grew up running on that course as a kid, and maybe some of the parents did and now their kids are.... I think our school and our families a nd our r u n ners an d o u r coaches take a lot of pride in getting a lot of people to come to our park. For our kids, it's definitely close to the biggest meet of the year for them because it's our meet. We want to go and run well and have a

a trade with Los Angeles. Then there is the Flyers' near-annual offseason caro usel. Newly s i gned f r ee agent Ray Emery i s c ompeting wit h S t eve M ason for the starting jo b a f t er Philadelphia gave up on Ilya

Bryzgalov. Questionsremain regarding the status of several established veterans. In Pittsburgh, Marc-Andre Fleury is on the hot seat after his latest playoff meltdown sent him to the bench last spring. Fleury will open the season as the starter by default with Tomas Vokoun out indefinitely due to blood clots. R yan Miller's future i n Buffalo is uncertain too. The Sabres have not ruled out the possibility of trading Miller before hiscontract expires after this season. Rookie watch: Center Nathan M acKinnon, d r afted first overall by Colorado in June, heads the list of raw rookies set to m ake their professional debuts. Other first-round picks set to make the immediate jump to the NHL include Panthers center Aleksander Barkov (No. 2 pick), Nashville de-

fenseman Seth Jones (No. 4), and Sabres defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen (No. 8).

great day." — Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucas@bendbulletin.com.

P

• • .

> • I

I I

I

I


C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

+

+

3,771.48

Toda+

Construction monitor

Change: -10.20 (-0.6%) 10 DAYS

1 54E 4

15,080

1 0 DAY S

16,000"

"

.

15,600 15,200:

1,600"

.

A

M

StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,162 1,777 Pvs. Volume 2,856 1,654 Advanced 1237 1159 Declined 1834 1385 New Highs 69 11 1 New Lows 38 23

DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

J

HIGH LOW C LOSE C H G. 15249.82 15086.71 15129.67 -128.57 6606.48 6522.66 6582.43 -15.16 483.09 480.12 482.29 + 0 . 10 9648.33 9587.69 9621.24 -62.95 3780.97 3734.74 3771.48 -10.11 1687.26 1674.99 1681.55 -10.20 -0.33 1246.99 1231.33 1243.85 18072.74 17888.22 17982.43 -90.31 1075.49 1061.79 1073.79 -0.40

A

%CHG. WK MO OTR YTD -0.84% L L +15.46% -0.23% +24.04% +0.02% L L +6.44% -0.65% L L +13.95% -0.27% L +24.90% -0.60% L +17.91% -0.03% L +21.89% -0.50% L L +19.92% -0.04% L +26.42%

0.6

NorthwestStocks

-0.1

F

M

A

Alaska Air Group M J J Avista Corp source: Factset Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

Labor Day impact? Auto manufacturers' data on U.S. sales in September are expected to show amodest annual increase. This year, Labor Day holiday sales are being counted toward August's sales. As a result, the strong sales demand during the holiday isn't going to be reflected in last month's total. A J.D. Power and LMC Automotive forecasts calls for September auto sales to be up only 4 percent from a year earlier, hitting a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 15.2 million units.

Health care overhaul A key part of President Barack Obama's health care overhaul is scheduled to go into effect today. The health insurance exchanges, which are online markets through which individuals and smallbusiness can buy private health insurance, are supposed to give consumers a quick way to compare insurance policies. Enrollment begins today, with health care coverage starting Jan. 1.

ALK 34.57 ~ AVA 22 78 ~ BAC 8. 8 5 ~ BBSI 26 1 9 ~ BA 69 . 20 ~ CascadeBancorp CACB 4.65 ~ Columbia Bakg CDLB 16.18 — Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 ~ Costco Wholesale COST 93.51 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 — FLIR Systems FLIR 18.58 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 Home Federal BacpID HOME 10.26 Intel Corp INTC 19.23 Keycorp KEY 7. 8 1 ~ Kroger Co KR 2 3 09 — Lattice Semi LSCC 3.46 ~ LA Pacific L PX 12.50 ~ MDU Resources M DU 19.59 ~ Mentor Graphics MENT 13,21 — Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 ~ Nike Inc 8 NKE 44 83 — NordstromIac JWN 50.94 ~ Nwst NatGas NWN 39.96 ~ OfficeMax Iac DMX 6. 2 2 — PaccarIac PCAR 39.52 ~ Planar Systms P LNR 1.12 ~ Plum Creek PCL 4 0.60 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 160.78 ~ Safeway Ioc SWY 15,00 — Schaitzer Steel SCHN 23.07 Sherwin Wms SHW 138.36 Staacorp Facl SFG 31.15 StarbucksCp SBUX 44.27 Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 US Baacorp USB 30.96 WashingtonFedl WAFD 15.64 Wells Fargo &Co WFC 31.25 Weyerhaeuser WY 2 4.75

0

0

0

0 0

o

68.00 29 26 15.03 73 49 1 20.38 7.18 25.59 66.69 120.20 13.94 33.82 27.78 14.81 25.98 1 2.63 41 42 5.71 22.55 30.21 23,60 3 6.43 75 25 63.34 50.80 13.17 60.0 0 2.36

54.62 270.0 0 0 32,72 32.99 194.56 56.40 77.85 8.49 17.48 38.23 22.78 44.79 33.24

62.62 .97 26.40 +.06 13.80 -.10 67.31 1.48 117.50 1.24 5.83 +.02 24.70 02 60.23 31 115.17 -.55 13 .44 -.36 31 .40 +.08 20 .99 -.18 12 .58 08 22 .92 06 11.4 0 +. 0 4 40 .34 -.35 4.46 -.03 17.5 9 +. 0 5 27.9 7 +.1 8 23 .37 + . 2 2 33.2 8 +.0 1 72 .64 -1.00 5 6. 2 0 -.25 41. 9 8 +. 0 1 12 .79 +. 2 4 5 5. 6 6 -.14 1 .84 +.02 4 6. 8 3 -.24 22 7.24 -.85 31 .99 -.26 27 .50 07 182.18 +1.75 55 .02 20 76 .97 36 8 .1 2 +.07 16 .22 +.05 36 .58 +.08 20 .68 +.15 41 .32 27 28 .63 30 -

-1.5 w +0.2 L L -0.7 w w -2.2 w L

V L L

-1.0 w +0.3 -0.1 w - 0.5 V -0.5 w -2.6 w +0.3 L L -0.9 V

V

V

L L L L

L W L L L V

V

-0.6 w w

w

+ 45.3 +79.5 7 2 4 1 5 0 . 8 0 + 9.5 +6.3 262 18 1.2 2 +18. 9 +5 5 .4 97370 25 0 . 04 + 76. 7 + 1 49.6 6 2 33 0.5 2 +55.9 t 72.1 3 9 37 2 1 1. 9 4 -6.9 + 7 . 8 29 5 +37. 7 +36 .3 3 3 9 2 0 0. 4 0 + 12. 9 +1 2 .2 1 0 3 1 9 0. 8 8 +16. 7 t 23. 5 1 6 84 2 5 1. 2 4 +107 .4 + 7 2 .7 4 7 cc +40.7 +56 .8 8 9 5 2 0 0. 3 6 +47. 3 +2 6 .1 13022 dd 0 . 5 8

+1.2

+13 .8 2 4 2 c c 0. 24a

- 0.3 V +0 .4 L -0 9 w

L w L

W +11. 2 L +35.4 L +55 0

+3. 4 2 9525 12 0 . 9 0 +31 .3 10013 13 0 . 2 2 +75 , 1 2 8 29 1 3 0 , 66f

-0.7 w

w

w +11 . 8 +1 6 .3 1 080 dd L -9.0 +34.3 2650 11

+0 .3 L L +0 .6 L L +1,0 L L ... ~ w -1,4 V L -0.4 W L ... L +1 .9 L L -0.3 V L +1 . 0 L W -0.5 V L -0.4 W L -0,8 W L -0.3 w L +1.0 L L -0.4 w L - 0.5 V L +0.9 L L +0.3 L W +0.2 L L +0.7 L V -0.6 w L -1.0 W L

L +31.7 L +37,3 w +24 .6 L + 40 8 W +5.0 W -5.0 L +48.4 L + 23.1 L +28.7 L + 5.5 L +20. 0 L +76, 8 L - 9.3 L + 18.4 L +50.0 L +43. 5 L + 68.1 L +37. 6 L +14.5 L +22.6 L +20.9 L + 2.9

Help wanted for the holidays'".'."',' relatively flat because of cautious consumer spending and uncertainty about the economic environment. Last week, Toys R Us said it plans to hire 45,000 seasonal workers at its stores and distribution centers, the same number as last year. Wal-Mart Stores has plans to hire 55,000 seasonal workers. Target plans to hire 70,000 workers, a 20 percent drop from a year ago. And Kohl's plans to hire about 53,000 seasonal workers, slightly more than last year.

Holiday hires (in thousands)

Macy's(M) Target(TGT) Wal-Mart(WMT) Kohl's(KSS)

83 70 55 53

Stock price change YTD

10.2% 7.6 9.1 19.9 Source: FactSet

AP

FundFocus AP

168.01 —.90 13.80 -.10 50.23 -1.01 40.76 —.48 8.81 —.25

S&P500ETF 1296978 BkofAm 973695 Facebook 970788 iShEMkts 873332 Penney 578351 BariPVix rs 512120 RiteAid 464449 iShR2K 409754 SPDR Fncl 394218 Cisco 371376

14.70 4.76 106.61 19.91 23.43

+ . 50 + . 06 + . 03 —.14 + . 10

Gainers NAME LAST ChinaSun h 6.01 ActiveNet 14.31 Andatee h 2.14 AccelrDiag 13.41 BrkfldDfPr 19.07 Edenor 4.40 AlliHltC rs 27.69 ChiYida rs 5.89 ChiMYWnd 2.39 FndtnMd n 39.64

CHG %CHG +1.80 +2.91 +.41 +2.35 +2.30 t .52 +3.22 +.64 t .24 +3.99

+ 4 2 .8 + 2 5 .5 + 2 3 .7 + 2 1 .2 + 1 3 .7 +1 3 . 4 + 1 3.2 + 1 2 .2 +1 1 . 2 + 1 1.2

Losers NAME Achillion

Chinalnfo PingtanM

CelluDyn n ChartAcq n

LAST 3.02 5.14 2.03 18.41 9.95

CHG %CHG -4.22 -58.3 -1.67 -24.5 —.35 -14.7 -3.08 -14.3 -1.56 -13.6

Foreign Markets NAME Paris

LAST 4,143.44 London 6,462.22 Frankfurt 8,594.40 Hong Kong 22,859.86 Mexico 40,185.23 Milan 17,434.86 Tokyo 14,455.80 Stockholm 1,259.60 Sydney 5,217.70 Zurich 8,022.60

CHG %CHG -43.33 -1.03 —.77 -50.44 -67.11 -.77 -347.18 -1.50 -718.42 -1.76 -211.30 -1.20 -304.27 -2.06 -9.88 -.78 -84.60 -1.60 -32.40 —.40

SelectedMutualFunds

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 22.83 - . 0 9+13.4 +14.8 +12.7 +9.5 A A A CaplncBoA m 56.19 -.26 +9.3 +10.7 +9.2 +7.2 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 42.33 -.26+15.9 +20.6 +10.3 +8.0 C C D EurPacGrA m 46.01 -.40 +11.6 +17.9 +6.7 +7.2 D D 8 FnlnvA m 48.3 9 - . 22+19.6 +22.4 +14.8 +9.9 8 C 8 GrthAmA m 42 .01 -.19+22.3 +25.1 +15.6+10.2 A C C TCW TotnetBdl TGLMX IncAmerA m 19.64 -.08 +11.6 +13.2 +11.4 +9.3 8 A 8 InvCoAmA m 35.74 -.22 +19.9 +20.9 +14.0 +9.2 C D C LIMITED MODERATE EXTENSIVE NewPerspA m 36.52 -.23 +16.8 +21.7 +12.4+10.1 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m36.94 -.22+20.1 +20.6 +16.2 +9.3 C A 8 Dodge 8 Cox Income 1 3.50 . . . -0.4 + 0.6 + 4.1 +7.7 IntlStk 40.97 . . . +18.3 +26.6 +9.3 +7.1 Stock 151.97 . . . +26.1 +28.7 +18.1 +9.8 Fidelity Contra 93.30 -.53 +21.4 +19.5 +15.5+11.1 D C 6 GrowCo 118. 77 - .42+27.4 +24.3 +19.3+14.6 A A A LowPriStk d 46.85 -.12+24.5 +28.5 +17.8+14.4 8 B A Fidelity Spartan 500 l dxAdvtg59.89 -.36+19.8 +19.3 +16.2+10.0 C 8 8 FrankTemp-Fraoklio Income C m 2. 35 - .01 +8.1 +10.1 +9.4+10.4 A A A IncomeA m 2. 3 3 -. 01 +8.5 +10.7 +10.1+10.9 A A A Cl FrankTemp-TempletoaGIBondAdv 12 . 92 +.01 -0.3 + 3 .5 + 4.7 +9.7 A A A Oakmark Intl I 26.15 . . . +24.9 +40.0 +14.3+13.4 RisDivA m 20. 07 - .08+16.2 +16.8 +14.0 +7.6 E D E Morningstar OwnershipZone™ Oppeoheimer RisDivB m 18. 17 - .07+ 15.4 +15.7 +12.9 +6.6 E E E Vertical axis represents average credit RisDivC m 18 . 07 - .08+ 15.5 +15.9 +13.1 +6.8 E D E quality; horizontal axis represents SmMidValA m41.09 -.07 + 26.8 +33.0 +13.4 +9.0 A E E interest-rate sensitivity SmMidValB m34.47 -.07+25.9 +31.8 +12.4 +8.1 B E E CATEGORY Intermediate-Term BondPIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 82 +.01 -2.2 -1.1 +3.4 +7.5 C C 6 MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 3 1.15 -.16 +19.3 +21.6 +15.5 +9.4 C 8 6 R ATING™ *** * * GrowStk 46.97 -.15 t 24.3 +23.0 t17.7 t13.4 6 A A ASSETS $5,372 million HealthSci 57.37 -.01 +39.2 +35.8 +30.8 +20.4 6 A A EXP RATIO 0.44% Vanguard 500Adml 155.02 -.93 +19.8 +19.3 +16.2+10.0 C 8 8 500lnv 155.02 -.94 +19.7 +19.2 +16.1 +9.9 D 8 8 MANAGER Bryan Whalen CapDp 44.57 -.17 t32.6 +39.4 +18.4+13.2 A A A SINCE 2009-12-07 Eqlnc 28.26 -.17 +19.4 +19.5 +17.8+10.6 D A A RETURNS3-MD +1,0 StratgcEq 27.34 -.06 +27.5 +32.2 +20.4+12.4 A A 8 YTD +0.5 TgtRe2020 26.26 -.09 +10.2 +11.7 +9.9 +8.2 8 A A 1-YR +2.2 Tgtet2025 15.18 -.06 +11.7 +13.3 +10.7 +8.4 8 8 8 3-YR ANNL +6.0 TotBdAdml 1 0 66 . . . -20 -1.8 +2.8 +5.3 D D D 5-YR-ANNL +9.4 Totlntl 16.12 -.11 t 9 . 7 +17.1 +5.9 t5.9 D D C TotStlAdm 42.63 -.22 t21.3 +21.5 +16.8+10.7 6 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 42.62 -.22 +21.2 +21.4 +16.7+10.6 8 A A Commit To Pur Fnma Sf Mtg 4.01 USGro 25.95 -.13 t22.1 +22.7 t17.5 t11.1 6 A 8 US Treasury Note 0.25% 3.77 Welltn 37.39 -.15 t12.6 +13.7 +11.6 +9.8 6 A A Commit To Pur Fnma Sf Mtg 3.28 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Commit To Pur Fnma Sf Mtg 2.62 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or Commit To Pur Fnma Sf Mtg 2.07 redemption fee. Source: Mornngstac

This intermediate-bond fund invests the bulk of its portfolio in MarketSummary mortgage-backed securities, Most Active according to Morningstar, which NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG gives it a 5-star rating.

FAMILY

+

EURO

' 54

1.3524

StoryStocks

HNR

Close:$5.35L0.22 or 4.3% The independent energy company is in exclusive negotiations to sell its interest in permits off of Gabon for $137 million.

$6

Brookfield Office USA Close:$5.41 V-0.03 or -0.6% Brookfield Property Partners wants to buy the remainder of the real estate investment company for about $5 billion. $5.8 5.6 5.4

J

8

A 52-week range

$2.45 ~

$10.83

Vol.:1.2m (1.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$211.44 m

LDK Close: $1.93 %0.44 or 29.5% LDK is the latest Chinese solar manufacturer to enter into an arrangement with debtors and keep bankruptcy at arm's length. $2.5 2.0 1.5

J

8

J A 52-week range $4.25~

$5.72

P E: 16 . 7 Vol.:536.7k (1.2x avg.) P E: . . . Yield :... Mkt. Cap:$966.64 m Yi e ld: 6.7%

8

A 52-week range

$0,71~

$2.$2

Vol.:14.0m (6.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$306.53 m

WhiteWave

WWAV Close:$19.97V-0.08 or -0.4%

The beveragecompany took a hit after BMO Capital issued a downgrade citing weak dairy trends and more intense competition. $22 20 1816-

J A 52-wcek range $14.22 ~

P E: . . . Vol.:3.0m (1.6x avg.) Yield :... Mkt. Cap:$2.1 b

Intel

INTC Close:$22.92 V-0.06 or -0.3% Sterne Agee said back-to-school demand is weak and lowered expectations for the tech giant in the

second half of the year. + 28 .6 76 7 cc 0.6 9 $26 +49 ,3 5 1 5 2 4 0, 1 8 24 +1 3.435478 13 1 .12f 22 +55 , 2 7 1 29 2 5 0, 8 4 +4.6 17 6 4 1 5 1. 2 0 J A 8 - 10.6 264 2 0 1 . 82 52-week range +77 .7 2 4 71 2 0 . 0 8 a $19,2$~ $2$.9$ +4 3 .0 1 7 47 1 9 0 .80a Vol.:32.4m (0.9x avg.) PE: 1 2 .4 +36 . 9 10 dd Mkt. Cap:$114.19 b Yi e l d: 3.9% +10. 5 60 4 3 2 1.7 6 +4 0 .2 6 5 9 2 2 0. 1 2 Yahoo YHOO + 1 04,6 3846 15 0 , 8 0 Close:$33.17 V-0.38 or -1.1% + 0.7 2 2 9 9 8 0 . 75 Bank of America increased its price +22 .6 1 0 31 2 6 2. 0 0 target and said the upcoming Alibaba IPO will enable the tech compa+7 9 .4 1 8 2 1 3 0. 9 3f ny to unlock value. +5 3 .2 4 1 17 3 7 0. 8 4 $35 +53 .8 2 1 48 d d +2 9 .2 1 2 41 1 7 0 .60a 30 +9.3 73 7 1 1 2 0. 9 2 +24 .4 4 9 4 1 5 0. 4 0f +22 .7 18856 11 1 . 2 0 J A 8 52-week range +11. 2 3 5 67 2 6 0 . 88f

Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, ttut are not included. e - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreasee bymost recent dividend announcement. i - sum Dt dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dmdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pwd th>$ year, a cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. r - Declared or paid in precedmg t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approx>matecash value on ex-distrittution date.pe Footnotes:q - stock is a closed-end fund - no piE ratio shown. cc - p/E exceeds 9a dd - Loss in last t2 months

Macy's says it plans to hire about 83,000 seasonal workers for the holiday season. Coming off a slower-than-expected back-to-school season, analysts and stores are bracing for a tough holiday shopping period, which accounts for as much as 40 percent of stores' annual revenue. Analysts study the holiday hiring figures from retailers for clues about overall employment trends and sales expectations for the holiday season. Overall holiday hiring is expected to be

+

LDK Solar

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

NAME 0.5

$102.33

Harvest Natural

14,400

A

0.5

CRUDEOIL

12

Stocks fell Monday as the federal government trudged toward a parCh a nge: -128.57 (-0.8%) tial shutdown. Sharp disagreement on Capitol Hill over government spending meant investors expected to see the first partial shutdown in 17 years begin on Tuesday. An even bigger worry for investors is that the discord will continue and lead to the government's first-ever default on its debt in mid- to late October. Concerns about the brinksmanship in Washington sent the Standard & Poor's 50D index to its seventh decline in the last eight days. The losses were widespread across industries, and companies that sell staples to consumers had some of the sharpest losses.

14 800.

1,550 1'500

+

$21.66

Close: 15,129.67

1,650,

Percent change, seasonally adjusted

0.8

,

'

1,750 " 1,700 .

SILVER

GOLD $1,326.50

' i)2

Dow Jones industrials

Close: 1,681.55

1,640 "

Construction spending 2.0%

+

2.61%

58tp 5pp

1,700.0 ..

Spending on construction projects has been uneven this year, partly due to budget cutbacks for public projects. In July, spending jumped 0.6 percent from June, reaching the highest level since September 2008. That increase was led by strong gains in housing and nonresidential projects. The Commerce Department reports its tally of how spending on U.S. construction projects fared in August today.

10 YR T NOTE

1p pp

1,681.55

1 760

Tuesday, october t, 2013

1 .0

S&P 500

NASDAO ~ -1p.11

15,129.67

$15.$5~

$$$.$5

Vol.:28.8m (1.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$33.84 b

P E: 9 . 4 Yield: ...

8 $20.$$ PE: 29.8 Yield: ...

AMC

AMCX Close:$68.50 A1.62 or 2.4% "Breaking Bad" ends, but Barron's sees a stock surge and said the network could become the target of a media heavyweight. $75 70

65

J A 8 52-week range $40.7$ ~ $72.4$

Vol.:632.7k (1.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.16 b

PE: 1 9 .9 Yield:...

Achillion

ACHN Close:$3.02 V-4.22 or -58.3% Downgraded after the pharmaceutical company said regulators would maintain a clinical hold on a study of its hepatitis C drug.

$8

8

J A 52-week range $2.$7~

$11.3$

Vol.:38.8m (21.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$291.86 m

P E: . . . Yield :... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

The yield on the 1D-year Treasury note fell to 2.61 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill

. 01

.01

...

-

6-month T-bill

. 0 3 .03

...

w

52-wk T-bill

.08

.09

-0.01 V

2-year T-note . 3 2 .33 -0.01 W 5-year T-note 1 .38 1 .40 -0.02 W 10-year T-note 2.61 2.63 -0.02 W 30-year T-bond 3.69 3.69 ... W

BONDS

w w

w w

.0 9 .13

W

V

.15

W W T

T T L

.23 .63 1.63

W L 2.82

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.47 3.47 ... W W BondBuyerMcni Idx 5.09 5.09 ... W W Barcl ays USAggregate 2.34 2.36 -0.02 W W PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.16 6.11 +0.05 L W RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.54 4.55 -0.01 W L YEST 3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.56 1.57 -0.01 w w 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.28 3.29 -0.01 w w 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities Commodity prices fell on worries that political brinksmanship in Washington may harm the economy. The price of oil fell at one point during trading to its lowest level since July 5.

L 2. 51 L 4. 18 W 1 .60 W 6.5 5 L 3.37 .91

w

2. 8 1

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 102.33 102.87 -0.52 + 11.5 Ethanol (gal) 1.93 1.98 -1.26 -12.1 Heating Dil (gal) 2.97 2.99 -0.64 -2.4 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.56 3.56 - 0.81 + 6 . 2 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.63 2.68 -1.55 -6.3 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1326.50 1338.40 21.66 21.78 1408.10 1416.10 3.32 3.33 726.15 730.80

%CH. %YTD -0.89 -20.8 -0.58 -28.2 -0.48 -8.5 -0.14 -8.8 - 0.64 + 3 . 3

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -1.6 1.28 1.28 -0.31 1.14 1.14 -20.9 4.42 4.54 -2.75 -36.8 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.86 0.86 +0.53 +14.6 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 344.10 341.80 +0.67 -8.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.31 1.29 +1.47 +13.1 Soybeans (bu) 12.83 13.20 -2.80 -9.6 Wheat(bu) 6.79 6.83 -0.66 -12.8 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

Foreign Exchange The dollar inched lower against the British pound and other currencies amid expectations that political discord will lead to the first partial shutdown of the U.S. government since 1996.

h5N4 QG

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6184 +.0051 +.32% 1 .6140 Canadian Dollar 1.0305 +.0004 +.04% .9834 USD per Euro 1.3524 +.0009 +.07% 1 . 2855 —.06 —.06% 77.99 Japanese Yen 98.24 Mexican Peso 13. 1 354 —.0351 —.27% 12.8634 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5240 —.0298 —.85% 3.9174 Norwegian Krone 6. 0 223 + .0267 +.44% 5.7264 Sooth African Rand 10.0670 —.0274 —.27% 8.3254 Swedish Krona 6.43 4 4 + . 0053 +.08% 6.5597 0018 —. 20% Swiss Franc . 9043 —. .9404 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0725 -.0009 -.08% . 9 639 Chinese Yuan 6.1205 +.0022 +.04% 6 .2874 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7555 +.0010 +.01% 7 .7544 Indian Rupee 62.580 +.075 +.12% 5 2.860 Singapore Dollar 1.2547 -.0016 -.13% 1.2265 South Korean Won 1075.29 -.25 -.02% 1112.86 Taiwan Dollar 29.61 + .05 +.17% 29 . 34


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

BRIEFING

State personal income grows Oregon's personal income grew about1.1

percent in the second quarter of this year, over the first quarter, accord-

ing to figures released Monday by the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis. State personal income serves as agauge

EXECUTIVE FILE

Student

What: Bellatrix Systems, Inc.

loan defaults onrise

What it does:Developsand makes low-power electronic control and security units for

businesses andconsumers. Pictured:Ray Lundy, president

and chief operating officer. Where:1015 S.W. Emkay Drive, Bend

Employees:About 25 Phone:541-382-2208 Website:www.bellatrix.com

of economic activity. It

By Janet Lorin and John Hechinger

equals thesum ofwages and salaries; dividends, interest and rent; and

Bloomberg News

transfer receipts, such as unemployment and Medicare benefits, for

all people in the state. Arizona and Florida saw the greatest growth, with both states

showing increases of1.5 percent in the

second quarter, which ended June30, according to the bureau.

For Oregon, an increase in dividends interest and rent ac-

counted for most of the second-quarter growth. However, most states saw declines in overall personal income in the first quarter, the

bureau said. Thedrops stemmed in large part from the ending of the

temporary payroll tax cuton Jan.1.

Study: Applemost valuable drand Apple has unseated Coca-Cola asthe world's No. 1 brand, as the company founded by Steve Jobs is a leader

in design, performance and focuses on customers, according to a study of the Top100 brands by Interbrand.

Apple's brand value jumped 28 percent to $98.3 billion, Google is now in second place at $93.3 billion, and Coca-Cola hasslipped from the top seatafter

13 years to third place at $79.2 billion. — From staff and wire reports

DEEDS Deschutes County • Gretchen V.Dakin, trustee tothe Gretchen V.Dakin Survivors Trust, to Ned and Susan M.Burck, First Addition to Indian Ford Ranch Homes,Lo14, Block 5, $649,000 • Mark and RoxanneKuczek to Evelyn Lerner,Carriage Addition, Lo12, Block4, $207,500 • Daniel E. BeougherJr. to William E.andJulie L. Boyd, Township15, Range12, Section11, $159,000 •Judy C. Penny,trustee forthe Judy Cochran Penny Trust, to Charles J. and Diane L.Forslund, Woodside RanchPhase5, Lot11, Block13, $339,500 •Tennbrook FinancingLLCto HasenoehrlCustomHomes Inc., Renaissanceat Shevlin Park, Lot 23,$150,000 •Tennbrook Financing LLC to Self Directed IRA Services lnc., custodian FBO EdwardBonnIRA, Renaissance atShevlin Park, Lot 21, $190,000 • Darren M. Welborn and Ben F.Williams to Kirk R. and Kristen J.Meckem, Parks at BrokenTop,Phase 2, Lo176, $504,500 • Rick and Erika Miler to HaydenHomesLLC, Mountain Park, Lots1-8, $320,000 • McCarthy Development and Construction Services Inc. to Bernard J.and Marilyn I. Smith, Orion Estates, Lot26, Block15, $ $365,000 • DKS LLC to Linda R. Anderson, LavaRidge, Phase 4, Lot136, $292,750 • PNC Mortgage, adivision of PNCBank N.A., tothe Secretary of Housingand Urban Developmentof Washington D.C.,Hillman, Lots 13-20, Block 55, $346,979.49 • Kenneth E. Robbins and Teresa M.Brown toDeborah S. Sprague,Township 15, Range11,Section 30, $875,000 • Linda L. Thomas,trustee for the Peter A.Tedeschi

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

reain a smar er Swi C

. Whatis

• your favorite part about working for Bellatrix? The thing I . Iovemost about working for

A•

Bellatrix is we're in the position to reach out to

consumers and businessesand

By Rachael Reese The Bulletin

ask them, "What

By the end of the month, Bend-based Bellatrix

would you like?

Systems, Inc. hopes to have the funds to bring its latest

What would you

invention, a programmable home-electrical system, to

the future?" And then, we turn that dream into reality.

market by May.

need or want for

I love being part of that process....

"(The system) puts the power of

On theWeb

our handheld devices like iPads or cellphones into the wall switch so the wall switch can do all kinds of fancy functions," said Ray Lundy, president and chief operating officer.

To see videos of bRight Switch features in action, visit http://

vimeo.com/getbrightswitch

The applied-technology company began when Tom Ellsberg, the founder, came to Bend from the Los Angeles area in 1986 and began building coin readers for newspaper vending machines. Since then, Lundy said, Bellatrix has expanded into manufacturing other products, such as electronic locks for FedEx drop boxes and credit-cardacceptors forthe restaurant industry. Bellatrix makes its products in Bend, at several contract manufacturing facilities around Oregon and in Asia, Lundy said, and has customers around the world. Because Bellatrix is a pioneer in electronic and electromechanical systems, its business philosophy is to make about three different products at a time. If one product is discontinued or a new invention isn't successful, the company can still survive, Lundy said. The home-electrical system, called bRight Switch, is the company's newest development. It consists of electronic switches,

outlets and software that create an intelligent, wireless lighting system. Lights learn to turn on when desired, and occupants can link switches in different rooms so lights turn on together. Another part of the system allows users to control alarm clocks and apps with the wall switches, he said. "The light in your bedroom can turn on Pandora in the morning, connect to Skype so you can talk to your mom in Boston, or have an alarm to turn on your lights electronically," Lundy said, describing a few of the bRight Switch features. Prototypes for the switches have been developed, and Bellatrix is gauging market demand through a $400,000crowd-funding campaign on Indiegogo that ends Oct. 31. "If we don't reach our funding goal, we have a decision to make, whether we want to self-fund it or pursue additional funding," he said.

We conceptualize it, and we make it real.

• Where do . youseethe company in the next five years? . I thinkwe'll

• continue to do what we do

now, but our reach will expand. We

will be developing many new products for consumers and businesses in electronics, software

and mechanical systems. I see that Bellatrix has a bright future, with all ofthese prod-

uct lines going simultaneous.

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbultetin.com

Study: Use ofcashrather costly By David Nicklaus St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Even in the age of PayPal, Square and Bitcoin, many

people pull out a green piece of paper to pay for their morning coffee without giving the transaction much thought. Somebody, though, had to get that piece of paper to your neighborhood ATM, and you

had to spend some gasoline (or

Exempt Trust, to Michael L. and CarmenM.Tagg, Tollgate, Lot 21, $220,000 • Stanley H. Klepperand Peggye J. Phillips-Klepper to Linda F. Falisec, Grecnsat Redmond 6A, Lots152 and 153, $350,000 • Kyle and Kalisha Fleischmann toDonJ. Leonard Jr andPaula Bradford, YardleyEstates, Phase 2, Lot51,$360,000 • Caldera Capital LLC to Matthew Laub,Sundance

NEW YORK — About one in seven borrowers defaulted on their federal student loans, showing how former students are buckling under h ighere ducation costs in a w e a k economy. The default rate, for the first three years that students are required to make payments, was 14.7 percent, up from D.4 percent the year before,the U.S. Education Department said Monday. Based on a related measure,defaults are at the highest level since 1995. The fresh data follows the a nnouncement b y Bar a c k Obama's administration that it would seek to restrain skyrocketing college expenses by tying federal financial aid to a new government rating of costs and educational outcomes. The rising number of defaults shows the pain of b orrowers, said Rory O'Sullivan, policy and research director at Young Invincibles, a Washington nonprofit. "Our generation is behind in the economicrecovery and not recovering as fast as we need to," said O'Sullivan, whose group represents the interests of people ages 18 to 34.

shoe leather) to get it out. Cash also carries a risk of theft, and it allows some unscrupulous people to evade taxes. Researchers from Tufts University came up with a big number. They say that based on "highly conservative assumptions," the cost of cash in the U.S. amounts to $200 billion a year. The culprits:

East, Phase 2,Lot 7,Block 3, $274,770 • Burton H. andCarol J. Douglass, trusteesfor the Douglass FamilyRevocable Trust, to Herbert W.and Susan E.Klein, trusteesfor the Klein Family 2007Trust, Tanglewood, Phase7,Lot I4, $456,000 • Lloyd and Leilani A. Pratt to Peter J. andEudaemone J. Battilega, South Heights Addition, Lot1, Block 2, $203,000

• Daren andPamCurry to James S.and Molly K. Smith, Heritage Ranch,Lot 3, $ I86,500 • John T. andSherry L. O'Mall eytoSusan P.and Thomas J. Dernbach, Terrango GlenSouth, Lot8, $282,000 • John L. andMaryJane Nicholson, trusteesfor the Mary JaneNicholson and John L. Nicholson Living Trust, to David M.Osborne, Mountain VillageWest2,

Households pay about $8 billion in ATM fees and lose $500 million a year to theft, but the study puts their total costmuch higher,at$43 billion. Most of that comes from assigning a value to the time that people spend going to ATMs or check-cashing stores. The study estimates that tax evasion amounts to 8100 billion a year.

Lot13, Block17, $150,000 • Jake Bell to Junie M.and TamasBessenyei,City View, Phase 2,Lot28, $462,500 • Brad A. andLani R. Hudspeth to W.Richard Hardie andCynthia R. Hardie Living Trust, Stonehaven,Phase3, Lot 71, $345,000 • Christine M. Ferrante, trustee for theChristine M. Ferrante Trust, to Ross J. and Mary T.Scrocca.

BP accused of lying to government in Gulf spill By Michael Kunzelman The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — BP lied to the U.S. government and withheld information about the amount of oil spilling into the Gulf of Mexico after its well blew out in 2010, attorneys told

ajudgeMonday. But lawyers for the Londonbased oil giant denied those accusations and said there was no way to prepare for such a unique blowout a mile below the seafloor.Second-guessing the company's efforts to cap the well was "Monday morning quarterbacking at its worst," BP attorney Mike Brock said during opening statements of the secondphase ofa trialover the spill. This part focuses on BP'sresponse to the disaster and is designed to help U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier determine how much oil spewed into the Gulf. The government's estimate is 70 million gallons more than what BP says spilled. Establishing how much oil leaked into the Gulf during BP's struggle to cap the well will help figure out the penalties the oil company must pay. Billions of dollars are at stake. The April 20, 2010, blowout of BP's Macondo well 50 miles off the Louisiana coast triggered an explosion that killed 11 workers on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig and spawned the nation's worst offshore oil spill.

Arrowhead, Phases1-4, Lot 8, $218,000 • SFI CascadeHighlands LLC to Richard A.and Janice M. Silver, trustees forthe Silver Family Trust, Tetherow, Phase 3,Lot168, $255,000 • Stephen A. Palmerto KG RanchLLC,Township 17, Range14, Section13, $340,000 • John and Kim A. Lewandowski to Nicole A. and CaseyT. O'Neill, Forest

Grove Estates, Phase 2,Lot 44, $285,000 • Jeff Pitkin to Tyler J. Nass, Clear Sky Estates, Lot 5, Block 5, $150,500 • Alan K. andClaudia Bingham to MaxE.G. Guernsey III andAmy K. Bingham, LakePark Estates, Lot6, Block17, $285,000 • Hayden HomesLLC to Kip L. and Kristin M. Jones, AspenRim,Lot124, $326,997

BRIEFING

Delta chooses Microsoft Delta Air Lines plans to buy11,000 Microsoft Surface 2 tablets for

its pilots to replace the heavy bundles of books and maps they haul around now. Other airlines, including American and United, have

been buying Apple's iPad for that purpose. Delta says the Surface tablets will save it $13 million per year in fuel and other

costs. Right now, each pilot carries a 38-pound flight bag with manuals

and maps. Delta plans to test the tablets on its Boeing 757s and 767s, which are flown by the same

group of pilots. — From wire reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Young Professionals Network: 5:30 p.m. The Pig and Pound Public House, 427 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-526-1697. • Blogging for Business and Beyond: Create a Wordpress blog, integrate it with other social media, engage your audience and other bloggers and create original content on the fly; registration required; $65; 6-9 p.m. COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • Howto Starta Business: Registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m. Central Oregon Community College - Crook County Open Campus, 510 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7290. • The Value of Performance, Buying or Building an Energy Efficient Home: Presented by Bud Munson, broker at Holiday Realty of Central Oregon; free; 6-7 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. WEDNESDAY • What's Brewing: Bob Gomes, CEO Pioneer Memorial Hospital, will discuss the new hospital planned for Prineville; 7-8 a.m.; Meadow Lakes Restaurant, 300 S.W. Meadowlakes Drive, Prineville. • Howfo Starta Business: For those contemplating business ownership; registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way,Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • Basics of Supply Chain Management (CPIM): Course covers basic conceptsinmanaging the complete flow of materials in a supply chain from suppliers to customers; registration required; $659; Thursdays through Dec. 12, 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way,Bend; 541-383-7270. • Essential Leadership Series: Improve communicati on,enhance collaboration, develop confidence in supervisory abilities and increase workplace productivity; registration required; $725, $95 for individual sessions; meets once per month through June 5; 8:30 a.m.- noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7700.

For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit ttendbutiet/n.com/ttizcai

• Louis K. and Joan N. Iselin, trustees to theIselin Family RevocableTrust, to Marshall P Baldocchi Fremont Crossing, Lot12, $465,000 • Curtis J. and Michelle C. Harper to Robert N.and Shannon T.Henderson, Juniper Glen,Lo112, $154,000 • Kathleen A. Delhagcn and Denise M.Burdickto Charlotte Melluzzo, Ridge at Eagle Crest 46, Lot18, $188,000


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Homn, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome

AT THE MARKET A weekly look at produce atlocalfarmers markets.

HOME

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

What:Gala apples Season:Late summer and fall About:Apple season is in full swing right now. It's time to take advantage of all the delicious varieties of

apples that grow in the Pacific Northwest.

There are orchards all over Oregon and Washington. These

ioneerS

OI' S

gala apples came from King Estate, a winery outside of Eugene that

also grows apples. Local farmers markets

By Penny NakamuraeFor The Bulletin

will have all sorts of fun

apples worth trying. Gala apples are tender, with that ideal mix of sweet and tart. Look for

other varieties as well, from Honeycrisp to Braeburn.

Preparation:Gala apples are great for snacking on raw. But they will also hold up well when cooked. You

can slice them into a pie or crisp. Or place some chunks of apple into your next salad.

Apples also pair beauti-

Il f

' ~ rfff

fully with cheese. Try a

slice of sharp cheddar with a slice of a crisp,

Mountain roots

=

You can't say the name Skjersaa without associating it with Terry's famous ski and snow-

tart apple. Blue cheese

also works wonderfully along side apple, as the sweet tang cuts into the intense flavors

of the cheese. Oneof my favorite ways to

prepare apples is to make a big batch of spiced apple sauce. Take any kind of apple (this works particularly

Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

The living room in the Skjersaas' Tetherow townhouse features a white leather sectional and Terry Skjersaa's favorite eggplant lounge chair pointed at the glass-fronted gas fireplace and 65inch flat-screen TV. The Skjersaas owned and operated the chalet-styled ski and snowboard shop that bears their name on Century Drive until 1996.

well with slightly softer

apples or apples that are notat their peak of crispness) and peel and

Editor's note:The At Home section features

a profile of a local home each month. To suggest a home, email athomeN bendbulletin.com.

slice them into half-

inch chunks. Pile these chunks into a pot and add a bit of liquid. I like

a glug or two of orange

O

sl

juice. I like to add a lot

;

See additional photos on The Bulletin's

website:denddulletin.com/athometour

of spices — cinnamon sticks, cloves, nutmeg, allspice and a little

ginger (ideally, you can place the spices into a small spice bag so you can remove them easily at the end). Let the mixture slowly

simmer and develop until the apples are relatively soft. I like my

spiced apple sauce a bit chunky. Serve as is for a healthy dessert or pair it with a

shortbread cookie for something special. — Alandra Johnson, The Bulletin

Olaf Skjersaa, Terry's father, catches some air at Mount Bachelor with the Three Sisters in the distance in a photo by Jim Hosmer on display in Terry and Judy Skjersaa's home.

erry Skjersaa is not afraid of taking risks and dofng thfngs other 73-year-olds might consider unconventional. So when he came to Tetherow looking for an easy-tocare-for dream townhome, he wasn't afraid to go brazenly modern. "I walked into the Tetherow model of this townhouse, and I knew this is what we wanted. And we had been looking at a lot of other homes in Bend. Some of them were over a million or a million and a half dollars, and they weren't even close to being as nice as this home," said Skjersaa. aMy father was a carpenter, and I learned a lot from him, so I know a well-designed and well-built home when I see one." The Skjersaas also knew they wanted big mountain views of the Cascades as the mountains are part of their history.

A sideboard table in the Skjersaa home is made of a chunk of sequoia root that's been worked and painted a muted, metallic silver.

boarding shop

The Skjersaas like to entertain, and they have a kitchen to match. The dual oven combinesa microwave and convection oven.

on Century Drive in Bend. The two-story wooden shop looks like an old-fashioned European ski chalet. He no longer owns the shop and is happily retired with his wife, Judy. But he fondly remembers those early ski days of Bend. "Well my father, Olaf Skjersaa, and my mother, Grace, started the very first ski shop in Bend in 1939. It was in the back of our house. A house my father built on 10th Street," said Skjersaa. "Back in those days, my father and his brother Nels Skjersaa would always try to get the first run on the mountain. When the first snow fell, they would hike to the top." Skjersaaalso remembers his father putting him in a backpack when he was a toddler and hiking him into what is now the Hoodoo Ski Area. SeeSkjersaas/D4

Produce purchased from Agncultural Connections, which distributes goods from regional farms (www. agriculturalconnections.com).

TODAY'S RECIPES Recipes withred ale:Some just go well with a nice hoppy

beverage, while others include someale in the dish: Cioppino, Potato, Cheeseand BeerSoup (pictured), Dijon Slaw, Cuban Sliders, Huli Huli Chicken Sliders,D2;Barley Risotto with Wild

Mushrooms andSmoky Bacon, D3

Y

FOOD

Better fed when you Penty to ponderfor fa

use somered (ale) By Jan Roberts-Dominguez For The Bulletin

Vegan for aday: Mark Bittman offers ideas for a full slate of meals: Hoecakes with Fruit, Bow Ties with Arugula, Olives,

Bulgur andTomatoWe dges,CarrotCandy,ChickpeaandFennel Ratatouille, Broiled Melon with Balsamic,D3

Recipe Finder:Coffeecakewith raisin bran, buttermilk and O.J., D3

GARDEN

So there we were, brewmaster and food writer, contemplating the potential union of a hoppy red ale and a Cuban sandwich. Our mission was to explorethe concept ofamber ales,red alesand thefoods they love. It was noon, but Sky High Brewing's taproom in downtown Corvallis wasn't opening until 4 p.m. for socalled Hoppy Hour, so brewmaster Laurence Livingston and I had the joint to ourselves. What Livingston's Big Kahuna

Northwest Red brought to the party is exactly what I love about a fine-tuned American

red ale: a hoppy personality, tempered by a generous layering of caramel maltiness. My spunky Cuban slider had its own delectable layers to anticipate: a garlicky-mustardy aioli sauce, smoked pork, ham, a nuttyJarlsberg and slender slices of my homemade Damn Good Garlic Dills. After assembly, the sliders were warmed and gently pressed into submission, panini fashion. See Reds/D2

By Liz Douville For The Bulletin

As the daylight hours diminish and sweatshirts become favored outdoor wear, it's apparent we've moved into fall. That doesn't mean we put the lock on the garden shed door. In fact, it's a great time for a good looksee around and some note taking. A fall to-do list can

be just as long as a spring list. Grab a cup of coffee, take a stroll around, or sit in your favorite spot and access what is before you. Are there holes to fill or potted plants that would do better

planted in the garden? Why keep moving containers in and out each year? Find a spot and give it an in-ground home. Save the containers for interesting annual plantings that are easier to manage at season's end. At least 12 years ago a bird must have decided that I needed a bright pink snapdragon to show against the gray of the lava rockery. The spot is the most unlikely spot you'd think any plant could grow, but every year the snapdragon blooms in its bed of juniper duff and

dappled shade. See Fall/D5


D2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

Fooo Reds Continued from D1 L ivingston pulled tw o 4 ounce pours of his red from the tap. Then, just for comparison's sake, he pulled two more servings of his amber ale. His thought was that the amber might go just as well or better than the Northwest red because inhis 20 years of merging his beer with the foods he loves, ambers and barbecue are a winning combo. Of course, I was equally confident that his Big Kahuna would be up to taking on the Cuban.

Cioppino Makes 8 generous servings of 2'/4 cups each (or 10 to 12 potluck

servings). It seems like thereare asmany ren-

Next week: For quick and delicious, think rice

We dove into our sandwiches. "OK, amber first," said Livingston. It only took a moment of chewing and sipping before his eyes lit up. "Wow! That really brings the smoked pork right out. Right in your face." And he was right. The Base Jumper Amber Ale was really merging with the dominant flavor of the sandwich and creating an entirely new level of rich flavor, which is the very definition of a successful pairing: two flavors uniting to form a new and better flavor experience. On tothe Big Kahuna. Same program: chew and sip. But it just didn't happen. What I thought was going to be the perfect pairing turned out just so-so. The Big Kahuna Red Ale failed to create the same synergy, and in fact, the high level of

hops was actually fighting the character of the sandwich. Yet all ingredients in the sandwich are listed as compatible for the red. So what's the deal? There's a lessonhere:Sometimes, what looks good on paper doesn't come together in real time. Livingston's Big Kahuna is just assertive enough in hoppiness to not meld as gracefully with the sandwich's ultimate character. If I'd used a slightly less sweet bread and a more robust ham, I predict it would have all worked out. After all, it wasn't a bad pairing; just not perfect. Next up, my creamy Potato, Cheese and Beer Soup. I was pretty sure this was going to be a winner with the Big Kahuna Red. One of my favorite cold-weather picnic soups, it's loaded with plenty of American red ale-friendly goodies:

chicken broth, Yukon Gold potatoes, green onions, soy sauce, Jarlsberg, extra-sharp cheddar and a pinch of white pepper. Plus, th e c l incher? When Livingston wasn't looking, I whisked a shot of the Big Kahuna right into the soup. Livingston took a sip and smiled. "Wow, th e p o t ato comes through, doesn't it ? Nice, real n ice b alance of cheese. And is that a bit of Big Kahuna in there?" Livingston's persnickety palate had detected the secret ingredient. After much sipping and slurping, we agreed that although the Base Jumper Amber held its own with the soup, it was the Big Kahuna that boosted the experience. Next and final offering: my Shredded Southwest B eef, served on a Golden Quesadilla

ditions of this classic San Francisco fish stew specialtyas there are folks who have left their hearts there. This is a wonderful feast to serve a

group offriends, especiallybecause the tomato stew base can be prepared ahead(days ahead, or weeks ahead andfrozen). Then, just before you're ready to serve, you canheat

with sour cream and a bit of fresh salsa. The beef portion of this dish was a zesty stew of braised, falling-off-the-bonetenderbeef chuck, diced tomatoes, Anaheim chilies, cumin and chili powders, salsa, cilantro, and for an undertone of whang, minced pickled jalapenos. While it was reheating on the burner, I maneuvered a griddle on another burner for the quesadillas. With hand held high, I startled Livingston

have always been my favorite part. So one night I decided to make an entire pan of them. Now obviously the I t alians have been doing that for eons. But did they ever think to slap a tortilla down on top of the cheese while it was frying? "Well, I did. And the Golden Quesadilla is the result." I returned my attentions to the tortilla, flipping it over so the golden cheese-encrusted underside was face up and by dropping a pile of shredded ready to slide out of the pan. " Try this beauty w it h a cheddar right onto the hot surface. Bubbling and smoking sip of t h e B i g K a huna," I ensued. encouraged. "I'll do better than that," he "No worries. It's Teflon." Livingston's puzzled expres- said, reaching for a ladle and sion required embellishment: scooping a generous portion "You know when you sprinkle of the simmering beef onto the cheese onto a flour tortilla as tortilla. it's warming in a skillet, and "Oh myu' he said between some of the shreds fall onto bites and sips. That was a the surface of the pan and im- d efinite thumbs up fo r t h e mediately turn to a golden, de- pairing. lectable crunch? Those tidbits Continued on next page

Cuban Sliders Makes 8smallsandwiches. It doesn't matter who I serve these spunky little sandwiches to. The first

response is total silence, followed by oh-my-gosh! Yep,they're that tasty.

it up and begin adding the fish and shellfish in the appropriate order so

There's the garlicky-mustardy aioli sauce, smoked pulled pork, richly flavored ham, a nutty Jarlsberg and slender slices of garlic dills. After as-

that everything turns out tenderand

sembly, the sliders are gently toasted and pressed into submission, pa-

cooked to perfection. Just make sure the seafood is fresh! fresh!

nini fashion.

Why the pairingworks:Well, American red ale and Jarlsberg make awinning combination in general. Thenutty character in this ale embraces the

fresh! So knowyour fish guy.

nutty-caramely cheeses. Plus, the smoked pork and ham are true friends of most red ales. And then there's that layering of lemon-mustard flavors

Why the pairing works:No matter

what seafood you choose, it's the

in the dressing aioli that interacts with the citrus character of the hops.

zesty sweet tomato base that ties this dish to American red ale. You want an ale that not only stands up

8 soft rolls, about 3 inches in diameter (see note) About ~/~ CQuick Aioli with Stone

to the task but provides flavor in return. And the red ale comes through on two levels. First, that rich, car-

amely malt complementsthesweetness in the sauce. Aless malty beer

Ground Mustard(see below) r

/2 Ib sliced Jarlsberg cheese '/4 Ib good quality ham (cut slightly thicker than "delicut")

l

isn't going to do that. Second, a nice

hoppy-citrusy finish lifts the heat right off the palate and addresses the flavors in the seafood.

/2 Ib smoked pulled pork (NOT with barbecue sauce; the bare meat) 6 garlic dill pickles, thinly sliced (find a recipe for Dominguez's Damn Good Garlic Dills at www. bendbulletin.com/recipes)

To assemble the sliders, slice open the rolls and spread a generous amount of the Quick Aioli on the cut surface of the top bun. On the bottom

slice, place a piece of cheese, then top with a piece of ham, followed by a

FOR THE TOMATO STEW BASE: 2TBS oil 2 C chopped onion 4 fresh cloves garlic, minced

mound of the pulled pork and then some of the sliced pickle. Place the top

half of the bun onthe pickle. After all of the sandwiches have been assembled, heat a panini press. Cook the sandwiches in the press until they are toasted and hot through-

16 oz salsa (anycommercially prepared salsa will do, but I prefer a "medium" picante

out (the cheesewill melt). Keep the cookedsandwiches warm on abaking

sauce)

Note on rolls:Make sure your rolls aren't too sweet or they won't complement the red Ale. As far as size goes, to be called a "slider," the

sheet in a 200 degree oven until all of them have been cooked.

5 cans(14~/2oz each) diced tomatoes (see note) 1 /2 C (one 12-oz bottle) American red ale 2 tsp each, dried (or 1 TBS each fresh): basil, thyme, marjoram and oregano 1 bay leaf '/2 tsp freshly ground black

rolls should be small. However, you can also turn this into an entree-sized

sandwich simply by using larger rolls. No panini press?Noproblem, you can cook these right in a nonstick skillet or on a griddle using sliced bread instead of rolls and weighting the

sandwiches down with a bacon press or a flat, heavy object that you've covered in foil, or abaking sheet placed ontop of the sandwiches filled with heavy cans of food, or a bowl or something else that will provide weight. After the bottom side is grilled, turn the sandwiches over and repeat.

pepper

Quick Aioli with Stone Ground Mustard

/2 C chopped fresh parsley Salt and additional pepper to taste

Makes a scant1'/4 C.

Also delicious as adip for shrimp boiled in beer.

RECOMMENDED FISH: '/4 Ib red snapper '/4 Ib halibut Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin /2 Ib scallops With this Potato, Cheese and Beer Soup, serve an American red ale in the dish and on the side. A 1 Ib steamer clams (optional, tablecloth with some red in it is optional, of course. but very tasty) 2 C shrimp meat 1 to 2 whole cooked crab, Potato, Cheese and Beer Soup depending on size, or about 3 C of firm, cooked Dungeness Makes 8 servings. crab meat (see note) This is my family soup — our most beloved for picnics anddayhikes andcross-country skiing in the Cascades. It's savory in the true sense of the word: delectable, hearty-rich and cheesy. Heat the oil in a large, heavy pot Why the pairingworks:By using an American red ale in the soup, you're setting yourself up for success if you

and saute the onions and garlic go ahead andserve the soupWITH an American red. Both cheeses, the cheddar and Jarlsberg, pair beautifully

1 TBS fresh-squeezed lemon juice 3 med cloves of garlic, peeled

and coarsely chopped 1 C good quality mayonnaise (I use Best Foods)

1 TBS extra virgin olive oil 1 TBS stone ground mustard (I use Inglehoffer Original Stone Ground Mustard; see

note)

Place the lemon juice and garlic cloves in a blender jar. Now add the mayonnaise and blend, turning the motor on and off and scraping the sides of the blender jar often, until the mixture is smooth and creamy.

With the motor running, add the olive oil a teaspoon at a time, giving the sauce a chance to absorb one addition of the oil before adding the next. You may have to stop the motor and give the sauce a brief stir each time.

Scrape the sauce into a small container then stir in the mustard. The

over medium-high heat until the onions are tender. Stir in the salsa,

with a red ale. Plus, the dash of soy sauce adds a savory note that complements the malty sweetness in the ale. sauce will keep for weeks in the refrigerator (just like commercially made

Reduce heat, and simmer for 20 to

1 qt chicken broth (homemade

Of course, this is one of those chameleon recipes that can go inseveral directions, so if you decided you'd rather tomatoes, wine, herbs, black pep- serve the beerwith an American amber or anut ale, just make surethat's the beer you cook with. per and parsley and bring to a boil. 30 minutes, or until the sauce has

or canned)

thickened enough to have enough 2'/~ Ibs potatoes, unpeeled,

substance to coat a spoon. The coarsely chopped stew base may be refrigerated at 2 C chopped green onions, this point for several days (or even whites and about half the frozen for up to 4 or 5months). green stalks When ready to assemble the

1 qt half-and-half or milk '/4 C soy sauce 1 tsp freshly ground white

pepper 6 oz shredded Jarlsberg cheese 6 oz shredded cheddar cheese

/2 C craft beer (use whatever beer you plan to serve with it; in this case, an American red; at another time, consider an amber style or nut brown

mayonnaise). Note on stone groundmustard: TheInglehoffer Original Stone Ground Mustard is prepared by Beaverton Foods in Beaverton. It's widely distributed, so you shouldn't have a problem finding it where most mustards

are sold. It has a rich mustardy-whole grain character that I love. If unavailable, use another brand that describes itself as being a classic whole grain mustard or deli-style mustard (which will mean it isn't too sweet or

seasoned in anunusual way).

style)

stew, bring the tomato mixture to a boil. Cut the snapper and halibut

In a heavy-bottomed soup pot bring the chicken broth to a boil. Add the potatoes and simmer for 30 minutes, or until the potatoes are very soft. Add the green onions and remove the pot from the heat. Add the half-and-half into ~/~- to 1-inch chunks and add or milk to the pot. the fish chunks and simmer until Puree the potato-broth mixture. If you can't do it in the pot with a hand-held blender, you'll have to do it in just barely cooked through. Add batches in your food processor or blender. Return the puree to the pot. Stir in the soy sauce and pepper and

Huli Huli Chicken Sliders Makes 8-12 servings.

This isn't a traditional Huli Huli chicken preparation, as made in Hawaii, but its texture and flavor is very close to a variation made here in Corval-

the scallops and clams and cook slowly bring the soup back to asimmer. Thesoup can beprepared to this point up to 48 hours ahead andrefrig-

lis at a popular eatery, Local Boyz Hawaiian Cafe. Thechicken cooks in a sweet-yet-savory sauce rich in garlic, fresh ginger, pineapple juice and

just until the clams open (discard erated, or prepared and frozen for 3 months. any clams that don't open). Add the When ready to serve (or pack into athermos for an outing), proceedwith the recipe by placing the pot backon

soy sauce, until it's falling into tender shreds. It's delicious over rice or tucked into a bun!

shrimp andremovethe pot fromthe

Why the pairingworks: Remember, an American red, because of its rich

the burner, over mediumheat. Whenthe soup begins to simmer, stir in the grated cheesesgradually, a handful at

burner; the shrimp will heat through a time. Now gently whisk in the beer and let the soup simmer slowly to marry the beer flavor with the soup. nicelyand notbecome tough.Add

level of sweet malts, can stand up to quite a bit of sweetness in the food with which it is served. In this case, the sauce also achieves a lively kick

salt and additional fresh ground

due to the fresh ginger and adollop of chili-garlic sauce.

black pepper to taste.

Dijon Slaw

Note on diced tomatoes:I use 3 TBS canola oil 1 can of diced tomatoes with jala- Makes 8-10 servings. 4 Ibs boneless/skinless chicken peno, and 4 cans of regular diced This salad is simply delectable. Just the right amount of zip. And so wonderful with fresh crab. thighs, halved or quartered tomatoes. That little bit of jalapeno Why the pairingworks: American red ale andJarlsberg make awinning combination in general. Because of the 2 Ibs boneless/skinless chicken adds just enough zip. However, if nutty character in this ale it embraces the nutty-caramely cheeses. However, there's also the wonderful lemonbreast, cut into 1- or 2-inch you think you'll be serving some

mustard flavors in the dressing interacting with the citrus character of the hops.

very sensitive palates, just use 5 cans of regular diced tomatoes. 6 C shredded green cabbage Note on crab meat: Add- 2 C finely chopped celery ing cooked crab meat is the less /2 Ib (about 2 C) Jarlsberg, messy way to go, but the meat Emmenthal or other finetends to disappear into the stew; quality Swiss cheese, cut whereas, if you simply break1 (or into julienne strips

1 sm clove garlic, finely minced 2 TBS fresh lemon juice 2 TBS white wine vinegar 2 tsp Dijon mustard /~ C olive oil

Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

2 hard-cooked eggs, peeled and coarsely chopped

chunks 1 med yellow onion, chopped

1 qt chicken broth (canned is OK) 1 qt pineapple juice ~/4 C soy sauce /2 C brown sugar /3 C peeled and shredded fresh ginger 2 tsp chili-garlic sauce

Heat the oil in a heavy-bottomed pot or Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add the chicken and saute until the pieces are browned on all sides. Add the onion and saute until softened, about 2 minutes. Deglaze the pot with the chicken broth, stirring and scraping up all the

cooked-on bits of food. Add the pineapple juice, soy sauce, brown sugar, 2 if they are small) whole cooked ginger and chili-garlic sauce. Bring the liquid to aboil, then cover andsimand cleaned crab(s) into its parts In a large bowl, combine the cabbage,celery and cheese. mer gently until the chicken is very tender, about 60 to 90 minutes. In a small bowl, whisk together the garlic, lemon juice, vinegar and mustard until well blended. Whisk in the This dish can be prepared several days ahead, or even frozen. Simply (legs, claws, and the halved or quartered body), folks can fish out oil, then pour the dressing over the salad mixture, tossing well to completely coat the ingredients. Add salt and reheat to serve. a portion and break it open themselves for a real tasty treat.

pepper to taste. Chill well before serving. Adjust flavorings before serving, adding splashes of lemon juice, vin-

egar or mustard as needed. Toserve, garnish with coarsely chopped eggs.

Delicious tucked into mini buns, to serve as sliders. But equally yummy

over rice, alongside asimple slaw dressed with a sweet-but-tangy sauce.


FOO D

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

THE FLEXITARIAN

From previous page

pact the pairing experience, no matter what you've read on any given food and beer pairing list. In the case of the Cuban sandwich, it was the piness was going to join forces sweetness in the bread and with the zesty-richness in the lack of oomph in the ham that beef dish, handling everything undermined what should have the zesty stew threw at it, from been an excellent pairing. Plus, the pickled jalapenos to the all craft beer styles have their generous doses of chili and own delightful quirks — an cumin powders. The amber assertive hop aroma perhaps, was just OK. or an extra layering of malt So, at the end of the sip- on the finish that you didn't ping and savoring, with our expect — that ultimately influprimary objective complete, it ence the foods they love. was Big Kahuna Red 2, Base — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Jumper Amber 1. Your takeCorvallis food writer, cookbook away message hereis thatthe author and artist. Contact: janrd@ ingredients you cook with improaxis.com.

D3

But I had predicted the outcome far ahead of Livingston, k nowing full w ell t hat B i g Kahuna's extra spank of hop-

MARK / BITTMAN

Breakfast: Hoecakes with Fruit Makes 4 servings.

Makes 4 servings.

1 /2 C cornmeal (fine or medium

grind) This monthly feature explores healthy and delicious food ideas from the New York Times'food columnist.

Snack: Carrot Candy

1 tsp salt 1 /2 C boiling water, more as needed

3 TBS olive oil 1 C chopped fresh or frozen fruit (berries, apples,

pears, bananas, mangoor pineapple)

Heat oven to 200 degrees. Combine cornmeal and salt in a medium

8 med carrots (about1 Ib) 1 TBS olive oil /2 tsp salt /2 tsp cumin, optional Heat the oven to 225 degrees. Peel carrots and cut into ~/s-inch

bowl. Gradually pour in boiling water, whisking constantly. Let mixture coins. Toss with olive oil, salt By Mark Bittman

Barley Risotto with Wild Mushrooms and Smoky Bacon

New York Times News Service

derful flavors line up in complete harmony with the sweet, caramely-nutty malts in an American red ale. And then, with another swallow and sip, the

I t's not worth t r y ing to persuade anyone to become vegan, for a couple of very good reasons: One, it's a losing battle, and two, it's far from certain that a diet with no animal products is best for everyone. It's increasingly evident, however, that a p a rt-time vegan diet — one that emphasizes minimally processed plant food at the expense of everything else — is the direction that will most benefit human health, increase animal welfare and reduce environmental impact. The

whole experience istempered nicely bythe ale's bright hoppy finish.

remaining challenge, an un-

Makes about 6 servings. When the International Barley Conference came to Oregon State University in 2012, OSU professor Pat Hayes, an internationally recognized

barley researcher, brought me on board to consult with menus and beer pairings (remember, malted barley is amain ingredient in craft beer). This is one of the recipes that I created for the final evening's gala. The title of the recipe pretty much gives you a strong inclination as to the character ofthis dish: divine. Why the pairing works:I love a creamy-flavorful risotto and find from that point alone it makes a nice balance with the hoppiness in an American red

ale. A less sharp beer couldn't stand up to the richness in the risotto and wouldn't provide enough cleansing of the palate between bites. Beyond that, however, there's the savory combination of earthy porcini mush-

rooms, smoky bacon and nutty Parmigiano-Reggiano. All of those won-

'/4 Ib smoked bacon, thin sliced and cut into'/4-inch pieces 2 oz butter 2 C chopped yellow onion 1 C pearled barley /3 C amber or red ale 4 C chicken broth

/2 C ('/2 oz) dried porcini mushroom pieces (see note) 3 oz grated Parmigiano-

Reggiano cheese Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

Chopped parsley for garnish

In a large, heavy-bottomed pot, saute the bacon over medium heat until it is richly browned. Remove the bacon with a slotted spoon and

reserve for later. Spoon off all but 2 tablespoons of the bacon grease. Add the butter and the onions to the pan and saute over medium heat until the onions have

softened and turned slightly golden. Stir in the barley, ale, broth and prepared mushrooms. Stir and bring the mixture to a boil. Reduce heat to a gentle simmer, cover, and cook,

stirring occasionally, until the barley hasabsorbed most of the liquid and is very tender. It should have a creamy character but not be "soupy" and definitely not overly dry. Just like risotto!

When ready to serve, stir in the cheese,along with the reserved bacon pieces. Note: I don't reconstitute the dried mushrooms, but I do chop them

before adding to the pot. I use afood processor and just run the motor in quick bursts so most of the pieces are about '/4 to /2 inch in dimension;

some can besmaller. But you want to avoid very large pieces so that the mushroom flavor is evenly distributed.

Coffeecake, abit lighter By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun

Alisia Verdoorn from Cupertino, Calif., was looking for a recipe for a coffee cake that is made with raisin bran. She said her grandmother had given her the recipe, but she lost it. She said she remembers that the cake was made with buttermilk and orange juice in addition to the raisin bran. I did not receive the exact recipe she was looking for but I did some research and found a similar-sounding coffeecake on Post foods website (postfoods.

com). Their recipe for Sunny Raisin Nut Coffeecake seemed to have most of what Verdoorn recalled about her grandmother's original recipe. The biggest difference was that the Post recipe was made with fat-free milk, not buttermilk. I decided to test the recipe substituting low-fat buttermilk for the fat-free milk and I was pleased with the result. The buttermilk paired with the orange zest gave the cake a nice moist texture and slight tang. The Post recipe has an optional orange glaze that I omitted as I thought it might

RECIPE FINDER Looking for a hardto-find recipe or can

answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email

baltsunrecipefinder© gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

make the cake a tad too sweet. Instead, I added a tablespoon of freshlysqueezed orange juice to the batter, which made for a relatively low-fat coffeecake full ofbright citrus flavor.

Request Doris Smithson of Greeneville, Tenn., is looking for the recipe for making what she calls "stained glass candy." She said in the mid-1980s the ladies at Trinity Hill United Methodist Church in Lexington, Ky., made and sold the candy at Christmas time.

Raisin Nut Coffeecake Makes 24 servings. 2 C flour, divided use 1 TBS baking powder '/z tsp salt 2 C raisin bran cereal 1/2 C low-fat buttermilk 8 TBS margarine, divided use 1 /3 C firmly packed brown sugar, divided use

1 egg, slightly beaten 1 TBS grated orange zest 1 TBS freshly squeezed orange juice /2 C dried cranberries 1 C chopped pecans, divideduse

Orange glaze, optional (recipe follows)

deniably big one, is to figure out how to make such a diet, which you might also call "flexitarian," the standard. My own diet, which I call Vegan Before 6 (and wrote a book about), is one way of tackling part-time veganism, but it isn't the only way. An intelligent adaptation of the Mediterranean diet, one of the popular "fast today, feast tomorrow" diets or even a so-called paleo diet — one that s t r esses v e getables rather than animal products (our great ancestors, after all, were g atherer-hunters who saw meat not as routine but as an occasion to feast) — can put you on the right track. As can this: a day of your

sit until cornmeal absorbs water, 5 to10 minutes. Stir in half the oil and a little more boiling water, a little at a time, until batter is pourable. Fold in fruit. Put a large skillet or griddle, preferably cast-iron or nonstick, over medium heat. When a few drops of water dance on the surface, add a thin

Transfer to warm oven and continue with next batch, adding more oil to

2 hours and remove from oven when they're as chewy or crisp as

skillet if necessary. Servewarm with syrup, jam or compote.

you like, another 30 to 60 minutes.

Cool thoroughly before storing in an airtight container.

Dinner: Chickpea and Fennel Ratatouille Makes 4 servings.

kpl'

bowl of electric mixer on mediumspeeduntil creamy. Addegg, orangezest and orange juice; mixwell. Alternately stir in flour andcereal mixtures just until blended. Add cranberries and~/2cup of the pecans; stir just until blended. Pour batter into a greased13-inch-by-9-inch baking pan.

Mix remaining '/4cupflour, /3 cup brownsugar and4 tablespoons marga-

1 Ib Roma (plum)tomatoes, u

Photos by Evan Sung i New York Times NewsService

Bow ties and pasta form the backbone to a dish that basically amounts to a salad.

Lunch: Bow Ties with Arugula, Olives, Bulgur and Tomato Wedges Makes 4 servings.

cored and chopped, or a 28oz can, drained 1 onion, sliced 2 red or yellow bell peppers, cored, seeded and sliced 1 fennel bulb (about 1 Ib), trimmed and cut into large chunks 5 garlic cloves, halved 1 tsp salt, more to taste Black pepper to taste '/4 C olive oil 3 C cooked or canned chickpeas, drained 1 TBS chopped fresh thyme or rosemary, or /2 C chopped fresh basil or parsley

Heat the oven to 425 degrees. Combine all ingredients except

oil, chickpeas and herbs in a large roasting pan. Drizzle with oil and toss to combine. Transfer to oven and roast, stir-

ring occasionally, until vegetables are lightly browned and tender and

some water hasbeenreleasedfrom the tomatoes to create a sauce, 30 to 40 minutes. Add chickpeas, stir and return to

oven until beans heat through, 5 to 10 minutes. Add herbs and stir. Taste

and adjust seasoningandserve hot, warm or at roomtemperature. jazz them up if you like: a little sugar, a little baking powder, a little nondairy milk, maybe some maple syrup, and they start to resemble something far richerand more common. I happen to like the ultraminimalist version.) Some are elaborate, and designed to satisfy an openminded if devoted meat-eater at the biggest meal of the day. This ratatouille with c hickpeas and fennel is among the best I've ever made, and bow ties with b ulgur an d w h at amounts to a salad is as good at room temperature as any pasta I know. The others are creatively simple: Carrot candy is as much fun to eat as it is to look at; broiled melon is a lovely and unusual dessert.

'

ERICKSONS Serv>ngthecommunitysincel9IS S g ~

~

725 NE Greenwood, Bend

ANGUS •

BBQ'd to Perfection! II

I I i

$12.99 Ib Whileit lasts!

Call in orders 541-382-4421

Dessert: Broiled Melon with Balsamic

BendErickson's Thriftway

1 cantaloupe or honeydew melon, cut into 1-inch-thick slices, rinds and seeds removed 4 tsp vegetable oil

~/2 tsp salt '/2 C chopped pine nuts

Black pepper 2 TBS balsamic vinegar

Turn on broiler; heat should be medium-high and rack no closer

rine until crumbly; stir in ~/~ cup pecans. Sprinkle evenly over batter in pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 to 50 minutes or until toothpick in center comes

than 4 inches from heat source. Brush melon all over with oil and put on a rimmed baking sheet. Broil

out clean.Cool onwire rack. Servewarm or cooled with theorange glaze.

until beginning to color, 3 to 8minutes depending onyour broiler.

To make glaze:Stir 1 tablespoon orange juice into 1/2 cups powdered sugar until well blended. If too thick for drizzling consistency, stir small

Turn melon carefully (or skip it if the melon seems too tender to turn), sprinkle with salt. Broil until melon is fully tender, another 2 or

amount of additional orange juice until glaze is desired consistency. Cover

3 minutes; sprinkle with nuts and pass under broiler again until pieces

and refrigerate until ready to use.

just begin to toast, no more than 1 minute. Sprinkle with lots of black — Adapted from wwwpostfoods.com

1 Ib eggplant (smaller is better), peeled if you like, and cut into large chunks /4 Ib zucchini, cut into large chunks

1

Makes 4 servings. Beat 4 tablespoons of the margarine and1 cup of the brown sugar in a large

dehydrated and sweet but still soft

size cakes you like; they will be thinner than pancakes. Cook until bubbles they don't burn or get too crisp. Start testing carrots after about

appear andburst on thetops, andthe undersides aregolden brown, 3 to 5 minutes; turn andcook onother side until golden, another 2 or 3minutes.

Mix1s/4cups of the flour, baking powder and salt in a medium bowl.

Mix cereal andbuttermilk in asmall bowl; let stand 5minutes.

spread on abaking sheet in a single layer. Cook until slightly shriveled,

and chewy. Youmayhave to move film of remaining oil. Working in batches, spoon in batter, making any them or the pan around to ensure

Sait 4 ripe tomatoes, cored and cut 2 TBS olive oil into thick wedges 1 sm red onion, chopped Black pepper '/4 C bulgur 1 TBS minced garlic choosing when you just go 1 C mixed olives, pitted and 8 oz whole wheat bow-tie or vegan. roughly chopped other cut pasta There are t r u e v egans Juice of 1 lemon 3 C torn arugula leaves who will say that part-time /2 C chopped almonds veganism is a little-bit-pregnant kind of thing; that is, Bring a large pot of water to a boil and salt it. Put oil in a large, deep i mpossible. But s ince t h e skillet over medium heat. Whenhot, add onion and garlic and cook, stirword means a diet without ring until softens, about 5 minutes. Stir in olives, then add lemon juice animal products, it can be and tomatoes. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and cook until tomatoes used to describe something are just heated through. Turn off heat. as part-time as a meal: After When water comes to a boil, add bulgur. Let water return to a boil, all, a salad often is a vegan then add pasta. Cook bow ties until tender but not mushy. (Start tasting meaL (I am aware, having after 5 minutes.) Reserve somecooking water, then drain in a strainer to had this argument dozens of trap grains with pasta. times in the last few years, Toss pasta and bulgur with tomato mixture, adding some cooking that many full-time vegans' water if needed. Stir in arugula and almonds, taste and adjust seasonprimary concern is animal ing. Let rest for up to 15 minutes. Stir again and serve. welfare, and that's a different discussion.) Being a vegan is not my organic produce is expen- bles are at their best, they give you insight into how the vegan point, and anyway, it's as sive (and so inconveniently easy to create an unhealthy s easonal!). But if y o u a r e thing can work for you, if only full-time vegan diet as it is going to eat it, now is your for a day. And given a moderto eat brilliantly as a partchance. It isn't a coincidence ate degree offreshness, most time vegan. It just takes a that this column is appear- conventional vegetables from little thought and a little will, ing in September; to m e, ordinary supermarkets can be though perhaps less will than the period between Labor made to taste good when garyou may think at first. Many Day and T hanksgiving is dens go dormant. cooked dishes that contain the best time of year to cook P lant-based m eal s c o n animal products can be and — warm enough to grill and tain more than vegetables, of traditionally have been made cool enough to braise, with course. Stock the pantry with without them, usually out of the farmers' market still an good grains, legumes, nuts, want. The problem for most absolute paradigm of abun- seeds,oils,vinegars and other people in developed coun- dance. Take advantage: In classiccondiments, and you're tries is not a lack of opportu- a few months, there may be set to make an infinite number nity to eat animal products little more than root vegeta- of dishes that don't ruffle a but a superabundance. bles, apple cider and hand- single animal's feathers, hide It isn't as if vegetables are dyed yarn. or fin. in short supply. Yes, local or When fruits and vegetaHere then are some recipes for what you might call a Vegan Day. I don't pretend that you're likely to eat all five in the same day, or even that they have much relationship to one another, but they're each a representation of the kind of thing you might be eating at a given moment Some are simple, traditional peasant food: hoecakes made from little but corn and water may seem ascetic until you recognize that this is polenta in a fast, crunchy form, filled with flavor and perfect to bury under a pile of fruit. (You can Melon cooked under the broiler tops off a vegan day. •

and cumin, if you're using it, then

pepper and drizzle with balsamic. Servewarm or at roomtemperature.

725 NE Greenwood, Bend

Saturday, Oct.5 Jt 12 • 12 ym - 4 pm Prineville Erickson's Thriftway 315 W. Third, Prineville

Friday, Oct. 4 • 12 pm - 5 ym

ss < s3o Medicarepart-B, PacificSource *, RegenceBiueCross BlueShield of Oregon, LifeWise accepted *Excluding Community Health Solutions

Minimum 12 years of age • An immunizations by licensed nurse Service by GetAFluShot.com


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

H OME 4

A R DEN

Next week: A garden where everything's rosy

' r,,P':

4., g'-

' t,j

Ii

*

J

"The entire house is made for people who don't want a lot of home maintenance. It's an easy-to-care-

Terry and Judy Sklersaa in the living room of their Tetherow home.

for single-level home," says JudySklersaa.

Skjersaas

they saythere'smore space in the right places for an emptynest couple. Because the Skjersaas love to entertain guests and hold dinner parties, the kitchen had to be generous in size, which is what they got. In addition to one kitchen island, they also have an entire peninsula with

Continued from 01 "You had to hike in from the highway. There was no road then to Hoodoo," said Skjersaa. "I was skiing by the time I was 3 years old. It was what we did." Terry and Judy Skjersaa pulled out an old, iconic blackand-white photo of Olaf Skjersaa ski jumping on his handbuilt wooden skis. "Dad held the jumping record back in those days," said Terry. "This photo was actually made into a poster for BlitzWeinhard beer,back in the

an additional prepping sink.

Modernism Though Terry Skjersaa built an old-fashioned-looking chalet ski shop, he's always embraced the latest and greatest in technology. "I was the first ski shop in Bend tohave a computer. We originally did al l ou r p o int of sales on an Apple II," said Skjersaa. "I've always loved electronic gadgets. I'm a techy

day," added Judy Skjersaa. Olaf emigrated from Norway to Bend in 1913, following his older brother Nels to the area. At that time, many Scandinavian lumber workers and carpenters came to Central Oregon for work. Besides their woodworking skill set, the Scandinavians also brought their native love of skiing, and the Skjersaas were no different.Terry said t hey could e n vision w h a t Mount Bachelorcould be one

kind of guy."

day.

A kitchen island and an additional peninsula with its own prep sink add to the generous kitchen.

"They were all skiing long before Bachelor Butte started," said Terry Skjersaa. "When Bill Healy opened Bachelor Butte in the winter of 1958, he asked our family to have the ski shop up at the mountain." The Skjersaa family opened the first ski shop on Bachelor Butte. That first winter when Terry Skjersaa wasn't working in the family ski shop, he was honing his ski racing technique. "Terry would've been in the 1960 Winter Olympics, but he had a bad skiing accident and broke his neck in t r aining," said Judy Skjersaa.

Despite missing the Olympics, Skjersaa went on to coach other Central Oregonian ski racers and kept busy buying some fortuitous property on Century Drive.

building our shop on C entury West, there was nothing there, except for the Timbers bar," said Skjersaa. "We had no running water out there. The water stopped at Albany (Avenue), so I had to bring the Ski chalet water (line) in from there. You In 1965 the Skjersaas de- wouldn't believe it." cided to come down from the Skjersaa said he knew the mountain, and Terry bought area would g ro w b e cause an empty dirt lot, and built this was the only road to the what is now the Skjersaa Ski mountain. a nd S n owboarding s h o p , By the time he completed which he and his wife owned his shop in 1965, Bachelor and operated until 1996. Butte had 127,000 skier visits "When w e f i r s t s t a rted that winter.

One young female ski visitor to the mountain needed a pair of new ski boots, and her first stop was the Skjersaa ski

shop. "I got fitted for a new pair

of (ski) boots, which I bought, and I got asked out on a date, too," said Judy Skjersaa, 71, laughing at the memory. "She was a big flirt," said Terry, with a twinkle in his

eye.

Go big or go home Married for 40 years now, the Skjersaas have had to give

H e waved h i s i P a d a s proof. The Skjersaas' sleek living room features a modern glassfront gas-powered fireplace that burns a warm fire in a straight line across the wall, which makes it look like art. Just above this modernistic Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin fireplace, is Skjersaa's 65-inch flat-screen television. Because the wall that houses the fireplace and television up skiing due to some health is tiled in large rectangular problems, but they still enjoy black ceramic tiles, neither an active lifestyle. the television nor the fireplace Terry Skjersaa loves his overwhelm the room. The livnew townhome that overlooks ing area is decorated in black the Tetherow golf course. and white tones, with rich eggHaving raised four children plant-colored highlights and in the Sunrise Village subdivi- silver-accented decor. sion in Bend, they had downThe living room has a luxusized once before, moving to a rious white leather sectional, townhome in Eagle Crest, but and Skjersaa's favorite lounge they eventually decided they chair is in eggplant. This isn't wanted to be back in Bend. your grandfather's La-Z-Boy While t heir n e w n e a rly l ounge chair, as it ha s t h e 2,400-square-foot townhome modern lines to fit in with the isn't as large as their fam- home. ily home had been in Sunrise, Continued on next page

YOU C AN W I N ! A 3100 Gift C ertific a t e

to one of these businesses:

tt,sNo

PETOEXPRESS Good at both locations and the eastside grooming

service

I

' I

I

I I

I

I

e

g

I

e

e

I

I

s

s~

Qs

We want to see your pup go after The Bulletin. Get the most votes from adoring readers and your dog could win! Our contest will award $100 gift certificates to two lucky dogs: the most popular successful retrieval of the paper (Good Dog!) and the most popular attempt (Nice Try!). H ERE'S HOW T O E N T E R

l. VIDEO YOUR PUP and upload the video to your YouTube or vimeo account.

2. TITLE YOUR VIDEO

3. EMAIL THE LINK

"Good dog: (your dog's name)" or "Nice lry: (your dog's name)"

to your video to gooddog©bendbulletin.com.

F OR OFFI C IA L R U LES V I SI T b e n d b u l l e t i n .com / g o o d d o g c o n t e st : Deadlinetoenter

OCT6TH Votingcloses

OCTITH

E eW ~ Z g

b4 > >+tin.E.-~~I

WINNE'gg +'ILLgp ANNOUNCED

OCT>gTHI


TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Continued from D1 This spring I bought a six pack of the pink snapdragons and gave them a sunny spot with good soil and ample water. You guessed it; they looked terrible most of the season. Chore No. 1 on my list is to move them to join the ones that are lush, healthy and that return every year. Then I will sitback, cross my fingers and hope for their reappearance next summer. Fall is a great time for planting. Take time out t o v i sit nurseries, and you might find some sales you can't pass up. You will also be able to compare what varieties look like at the end of the season. Some shrubs and trees have great fall color; others, especially shrubs, can look washed out and dried up. The soil is at a temperature that is still warm enough to accept new plantings without bursting forth with robust spring growth. Mix in good quality compost, add plenty of water and you are off to a good start. Hold the fertilizer till next spring. Where are your herbs planted? Are they close enough to the house to be quickly cut and used frequently? The ideal situation would be two areas. One to help draw pollinators into the vegetable garden and the other a small area in full sun close to the kitchen to encourage more everyday pickings.

How io save tomaio seeds Saving tomato seeds requires fully ripe fruit.

) O'Et w

v

%11 ae A e w w + • 41 • ea ww t e k'Eev ~

4

a W+

S

Pour off floating seeds (they're not good ones), then pour liquid through a fine screen and rinse seeds well.

seeds and pulp 2 Squeeze into glass or plastic

rigorousinbreeding program

The seedsareencased in a gelatinous coating, which prevents them from sprouting inside the tomato.

Remove this coating by fermenting it. This mimics the natural rotting of the fruitand has the added bonus of killing seedborne

container. Add1/4 cup of water per tomato.

the seeds from a fully ripe fruit into a bowl, add water and let stand at room temperature for about three days. Once fermentation occurs, mold will form on the surface of the water. Add more water, stir and then gently scrape mold and debris off the top. Repeat until only clean seed remains, and then strain,

rinse and leavethe seedsat room temperature until dry. on a paper towel 5 orDryinseeds a glass dish (a pie dish works well). Stir several times a day. This step could take seven days or longer.

mixture to ferment at 3 Allow room temperature for at

— Source: John W. Jett, West Virginia University Extension Service, Horticulture Specialist

familiar with c rop r otation, spend some time learning the process this winter. portant in helping to eliminate insect and soil problems. Do not put diseasedplants or weeds into a compost pile. Backyard compost piles in Central Or-

Place seeds in a labeled glass or plastic container. Store in your refrigerator.

that is part of the hybridizing process. Heirloom varieties of flowers and vegetables have g ained popularity f o r t h a t very reason. They are usually open pollinated, and therefore the saved seeds will breed true to the variety every year. Mountain Princess, an heirloom that I have purchased for several years, has become a tomato I can't live without. In 2012 I ordered two packets, and now I am glad I did as the variety wasn't listed in the supplier's 2013 catalog. Many times seed crop failure isthe reason for a variety be-

ing dropped or in short supply. Perhaps we will see that scenario played out when we go

to purchase carrot seeds next spring. The Madras area is a worldwide supplier of carrot seeds. The early September storm of high winds, plus the downpour of rain and hail hit the carrot fields just days away from seed harvest. I'm not advocating trying to save carrot seeds, it's just a heads up that carrotseeds may be in short supply somewhere down the line. Saving carrot seeds is a two-year process and definitely requires more skill than I have. Remember to record this y ear's planting beds if y o u didn't do it at planting time. You need awritten record for crop rotation purposes next planting season. If you aren't

high enough temperature to kill weed seeds and disease cells. And please, don't forget to plant the bulbs you bought earlier— remember you put them in the refrigerator out in the garage to keep them cooL If you are unsure of the planting and care of bulbs, mark your calendarfor a free class "Tips for Growing Bulbs in Central Oregon" off ered by the Central Oregon MasterGardeners. The class is scheduled for Oct. 12 at two convenient locations. The classes will be held at the Oregon State University Deschutes Extension Office, Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, Parking Lot D, Redmond, at 10 a.m. and at the Bend Senior Center in Bend at I p.m. — Reporter: douville@ bendbroadband.com.

Judy Skjersaa says they brought very little from their o ther homes, w h ich w e r e more traditionally mountainlodge styled. They wanted to start fresh with this European modern two-bedroom, twoand-a-half-bath home. Terry Skjersaa walked over to the built-in glass cabinetry, where valuable crystal glasses are displayed, and fiddled with a remote control that varied the brightness of the lights. "I really like this. You can change the lights remotely. It's like mood lighting in your cabinets," he said. Judy Skjersaa walked to her favorite part of the kitchen, the built-in pantry that looks more like a hidden wall. She opened the large discreet floor-to-ceiling pantry door, where she keeps electric appliances like a coffeemaker and t oaster. Andy Tullis/The Bulletin Every appliance has an out- Judy and Terry Skjersaa take in the view from their concrete chairs by the gas fire pit on their back let, which allows the couple to porch. make coffee right inside the

pantry.

Judy Skjersaa, opening up the

stainless steel dual oven. "It has computerized directions in this screen here." The kitchen i s d e signed with a soft touch of industrialized modernism, with a serious nod to functionality. While some modern kitchens can look stark, the Skjersaas' kitchen has clean, warm lines that give it a feel of an efficient home kitchen, instead of a commercial one. To add warmth, the Skjersaas also picked custom counters that incorporate recycled g lass, which m a kes t h em sparkle. The couplealso appreciates the fact that their new townhome is energy-efficient and built to conserve water to a high standard.

Open design From the moment you enter the Skjersaas' townhome,

you are surrounded by big mountain views. There are no walls from the entry space to

a in care 0 0 05 l n B

na Liia wa and drawers that need a little

. MARTHA ~

='

freshening.

i STEWART

egon generally do not reach a Greg Cross/The Bulletin

From previous page

"I love this because you don't have to have all these appliances on your sink. It stays hidden, so your kitchen sinks don't look cluttered," she said. Right next to th e h idden wall pantry is one of the most modern ovenson the market. "Have you seen this before? It's a convection oven and a microwave oven, all in one," said

Tony Cenicola/ New York Times News Service

Lemons and oranges can help rid your home ofstrong odors.

Cleaning up the garden is im-

least three days.

Drying herbs is always on my fall list. Parsley, winter savory and several varieties of thyme will find their way to the microwave in the next few weeks. Seed saving is an ongoing process as flowers and vegetables mature. I jokingly refer to it as gardening on the cheap. It really does save money, but the real reason is to be sure I have the varieties I can't live without, especially some of the open-pollinated tomatoes. A note for the garden journal: hybrid seeds rarely breed true from collected seed. They are the result of cross-fertilizing two different plant varieties. Open pollinated seeds have not been subject to the

ASK MARTHA

Saving tomatoseeds

tomato disease.Squeeze

fruit in half to expose 1 Cut seed cavities.

6

DS

the back of the home, which allows t h e fl o o r-to-ceiling windows in the great room to provide ample natural, continuous lighting t h roughout the home. The kitchen is open to the dining room, and the dining room naturally flows into the living room with vaulted ceilings. The effect is dramatic. Accent pieces throughout the home also draw attention. A piece that Terry Skjersaa is especially proud of is a sequoia tree root that was carved down into a sideboard table and then painted muted silver. It looks like metal until you touch it and realize it's actually wood. Off the great room and dining room is the outdoor patio, where the Skjersaas had a custom-made cement fire pit built. The corner faces directly to Mount Bachelor. The Skjersaas have surprisingly comfortable cement chairs that match the fire pit. "What we l ike about the cement chairs is that they're really heavy, and they're not going to get blown around by the wind," said Judy Skjersaa. "Sometimes we come out here, and roast hot dogs and look at the mountain." Back inside, w e w a l k ed past the dining room and to the master bedroom, where the Skjersaas awaken to huge

mountain views from t h eir elegant queen-size bed. The wall along their bedroom is one long panoramic view from M ount Bachelor t o M o u nt Jefferson. Judy Skjersaa showed the triple-sized shower in the master bath that runs along one sideofthe room. The seamless floor-to-shower transition offerseasy access into the space. "It's like a spa, isn't it'?" said Skjersaa. "The entire house is made for people who don't want a lot of home maintenance.It' s an easy-to-care-for single-level home." She also appreciates the separate water closet that has a European-style, tankless, suspended wall toilet. Skjersaa walked from the large master bathroom into her large walk-in closet. "There are so many little things you can appreciate in a closet like this," she said, pointing to the built-in ironing board that slips sideways into the closet wall. A m atching full-length mirror slips out of a wall pocket, opposite the iron-

mountain explorer, John Muir. The connection isn't lost on the Skjersaas, who are familiar with mountains and who share the love of this natural setting all around them. It's a perfect townhouse designed by another d escendent of someone who also loved the mountains. — Reporter: pnalzamura~ bendbulletin.com

Q

•What are some natu•ral ways to deodorize my home'? • Before a ttac k i ng • an o f f e nsive o d or, try simply opening a window. Fresh air alone can eradicate many unpleasant smells. For persistent problems, find the source of the odor and address it. This is favorable to m a sking smells with a commercial air freshener, which can contain toxic c h emicals. As explained in "Martha Stewart's Ho m e keeping Handbook," hou s ehold odors can be separated into two groups, based on their pH level: acid odors and alkaline odors. Acid odors, such as smoke, can be mitigated with an open box of baking soda; while alkaline odors, such as fish, are neutralized by vinegar, baking soda and lemon juice. 0ther options include orange oil, cloves and eucalyptus. Here is a guide for how to use these natural elements to combat lingering odors in your home.

A

Lemons Use to: eliminate strong odors from cooking fish or vegetables that give off a sulfuric smell.

Nurturing a lime tree • What advice can you

• give me on caring for a lime tree outside its climate'? I would love to have a little piece of my Texas childhood here in Illinois. • Lime trees can thrive • indoors when they're in the right spot. They need full sun and excellent drainage to grow. For starters, plant a twoto three-year-old tree: It will yield fruit much sooner than one started from seed. The plant also should be placed in a south-facing window with a minimum of six hours of direct sunlight per day. (0therwise, you'll have to supplement natural light with grow

A

lights.) Once you know where your tree will live, choose a planter that is just a couple of inches larger than the root-ball and has plenty of drainage holes. Repot with a soil mi x t h at d rains well. T y pically, t h e plant will require a deep watering once a week. The biggest concern with citrus trees is their finicky roots: They need to stay moist, but overwatering can damage them, too. Keeping the soil damp

but not soggy is especially important; exactly how much to irrigate will depend on the conditions in your home and the size of your pot. Use a moisture meter at root level to avoid overwatering when only the topsoil is dry. (Many people make the mistake of watering when the topsoil is dry but the soil at root level is still wet.) Put pebbles in the tray under the planter to elevate it from the drainage area.Feed the tree regularly, too: Get a citrus-specific fertilizer, or simply look for one with a nitrogen-phosphorouspotassium ratio of at least 2 to I to I and up to 4 to I to 1.

Try: simmering half a dozen lemon slices and a handful of cloves in water for 10 minutes.

Eucalyptus Use to: invigorate a room that has a stale or musty odor (the leaves can also

help clear sinuses). Try: displaying a few branches to scent a room for up to two weeks, or simmering the leaves in water for 10 minutes to cleanse the air.

Vinegar Use to: neutralize cooking odors, musty smells in drawers and even cigarette smoke.

Try: filling a deep glass dish with a h a lf-inch of white vinegar and setting it in the offending room or drawer until the odor dissipates.

Pomanders

— Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters@ marthastewrart.com. For more information on this column,visit www.marthastewart.com.

BarkTurISo|l.com I

I

PROMPT DELIVERY

Use to: spice up closets

541-389-9663

i', I

'I

•II

Seabrook

ing board. The guest bedroom and bathroom on the other side of this townhome match the modern style. These townhomes were designed by architect John Muir. Yes, the grand nephew of the legendary naturalist and

Try: studding oranges with whole cloves, spaced evenly and closetogether. Keep them in adrawer or closet for up to a year.

WALlCOVERINGS •

• f>If

P/g

i

2121 NE Division St Bend, OR 97701 I (541) 382-4171


D6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

e ore' a,' TV SPOTLIGHT By Mark Peters Slate

CHICAGO — My f avorite TV show is a Shakespearean tragedy in which the antihero's sins, spinning out from a fatal decision he makes in the pilot, slowly destroy everyone around him. The main character insists he's doing it all for his family — but he's lying, especially to himself. There's a lot of collateral damage, but this murderer's worst crime might be the corruption of his vulnerable younger partner. The show maintains a remarkable level of quality throughout its run, and helped put its network on the map. It was

largelycarried by a greatperformance from itslead actor,a man previously known mainly for comedy who transformed himself into an E mmy-winning menace. Of course, I'm talking about "The Shield." With "Breaking Bad" having wound down,conventional wisdom says it's a contender for Best Show Ever, along with "The Wire" and "The Sopranos." No argument there. But major argument here: "The Shield" should be in that conversation, too. Shawn Ryan's saga of Vic Mackey (Michael Chiklis) and the Strike Team, which aired on FX from 2002 to 2008, remains — pardon the expression — criminally underrated. It was every bit

e re was ' e i e

first season, impressing the award'svoters with his versatility after years doing lighter fare. Cranston won two more and counting; for reasons I'll never fathom, "The Shield" fell off the awards radar after a while. Both Chiklis and Cranston have a remarkable ability to convey the fundam ental h umanity o f t h e i r characters,even while doing horrible, terrible things. We see Walt let a choking woman die and watch Vic burn a guy's face on a stove, and yet The Associated Press file photo it is nearly impossible to turn Michael Chiklis, as Det. Vic Mackey on "The Shield," managed to on them completely. convey his character's humanity even while doing terrible things. Similarly, Vic's and Walt's second bananas — rogue cop Shane Vendrell (Walton Gogas riveting and consistent as "Breaking Bad" has. (The best gins) and meth cook Jesse "Breaking Bad." And the two of these plots were usually the Pinkman (A aron P aul) shows are also remarkably cases worked by Jay Karnes' evoke oursympathies despite similar. In many ways, "The Dutch and CC H P ounder's engaging in many of the same Shield" was "Breaking Bad" Claudette — the show's good g ruesome activities as t h e before "Breaking Bad." cops, who were no less com- big kahunas. Pinkman is so There are notable differplex than the bad ones.) sympathetic and long-sufferences between the two shows, T he similarities, o n t h e ing you forget that the show's of course, but these are fairly other hand, are much more "moral center" is a drug-makobvious and l argely super- extensive — and downright ing, drug-selling, murdering ficial. The deliberate pacing uncanny. They start with the junkie. On"The Shield," Shane of "Breaking Bad" is a long b ackgrounds of t h ei r c r e - Vendrell was even worse; he way from the frenetic action ators, Shawn Ryan and Vince eventually murders team and of "The Shield" and its shaky- Gilligan, who each learned family members. Yet his vulcam visuals (developed by the ropes ofthe TV business nerability, much like Jesse's, director Clark Johnson in the in the geekier parts of town never allows you to write him FX series' pilot). "The Shield" (Ryan on "Angel" and Gilligan off as a human being. is a cop show, and "Break- on "The X-Files"). Their stars These characters r e tain ing Bad" is a criminal show also share unlikely c areer much of their sympathy for us — though you could argue that paths and transcendent skills. in large part because they are both are criminal shows when Like Bryan Cranston, Michael manipulated and warped by you really get down to it. "The Chiklis won the Emmy f or their older partners. The two Shield" also had more simulta- Outstanding Lead Actor in a cops on "The Shield" have a neous storylines going on than Drama Seriesafterhis show's big brother-little brother vibe;

ancer survivor eserves etter

the meth cooks are more of a father-son duo. But in both cases the older partner ends up destroying the life of the younger,more fragile member of the team. Shane's sins are, to a significant degree, Vic's fault, just as Walt is largely to blame for some of the worst things J esse's done. And o n b o t h shows, the younger partner is

more damaged and consumed by guilt than his mentor. There are smaller similarities as welL Bumbling Detective Steve Billings on " T he Shield" provided comic relief in the manner of "Breaking Bad's" sleazy l awyer S aul Goodman. "Breaking B ad" had a severed head on a turtle; "The Shield" had severed feet all over the place, thanks to the

foot-chopping Armenian maniac played by eventual "Sons of Anarchy" creator Kurt Sutter. Vic and the gang burned corpses; Waltand Jesse dissolved them. And Vic's wife

Corrine (Cathy Cahlin Ryan) was at times loathed by misogynistic fans, much as Walt's

wife Skyler (Anna Gunn) has been. L astly, both shows hit i t out of the park in their final seasons. "I've said for a long time that the best final season of any one of these kinds of shows is 'The Shield,'" Alan Sepinwall recently told B i ll Simmons, "and it's such a good season that it kind of drags 'The Shield' into the pantheon all by itself."

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-D andIMAXmovies. • Movie times aresubject to change after presstime. I

Dear Abby: I am writing in response to "Anonymous in Wisconsin" (Aug. 11), the cancer survivor whose husband has lost interest in her after her double mastectomy. I am OUTRAGED by his insensitivity and lack of love. She says she doesn't want to leave him. DEAR My question to her ABBY is, why not? She deserves better. I a m a ca n c er survivor who was diagnosed with breast cancer seven months after I was married. Prior to my decision to have a radical mastectomy, I offered my husband the chance to leave. (After all, one doesn't expect "worse" to come so soon after the wedding.) The prospectof children, which we had discussed and was important to us, was uncertain because of my subsequent chemotherapy. My husband didn't hesitate. He said, "You would not leave me. We will adopt." On our first wedding anniversary I was bald, and he treated me to a beautiful, romantic getaway. Although I did have reconstruction, it was a long process. He was supportive from day one. Fifteen years later, I was diagnosed with breast cancer again. I

had another radical mastectomy followed by chemo and reconstruction.Abby, my husband again made me feel beautiful even when I didn't. There are men out there who define a woman not by the size of her b reasts, but by t h e beauty of her heart. — Survivor in Natick, Mass.

Dear Survivor: I wanttothankyouand the many breast cancer survivors who wrote me — and their supportive spouses — for telling me your personal stories. Readers, I am printing this to remind you that October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Read on: Dear Abby:I had to write to "Anonymous." I kept hoping my husband of 20 years would change his mind and accept my new body. However, because he could not, I chose to divorce him and it liberated me. At first, I felt that if the one person who was supposed to care couldn't look at me, then no other man would either. I was vtvong. After five years of dating, I never once encountered a man who was as insensitive as my husband had been. I have now found the man of my dreams. In some respects, my "medical

HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORTUESDAY, OCT. 1, 2013:This year you will alternate between being the extreme extrovert and the recluse whom noonecanfind. You will network and expandyour horizons, yetyou also will take frequent timeouts. During the more Stars showthe kind introverted periods, of day you'll have yo u will reflect and ** * * * D ynamic verify whether you ** * * P ositive h a ve made the ** * A verage right choices for ** So-so yourself. If you are * Difficult single, meeting people comes easily; however, learning to choosethe right person is a different issue entirely. If you are attached, enjoy the closeness that the two ofyou createasacouple.LEO can be hard on you, but he or shewon't ever criticize you in public. ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * O thers desire your precision and your ability to handle details. Your compassion comes acrossthroughyour semi-businesslike attitude. Whenyou express your feelings, the other party gets the message. Tonight: The challenge is not to get involved in a power play.

TAURUS (April20-May20) ** * * T he morning might bethe most important part of your day.Your follow-through counts with a boss or with someone you would like to impress. Your creativity will inspire others, especially a close friend. Tonight: Live today as if there were no tomorrow.

GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * * Y ou will flow with ease in the morning. Make important calls at that time, and/or handle anydealings involving

adventures," as I refer to them, were the best thing that ever happened. They enabled me tosee my ex for who he really was, and find a man who truly IS a man. — GotaNew SetandaNew Life Dear Abby:Breast cancer doesn't ruin your life unless you let it. I am 66years old. When I wasin high school, my mom had a breast removed. My parents and I just took it in stride. It didn't define us. Dad adored her. Mom would come in d ressed up for whatever reason and ask, "Am I even?" because the "falsies" then were made offoam and were lightweight. She kept the vacation money pinned to it. She made a few new friends faint when she used it as a pin cushion. Dad died at 90, and Mom died the following year. Mom could havehelped "Anonymous." She would have cut her a slice of homemade pie, poured a cup of coffee, sat down at the table and just talked to her. Women need other women. "Anonymous" should find a friend who has gone through the same thing and talk and pray. She needs both. — Earlene in Texas — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com orP0. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

others. By afternoon, you will be best servedbycocooningathome .Knowthat you will get a lot done onceyou emerge, and quickly at that. Tonight: Headhome.

CANCER (June 21-Joly22) ** * * * T ry to be more in sync with others, and knowfull well whatyou needto do.Honorachangethatisgoingon,even if you do not necessarily feel comfortable with it.Letsomeoneknow how much you care. Plan to visit this person soon. Tonight: Hang out with afriend. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * M ove forward with a project that has been onthe back burner. Youmight not be as sure of yourself as you would like to be in the afternoon. Realize that there is a good reason for this lack of confidence, as someone could be trying to sabotage your plans. Tonight: Headhomeearly.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You might sense change a of energy midday. Usethe high energy of the afternoon to forge aheadwith an important cause; otherwise, a loved onecould become very difficult. Understand that this person is set on having things go his or her way. Tonight: Enjoythe moment.

LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22)

** * * * U se the morning to the fullest, when networking is favored andgetting along with others is highlighted. You will have your way, as long asyou usethe time well. By the afternoon, you could feel overwhelmed and be inneed of some personal time. Tonight: Be lessavailable.

** * * Be aware of the fact that you are about to acceptyetanother responsibility. If you don't want to take on this task, make yourself more aware of the nuances in your conversations. A meeting in the afternoon could be your major concern. Tonight: Only where your friends are.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * You'll have a limited amount of time to proceed in acertain direction or to blaze anewtrail. Allow your innate leadership qualities to emerge. Knowthat the possibility exists that you no longer will have the samefreedom to explore alternatives. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil.

I

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 2 GUNS(R) 9:30 • BAGGAGE CLAIM (PG-13) I:25, 3:45, 7: IO,9:35 • BATTLE OF THEYEAR 3-D (PG-13) 12:50, 3:50, 6:40, 9:25 • BLUE JASMINE (PG-13) 12:45, 3:15, 6:15 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)12:05, 12:30, 2:30, 3, 4:50, 6, 7:20, 8:45 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 23-D (PG)1, 3:30, 6:30, 9:15 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG) 12:15, 2:45 • DON JON (R) 1:35, 3:55, 7:30, 9:50 • ELYSIUM(R) 8:50 • THE FAMILY (R) 1:05, 4:35, 7:15, 10 • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) I:20, 4:30, 7:40, 10:15 • LEEDANIELS'THE BUTLER (PG-l3)l2:25,3:20,6:20, 9:20 • METALLICATHROUGHTHE NEVER IMAX3-0 (R)4,7, 9:45 • PERCYJACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS (PG)1:30,4:20, 6:55 • PRISONERS (R) 12:20, 4:10, 7:45 • RIDDICK (R)9:45 • RUSH(R) 12:40, 3:35, 6:05, 6:45, 9, 9:40 • INE'RE THE MILLERS(R) 1:15, 4:40, 7:25, 10:05 • THEWIZARD OF OZ IMAX3-0 (PG)Noon • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • MAN OF STEEL(PG-13) 6 • THIS IS THE END(R) 9:15 • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 2f may attend screeningsbefore 7 pm.ifaccompanied tfy a legalguardian. t

I

I

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Fed. 18)

10 p.m. on H Cl, "Locky 7" — As a news crew comes in to do a story on the lottery winners, the reality of what's happenedsets in for them — especially for Antonio (Luis Antonio Ramos) and his family. The girls go on ashopping spree to prepare for the Gold Star block party. Thepolice come closer to learning the truth about the robbery in the newepisode "Inside Job." Summer Bishil and Lorraine Bruce also star. 10 p.m. on ARE, "Barter Kings" — Steve andAntonio decide they really need a recreational vehicle to get themselves andtheir families to and from their new trading post in Utah. Their quest to acquire one brings them to LasVegaswith their wives for a wedding andan encounter with Elvis in the season finale, "Trading or Bust." 10 p.m. on FX,"Sons of Anarchy" — It's not rocket science: You don't mess with the Sons of Anarchy. When the club'scom pound is attacked, its members prepare to exact revenge on the perpetrators in the new episode "Wolfsangel." Charlie Hunnam, Kurt Sutter and Katey Sagal star. ©Zap2it

Central Oregon

(

Derm a tology Mark Hall,MD

I

I '

I

I

I

Mountain Medical Immediate Care 541-3SS-7799 1302 NE 3r S t . Bend www.mtmedgr.com

Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)6:15 • THE HEAT (Upstairs — R) 6:30 • Theupstairs screeningroomhaslimited accessibility.

O

I

vPure &oA6 &o.

rd o a~ B~

ir

Bend Redmond John Day Burns Lakeview La Pine 541.362.6447 bendurology.com

PISCES (Fed.19-March20)

©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

9:30 p.m. on AtflE, "Storage Wars Texas" —In the town of Longview, Lesa andJerry hope to use their home-field advantage against Jenny and Mary, Rudy sets his sights on an unusual weapon, and Ricky and Bubba may have bitten off more than they can chew in their quest to expand in the new episode "Built for Pleasure Not Speed."

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I-548-8777 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)3,5, 7,9 • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 • PRISONERS (R) 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 • RIDDICK(R) 4:30, 7, 9:30

Madras Cinema 5, 1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF ME ATBALLS 2(PG)4:45,7 • THE CONJURING (R) 7: IO • THE FAMILY (R) 4:50, 7: IO • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG- I3) 5, 7:20 • PLANES (PG)5:05 • PRISONERS (R) 3:25, 6:25

** * * G etan earlystart, ifpossible, and handle the most important matters first. You could find thatyou won't be able to concentrate to the samedegree, come afternoon. A meeting with a boss or parent might steal the scene. Listen to what this person says. Tonight: Opt to not be alone.

8 p.m. onH C), "Marvel's Agents of S.H.LE.L.D." — Coulson (Clark Gregg) and the agents head for Peru to investlgate a mysterious object code-named 0-8-4. An encounter with Comandante Camilla Reyes(guest star Leonor Varela) heats things up in the new episode "0-8-4." Ming-Na Wen, Brett Dalton, Chloe Bennet, lain De Caestecker andElizabeth Henstridge also star.

I

CAPRICORN (Dec t 22-Jan.19)

** * * You might feel as if you are a social director on a cruise, as somany people wantto seeyouand speakwith you. You give asense of direction to many people's dreams. Someonemight want to isolate you in order to monopolize your time. Tonight: Visit with friends over dinner.

5 p.m. on TBS,"MLB Basedall" —Baseball's postseason gets under way tonight with the first of two Wild Card games, single-game playoffs that determine which teams advance to the Division Series later this week. TBS will carry tonight's National League contest, tommorow's American League game, most of the Division Series (with MLB Network) and the NLChampionship Series. Fox will carry the ALCS and the World Series, which begins Oct. 23 in the home park of the AL champion.

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • AIN'T THEMBODIESSAINTS (R) 6 • DRINKINGBUDDIES(R) 8:15 • PRINCE AVALANCHE(R) 3:45

Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)6 • IN A WORLD (R) 6:30 • LEE DANIELS'THEBUTLER(PG-13) 6:15 • PRISONERS (R) 6

** * * A partner might demand more of your attention than you willingly want to give him or her this morning. Do not be surprised if this behavior resurges later today. Detach, and perhaps distance yourself, in order to seehow to integrate whatyou must do. Tonight: Surf the Web.

TV TODAY

Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's

0 G O! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at benddulletin.com/movies

e~e~eC~SSIC COVERINGS Also see usfor

Awnings, Solar Screens 8 Custom Draperies

(541) 388-4418


TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013

THE BULLETIN

e

i

I

I

CUSTOMER LOYALTY KEY TAGS ARE HERE!

3 Oil Ghanges

, 'MURR4YSHOLT ~J~

~

• os

c""-jII

Includes 6 quarts of oil, (blend of synthetic oil) replace oil filter, 21-point inspection, discounts up to 10%, roadside The key tag includes assistance, 12/12 warranty.

I •

I I

(Gas)

•Iq

(/ •

5 41 -3 8 2 - 2 2 2 2 SERVICE HOURS: M-F7:45am to 5:30pm

$2999

The cost isonl 'Bgis per tag.

I Coversmostvehicles. Oieselsextra. Couponexpires10/31/13.

J

YourBargaluC ouuectiou ®~~

a

®0

M A l l ttwtllihitimtl //SII

a

a

a a

a

0

E

ey

e•

Chem~r '

Drier. Cleaner. Heajehiere

e

p

e

Chem-Dry of Central Oregon

Servin g Deschutes,Crook6Jeff ersonCounties IndependentlyOwnedI Operated • e

I I '

I

I

Perfectfor Ceramic,Porcelain, Slate, GraniteandTravertine I

"

o 0FF

• I'E

'

I

I

II

AK

I'

(•

iltlIfggiiiggg

Tile, Stone I GroutCleaning I Sealing

I

541-388-7374• Residential & Commercial

I

Offer valid with coupon only. Not valid with other offers. Minimums apply. Payment due at time of service. Expiration date: October 31,2013

0

Ba a a a a a a a a p

3 Rooms Cleaned I

IRK' <y>

541-382-3173

$99

••e••s

I

WithCoupon. Roomis Considered250Sq. Ft. E xpires 10/31/201 3

Behind Bank ofAmerica on 3rd Street in Bend

BW 10 1 3

1230 NE 3RD ST

2 Rooms Cleaned

$76 Expires 10/31/2013

I I

BW 10 1 3 I

Whole House Cleaning

I

I WithCoupon. RoomisConsidered 250Sq.Ft. I

I

i

Fish House

I

I I

I

I I I Not valid back page specials or I otheromo prtionaloffers. I Ex pi r es 11/05/13

eee

I

with purchase oftwo beverages

$158 """'-* ' Cleaned •

Im

Roszak's

iylthCoupon.RoomisConsidered 250Sq. Ft. I

0- I

I

with purchaseoftwo I beverages I I Notvalid backpagespedalsor I ot h er promotional offers. I Exp ires 11/05/13

LUNCH 11:30 — 2:30, MON-FRI DINNER tw-9,MON-SAT SEE OTHER SIDE FOR DAILY BACK PAGE SPECIALS

xpires 10/31/2013 BW1013 I

I I I

I

Chimney Cleaning

I'

I I

$15 OFF any Dryer Vent Cleaning

l Lmese'I

III I

'

II I

I

I II

'I I '

I

I

I

'I

I

I'I

'

I

''

I I I

I I

II

' I ' I

'

'

' l l

'

'I

'

I

'

I

'

I ' I

I

I

I

il

ili

I

'I

'

''

I '

'I

I

'

I

I I

• I

'

I

I

I

I

' l l

'

' I '

I

I'

Single Story House

'I • ' I

I

I

'

I

'I

Wood Stove• Fireplace Insert Natural Gas• Dryer 8 Dryer

'I

I

'

I

I

94,

St»doedcteool«/odee

m+5tf ef 5 tQUCh

I I '

I I '

i i

I

''

I'

ch,'.".,„

Coupon DiscountRa teOlly

I

I I 'I

I

, I '

I

I

'

'

I

I

'

' I

I

Standard Rate$~

I

'I

Vent Cleaning •

• •

Licensed • Bonded•Insured CCB¹ 197928 www.mastertouchbend.com

/I

o o

/

o/ o

I. :

-

(N)ttIJII

IVF jl e

—.®,— SOLAT U B E. •

h'

-

•-•

~

• ~

I

• ~

I'I

'123

Cleaning Completed by: 11/5/13 a

~

a

9 •- • • • •

i

5 ROOMS I ir 'I95

Vfi)EVlE YQUSEE ONE 87ll9~~R, I

TR~Pl~ t OULIO P~ RURDPIE S.

SAVE

by: 11/5/13 QQ aCleaning Completed a a ~ a

a

BEYOND CARPET CLEANING

I —ST/hEI,JSY STE MER,'=

e

CARPET i UPHOISTERY i TILE&GROUT i HARDWOOD

541-709-9390 1-800-STEEMER. l stanleysteemescom

I

~CI

BI ~

E - •

+ CARPET CLEANING + CARPET CLEANING

.I 3 ROOMS

:.thdh,'Ivd,:; tt'

Ll f e

~

e

on Terminix® Pest Control.

I

*For new customers. Some restrictions apply. Expires 12/31/ 13

I I

ANY PIZZA ANY SIZE

ns

g~~NAJ P~Qp nil taah,

$2 off any

menu-priced

FULL SERVICE DOG GROOMING THAT COMES TO TOU.

We groom your dog in the comt'ort ofour state ofthe art grooming van, saving you the mess and stress.

Pizza or Calzone Any Size!

Professionally Licensed Dog Groomer with 30 years experience.

~20FF

—LARGEStuffed with: Red Sauce, Mozzarella, Canadian Bacon, Peppercnt, Sausege, Crispy Bacon

l /I

Excludes mini-pizzas and Mini Murph

Toppedwith:

Pnn>

nr r ~.

TAKE 'N' BAKE PIZZA

Loveatlmi

OIF'jr I"u1~1 Serviee G~POI. Ol i11hti

Nevg Qustomers

Red Sauce, Beef, Provolone

and Cheddar Cheeses

541-382-8252

Power over pests:

Combined Living areas, L-shaped rooms, and rooms over 300 sq ft are considered two areas. Baths, halls, large walk in closets, and area rugs are pnced separately. Minimum charges apply. Cannot combine with other offers. Residential only. Must present coupon at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Certain restrictions may apply. Call for details.

I

ilg

l

Must present coupon for discount at time of service, one per household. Offer expires 12/31/2013 Not to be eombi»ed ioith any other diteonnt.

Exp. 11.30.13 Not valid with other offers

541-848-7605 I janasgrooming.com

BBCW.10.13

Ia ~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

I


's

I I I I I I I I I I I

I

$

95 DODGE • CHEVY • FORD

MURMY~&KOLT Great Selection.

,

r

(hemPry Drier. Cleaner. Healthier.

I

O f I Ie Q{}I eie italI sogt

I

I

interesting and unique items.Wehave toys, p

541-388-7374

clothing, crafts, swords, tools, leather goods, household supplies,gifts,and an assortment of tobacco products, all at great prices!

Offer valid with coupon only. Ncl including RVs & stairs. Ncl valid with other offers. Minimumsapply. Payment due at time ofservice. Expiration date: October 3L 2013

Clean & Seal

SERVICE HOURS: M-F7:45am to 5:30pm Couponexpires 10/31/13.

www.chemdrybend.com Residential II Commercial

~

i

I

I I

5 41 -382- 2 2 2 2

Gre a t Pricing

Welcome to The Outpost! The Outpost is a Oregon retailer. We specialize in providing a fun shopping experience for our customers,with a lot of

O

a

G r e at Service.

i

Includes 21-point inspection, top off of fluids, blended synthetic oil.

I

I

M~d!~~

a

<ineViii

Lapine •

Providing you with a fun shopping experience is our priority,so please come in and see us at any of our locations!

Chem Dry -of Central Oregon 54 I -388-7374 Bend Serving Deschutes, Crook 8 Jefferson Counties • Independently Owned & Operated L ~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

tI Ia

ffQ g ms Xl!WZXZ M'M Z

WN

I

I

The power of oxygen is undeniable; Mother Nature has used oxygen to naturally purify the Earth for thousands I of years. Now let the power of oxygen clean your carpets!I II

I

No Coupon required!

3ZDgLW5 5ZR,lfM2' PZR'

I

I

DEHKX MCX HE,IR R'RCMX5

, IS

I

I C A R P E T C I E A I I I I I I IG G

Convenient Appointments

l

Of Qepf~pl 0lsegpp 54 ai 5 9 3 ai 799

lf FREE Estimate Over the Phone Ef IICRC Certified Technician

I

I Monday - Saturday• No coupon required Not valid with other promotions, offers or discounts. Promotion expires 11/05/13

Oxi Fresh uses a combination of its one of a kindOxi Sponge Encapsulatar, andOxi Powder. This three part cleaning solution creates a powerful oxygenated cleaning system that breaks down the stains while encapsulating them, so that they can be efficiently removed from the carpet pile.

Roszat's eeke eSa kefa e eae Se Seee'e,

t Fish House

541-382-3173

It is safe for children and pets, leaves no sticky residue, reduces returning stains and has an one hour average dry time.

AI.I.ERGIES...

,'~MON~ - SAVgNG Cg~ ~ I

VRII CANRRHL TIIE RETTtR AIR

I

rynEEeeaaeeaoeee EERIECE e

I I I I I I I I I I I I

Air Duct Cleaning! 515 Off Dryer Vent or Chimney Cleaning

D/D YOU KNOI/ffy Poor Indoor Air ualit can: Result in lllness • Including: Nausea Eye8 Skin Irritation • Headaches • Allergic Reactions • Respiratory Problems

I

• a

I

• I '

•' I

I

PA

a•

I

'

I

e

e •

I

I IT X X

I

L

I

'

I

» Lube, o i l , Fi l t e r g g; BRAKE Tire Rotation MAINTE NA N CE

I I

I

s50 to s100 OFF (541) 389-87't 5

ST II

, Sg999

Install new disc pads/shoes, resurface I drums/rotors. Most cars per axle. Ceramic I or carbon metallic pads extra if required. I I Starting at • Wash Exterior FrontII I I • Chassis Lube I Window I • New Oil Filter II I I • Up to 5 Qts of 5W30 • VacuumFront Kendall SyntheticBlend Floorboards •Tire Rotation • Top offmostFluids O N'eitdaii unde r the hood I I Most cars & light trucks. 3/4 & 1Ton may Bearing Repack Extra I Most cars & light trucks. Expires 9/30/13I I require extra fee. Expires11/01/13 I' Sa

Ia

I

• •

4

I I I

I a

\

S OL A T U B E

PASTARIA

Bring Sunshine into Your L ivin S a c e

Valid anydayoftheweek. Bring in this vouchertoredeem.Must buytworegularly pricedentreesandtwobeveragestoreceive $7 discount.Limit onecouponper table. Cannot becombinedwith anyother offers, discounts,or specials. Doesnot applyto the Pastini SundaySupper.Valid in Bendonly. Pleasehonor yourserver with agratuity basedonthe amount before discount. Offer expires10/31/2013.

e

.

-

We are the BEST(.): Certified Installers 10 Year Warranty Licensed, Bonded, Insured Highest Performance Guaranty ~

Old Mill - Next to REI 375 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, OR 97702

(541) 749-1060

~ wi)ttrr ~ II ~ ~~~ I~

a ee~~

www.Pastini.com

f s

~

I

B ~

:.®.= SOL A T

U BE

... www.S'olatubeBCen • acorn

5

l iSAVE I

*

on Terminix® Pest Control.

I

• •

*For new customers. Some restrictions apply

TERIffllNIX PROTEGTION IS BAGicEO BY THE STRONGEST GUARANTEE IN THE BUSINESS.

I

tI

A custom plan to help get pests out and keep them Dut. Solutions within 24 hours. Work continued until you're satisfied.

I

7+ggg+I+

BEYOND CARPET CLEANING CARPET i UPHOLSTERY i TILE&GROUT i HARDWOOD

— 3TAIL Y TE MEH

541-706-9390

1-800-STEEMER. I stanleysteemer.com

40 sa BRIDGEFDRD BLVD.

IIQ QaaQ

Power over pests:

Combined Living areas, L-shapad rooms, and rooms over 300 sef fl are considered lwc areas. Baths, halls, large walk in closets, and area rugs are priced separately. Minimum charges apply Cannot combine with other offers. Residential only. Must present coupon at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Certain restrictions may apply. Call for details.

Iw

k

m~

~ ~ ~

~ ~ ~

~

~

~

~ ~ ~

~ ~ ~

~

~

~

J

BEND SOUTH BEND NORTH South Hwy 97 NE 3 r d St 8 Murphy Rd & Re v e re

g~~ Ol~ > ~ Cp F UL L G R O O M I N G I N C L U D E S :

TAKE 'N' BAKE PIXXA

Compassionate, patient grooming, one dog at a time. Your dog will have a stress-free, pampered experience. • Nail trimming /f iling • Bathing with organic shampoo and conditioner • Teeth polishing with enzymatic toothpasteand a breath freshener • Fulf body massage, blow dry, • Ear cleaning trim/cut /style of your choice and aromatherapy. • Anal gland release

Love at II Facebook at: Papa Murphy's Central Oregon

OpenMonday-Friday Sam to 6pm to accommodate our clients' schedules. Same dayappointments areoften available. Proud owners of Baby's Breath Cavaliers - AICC Champion Pedigree Cavalier King Charles Spaniels. Please call for puppy availability.

541-84S-7605 I janasgrooming.com

Online at: www, pmpizza.com •

'

(541) REDMOND SW10th & Highland

(541)

~EBT

(541)

382-6767 389-7272

548-7272

phone ahead

we'll have il ready

when youarrlva

P RINEVILLE MADR A S NE Third St SW H w y 97 Near Les Schwab 8 Bard Lane

(541)

(541)

447-5999 475-1555


ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 •

~

I

~ l 'f ~

f

I

•I•

I

.Ik

't. A

0

::haurs:

cantact us: •

Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Includeyour name, phone number and address

Monday - Friday : 7:30a.m. -5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

. Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371

T h e ~

u I I e t i~ 208

Pets 8 Supplies

202

Want to Buy or Rent Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Wanted: white s tacka ble n a t ural ga s washer & dryer. Call 541-508-0916.

Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows

Patchwork Antiques & Fall Faire Fri. 8 Sat., Oct. 4-5, 9-6 Fri. • 9-4 Sat. 797 C Ave., Terrebonne. Antiques, fall wreaths 8 decor, home spun crafts, baked goods 8 lots more! More info: 541-419-8637 541-480-8469 Items for Free

Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all volunteer, non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/ neuter. Cans for Cats trailer at Grocery Outlet, 694 S. 3rd; or donate Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, 1515 NE 2 nd; o r a n y time a t CRAFT in Tumalo. www.craftcats.org

1 77 ~

not exceed $500.

Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletln.com

210

Lab purebred black female, 9 wks, 1st shots, dewclaws, wormed,

S

Serving Central Oregon ppre 2003

541-410-8078 or 541-306-1703

l~

r

Ave

9 7 $0 2

, • Bg n d • O g e g g n

246

257

266

270

Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing

Musical Instruments

Heating & Stoves

Lost & Found

Lost Cat, black & white male, friendly, corner of DON'TMISSTHIS Since September 29, Underwood 8 Studio Rd. Ipk i p 00 0 1991, advertising for No collar, but m icrochasing products or • used woodstoves has chipped. If found, please services from out of I DO YOU HAVE $$.',' V t" been limited to mod- call Mary, 541-389-2249 I the area. Sending I SOMETHING TO els which have been LOST since Sat.. 9/21 Piano, Baldwin upI cash, checks, or ' SELL c ertified by th e O r - in Glacier Ridge dev. right, with b e nch, I credit i n f o rmation FOR $500 OR exc. cond. $ 6 00. egon Department of Neff Rd., b lack may be subjected to Farm Equipment LESS? Environmental Qual- off 541-410-4087 med. short hair male I FRAUD. For more Non-commercial ity (DEQ) and the fed- cat with white patch & Machinery information about an I advertisers may eral En v ironmental o n chest, white t i p 258 advertiser, you may place an ad Protection A g e ncy front paws, REWARD. 2 Holstein steers, about Travel/Tickets I call t h e Ore g onI with our 6 00 Ibs, $ 50 0 e a . (EPA) as having met 541-647-7899 ' State Attor ney ' "QUICK CASH Butcher hogs, $275 smoke emission stanSTEVE MARTIN ticket, dards. A I General's O f f i ce ea. 541-420-2116 SPECIAL" cer t ified Find exactly what Oct. 4, Les Schwab AmConsumer P rotec- • 1 week3lines 12 w oodstove may b e phitheater, prime center identified by its certifi- you are looking for in the 5' brush hog, tires to pull t ion ho t l in e at I OI' seat 10 rows back, $100. down hwy, pull P TO I 1-877-877-9392. k 2 0i cation label, which is CLASSIFIEDS ~2 541-923-2238 3-point, $350. 5' wide CAd must permanently attached harrow, 3 sections, 7 include price of 260 to the stove. The Bul- LOST S m ith s un-tine wi d e $125 2 i $500 letin will no t k n ow- glasses, at Phil's trail- tines Misc. Items 541-480-7085 or less, or multiple ingly accept advertis- head parking lot. on items whose total i ng for the sale of 9/20. 541-280-4999 Attentioanowbirder Antiques & does not exceed uncertified h unt e r s , Hon d a LOST WEDDING BAND Hay, Grain & Feed Collectibles $500. woodstoves. E tkl1600 Gen e r a t or . On Saturday night Sept. R unsgood , 6 1 0 0obo . 21 at Mavericks Bar and Call Classifieds at 1st Class Grass Hay Antiques wanted: tools, 5 41-447-424 6 Grill in Bend, I lost my 541-385-5809 Barn-stored, furniture, marbles, beer • Fu e l & Wood grandmother's wedding www.bendbulletinpcom Buying Diamonds $230/ ton. cans, early B/W phoring. It s l ipped while /Gold for Cash Patterson Ranch tography, Western dancing and was never Sisters, 541-549-3831 items. 541-389-1578 L.H. Weatherby MKV Saxon's Fine Jewelers WHEN BUYING able to locate it again. It's 541-389-6655 .240 WM NIB $1,150 FIREWOOD... n ot worth m uch b u t Low Sugar Grass Hay. BUYING means the world to me!!! $220/ton. Very clean and also, L.H. Weatherby To avoid fraud, It is silver and gold with palatable. Black D i aM KV .340 WM N I B Lionel/American Flyer The Bulletin trains, accessories. no diamonds and an en- mond Ranch near Sisters Deglil I $1,150. Each w/one recommends pay541-408-2191. graving on the inside. I Rodeo. 541 388-3666 Visit our HUGE box factory a mmo ment for Firewood am offering a reward to 541-251-0089 (Red- BUYING & SE L LING only upon delivery home decor get it back. Any info consignment store. mond) All gold jewelry, silver 333 and inspection. New items and gold coins, bars, • A cord is 128 cu. ft. please call 541-576-2158 REM 700 300WSM. New in Poultry, Rabbits, arrive daily! rounds, wedding sets, 4' x 4' x 8' box, never been fired. class rings, sterling sil& Supplies 930 SE Textron, Black syn stock. $499. ver, coin collect, vin- • Receipts should Bend 541-318-1501 include name, 406-498-4024/Bend www.redeuxbend.com tage watches, dental 2 b l ack-tailed, w h ite price and Japanese hobby roostgold. Bill Fl e ming, phone, kind of wood Need to get an 541-382-9419. ers, free! 541-382-8423 Pepsi C ol a C o l lectpurchased. ables, 100+ i t e ms, ad in ASAP? MISSING: Tan / White Deschutes Memorial • Firewood ads $300. 541-389-2600 Chihuahua since 8/2 Gardens, C atholic You can place it MUST include i n C r ooked R i v er Horses & Equipment I Gardens, lot 41 C, species 8 cost per The Bulletin reserves online at: Ranch. Male, 8 years cord to better serve the right to publish all www.bendbulletin.com space 2. Bargain at old, a bout 6 lbs . Call $750. our customers. ads from The Bulletin $4,500 cash reward. 541-504-8868 newspaper onto The No questions asked! 541-3B5-5809 Bulletin Internet webMoving! Patio furn. set, 7' $erkrpp CentralOregon since 190$ Call 503-805-3833 or site. powder coated frame, 541-325-6629 REM 870 Express. 3.5" glass top, 4 sling type Magnum. Great cond. chairs. $100. BBQ grill, 3 All Year Dependable ASPC registered Shet5er 00 Central Qkegpp 5 pce l903 Wood stock. $ 299. + (1 side) burners, cover, Firewood: Seasoned l and pony colt. V e r y 406-498-4024/Bend $40. 541-350-0898 Lodgepole, Split, Del. fancy, s ho w q u a lity. REMEMBER: If you Wantedpaying cash Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 Coins & Stamps Remington 270, model have lost an animal, Priced to s el l b efore $ 4 9 5 . L eave 710, 3x 9 B u s hnell for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- for $365. Cash, Check don't forget to check winter. message, 541-788-1649. Private collector buyin scope, 2.5 boxes of dio equip. Mclntosh, or Credit Card OK. The Humane Society 541-420-3484. postage stamp albumstI shells. $350. Dave, J BL, Marantz, D y Bend At Riding in Style we collections, w orld-wide 541-788-8791 naco, Heathkit, San541-382-3537 Firewood, mixed pine, and U.S. 573-286-4343 are closing our doors, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Redmond split 8 deliv'd: Sunriver, Remington 700 rh 8mm as of Oct. 31st, (local, cell phone). Call 541-261-1808 541-923-0882 Rem mag rifle scope $170/cord, $250/1Y2cord; EVERYTHING MUST 0i WHEN YOU SEE THIS Bend, $180/cord; $270/ mount, in box fired 10 GO!! Located in 541-447-7175; 1Y2 cord. 541-390-8188 Bicycles 8 times, includes ammo Tumalo on Cook Ave. or Craft Cats Oo ~ $1000 n o tr a d es, 541-617-9243. Accessories 541-389-8420. 541-279-4363 269 Gardening Supplies Electric Bike, Easy Rider yyaii Tent, R a inier, On a classified ad 350, less than 100 mlles, 20x24, frame, porch, go to & Equipment battery + 2 c h argers, $4850 541 480 1353' www.bendbulletin.com $500. 541-420-0301 to view additional Wanted: Collector photos of the item. BarkTurfSoil.com People Look for Information seeks high quality About Products and fishing items. PROMPT D E LIVERY Services Every Day through Call 541-678-5753, or Tools 541-389-9663

rrecommends extra

NOTICE TO

TheBulletin

ADVERTISER

I Antique Dining Set 18th century legs, mahogany top6 Chippendale style chairs, $2770. 541-639-3211

I I I

I

I

I

LTheBulleting A rustic, solid oak coffee table you won't worry about damaging! For domestic harmony, big enough for both of you to put your feet up! Large enough for family games. Shortened from antique kitchen table, 39"x42" x16Y2" high. $250 cash 541-322-0682

541-408-0846

>' * m@WO~

Freezer

Commercial upright Delfield

The Bulletin recom- $200. 541-389-5893 6000 Series mends extra caution Labradors, AKC black 8 freezer, 20 cubic when purc h as- chocolate puppies, exfeet, stainless, ing products or ser- cellent pedigrees, male 8 $1200. vices from out of the f emale, $ 45 0 ea c h . 541-325-2691 area. Sending cash, 541-680-0009 checks, or credit inMaltese/Yorkie puppies, G ENERATE f ormation may b e SOM E males,$250 EXCITEMENT in your subjected to fraud. females$300; CASH. 541-546-7909 neighborhood! Plan a For more i nformagarage sale and don't tion about an adverPOMERANIAN MALE tiser, you may call AT STUD, Proven. Blue forget to advertise in classified! the O r egon State Tipped. Show quality, 541-385-5809. Attorney General's excellent personality. Office C o n sumer Want to mate with like Hidebed, full-sized, like Protection hotline at quality purebred female new, rust brown color, 1-877-877-9392. Pomeranian (papers not $500. 541-408-0846 necessary) ASAP.

The Bulletin

C h a ng

210

German Shepherds AKC Englander, queen box www.sherman-ranch.us sPrings & m attress, $500 Li k e new , 541 281 6829

541-279-3018

W .

Furniture & Appliances Furniture & Appliances

oul'

"QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 ~ 2 k 20 ! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does

Free Hot Tub - come Kitten, female Oriental kitten $300; Exotic and get it! Redmond, 541-410-3393 Shorthair adult, $50 Pets 8 Supplies

:

95"x46"x29";

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with

: Monday- Friday 7:30a.m. -5p.m.

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

Place, cancel or extend an ad

I

e

RC CLL4

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

POODLEToy pups & A dog sitter in NE Bend, Loving home w/no cages, teens. AlsoPOMAPOOS $25 day.Linda atnew Cal l 541-475-3889 number - 541-576-4574 High Quality King Bedroom Set with Adopt a rescued kitten or USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Storage - 1 yr old, in cat! F i xed, shots, ID Door-to-door selling with PERFECT condition! chip, tested, more! NonBeautiful medium oak profit sanctuary at 65480 fast results! It's the easiest hardwood bedframe 78th St., Bend, open way in the world to sell. with storage drawers, Sat/Sun 1-5; kitten foster king pillow-top mathome by a p pt. ( call The Bulletin Classified tress, 2 night stands, 541-815-7278). Photos, The Bulletin ClassiNeds 541-385-5809 2 lamps, 1 5-drawer map 8 more: www.craft dresser, 1 dresser+ cats.org. 541-389-8420, mirror. Price QueenslandHeelers or like us on Facebook. Golf Equipment • reduced! Now $2700, Standard & Mini, $150 all. 541-410-1010 & up. 541-280-1537 A ussies, M in i A K C , CHECK YOUR AD parents on site, 1st www.rightwayranch.wor Refrigerator 25 cu. ft., shots/wormed, blk/red dpress.com French doors, l o wer tri, 541-598-5314 Rodent issues? F ree freezer drawer, exc cond Australian Shepherd adult barn/shop cats, $500. 541-388-8339 AKC Reg'd puppies, f ixed, s h ots , so m e TV, 52' DLP Mitsubishi, black tri 8 blue merle, friendly, some not. Will new lamp, Yamaha on the first day it runs ready to go! $600/up. deliver. 541-389-8420 receiver, DVD player, to make sure it is cor541-420-1580 or and s t and. W o r ks St. Bernard Puppies, rect. 0Spellcheck" and www.highdesertaussies.com g reat. $ 47 5 O B O . human errors do oc1st shots, w o rmed. 541-480-7024 Boston Terrier puppies $400. 541-977-4686 cur. If this happens to Adorable purebred, 6 your ad, please conasher & Dry e r , M a y weeks old, parents on Yorkie„4 mo. female, loves W thgl tact us ASAP so that an t i 6 2 0 0/set . s ite, $ 4 0 0 ea c h . people/kids, very enercorrections and any 541-382-6806 . 541-420-1 048 getic, to approved home adjustments can be only. $450. 541 -678-2628 made to your ad. Cats - 2 Gorgeous CFA 541-385-5809 registered: Black Per- Yorkie pups AKC, sweet, The Bulletin Classified sian kitten, very nice. adorable, potty training, 2 $250; Flame point male boys, 2 girls, $450 & up. •j H imalayan, $150. A s Health guar.541-777-7743 Guns, Hunting pets only. Leave mesWe're selling half a Yorkie pups, f e male, house full of very nice sage,541-788 1649 & Fishing $650, male, $550, 8 wks, furniture! Teak sideChihuahua mix pups, 2 AKC. 541-410-1722 board, $400; w/hutch, Bend local pays CASH!! males, 1 female, $200 for all firearms & $800. Large maple exec. 210 obo. 541-420-1856 desk, $1000. Oak ammo. 541-526-0617 Furniture & Appliances corner armoire, $500. 3 Tiffany Browning Bar Belgium, Chihuahua/Yorkie lamps, $125 ea. Oak mix puppies, beautiful! w/Redfield scope. computer desk 8 chair, 30-06, $250. 541-977-0035 A1 Washers&Dryers $590. 541-419-9961 $350. Small antique $150 ea. Full warYorkie/Chihuahua puppy, ranty. painted desk, $100. CASH!! Free Del. Also female, born 7/1, very Large beautiful area rug, For Guns, Ammo 8 wanted, used W/D's sweet! $250. $700. 541-593-8921 or Reloading Supplies. 541-280-7355 541-815-4052 541-410-2911 541-408-6900.

MorePixatBendbuletin,com

SELL YOURSOFA AD RUNS UNTIL THESOFA SELLS!

503-351-2746 249

Art, Jewelry & Furs

It's Print Season! Buy a Shingledecker print and get a matching mini print as a bonus! BruceShin ledecker.com or chaforthefinest.com Cha for the Finest 183 East Hood St., in Sisters - 541-549-1140 253

Tv Stereo & Vldeo 47" Samsung HD TV, works great, moving sale, $195. 541-350-0898 255

Computers T HE B U LLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple

ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.

Craftsman floor-standing drill press, 15Y2, 8 spds, $150. 541-318-0292

New 10" Delta table saw with dust bag 8, roller s tand, $ 1 2 0 ca s h .

To place an ad, call

+2, 119 hrs, all access. for RV. $800.

classified@bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809

or email

The Bulletin

541-593-1455

500 00 Central eregppSinCe 200$

W ood splitter, 10 t o n electric/hydraulic, used SUPER TOP SOIL once, $500. www.hershe sollandbark.com 541-221-8226 Screened, soil 8 com-

post m i x ed , no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. f or flower beds, lawns, straight gardens, s creened to p s o i l . Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul.

265

Building Materials Bend Habitat RESTORE

Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES

541-548-3949.

740 NE 1st 541-312-6709

541-549-1621

Open to the public.

g.

541-385-5800

541-318-8503 RV Generator, 3600 LP

Open to the public. Lumber: 1x10's, 20' long, primered, 30 for $175. 541-388-3833 Sisters Habitat ReStore Building Supply Resale Quality items. LOW PRICES! 150 N. Fir.

o PO'

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at

Lo s t & Found

Found bicycle helmet at Three Pines; call to identify, 541-280-5754.

Found Digital Camera near Mt. View High School on 9/25. Call to identify 541-480-4744.

n pkrk ltalian soft leather

er ot tpm2000 COuCh 50t. EXCellent 000ditieir 00 tears,

stains. Very comfortable W2$ $1600 neW, otfkring for only

$700

541-000-0000

Item Priced at:

• • • •

Y o ur Total Ad Cost onl:

Under $500 $500 to $999 $1000 to $2499 $2500 and over

$29 $39 $49 $59

Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border,full color photo,bold headline • The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Marketplace

• The Cent ral OregonNickelAds ~ bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 "Privateparty merchandiseonly - excludespets& livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles,boats, airplanes,andgarage salecategories.


E2 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri • 20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L Harley Davidson Sport- V6 w/OMC outdrive, open 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0 cc, bow,Shorelander trlr, nds Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . Noon Mon. ster 9,257 miles, $4995. Call some interior trim work. Michael, 541-310-9057 $4500. 541-639-3209 Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. 21' Crownline Cuddy HDFatBo 19 9 6 Cabin, 1995, only Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. outdrive. Bimini top & moorage cover, $7500 obo. Saturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. 541-382-2577 Completely Saturday • . • .. 3:00 pm Fri. Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Condition Sunday.. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Showroom Many Extras Low Miles.

Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500 in total merchandise

OVER'500in total merchandise

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

Garage Sale Special

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

4 lines for 4 days .................................

(call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

*Must state prices in ad

C®X

Suzuki DRZ400 SM 2007, 14K mi.,

NEW FALL HOURS! Closed Tues. & Wed. open Thurs. thru Mon. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. only. U-pick & R~ead Picked • Golden Delicious apples, Ambrosia apples, Jonagold apples, Pinata apples. • Prunes BRING CONTAINERS for U-PICK!!! See us on Facebook 8 Bend Farmers Market on Wed., 3-7p.m.

36' 1998, Ig kitchen & sofa slide, perfect leather. W/D, elec. awn, dash computer, 2 TVs. Always covered. Exterior = 8, interior =9. New paint bottom half & new roof seal 2012. 300 Turbo CAT, 89K

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

0 0

00

528

732

Loans & Mortgages

775

Victory TC 2002, runs great many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-647-4232

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

865

Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale

mi. Engine diagnostic =perfect 9/20/13. Good batteries, tires. All service done at Beaver Coach, Bend. $42,500, 541-419-8184

BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbuUetin.com

ATVs Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

-

WARNING The Bulletin recom-

mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER

HUNTERS! Honda Fat Cat 200cc w/rear rack & receiver hitch carrier, used very little, exlnt cond, $1875 obo. 541-546-3330

®

Burns, OR W ar e house 8 w a rehouse property. Prior used as beer wholesaler. 11,000 s q.ft. t o t al, 5 500 s q . ft . me t a l warehouse. Misc. free standing coolers included. $2 39,000.

880

Motorhomes

Beaver Monterey

4 gal. tank, racks, recent tires, $4200 OBO.

The Bulletin bendbulletin.ccm

5m ©nlh

THOMAS ORCHARDS Kimberly, Oregon 541-934-2870 Starting Tues, Oct. 1st

www.centraloregon houseboat.com

with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

541-306-8812

541-383-2847.

Bwjj &ieRs

Get your business

h o u seboat,

$85,000. 541-390-4693

Street Glide 2006 black cherry metal f l ake, good extras, 8 ,100 miles, will take some trade of firearms or small ironhead. $14,000.

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

Produce & Food

Beautiful

541-548-4807

o 0 0

The Bulletin

Jayco Eagle 26.6 tt long, 2000

wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, microwave, Vizio TV & awning, Eaz-Lift roof satellite, walk-in stabilizer bars, heat shower, new queen bed. & air, queen White leather hide-awalk-around bed, bed & chair, all records, very good condition, no pets or s moking. $10,000 obo. $28,450. 541-595-2003 Call 541-771-4800

a ROW I N G

817,000

Placea photoin your private party ad for only$15.00 perweek.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces,

TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $129,900. 30,900 miles, great condition!

Extended warranty, dishwasher, washer/ dryer, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150 Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater 8 air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper that fits 6/a' pickup bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

I • ~ KeystoneLaredo 31'

s.

WEEKEND WARRIOR

Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. slide-out. Sleeps 6, Sleeps 6. Self-conqueen walk-around tained. Systems/ bed w/storage underappearancein good neath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. condition. Smoke-free. Air cond. Gas stove 8 Tow with ya-ton. Strong refrigerator/freezer. suspension; can haul Microwave. Awning. ATVs snowmobiles, Outside sho w e r. even a small car! Great Slide through storprice - $8900. a ge, E a s y Lif t . Call 541-593-6266 $29,000 new; Weight distribution hitch Asking $18,600 541-447-4805 with spring bars and bracket f o r tr a i ler f rame, $ 30 0 o b o . Adco aqua cover for 25'x28' travel trailer, SOLD. Rubber liner for 8' pickup box, $25. RV

2 0 06 w i th 1 2 '

541-420-0551

Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front 8 rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388 Mallard 22' 1995, ready for hunting season!Sleeps 7, two twin beds, fully equipped, very good cond, $3900 obo. 541-678-5575

aa aa • ~ Q -

I

Monte Carlo 2012 Limited Edition, 2 slides, 2

Fifth Wheels

Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition. Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer. 541-382-2577

•I

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

Call Dick, E I A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps 541-480-1687. Fleetwood D i scovery Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' 6-8 comfortably, has 2004, 35Kr loaded, too w/d, dishwasher, many 40' 2003, diesel momuch to list, ext'd warr. extras, fully l o aded. torhome w/all thru Snowmobiles • 2014, $49,900 Den$29,600 obo. Located Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, options-3 slide outs, 541-749-0724 in Bend. 682-777-8039 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, nis, 541-589-3243 MXR Sport quad, dirt & Check out the • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 One of the only sand tires,runs great, low etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. classifieds online EXT, $1000. Look at: counties in hrs, $3750 541-647-8931 Wintered i n h e ated wvvw.bendbuttetin.com Bendhomes.com Oregon without a • Yamaha 750 1999 • T r a vel Trailers shop. $84,900 O.B.O. Mountain Max, SOLD! Updated daily microbrewery. for Complete Listings of Keystone Challenger 541-447-8664 • Zieman 4-place HOTLINE, Area Real Estate for Sale 2004 CH34TLB04 34' trailer, SOLD! 745 1-877-877-9392. fully S/C, w/d hookups, All in good condition. Homes for Sale new 18' Dometic awLocated in La Pine. BANK TURNED YOU s o g[juj)g ning, 4 new tires, new DOWN? Private party CalI 541-408-6149. Kubota 7000w marine NOTICE Suzuki powered custom will loan on real esdiesel generator, 3 Dune Buggy, twin 650 cc tate equity. Credit, no All real estate adver860 slides, exc. cond. inproblem, good equity tised here in is sub- Motorcycles & Accessories motor, 5-spd, with trailer, G ulfstream S u n - Cougar 33 lt. 2006, s ide & o ut. 27 " T V $3500. 541-389-3890 is all you need. Call ject to t h e F e deral 14 ft. slide, awning, sport 30' Class A dvd/cd/am/fm entertain Orbit 21' 2007, used F air Housing A c t , Oregon Land Mort1988 ne w f r i dge, easy lift, stability bar, 870 center. Call for more only 8 times, A/C, which makes it illegal gage 541-388-4200. bumper extends for TV, solar panel, new details. Only used 4 oven, tub s hower, Boats & Accessories to advertise any prefextra cargo, all acrefrigerator, wheeltimes total in last 5 t/s micro, load leveler LOCAL MONEY:We buy erence, limitation or 470 cess. incl., like new c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W y ears.. No pets, no secured trust deeds & discrimination based hitch, awning, dual condition, stored in Domestic & g enerator, Goo d smoking. High retail note,some hard money on race, color, relibatteries, sleeps 4-5, RV barn, used less condition! $18,000 $27,700. Will sell for loans. Call Pat Kelley In-Home Positions EXCELLENT CONgion, sex, handicap, t han 10 t i mes l o 2013 Harley obo 541-447-5504 541-382-3099 ext.13. $24,000 including slidDITION. All accesfamilial status or nac ally, no p et s o r Davidson Dyna ing hitch that fits in Helperfor ElderlyParents sories are included. tional origin, or intensmoking. $20,000 Wide Glide, black, your truck. Call 8 a.m. (Bend) - At $12 per hour $14,511 OBO. tion to make any such only 200 miles, obo. 541-536-2709. to 10 p.m. for appt to 14' LAZER 1993 JAMEE 1982 20', sailin the Drake Park area to 541-382-9441 preferences, l i m ita- brand new, all stock, see. 541-330-5527. low miles on it, drive my car to help in boat with trailer, exc. tions or discrimination. plus after-market overseeing & directing my c ond., $2000 o b o . self-contained. Runs We will not knowingly exhaust. Has winter loving parents on their Great, everything Call 503-312-4168 accept any advertiscover, helmet. shopping, errands & exerworks. $3 000. ing for r ea l e s tate Selling for what I 541-382-6494 cise club trips. Patience & which is in violation of sense o f ha p piness/ owe on it: $15,500. this law. All persons humor needed for 12-20 Call anytime, are hereby informed B~ : :. hours/wk. Send resume to 541-554-0384 that all dwellings ad440 NW Congress St., 616 Call541 3855809topromoteyourservice Advertisefor 28daysstarting at 'l40lflir rfrrrrrrfprrrkrrtr rrer availableeer websrrej vertised are available Bend, OR 97701. Want To Rent 16'9" Larson All Amerion an equal opportuTURN THE PAGE nity basis. The Bullecan, 1971, V-hull, 120hp 476 Room wanted $300 mo. tin Classified I/O, 1 owner, always gaFor More Ads Employment Building/Contracting Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care Send reply w/phone to raged, w/trlr, exc cond, KOUNTRY AIRE The Bulletin Box ¹20405220, The 746 Opportunities $2000. 541-788-5456 1994 37.5' motorERIC REEVE HANDY NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon LandBulletin, PO Box 6020, Northwest Bend Homes home, with awning, law r equires anyone SERVICES. Home & scape Contractors Law Bend, OR 97708 Add your web address Buell 1125R, 2008 15k 17' S i I 196 8, and one slide-out, who contracts for (ORS 671) requires all Commercial Repairs, to your ad and readmiles, reg. s ervice, Awbrey Road. area. tri-hull o pen bow, 632 Only 47k miles construction work to businesses that adCarpentry-Painting, ers on The Bulletin's Apt./Multiplex General Rebuilt 3/2 on 3 City well cared for. factory 20 h p ou t board and good condition. be licensed with the vertise t o pe r f orm Pressure-washing, web site, www.bendlots! quiet, convenient, Buell optional fairing drive, 4 hp Evinrude ~ Construction ContracLandscape Construc$25,000. Honey Do's. On-time bulletin.com, will be classy. Chickens inkit, Michelin 2cc tires, trolling motor, like tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: 541-548-0318 CHECK YOUR AD promise. Senior able to click through cluded. Only $440,000 will trade for ie: Ennew E-Z lift trailer e (photo aboveis of a active license deck s , Discount. Work guar- p lanting, Call Glenn Oseland, with 3 tires, $2,200. automatically to your duro DR 650, $5700 similar model & not the means the contractor arbors, anteed. 541-389-3361 fences, Princ. Broker, Holiday website. obo. 541-536-7924. actual vehicle) is bonded 8 insured. water-features, and inor 541-771-4463 Realty 541-389-6899 Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irBonded & Insured Driver Needed. Night CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be CCB¹181595 750 s hift, apply a t O w l www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the Taxi, 1919 NE 2nd, Redmond Homes Home Repairs, Remod Landscape Contracon the first day it runs contractor.com Bend. After 5pm. No to make sure it is coror call 503-378-4621. els, Tile, Carpentry tors Board. This 4-digit phone calls please. rect. "Spellcheck" and The Bulletin recom- Finish work, M ainte number is to be i nLooking for your next human errors do ocmends checking with nance. CCB¹168910 cluded in all adveremp/oyee? IT Professional Health Forces Sale! Phil, 541-279-0846. cur. If this happens to Place a Bulletin help 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Monaco Windsor, 2001, the CCB prior to contisements which indiNeeded! 2007 Harley Davidson inboard motor, g reat your ad, please contracting with anyone. Just bought a new boat? cate the business has 40-ft, loaded! (was wanted ad today and Full-time position availFLHX Street GlideSome other t rades a bond,insurance and tact us ASAP so that cond, well maintained, $234,000 new) Sell your old one in the reach over 60,000 able starting on Oct. Too many extras to list! $8995obo. 541-350-7755 Solid-surface corrections and any also req u ire addi-classifieds! Ask about our workers c ompensacounters, readers each week. 2 1, 2 0 1 3 . Sm a l l , adjustments can be 6-spd, cruise control, stet ional licenses a nd tion for their employconvection/micro, 4-dr, Super Seller rates! full-service computer Your classified ad reo, batt. tender, cover. ees. For your protecmade to your ad. fridge, washer/dryer, ce- certifications. 541-385-5809 will also appear on Set-up for long haul road r etail, r e p ai r an d PRICE RF O Ud F OI tion call 503-378-5909 541-385-5809 ramic tile 8 carpet, TV, bendbulletin.com trips. Dealership svc'd. Internet Service Pro- The Bulletin Classified • D e bris Removal or use our website: DVD, satellite dish, levLandscapingNard Care 20.5' Seaswirl Spywhich currently reOnly 2,000 miles. vider business estabwww.lcb.state.or.us to eling, B-airbags, power der 1989 H.O. 302, PLUS H-D cold weather ceives over lished i n 1 9 8 5 in 634 check license status cord reel, 2 full pass-thru JUNK BE GONE 285 hrs., exc. cond., 1.5 million page gear, rain gear, packs, Lakeview, OR. Must Apt./Multiplex NE Bend before contracting with trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 I Haul Away FREE stored indoors for helmets, leathers views every month have excellent netthe business. Persons 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 life $8900 OBO. For Salvage. Also & much more. $15,000. at no extra cost. Zor/dtz gaaErip work m a n agement Call for Specials! doing land scape Diesel gen set. $74,900 Cleanups & Cleanouts 541-382-3135 after 5pm 541-379-3530 Bulletin Classifieds skills and experience. Limited numbers avail. 503-799-2950 maintenance do n ot Zacug gas.e, r,. Mel, 541-389-8107 Get Results! Computer repair exr equire an L C B 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Call 385-5809 or cense. perience re q uired. W/D hookups, patios Managing • Domestic Services place your ad on-line Starting salary comCentral Oregon or decks. at Nelson mensurate with expe- MOUNTAIN GLEN, Landscapes A ssisting Seniors a t bendbulletin.com rience. Health insurLandscaping & Home. Light houseSince 2006 541-383-9313 ance benefits avail. Maintenance Professionally keeping & other serCall Marcia at Goose managed by Norris & Serving Central 763 v ices. L icensed 8 Fall Clean Up Lake Comp uting Oregon Since 2003 Stevens, Inc. Bonded. BBB Certi- Don't track it in all Winter Recreational Homes 541-947-4513. Email Residental/Commercial fied. 503-756-3544 •Leaves & Property resume to Call The Bulletin At •Cones Prestige Housekeeping S prinkler Blowouts jobs©gooselake.com 541-385-5809 • Needles Housecleaning, Vacation PRICED REDUCED Sprinkler Repair j - ff • Debris Hauling Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Rentals, Move-ins/Outs Plumber, Journeymen cabin on year-round Licensed & insured. At: www.bendbulletin.com creek. needed for Maintenance 637 acres sur541-977-2450 Winter Prep • Fall Clean up new construction. rounded federal land, 652 $10 ofl 1st Cleaning! • Pruning •Weekly Mowing Startimmediately! M i Fremont Nat'I Forest. •Aerating Houses for Rent Call Gary, 541-410-1655 & Edging 541-480-7215 Handyman • Fertilizing •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly NW Bend 775 Maintenance I DO THAT! •Bark, Rock, Etc. Compost Deschutes River frontManufactured/ Home/Rental repairs age in Tumalo, remodApplications Mobile Homes Small jobs to remodels Landsca in 3 bdrm/2 bath+ offc, ~ Use Less Water chasing products or I eled Honest, guaranteed •Landscape 1 level, $1795 mo-tomo, it takes a special person to become a Home services from out of $$$ SAVE $$$ FACTORY SPECIAL work. CCB¹151573 Construction now thru April. 20076 instead CAREGiver.'" not a special degree. Dennis 541-317-9768 l the area. Sending Beaver Ln off Cline Falls. New Home, 3 bdrm, Improve Plant Health •Water Feature $46,500 finished Working with seniors in their homes can be c ash, checks, o r Installation/Maint. Virginia, 541-480-7501 on your site. l credit i n f o rmation challenging but, at the same time, tremendously Call a Pro 2014 Maintenance •Pavers J and M Homes 687 l may be subjected to rewarding. Enjoy training, support,flexible shifts Package Available •Renovations Whether you need a 541-548-5511 FRAUD. •Irrigations Installation thatfityour life,and a job that nurcures the soul. Commercial for For more informafence fixed, hedges Weekly, Monthly & LOT MODEL Rent/Lease Senior Discounts tion about an advertrimmed or a house One Time Service LIQUIDATION Bonded & Insured l tiser, you may call Prices Slashed Huge built, you'll find Fenced storage yard, 541-815-4458 the Oregon State • No medical degree necessary EXPERIENCED Savings! 10 Year LCB¹8759 professional help in l Attorney General's building and o f fice conditional • Training and support provided Flexible shifts Commercial warranty. trailer for rent. In conOffice Co n s umer1 The Bulletin's "Call a & Residential venient Redmond lo- Finished on your site. Find out more at homeinsteadaend.com, ALLEN REINSCH Protection hotline at I Service Professional" cation, 205 SE RailONLY 2 LEFT! Yard maintenance & I 1-877-877-9392. s KI' Become a CAREGiver link m l ~ Senior Discounts road Blvd. $800/mo. Redmond, Oregon clean-up, thatching, Directory 541-548-5511 lz uc rtci raerrswrz~/ 541-390-1466 Avail. 10/1. Call 54 I.330.6400 plugging & much more! LThe Bulletin 541-385-5809 541-923-7343. JandMHomes.com Each Home Instead Senior Care~ offi«e a inde endenrl owned and o erarea © 2013 Home Instead Inc Same Day Response Call 541-536-1 294

/! 0

0

. 0 0

EIII

+

P

(

L'"'"'"' J

r.=.-"-,.— .v I

l l l l l l l

I I

J

I

HOme ITTStcatI I



E4 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D AILY B R I D t alE CLU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD W'll Sh ort2

T uesday,octobe 1,2013r

ACROSS 1Chowder ingredient SGo fish 10"Dear" advice-giver 140peraset in Egypt 15Pricey watch 16Hacienda room 17 Product of colliding weather

Transparent play Tribune Content Agency

do you say? ANSWER: I am reluctant to act with balanced pattern — such hands are better fordefense than as dummy — but this hand is too strong to pass. Moreover, it contains no honors in diamonds that might be useful for defense. Double, intending to pass any minimum response by partner. A few good players might prefer an overcall of one spade. East dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4543 9 J7 07542 A7653

SECOND TRICK South succeeds if he conjures up a dummy entry. At Trick Two he leads the queen of hearts. If East wins, South can reach dummy with the jack to lead a trump to his queen. He ruffs his ace of hearts in dummy to lead a second trump. East gets two trumps and a heart. It won't help East to duck the queen of hearts. Then South takes the ace and ruffs his last heart, losing only three trump tricks.

DAILY QUESTION

WEST 4 None 9 1 086 4 2 0 J93 4 10 9 8 4 2

EAST 4AK98 (JI K 9 5

0 1086 AK Q J

SOUTH 4o Q J 10762 iv) A

Q3

C A KQ 4A East 1 NT P ass

Sou t h Dbl 44

P L A N B

EA F R ES N

West North 2Q Pass AII Pas s

LE A

A A RS O N

Youhold: J IoAK 9 8 (J/ K 9 5 Opening lead — 4 10 0 108 6 4 K Q J. Th e d ealer,at your right, opens one diamond. What (Cl 20)3 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

S UT R K NO B R5 OVA C EN T H I GH 5 L E E

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

1

title is sung played on clay three times after 66"Byenow" "Come on and" 67 Do without 39Altar 68"Dies constellation (hymn) 40 Tolkien creature 69 Bowlful for Bowser 41 Coupe, e.g.... ora hint to 1770Admittance and 64-Across 71At sea and 11- and 34-Down DOWN 42 Breach systems 1Flings 43 Expert 19Lowlife 2 Began to smoke 44 Really enjoys 20 Extra-powerful 3 Dig, so to speak engine 45 oAII are off!" 4 Children's game in which players 21 Mr. (Peter 46Annoy "knuckle down" Lorre role) 48 McEntire of 5 Kennelsound 22 What some country 6 Usual figure strummers 50 Rustic strum, informally accommodations 7 Melancholy BSlow, musically 23 Fainting fits, e.g. 54 Cheap booze 9 Laud 25 Grinders 58 Digging 10 Give one's word 27Carve in stone 60 Meara of 11 Behind the comedy 29 Manage scenes 62 More than elbow 12 Feeling down 32 "Bonanza" brother 63 Weenie 13Thanksgiving dish ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 18Shed LEG I T G L O O B A M A 24Vowel sound represented by A L I T 0 A O L T U D O R an upside-down M AN U P SW EE T T A L K "e"

By FRANK STEWART Heard about the invisible man who w ed an i n v i sible w oman? T he marriage didn't last — and the kids weren't much to look at either. Today's declarer needed entries to dummy, but none was visible to the naked eye. At four spades, he took the ace ofclubs, led the queen of trumps to East's king, ruffed the club return and led the jack of trumps. E ast won and carefully led a diamond. South won, took the ten of trumps and two more diamonds, and exited with a trump to East's nine. But East produced a club, and South had to ruff and lose a heart to the king. Down one.

64Annual tennis tournament

35 1982 Fleetwood Mac hit whose

A V

N E C K

S SY O D A M E A N P E A RC T S

H A N G I N G F R U I T

O V I F L E R N U S E E S T E S

E R A R B I L A I N E D S D P A I T E ED

M S A P P L E

E S

L O N G

U L E E

26Teenfollower 28 Happening with lots of laughs E D S E 30 Sitter's headache A N C E

R S S I T S

2

3

5

4

14

6

9

10

18

24

35

40

29 36

37

38

48

51

52

53

60

59

57

45

47

50

56

42

44

46

31

39

41

43

30

26

28

34

13

22 25

27 33

12

19

21

23

11

16

20

58

8

15

17

32

7

No. 0827

63

64

66

67

69

70

49

55

54

61

62 65

71

PUZZLE BYJACOB MCOERMOTT

34 Metaphor for a sharp mind 36 Mormon Church inits. 37 Forbidding, as an expression 38Sullensort 41Angry, with ooff"

45 Aromatherapy purchase 47 Kind of doll

SBAncient Andean

49 Claptrap 51Fauxpas 52 Noted bankruptcy of

59Dog on TV's "Topper"

2001 53 Hagar the

Horrible's dog 55 Switch from amateur status 56 Eye parts 57Article of faith

61 M.I.T. grad, often: Abbr. 65 Coquettish

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. 31Goeson and on Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. and on ATBT users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit 32 Bucket of bolts nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. 33 How many times Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past Laurence Olivier puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). won a Best Actor Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. Oscar

DENNIS THE MENACE

SUDOKU o (o

Complete the grid so that

every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.

p//ut

® - ('E Qo

9

SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY'S SUDOKU

'Pol' ,7oI' '~r fo1' P0I'

Ts (4 (4

ol

36I

42 97 13I 75, j 68 59

'//( 0: Psaltt

"THS Kil) KNOIINB A LITTLS KARATE... eORTOF THEPART<AL ARTS."

19I 13 g(ZAIIIIOCOI/IICI.CO)h FaJekook Jom/Rizarrocomict Ditl 8 Iaotf(eolroa

ol (o

IL 4:

Lo

E

84I

(0 Ct

(o

CANDORVILLE

Qo

Installing software update that'll consume so many system resources that your two-year-old phone will slow to a crawl and

Processing... Processing

8(

DIFFICULTY RATING: ** 4

Ii/I/AT 4/AP TI/AT< Um... l mean... "processing..."

you'll have no choice but to upgrade to the new phone.

LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce NicholsLewis

O 8

t SAFE HAVENS

O 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc World oehts reserved

go(Af'l.L 86 6I/CH A STggfCH...

&HES PIOT

VHAT

Fl )II C Icir'!

E-ma(l boolbrook(O ema(l.com

http /lwww satehavenscom(c com

SIX CHIX g)-IArEVER (I'OUOO,VON f <ELLHE:F( AoJL(@Cea)P- SHE REPEATS EVER 11'W//V&.

7 4 4 7 //

10- i I..

B

Sl-)OLo6.K

ZITS I CO(jLP 6%NDTPl HOURslzFAPIN("THe...

o 33 Mall Unit 47 ND worries, 35 "lliad" war god man" 68 Lodge group 36 Home to millions 48 "Shame, shame!" 5 Organizes by of Brazilians 49 Detailed map DOWN date, say 37 Half a wlndows 1 "North to the 10 Is able to superhero's 53 Recluse 13 Former Defense Future" state identity 56 Franchised secretary Panetta 2 Pierre-Auguste of 38 Switch supermarket 14 Came into play impressionism 39 Animated brand 15 "Mission: 3 Take it all off mermaid 57 Put away Impossible" 4 Small bills 40 Open, as a bud 58 Almost never theme composer 5 Barack's younger 44 KGB country 60 Sit-up targets Schifrin daughter 45 Take a nap 61 Opponent 6 "Murder on the 16 Novelist Tyler 17 Most populous Express" ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: city in South 7 Ski rack site S G T S C P R P E A R L Dakota 8 Lone Star State 19 Second-insch. E R I C L O A F U RG E S command inthe 9 Gender RO T H O R C A S I R E D kitchen 10 Ristorante squid F U L L S P E E D A H E A D 11 "Good Hands" 21 Demean S T E E P EMU 22 Baby goat company P A C K E D A P U N C H 23 Legged it 12 Bouquet Of 24 Mercedes rival flowers R E M R O O M S H O U T 26 Bus. get-together 15 Chem class I D E A T I A R A F R E T 27 Sharp ridge requirement P I N T O G A L A A S P 29 Adman's 18 Baby deer S T U F F E D S H I R T connection 20 Fishing basket FR A K A P P A 31 Digital camera 24 Neuwirth of "Cheers" L O A D E D Q U E S T I O N battery, often 32 Legal thing 25 Home Of N E H R U A U R A E X I T 34 Hoops gp. baseball's Marlins R E M I T S A S S R I S E 28 'You're right" 35 Superficially A S S A Y D A Y S E E D cultured 30 Very big maker of 10/01/13 xwordeditor@aol.com 36 Michigan or very little chips Ontario city on 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 12

ACROSS 1 2012 Ben Affleck political thriller

Ilol

F'A1 IoIA, FH)5 15 I HOPE t('od'LC 7r7 "(ou THI7IK '(OL) CA14 L.IVE E'/aM 'F/7PP. SHE'LL FI74D IV)e u(IITH A FOCU56D, Hl&H Sf. 4('OV+ PIE(A) C/7NIP/oi1 iBL6. AcHI&VIN& &~SK (4)ITH A )4,'/7ollANIATe, 5Tf ON&' IMPLIL56 1o lf&Lf' o7IIE iz6.

„. OI4'I COUlP FINPA SAOP5IS ONLINF ANP 5RJP( IT lN ARXTONE-

4 4

PIPIIOU FINISH I PP I(C)tjVFEPVIN(-P THEN)ATH

INREAP.

TSNTHTHFTlhAE

67 Betsy Ross, famously

the same border

8 E

HERMAN

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Ioov( and Jeff Knurok

3>L j ~u ~ X

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter 10 each square, to form four ordinary words.

One of these days ( this will all be yours.

I E

/

SLUPH

This tie io ohoklhg

02013 Tobune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

EXPIL

river 40 Unit of cotton 41 Carry a balance 42 Yeats' land: Abbr. 43 Land parcel 44 Continental

border range 46 Last Supper

MOHFAT

10

I

RITREW

HI5 FATHER WANTEt2 HIM TC( BECCIME A TAILOI c BUT THE PRD5PECT t2ICIN'T —-

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, 88 suggested by the above cartoon. 0 LaughingStock Internahona( Inc, • (st by universal uc((ck tor UF8, 20(3

Print answer here: ~

~ (Anowero tomorrow)

"I told you you were putting on weight."

YeSterday'8

J umbles: AWAKE F O R C E WA R ML Y ZE N I T H Answer: The rooster meteorologist predicted"FOWL" WEATHER

14

16

17

19

20

22

23

27

15 18 21 24

29

28

26

25

30

31

query 50 Unbarred, to a bard 51 Fall mo. 52 Marlins' div. 54 ISP option 55 Indian dresses

57 Canal passage connecting Lake 14

13

Superior and the lower Great Lakes 59 'aoV is for Wasted" mystery author 62 Margin jotting 63 Gymnast Korbut 64 Part of BYOB 65 Price 66 Low in the lea

32 36

33

34

35 39

37

41

50 55

42

44

45

51

52

56

57 61

46

47 4 8

53

54

58

59

60

63

64

65

66

67

68

By C.C. Burmkel and D. Scott NIchols (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

49

62

10/01/1 3


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

THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 2013 E5 975

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sp o rt Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

975

Au t o mobiles

Automobiles •

Subaru Outback 2008 Mercedes Benz Porsche 911 Immaculate! Piper A rcher 1 9 80, Buick 1983 E500 4-matic 2004 Carrera 993 cou e Original owner. 82K based in Madras, alRegal, T-type 86,625 miles, sunmiles, 2 new sets of ways hangared since Transmission rebuilt & roof with a shade, tires, service records, new. New annual, auto 3000 rpm stall converter; loaded, silver, 2 sets new brakes & struts, 750 Holley double pilot, IFR, one piece Nissan Pathfinder SE of tires and a set of Monaco Lakota 2004 leather seats, loaded! windshield. Fastest Ar- pumper w/milled air horn 1997 Dodge 3500 Du- 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd chains. $13,500. 5th Wheel ally, Cummins diesel 4x4, loaded, very good $15,900. cher around. 1750 to- (flows 850 cfms); turbo 541-362-5598 34 ft.; 3 s lides; im541-693-3975 tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500.rebuilt. Have receipts for with 203,813 miles. 3 tires, very good cond, 1996, 73k miles, maculate c o ndition; 541-475-6947, ask for all 3 items. Plus addispeed automatic with $4800. 503-334-7345 tional work done. $3300 Tiptronic auto. l arge screen TV w / O.D. (the OD is not Need help fixing stuff? Rob Berg. Take care of entertainment center; obo. Call for addtional working). Tires have Call A Service Professional transmission. Silver, info 541-480-5502 70-75% rubber. Has blue leather interior, reclining chairs; cenfind the help you need. your investments moon/sunroof, new ter kitchen; air; queen covered 11' utility box. www.bendbulletin.com with the help from quality tires and bed; complete hitch Truck is 2WD 8 has N///ZR' and new fabric cover. I /' Mustang GT 1995 red battery, car and seat AC, cruise, PS, PB, The Bulletin's 133k miles, Boss 302 covers, many extras. $22,900 OBO. A M/FM/cassette, t i lt "Call A Service Toyota Highlander motor, custom pipes, Recently fully serwheel. $3950. (541) 548-5886 2 003 Limited A W D S ave money. L e a r n Price Reduced! 5 s p ee d m a n ual, viced, garaged, Call 541-815-8176 Professional" Directory 99,000 mi., automatic t of l l o r b u i 1 <hou r s looks and runs like power windows, cusChev P/U 1968, custom Almost Perfect Chev wit h y o u r o w n a i r $12,000 ob o . O n e tom stereo, very fast. new. Excellent concab, 350 crate, AT, new S10 long bed, 1988 owner. 816.812.9882 c r a f t . 19 68 A e r o dition $29,700 $5800. 541-280-7910 paint, chrome, orig int, gas 4.3 V6, professional Toyota Celica C ommander , 4 s e a t , 541-322-9647 tank under bed, $10,900 940 Convertible 1993 r ebuilt engine, 4 7 k 1 50 HP, l o w t i m e , obo. 541-788-9648 I since installed, dual Vans ful g a n e l 8 23 , 000 MONTANA 3585 2008, Chevy 1955 PROJECT pipes, custom grill, Porsche 911 Turbo oho.ContactPaujat exc. cond., 3 slides, car. 2 door wgn, 350 sunroof, full canopy 5 41-447- 5 1 84 . king bed, Irg LR, small block w/Weiand cab h i gh , C l a rion Arctic insulation, all dual quad tunnel ram AM/FM/CD re m o te ,<n options $35,000 obo. N issan Altima 2.5 S with 450 Holleys. T-10 radio. Looks great, r 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, runs strong, always 2004, 1 04 K m i l es, 541-420-3250 G T 2200 4 c y l , 5 Weld Prostar wheels, garaged. $3,550 firm. sunroof, a/c, power speed a/c pw pdl Nuyya 297LK Hitchextra rolling chassis + 541-504-0663. windows & do o r s, 2003 6 speed, X50 GMC 1995 Safari XT, nicest c o n vertible Hiker 2007, All seaextras. $6500 for all. seats 8, 4.3L V6, good cond., service added power pkg., around in this pnce sons, 3 slides, 32' 541-389-7669. studs on rims, $3000 records, winter ready. 530 HP! Under 10k range, ne w t i r es, perfect for snow birds, Superhavvkobo. 541-312-6960 $5600. 541-593-7482 wheels, clutch, timmiles, Arctic silver, left kitchen, rear Only 1 Share ing belt, plugs, etc. 975 gray leather interior, lounge, extras, must Available 111K mi., remarknew quality t i res, see. Prineville Economical flying Automobiles able cond. i n side 541-447-5502 days 8 and battery, Bose in your own and out. Fun car to 541-447-1641 eves. premium sound steChevy 2500 HD 2003 IFR equipped d rive, M ust S E E ! M reo, moon/sunroof, 4 WD w o r k tru c k , My little red Cessna 172/180 HP for Chevy Wagon 1957, $5995. R e dmond. car and seat covers. 140,000 miles, $7000 only $13,500! New Corvette" Cou e Nissan Versa S 2011, Many extras. Ga541-504-1993 4-drn complete, obo. 541-408-4994. Garmin Touchscreen $7,000 OBO / trades. Gas saver, auto, air, raged, perfect conavionics center stack! Please call Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD CD, a lloys, Vin dition $59,700. Exceptionally clean! 541-389-6998 SLT quad cab, auto541-322-9647 ¹397598 Hangared at BDN. matic, AC, high mileage, $11,988 Call 541-728-0773 OPEN ROAD 36' $13,900. 541-389-7857 2005 - $28,000 Porsche Carrera 911 916 ~ SUBA R U . King bed, hide-a-bed 1996, 350 auto, 2003 convertible with Trucks & sofa, 3 slides, glass 132,000 miles. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. hardtop. 50K miles, shower, 10 gal. waNon-ethanol fuel & Heavy Equipment new factory Porsche Toyota Corolla 2011, 877-266-3821 F350 4-dr diesel auto, air, t ilt, M P3. ter heater, 10 cu.ft. synthetic oil only, motor 6 mos ago with Dlr ¹0354 Corvette Coupe 1964 2004 pickup, auto, fridge, central vac, FWD, 1.8 l iter, V in 18 mo factory wargaraged, premium King Ranch, 144K, ~ s a ~ w r ~ 530 miles since frame s atellite dish, 27 " ¹630707 ranty remaining. Bose stereo, off restoration. Runs excellent, extras, TV/stereo syst., front $37,500. $13,788 $11,000. and drives as new. $16,995 obo. front power leveling 541-322-6928 541-923-0231 541-923-1781 Satin Silver color with ~' S U BA R U . jacks and s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' black leather interior, The Bulletin 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2005 Buick LeSabre awning. Like new! 1987 Freightliner COE 3- mint dash. PS, PB, Pontiac G6 2007, low 877-266-3821 To Subscribe call 541-419-0566 Custom, 101K, $6500. axle truck, Cummins en- AC, 4 speed. Knock miles, $8900. Dlr ¹0354 541-385-5800 or go to 30+ mpg hwy, full-size 541-548-1422 gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 offs. New tires. Fresh 4-dr sedan, luxury ride obo. 541-419-2713 327 N.O.M. All Corwww.bendbulletin.com BU vette restoration parts 8 handling in & out. Reduced to Why not drive a Buick? BUBMtUORBRNU COM

Automo b iles

Volkswagen Jeffa GLI 2004, 4 Cyl., Turbo, 6 speed, FWD, A l loy wheel, moon roof. Vin ¹041213.

$6,288

©

S UB A R U .

BUBBRUOBBRNU COM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Volkswagon Bee t le GLS 1999, 5 Speed, leather, air, roof rack, Vin ¹439189

©

$4488 S UB A R U . BUBMIUORBRNU COM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

WHEN YOU SEE THIS

~OO MOrePiXatBendbuletil).COm On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

BUBBRUOBBBNU COM

$59,500. 541-410-2870 P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h

wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room 5th wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

'/ Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb, loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell $75,000. 541-350-3393

Ford Model A 1930 Coupe, good condition, $16,000. 541-588-6084 Ford Ranchero 1965 Rhino bedliner custom wheels, 302V-8 a uto. Runs g o od $9,995.

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4

matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190

Call Bob, 541-318-9999

AUDI 1990 V8 Quattro. Perfect Ski Car. LOW MILES. $3,995 obo. 541-480-9200. BMW 525 2002

Luxury Sport Edition, V-6, automatic, U loaded, 18 new tires, 114k miles. $7 900 obo (541) 419-4152

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.

Pontiac Grand Prix SE 2001, V6, 3 . 1 l i t er, Subaru Legacy Sedan a uto, F W D , Al l o y 2008, 6 cyl., spoiler, Wheels, rear spoiler. leather, under 45k mi. Vin ¹207281 Vin ¹111417. $23,888 $3,888

4@

©

i SU B A R U . S UBA RU. BUBBRUOPBRNO COM 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. BUBBRUORBBNUCOM

877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com Toyota Matrix S 2009, which currently reFWD, power window, ceives over 1.5 milp ower l ocks, A / C . lion page views Vin ¹023839 every month at $14,888 no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds ii S U B A R U . Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. your ad on-line at 877-266-3821 bendbullefin.com Dlr ¹0354

Buick 2006 silver CXS Lucerne. Northstar 93k, black leather Ford 1965 6-yard special wheels & tires, dump truck, good Guaranteed you'll be paint, recent overhappy with this fine car. haul, everything Come drive & see for works! $3995. 541-41 9-5480. yourself! $7,500 will do 541-815-3636 it. Bob, 541-318-9999 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 935 ( in La Pine ) Cadillac El Dor a do engine, power everyWILL DELIVER thing, new paint, 54K Sport Utility Vehicles 1994, T otal C r e a m 1000 original m i les, runs Puff! Body, paint, trunk Legal Notices • Le g al Notices as showroom, blue great, excellent condiCanopies & Campers leather, $1700 wheels tion in 8 out. Asking Wall St., Bend OR LEGAL NOTICE w/snow tires although $8,500. 541-480-3179 97701. B ids must CITY OF BEND Ford F350 2006/ Brush car has not been wet in b e physically r eNOTICE OF v • I Bandit XL 150 wood 8 years. On t rip t o ceived by the City at TO BID chipper T ruck h a s Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., INVITATION the location listed Landscape V-10, 21k miles, HD BMW X 3 2 0 07, 9 9 K $4800. 541-593-4016. below by the deadMaintenance for winch w/custom HD miles, premium packline. N o f axed or Public Works Lance Si/2' camper, 1991 front bumper, air load age, heated lumbar electronic (email) Operations Sites Great cond; toilet 8 fullbags w/12' dump bed. GMC V~ton 1971, Only supported seats, pansubmissions will be size bed. Lightly used. ChipperUis 2006 w/250 oramic moonroof, accepted. The City of Bend is Recently serviced, feed 'drum' $19,700! Original low Bluetooth, ski bag, Xehrs, 12 exceptional, 3rd accepting s e aled non headlights, tan & $4500. 503-307-8571 w/110hp Cat diesel. mile, Bids shall be delivblack leather interior, bids for landscape Set up like new. Cost owner. 951-699-7171 e red t o : Gwe n new over $90,000. Sell n ew front 8 rea r Chevrolet Impala L S m aintenance s e r PurM /n l brakes O 76K miles, 2007, 4 Door sedan, vices fo r v a r ious Chapman, $60,000 obo. I ~l~ U + chasing Manager, one owner, all records, auto, ps, pw, pl, A/C, Public Works Op541-350-3393 City Hall, Adminisvery clean, $16,900. CD. erations sites. Sites 541-388-4360 Vin ¹186346 include th e l a n d- trative Office, 2nd GMC 2004 16' F loor, 7 1 0 Wal l $8,388 scaping a d joining refrigerated box van, Ford Explorer, 1997, S treet, Bend, O r pump houses, wells, gvw 20,000, 177,800 GMC Sierra 1977 short 5-speed, V6, K8N, 4j@SUBARU. e gon 97701. T h e l ift s t ations, a n d bed, exlnt o r iginal Mossy Oak, SSS. Very mi, diesel, 6 spd of the encond., runs & drives good condition, a young 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. r eservoirs. L a n d - outside manual with on-spot velope or box conscape w o r k in great. V8, new paint person's ride! $3600 obo. 877-266-3821 automatic tire taining the bid shall c ludes, but is n o t and tires. $4950 obo. Dlr ¹0354 chains. Thermo-King 541-548-2808 be marked: "Landlimited t o; t urf 541-504-1050 reefer has 1,635 enAircraft, Parts Main t emowing, p r u ning, s cape GMC Yukon 1998, V8, gine hours. $19,995. & Service nance for PW Opauto, tow pkg excellent thatching, fertilizing, 541-41 9-41 72. erations Sites". cond, new tires, motor & weed control, trash trans rebuilt, only $3300. B,h pick-up, and gen541-633-8528 eral s it e m a i nte- The City may reject a ny o r a l l bi d s nance. (Photo for illustration only) and/or cancel proHonda CRV EXL ChevyImpala LS 2000, MGA 1959 - $19,999 curement in accorThe invitation to bid, V6, 3.8 l i ter, a utoConvertible. O r igid ance wit h O R S s pecifications, a d matic, FWD, power 1/3 interest in Columbia nal body/motor. No 279 B. 1 00. denda, planholders seats, JCB 2006 214 E diesel 400, $150,000 (located rust. 541-549-3838 list, pre-bid attendVin ¹212021. @ Bend.) Also: Sunri- backhoe with HamPublished ees, information and Master 360U rock $3,488 ver hangar available for mer October 1, 2013 n otifications of b i d 18 dig ~ Oo sale at $155K, or lease, hammer . SU B A R U . results f o r thi s bucket, quick coupler, M 3 3k mil e s , @ $400/mo. orePixat Bendbulletin.com 2009, Gwen Chapman be backhoe has 380 hrs, original owner, auto 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. project ma y 541-948-2963 Purchasing Manager viewed, printed or rock hammer has less transmission, leather 877-266-3821 ordered on-line from t han 100 hrs. L i k e interior, sun r oof, Dlr ¹0354 LEGAL NOTICE C entral Ore g o n new, $40,000 o bo. exc. tires, optional IN T H E CI R C UIT Builders Exchange Can purchase Kodiak sport package, with COURT O F THE GMC top kick 5 yrd at http://www.planr oof c a rg o b o x , STATE OF OREGON sonfile.com by dump and 28' trailer I-:="-.'~k' "' --' dealer ser v i ced FOR THE COUNTY for a d d' I $3 0 ,000 Mustang 1966 2 dr. clicking on "Public s ince n ew , F l a t , ~i' OF DESCHUTES, In 1/3 interest i n w e l l- 541-350-3393 Work Projects" and towable. $20,995. coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 the Matter of the Esequipped IFR Beech Bothen on "City of 541-385-0753 cyl. Over $12,000 int ate of ERICK nanza A36, new 10-550/ CORVETTE COUPE Bend" or in person vested, asking $9000. BECKER, Deceased, Glasstop 2010 prop, located KBDN. at 1902 NE 4th St., All receipts, runs Case No. 13PB0106. $65,000. 541-419-9510 Grand Sport - 4 LT Bend, Oregon. good. 541-420-5011 NOTICE TO INTERloaded, clear bra ESTED P E RSONS. hood 8 fenders. Entities intending to NOTICE IS HEREBY Peterbilt 35 9 p o table New Michelin Super bid should register G IVEN that the u nwater t r uck, 1 9 9 0, Sports, G.S. floor with the Central Ordersigned has been 3200 gal. tank, 5hp mats, 17,000 miles, egon Builders ExU appointed a d minisp ump, 4 - 3 hoses, Crystal red. lnfinifi FX35 2012, c hange a s p l a n- trator for the Estate of camlocks, $ 2 5,000. $42,000. Platinum silver, holder in order to Must Sell! Health forces Erick Becker. All per541-820-3724 503-358-1164. 1/5th interest in 1973 24,000 miles, with receive a d denda. sale. Buick Riviera 1991, sons having claims Cessna 150 LLC factory war r anty, This can be done Where can you find a classic low-mileage car, against the estate are 150hp conversion, low f ully l o aded, A l l on-line or by congaraged, pampered, required to p r esent helping hand? time on air frame and non-smoker, exclnt cond, Wheel Drive, GPS, tracting Central Orthem, with vouchers engine, hangared in egon Exchange at From contractors to $4300 obo 541-389-0049 sunroof, etc. attached, to the unBend. Excellent per$37,500. (541) 389-0123, Fax /BrR yard care, it's all here dersigned a d minisformance& afford541-550-7189 Just too many (541) 389-1549,' or trator at 747 SW Mill in The Bulletin's able flying! $6,500. email at collectibles? View Way, Bend, Or541-410-6007 "Call A Service Kia Roi 2011, Auto, gas admin © plansonfile. egon 97702, w ithin s aver, cruise, 1 4 K com. Bidders are Professional" Directory four months after the Sell them in responsible for miles. Vin ¹927546 date of first publicaThe Bulletin Classifieds making sure they $12,488 931 of this notice, or have all a d denda tion t he claims may b e Automotive Parts, before submitting a ) S U B A R U barred. All p ersons 541-385-5809 Service & Accessories bid. ELK HUNTERS! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. whose rights may be Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. 877-266-3821 affected by the proMust sell like new Toyo A mandatory pre-bid owner, 87k only 3k on 1974 Bellanca Dlr ¹0354 ceedings may obtain tubeless snow tires, conference will be new 258 long block. 1730A additional information 235/55Rx19, $149 ea. held on October 8, C lutch p kg , W a r n from the records of 541-382-9295 2013 at 9:00 AM at hubs. Excellent runSale the court, the admin2180 TT, 440 SMO, ner, very dependable. the Eis e n hower 932 Pending! istrator, or th e l a w180 mph, excellent Room, 62975 Boyd Northman 6'/2' plow, Plymouth B a r racuda yers for the adminiscondition, always Antique & Warn 6000¹ w i nch. Bil Acres Road, Bend, 1966, original car! 300 Nvr trator, Ry a n P. hangared, 1 owner O regon. A n op Classic Autos $9500 or best reahp, 360 V8, centerC orrea. Dated a n d for 35 years. $60K. Mazda MX5 Miata t ional tour o f t h e sonable offer. lines, 541-593-2597 f irst p u blished o n 541-549-6970 or 2006 Grand Touring, sites will be availSeptember 24, 2013. In Madras, PROJECT CARS: Chevy 541-815-8105. 13,095 easy miles. able im m ediately SUSAN DUNN, Ad2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 Copper red w/tan upcall 541-475-6302 following the meetministrator. h olstery. Bose d e Chevy Coupe 1950 ing. 1921 Model T luxe sound. 6 -spd rolling chassis's $1750 LEGAL NOTICE Executive Hangar Delivery Truck auto trans w / dual T he d eadline f o r ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, TRUSTEE'S NOTICE at Bend Airport (KBDN) Restored 8 Runs complete car, $ 1949; m ode shifting. A l submitting bids is: OF SALE 60' wide x 50' deep, $9000. Cadillac Series 61 1950, w ays g araged & October 17, 2013 Reference is made to w/55' wide x 17' high bi2 dr. hard top, complete w ashed b y h a n d . 541-389-8963 at 2 :OOPM. Bi d s that certain trust deed fold dr. Natural gas heat, Power brakes, steerw/spare f r on t cl i p ., Jeep Grand Cheroshall be opened and made by Donald S. offc, bathroom. Adjacent ing, mirrors, d o or $3950, 541-382-7391 kee 1996 4x4, autoread i m m ediately Biswell and Heather to Frontage Rd; great 1952 Ford Customline locks. Like new car! matic, 135,000 miles. after deadline in the A. Biswell, as grantor, visibility for aviation busi- Coupe, project car, flat- VW Bug Sedan, 1969, Selling due to health Great shape - very B end C i t y Hal l to A m e rititle, as ness. Financing avail- head V-8, 3 spd extra fully restored, 2 owners, issues. $14,895 able. 541-948-2126 or parts, & materials, $2000 with 73,000 total miles, nice interior, $3,600. Council Chambers, t rustee, in f avor o f 503-807-1973 email 1)etjockoq.com obo. 541-410-7473 541-815-9939 1st floor, 710 NW B ank of t h e C a s $10,000. 541-382-5127 541-771-4778

BUBBRUOlBBNU COM

I

BUBBRUORBRNU COM

©

Looking for your next employee?

®

BUBBRUOl BRNU COM

Legal Notices • cades Mrtg. Center as beneficiary, dated July 1 9, 2005, an d r e corded on July 2 2, 2005, as I nstrument No.

2 0 0 5-47064 of

Legal Notices the highest bidder for cash the interest in said described real p roperty which t h e Grantors had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with a n y int e rest which the Grantors or their successors in interest acquired after the execution of said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and ex-

the Official Records of Deschutes C o unty, O regon, a n d th a t certain Assignment of Trust Deed dated July 1 9, 2005 a n d r e c orded A u gust 2 , 2005 as I n strument No. 2005 - 5 0352 w herein Oreg o n Housing and Community Services Department was designated penses of sale, inas t h e su c cessor cluding a reasonable by the beneficiary, covering charge t he f o l lowing d e - T rustee. N o t ice i s further given that any scribed real property situated in said county person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, and state, to-wit: Lot Seven (7), HUN- at any time prior to TINGTON ADDITION, five days before the Deschutes C o unty, date last set for the O regon. B ot h th e s ale, to h a v e t h i s foreclosure proceedB eneficiary and t h e Trustee have elected ing dismissed and the to sell the said real Trust Deed reinstated property to satisfy the b y payment to t h e obligations secured by Beneficiary of the ensaid Trust Deed and a tire amount when due (other than such porNotice of Default has been recorded pursu- tion of the principal as would not then be due ant to O regon Rewsed Statutes had no default oc86.735(3); the default curred) and by curing d e f ault for which the foreclo- any o t he r sure i s ma d e is complained of herein that is capable of beG rantors' failure t o ing cured by renderp ay when due t h e following sums: ing the performance r equired under t h e G rantor's failure t o pay monthly install- o bligation o r T r u st ment payments due Deed, and in addition under the Promissory to paying said sums Note in the amount of or tendering the per$880.00 per month for formance necessary the months of Janu- to cure the default by ary, February, March paying all costs and expenses actually inand April 2013. By reason of said default, curred in enforcing the the Beneficiary has obligation and t r ust d eclared al l su m s deed, together with and owing on the obliga- Trustee's tion secured by said a ttorney's fees n o t the Trust Deed immedi- exceeding ately due and pay- amounts provided by ORS 86.753. In conable, said sums being the following, to-wit: struing this notice the the principal balance masculine gender includes the f eminine of $ 100,403.77 t othe neuter, the gether with accrued and interest through April singular includes the plural, t h e word 10, 2 0 13, i n t he U U Grantors includes amount of $1,788.63 any successor in in(interest continues to terest to the Grantors accrue at the rate of $13.5068 per d i em as well as any other person owing an oblifrom April 10, 2013 until paid), plus late gation, th e p e r formance of which is sefees in the amount of $ 92.22, an d su c h cured by said Trust Deed, and the words other costs and fees "Trustee" and "Benas are due under the eficiary" include their note or other instrument secured, and as respective s u c cesare provided by stat- sors in interest, if any. ute. W H E REFORE, D ATED: J un e 24 , notice is hereby given 2013. Benjamin M. that the undersigned Kearney, Successor T rustee, 8 0 0 Wil Trustee will on D elamette Street, Suite cember 3, 2013, at t he hour o f 11 : 0 0 8 00, E ugene, O R 97401, (541) o'clock A.M., in accord with the s tan- 484-0188. dard of t ime established by ORS Say Ugoodbuy 187.110, a t Des to that unused chutes County Courth ouse steps, 1 1 64 item by placing it in N W Bond, City o f The Bulletin Classifieds Bend, County of Deschutes, Oregon, sell 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9 at public auction to U


E6 TUESDAY OCTOBER 1 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

"Lit " i tle Red Corvette"

0

~~ggW'

'

'

lUlonaco Dynasty 2004 - LOADED.i solid Features includse4-dr surface counter, d e convection micro, ld ry, built-in washer ramic tile floor, TU,OUD, liite dish, air leveling, pass-through tray, and a king size be - All for only $149,000 541-000-000

Corvett Convertible

Coupe, 350, auto with 732 miles, gets 26-24 mpg. Add lots more description andinteresting facts for $99! Lookhow muchfun a girl could have n a sweetcarlike this! $12,500 54T -000-000

R~, mo boat, or airplane

up to g 2 mo ( h(~heyer (;om

40

o r d ~ of text 2

length with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


e I

Z

• <

I

'

Oper 2,000 NEW naturaW

MEAT

Check Out Our New

PROGD0Ut E

~ 4( 00~4 I. Department

PR UCTS! e

e

y

BEEF TRI TIP ROAST Boneless

RED 8 YUKONGOLD POTATOES

I

I '

28 LB

BEEF CROSSRIB POT ROAST -

'8

$8 LB

PORK LOIN Boneless Whole In Bag

-898

LB

CHICKENLEG QUARTERS Southern Grown Frozen

LB

POLLOCK FILLETS Frozen

ENGLISH CUCUMBERS BC Hothouse

LB

98!

LARGE NAVEL ORANGES

r'

Your Locally Owned Ad Items Subject To Avoilobility

MUSHROOMS

Allrne

Soz

Whole or Sliced

$128

LB

MYAN SWEET ONIONS

CRISP CELERY

48! BEEF NEW YORK STEAK

LB

Boneless

, $3$8

JONAGOLD APPLES Extra Fancy

BEEF CHUCK STEAK

LB

• $288

SWEET POTATOES

CHICKEN BREAST

y/ ~ LB

i J

i,

LB

Southern Grown Boneless

$)8S

PRICES EFFECTIVE: •

I

I

2

63455 Hwy. 97 N., Bend • 541-388-2100

6

7

3

4

5

8

FOOD 4 LESS — BEND I TUESDAY, OCT 01,2013 IPAGE 1


KEYSTONE

I' P

Q

GVCIgj Q;

BUDWEISER

5 HIGHLIFE

L BUD LIGHT

BEER

BEER

30 Pack 12 Oz Cans

18 Pack, 12 Oz Cans or Bottles

EA + DEP

EA + DEP

CASCADE LAKES BEER

a Kea~a KOMSUCHA

6 Pack 12 Oz Bottles

EA + DEP

6 Pack 12 Oz Bottles

' 10II410ARD

Cl

MAMA REFII.I. 64 QZ

QORITQS

WITH YOUR OWN BOTTLE

10 to11 Oz Selected VariE

EA

EA + DEP «VIIAMIN r I rrI 1%,

4Abpfb

mr

s V I TAMIND s*sj

I

4dkp~

y

e

REX-GOLIATH WINE

PEPPERW OOD GROVEWINE

750 ML Selected Varieties

750 ML Selected Varieties

r • •

KELLOG G'S CEREAL

WESTERN FAMILYTUNA

12 to 15 Oz Cocoa Krispies, Apple Jacks, Frosted Flakes, Froot Loops

EA

EA

50z In Water

EA

EA

7-UP,

ANW, RC, CANADA

COOC PACK

HENRY

WEINHARD'S SODA

DRY /

'~gD D

12 Pack 12 Oz Cans

GIN

variii'i,. CRCgg

,

BIGELOW

0

PAGE 2 I TUESDAY, OCT 01,2013 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

6 Pack 12 Oz Bottles

r

EA + DEP

I

MUIR GLEN TOMATOE S

TEA EA + DEP

20 Count Selected Varieties

EA

28 Oz Selected Varieties

EA


)

g

r

g

r

/

Haagen Dms

I

MIIRII

I

chocolate ICE CREAM

i

+a

mRA4~A'A'R.~~-~R.

~

- EBERHARD S

=

=== +

)

i Haagen nms

- EBERHARD'S

=

QQBDQ

M

=== ~ 'I', C)

M R M

'tDQSSjIE

cky road

I

ICE CREAM

Haagen.pms vanilla ICE CREAM

ES EBERHARD

HAAGEH-DAZS ICE CREAM

EGGHOG

14 Oz EA Selected Varieties

,ties

ARER

64 Oz, Regular 8 Lite FIRST OF THE SEASON!

EROlER VAlUES

®

VAlUES

UAIRV EEERHARD'S Rk

g

I

EA

'J

f

EDEHHARD'S <6

'I AA h RM

Qk,

FRANZNEW YORKSTYLE BAGELS 6 Count Selected Varieties

PS EBERHARD

ASSORTED

FRUITDANISH EA

4 Count

EBERHARD'S

ICE CREAM EA

56 Oz Selected Varieties

BUTTER EA

I'ROHR

DEll

VAlUES

RAIRV

VAlUES

IIAlUES

®'

1

\ • .

FRANCISCO OUTDOO R8 FRENCH SANDWICH ROLLS 6 Count

EA

CHICKENS

I

TONY'S ORIGINAL CRUSTPIZZA

ROTISSERIE EA

14 to 17 Oz Selected Varieties

EA

1 Lb Quarters

GREEKGODS YOGURT EA

60z Selected Varieties

EA

FOOD 4 LESS — BEND I TUESDAY, OCT 01,2013 IPAGE 3


P~ 5~. SPECIALS.

FRESH

PINEAPPLE

C ert i f i e d

RQBN1C

EA

ORGANIC , =-~ ' . K Q~ 1C BUNCHBEETS

$8 EA

ORGANICHASS AVOCADOS Small

LOCAL PUMPKINS EA

FOSTERFARMS GRILL PACK CHICKEN

LB

~I I I uA 5g, SPECIALS.' STONECRAB CLAWS

Northwest Grown

28

2Lb Bag Frozen

LB

BAR-S BUNLENGTH SAUSAGE 2.5 Lb

EA

48 EA

FOSTERFARMS

DDR RANIBDRG 1S GRDDID FRESI DALLW'

HOT WINGS,BUFFALO WINGS, HONEY BBQWINGS OR CHICKENSTRIPS 24to 280z Bag

98

EXTRALEAN HAMBURGER Not to Exceed 15% Fat

ggglBO

paeK

LB

EA

WE ACCEPY:

Bend 63455 Hwy. 97 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, OCT 01,2013 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

• F ood Stamp s • WIC Vouchers We reserve the right to limit quantities

• Manufacturer's Coupons


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.