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THURSDAY October 2, 2014
ena nS ia'S mieSaWa PreIOO~bai t i SPORTS • C1
HEALTH• D1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
GMO LABELS
Opposing
High-tech haunting-
gl'OUP
Theme parks are using serious special effects for their Halloween attractions.C6
By Andrew Clevenger
dollars are spent and in the pro-
The Bulletin
gram's inability to account for
oversight of wildfire spending
all fire purchases. Overall, we determined that the program
leavesthe Bureau ofLand Man-
does not have adequate internal
agement vulnerable to fraud and unable to account for all of
controls, nor does it consistently apply or effectively monitor the
its equipment, a report issued
controls it already has in place,"
Wednesday by the Interior Department's inspector general found. "The BLM wildland fire pro-
the report states. Specifically, the report concluded, lack of internal controls on fire spending left the agency
gram is vulnerable to misuse of funding, both in the ways
unable to: • Reliably determine the cost
WASHINGTON — Lax
Polynesian explorersA centuries-old canoe found in New Zealand sheds light on the first people to sail the Pacific Ocean.A3
Exercise etiquette-
of individual fires. • Fully account for purchase card (similar to an ATM card) purchases. • Readily locate either critical or highly pilferable property items.
alreadytaken steps to address
gets cash injection
the problems raised in the report, according to the agency's
By Taylor W.Anderson
response to the report.
The Bulletin
When fires break out, they are assigned four-digit fire
The group campaigning against a measure that would
codes so that costs can be as-
• Thoroughly validate the accuracy of its payroll.
sociated with a particular fire. This canbe important later, par-
The BLM, which reviewed
ticularly if the government tries
the report before it was finalto recoup the costs of fighting ized, concurred with most of the the fire as part of a court case, if inspector general's recommenarson ortrespass isinvolved. dations, and in many cases had SeeWildfire /A4
require most food
containing genetically engineered products to be labeled in
supermarkets statewide reported a big uptick in donations
Howto actatthe gym.D1
and spending last
Plus: Health data — can
month. The No on 92 Co-
your personal information help improve the pharmaceutical industry?D1
alition has reported raising more than $5.4 miiiion from
July 17 through Sept. 22, a number that's
Ehola —More about the first case diagnosed in the U.S.A4
likely to rise quickly as the election nears and campaign finance disclosure
And a Wed exclusive-
rules tighten reporting deadlines. At
Ebola is tearing through West Africa so fast, many people have little chance to saygoodbye to their loved ones. bendbnuetin.cnm/extras
the time of its last
report on Aug. 29, No on 92 had raised
just $327,000 from four cash donations and six in-kind donations.
The cash comes
EDITOR'SCHOICE
from 26 donations and from fewer than
two dozen compa-
CrossFit's new target age gi'oUp: preschool
nies, according to the
filing late Tuesday with the Oregon Secretary of State.
The biggest donors include companies that unleashed
millions in unsuccessful GMOlabeling efforts in Washington state last year and California in 2012.
By Mary Pilon
SeeGMO/A4
New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — On a re-
cent afternoon at the CrossFitgym in Queens,3-year-
Internet
old Ella Reznikbounded to-
ward an array ofhoops and candy-colored bouncy balls,
voting test results are still secret
her ponytail and her mother
trailingbehind her. Ella's brother Adam, 4,
padded along nearby on rubberblackmats and inspected some metal bars bolted to the wall. The
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
gym's owner and coach,
Michelle Kochosky, the Oregon National Guard's state family programs director, speaks during the 2014Oregon State Youth Symposium
Michele Kelber, greeted the Rezniks and other children
in Redmond on Sunday. The Oregon Military Teen Panel is one program that aids teens with deployed parents.
By Greg Gordon TribuneNews Service
with a series of high-fives
WASHINGTON
and smiles. Soon, class was
By Monicia Wamer
underway: Duck, Duck Goose, burpees and dangling from monkey bars. The hard-core workout regime has a growing new demographic to court: preschoolers. As the issue of youth fitness — from obesity to proper exercise — takes on more resonance in schools and communities
The Bulletin
across the country, CrossFit
Kids and otherpreschool fitness programs are raising questions about when and
how children should start playingorganized sports or hitting the gym. The adult version of CrossFit has garnered acclaim and criticism in recent
years for its high-intensity workouts and unyielding approach to exercise, with colorful language to match (barbell snatch, hangpower clean, air squat, jerk and thruster). While critics have questioned the quality of some instructors and said there is insufficient research on injuries, CrossFit has dis-
missed those daims as its business has exploded. SeeCrossFit /A5
the teen who does the counseling (by) giving them empathy skills and listening skills, as well as the one who receives
EAGLE CREST — Brooke
Blythe, 15, of Bend, is dealing with deployment for the first
it," said Terry Larkin, 59, Ore-
time.
Her dad, Spc. Jesse Blythe, 31, deployed with the Oregon Army National Guard 1-82
Cavalry Squadron in June and isn't expected to return until July 2015. To help her cope with his deployment, she joined the Oregon Military
Brooke Blythe, 15, of Bend, receives a camouflage backpack for being a part of the Oregon Military Teen Panel.
and family support division.
and helpingto bridge the gap
Since the panel was created in 2010, it has blossomed to 14 kids
between service members, their families andtheir children.
"We're givingthese teens representing all seven regions of Oregon. Theirpurpose? Con- the ability to speak to their necting with other military kids peers in a waythat enhances
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly sunny High 69, Low40 Page B6
for three years to
gathered at Eagle Crest Resort
systems that are increasingly being used to cast absentee ballots. The Pentagon
Better," signified the week-
sophomore at Mountain View
High School. "Helping other kids get their mind off (deployment) helps me too." The Teen Panel is a federally funded program under the National Guard'sservicem ember
gon National Guard chaplain and service member and family support director. Thepanel, along withother military kids and their families, in Redmond overthe weekend for the 2014Oregon State Youth Symposium sponsored by the Oregon National Guard. The theme,"Because Togetheris
Teen Panel and has recently
completed her first year. "It's a very rough time to go through. There's so many adjustments in such a short period of time," said Brooke, a
— A nonprofit watchdog group is suing an obscure Defense Department unit over its failure
end's team-buildingactivities, induding tackling low-ropes courses and learning about military culture at Biak Training Center near Powell Butte, and creating artwork with purpose
statementsbasedon lessons from the book"Seven Habits of
Highly Effective Teens." SeeTeen /A4
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health D1-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 S oI Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
B5 C1-4 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 112, No. 275,
30 pages, 5 sectIons 0
disclose the results of testing on the security safeguards of Internet voting
unit, the Federal Vot-
ing Assistance Program, has effectively bankrolled many states' shift to online
voting, disbursing tens of millions of dollars in grants for the purchase of equipment that includes Internet
balloting options. SeeVoting/A5
Q l/i/e use rec)rclnewspri ed nt
IIIIIIIIIIIjl 88267 02329
A2
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mand Consulting Group who according to his father, Pat- worked with Clancy at the rick Clancy. When West Point Secret Servicefrom 2005 to officials tried to hold him back 2006. "He was someone who a year, he dropped out and the president would persontransferred to Villanova Unially know and have a lot of versity in Pennsylvania, from confidencein.Joe issomeone which he graduated in the late who was a seasoned hand." 1970s. Clancy also worked with After spending a few years Presidents Bill Clinton and as a schoolteacher, Clancy George W. Bush, specializing joined the Secret Service in in White House security and Philadelphia in the 1980s and serving as a member of their later worked in the New York personal details. field office, directing a team His tenure included a conof agents that conducted ma- troversy of its own: Clancy jor investigations. He was in was in charge of White House charge of security at national security when Michaele and special events before joining Tareq Salahi crashed a party the president's protective de- at the White House in 2009. tail, according to a biography Mickey Nelson, another provided by Comcast. former colleague, said ClanThe White H ouse an- cy was known in the Secret nouncement led to confusion Service for his low profile about his resume. The White and subtle sense of humor House initially said that Clan- and was tagged with the nickcy was a West Point gradu- name "Father Joe" for his ate, but later in the day Ear- no-nonsense demeanor. Nelnest said he had the wrong son also made light of a career information about C l ancy's path Clancy did not pursue. "He was deciding to either educational history. Former colleagues said Clancy was a go into th e Secret Service good choiceto steerthe agen- or be a priest," said Nelson, cy through the controversy who served with Clancy for over security lapses at the 25 years and was his partner White House. in the presidential protection "He was on the president's dtvtston. hip for the first few years of Nelson said that Clancy is his presidency," said Steve married and has a son who is Atkiss, a partner at Com- alsoa SecretService officer. but his math grades suffered,
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HOng KOng pretests —Raising the stakes in their standoff with the authorities, Hong Kong's pro-democracy protesters threatened to occupy key government buildings unless the territory's top official resigns by the end of the day today. TheChinesegovernment, meanwhile, appeared to be losing patience. An editorial solemnly read Wednesday on state TVsaid all Hong Kong residents should support authorities in their efforts to "deploy police enforcement decisively" and "restore the social order in Hong Kong as soon as possible." And the Communist Party-run People's Daily warned of "unimaginable consequences" if the protests persist. In the biggest challenge to Beijing's authority since China took control of the former British colony in1997, thousands of demonstrators have clogged the streets of the Asian financial center since Friday, demanding freer elections in Hong Kong. ISraeli SettlementS —In a striking public rebuke, the Obamaadministration warned Israel onWednesday that plans for a controversial new housing project in east Jerusalem would distance Israel from "even its closest allies" and raise questions about its commitment to seeking peacewith Palestinians. The harsh criticism camejust hours after President BarackObamaand Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin NetanyahumetattheW hiteHouse.Obama spokesman JoshEarnest said the president privately raised his concerns with Netanyahu though the two leaders made nomention of the matter in their public comments to reporters. Ukraine rOCkets —Rocket fire slammed into an elementary school and acity bus in Donetsk, Ukraine, onWednesday morning, killing nine people, while fighting continued to rage atthe Donetsk airport. Although both the Ukrainian government andthe separatist rebels who hold Donetsk formally declared acease-fire on Sept. 5, the increasing tally of the deadand wounded in recent days has shown the agreement to be largely a fiction. Several witnesses said that a teacher, a parent and arebel fighter were killed in one rocket attack. Down the street from the school, a rocket that appeared to havebeen launched in the same volley struck a public bus, killing six. Taliban atiaCks —Two suicide attacks targeting military transport vehicles in Kabul, Afghanistan, onWednesday killed seven Afghan soldiers and woundednearly 20 others, officials said. The attacks came aday after the government signed acrucial security deal with the United States that pavesthe wayfor the long-term presence of American troops, a pact theTaliban vehemently opposed. The group quickly issued a statement claiming responsibility for the assaults .TheattacksonWednesdaycame ontheheelsoftheinauguration of the newpresident, Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai. Military hOSpitalS —Defense Secretary Chuck Hagelordered the military Wednesday to improve access to treatment, quality of care and patient safety at its hospitals and clinics, giving underperforming hospitals four to six weeks to showhowthey will address shortcomings. Hagel's directives hew to the findings of a report that a panel of experts produced after he ordered areview of a system that serves1.35 million active-duty service membersand millions of family members andothers. The study, released Wednesday,was motivated by ascandal over access to treatment in aseparate hospital system managed bythe Department of Veterans Affairs. EnierOVlrUS deaths —At least four people havedied after contracting a respiratory illness that has spread to more than 40states, officials announcedWednesday.Thedeaths werethe first to be linked to enterovirus 68, which hascaused an influx of sick children at hospitals. TheCenters for DiseaseControl and Prevention confirmed 472 cases of the infection as ofWednesday,although experts said the true number of caseswas likely to be higher. Tests showedthat four patients who died werecarrying the virus, but it was unclear to what extent the virus contributed to their deaths, the CDC said.
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LOudmuSiC Slaying —A Florida man whoshot an unarmed teenager during a dispute over loud music wasconvicted of first-degree murder Wednesdayafter a jury rejected his claim that he fired his gun repeatedly in self-defense. Michael Dunn,47,will spend the rest of his life in prison for killing Jordan Davis, 17, ahigh school junior, as the teensat in a friend's car in a convenience store parking lot. Dunn, a software developer, wasalso convicted in February of three counts of second-degreeattempted murder — onefor each of the teenagers whowere with Davis — and of firing deadly missiles.
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A Kurdish Peshmerga soldier who was wounded in fierce battles in nearby Nineveh province with Islamic State group militants is brought to the Zakho Emergency Hospital for treatment in Dahuk, 260 miles northwest of Baghdad.
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By Vivian Salama
iyah and the nearby strategic At one point, the Kurdish fight-
The Associated Press
towns of Rabia and Zumar. While some newly sent arms
%ILSONSof Redmond
MAHMOUDIYAH, Iraq -
The exhausted Kurdish fight- have stacked up in the Kurdish ers leaned against a pair of capital, including a shipment aged green cannons on a hill from Germany t hi s w e ek, overlooking this northern Iraqi Kurdish officials say they can't village, the ground around be distributed until the Kurdthem littered with shrapnel ish fighters are trained. The from fierce battles with Islamic delay shows the difficulties on State militants. the ground as the U.S. and its One of t hem, Moustafa allies bomb the militants from
ers fired off a round from one
of their aging cannons, to a chorus of cheers, though it was unclear if it hit its target.
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"We could retake the hospital so easily if we had the right
COVERINGS
rockets," said Mohsen. "Most
1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com
of our injuries here were from (roadside bombs), which could have been limited if we had bomb detectors, for example." Saleh, tapped the cannon with the air. As he spoke, several Kurdish " Peshmerga were o n l y units were fanning westward his mud-caked boots. "Russian-made," he said, with a trained before to save Kurd- to try to reclaim the strategic smirk. "My grandfather used istan and to prevent terrorists town of Sinjar, which would althe same one." from coming inside Kurdis- most certainly secure the main Iraqi Kurdish fighters on the tan," said Halgurd Hekmat, road between Syria and Iraq, front lines of battle say they spokesman for the Iraqi Kurd- used now by militants to ferry have yetto receive the heavy ish force in Irbil, the capital of weapons and fighters between weapons and training pledged the semi-autonomous Kurdish the two embattled countries. by the United States and near- region. "We plan to send the The U.S. and Western ally a dozen other countries to heavy weapons, but only after lies including Britain, France, help them push back the Sunni making sure the soldiers know Germany and the Netherlands militants. how to use them in battle and have committed to arming the U.S.-led airstrikes have fix them when the weapons Kurds, agreeing to send maforced the militants to retreat have a problem." chine guns, assault rifles and or go into hiding in towns and At a checkpoint outside Ra- a mmunition. H e kmat s a i d villages across northern Iraq, bia in northwestern Iraq, some some units had received the paving the way for ground two dozen peshmerga soldiers ammunition, since it requires forces to retake territory seized stood guard Wednesday to no training. However, fighters by the militant group in its secure the town they had just at more than a half-dozen units lightening advance since June retaken. Only one wore a flak said they had yet to receive across western and northern jacket. "We don'thave them," anything. Iraq. Special Forces commander Cmdr. Elissa Smith, a PenBut without more sophisti- Hakar Mohsen said. "One of tagon press officer, said in cated weaponry, the Kurdish many things we need." an email that efforts by the fighters, known as peshmerga, A half-mile away, the Rabia U.S. to arm the Kurds "have have had to rely on aging arms hospital remained an active already begun and will accellike the Soviet-era cannons, battleground, with I slamic erate in the coming days with a centerpiece of the offensive State militants holed up inside more nations also expected to 'Ibesday to retake Mahmoud- sniping at the Kurdish soldiers. contribute."
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, Oct. 2, the 275th
day of 2014. Thereare 90days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Turkey —A bill allowing the country to participate in military action in Syria and Iraq goes up for debate.
600-year-old canoein New Zealand linked to Polynesian sailors
HISTORY Highlight:In1944, German troops crushed the twomonth-old Warsaw Uprising, during which a quarter of a million people were killed. In1780,British spy John Andre was hanged inTappan, New York, during the Revolutionary War. In1835, the first battle of the
Texas Revolution took place as American settlers fought Mexican soldiers near the Guadalupe River; the Mexicans ended up withdrawing. In1889, the first International Conference of American States convenedinWashington,D.C. In1919, President Woodrow Wilson suffered a serious stroke at the White Housethat left him paralyzed onhis left slde.
In1939,theBennyGoodman Sextet (which included Lionel Hampton) madetheir first recording, "Flying Home," for Columbia. In1950, the comic strip "Peanuts," created byCharles Schulz, wassyndicatedtoseven newspapers. In1958,the former French colony of Guinea inWest Africa proclaimed its independence. In1967, Thurgood Marshall was sworn as anassociate justice of the U.S.Supreme Court as the court opened its newterm. In1970, one of two chartered twin-engine planes flying the Wichita State University football team to Utah crashed into a mountain near Silver Plume, Colorado, killing 31 of the 40 people on board. In1984, Richard Miller became the first FBI agent to be arrested andchargedwith espionage. (Miller was tried three times; hewas sentenced to 20 years in prison, but was released after nine years.) In2002, the Washington, D.C.-area sniper attacks began, setting off a frantic manhunt lasting three weeks. (John Allen Muhammadand Lee Boyd Malvo were finally arrested for10 killings and three woundings; Muhammadwas executedin2009;Malvowas sentenced to life in prison.) Ten years aga:Suspected separatist rebels beganfour days of attacks in India's Nagaland and Assam states that killed more than 70 people. Five years ago: The International Olympic Committee, meeting inCopenhagen,chose Rio de Janeiro to bethe site of the 2016 SummerOlympics; Chicago waseliminated in the first round, despite a last-minute in-person appeal by President BarackObama. A man accused of stalking ESPN reporter Erin Andrews and secretly videotaping her inside her hotel room was arrested at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport. (Michael David Barrett later pleaded guilty to interstate stalking and was sentenced to2~/~years in federal prison.) One year aio:President Barack Obamamet privately with congressional leaders at the White Housefor the first time since apartial government shutdown began,but there was no sign of progress toward ending the impasse. Overloaded websites and jammed phone lines frustrated consumers for a secondday as they tried to sign up for coverage using newhealth insurance exchanges.
BIRTHDAYS Retired MLBAll-Star Maury Wills is 82. Singer-songwriter Don McLean is 69.Actor Avery Brooks is 66. Fashion designer DonnaKaran is 66. Photographer Annie Leibovitz is 65. Singer-actor Sting is 63. Actress Lorraine Bracco is 60. Actress-talk show host Kelly Ripa is 44. Singer Tiffany is 43. Actor Efren Ramirez is 41.Actress Brianna Brown is 35. — From wire reports
By Amina Khan
in 1913. The New Zealand ca-
Los Angeles Times
noe also shares some design
Centuries before Captain
elements with a canoe found
James Cook explored the South Pacific, Polynesian
about 30 years ago on Huahine in the Society Islands. It's
seafarers in canoes crossed
thought to be from around the
same time period as the New Zealandcanoe,even though it moa and New Zealand all the was discovered roughly 2,500 way to Hawaii. But how they miles away. The canoes "could managed such a feat remains have comefrom thesame desomething of a mystery. sign tradition," the authors Now, a roughly 600-year-old wrote. Clearly, the Polynecanoe discovered in New Zea- sians knew how to get around. land may shed some light on Scientists have tried to unthe Polynesians' sailing tech- derstand the kinds of boats nology. The vessel, described and sailing technology that in the Proceedings of the Na- would have allowed seafaring tional Academy of Sciences, is Polynesians to brave the waone of just two canoes dating ters and winds. Without these back to such an early time kinds of archaeological finds, period. A second paper in the researchers have to rely on far same journal finds that shiftless direct evidence, from lining ancient wind patterns may guistic reconstructions of the have created ideal windows of words for canoe parts to the opportunity for certain gener- much-later observations of Euations of sailing Polynesians. ropean explorers. The preserved canoe reA second study in PNAS
RESEARCH
u ies au warmin 's wi weB el'
in
Scientists examining cases of extreme weather last year said man-made climate change was to blame for more than half.
vast swaths of water to colonize lonely islands from Sa-
mains were d i scovered in 2012 on New Zealand's South Island near the Anaweka estu-
takes a different tack at an-
swering that question, by c harting t h e "paleowind" ary, pulled from a sand dune patterns. Because the Polysome time after a major storm. nesians appeared to t r avel The 19.95-foot-long section of against the wind patterns hull is part of what the authors
other extremes: Heat waves
in Europe, China, Japan and Korea, intense rain in parts of the United States
Rajesh Kumar Singh I The AssociatedPress file photo
An Indian rickshaw puller sits atop the passenger seat to protect
and India, and severe himself during a heavy downpour in Allahabad, India. Scientists droughts in California and blame the intense rains there on global warming. New Zealand. The Califor-
nia drought, though, comes
California's drought to climate change. However, the editors of the journal's special edition
the team found that the canoe
gotiated at times proposed ar-
was last caulked around the
chaeologically by canoes lacking an upwind capability," the
as a waka, was probably at study authors wrote. "We do least 45.9 feet long when it was not assert that this ability was whole, Johns said. absent, although it may have The image of a sea turtle is been." carved into the hull — a symTiming wise, the papers don't seem to quite line up. In the Goodwin paper, the win-
but that featured widely in art,
dow to New Zealand appears
myths and ritual throughout
to have closed around 1300, but the canoe described in
Polynesia. (Sea turtles were held in high regard, knownthe Johns paper was dated to perhaps fittingly — for their 1400. While these trends may long voyages through open ocean.) have been helpful, the closing "A sea turtle on a 600-(year)- of such wind windows don't old Polynesian canoe is a appear to have stopped the unique and powerful symbol," Polynesians, Johns said. "We're going to have to disthe study authors wrote. A few features, including cuss, clearly," said Johns, who four transverse ribs carved said she welcomed the other study's insights. "We think into the hull, haven't been known historically in New Polynesianswere really good Zealand, but have been fea- sailors ... we think they were tured in canoes in the South-
they've found that phenomenon accounts for eight
patternshave also connected
to New Zealand from 1140 to 1260, and travel to Easter Island from 1250 to 1280. "Our reconstructed sailing
seen anything like it." the known colonizing routes, Using radiocarbon dating, and others, to have been ne-
bol that is rarely found in the Maori culture of New Zealand
waves in Australia. Now
variability is always part of any extreme climate event."
el, the winds favored sailing from central East Polynesia
year 1400. The canoe, known
Researchers earlier re-
ported that climate change increased the odds of heat
Tom Karl said. "Natural
example, based on their mod-
be very unlike the boats that early European explorers had described. "It was one of those situations where it sort of took your research fellow at the University of Auckland. "I'd never
the world last year see the fingerprints of man-made global warming on more than half of them.
tion would have enabled all of
increments, showing that at
the shape of it turned out to
Dilys Amanda Johns, a senior
WASHINGTON — Scientists looking at 16 cases of wild w eather around
conditions during the period of East Polynesian coloniza-
as we know them today, it's
the canoe to survive the cen- key periods, the winds favored turies, researchers said. And travel to distant islands. For
breath away," said lead author
The Associated Press
parks over the northern Pacif- the Swain report, it is unclear ic during California's winters, whether a global warming a global warming link to which is normally when it gets connection can be pinned on an early S outh D a kota rain. Higher atmospheric pres- California's drought. blizzard, freak storms in sure usually means less storms Hoerling said there were Germany and the Pyre- and rain. The pressure was so still questions about the Swain nees, heavy rain in Colo- strong last year that study lead study. Other scientists said rado, southern and central author Daniel Swain called it Swain's study was convincing. "The report as a whole is Europe, and a cold British "a ridiculously resilient ridge." spring. The Stanford team ran com- a reflection that more and Organized by the U.S. puter models with and without more future climate extremes National Oceanic and Atman-made warming from the around the globe will be atmospheric Administration, burning of coal, oil and gas. tributed t o hum a n-caused researchers this week pub- The warming from green- dimate change," said Univerlished 22 studies on 2013 house gases showed that the sity of Arizona climate scienclimate extremes in a spe- rain-blocking ridge of high tist Jonathan Overpeck, who cial edition of the Bulletin pressure was more than three wasn't part of the research. of the American Meteoro- times more likely with manIn two extreme eventslogical Society. made factors than w i thout, the British cold spring and the "It's not ever a single fac- Swain said. September northern Colora"There's definitely a climate do rains — the report found tor that is responsible for the extremes that we see," change signal," Swain said. global warming actually desaid NOAA National CliEarlier peer-reviewed stud- creased their likelihoods and matic Data Center director ies looking at atmospheric yet they happened.
call a "complex and robust thought that they would have composite canoe, carved from needed sufficiently high-tech a single timber." sailing canoes to navigate Few such vessels have last- these unfavorable conditions. ed long enough to be found, But a team led by Ian Goodbecause wood is organic mat- win of Macquarie University ter and decays quickly. But in Sydney created a model of the swampy, oxygen-poor the paleoclimate in 20-year spot it was buried in allowed
By Seth Borenstein
able to sail down here with or
ern Cook Islands, described without help."
with an asterisk. Scientists couldn't find
For years, scientists said
they could not attribute sin- said that with the studies in gle weather events — like the report that couldn't find a a drought, heat wave or man-made signal in Califorstorm — to man-made glob- nia and the indirect nature of
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scientists can see how the
odds of events increaseor not — because of climate change. Other researchers question the usefulness and accuracy of focusing on sin-
SwNwr4uASne'
gle extreme events. The editors of the 108-
page compilation of studies wrote that people and animals tend to be more
affected by extreme weather than changes in averages, so they pay attention to it. The public often connects extreme events
to climate change, sometimes wrongly, so scientific analysis like this "can help inform the public's understanding of our changing
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The report seeks to find
Rating pain relievers By C. Claiborne Ray New York Times News Service
SCIENCE QSA
is the effectiveQ •• How ness of pain r e lievers
"We believe our patients." Adults are asked to r ate
measured? Is there a list that
their pain on the familiar 1-to-
how much and how man-
m ade warming hasinfl uenced the weather, said NOAA research meteorologist Martin Hoerling, an editor of the report. The influence on Australia's hottest year in more the report's editors said. "It's almost impossi-
quantifies them by strength?
10 scale: A chart of facial ex-
A • sure, where a g i ven dose reduces blood pressure
pressions is used for children. The doctor also considers how
hot 2013 without climate change, said Peter Stott of
much the pain affects systems
the United Kingdom's meteorology office, another
"It's not like blood pres-
a given amount," said Dr. Neel Mehta, medical director of the Pain Medicine Center
like sleeping and how much it interferes with physical functions like walking and at New Y o rk-Presbyterian/ standing. Weill Cornell Medical CenDifferent kinds of pain reter. Instead, he said, "we must quire different kinds of relief. use a n
exp e r ience-based
"First, there is nociceptive
report editor.
The most
c omplicat-
ed issue is the California
drought, the only extreme
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that has continued into this
year.
approach." The goal is always to find
pain, like that of a broken bone or a surgical incision,"
state's record drought in
the lowest possible dose to
Mehta said. "Then there is
different ways. Two teams
treat pain aggressively while neuropathic pain, resulting limiting i nteractions with from disruption in th e nerother drugs and reducing the vous system." Opioids, though possibility of harmful side strong relievers of the first effects, Mehta said. Pain spe- type of pain, "may not be as cialists measure effectiveness effective for neuropathic pain based on the patient's own as, say, gabapentin," a differperception, he said, adding, ent kind of drug.
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than a century is glaring, ble" to explain Australia's
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
exas os Ia e man WI oa o ome
Teen Continued from A1 "A lot of the kids feel very
isolated and maybe even slightly resentful toward the military because they don't
have an understanding of military culture or it's taken their parents away," said Amy Conroy, 34, airman and family-readiness manager for the
By Manny Femandez and Norimitsu Onishi New York Times News Service
Oregon National Guard. "So
D ALLAS — T h e m a n who has become the first
when they come to events like this, it becomes a totally different perspective of what the
military can do." According to Conroy and Michelle Kochosky, state fam-
ily program director, the panel steps in where many Oregon schools don't — it provides a
simpler way for military kids to connect with one anoth-
er through youth-oriented programming. "Oregon does not currently,
Ebola patient to develop symptoms in th e U n ited States told officials at Tex-
C
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Art created by the participants of the 2014 Oregon State Youth Symposium isdisplayed in Redmond on Sunday.
The Oregon Military Teen Panel has "given me a lot of leadership and amazing opportunities that the average kid may not get." — Brooke Blythe, 15
within the school system, have
a way for families to self-identify, so in the school structure there's not a lot of intentional
just encourage them." support for families," Conroy As members ofthe panel, said. "Kids could be going to teens serve two-year terms, school with other military kids meet once quarterly and parand they wouldn't know it." ticipate in monthly conference "It's up to t h e i n dividual calls. They also do community school districts on how (or) if service work in Oregon and they implement, and there's Idaho and plan annual youth probably five across the en- and family events such as tire state that have any type the State Youth Symposium, of formalized curriculum or M onth of th e M i l itary a nd activity or support club," Ko- Young Leaders' Conference. chosky, 36, added. "We underBrooke helps organize conestimate how many schools ference calls between panel are willing to help that prob- members and also contributes ably don't know or have never to an advice column published thought to ask; a lot of teach- in a m onthly newsletter to ers are willing to help if we youth and families. She said
she plans to work harder in her final year as a teen panel member andtry to encourage other Central Oregon military kids to apply. "It depends on the person, but if they were really good at speaking in front of people, inspirationally, and good with kids, I would recommend it," Brooke said. "It's given me a lot of leadership and amazing opportunities that the average kid may not get. It's helped me mature andbecome the person I want to be." — Reporter: 541-633-2117, mwarneribendbulletirt.com
GMO
than two dozen other studies measure, has reported raising on the potential costs associ- $2.8million through Sept. 23. Continued from A1 ated with labeling GMOs. The Some of its biggest donors The leading donors so far median cost was $2.30 per cap- indude Dr. Bronner's Magare: Monsanto Co.: $1.5 million; ita annually, the report showed. ic Soaps, which kicked in PepsiCo: $900,000; General The Consumers Union re- over $700,000to the eff ort. Mills: $695,000. The campaign port refutes daims by oppo- Mercola.com Health Resourchas already spent most of that nents to GMO labeling that the es, a health website, also gave money on advertising. regulation would increase food more than $500,000. Campaigns are ramping costs in Oregon. The Yes on 92 campaign up as the deadline to register Sixty-four other countries says it has collected donations voters — Oct 14 at midnight already require GMO labeling. from nearly 3,500 individual online — nears; the state mails Earlier this year, Vermont be- donors. ballots shortly after. came the first state in the U.S. The opposition in CaliforThe f inancial r eporting to enact a law requiring GMO nia spent $45 million in 2012. comes the same day the Con- labeling, but the law is being In Washington, the opposition sumersUnion released areport challenged by the food industry spent more than $22 million to showing what GMO labeling in federal court. defeat the measure. may cost Oregonians. That reYes on 92, a group advocating — Reporter: 406-589-4347, port included a review of more the passage of Oregon's ballot tandersonibendbulletirt.com
Wildfire
ent complexity and challenges cial losses cited in the report of fighting wildland fire at its — $799,000 in unaccounted-for current scale, and the need spending on purchase cards-
Continued from A1 The report cites examples of to move fire assets quickly sloppy record-keeping using where they are needed most the codes, so that 26 workers to protect human life, commuwrongly associated their ac- nities and resources, the BLM tivities to a one-tree fire in the fireprogram has experienced BLM's Carson City, Nevada, occasionalbusiness managedistrict. This caused the agen- ment vulnerabilities in billing, cy to overstate the cost of that timekeeping, and property fire by 95 percent. management. In partnership The report c r iticized the
with your office, the BLM has
BLM for incomplete tracking identified and aggressively adofgovernmentpurchasecards, dressed these issues." which in some cases had been Kornze did push back slightused to purchase gift cards ly, noting that some of the acfrom REI, American Express, counting processes singled Fred Meyer and Visa. In 2012, out by the inspector general's a BLM employee pleaded report were four years old, and guilty to using a purchase card that the on-site visits occurred for gift cards and electronics before oversight reforms had for personal use, the report been implemented. notes.
"Poor documentation en-
courages a n
It also noted that the finan-
and potential additional leak-
age were relatively small when considered in the context of a
$450 million annual fire-suppression budget. "The BLM takes seriously
any budget vulnerabilities, no matter the size," the memo states, but the BLM "does not
believe that these management issues meaningfully impact the overall resources
required to operate the BLM fire program or the appropria-
as Health Presbyterian Hospital on Sept. 26 that
he had just arrived from West Africa but was not admitted that day because that information was not
Ebuladrug — U.S. federal officials are planning to sharply increase production of ZMapp,which is viewed by many experts as the most promising experimental drug for treating people stricken by Ebola in WestAfrica. TheDepartment of Health and Human Services is in advanceddiscussions to enlist Caliber Biotherapeutics, a Texascompany that can produce the drug in millions of tobacco plants, according to federal officials and pharmaceutical industry executives. Despite the newefforts, supplies of the drug are expected to be limited to hundreds or thousands of treatment courses by early next year, which would not benearly enough if the epidemic continues to spiral out of control. — New YorkTimesNews Service
passed along at the hospital, officials acknowledged las/Fort Worth on Flight 822, Wednesday. arriving Sept. 20.
The five students who came into contact w it h D u n can
Here in Dallas, the case was attend four Dallas-area pubbeing handled with extraordi- lic schools. They have been der the mistaken belief that nary caution and raised wide- advised to stay home from he had only a mild fever, a spread concern. There was no school. The students — at a hospital administrator said; indication of panic among res- high school, a middle school the information that he had idents in the largely Hispanic and two elementary schools traveled from Liberia, one and African neighborhood — are under observation by of the nations at the heart where Duncan was staying county health officials. "The students don't have of the Ebola epidemic, was in the Fair Oaks section of overlooked. the city. But misinformation symptoms, so the odds of passDuncan came back to about how the disease spreads ing on the virus is very low," Texas Health Presbyterian was everywhere, even as lo- said Mike Miles, the Dallas Hospital on Sept. 28 and cal, state and federal health district's superintendent. was admitted for treatment, officials continued to make The schools wil l r e main but in those two days in clear that Ebola is not an air- open but will undergo an exbetween, his contacts with borne illness and is not spread tensive cleaning. Additionally, a number of people — in- through casual contact but at least three Dallas Fire and cluding five schoolchildren through direct contact with the Rescue emergency medical and the medics who helped bodily fluids of a sick person. technicians were being mon"We're confident that it's iso- itored and were in isolation at transport him to the hospital — potentially exposed lated and it's being contained, home, although they, as well as them to Ebola, forcing offi- but everyone is working tire- the otheradults under obsercials to monitor and isolate lessly to double- and triple- vation, were free to leave their them in their homes and to and quadruple-check their homes because they were not begin a thorough cleaning work, to make sure that we've being quarantined. The medof the schools the students done an absolutely thorough ics helpedtransport Duncan to attended. Duncan is now in job of identifying anyone who the hospital on Sept. 28. Even serious but stable condition. might be at any risk," said the the emergency vehicle that Duncan's case began top elected official of Dallas was used — Ambulance No. with him playing the part County, County Judge Clay 37 — is in isolation and not in The man, Thomas Eric Duncan, was sent home un-
of good Samaritan on another continent. Duncan-
a Liberian national in his mid-40s who had come to America to visit relatives in Dallas — had direct contact with a woman stricken by Ebola in Monrovia, the Liberian capital, on Sept. 15,
days before he left Liberia for the United States, the
Jenkins.
service, officials said.
into contact with 12 to 18 peo-
news conference at the hospi-
ple when he was experiencing active symptoms and when the disease was contagious, and the daily monitoring of those people had notyet shown them to be infected.
tal on Wednesday. "This is all hands on deck."
"This case is serious," Gov. Officials said Wednesday they believed Duncan came Rick Perry of Texas said at a
When Duncan first arrived
Some of the children and
adultsunder observation are from Liberia, but it was unclear how many. There are an estimated 10,000 L iberians
at the hospital on Sept. 26, six living in four counties in North days after he had arrived in Texas, including Dallas and America, he told a nurse that Tarrant counties. One active an, Marthalene Williams, he had come from West Af- group, the Liberian Commu19, took her by taxi to a rica. Public health officials nity Association of Dallas-Fort hospital with Duncan's help have been urging doctors and Worth, was founded more after failing to get an ambu- nurses to be on the alert for than 30 years ago. lance. Williams was turned Ebola in anyone who has been In Kannapolis, North Caraway for lack of space in the in Guinea, Liberia or Sierra olina,a man who only gave hospital's Ebola treatment Leone. But information about his name as Joe said he was ward, the family said, and Duncan's travel was not "ful- Thomas Duncan's brother and they took her back home in ly communicated" to the full that Duncan's mother was inthe evening, hours before medical team, said Dr. Mark side a house there. "His mom is in there crying she died: Duncan helped Lester, executive vice presicarry her because she was dent of Texas Health Resourc- for her son," he said. 'Tm worno longer able to walk. In es, the parent organization ried about my brother. And I'm the taxi, Williams, who was that oversees Texas Health over here trying to figure out seven months pregnant, Presbyterian Hospital. what to do." had been convulsing. As a result, that information Duncan flew on Sept. 19 was not used in the clinical from Monrovia to Brussels, diagnosis and Duncan was where, according to United sent home, with the diagnostic Airlines, he took Flight 951 team believing he simply had to Washington Dulles Air- a low-grade fever from a viral port and continued to Dal- infection, Dr. Lester said. Plae Well, Retire Well woman's parents and Dun-
can's neighbors said. The family of the wom-
tions requested from Congress
through the annual budget process. Those amounts are driven by the severity of the
fire season." — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletirt.com
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en v i r onment
where purchase cards can be misused," the report notes. The four regional offices visited by inspectors — Boise, Carson City, Idaho Falls and Southern Nevada —
m a i n-
tained spotty inventories of fire-r elated purchases,according to the report.
"Inaccurate and incomplete property inventory listings increase the potential for the
undetected theft of hand-held tools, cameras, and other items that are used to fight fires but
that are also equally desirable for personaluse," the report states.
Payroll records were also not properly reconciled, allowing hours to be billed to firesbefore they had started or months after they were put
•
•
•
•
e •
• e
•
out, in some cases, according
to the report. The report recommends the implementation of tighter controls, which the BLM itself had identified as a potential area of improvement in 2012.
In a written response attached to the report, the BLM
indicated it had broadly expanded its internal review process. "In concert with these actions, the BLM has undertaken
an unprecedented, high-priority effort to improve the busi-
ness management of its fire program," wrote BLM director Neil Kornze. "Due to the inher-
•
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I sIIs I
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Voting
duct a demonstration project on electronic voting, it said,
Continued fromA1
the test results are deemed
the National Institute of Stan-
dards and Technology that theyaresecure andreliable.
"pre-decisional" and currently sternation from cyberexperts, are exempt from disclosure. who have warned for years The case, filed Sept. 11 in
standards agency weighed in
that Internet voting is an easy
that Internet voting systems
Its actions have drawn con-
t he U.S. District Court f o r
In 2012, the last time the on the subject, it concluded
targetfor hackers who could the District o f C o lumbia, "cannot currently be a udittamper with or even fix elec- marks the latest skirmish in ed" with confidence because, tion results. The government's a long-simmering clash over unlike most electronic votpremier technology testing the role of the Pentagon unit, ing systems at polling places agency also has refused to en- whose primary task is to facil- across the nation, there is no dorse these systems. itate absentee voting by troops verifiable paper trail. Now, on the eve of anoth- and other Americans living As a result, it said, "additioner federal election in which overseas. al researchand development at least 31 states plan to use The Pentagon unit said it is needed to overcome these some form of online voting, conducted the tests for use by challengesbefore secure Inthe Electronic Privacy Infor- a separate agency, the U.S. ternet voting will be feasible." mation Center is pressing a Election Assistance CommisIn an earlier statement, the Freedom of Information Act sion, which is attempting to institute said in 2011 that it lawsuit demanding disclo- set standards for Internet vot- would be "difficult to mitigate" sure of the test results so it can ing systems. But a shortage of malicious software attacks on disseminate the information appointed commissioners has voters' personal computers, nationwide. stalled that agency's progress, which are outside the control In a statement, the Federal and so the Pentagon agency of election officials. While Voting Assistance Program said it is preparing to release each such attack could only said it expects to release the the test results on its own. impact one vote, it said, "atresults in 2015. Because they The agency has walked a tackers have demonstrated an "contribute to the larger, on- fine line since Congress de- ability to infect a large number going decision-making pro- clined in a 2005 law to endorse of clients, and thus client-side cess" regarding the agency's electronic voting systems un- attacks have the ability to have congressional mandate to con- til it receives assurance from a large-scale impact."
Should transit agencies,short on cash,sell alcoholadsto get it> By Emily Badger The Washington Post
The public transit agency in Atlanta is running a pilot program this year to test one
of the population on board. The same ads reached about
the time, the Chicago Transit Authority estimated that the
54 percent of Boston Public
policy could bring in about $3
School students riding the system.
million in revenue. The Port Authority that r u n s P i tts-
potential source of new revSo what's the impact of enue for the cash-strapped tllat? "Longitudinal studies have system: ads inside train stations and on buses and trains found that the more young for alcohol. peopleareexposed to alcohol The idea isn't a new one advertising of various kinds,
burgh's system was facing a $64 million budget deficit
in the world of public transit,
but it regularly raises more
conducted by researchers at the advocacy group Alco-
contentious questions that
hol Justice concluded that
the more likely they are to
start drinking, or if they're drinking, to drink more," your average roadside vod- says David Jernigan, the dika billboard. Is the youth rector of the Center on Alcoexposure to alcohol ads hol Marketing and Youth at students in many cities ride Johns Hopkins University. transit to school — worth the Public transit ads also enextrafunds fora city service? tail a kind of captive-audiShould public agenciesence effect. If you're sitting in and public assets — abstain a subway car surrounded by from hawking some of the Bud Light posters, the mesproducts that private proper- sage is theoretically hardtyowners do? If a run ofbeer er to tune out than if you're ads might bring in $200,000 watching a 30-second spot for a system confronting on TV, or if you're driving by service cuts, is that bargain an outdoor sign at 50 miles worth it? The Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority, or
an hour. And u nlike w ith
other kinds of advertising, you can't flip the channel or turn the page.
MARTA, is weighing rider reactionagainst revenue All that said, there isn't during the pilot. And this is much data that focuses on one of just several ways the how people might be harmed agency is looking to gin up by ads specifically in this new resources. As MARTA's setting. We don't know, for
Michael Appleton / New York Times News Service
gym in NewYork. Physical fitness for children has become big business, as gymsand workout centers continue to wind back the age of their youngest customers even further.
CrossFit
"The goal isn't to
down the road.
make the fittest 4-year-old in the
teaching lifelong healthy behaviors for the sake of being
world. The goal is
and conducts th e
to have a kid be
body image or weight," she said. "Kids this age are sponges, and they pick up on everything around them."
C r ossFit
"the fittest on earth."
Physical fitness for children is big business. Last year, there were 460,000 youths un-
physically active and physically literate." — Jeff Martin, CrossFit Kids'
transit
m a r k et s r e c ently
half of them allowed alcohol advertising, while the other half banned it in some way. Transit in Honolulu, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Washington and Baltimore is alcohol-free. Transit in New York City, Denver and Min-
neapolis isn't. The decision, though, isn't always up to the transit agency itself, given that other departments may own "street furniture" like bus stops, or control citywide
policy. The Alcohol Justice researchers, Sarah Mart and
Jessica Blakemore, were only able to obtain revenue data from four places that accept
some alcoholads. In each of them — Boston, Denver, Pittsburgh and Portland -
instance, that some percent-
healthy and not focused on
Shiri Reznik, Ella and Adam's mother, said it was not
until she met the preschool inco-founder structors and saw the low-in-
der the age of 13 using personal trainers, according to the
tensity environment that she
International Health, Racquet
& Sportsclub Association, an industry trade group. That is
done for only a few minutes at a time in short bursts followed
more than triple the 140,000
byrests.
decided to enroll her children this fall. "I see the CrossFit adults
running around the neighwho used them in 2009. In pr e school Cr o ssFit, borhood like crazy people," Young boys and girls who dangling off hanging bars is Reznik said. "But once I saw used to be guided reluctantly likened to being a monkey. this class, I saw that it was into day care centers are now Squats are frog-inspired. Box different." She added: "If it wasn't playconsidered crucial to customer jumps, plyometric leaps long acquisition and retention. beloved by elite athletes, are ful, we wouldn't do it." Angela Salveo, who offers CrossFit instructors say smaller and r e branded for CrossFitKids for preschoolthey are aware of the skepti- kids as superhero leaps. cism that sometimes greets In Queens, a tunnel con- ers at her gym in Middletown, their preschool eff orts, and structed from red t umbling New Jersey, said that often they say it is a misunderstand- mats inspired comparisons the struggle is harnessing ing. The emphasis for 3- to to snakes and worms. Games the boundless energy of pre5-year-olds, they said, is on and exercises were punctuated schoolers. "When we practice fun. by water breaks and doodling. box jumps, if the boxes are set "There is a stigma," said CrossFit Kids instructors are up for an adult class, they'll try Jeff Martin, the CrossFit Kids' discouraged from telling chil- and jump on those," she said. co-founder. The preschool pro- dren to lift weights or move "They have no fear at all." gram is "completely different," faster, Martin said. High-fives Costs vary by location, but children in Queens can regishe said. for effort are prevalent. "The goal isn't to make the As long as that remains the ter for a once- or twice-a-week fittest 4-year-old in the world," case, some pediatricians said, "membership," at $140 or $260 Martin said in a recent tele- CrossFit preschoolclassescan a month, said Kelber, the gym phone interview. "The goal is be suitable for youngsters. But owner there. "We climbed ropes in gym to have a kid be physically ac- some cautioned that the same tive and physically literate so criticisms leveled at CrossFit's class," Kelber said. "I don't they can express athleticism grown-up counterpart — that even know if schools have in whatever sport they like. there can b e g r eat v a r ia- ropes anymore. The kids are The goal is they can have a fun tion among the thousands of mesmerized by these things." For some parents and chilexperience doing something CrossFit outposts in the style physically active and buy into and quality of t r ainers and dren, CrossFit has become regimens — may be true for an alternative to the t ravel a physically active lifestyle." Martin said the idea for a preschoolers as well. They teams and year-round youth preschool program arose in suggested that parents would sports schedules that can be the early 2000s, when he no- benefit from observing a class so demanding. Leslie Costa, ticed that the younger siblings beforehand. from Queens, said she was "CrossFit has the image of surprised when her older of his elementary, middle and high school-age students were pushing people beyond their d aughter, Natalie, 10, e m limits," said Dr. Gregory Myer, bracedCrossFitKids after esfrustrated that they had no activity in w hich to partici-
increases. A study of 26 major U.S.
"You want to make sure it's
Continued fromA1 Today it includes devout followers at more than 10,000 gyms, or "boxes" worldwide, Games, an annual test to find
and another round of fare
alcohol made up less than age of Boston Public School 10 percent of the agency's "We're assessing what brings students became underaged ad revenue, and less than 1 the most positive benefit to us drinkers because they shared percent of its total operating with the least amount of neg- their commute to and from revenue. ative return." school every day with an alBut it's hard to measure Advocacy groups in many cohol advertising campaign. whether that money is worth cities that have fought alcohol In Boston, though, oppo- it given that any societal costs advertising on transit argue nents successfully wrested that could come from alcohol that the ads can be particu- an alcohol ban from the Mas- advertising won't appear on larly harmful to children (this sachusetts Bay Transporta- a transit agency's balance debate — and the research tion Authority in 2012, cov- sheet. "What it usually comes behind it — doesn't pay quite ering agency property like as much attention to the efsubway cars and buses. The down to i s a c o m parison fects of alcohol ads on adults). city of Boston, however, con- between revenues that a One 2008 study conducted tinued to accept alcohol ads single agency would gain on Boston transit lines estion bus shelters. versus the costs that would mated that alcohol ads were That same year, the tran- be generated through an inviewed by riders 1,212,960 sit agencies in Chicago and crease in underaged drinktimes across the system on Pittsburgh opted to start ac- ing," Jernigan said. "But it's an average weekday, with- cepting alcohol ads, while certainly not a cost paid by in sight of about 43 percent badly in need of revenue. At MARTA itself." CEO Keith Parker told the Atlanta J o urnal-Constitution:
Three-year-old Georgia Costa works out with an assist from Michele Kelber, the owner of a CrossFit
A5
director of the Human Per-
chewing other activities like
pate. In 2003, he and his wife, formance Laboratory at Cin- ballet, gymnastics and tennis. Mikki, started CrossFit Kids, cinnati Children's Hospital This fall, she enrolled Natalie's and four years later they be- Medical Center. "You want to 3-year-old sister, Georgia. "I think this isn't as intimigan consulting with pediatric m ake sure people are trained physical therapists on devel- in understanding a child. Kids dating for them," she said. T he c l ass t h i s mo n t h , oping a program for the re- are likely going to have a discently potty-trained. connect with their ability and which was punctuated by the occasional tear or a giggle, In recent years it has bal- what they want to do." looned to about 700 active preIn addition to promoting fun progressedfrom an obstacl e school CrossFit Kids classes and safety, Dr. Lee Beers, a pe- courseto a game of "farmers diatrician with Children's Na- and lumberjacks," a contest to across the country. Preschool-age CrossFit par- tional Health System in Wash- tip over kettlebell weights onto ticipants do not use weights. ington, said her concerns were the ground, as a lumberjack Class time is short, typically more environmental. If a child would knock over a tree. "I have strong muscles!" 30 minutes or less. There are observes behaviors exhibited basic lessons on n u t rition, by adults at a gym, such as Ella Reznik exclaimed, tipping such as where tomatoes come comparing muscles or look- one over. "It's made for your kid to from. There are no weigh-ins ing distressed when weighing or flexing of muscles before a in on a scale, that could lead succeed in life," Kelber said, mirror. Instead, activities are to negative body image issues "not to beat them down."
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
BRIEFING Service Saturday for crash victim A memorial service for Phoenix Marie Price, the 7-year-old girl who died in a carcrash Friday north of Bend,will be held from1 to 3 p.m. Saturday. The celebration of life will be in the gymand cafeteria of M.A. Lynch Elementary in Redmond, where Price was inthe second grade.Shedied when her stepfather crashed his SUV traveling north on U.S.Highway 97 about 5 miles north of Bendshortly before 7:30 p.m. Friday. Four other girls were injured in the crash. — Bulletin staff reports
, g%'»
e8 d
a o mariuana in a ras — WI easure oomin By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
MADRAS — "I don't use the
word gateway," said Dr. Kevin Sabet to an attentive audience
at the Living Hope Church in Madras on Wednesday.
that marijuana is harmless, that it's medicine and that marijuana convictions are respon-
time solely for marijuana possession, but that one-third of
sible for a high percentage of the national prison population.
offederalprisoners arein prison for crimes they com-
"The more you smoke, the
stateprisoners and one-fourth mitted under the influence. He
The Madras Drug and Alcohol Summit was initially organized by Best Care, a Red-
Sabet, the director of the
worse the outcomes are," said Sabet, citing a study in New
Drug Policy Institute at the
Zealand that showed that reg-
University of Florida and a former adviser at the White
ular marijuana users over time experienced a significant drop w ork together across sectorsto in IQ. He dismissed a distinccombat the effects of drug use tionbetweenpsychological and on society. physical addiction. After his presentation, Sabet reimbursement for speakers'travel — in late August Sabet emphasized lack of answered audience questions consistencyinmedical marithat ranged from the potency after pro-marijuana factions juana strength and the harmful of current marijuana strains questioned the role of federal effects of smoking. "Do we and how long THC — the money in organizing a summit smoke anyotherme dicine?"he chemical in marijuana that can so dose to the vote on Oregon asked. act as a pain analgesic and can Ballot Measure 91, which Sabet said a small percentstimulate appetite — stays in would legalize recreational use age of the state and federal thebody. of marijuana. prison population were serving Sabet, who kicked offa 14See Summit/B5
House Office of National Drug Control Policy, was the keynote
speaker for the daylong Madras Drug and Alcohol Summit on Wednesday.
Sabet shuns pot's designation as a"gateway drug." What he framed as three popular misconceptions of marijuana led his 90-minute presentation Wednesday. He sought to debunk claims
called for"swift and certain" sanctions ~ ill i cit drug users, praised drug courts and saidthat communities must
stop statewide tour Wednesday with the speech, almost missed his chance to try to myth-bust in Madras.
BEND COUNCIL
project contract
approved
mond-based drug-treatment
By Tyler Leeds
organization, as atwo-day conference on the medical and social effects of drugs and alcohol. Best Care withdrew its support — and $15,000 in
The Bulletin
The Bend City Council
approved a sewer project contract at its meeting Wednesday night that could be worth up to $5 million. The contract for the
southeast interceptor between Ferguson and Brosterhous roads was
awarded to Taylor Northwest. The contract includes a base deal worth about $3
million, with the possibility of an additional payout of nearly $2 million depending on how construction
proceeds. The additional money will be withheld only if crews encounter hazardous material while
digging, a situation that would require a separate remediation project.
Klwnath Ttlls
This contract represents only one segment of an ongoing sanitary sewer proj-
FIRE UPDATE
ect that spans the southern
and eastern portions of
Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit • http://inciweb.nwcg. gev/state/38 • www.nwccweb.us/ infermatien/firemap. aspx
Bend, the first phase of
which was completed in 2011. The approved segment is projected to be
completed next year. The project is intended to increase the city's sewer
capacity and to deliver service to neighborhoods lacking access to the system.
1. 36 Pit
• Acres: 5,520 • Containment: 75% • Cause: Humancaused
Other issues
2. Deception Complex • Acres: 6,033 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Lightning
of residents offered their
3. Onion Mountain • Acres: 4,105 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Unknown
During the visitors section of the meeting, a line views on vacation rentals,
with homeowners urging the council to take action as soon as possible on regulating the industry and even to consider a halt to issuing new vacation rental Andy Tullis l The Bulletin
U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., talks with a group of students about college affordability during a campaign-related visit to Cascade Hall
on the Central Oregon Community College campus inBend onWednesday morning.
permits until that time.
Rental company representatives urged the council to slow down its evaluation of
Have a story idea or submission? Contact ils!
The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 sunriver .................541-e17-7831 oeschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347
o.c.......................202-ee2-7456 Business..............54i-e83-03eo Education.............541-383-0367 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands.......... 541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
Submissions • Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView
p.o. eox6020
Bend, OR 97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact:541-e83-0358
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email event information to news©bendbulletln.com, with "Civic Calendar" lnthe subject, andincludeacontactname
and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
—asca es
er e maes e irs so on
ISCO 8 8 OLll'
the topic, arguing enough time hasn't been given to study the landscape of
rentals in the city and that residents had earlier provided the council with false information. The council also discussed a new contract with
Visit Bend, which receives funding from the city's room taxbut is technically
a contractor tasked with By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., was in Central Oregon on Wednesday to discuss the rising cost of tuition with stu-
Central Oregon before the election — was never men-
tioned Wednesday, Merkley did discuss how congressional Republicans have opposed college affordability legislation
dents fighting debt and with graduates considering how to financeamaster' sprogram. Merkley met with students
the senator has backed. Specif-
and graduates from OSU-Cas-
introduced by U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., which would allow students with existing loans to refinance at the
cades and Central Oregon Community College on the COCC campus, the first stop
ically, Merkley discussed the Bank on Students Emergency Loan Refinancing Act, a bill
those are at a higher rate than
city. City Manager Eric King
senator also discussed how
agreement that the city
a return off its student loan
of six, said between class and
program, something he said should stop.
caring for her kids, the only time she would have to earn
Susana Hernandez, 19,
an income is when she should
election, Republican Monica
be able to do that, too. This is a big deal in Oregon. We have
finance their loans, noting her own education was financed by a mix of loans and Pell
500,000 Oregonians with stu-
Grants.
dent loans and a vastbulk of
financial situation with Merk-
the federal government makes ley. Jackson, a single mother
lower rates now available. "You can refinance if you have a home loan, or a car loan, if the interest rate drops,"
Wehby — who according to hercampaign officehasno publidy scheduled events in
promoting tourism in the
we have available now." Merkley stressed that refinancing would allow more students to make their payments and for fewer to face de- this much for our education; it fault, an experience, he said, doesn't make sense." which can discourage dreams Christina Jackson, 44, broke of an advanced degree. The into tears while discussing her
in a five-campus trip dubbed the "Fighting for College Affordability Tour" by his re-election campaign. While his opponent in the November
Merkley said. "Students should
for the first year was about $3,000, and I've already been having to pay interest on some of them," Hernandez said. "We shouldn't have to pay
described the draft con-
tract as a "cleanup" of the previous agreement. Much of the council's discussion
centered on oversight. All councilors seemed in should have more oversight of Visit Bend, but the issue of who should carry it out
was discussed atlength. Councilor Sally Russell
president of COCC's student government, said she liked the
be sleeping. "I almost have to quit school;
idea of allowing students to re-
I have to make that decision
Bend offered"somewhat cursory" presentations on
right now," said Jackson, a
its efforts, but that a "more
junior at OSU-Cascades. "I had to scale back to two-thirds time, but I don't want to quit."
robust tracking system is needed" as the group's budget continues to grow. SeeCouncil/B2
"The total of those loans
SeeMerkley/B6
noted that in the past, Visit
• School newsandnotes: Email newsitems and notices ofgeneral interest to news@bendbulletln.com. Email announcementsof teens' academicach ievements toyouth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin@bendbulletin.com.
Correction Incomplete information was given on the monthly weather graphic that was publishedWednesday,Oct. 1, on PageB1.An updated version appears at bendbulletin.com/ monthlyweather.
Crawford, Wagnerbattle for seat onCrookCoun Court By Scott Hammers
Nov. 4
Crawford, 36, regards himself as a Republican and won his first term onthe County
~
sioner Seth Crawford won the nomination ofboth the Repub-
Court running as such in 2010.
bendbulletin.cem/electiens
the May primary, but he won't
tion, when no Democrats filed
be unopposed for re-election in November; Walt Wagner, a
to run in the primary. Wagner, 73, said he does not
member of the Crook County
consider himself a member
School Board, is running an independent campaign for
of any party. In past years, Wagnerhaschallenged Com-
county commissioner.
missioner Mike McCabe in the
The Bulletin
Crook County Commis-
This year, write-invotes won lican and Democraticparties in him the Democratic nomina-
ELE CTION
the last of its kind — earlier this
the continued use of incentives such as the county's enterprise
year, Crook County residents
zone to attract and retain
the November election willbe
business. Offeringtaxincentives
and run for state House and Senate as a Republican and
votedto drop party labels from County Court elections starting in 2015. Crawford and Wagnerboth saidjobsandtheeconomy are the leading issues for county residents. Crawford said he'd like to
Democrat.
see the high-tech sector expand
to add another 60 jobs, he said. SeeElection /B5
Republican primary, mounted aprior independent campaign for the Crook County Court,
Regardless of who prevails,
in the county and advocates
throughthe enterprisezone
kept Woodgrain Millwork from moving from Prineville to North Carolina earlier this
year, Crawford said, saving200 jobs. The company now plans
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
E VENT
ENDA R
FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine andfood DONUTS WITHDADS: 7:30-9a.m .; in downtown Bendandthe OldMill Pine Ridge Elementary School,19840 District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Hollygrape St., Bend; www.bend.k12. Bend. or.us or 541-355-1010. JUBELALECELEBRATIONAND PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a ARTIST POSTER SIGNING: Featuring pumpkin patch, petting zoo and a celebration of the seasonal beerand various activities; free admission, signings by this year's label artists, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Lisa and Lori Lubbesmeyer; free; 5-8 DD Ranch, 3836 NE Sm ithRockW ay, p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or House, 1044 NWBond St., Bend; 541-548-1432. www.deschutesbrewery.com or "CATCHMAGAZINE": Afilm about 541-382-9242. fly fishing, Todd Moenwill speak; free; CREATEABILITY:MAKING THE 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E.Main Ave., INVISIBLEVISIBLE: Featuring art for Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or auction by children andyoung adults 541-815-9122. experiencing disability to benefit TIM RICE'S "FROM HERE TO Central Oregon Disability Support ETERNITY":Showing of the musical Network; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; Crow's that was adapted from the1951 FeetCommons, 875 NW BrooksSt., novel about love andarmy life set Bend; www.crowsfeetcommons. in1941 Hawaii, prior to the attacks com, stephanie©codsn.orgor on Pearl Harbor; $18; 7 p.m.; Regal 541-408-1092. Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 PAINTINGMARATHON LIVE SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; AUCTIONFUNDRAISER:Paintings 541-312-2901. will be auctioned to benefit Base Camp Studio; free, donations accepted; auctions times are 6:30, 7 and 7:30 p.m.; Bend FRIDAY Modern, 1000 NW Wall St., Suite 110; www.bendmodern.com, PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a hellojibasecampstudio.org or pumpkin patch, petting zoo and 541-335-1846. various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; PATRIMONY:The blues-rock band DD Ranch,3836 NE SmithRockW ay, performs, with Helga; free; 6 p.m.; Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or Broken TopBottle Shop 8 Ale 541-548-1432. Cafe, 1740 NWPence Lane, Suite CENTRALOREGON GUNAND KNIFE 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. MAKERSSHOW:Featuring gun and knife items with firearm safety AUTHORPRESENTATION:Janet presentations offered; $5, free for Fisher will present on her book"A children14oryounger; noon-6p.m.; PlaceofHerOwn:The Legacy of Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, Oregon Pioneer Martha Poindexter 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; Maupin"; $5;6:30p.m .;Paulina www.expo.deschutes.org, ossz55IO Springs Books, 252 W.Hood Ave., yahoo.com or 541-610-3717. Sisters; 541-549-0866. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN "THETROUBLE WITH HARRY": PATCH:Aneight-acre Godzilla corn Alfred Hitchcock's comedic whodunit maze with pumpkin patch and market about Harry Worp, who appears featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train, dead on a hillside by asmall town, pony ridesandmore;$7.50, $5.50 presented by BendExperimental Art ages 6-11, free ages5andyounger Theatre; $15, $10 for students; 7 p.m.; for Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette activities; 10 a.m.-7 p.m., pumpkin Ave., Bend; www.beattickets.org or patch open until 6 p.m.; Smith 541-419-5558. Rock Ranch, 1250 NE Wilcox Ave., "DEAD POETS SOCIETY": A Terrebonne; www.smithrockranch. screening of the1989film about a com or 541-504-1414. teacher inspiring his students with VFW DINNER: Fishand chips;$6;3-7 poetry; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez p.m.; VFWHall,1503 NE Fourth St., Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or Bend; 541-389-0775. 541-475-3351. BEND FALLFESTIVAL: Featuring fall-themed activities, homebrew THE QUICKANDEASYBOYS: The competition, live music, artand food; Portland rock and roll trio performs, free admission; 5-11 p.m.; downtown with McDougall; $10 plus fees in advance; 8 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E. Bend; www.j.mp/BendFallFest or 541-383-3026. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY
Andy Tullis 1The Bulletin
There's plenty of time to take the kids to Smith Rock Ranch in Terrebonne so they can rlde the Zoo Train that is part of the Corn Maizeand Pumpkin Patch. com or 541-815-9122. BARISONE:ThePortland DJ performs, with Mr. WuandRada; $5; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NWBrooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091.
SATURDAY PARKINGLOTSALE:To benefit the Ridgeview High Band's Carnegie Hall fundraising campaign; 8a.m.-2 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www.rvhs. redmond.k12.or.us, debi.deweyIO redmond.k12.or.us or 541-389-5917. VFW BREAKFAST: $8.50; 8:30a.m.; VFW Hall,1503 NEFourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. CENTRAL OREGONGUN AND KNIFE MAKERSSHOW:Featuring gun and knife items with firearm safety presentations offered; $5, free for children14 or younger; 9a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond;
www.expo.deschutes.org,ossz55©
yahoo.com or 541-610-3717. PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a petting zoo, hay rides, pony rides and train rides; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith RockW ay, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH:Aneight-acre Godzilla corn maze with pumpkin patch andmarket
featuring pumpkincannons, zootrain, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5andyounger for Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other activities; 10 a.m.-7 p.m., pumpkin patch open until 6 p.m.; Smith Rock Ranch,1250 NEWilcox Ave.,
Terrebonne; www.smithrockranch. com or 541-504-1414. BEND FALLFESTIVAL: Featuring fall-themed activities, homebrew competition, live music, artand food; free admission; 11a.m.-10 p.m.; downtown Bend; www.j.mp/ BendFallFest or 541-383-3026. FALLBOOK SALE:TheFriendsofthe Bend Libraries hosts a book sale; free admission; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 NW Wall St., Bend; www.dpls. lib.or.us, foblibrary©gmail.com or 541-617-7047. HARVESTFESTIVAL:Featuring live music, German food andmore; free; 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Stone Lodge Retirement, 1460 NE27th St., Bend; www.stonelodgeretirement.com, kaitlin.dahlquist@holidaytouch.com or 541-233-9914. "GENETICROULETTE, THE GAMBLE OF OURLIVES": Screening of Jeffrey Smith's documentary about genetically modified foods link to rising disease rates in the U.S., Q8A to follow; free; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ redmond or 541-548-0135. "THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY": Alfred Hitchcock's comedic whodunit about Harry Worp, who appears dead on a hillside by asmall town, presented by BendExperimental Art Theatre; $15, $10for students; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.beattickets.org or 541-419-5558. TAKE STEPS BEND:A fundraising walk event to benefit the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of America; registration requested, donations accepted; 2-5:30 p.m.; Riverbend
Park, 799 SWColumbia St.; www. cctakesteps.org/bend, kbaxter©ccfa. org or 503-715-7610. A NIGHT INETHIOPIA: Featuring an authentic Ethiopian dinner, an auction, music and more to benefit surgery for babies in Ethiopia born with hydrocephalus; $100; 6 p.m.; St.Charles Bend,2500 NE Neff Road; www.anightinethiopia.org or 541-382-4321. TASTE OF SISTERS/MAYOR'S BALL:Featuring live music with the Moon Mountain Ramblers, live comedy with Nathan Woodworth, food and more to benefit the Sisters Kiwanis Food Bankandthe Furry Friends Foundation; $15-$50 in advance; 6 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E. Main Ave.; www.sistersmayorsball. com or 541-549-2471. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Janet Fisher will present on her book"A Place of HerOwn:The Legacy of Oregon Pioneer Martha Poindexter Maupin"; $5;6:30 p.m.;Paulina Springs Books, 422 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. "THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY": Alfred Hitchcock's comedic whodunit about Harry Worp, who appears dead on a hillside by asmall town, presented by BendExperimental Art Theatre; $15, $10for students; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.beattickets.org or 541-419-5558. HIGH DESERTSCOTTISH COUNTRY DANCEHARVESTBALL:Featuring bagpipes, traditional music and dancers and aworkshop; $45 for dance andworkshop, $25 for workshop only, $22 for dance only, $5 for spectators; 7:30 p.m.; RedmondGrange,707SW Kalama Ave.; 541-480-4495. SARA JACKSON-HOLMAN: The Portland piano-pop singer-songwriter performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. BREWER'SGRADE:TheNorthwest country band performs; 9 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; www. maverickscountrybar.com or 541-325-1886. KYTAMI:The hip-hop violinist performs, with Jay Tablet, DJGeneric, Caitlin Cardier and Rory Oneders; $5; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NWBrooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091.
SUNDAY CENTRAL OREGONGUN AND
KNIFEMAKERS SHOW: Featuring gun and knife items with firearm safety presentations offered; $5, free for children14 or younger; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.expo.deschutes.
org, ossz55@yahoo.comor 541-610-3717. PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a petting zoo, hay rides, pony rides and train rides; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE SmithRockW ay, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH:Aneight-acre Godzilla corn maze with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50ages 6-11, free ages 5 and younger for Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other activities;10 a.m.-7 p.m.,pumpkinpatchopen until 6 p.m.; Smith Rock Ranch, 1250 NE Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; www.smithrockranch.com or 541-504-1414. THE GREATPUMPKIN RACE: Fun run andwalk5kto benefit Elk Meadow Elementary School, featuring a raffle, art, live music, food and more; $20 for adults, $12 for kids, $5 for fun walk, registration required, donations accepted;10:30 a.m. kids run fun,11 a.m. 5K run; C.E. Lovejoy's Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; www.greatraceofbend.com,
thegreatpumpkinrace©gmail.comor 541-388-1188. BEND FALL FESTIVAL: Featuring fall-themed activities, homebrew competition, live music, art and food; free admission; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; downtown Bend; www.j.mp/ BendFallFest or 541-383-3026. TIM RICE'S"FROM HERE TO ETERNITY":Showing of the musical that was adapted from the1951 novel about love andarmy life set in1941 Hawaii, prior to the attacks on Pearl Harbor; $18;12:55 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. FALL BOOK SALE: The Friends of the Bend Libraries hosts a bag sale of books; free admission, $5 per bag; 1-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 NW Wall St., Bend; www.dpls. lib.or.us, foblibrarymogmail.com or 541-617-7047.
XEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items inthe Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such asthe dismissal of chargesor acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at12:48 p.m. Sept. 20, in the2700 block of NE Rainier Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at9:01a.m. Sept. 25, in the200block of NEFranklin Avenue.
Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief wasreported at 9:51 a.m. Sept. 27, inthe 400blockof SE Woodland Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:03 p.m. Sept. 27, inthe 2500 block of NE Neff Road. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:07 p.m. Sept. 27, in the600 block of NW Broadway Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:49 p.m. Sept. 28, in the700block of NW Riverside Boulevard. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at10:04 p.m.Sept. 28, in the800 block of NEWatt Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:09 a.m. Sept. 29, in the21300block of
Evelyn Place. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at11:29a.m. Sept. 29, in the 200 block of SEDavis Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:33 a.m. Sept. 29, in the1500 block of NE Medical Center Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:48 p.m. Sept. 29, in the1900 block of NE Cliff Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at2:08 p.m. Sept. 29, in the 61900 block ofJanalee Place. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest made at4:27 p.m. Sept. 29, inthe 20100 block of PinebrookBoulevard. DUII —RyanOlson,18, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:49 p.m.
Sept. 29, in theareaof NE27th Street and Mary RosePlace. Theft —A theft was reported at 8 a.m. Sept. 30, in the1500 block of NW Fourth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at10:29 a.m. Sept. 30, in the61100block of Brown Trout Place. Theft —A theft was reported at12:01 p.m. Sept. 30, in the600block of NW Wall Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at12:12 p.m. Sept. 30, in the600 block of NWOgden Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:31 p.m. Sept. 30, in the21100block of Kayla Court. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal
mischief was reported at3:35a.m. Sept. 28, in the2000 block of NEThird Street. Theft —A theft was reported at10:24 a.m. Sept. 23, in the100 block of SE Bridgeford Boulevard. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 9 p.m. Sept. 27, inthe1800 block of NE Purcell Boulevard.
area of NE Third Street.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMEMT
19 —Medical aid calls.
BEMD FIRE RUMS Monday 3:29p.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 409 NEGreenwoodAve. 23 —Medical aid calls. Tuesday
Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at5:04 a.m. Sept. 30, in thearea of NWTeal Loop. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief and a vehicle wasreported entered at 8:16a.m. Sept. 30, in the
~+ccoolsculpting
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reviewingVisit Bend's business "We're setting up another buplan beforeit reaches council- reaucracy that will get in the Continued from B1 ors for final approval. way of doingthe job well." In the draft co ntract, the While Russell said the proCouncilor VictorChudowsky Bend Economic Development posal sounded "appropriate," advocated formore inclusion of Advisory Board, which i s Councilor Mark Capell said he members from the city's tourchartered by the City Council, believed oversight should fall ism industry, differentiating would provide that oversight, directly to the council, saying, that sector from the economic
development sphere, saying this proposal is an improvement, "but not quitethere."
Thecouncil did not take any action on the Visit Bend con-
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PUBLIC OFFICIALS U.S. SENATE • Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorneAve., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 W eb: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorneAve., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary ofState Kate Brown,D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 OregonState Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral EllenRosenblum, D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissioner BradAvakian 800 NEOregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mailmostate.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
LEGISLATURE: SENATE • Sen. TedFerrioli, R-Dishict30 (Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp,R-District27 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (Crook, portion ofDeschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett LEGISLATURE: HOUSE
• Rep. JasonConger, R-District54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger©state.or.us • Rep. John Huffrna, R-District59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. NE,H-476
•
Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us • Rep. MikeMcLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900Court St. NE,H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District53 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state.or.us DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
Deschutes County Commission • TammyBaney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email:Tammy Baney©ndeschutes.or.us • Alan Unger,D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes.or.us • TonyDeBone,R-LaPine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email :Tony DeBone©o.deschutes.or.us
•
•
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
ama i ver sa mon score v i o r o m e era' u e By Jeff Barnard
the water should have been
a provision that the govern-
make the decision to aug-
The Associated Press
saved for farms facing the drought. Irrigation has been
ment maintain a m i n imum flow in the Trinity r iver to
m ent flows o n
GRANTS PASS — A fed-
eral judge ruled Wednesday shut off to farms in the rethat a federal water agency gion this year. did not violate the law when it made special reservoir re-
As the drought continued
sustain fish and wildlife. In the 1984, another law was enacted to restore fish and wildlife in the Trinity to
this year, the bureau again leases last year to help salm- made specialreleases for a level roughly equivalent to on in Northern California's Klamath salmon, which the those before so much water Klamath River survive the judge also refused to stop, was diverted to Central Valdrought rather than save it finding that the potential ley farms. for farms. harm from drought to salmJudge O'Neill w r ote that But U.S. D i strict J u dge on right now was greater the bureau had not violated Lawrence O'Neill in Fres- t han the potential harm t o any laws in making the speno, California, wrote in his farms next year. cial releases for salmon, but ruling Wednesday that the T he Trinity R iver i s t h e the authority of the 1955 law next time the U.S. Bureau b iggest tributary o f t h e — the only authority cited by of Reclamation wants to re- Klamath River, where tens the bureau — only applied to lease Trinity Reservoir water of thousands of adult salmon the Trinity River, and not the for Klamath River salmon, died from disease in low wa- Klamath River downstream. it needs to cite a better legal ter conditions in 2002. Since The ruling as praised by authority. the 1960s, a major portion of Indian tribes and salmon The Westlands Water District and the San L ouis & D elta-Mendota W ater A u -
the water from Trinity Reservoir has been diverted to
thority in the San Joaquin
the Central Valley Project, where it helps to i rrigate
Valley had sued the bureau
farms. The 1955 law autho-
to stop the releases, arguing
rizing the diversion contains
the K lam-
ath, we would be right now cleaning up thousands of salmon carcasses on the riv-
er," Yurok Tribal Chairman Thomas O'Rourke said in a statement.
Earthjustice attorney Jan Hasselman, who represented salmon fishermen and the
Yurok Tribe as interveners in the case, said the lack of
a specific authority for the releases was a technicality which the bureau should
have no trouble overcoming in the future. A lawyer for W estlands,
the nation's largest water provider, did not respond to
a telephone call and email fishermen who h ave b een seeking comment.
pressing the bureau to devote Bureau sp o k eswoman more of the Klamath Basin's Erin Curtis said the agency scarce water to fish. had not reviewed the rul"Straight up, if the Bu- ing, and had no immediate reau of Reclamation did not comment.
AROUND THE STATE Meth SeiZure — A judge in southern Oregonhassentenced a 25-year-old man to five years in prison after OregonState Police seized 22 pounds of methamphetamine from avehicle in which he was a passenger. Klamath County District Attorney RobPatridge said the seized drugs had a street value of more than $1.1million. Jeronimo Novoa-Leal wassentenced Wednesday in Circuit Court. He pleaded no contest to meth delivery and possession. The district attorney said after a fakeSocial Security card wasfound in the vehicle stopped on U.S. Highway 97 onOct. 12, 2013, troopers got written consent to search and a drug dog found the meth. Patridge said Novoa-Leal's fingerprints were found onthe packaging. Themanwill likely be deported to Mexico after serving his sentence.
Daimler allegatienS — OregonLabor Commissioner Brad Avakian has filed a complaint against Daimler Trucks North America, alleging that five employees at its Portland plant were subjected to racial slurs and threats. A statementWednesdayfrom Avakian said that among the allegations is that a Daimler employeethreatened a black co-worker with a noose,saying he'd drag theAfrican-American behind a car.Thecomplaint says the company failed to take "appropriate corrective action." Avakian said such acomplaint leads to an investigation, and if the allegations bear out, workers could beawarded damages including back pay if they've quit. A statement from Daimler said it doesn't tolerate discrimination and is cooperating with the investigation. ChemiCal eXplOSiOn —Oneperson was injured by broken glass when some chemicals reacted to produce an explosion at a medical products laboratory in Eugene.TheWednesday explosion was at the campus of Thermo Fisher Scientific, which produces dyesandother products for the medical industry. The companysaystwo people were exposed to the nontoxic chemicals methyl iodide and picoline, and the injured person washurt by broken glass. Thecompany says no toxic substances were released, andthere was no health threat to other employees or the public at large. Eugene-Springfield Fire Department crews were atthe scenefor about an hour. — From wire reports
VA hospital director to leave early
Winds cLjt short
Pendleton drone test
The Associated Press ROSEBURG
The
Affairs Medical Center in
Roseburg, who had come under criticism by a local veterans group unhappy
The Associated Press P ENDLETON —
-
director of the Veterans
De -
velopers of a test range in Eastern Oregon for the
with care at the facility, is
leaving earlier than she had originally planned. Carol Bogedain notified employees in an email that
unmanned aerial vehicles
known as drones have conducted their first flights, but high winds ended them early. The four-propeller drone was launched as high as 200 feet above a field north of Pendleton.
she is leaving at the end of this week, rather than
at the end of the year, because her house had sold
more quickly than she anticipated, The News-Review newspaper reported Wednesday.
It was to scan a small
barbecue grill for heat signatures — a test of its ability to pinpoint hot spots for
"I want to thank all of you who have assisted me
crews fighting wildfires.
in this role as director over
I t wa s l a unched a n d landed twice.
the past three years," wrote
Bogedain, 62, who came to Roseburg from Salem, Virginia, in 2011. "Although I will miss many of the staff
Pilot Brian Prange said the winds at f l ight level
were running about 29 mph with gusts to nearly 35 mph, near the limits of the drone's
ability to avoid a "fly-away," when it wouldn't be powerful enough to return against the headwinds. The Pendleton test site is managed by a contractor, Peak 3 Technical Services, for the city of Pendleton, which has invested more than $100,000 in l aunch
padsforthetestrange. The city hopes to spur the
Amanda Cowan I CorvallisGazette-Times
Corvallis Waldorf School teacher Jeff Parker joins first-grade students as they identify words starting with the letter "H" on Monday.
and veterans I have come
Teac er o owsstu entst roug gra es Corvallis Gazette-Times
CORVALLIS — In Jeff Park-
er's class at Corvallis Waldorf School onMonday morning, students practiced writing the letter "H" and naming words that start with the letter: horse,
eventually to attract those companies to establish per-
year in his class, Parker would have been teaching European history,specifically,the French
The city's economic de-
velopment director, Steve Chrisman, said the first t ests mark "what we a l l
heart, hay, hat, harp, hum, him andhang. However, at this time last
Revolution. Parker's move to teach the
first grade after teaching the eighth last year is part of the school's normal rotation for
hope will be a new chapter in Pendleton's economic
teachers: The Waldorf school's
future."
with the same group of students from year toyear, be-
Tests are expected to be conducted on the range at the local airport as well as
off-site locations such as
model is for teachers to stay tween first and eighth grade. Parker, who started teach-
ing at the school 10 years ago,
had taken the same group of with students over the years Parker said that each sumstudents through eight years are clearly strong and healthy," mer, Waldorf teachers get of school, which is only the Zaremba said. training to prepare them for second time in the Corvallis Parker hasmade the transi- the grade they will teach the Waldorf School's 21-year his- tion from teaching kids headed next year because they are tory that a teacher has stayed for their freshman year in high teaching a different grade each with the same group of stuschool to students coming out year. Some teachers also spedents through the full rotation of kindergarten. cialize in certain content areas, "I'm really looking forward such as middle school math, — mostly. Parker said that 12 of the 22 to starting this process again," and will teach other teachers' students in his eighth-grade he said. classes for certain subjects. "Some teachers say 'I love class last year had started in Parker said that transitionhis class in the first grade. ing to teaching first-graders this grade, or that grade.' They "From a teacher's stand- has its advantages. For in- are all interesting." Parker said that the connecpoint, I have a full picture. stance, it requires less prepaThere's no way for a student ration time. At the upper grade tion to his students has conto slip through the cracks," he levels, he's teaching complex tinued past his time teaching SBld. subjects such as algebra, phys- them. This weekend he plans Peter Zaremba, who began ics and history, and he spends to meet with the ninth-graders as the Waldorf school's admin- several hours a day preparing he taught last year. "It's great on many levels," istrative director in May, said for class. Parker is one of the school's Teaching the younger stu- he said of staying with the veteran teachers and is very dents requires less subject same group ofstudents for so sensitive to his students' aca- prep, but it takes a different toll: many years. "To get to know "I need more sleep, because these kids and their families is demic needs. "The relationships he builds it's more exhausting," he said. really special."
the one chosen Tuesday.
Trust Your Loved One's Care To EVERGREEN
Related • Unmanned aerial vehicles and their economic impact,C6
Pilot Brian Prange
ward to this new chapter in
mylife." The Douglas County Veterans Forum has been
critical of a decision to By Anthony Rimel
local economy through the visits of people from companies trying out drones for commercialpurposes, and manent offices and manufacturing plants.
to know, I am looking for-
Pimp'ssneaker-warninglawsuit tossed
Theoldest, mostexperienced in-home care servicein Central Oregon
close the hospital's inten-
sive care unit five years ago, before Bogedain took over. She had
unit saw too few patients for staff t o k e e p t h e ir
skills sharp. R elations soured even more after she walked out of a meeting
with the group.
Beltone
TRIAL of our newest most advanced hearing aids
said the winds at
flight level were running about 29 mph with gusts to nearly 35 mph, near the limits of
the drone's ability to avoid a "fly-away," when it wouldn't be
powerful enough to return against the headwinds.
The Associated Press
where he's serving a 100-
O r e - year sentence, representing gon judge needed less than himself in the lawsuit filed P ORTLAND — A n
"when used normally." Clardy spoke for most of the mid-September hearing's 23 minutes before the judge
a half-hour to dismiss a $100 million lawsuit filed by an imprisoned pimp who contended Nike should have included a consumer warn-
last January in Multnomah County Circuit Court. He told declared the 27-year-old inJudge Robert Durham that
mate had wasted his time.
Nike was partially responsible for his sentence for failing
July 2013 after jurors convict-
ing on the sneakers the man
to warn that his Air Jordans
used to beat a prostitute's customer. Inmate Sirgiorgio Clardy appeared by video feed from the Eastern Oregon prison
could be used as a dangerous weapon. Nike's lawyers spoke for less than 90 seconds, saying there's no defect in the shoes
The man was sentenced in ed him of assault, robbery and compelling prostitution and declared him a dangerous offender. The sentence includes the possibility of release after 36 years.
d efended
the decision, saying the
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S U r olo S~
B4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
on ome o incum en on a ras counci
FULLRO UTEOF WHITEHOUSE INTRUPE R REVEALE P... ~o
adras voters will elect a new mayor and fill three
j
I
i
1
seats on the City Council this November. Though Royce Embanks is running unopposed for the top slot, four men seek the three City Council positions. Running for council are two in- c ommunity. He has been active in efcumbents, Jim Leach and Richard f orts to improve relationships among Ladeby. Hoping to join them ave Bill the diverse gvoups that make up the Montgomery and Clifford Rhodes. ci t y and believes his career as a pub37 year old pastor of lic emPloyee gives him a diffevent the Living Hope Chrishan Center in Madras,a job he's held for sev- Like Leach and Ladeby, Monten years.He was appointed to the gomery brings a unique setof qualcouncilthreeyearsago,andhe'sdis- i f ications to the race for muncil. covered he likes being there. He will Th e 72-year-old retired computer celebrate his 38th birthday about the expert has served on the city's plantimeballots an. mailedbutbeforethe n ing commission and would like the election. chance to put policy in place rather Leachbelievesthe citywiildobest if its leaders are transparent about Mon t gomery is a former small what they've doing and take time to businessman who believes his abillisten to city residents befove import- ity to look at and consider both cost ant decisions ave made. Thus, when and benefits of projects would make the council was asked to approve an him usehd on the council. He has access plan from the Oregon Depart- been active in the economic development of Transportation,Leach asked ment group EDCO and is a foundfor a delay until local businesses af- ing member of the Tech Alliance of fected by the plan could weigh in. C entralOregon,whichpromotesand Businessmen turned out in force two supports high-tech companies in the weeks later, having specifically been vegion. invited to the meeting, and the Plan Aiso running is Rhodes 62, who was largelyapproved. is inthe race largelybecause, he says, IncumbentLadebyisemployedby he cannot find answers to his questhe Department of Corrections at the tions about the city easily. He worries Deer Ridge Correctional Institution, thatbigbusiness andgovernmentget where he is the prison's food services special treatment from the muncil manager. Now 62, he was born in b u t has few other conciete ~ Sweden and immigrated to the Unit- tions forimpvovingthe city. edStatesin1957.Hehasworkedfor M ad h k e~ o f the department since 1984, moved to gon is j~ now pggjgg out of ~ Madras seven years ago and is com- s ion. It needs stmng Ieade~ I i k e Pletinghis first termonthe counciL that aheady demonstrated by Leach Ladeby believes economic devel- and Ladeby and promised by Montopment and education are the keys gomery, all of whom will serve the to improving life for the poor in the citywell.
M 1Vickel's Worth Vote no on driver cards
ture generations will enjoy. For hunters and anglers — parThe In My View opinion Sept. 18 ticularly those among us who by Marilyn Burwell on Measure 88 live in cities and suburbs — pubglossesover some realitiesregard- lic lands are vital to the outdoor
was a real eye-opener. Besides the tragedy of some of our neighbors going hungry, the decomposing garbage in landfills creates tons of methane gas, fouling the air we
ing auto insurance and driver's
sports we love. For decades, Amer-
breathe and causing environmen-
licenses and the hoped-for driver cards.Insurance is not required
does not increase nor decrease safety on the road. Many vehicles
ican hunters and anglers have tal damage. All of us can help to been the guardians of America's solve the problem. Kitchen garpublic lands. Indeed, the taxes and bage can be collected separately user fees we pay on guns, ammuni- and mixed with grass clippings tion, archery equipment and fish- and soil to form compost, good in ing tackle go directly to enhance flower pots or big gardens, where it habitat, increase game populations greatly increases the productivity and train young hunters. In Ore- of flowers or carrots. Another possibility is backyard chickens. They gon, outdoor recreation supports over 140,000 jobs generating over love kitchen leftovers and give you $13 billion in consumer spending, fresh eggs in return. When I was a according to the Outdoor Industry kid during the Great Depression, Association. my parents wisely required me to The Land and Water Conser- "clean the plate" before having any
cross state lines both ways; who
vation Fund — our nation's most
dessert. Believe me, there were few
keeps track? Many carry contra- important tool to ensure a vibrant band. Simply put, insurance does future for hunting and fishingnot make you safe. Consider how protects land, water and wildlife it is practiced that drivers borrow, resources across the country and
leftovers in our house! Jack RemIngton
to obtain a d r iver's license, nor
would it be for the hoped-for driver cards. Nothing compels a driver wanting a license or card to obtain
any insurance, period. But it would be nice if it were a compulsory requirement. Vehicles are required to
be insured, not the driver. Consider all of the uninsured vehicles on the road, the fact that they are there
perhaps steal cars, or how owners lend their cars out to friends and
provides access to outdoor recre-
relatives. Most cars are insured, of course, already. Consider how an individual can acquire a fleet of clunkers and insure them all at a discounted bulk rate with the ex-
Full support to Newberry dust-abatement levy ust can cause health problems and decrease visibility. We urge voters in the Newberry Estates Special Road District in southern Deschutes County to support the district's dust-abatement levy. A yes vote would impose a fiveyear levy of 40 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value specifically for dust abatement. That's $40 a year ona $100,000 home. Itwoul d raise an estimated total of $45,000 over fiveyears. Deschutes County has more than a dozen tiny taxing districts to maintain roads. The county government doesn't have any control over road maintenance in these special voad
D
districts.
County Administrator Tom Anderson told us in an email the county would get involved in things like utility placement, right-of-way encroachment, weight limits, gates or hazardabatement.How actualroad
maintenance is done is up to the special road district. The district's existing tax levy is 78.31 centsper $1,000of the assessed value of property. Frank Mengel, the president of the road district, said the money the district raises from its existing levy goes to snow removal, grading, gravel application and so on. It has done some dust abatement whenit can afford it. To do itregularly, itneedsmore money. The district's board will decide which roads will get the treatment. Mengel said the district probably would not use water, but maybe magnesium chloride. In 2010, the Newberry road district put a dust-abatement levy on the ballot that was double the rate of the current proposal. It was narrowly defeated 100to 83, inunofficial returns. Mengel hopes that by cutting the proposal in half the district will get the money to do a better job of cuttingthe dust. We hope so, too.
A CAisa o o
press purpose of loaning them out for free or a fee. You might call this person an enabler. A driver card
will not make anyone safer. Measure 88, it's not about safety. You know what it's about; vote no on
88. Andre PInette Redmond
Conservation fund
preservesland, water Saturday marked the 42nd an-
niversary of National Hunting and Fishing Day — a day set aside to salute hunters and anglers who have made significant conservation contributions over the years which fu-
Compost kitchen garbage
the usual commentary in an effort to
support his favorite local politicians. He claims that the ACA is "a government takeover of one-sixth of
the U.S. economy" and that it was "forced through ... with legislative sleight of hand." He also asserts that
"Obamacare is more unpopular than ever." Actually, it was passed with
the required congressional majority, was deemed constitutional by the Supreme Court, and is more popular
Bend
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
s t a rtat re ormin e a t c a r e IN MY VIEW
tAffordable Care Act. Perhaps this ample is the In My View column on Aug. 28 in which Keith Sime offers
Charley Miller
Letters policy
vate insurance companies provide and Snopes have been checking the ing to support the ACA of 2010. coverage under the ACA and contin- truth or fiction of statements on the In surveys, most people like the ue to make big profits under it. But ACA for several years. They report: provisions of the ACA, such as the they have to comply with new rules (I) The ACA reduces the growth of ability to get health insurance despite that give the clients — you and mespending in Medicare without cutpre-existing conditions, or the right more favorable terms in the policies. ting essential services. (2) Millions to keep your kids on the plan until A better example of a government more Americans will have coverage. they are 26, or the removal of caps health care program is Medicare. (3) Health care costs will go down for on benefits when you have a serious Ask our senior citizens if they would over90percent ofAmericans.(4)The health problem. We are finally catch- rather go out and shop for coverage ACA is not "loaded with taxes" that ing up to the other modern countries on their own — the solution offered raise costs. (5) Doctors are accepting that have protected their residents by Rep. Greg Walden and Dr. Monica new Medicare patients and patients from going broke due to illness or in- Wehby. Ask the insurance commis- with ACA-compliant plans. (6) Docjury. But I do admit that a small per- sioners in each state if they would tors will continue to make our health centage of people will have to change like to remove their state regulations care decisions. insurance plans or doctors as compa- on healthcare insurance companies. Of course, if one gets his or her nies and employers adjust to the new Ask the millions of Americans who information from b i ased sources requirements. now haveaff ordable health care cov- such as Fox News, the Koch brothNote that there is no "takeover" of erage if they would like to go back ers' PAC or the Heritage Foundation American health care, and the ACA to the old system. Their responses they might draw different concluis not a government health plan. Pri- would range from "No" to "Hell, no!" sions. Glenn Beck says, "Half the
more diligent writers. A recent ex-
Buehler for state representative for District 54.
Thursday's article on food waste
each year as more of its provisions
suggests most people in Central Oregon areunhappy with Obamacare, or maybe it's just that the critics are
Vote for Buehler
ation on local, state and federal lands. Over the years, I've observed Since its inception 50 years ago, Knute Buehler's strong committhe LWCF has provided sportsmen ment to the Bend community and with access to hunting and fishing to the entire state of Oregon. He's opportunities in their communities. a native Oregonian, a well-educatIts concept is simple yet brilliant in ed Beaver and a great family man. its construction: reinvesting Amer- He has tirelessly dedicated his time ica'soff-shore oil and gas royal- and talents to a w ide variety of ties to permanently conserve our worthy causes and is well-respecttwo most precious resources, our ed throughout the state. Buehler is land and water. What's even more a good listener and a good thinker. impressive is that it does not use I've found his opinions to be unbia dime oftaxpayer money. Back- ased and very well informed. He's country Hunters 8z Anglers of Ore- able and willing to explain and degon applaud Sens. Ron Wyden and fend his position and is not afraid Jeff Merkley for their support of to stand up for his beliefs. the Land and Water Conservation I feel his depth of experience Fund. and t houghtful d e cision-makBrian JennIngs ing will be a great asset in Salem, Bend and I strongly urge you to vote for
By John Flynn t seems most opinions printed by The Bulletin are critical of Presi dent Barack Obama and t h e
Bend
take effect. Also, President Obama was re-elected in 2012 while continu-
And now for some facts: Neutral sources such as PolitiFact, FactCheck
U.S. population will lose their health
insurance." (False.) Rush Limbaugh says, "Obamacare is the largest tax
increase in history." (False.) Ann Coulter says, "No medical school graduate will accept Obamacare patients." (False.) Bill O'Reilly says, "You might go to jail if you don't have health insurance." (False.) Maybe those people have a greater interest in their corporate sponsors and personal finances than they do with the well-being of millions of us
common folk. It's no wonder some of the letter writers repeat many of
these falsehoods. The Affordable Care Act is the law of the land despite dozens of attempts by lobbyists and
Republican politicians to defeat it. It provides a start to reforming our expensive and inefficient health care
system. — John Flynn lives in Bend.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
Salem drinking fountain took 6K
BITUARIES
By Michael Rose
City Hall, a building at 1320 ing code because of a number Edgewater Street NW that he factors. He peppered city inS ALEM — A n e wly i n - has owned since 1989. spectors with questions about stalled drinking f ountain His vision of having a his- possible solutions to no avail. adds a classy touch to a West toric drinking fountain paired "I just threw up my hands," Salem neighborhood, but for with a historic building hit its Sannes said. Marvin Sannes it's also a par- first obstacle when Sannes Next, Sannes took his able about bureaucracy. wanted to put the drinking plumbing conundrum to a Sannes' nearly 2r2-year fountain in the public right of state building code expert. effort to have a drinking way. Placement of the foun- The state expert suggested fountain installed on Edge- tain was solved when the that a French drain — adevice water Street NW has ended city agreed to buy a sliver of that slowly releases water into in success. The project took S annes' property, with t h e the ground — would solve the patience, ingenuity and cost proviso that he would install problem. Sannes about $6,000 — about and maintain the fountain. After Sannes paid $2,000 to three times more than he The next hitch was hardhave French drain installed, expected. er to overcome: plumbing a cityainspector came by and In spring 2012, Sannes be- problems. wrote a stop order, he said. came interested in a 1940s-era Sannes thought he could Sannes then learned that drinking fountain, which simply let the fountain drain hadn't worked in decades. into a catch basin, the same the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality would The fountain was i n f r ont placeraingoes after a storm. of Annette's Westgate Cafe. He was wrong. As Sannes need to i ssue an "underSannes thought it would be explains, he was informed by ground injection" permit beSalem Statesman Journal
FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES Phoenix Price, of Redmond
-,)"D3
Jan. 24, 2007 - Sept. 26, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to
serve. Please sign our
guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219. Services: Celebration of Life to be held Saturday Oct. 4, 2014 at 1PM at Lynch Elementary School, 1314 SW Kalama Ave., Redmond, OR. Contributions may be made: In Phoenix Price name at www.fund go fund me or contact Redmond Memorial Chapel for details 541-548-3219
i~
s•
Jack W. Rothweiler, of Bend May 19, 1914 - Sept. 28, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapeicom
The Associated Press file photo
In this April 18, 1946, photo, the Montreal Royals' Jackie Robinson,
right, is congratulated by teammate George Shuba as hecrosses home to score against the Jersey City Giants at Roosevelt Stadium in Jersey City, New Jersey.
Services: A private family service will be held. Contributionsmay be made to:
NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness) of Central Oregon, PO Box 7462, Bend, OR 97708.
Cecilia Theresa Sears Jan. 13, 1923- Sept. 26, 2014 Cecilia passed away Frid ay morning i n he r h o m e in southeast B end . She was born in East St. Louis, Illinois to A n d rew S k o ski and Apolonia (Furmanek). B oth h e r p ar e n t s w e r e Polish i m m i g rants . She married H en ry Ir vi n g S ears on M a r c h 3 , 1 9 4 5 and ha d t h r e e c h i l d r en, Thomas, Gary and Linda. Cecilia was a meat wrapper for 30 years. S h e en] oyed traveling w he n s h e retired and traveled to Eur ope twice . H e r h o b b i es were crochet and r e ading
autobiographies.
S he is survived by h e r son, G a r y Sea r s , her d aughter, L i n d a R o e p k e and f i v e gr a n d c h ildren, Brian, K a r l , Sal l y , JR Sears and Danny Roepke. S he wa s p r e ceded i n d eath b y h er h u s b a n d , p arents, b r o t h er , L o u i e , s isters, Carrie, M ar y a n d Molly and son, Thomas. There will be a v i ewing p rior t o t he se r v i c e o n T hursday, O c t o be r 2 n d , 3:00-5:00 p . m . at N i swonger-Reynolds F u n eral Home. A graveside service w ill b e h e l d o n Fr i d a y , October 3rd, at I:00 p.m. at Pilot Butte Cemetery. Please pay y o u r c o n d ol ences o n l i n e at n i swonger-reynolds.com.
This Dodgeroffered his hand toRobinson By Richard Goldstein
noon in the Royals' 14-1 victory.
New York Times News Service
In their second game of the seaGeorge Shuba, the Brook- son, Shubahit threehome runs. lyn Dodgers outfielder who When Robinson joined the played in three World Series Dodgers in 1947, he faced the during the 1950s but who was fullforce of racism. He heard best remembered for his wel- taunting from opposing dugcoming gesture to Jackie Rob- outs and receivedhate mail and inson at home plate on the day
Robinson, as a minor leaguer, broke baseball' s color barrier, died Monday at his home in Youngstown, Ohio. He was 89. His son, Michael, confirmed the death.
Playing in Brooklyn for seven seasons, Shuba was usually a backup, but he had his moments. Known as Shotgun for his ability to spray line
death threats. But he surmounted the pressures, earning what one Rookie of the Year award on his way to a Hall of Fame ca-
reer and recognition as a civil rights pioneer.
The owner of Annette's let
tain would need to drain into a
m an Journal inquiry,a DEQ
spokesman confirmed that a state permit is required for U nfortunately, San n e s projects that may inject water found it was "virtually impos- into the aquifer.
sewer pipe, just like a plumbing fixture inside a house.
Sannes have the cast-concrete drinking fountain. Sannes Sannes applied to DEQ for started making plans to move sible" to hook up the fountain it across the street and place up to the sewer and stay in the permit, and a month later, it front of the old West Salem compliance with the plumb- it was approved.
NAME:Seth Crawford
NAME:Walt Wagner
AGE:36 RESIDENCE:Prineville
AGE:73 RESIDENCE:Powell Butte
EDUCATION: Bachelor's in political science from University of Oregon GOV/CIVIC EXPERIENCE:CrookCounty commissioner; past member of fair board and Crook County Commission onChildren and Families; current vice chairman of National Association of Counties cybersecurity task force; member of National Association of Counties rural action committee
EDUCATION: No college degree, but thousands of hours of study in psychology, anthropology andmanagement while with Oregon State Police GOV/CIVIC EXPERIENCE:CrookCountySchool Board; pastchairman of Powell Butte Community Center; chairman of first Oregon State Games
L hI
Election Continued from B1 "That was a big thing for our community," he said. "If
cordingly," he said. Crawford said preserving and enhancing the quality of life in Crook County is a top priority if he wins a second term. He said he intends
the county's communications
within five to 10 years.
to use email to attract more
and transparencyto improve citizen participation.
Stadium in Game I of the 1953
games for Montreal in 1946 be-
to meet with businesses and
Series.
fore being sent to the Dodgers' Mobile, Alabama, team of the
m ake the casefor relocating to Crook County, a job largely performed today by Economic Development for Central Oregon. Wagner said that while EDCO plays an important role in recruitment, sending an elected official to participate in the process would send a strong message
his left-handed batting stance, was born on Dec. 13, 1924, in he batted .305 for the Dodgers' Youngstown, where his father, 1952 National League pen- an immigrant from Czechoslonant-winner. He was the first National Leaguer to hit apinchhit homer in the World Series,
But his career was most
The Montreal Gazette on the
vakia, worked in a steel mill.
He was signed by the Dodgers' organization in 1944 after at-
dy Amoros went to left. In the
to businesses.
Crook County s h ould explore luring other communities to dump their garbage at the county's larger-than-needed 1,600-acre landfill, an arrangement that
could create 100 jobs locally, Wagner said. He said he's concerned to
see the county's poverty rate inching up, even as unemployment has been declining in recent years. "If we're really opening up jobs and making jobs available for people, the poverty rate should be adjusting ac-
Summit
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.
"I think a big part of the people to countymeetings. He reason people move to Crook said he'd work with the heads County is our quality of life, of the county Democratic and but we need to constantly be Republican parties, as well expanding on that if we want as other groups, to provide peopleto move to our com- them with information about munity," he said. upcoming meetings for their Wagner said he wants members. to see more collaboration Thousands of people in among the county, local busi- Crook County have no access nesses and the school district to computers or the Internet, to expose young people to Wagner said, and the county employment opportunities needs to find a better way to locally. Too many recent high reach out to them. "It's gonna take some work, school orcollege graduates leave Crook County never to but unless you make an effort return, he said. and take on stuff like this, it's "I've found we have busi- not going to happen; it's just nesses in this county, wheth- going to be status quo," he er it be wood products or sald. Les Schwab, where they can Also on the ballot, Crook actually have a career in this County Sheriff Jim Hensley county," Wagner said. "We is running unopposed, and can get them into a job and Cheryl Seely is unopposed keep them here for a very in her campaign for Crook long time." County clerk. Crawford and W agner — Reporter: 541-383-0387, said they want to improve shammers@bendbulletin.com
rang loud and clear during Leach said he, Leriche and the summit.
tinue, said Leach
Continued from B1
Jefferson County Sheriff Jim
"We want this event to be
The executive director of Best Care, Rick Treleaven, said in a statement to Willamette Week that while he
Adkins had been planning the summit in partnership
without question an educational event," said Leriche as
bers also made donations so
he introduced Sabet. As a rebefore Measure 91 was intro- sult, he said, attendees could duced. In 2012, Measure 80, only ask "appropriate" queswhich would have permitted tions by writing them down recreational marijuana use, on note cards and passing failed to get enough votes in them to a moderator. Leriche that year's general election. declined to comment on Best Medical marijuana has been Care's withdrawal. legal in Oregon since votBrian Hodges and Anna ers approved Measure 67 in Unruh, su b stance-abuse 1998. counselors from Bend, exThe summit occurred as a pressed interest in the sumpro-legalization campaign, mit's educational aspect. Yes on 91, on Wednesday "I see a lot of b r eakdown launched a $2 million televi- in relationships, families, sion advertising campaign inappropriate spending of on broadcast and cable net- money" with her clients as a works in Oregon. The new result of marijuana use, said ad features a former law en- Unruh. "Teenagers are looking at forcement official and Canby resident, Pete Tutmark, say- marijuana as this harmless ing that Measure 91's regu- drug," Hodges said. "I don't latory power would free up know where I s tand comOregon law enforcement to pletely on it. I want people pursue "serious, violent and to be more aware of what they're using." unsolved crimes." In light of the political cli— Reporter: 541-383-0376,
that the summit might con-
mate, the educational refrain
thought it was "far-fetched" that the summit could influence the outcome of the
election, the accusation was enough to make the nonprofit, which receives public funding, wary of any possible political associations. The Oregon Liquor Control Commission, which was going to provide staff for the Madras event, also withdrew
Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Fax: 541-322-7254
the river." The outdoor foun-
connecting for a two-run drive tending a tryout camp. off Allie Reynolds at Yankee Shuba played in only 20
drives, like buckshot, out of
Robinson and their teammates when the 1955 Dodgers captured Brooklyn's only World Serieschampionship. George Thomas Shuba
Obituary policy
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com
working again. "It turned into a big, involved process," he said.
forethe French drain could be used. In response to a States-
Crawford said the county has made strides in that direcwe would have lost that, it tion during his time in office, would have been very, very t o continue his work w i t h switching some court meetunfortunate." the Central Oregon Trails ings from morning to night Crawford said the enter- Alliance to build a network to allow more working peoprise zone has also lured of walking and biking trails ple to attend. The county has Buck Stop, a truck bumper around Prineville. Volunteers also started putting all meetmanufacturer, that settled in are already working on build- ing materials on its website, Prineville this summer and ing three miles of trails at no not just meeting agendas, he is building up toward 20 to 25 cost to taxpayers, he said, and said, and uses email to send living-wage jobs. if local leaders stay dedicated such materials to anyone who Wagner said he'd be will- to the project, it's realistic to wants to be added to the list. ing to travel outside the area have a 30-mile trail network Wagner said he'd also like
Shuba would celebrate with
suffering from Alzheimer's 60th anniversary of that hand- bottom of the sixth, Amoros disease for several years. shake. "We'd spent 30 days made a sparkling catch on a Richard F. Thompson, 84: at spring training, and we all drive by Yogi Berra with two University of Southern Cali- knew that Jackie had been a men on base, and the Dodgers, fornia neuroscientist whose great athlete at UCLA. As far behind the pitching of Johnexperiments with rabbits led as I was concerned, he was a ny Podres, went on to beat the to breakthrough discoveries great ballplayer — our best. I Yankees, 2-0, for their Series on how memories are physi- had no problem going to the championship. cally stored in the brain. Died plate to shake his hand instead Shuba retired after that seaSept. 16 at his home in Nipo- of waiting for him to come by son with a career batting avermo, California, from conges- me inthe on-deck circle." age of .259 and 24 home runs. tive heart failure. Robinson had four hits in five He later worked as a postal — From wire reports plate appearances that afterclerk in Youngstown.
Phone: 541-617-7825
the city that "you can't spit in
was then the major leagues'
pointedly defined in Jersey lower-classification Southern City, New Jersey, by an image Association. He did not make at home plate at Roosevelt Sta- his debut with the Dodgers undium two years before Shuba til July 2, 1948. made his major league debut. Although he had a smooth On the afternoon of April hitting stroke, Shuba was ham18, 1946, Robinson became the pered in Brooklyn by a knee first black player in modern injury he had incurred with organized baseball when he Montreal, and he faced stiff made his debut with the Dodg- competition getting outfield ers'Montreal Royals farm team playing time. "Snider, Pafko, Furillo, they in their International League DEATHS opener against the Jersey City weren't humpties," he told auGiants. thor Roger Kahn in "The Boys ELSEWHERE In the third inning, Robinson of Summer," referring to Duke hit a three-run homer over the Snider, Andy Pafko and Carl Deathsof note from around left-field fence. When he com- Furillo. the world: pleted his trip around the bases, In 1955, when Shuba played Geraldine "Jerrie" Mock, 88: Shuba, the Royals' left fielder in his third Dodgers-Yankees First female pilot to fly solo and their next batter, shook his W orld Series,hebecame a footaround the world. Died Tues- hand. note figure in Brooklyn baseday at her home in Quincy, Congratulating a home run ball history. Florida, after being in failing hitter was a commonplace ritIn his only appearance in health for months. ual, but Shuba's welcome to that Series, Shuba grounded Shlomo Lahat,87: Former a smiling Robinson was cap- out pinch-hitting for second Tel Aviv mayor who presided tured in an AssociatedPress baseman Don Zimmer in the over the city's transformation photograph that has endured sixth inning of Game 7 at Yaninto a vibrant and open urban as aportrait of racial tolerance. kee Stadium. Jim Gilliam, the "I couldn't care less if Jackie Dodgerslef center. Died on Wednesday t fielder, replaced in a Tel Aviv hospital. Israeli was Technicolor," Shuba told Zimmer at second,and Sanmedia said Lahat had been
"fun" to get the old fountain
its support. On Aug. 22, Jefferson County D i s trict
A t t o rney
Steven Leriche announced that the summit would continue despite the change. The
Oregon State Sheriffs' Association, which has come out
against Measure 91, matched the funding loss, said Jim Leach, pastor at Living Hope Church. Community mem-
with Best Care since 2012,
cwithycombe@bendbulletirLcom
B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014
I
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'
I
TODAY
rI
TONIGHT
HIGH
LOW
FRIDAY ' ' 77'
69'
4Q'
'rfi
Partly sunny
I f' I
45'
Pleasant with a full day of sunshine
EAST:Partly sunny TEMPERATURE today. Mostly clear Seasid Yesterday Normal Record and chilly tonight. 66/51 64 68 88' i n 1921 Sunny tomorrow with Cannon 36' 36' 17'in 1950 a warmer afternoon. 64/62
PRECIPITATION
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" 0.60"in 1911 Record M onth to date (normal) D.o ooo(0.01oo) Year to date (normal ) 5.73 (7.18 ) Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 1 5" Today Fri. Sunrise 7:04 a.m. 7: 0 5 a.m. Sunset 6:45 p.m. 6: 4 3 p.m. Moonrise 3 :04 p.m. 3:47 p.m. Moonset 12: 14 a.m. 1: 2 0 a.m.
I
67/49
71 I
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Lincoln 66/54
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0/48
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7
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dieton 60/2
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1/46 • Mitch U
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66 34
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64/30
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70/38
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The highertheAccuWeniherxmmUVIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin profecgcn.0-2 Low, 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exireme.
POLLEN COUNT G rasses Absent ~
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70/
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•
80/
74/5
Wee d s Abs e nt
70/38
Klamath
• Ashl nd • FaNS
Bro ings
74/35
Yesterday Today Fridny
UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon
0'
9 : 2 8 p.m. 4 : 4 5 p.m. 8: 3 4 p.m. 7: 4 0 a.m.
Mcoermi
• Lakeview 74/33
70/40
Yesterday Today Friday
H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Pruc. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lu/W city 65/47/0.01 69/48/pc75/51/pc Ln Grande 63/39/0.00 66/34/pc 75/38/s Portland 62/29/0.0064/30/pc 71/33/s Ls Pine 64/26/0.00 71/40/s 77/44/s Prineviiie 80/58/Tr 7 4/52/s 73/56/pc M e dford 75/4 2/0.00 83/47/s 87/48/s Redmond 62/25/0.00 71/30/s 75/34/s Newport 63 /48/0.00 67/51/pc 71/53/pc Roseburg 70/43/0.00 72/43/pc 78/46/s N o rth Bend 7 0 / 48/0.00 70/51/s 74/51/pc Salem 65/34/0.00 74/35/s 79/40/s O n tario 67/44/0.00 70/40/pc 73/41/s Sisters 64/32/0.00 74/33/s 79/37/s Pe ndleton 69/ 4 2/0.00 66/43/pc75/47/s The Dalles
City Asfcrin Baker City
srcokings
sums
Yesterday Today Friday Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lu/W 67/4 9/0.0071/49/pc 78/52/s 62/ 3 6/0.0070/38/pc77/43/ s 67/ 32/0.0069/35/pc 79/38/ s 71 / 48/0.00 77/47/s 84/49/s 69/47/0.00 71/45/pc 77/48/s 68/28/0.00 70/36/pc 79/40/s 7 0 / 47/0.00 73/43/pc 78/45/ s
Eugene Klamnth Falls Lukeview Wunthur(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstorms,r-rsin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwi-ice,Tr-frsce,Yesterday data ascf 5 p.m. yesterday
NATIONAL WEATHER
Source: OregonAiiergyAssccintus 541-683-1577
~ fos ~os ~ o s WATER REPORT NATIONAL As of 7 n.m.yesterday Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES (for the C rane Prairie 294 8 6 53% YESTERDAY 24'yo 48 contiguousstates) Wickiup 48458 Crescent Lake 5 8 9 33 68% National high: 99 Ochoco Reservoir I 521 5 34% at Thermal, CA Prinevige 89292 60% National low: 21 River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. at Angel Fire, NM
Mostly sunnyand comfortable
~ f o s ~ 208 ~s os ~4 0s ~50s ~e os ~7 09 ~a os ~9 0s ~toos ~ffOs Que 42/4
9 I 65 0
Hi/Ln/Prsc. HiRo/W Abilene 95/72/0.00 90/56/s Akron 67/51/0.00 78/60/s Albany 64/58/0.02 70/49/pc Albuquerque 78/48/0.00 71/45/s Anchorage 48/32/0.00 48/34/s Agnnfs 86/64/0.00 85/69/s Atlantic City 69/63/0.06 70/60/pc Austin 93n1/0.00 95/63/I Baltimore 74/62/0.89 75/55/pc Billings 61/45/0.02 50/29/c Birmingham 88/60/0.00 88/70/pc Bismarck 64/53/0.00 64/30/pc Boise 63/42/0.00 67/44/pc Boston 57/56/0.88 62/51/r Bridgeport, CT 64/59/0.33 68/53/pc Buffalo 70/58/0.00 76/59/s Burlington, VT 60/53/0.00 72/50/pc Caribou, ME 58/45/0.00 62/37/pc Charleston, SC 86/63/0.00 86/65/s Charlotte 84/56/0.00 84/61/s Chattanooga 87/60/0.00 87/68/s Cheyenne 61/44/0.22 59/29/pc Chicago 70/49/0.00 77/59/I Cincinnati 78/50/0.00 84/66/pc Cleveland 68/53/0.00 77/60/s ColoradoSprings 69/45/0.00 63/34/pc Columbia, Mo 80/61 /0.99 79/53/I Columbia, SC 88/59/0.00 88/62/s Columbus,GA 84/62/0.00 87/69/s Columbus,OH 71/49/0.00 84/65/s Concord, NH 57/56/0.46 65/42/r Corpus Christi gon4/o'.oo 92/76/s Dallas 93/74/0.00 91/62/I Dayton 69/45/0.00 84/65/pc Denver 65/41 /0.14 65/33/pc Des Moines 72/59/1.31 73/45/r Detroit 67/52/0.00 76/64/pc Duluth 53/45/0.64 62/42/c El Paso 85/63/0.00 82/53/s Fairbanks 44/28/0.00 47/27/pc Fargo 72/58/Tr 66/36/pc Flagstaff 65/36/0.00 65/32/s Grand Rapids 65/52/0.00 74/63/I Green 6sy 63/48/0.00 71/56/c Greensboro 76/58/Tr 82/62/pc Harrisburg 73/60/0.76 75/54/pc Hsrffcrd, CT 63/59/0.34 66/48/pc Helena 59/44/0.02 46/29/c Honolulu 88/75/0.13 eens/s Houston 93n2/0.09 gon2/pc Huntsville 89/62/0.00 87/67/s Indianapolis 76/49/0.00 84/65/I Jackson, MS gono/o.oo eenon Jacksonville 82no/0.00 83/67/s
Hi/Lu/W 81/53/s 76/46/I 73/52/pc 75/49/s 47/33/pc 77/54/I 71/62/pc 85/53/pc 73/61/pc 60/45/s 82/49/I 49/25/pc 72/46/s 65/55/pc 69/58/pc 76/52/I 73/52/pc 63/43/pc 85/66/pc 77/57/I 78/50/1 60/38/s 62/39/sh 75/41/I 73/45/1 61/39/s 59/36/c 83/62/I 80/56/1 77/46/I 66/48/pc 88/64/I 82/52/s 73/40/I 62/41/s 53/35/c 73/44/1 49/34/r 81/55/s 43/29/sn 45/30/sh 71/33/s 64/44/I 60/39/r 79/56/1 73/61/c 70/53/pc 63/40/s
ronto
Amsterdam Athens
69/55/s 73/62/pc 61/48/sh 96/67/s 93/77/I 65/56/r 84/73/s 67/49/pc 67/46/c 63/50/pc 65/58/I 91/78/pc 86/68/s 60/41/s
•
FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver Mod~erate ~ ~ Redmond/Madras ~M od ~erate ~ Sisters ~l L ow ~ PrineviRe ~M o d~erate ~ La Pine/Gilchrist ~M od ~erate ~ Source: USDA Forest Service
WEST NEWS
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegss Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wi Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA
PHOENIX — T h i s y ear's orrain.
Meteorologists say Phoenix received more than 6 inch-
Will be remembered fOr unusually intense storms that brought months' worth of rain in just The National Weather Ser-
es of rain, making it the seventh-Wettest SeaSOn On reCOrd. In Nevada, Las Vegas had its 31st-wettest monsoon season
vice says some areas in Arizo-
with more than an inch of rain.
na, Nevada and New Mexico
In New Mexico, metropolitan
receivedmore rain in a day than in atypical season. The traditional monsoon
Albuquerque received more than 5 inches.
season runs from m id-June
the region are still awaiting re- gists say someareas in Arizona, Nevada andNewMexico received pairs from flood damage. more rain in one day than in a normal summer.
one day.
egne/pc 84/59/pc 78/48/I 68/39/I 83/50/1 85/67/I
66/42/I
88/69/pc 90/75/I 72/58/I 66/44/r 89/65/pc 88/76/I
78/49/I
91/65/s 87/65/pc 74/43/I 65/43/sh 57/33/c 88/65/I 77/48/pc 96/67/s 99/69/s 89/67/pc 75/45/I 73/54/I 57/39/sh
gon2/s
65/45/r 60/45/r 69/49/s 83/56/s 92/78/pc 68/59/c 75/58/s 72/46/s 68/59/pc 83/64/s 68/58/pc 77/57/I
een7/f
I
esnslrr
104/84/0.00 101/78/s 75/57/0.10 73/56/I Montreal 61/52/0.00 69/49/pc Moscow 45/39/0.03 47/33/pc Nairobi 82/59/0.05 81/59/I Nassau 90/79/0.33 egnrn New Delhi ggn7/o.oo 98/76/s Osaka 81/68/0.00 84/68/I Oslo 52/36/0.39 57/47/pc Ottawa 66/52/0.00 70/50/s Paris 75/52/0.00 73/54/pc Ric de Janeiro 86/73/0.00 75/66/pc Rome 77/61/0.21 75/59/I Santiago 79/45/0.00 75/48/pc Snu Paulo eeno/o.oo 64/54/c Snppcrc 61/45/0.00 60/53/pc Seoul 75/53/0.04 72/56/sh Shanghai 77/58/0.00 80/64/s Singapore 90/80/0.00 89/78/I Stockholm 55/28/0.00 56/48/sh Sydney 64/54/0.00 74/56/s Taipei esns/0'.05 85/74/pc Tei Aviv 83/66/0.00 83/70/s Tokyo 72/65/0.20 75/71/I Toronto 61/59/Tr 72/57/s Vancouver 59/50/0.00 61149/pc Vienna 64/54/0.62 65/51/pc Warsaw 59/54/0.07 59/41/pc
d I
I
I I
ry represents what happens A section of Scottsdale, Arizona, floods following heavy rains in
when state investment in education goes down and tu-
September. Monsoon season in the Southwest, which officially ended Sept. 30, is one for the record books this year. Meteorolo-
ition goes up. "My son just started Or-
Matt York/The Associated Press
'
I 6
6
I
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NOW JUST WAS
6
l
I'll
102/79/s 73/56/I 72/53/pc 48/36/c 81/59/I 89/77/sh
rhythm." Over the next two days, Merkley will travel to Cor-
BR 200 BACKPACK BLOWER
6
'
I
62/41/sh 48/34/sh
COStShaVe gOne up, u Merk-
I I
gonsn
I
Mecca Mexico City
debt. Merkley said her sto-
Some homes and roads in
to the end of September and
75/62/I 83/62/s
Continued from B1
is characterized by thunderstorms that stir up dust storms
Southwest monsoon season
66/50/Tr 84/66/0.00 83/56/0.00 77/61/3.17 89/66/0.00 82/64/0.00 84/57/0.00 70/43/0.00 89/68/0.00 93/78/Tr 62/50/0.01 57/50/0.59 88/57/0.00
ley said. "When folks say, 'Well, simply work on the "I was the first in my fam- side,' how can you work on ily to go to college," she said. the side with children? Quite "My parents never graduat- frankly, what has happened ed high schooL My parents for students is that some are proud and my kids are want to make money before pl'OUd. school so they don't have Jackson added that be- to have debt. But how can cause she is no longer full you save if you're making time, she isn't eligible for a around minimum wage? number of grants, but she's And then when you can't averse to taking on more go back you lose the college
Monsoonseasonends The Associated Press
Hi/Lu/Pruc. Hi/Lu/W HiRo/W 49/34/0.36 45/38/r 49/46/r 80/63/1.52 76/47/r 56/37/c
76/46/I 87/63/I 64/61/0.02 68/56/pc 71/60/pc 66/62/Tr 69/55/pc 71/58/pc 74/66/0.00 74/62/pc 75/68/pc OklahomaCity 94no/o.oo 83/51/I 70/43/s Omaha 75/62/0.96 66/46/r 55/36/c Orlando 83/74/0.61 87/71/pc 89/72/I Palm Spnngs 98/68/0.00 98/71/s 101/74/s Peoria 79/53/0.18 78/58/I 61/39/c Philadelphia 73/63/Tr 74/57/pc 74/63/pc Phoenix 91/67/0.00 91/65/s 95/68/s Pittsburgh 66/54/0.18 76/58/pc 76/47/I Portland, ME 60/55/0.01 63/44/r 61/50/pc Providence 60/56/0.27 63/48/r 66/52/pc Raleigh 79/56/0.00 82/62/pc 81/62/pc Rapid City 60/48/0.16 64/29/c 53/29/pc Reno 67/42/0.00 76/40/s 79/43/s Richmond 81/60/0.03 79/59/pc 80/65/pc Rochester, NY 69/61/Tr 77/56/pc 76/56/c Sacramento 88/63/0.00 88/55/s 92/56/s Sf. Louis 88/62/0.00 84/59/I 66/42/c Salt Lake City 56/48/0.12 65/45/s 68/45/s Ssn Antonio 94n4/o'.oo 96/68/I 87/58/pc Ssn Diego 75/67/0.00 85/64/s 91/66/s Ssn Francisco 86/60/0.00 87/62/s 87/61/s San Jose 85/55/0.00 87/56/s 89/55/s Santa rc 73/40/0.00 68/38/s 72/40/s Savannah 87/64/0.00 86/66/s 84/65/I Seattle 65/52/0.00 65/50/pc 71/54/pc Sioux Falls 76/62/0.30 64/38/c 49/29/c Spokane 62/36/0.00 62/40/pc 69/45/pc Springfield, Mo 87/64/0.00 81/52/I 61/38/pc Tampa 86/76/0.18 87/73/pc 87/73/I Tucson 90/62/0.00 90/60/s 96/65/s Tulsa 93/71/0.00 82/54/I 67/42/s Washington, DC 77/66/0.05 78/62/pc 77/65/c Wichita 91/69/0.00 74/48/r 66/41/s Yskimn 71/39/0.00 68/39/pc 73/43/s Yuma 95/71/0.00 94/67/s 98/70/s
Nierkley
By Terry Tang
Yesterday Today Friday
City
o
44/so
68/52/0.01 66/53/pc 57 84/59/0.00 78/64/s • 67/44 uffolo 64/52/0.00 65/51/sh d dv v ' e Auckland Baghdad 100/72/0.00 104/71/s ko CitY Che n 8/56yo oo o oj v Bangkok 91/77/0.15 gon74 Precipitation: 2.08" 59/ ilndelgg~ ~~ ~~ ~ seijing 55/48/0.39 73/54/s n * S r * /5 Coi m b Beirut 84n3/0.23 82/74/s at Waseca, MN nh nhcloco Omnho~ • V. kk ' 8 Berlin 68/57/0.03 67/51/pc 87/62 ington "~~ +++++itnfs v.v.v.'et Bogota 45/3 uo ae 78 64/46/0.07 65/46/I wwv.v. Lo Vegno sv/ns ~c v. Budapest 70/50/0.15 67/51/pc ss/ • xW+ Buenos Ai r es 63/50/Tr 62/56/pc uq • nohvli Chorlo Loo An Ioo 71/45 Csbc Ssn Lucss 95/78/0.00 93/75/s %>J%+ v.W+' 89/6 1 • 4/47 Cairo 84/72/0.00 85/68/s Phoon \ 0 nhom faly 4y y y v • 8 4 5 Anchorage • At 61/34/0.02 47/27/pc • 91/45 o Calgary 8 /51 48/34 n 0 85/49 Cnncun 88n7/0.06 88/77/pc gt' air inghn El Pn • nolia 61/54/0.12 61/53/pc ss 0 +. v. v, v,> Dublin 91/6 59/54/0.15 58/50/pc 45/38 . c < v. < c. < v.v. v. v.v. v,> Edinburgh Geneva 72/55/0.00 69/48/pc x x w v.w'e'ev. • rlnrtub4++++<<< Hsrnre i~ x d d d o • 90/65/0.00 82/58/pc • '8 Hong Kong 89/78/0.23 92/81/I Chihunhun %%%wv.w'e'e v 0 Istanbul 75/53/0.00 72/60/pc 84/50 y y y y y y y y y v. v. v. v. v. v. y y e I Viism>~ y y y y y v Jerusalem 77/62/0.00 73/58/s vo/2s, vsn2 Johannesburg 73/48/0.00 71/49/s Lima 65/58/0.00 69/58/pc Lisbon 84/64/0.00 83/67/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 68/57/0.02 68/54/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 79/57/0.00 77/58/I Manila 90/77/0.51 87/77/I
Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 219 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 780 Deschutes R.below Bend 102 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1390 Little Deschutes near LaPine 139 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 1 7 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 3 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 135 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 208 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 4
Nice with plenty of sun
o
• Pa lina 68/42 7 40 Floren e • EUgeile n Se d Brothers 6 40 Valen 68/52 Su iVern 69/4O • 38 71I41 Nyssa u 70/ 7 • I.a pjne Ham on MOONPHASES C e Grove Oakridge Full La s t New Firs t • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES co 71 /37 74/50 /50 71 1 • Fort Rock Riley 71/30 YESTERDAY l Cresce t • 72/37 69/32 72/39 High: 80' Bandon Roseburg • Ch ristmas alley Oct 8 Oct 15 O c t 23 O c t 30 at Brookings Jordan V gey 70/52 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 77/47 Low: 25' 66/43 Marsh Lake 70/40 THE PLANETS '73/3'7 at Burns Po 0 73/36 Gra • Burns Jun tion T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 70/ a 70/41 Mercury 9:13 a.m. 7 : 1 5 p.m. Chiloquin Medfo d '74/39 Gold ach Rome Venus 6:33 a.m. 6 : 3 8 p.m.
Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
78'
0
77
Yesterday Today Friday
•
•
70/38
42
2
73/43 Gove nt • upi Cam 70 63/
CamPShmanRed
lington 71/39
• W co
•
2/44
OFVUIS 72/41
66/54
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71 I4
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Portland
Tdlamo •
CENTRAL: Warmer with plenty of sunshine today.Clear tonight. Warmwith plenty of sunshine tomorrow. WEST:Clouds giving way to somesunshine today; seasonable. Partly cloudy tonight. Sunny tomorrow.
SUN ANDMOON
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. Umatiaa Hood 71I41 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
ria
MONDAY
TRAVEL WEATHER
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
SUNDAY
44'
r Ti
Nice with plenty of sunshine
Clear
ALMANAC
SATURDAY ' ' 78'
S
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 C o l lege football, C3 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C4 Basketball, C3 Spo rts media, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP FOOTBALLTHIS WEEK
PREP
MLB COMMENTARY
CROSS-COUNTRY Oxford Classic Friday in Bend The Oxford Classic, considered to beone of the premier annual high school cross-country meets in the Northwest, is scheduled for Friday afternoon at DrakePark in Bend. Nine Central Oregon high schools, including defending Class 5Aboys and girls state champion Summit and 2013boys and girls state runner-up Mountain View, arepart of an expected field of 33 schools as hundreds of cross-country runners will converge in downtown Bendfor the 23rd annual event. Hosted by BendHigh and known for its scenic course and competitive field, the Oxford Classic will feature 5,000-meter varsity and junior varsity races in Invitational and Elite divisions. The JV Invitational races are slated for1 p.m., and the varsity Invitational races will begin at 2 p.m. The first JV Elite race is scheduled for 3:20 p.m., and thevarsity Elite field will start at 4:30 p.m. Spectators are welcome. For more information, visit www. athletic.net or www.the-
oxfordclassic.com, or contact Lisa Nye atlisa. nye@bend.k12.or.us.
DAHLBERG
rea (© ~tr '
in nee OB IX pening night of the baseball playoffs provided some great theater, assuming you could stay awake long enough to watch.
O
That the 12th-inning win
by Kansas City over Oakland took nearly five hours to play highlights a problem that Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Sophomore quarterback Bunker Parrish and the Redmond Panthers are off to e 4-0 start and one of the highest-scoring teams in the state, regardless of classification. But Redmond coach Nathan Stanley has primed his team for this moment
should be celebrated just as
• After a tough 2013 campaign, the Panthers haverolled to an early 4-0 start
much as the first postseason win by the Royals in 29 years. But as Bud Selig prepares to take a victory lap on behalf
REDMOND-
of the owners he represent-
t is an expression Nathan Stanley shares often with his players. Derek Brown can
ed so well, there are issues he has not handled nearly as well. While the game is awash in cash that is making both owners and players
t "He does," the Redmond High junior runconfirmthat.
ning back says. "A lot."
Bend golfer helps Oregon climd FRENCH LICK, Ind.
— Led by a1-under-par 71 by Bendgolfer Justin Kadin, the Oregon team climbed into15th place Wednesday inthe second round of the USGA Men's StateTeam Championship. Kadin, a 25-year-old who caddies atTetherow Golf Club, carded two birdies against one bogey to lead the threeman Oregon team to a 1-under 143 and to 6 overforthe tournament at the Pete DyeCourse at French Lick Resort. Albany's HansReimers shot an even-par 72 to contribute to the Oregon team. A team's two lowest individual scores each daymake uptheteam's total. Bend's Jesse Heinly, who shot the low round for Oregon on Tuesday, shot a 6-over 78 for the second round. Texas leads the tournament at 5 under. The TeamChampionship field is made upof three-man teams from all 50 states, the District
of Columbia andPuerto Rico. The final round is scheduled for today. — Bulletin staff report
in a sport plagued by steroids
and has instilled a simple expression into each player's mind: Enjoy the moment, but ignore the noise.
— Bulletin staff report
GOLF
baseball still has to address. Still, the return to small ball
But the message from the Panthers' third-
richer than ever, it has be-
year coach is simple. More important, it is clear: Enjoy the moment, but ignore the
come increasingly margin-
noise.
as attendance sags in some cities and television ratings
alized as a national sport
"Enjoy that we're winning," Brown explains, "but don't let it get in front of you."
continue to sink. I
It is a message that the Panthers have taken to heart. Yet it is difficult to ignore what
Incoming commissioner Rob Manfred has a chance to
/
they have done so far this season, what they have accomplished a year after winning just once in nine tries. Because in 2014, a year af- Members of the Redmond football team run drills during practice Tuesday ter posting their worst record in four years, afternoon. Redmond is showing flashes of 2012 — the
season it advanced to the state semifinals for only the second time in school history. See Redmond /C3
do something about that. As
the playoffs begin, here are a few suggestions to help the grand old game:
Hire Vinny
Inside
Clayton Kershaw may get the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series all by himself, but how about giving us
• A preview of all Central Oregon football games on Friday night,C4
a treat once they get there?
Put Vin Scully in the broadcast booth for Game 1 and let of the rest of the nation
MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR
DriverStandinls
Drivers fearnext round of Chase By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Drivers have been
although they are all even as they head into Kansas, the margin of error will be small. Drivers willbe desperate to run well at Kansas
fretting about the second round of NASCAR's this week and Charlotte next week so that the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship for crapshoot that is Talladega will not decide weeks. their championship fate. "7wo of the three races are as much of a The three-race stretch that begins Sunday at Kansas Speedway ends on Oct. 19 at Talladewild card as you can get in NASCAR racing ga Superspeedway, where fourdriverswillbe these days," Keselowski said Wednesday booted from the field. during a fan event for the 12 Chase drivers at "I think that bracket will break some
NASCAR's Hall of Fame. "One of the great
hearts, "BradKeselowski saidthreedaysbeteams that has a shot at winning this will probfore winning the Chase opener at Chicagoland ably be left at home after this series of events, Speedway last month. because you don't control your destiny as He has not changed his mind. The field much as you do the other races of the season." has been trimmed from 16 to 12 drivers, and SeeNASCAR/C4
Through Sunday 1. Brad Keselowski 3,000 2. Jeff Gordon 3 , 0 00 3. Joey Logano 3,000 4.Jimmie Johnson 3,000 5. Kevin Harvick 3,000 6. Matt Kenseth 3,000 7. Denny Hamlin 3,000 8 . Kyle Busch 3 , 0 00 9. Ryan Newman 3,000 10. Dale Earnhardt 3,000 11. Carl Edwards 3,000 12. Kasey Kahne 3,000 13. AJ Allmendinger 2,077 1 4. Kurt Busch
2,0 7 3
1 5. Greg Biffle 2 , 0 72 16. Aric Almirola 2,061
find out why the 86-year-old announcer is so revered in Southern California. Let
Scully work alone as always and spin stories, like the time in 1956 he called Don Lars-
en's perfect game at Yankee Stadium on NBC and was afraid to say much more than
"Strike three" because he had been told the new medium — TV — would tell the story.
Nothing to lose, because World Series ratings have been sinking for decades now.
SeeDahlberg/C4
Inside • Giants shut out Pirates to advance past NLwild card, C4
BASKETBALL Arizona
quarterback Anu Solomon.
)/iI'
Rick Scuteri/The Associated Press
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Arizona likely to key in on Oregon QB Mariota
Kansas State guard
By Anne M. Peterson
come out on fire in all cylinders.
Leticia Romero.
The Associated Press
But it's a 60-minute game, and sometimes longer, so we need
Players balance
hoops, class
Some U.S. basketball stars have to concentrate on school while playing at the women's world championship in Turkey,C3
EUGENE — Last season, Arizona went after Oregon quarterback
to try and keep the pressure
Marcus Mariota early and kept on on him and contain him hassling him. the entire time." Expect the same when the Wildcats visit the No. 2 Ducks tonight at Autzen Stadium.
The 42-16 rout l a st
November in
T ucson
was Arizona's first over a top-five t eam s i n ce
"Last year, getting to Mariota early on in the game probably threw him off knocking off No. 2 Oregon a little bit," Arizona senior safety Jared Tevis said. "It always helps when we
in2007.
SeeOregon/C3
Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota. Steve Dykes/The Associated Press
C2 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY GOLF
EuropeanTour, Alfred Dunhill Links Championship Golf, Big Break Invitational LPGA Tour, ReignvvoodClassic SOCCER Europa League, Krasnodar (Russia) vs. Everton (England) Europa League, Wolfsburg (Germany) vs. Lille (France) Europa League, Tottenham (England) vs. Besiktas (Turkey) Europa League, Celtic (Scotland) vs. DinamoZagreb (Croatia) Women's college, Kentucky at Missouri MLS, Chicago at Philadelphia Men's college, California at Washington
Time
TV / Radio
5 a.m. noon 8 p.m.
Golf Golf Golf
9 a.m.
FS1
9:50 a.m.
FS2
noon
FS1
noon 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
FS2
SEC ESP N2 Pac - 12
BASEBALL
MLB playoffs, Detroit at Baltimore
2 :30 p.m.
MLB playoffs, KansasCity at L.A. Angels
KICE-AM 940 6 p.m. TBS, KICE-AM 940
TB S ,
FOOTBALL
College, Central Florida at Houston College, FAUat FIU College, AlabamaSt. at Alcorn State NFL, Minnesota at GreenBay College, Arizona atOregon
4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. Root 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5:25 p.m. CBS, NFL 7:30 p.m. ESPN, KBND 1110-AM
TENNIS
China Open,JapanOpen
ON DECK Today Boyssoccer:Summit at Bend, 3 p.m.; Ridgeviewat MountainView,3 p.mcRedmond at South Albany, 4 p.m.;Sutherlin atSisters, 3p.m.; Madrasat Gladstone,6:30 p.m.;Estacada at CrookCounty, 4:30 p.m.;Creswell at LaPine, 4:30p.m.; Central Christianat HorizonChristian (HoodRiver), 4p.m. Girls soccer: Ridgeviewat MountainView,4:30p.m.; Summiatt Bend,4 30pm.;Sutherlin atSisters,4 30 p.m.;GladstoneatMadras, 4 p,mcCrookCounty at Estacada,6p.mcGlideatLaPine,3 prm. Volleyball:MountainViewat Summ it, 6:30 p.m.; Bend atRedm ond, 6:30 p.mcSisters at Sweet Home, 6;45p.m.;CrookCountyatMadras,6p.m.; PleasantHil at LaPine, 6p.m.; Culver at Stanfield, 4p.m. Boys waterpolo:Summit atMountain View
Ten n is
Saturday Boys soccer:CulveratRiverside,1 p.m. Volleyball:Bendat Mt. Hood Invitational, TBD; Mountain View at WestviewTournament, TBD; CrookCountyat Barlow Tournament, TBD;Madras at JunctionCityTournament, 9a.m.;LaPineat Amity Tournam ent, TBD;Culverat Country Christian CougarClassic, TBD ; HosannaChristian at Central Christian,2:30p.m.; Prospectat Gilchrist, noon; ButteFallsatTrinity Lutheran,2:30p.mr Cross-country: Madrasat Harrier Classic inAlbany,
10 p.m.
N B CSN
FRIDAY TENNIS
China Open,quarterfinals 1:30 a.m. T ennis China Open,JapanOpen, semifinals 7 p.m. Ten n is GOLF EuropeanTour, Alfred Dunhill Championship 5 a.m. Golf Golf, Big Break Invitational Reynolds Plantationnoon Golf LPGA Tour ,Reignwood LPGA Classic 8 p.m. Golf AUTO RACiNG
NASCAR,Nationwide, Kansas 9 a.m. FS1 NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Kansas, practice 10 a . m. FS1 NASCAR,Nationwide Series, Kansas, practice 1 p.m. ESPN2 NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Kansas, qualifying 2: 3 0 p.m. ESPN2 ARCA Series, Kansas 5:30 p.m. FS2 Formula One,Japanese Grand Prix, qualifying 10 p.m. NBCSN BASEBALL MLB Playoffs, Detroit at Baltimore
noon
FS1, KICE-AM 940
MLB Playoffs, St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers
3 :30 p.m.
FS1 ,
KICE-AM 940
MLB Playoffs, KansasCity at L.A. Angels
6 :30 p.m.
TB S ,
KICE-AM 940 FIELD ROCKEY
College, Ohio State at Maryland SOCCER Women's college, Colorado at Southern Cal Women's college, OregonState atArizona MLS, Sporting KansasCity at D.C.United Women's college, Utah atUCLA Women's college, Washington at Stanford
12:30 p.m. Big 10 3 p.m. 3 p.m. 5 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m.
Pac-12 Pac-12(OR) NBCSN
Pac-12 Pac-12(OR)
FOOTBALL
College, Louisville at Syracuse 4 p.m. ESPN ESP N2 High school, Norcross at North Gwinnett (Ga.) 4 p.m. Highschool,Redmond atBend High 6:30 p.m. Playactionsportsmedia.com High school, Mountain View atSummit 7 p.m. COT V CFL, Calgary at Saskatchewan 7 p.m. ESP N2 High School, Glacier Peak atBellevue 7 p.m. Root College, Utah State at BYU 7 :15 p.m. E S PN VOLLEYBALL
Women's college, Florida at LSU Women's college, PennState at Nebraska Women's college, USC at Washington State
4 p.m 5 p.m 6 p.m
SEC Big10 Pac-12
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible forlate changesmadebyTVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL LOBron welcomed dack dy Cavs fans —LeBronJamesis back on the floor where hetook his first steps in the NBA. Four years after leaving for Miami, James,again wearing the familiar No. 23 wine-and-gold Cavaliers uniform, performed for Cleveland fans asthe team held a scrimmagebefore a nearly filled Quicken Loans Arena. After being introduced, Jameswas welcomed with a deafening roar by Cavs fans, whogot their first look at a team expected to bring the city its first pro sports championship since 1964.
Chamderlain set to appear on postage stamp —wlit Chamberlain has beencut down to size. Wilt TheStilt is now Wilt The Stamp. TheHall of Famerand the only NBAplayer to score 100 points in a game isset to appear on acommemorative U.S. postage stamp. The U.S. Postal Service andthe Philadelphia 76ers, with cooperation from the NBA,will formally dedicate the Wilt Chamberlain Forever stamps in a halftime ceremony at aDec. 5gameagainst Oklahoma City.
SOCCER Players file lawsuit in Canadaover World Ciipturf —A group of elite players has filed a lawsuit in Canadachallenging plans to play the 2015Women's World Cup onartificial turf. The players, led by U.S.women's national team forward Abby Wambach, filed Wednesday in the humanrights tribunal of Ontario, attorney Hampton Dellinger told TheAssociated Press. The womenclaim that playing the sport's premier tournament on fakegrass amounts to gender discrimination under Canadian law.Their male counterparts havealways played theWorld Cup onnatural grass surfaces, and will for the foreseeable future. Theplayers say they believe there is agreater risk of injury on turf and that anartificial surface impacts both how the game is playedand howthe ball behaves. Amongthe players joining Wambach areU.S. teammate Alex Morgan, Germany's NadineAngerer, Brazil's Fabiana DaSilva Simoesand Spain's Veronica Boquete. — From wire reports
RoundsUnderPar
www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers
1, StacyLewis,.802. 2, MichelleWie,.759.3, SuzannPettersen,.721.4, SoYeon Ryu, .714. 5, Inbee Park,.676. 6,LydiaKo,.641.7, KarrieWebb,.607.8, AzaharaMunoz, .600. 9, ChellaChoi, .598.10,Line Vedel,.583.
le
HCMToL)5E. R IV/(~@T)IE
Champions Tour STATISTICS Through Sept. 28 CharlesSchwabCup 1, BernhardLanger, 3,624Points. 2, Colin Montgomerie,2,991. 3, JayHaas, 1,639. 4, KennyPerry, 1,495. 5,JeffSluman,1,344. 6, FredCouples,1,119. 7, Gene Sauers, 1,004. 8, Scott Dunlap,971.9, Kirk Triplett,958.10,TomPernice Jr., 908. ScoringAverage(Actual) 1, BernhardLanger, 67.98. 2, JayHaas, 68.63. 3, Colin Montgom erie, 69r11.4, KennyPerry, 69.44.5, Joe Durant,69.50.6, KirkTriplett, 69.58.7, BartBryant, 69.70.8,MarkO'Meara, 69.84. 9, Jeff Sluman, 69.85.10,DavidFrost, 69.89. OwvmgOlstance 1, JohnRiegger,296.4.2, DougGarwood,289.7. 3, KennyPerry,288.3. 4, WesShort, Jr., 285.1.5, MarcoDawson,284.3.6,Duff yWaldorf,283.9.7,Sandy Lyle,2822.8,BillyAndrade,2820. 9,TomPerniceJr., 281.9.10,BernhardLanger, 281.8. GreensinRegulation Percentage 1, BernhardLanger,79.40%. 2, TomLehman, 77.66%. 3, KennyPerry, 76.35%. 4, Jay Haas, 76.22%.5,JeffMaggert,75.85%.6,Fred Funk, 75.73%. 7, Scott Dunlap,75.21%.8, StevePate, 75.16%. 9,MarcoDawson,74.64%.10,Jeff Sluman, 74.26'yo.
"So let's...Yessss, Dewey. One more question and then,seriously,we need to move on."
BASEBALL
MOTOR SPORTS
Formula One,Japanese Grand Prix, practice
In the Bleachers 0 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck an
Friday Football:Bendat Redmond, 7 p.m.; Mountain View at Summit7, p.m.;TheDalles atRidgeview,7p.m.; Molalla atCrookCounty, 7p.m.; Sistersat Cottage Grove,7p.mcMadrasat Gladstone, 7p.m.;Creswell at La Pine,7p.m.;CulveratIrrigon, 7p.m.;Gilchrist at Chiloquin7, p.m. Volleyball:CrookCounty at Gladstone, 5:15p.m.; NorthLakeat Central Christian,6 p.m.;Gilchrist at Paisley,4:30 p.m. Crosscountry: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit, CrookCounty, Sisters, LaPine, CulveratOxford Classic inBend,1 p.m.
12:40p.m.
7 p.m.
BirdieAverage 1, StacyLewis,4.30. 2, SoYeon Ryu,4.06. 3, SuzannPettersen,4.03. 4, InheePark, 3.93. 5, Michelle Wie,3. 88.6,ShanshanFeng,3.80.7,AnnaNordqvist, 3.80. 8, Mirim Lee,3.75. 9, Cristie Kerr, 3.74. 10, LydiaKo,3.65.
IN THE BLEACHERS
MLB Playoffs MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL All TimesPDT
FOOTBALL
WILD CARD Tuesday,Sept.30:Kansas City 9, Oakland8, 12 innings Wednesday, Oct.1: SanFrancisco 8,Pittsburgh0 DIVISIONSERIES
NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPDT
(Best-of-6) AmericanLeague AU ALgamestelevisedbyTBS Baltimorevs.Detroit Today,Oct. 2: Detroit (Scherzer18-5)at Baltimore (Tillman13-6),2:37p.m. Friday,Oct.3: Detroit (Verlander15-12)at Baltimore (Chen16-6), 9:07a.m. Sunday, Oct. 5: Baltimore(Gonzalez10-9) at Detroit (Price15-12),12:45p.m. x-Monday,Oct. 6: Baltimoreat Detroit (Porcello1513), TBD x-Wednesday, Oct. 8: Detroit atBaltimore,TBD LosAngelesvs.KansasCity Today,Oct.2: KansasCity(Vargas11-10) atLosAngeles (Wea ver18-9), 6:07p.m. Friday,Oct.3: KansasCity (Ventura14-10) at LosAngeles(Shoemaker16-4), 6:37p.m. Sunday,Oct. 5: LosAngeles(Wilson13-10) at Kansas City (Shields14-8), 437pm. x-Monday ,Oct.6:LosAngelesatKansasCity,TBD x-Wednes day,Oct. 8;KansasCity atLosAngeles,TBD NationalLeague Washing tonvs.SanFrancisco Friday,Oct.3: SanFrancisco(Peavy7-13)atWashington (Strashurg14-11) (FS1),12:07 p.m. Saturday,Oct.4: SanFranciscoatWashington (FS1), 2:37 p.m.
Monday,Oct. 6: Washington atSanFrancisco (FS1 or MLBN),TBD x-Tuesday, Oct. 7: Washington atSanFrancisco (FS1), TBD x-Thursday,Oct. 9: SanFrancisco at Washington (FS1),TBD LosAngelesvs. St. Louis Friday,Oct.3: St. Louis(Wainwright 20-9) at LosAngeles(Kersha w21-3) (FS1), 3:37p.m. Saturday,Oct. 4;St. Louis(Lynn15-10)at LosAngeles (MLBN), 6:37p.m. Monday,Oct.6: LosAngelesat St.Louis (Lackey3-3) (FS1 or MLBN), TBD x-Tuesday, Oct. 7: LosAngelesat St.Louis(Miler109) (FS1),TBD x-ThursdayOct. 9: St.Louis at LosAngeles (FS1), TBD
Wednesday'sGame
NFL AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
w L T pm PF PA 2 2 2 1
Houston Indianapolis
Tennesse e Jacksonvile
2 2 2 3
0 0 0 0
South W L T 3 2
1 2 3 4
PctPF PA
0 . 7 5087 67 0 . 500 136 95 0 .250 60 110 0 . 00058 152
0 North W L T 3 0 0 3 1 0 2 2 0 1 2 0
Wesl
SanDiego Denver KansasCity Oakland
. 50079 75 . 5 0096 97 . 50080 90 . 25079 96
PctPF PA 1.000 80 33 . 750 103 60 . 50097 99 . 33374 77
W L T P ctPF PA 3 1 0 . 750 102 63 2 1 0 . 6 6775 67 2 2 0 . 500 102 79 0 4 0 . 0 0051 103 NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Philadelphia Dallas N.Y.Giants Washington Atlanta
Carolina NewOrleans TampaBay
Arizona Seattle SanFrancisco St. Louis
East W L T P clPF PA 3 1 0 . 750 122 104 3 2 1
1 0 . 7 50 115 86 2 0 . 500 103 91 3 0 . 25095 109
South W L T 2 2 0 2 2 0 1 3 0 1 3 0 North W L T 3 1 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 West W L T 3 0 0
PctPF PA . 500 131 113 . 50073 96 . 25095 110 . 25072 119 P d PF PA . 75085 62 . 50092 96 . 50091 84 . 50092 100
PctPF PA 1.000 66 45 2 1 0 . 6 6783 66 2 2 0 . 50088 89 1 2 0 . 33356 85
Giants 8, Pirates0
Today'sGame Minnes otaatGreenBay,5:25p.m. SundayisGames San Francisco P i ttsburgh Cleve landatTennessee,10a.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi T ampa B a y a t N e w Orleans,10a.m. GBlanccf 4 1 0 0 JHrrsn3h 4 0 2 0 HoustonatDalas, 10a.m. Panik2h 5 0 3 0 Mercerss 4 0 0 0 ChicagoatCarolina,10 a.m. Poseyc 5 1 2 1 AMcctcf 3 0 0 0 St. Louisat Philadelphia, 10a.m. Sandovl3h 4 2 2 0 RMartnc 4 0 1 0 AtlantaatN.Y.Giants, 10a.m. Arias3b 0 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 0 1 0 Buffalo atDetroit, 10 a.m. Pencerf 4 2 1 0 NWalkr2h 4 0 0 0 Belt1h 3 1 2 3 GSnchz1h 3 0 0 0 BaltimoreatIndianapolis,10 a.m. PittsburghatJacksonvile,10 a.m. B crwfrss 5 1 1 4 Sniderrf 2 0 0 0 Arizonaat Denver,1:05 prm. Ishi kawlf 2 0 0 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 KansasCityat San Francisco,1:25 p.m. J.Perezpr-lf 1 0 0 0 LFrmsp 0 0 0 0 NrY,Jetsat SanDiego,1:25 p.m. Bmgrnp 4 0 0 0 Hldzkmp 0 0 0 0 CincinnatiatNewEngland,5:30p.m. Morelph 1 0 0 0 Open:Miami,Oakland Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Monday'sGame Volquezp 1 0 0 0 SeattleatWashington, 5:30 p.m. JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Tahatarf 2 0 0 0 Inlurvreport Totals 37 8 11 8 Totals 3 2 0 4 0 MINNESOTA VIKI NGS at GREEN BAY San Francisco 000 401 210 — 8 PACKERS — VI K INGS: OUT; LBChadGreenway Pittsburgh B O O BOO ggg — 0 hand, rih), TEKyle Rudol ph(abdomen, groin). E—Arias(1), B.crawford(1). DP —Pittsburgh1. UESTION ABLE: QBTeddy Bridgewater (ankle). ) LOB —San Francisco 8, Pittsburgh6. HR —B.craw- PROBA BLE: RBJerome Felton (knee), LB Miford (1). chael Mauti (foot), RBJerick McKinnon(ankle), IP H R E R BBSO CB CaptainMunnerlyn(illness), CBJosh RobinSan Francisco son (hamstring), WRRodneySmith (hamstring), BumgarnerW,1-0 9 4 0 0 1 10 LB BrandonWatts (knee).PACKE RS: OUT: WR PiNsburgh Jarrett Boykin (groin). DOUB TFUL: LBSamBarVolquezL,0-1 5 5 5 5 3 3 rington (hamstring), DT JoshBoyd(knee). PROBJuWilson 13 1 0 0 ABLE: LBBradJones (quadriceps), G TJ. Lang J.Hughes 1 3 2 2 1 1 (not injury related), LB Clay Mathews (groin), LB LaFromhois e 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Mike Neal(hip). Holdzkom 1 2 1 1 1 1 Melancon 1 0 0 0 0 College Volquezpitchedto1 hatter inthe6th. WP — Ju.Wilson. Pac-12 T—3:12.A—40,629 (38,362). North Oivision Conf Overa II
TENNIS Professional ChinaOpen Wednesday,at TheNational TennisCenter Beijing Purse:Men,SS.76million (WTBOO); Women, $6.48 million(Premier) Surface:Hard-Outdoor Singles Men SecondRound NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def.VasekPospisil, Canada, 6-3,7-5. John Isner (8), UnitedStates, def.TommyRohredo, Spain,3-6,7-5,7-6(4). Women SecondRound PetraKvitova(3), CzechRepublic, def. PengShuai, China,6-4,6-2. Samantha Stosur,Australia, def. Caroline Wozniacki (6),Denmark,6-4, 7-6(9). Alize Cornet,France,def. LaurenDavis, United States,6-2,6-1. Third Round MariaSharapova(4), Russia, def.Carla SuarezNavarro,Spain,6-1, 7-6(3). ATPWorldTourJapanOpen Wednesday, atAriakeColosseum Tokyo Purse:S1.37million (WTBOO) Surface:Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Kei Nishikori (4),Japan,def. IvanDodig, Croatia, 6-3,6-4. SecondRound BenjaminBecker,Germany,def.TatsumaIto, Japan, 6-3,6-3.
SteveJohnson,UnitedStates, def. MarcelGranollers, Spain4-6, , 6-3, 6-4. JackSock,UnitedStates, def.AndreyGoluhev, Kazakhstan,6-3,1-6,7-5. Gilles Simon,France,def. Giles Muller,Luxembourg,4-6,7-6(1), 6-3.
W L W Oregon 1 0 4 California 1 1 3 Stanford 1 1 3 WashingtonSt. 1 1 2 Washington 0 1 4 OregonSt. 0 1 3 SouthDivision SouthernCal 2 0 3 Arizona 1 0 4 UCLA 1 0 4 Arizona St. 1 1 3 utah 0 1 3 0 2 2 Colorado Today'sGame Arizona atOregon,7:30 p.m. Saturday'sGames StanfordatNotre Dame,12:30 p.m. OregonSt.atColorado,1 p.m. ArizonaSt.at SouthernCal,4;30 p.m. CaliforniaatWashington St., 7:30p.m. utah atUCLA, 7:30p.m.
L PF PA 0 194 85 1 190 143 1 110 26 3 169 151 1 178 121 1 105 86 1 131 70 0 168 109 0 152 99 1 168 123 1 168 79 3 159 178
merica's Line Hometeamincaps Open Current 0/U Underdog NFL Today 10 B t / t 45tyt PACKE RS Vikings Sunday 3 451/2 PANTHE RS 2t/t Bears TITANS 2 2 441/2 Browns 48t/t EAGLE S 7 7 Rams 31/2 4 50tyt GIANTS Falcons 1 0t/t 1 0 48t/t SAINTS Bucs COWB OYS 4 6 46t/t Texans 44I/2 LIONS 7 7 Bills 3 '/I 3 ' / t 48tyt COLTS Ravens Steelers BVt BV 47 JAGUAR S 48t/t BRONC OS 8 7 Cards 49ERS IP7t 6t /t 44I/2 Chiefs CHARG ERS 7 6/tt 43tyt Jets Bengals PK 1 46 PATRIO TS Monday Seahawks 7 7 45'/t REDSKINS Favorite
PuttingAverage
1, DavidFrost,1.707.2, ScottHoch,1.710. 3, BernhardLanger,1713.4, JayHaas,1730. 5, DougGar-
wood,1.733.6(tie), MarkMcNulty andMarkO'Meara , 1.735. 8, MarkMouland,1.736. 9, MichaelAllen, 1.737.10,RoccoMediate,1.740. BirdieAverage 1, BernhardLanger, 5.23. 2, Colin Montgomerie, 4.36. 3, DougGarwood, 4.35. 4, KennyPerry, 4.30. 5 (tie), JayHaasand Rocco Mediate, 4.28. 7, Mark College O'Meara,4.21.8, David Frost, 4.20.9, SteveElkington, Today t/t 6t/z Fla Atlantic 9 47 F LA INT'L4.19. 10,KirkTriplett, 4.17. All-Around Ranking HOUSTON 2 3 51 C Florida Ar i zona 1, JayHa as, 104.2,Kenny Perry, 117.3, Bernhard OREGON 23t/t 23 79t/t Langer,127.4, JoeDurant, 146.5, DougGarwood, Friday 21/2 46t/t SYRACUSE 154. 6,BartBryant,158. 7, KirkTriplett,160. 8(tie), Louisville 4 3 57t/t San DiegoSt MarcoDawson andWe s Short, Jr., 173. 10, Jeff FRESNO ST NL BYU 17 20 51t/t Ut a h St Sluman,183. Saturday GEORGIA 32 331/2 54t/t Vanderbilt SOCCER FLORIDA ST 38 39 54t/t Wake Forest Miami-Fla -1 1 56t/t GA TECH INDIANA 13t/t
ILLINOIS 11 Ohio St 7 ECARO LINA 36Yt CINCINNATI 6 VIRGINIA 4 C MICHIGAN 3 W VIRGINIA 24 Toledo 9t/t M arshall 1 8 Va Tech PK NO ILLINOIS 23 Wisconsin 9t/t MIAMI-OHIO 4 S Alabama St/t S Carolina 7r/t A RMY 3 BOWLGREE N 5tyt A KRON 2 1 KANSAS ST 12 RICE
13t/t
10 7
41t/t
5 6 4 26 6 18
tt/t
24 8 3t7t
5 5Vt 2t/z 51/2
23 12 IP7t
5t/t
COLORADOST14'/t 14t/t UL-LAFA YETTE 17 16t/t 2t/t Stanford 1 USC 10 12 AUBURN Bt/t 8 N avy 4t/t 4Vt Oklahoma 5 5 TENNE SSEE PK 21/2 Bavlor 13t/t 16 OKLAHOM AST 17 17 Alabama 5 6 MISS ST 1 2 UCLA 12t/t 13 LATECH 13 12 MIDTENNST16'/t 1Plt Oreqon St 7 7 WASH ST 3 TEXAS ST 14
t/t t/t
RUTGERS 3
UT-SANTONIO IBt/t ARKANSA SST 10
CLEMSON 14
3t/z
17 3 17 11 14t/t
WKENTU CKY 13t/t MICHIGAN ST 8
91/2
Boise St 2
3t7t
Ga Southern 17 1Plt SANJOSEST Plt 10 t/t
61t/t 58t/t 61t/t
MLS
NTexas
P u rdue MARYLAN D Smu
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT
64t/t Memphis 47t/t Pittsburgh 45t/t Oh i o U
EasternConference W L T Pls GF GA 15 9 6 51 4 6 3 4 14 1 3 3 4 5 4 4 4 2 76t/t 0 DOMINION SportingKansascity 13 11 6 45 45 37 Columbus 11 9 10 43 43 36 64t/t N CAROLINA 10 9 11 41 48 46 58t/t Ke nt St NewYork 11 11 7 40 42 45 47t/tN'WESTERN TorontoFC 9 10 1 1 3 8 4 5 44 55t/t UM a ss P hiladelphia Houston 10 13 6 36 35 50 48 APP'CHIAN ST Chicago 5 8 1 6 31 37 45 55t/t KENTUCKY 6 18 6 2 4 3 4 5 4 55t/t Ba l I St Montreal WesternConference 76t/t Buffalo W L T Pls GF GA 49t/t E Michigan 18 9 3 5 7 57 46 TexasTech x-Seattle Angeles 1 6 5 9 5 7 63 31 54t/t Ha w aii x -Los 7 1 0 4 9 50 38 6 2t/t Tul s a RealSaltLake 1 3 FCDal l a s 65t/t Georgia St 1 4 10 6 4 8 52 4 0 44t/t NOTREDAME Vancouver 9 8 1 3 40 38 40 66t/t Arizona St Portland 9 9 1 2 39 54 51 55t/t Lsu Colorado 8 14 8 3 2 4 1 5 4 55t/t AIR FORCE SanJose 6 12 11 29 34 42 56t/t TCU C hivas USA 6 18 6 24 2 5 5 8 playoff berth 55t/t Fl o rida x- clinched 54 K a nsasD .C. United 68t/t W MICHIGAN N ewEngland
56t/t TE X AS Today'sGame 65t/t low a St 51 t/t MISSISSIPPI ChicagoatPhiladelphia, 5p.m. Utah
Friday'sGame SportingKansasCity atD.C.United, 5 p.m.
uab
RealSaltLakeat ChivasUSA 4pm
67t/tTexasABM 60t/t
58t/ Utep Saturday'sGames 60t/t S o Miss Houstonat Ne wYork, 3p.m. 57t/tCOLORADO FC DallasatVancouver,4 p.m. 78t/t Ca lifornia Columbus atNewEngland,4:30p.m. 6 6t/t Ida h o Toront oFCatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. 46t/t M ichigan PortlandatSanJose, 8p.m. 54t/t New Mexico Sunday'sGames 48t/t UL-Monroe Seattle FC at Colorado,noon 67t/t NCState Montrealat Chicago,2 p.m.
73
59t/t 6tt/t 57t/t 50t/t
GOLF PGA Tour STATISTICS Final
Ne braska N. M. ST Unlv NE VADA
HOCKEY NHL Preseason NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
All TimesPDT
Wednesday'sGames
Buffalo 6,Washington1 Columbus 6, Carolina 3 FedExcup Playoff sPoints Pittsburgh 2, Detroit 0 1, Billy Horschel, 4,750.000. 2, Chris Kirk, Montreal3, Chicago1 Edmonton 3,Arizona2 3,100.000.3, RoryMcllroy, 3,050.000.4, Jim Furyk, Today'sGames 2,450.000. 5, Bubba Watson, 2,285.000. 6, Hunter Mahan, 1,835.000.7,Jimmy Walker,1,667.500.8, PhiladelphiaatWashington, 4p.m. Matt Kuchar,1,300.000.9, RickieFowler, 1,225.000. N.Y.IslandersatNewJersey,4 p.m. Tampa Bayat Florida, 4:30p.m. 10, JasonDay,1,200.000. MinnesotaatSt.Louis, 5 p.m. ScoringAverage 1, Rory Mcllroy, 68.827. 2, Sergio Garcia, Winnipegat Calgary,6p.m. veratEdmonton,6p.m. 68.950.3,Jim Furyk,69.200.4,Adam Scott, Vancou 69.205. 5, Matt Kuchar,69.416. 6, Dustin John- LosAngelesvs.Coloradoat ColoradoSprings,Colo.,6pm. son, 69.546. 7,Justin Rose,69.624. 8, JasonDay, 69.626. 9, Graeme McDowell, 69.642. 10, Charl DEALS Schwartzel69.671. , DrivingDistance Transactions 1, BubbaWatson, 314.3. 2, Dustin Johnson, 311.0. 3, RoryMcllroy, 310.5. 4 (tie), J.B. Holmes FOOTBA LL and Andrew Loupe,308.0. 6, BrooksKoepka,307.0. NationalFootballLeague 7, Robert Garrigus, 306.1. 8, JhonattanVegas, NFL —Suspended Carolina DEFrankAlexander 304.8. 9 (tie), CharlesHowell III andGaryWood- an additional 10game s after violating theleague's land, 304.1. subst anceabusepolicyagain. GreensinRegulation Percentage ARIZONA CARDINALS— Re-signedLBDesmond 1, Chad Campbell, 72.43%. 2, Justin Hicks, Bishop. 71.44%.3,GrahamDeLaet, 70.68%.4,Bily Horschel, CHICAGO BEARS— SignedCBTeddy Wiliams 70.43%.5,J.J.Henry,69.60%.6,Rory Mcllroy, from Arizona'spractice squad.WaivedLBTerrell 69.44%.7,JhonattanVegas, 69.11%. 8, Henrik Sten- Manning. son, 69.03%. 9,KevinStadler, 68.91%.10,Adam HOCKEY Scott, 68.79%. NationalHockeyLeague StrokesGained-Putling DALLAS STARS — Assigned DJyrki Jokipakka 1, GraemeMcDowell, .886. 2, Aaron Baddeley, and RW Bret Ritchieto Texas(AHL) .873. 3, GregChalmers, .855. 4, MattEvery,.735. NEWYORKRANGERS— ReassignedConorAllen, 5, FreddieJacohson, .705. 6, BrendonTodd, .663. 7, MatBodi e,ChrisBourque,Ryan Bourque,Tommy LukeDonald,.520.8,JustinLeonard,.497.9,Daniel HughesD, annyKristo,JasonMissiaen,NickTarnasky, Summerh ays,.494.10,MorganHoff mann,.487. andPetrZamorskyto Harfford (AHL) BirdieAverage WINNIPEG JETS—AssignedFJohnAlbert, DJu1, RoryMcllroy,4.58. 2,AdamScott, 4.24.3, Jim- lien Brouilette,GConnor Hellebuyck, FCarl Klingherg my Walker,4.18. 4, DustinJohnson,4.05. 5, Charl and FJCLiponto St.John's(AHL). Schwarlzel4.02. , 6,JordanSpieth, 3.97. 7 (tie), HenSOCCER rikStensonandBubbaWatson,3.96.9,RyanPalmer, MajorLeagueSoccer 3.93.10,4 tiedwith 3.89. MLS —FinedSporting KansasCity DIgor Juliao All-Around Ranking anundisclosed amountfor violatingtheleague'spolicy 1r AdamScott, 189. 2 (tie), Rory Mcllroyand regarding handstoface/headofanopponent inaSept. DustinJohnson,256. 4, Sergio Garcia, 281.5, Ryan 26againstNew England.SuspendedColoradoMF Palmer ,289.6,JustinRose,295.7,BubbaWatson, CarlosAlvarezonegameandfinedhimanundisclosed 323. 8,KevinChappell, 366.9, MattKuchar, 374.10, amountfor violatingthe league'spolicy on entering Graham DeLaet, 382. the field ofplay/leavingthebenchand technical area during aSept. 27gameagainst SanJose. FinedReal Salt LakecoachJeff Cassaran undisclosedamount LPGA Tour for improper benchbehavior duringaSept. 27game STATISTICS againstVancou ver. Through Sept. 21 FCDALLAS— SignedMFAlejandroZendejas. Scoring COLLEGE 1, StacyLewis,69.384.2, Michelle Wie,69.707. BROWN— NamedTedRawlingsmen'sbasketball 3, InbeePark,69.735.4, SuzannPettersen, 69.926. operationsspecialist. 5, So YeonRyu, 69.986. 6, Lydia Ko,70.244. 7, IOWASTATE— Suspendedmen' s basketballG Cristie Kerr, 70.370. 8, Na YeonChoi, 70.473. Matt Thomas andFAhdel Nader threegames apiece 9, AzaharaMunoz, 70.475. 10, ShanshanFeng, for offseason drunken-driving arrests. 70.530. DrivingDistance FISH COUNT 1, Lexi Thompon, s 271.3. 2, BrittanyLincicome, 270.6. 3, Gerina Piler, 270.1.4,JoannaKlaten, 269.0. Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack 5,YaniTseng,266.0.6,CarlotaCiganda,265.7.7, chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCoPaulaReto,264.1. 8, MirimLee,262.6. 9, KarinSjo- lumhia Riverdamslast updatedonWednesdav. din, 262.1.10,CarolineHedwall, 260.3. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Greens in Regulation Pct. B onneville 6,811 2,253 7 7 1 20 0 1, Suzann Petersen.779. 2, Michelle Wie.773.3, T he Dalles 3,239 1,196 2,106 7 6 3 Stacy Lewis.770.4,AnnaNordqvist.762.5,SoYeon J ohn Day 4,684 1,266 2,161 5 87 Ryu.752. 6, Shanshan Feng.742. 7, Azahara Mu- McNary 5 ,188 2 ,031 3,684 1,224 nozr736,8, GerinaPiler.736. 9, Cristie Kerr732.10, Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, Mirim Lee.732. jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected PuttingAverage ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonWednesday. 1, StacyLewis,1.75. 2,InheePark,1r75,3, Line Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Vedel, 1.76. 4, MiJungHur, 1.77. 5,Michelle Wie, Bonneville1,105,587171,374 312,336 125,890 1.77. 6,MorganPressel,1.77. 7, HaruNomura,1.78. The Dalles 723,765 117,750 228,474 90,581 8, AnnaNordqvist, 1.78. 9, SoYeonRyu, 1.78. 10, JohnDay 602,203 102,445 171,309 64,913 KarineIcher,1.78. McNary 553,245 91,780 170,127 61,252
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Redmond
Prep footdallthisweekend
Continued from C1
Co e e a ers in Tur e ocuson oo s, casses
The Panthers are 4-0. And while they
have compiled that record against opponents whose combined record is just 1-15, this team is rolling — rolling to the most
points scored in Class 5A while limiting opponents to the fifth-fewest points in the classification. No doubt because of its rel-
atively weak schedule to date, Redmond is rated only 18th in the latest OSAA Class 5A
By Doug Feinberg
rankings heading into Friday's Intermountain Conference opener at home against Bend High. Ignore the noise, Stanley emphasizes each day, and enjoy the moment. The undefeatedPanthers are enjoying every second,
The Associated Press
ISTANBUL — UConn star Breanna Stewart and freshman teammate Kia
Nurse have had more than basketball to focus on at the women's world championship. They also have to keep up with school work from nearly 5,000 miles away. Both wil l
because they traversed a rough road to ar-
rive here. Last season, with its roster flooded with
youth and inexperience, Redmond struggled to a 1-8 record, losing its final seven games and allowing nearly 47 points per
h av e m i ssed about a
month of college to play for their national teams — Stewart with the U.S.; Nurse with Canada. This is th e t h ir d s t raight world
contest during that span.
"It was pretty difficult. It wasn't very fun,
that's for sure," says quarterback Bunker Parrish, who was the Panthers' starter last
championship in which the Americans have had a college player on the team. Candace Parker was on the 2006 squad while still playing at
year as a freshman. "We didn't really think about losing going into each game. It was just one of those things that happened. We came out and tried our hardest, but it just
Tennessee.
Stewart, who is beginning her junior year, has three of her classes on-
never seemed to work in our favor."
line so she hasn't had to miss them.
Stanley recalls speaking with veteran assistant coach Kurt Davis, who guided Cul-
She's just been doing homework while traveling to Paris, Prague and
Breanna Stewart smiles as she follows
ver to a 2A state title in 2007. After Stanley
Istanbul with the national team.
through on ashot during warmups
shared his thoughts about his struggling team, Davis replied: "You guys weren't bad. You were just young. And there's a huge difference between those two."
Jessica Hill/The Associated Press
"Week by week I just have to orga- before a women's exhibition basketball nize myself and prioritize time man- game against Canada in Bridgeport, agement to get the work done," the Connecticut, in September. reigning AP women's college basketball player of the year said. "The one class I'm missing I know some people back to the classroom easily when I in it, and if there are notes they send return." them to me." Nurse said she's taking one of her Stewart also can turn to U.S. team- freshmen class online and missing
"It doesn't matter how talented you are,"
Stanley says now. "When you're young and you play (against) seniors who are worth their salt, you're going to get beat. We found that out."
While Stanley ached for the seniors who were unable to taste anywhere close to the
mate Maya Moore, who was in the same position in 2010 when she was at UConn and on the American team
the others.
"My academicadvisor isgreat,she helps me keep on top of everything. She'sthe go-between me and my that won gold in the Czech Republic. "I talked to (Moore) a little bit," teachers. I'm in contact with her each Stewart said. "I'm taking some of the day and regularlyreceive messages classes she took when she missed the from teachers as well about what has month-long period. Our academic ad- been covered in class." visors realized that and planned the The players have managed to stay way she planned." caught up on their assignments. "Kia and Breanna have been doG eno Auriemma, coach o f t h e U.S.and UConn teams,has been im- ing a great job while away keeping pressed with how Stewart has bal- up with their academics," said Ellen
success they had experienced as juniors, the
anced the demands.
Trip, the Associate Athletic Director for Intercollegiate Athletics at UConn.
year older, and we should be ready to compete with anybody."
"Just watching her, she's handling it pretty well," he said. "She's been "Many of their reading assignments down this road before. Other people are available online so that has been at school understand that's the price extremely helpful. We've been very you have for being so good at a young impressed with both young womage. You have to juggle a lot of things. en and expect a seamless transition It will be something that she'll look when they come back next week." back on as a great experience for her." The UConn players aren't the stuNurse, who helped Canada reach dent-athletes in Turkey balancing acthe quarterfinals for the first time ademics and international hoops. s ince 1994, a g r eed w i t h S t e w Nurse would have a partner in art that the key to success is time "study hall" if C anada teammate management. Nirra Fields' classes had started at "That's the big part of being an elite U CLA. But the u niversity is o n a athlete," Nurse said. "Even though I'm quarter system and classes at UCLA the only one studying on the team, I didn't begin until Wednesday. find time every day. I've got an agenFields, a junior, only has classes on da all planned out, with what needs Tuesday and Thursday this semester, to be done each day for each class so will end up missing one class with so that I can keep up and transition Canada advancingto play Friday.
Redmond coachunderstood that he needed to prepare for the future. He needed to mold his young Panthers and ready them for a strong return the following season. In short, as difficult as it might have been during one of the roughest seasons in program history, he needed to be patient. "We had a young team last year," says Brown, the running back. "We were ready for this season. Last year, we didn't have that much confidence. This year, we're a But now, with Brown rushing for 18 touch-
downs and more than 950 yards through four games (that's nearly 240 yards per contest) and Parrish adding a total of five scores (and 253 yards rushing in the past three games),Redmond has returned to prominence. The Panthers withstood a disappointing season, learning how to lose, Brown notes, while developing a hunger to win. And as eye-opening, as challenging, as 2013 was, there is no reliving it within the Redmond camp. "We kind of just brushed it off," Parrish says. "We don't really want to think about it that much. It was something we needed to
move forward from. We don't really like to talk about it now." Redmond is not rewriting history. Instead,
the Panthersare burying it.They are submerging it beneath 228 points, a potent offensive backfield and a stifling defense that
has Redmond at4-0 and primed to make a
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
run at the IMC title. But Redmond has little concern for those
Beaverswant to avoid let down
at Colorado'shighelevation
numbers and facts, Stanley points out. The Panthers avoid being caught up in how many points they put up or how many yards they gain. All that matters each week for the revived Redmond program is the final score. "We're just all ready to win," Brown says. "We haveone goal:Wi n aballgame."
By Kevin Hampton
drinking water the day of the game.
Enjoy the moment, but ignore the noise. A
Corvallis Gazette-Times
But I've been told the process, it builds
difficult task. Because the Panthers are cre-
Gavin Andrews remembers his first up at least over a four-day period." football game of his senior season at Go i n g at an extra-hard pace during Granite Bay High in California. practice will help as well. The team traveled to Nevada and It ' s up to each player to make sure quickly encountered the thin air of an their getting ready. "Just try to make yourself tired evelevation well above 4,000 feet. "When you're actually playing, it's a ery day in practice and that's going to whole lot different than sitting on the
t a k e sprints to the ball every play, not
sideline. It's a really tough challenge," dogging reps or anything," linebacker Andrews said. Michael Doctor said. "It's h arder t o br e athe, Some of the players have you get sore faster, you can't elevation training masks that " get enough oxygen to your theyhavebeenwearingwhile system." they lift weights. Andrews and the Oregon A ndrews received o n e State football team will face nI • during the summer and defensimilar conditions on Satur- uextnP siveendDylanWynnalsohas day when the Beavers take on Dregon State been using one this week. Colorado in Boulder. The masks essentially repliat Colorado Many of the current team iifhen1pm catebreathingthethinnerair members played at Utah last Saturday of ahigherelevation. "It really just makes you season or even at Brigham TV pac Young in 2012. have to focus on your breathing," Wynn said. "Itjust reSaltLakeCitysits4,265feet " dio above sea level and Provo abit AM 940, stricts airflow to certain exKRCD-AM690 tent and makes it harder to higher at 4,550. Boulder's elevation is 5,430 breathe. It kind of simulates feet. the lack of oxygen you get. "I was at BYU and that was enough "Conditioning in that does help a o f a challenge," Andrews, OSU's left
l o t ."
tackle said. "But I think we're going to T h eBeavers made sure there will take care of this. be oxygen available on the sideline to "I think the biggest thing is, I don't help the players throughout the game. "We can even have the oxygen knowhowwe'regoingto,butwe'regoing to have to acclimatize fast." masks there when we're off the field Two basics of preparation are hy- on the sideline there for us when we dration and conditioning. need to get oxygen back," Doctor said. The Beaversworkongettingintop Wyn n s aid the Beavers can't afphysical condition throughout the off- ford to slack off in preparation for the season and continue a workout regi- elevation. "It's actually a big change and you men in addition to practice. Hydration began this week. feel it when you get on the field. So a "Hydration is the biggest thing l i t tle extra conditioning, some extra we can do," coach Mike Riley said. water and good eating and we'll be "You've got to rely on your being in readytogo,"hesaid. "It's an interesting place to play and shape and hydration starting now is a big factor. they do have a home-field advantage "People think you get hydrated by because of it."
ating all the racket.
FRIDAY Bend (3-1) at Redmond (4-0), 7 p.m.: Two of the hottest teams in the Intermountain Conference squareoff in a leagueopenerand each program seems to berejuvenated after matching 1-8 records in 2013. TheLava Bears, who havewon their past three games after logging a 27-17victory at Pendleton last Friday, have won four of the past five meetings betweenthesetwo storied rivals and look to add to the streak behind Hunter McDonald. McDonald, who ran for 205 yards andtwo touchdowns last week, is averagin gashadeunder160yardspergamerushing.Redmond comes off last Friday's 49-27 win at HoodRiver Valley and is the No. 2-scoring team in thestate, regardless of classification, with 228 points through four games.Derek Brown leadsthe Panthers after racking up 299 rushing yards last weekand upping his touchdown total to 18 onthe season. Mountain View(3-1) at Summit(3-1), 7 p.m.: The Storm have not defeated their crosstown foes since 2008, dropping the past five meetings against the Cougars. But after posting 41 unanswered points en route to a55-14 win at The Dalles last Friday, Summit aims to end that drought. Quarterback John Bledsoe, whohas completed 69 percent of his passes for 698 yards andeight touchdowns this season, andJason Garcia, with a team-leading 278 rushing yards andfour scores, guide the Storm into their Intermountain Conference openeragainst Mountain View. The Cougars, who enter the gameNo. 2 inthe DSAAClass 5Arankings, were dealt their first setback in a40-34 loss at Springfield last Friday. CodyAnthony takes Mountain View into its conference opener after rushing for 104 yards andhauling in atouchdown pass last week. The Dalles (0-4) at Ridgeview(2-2). 7 p.m.: Only an unfortunate bounce kept the Ravensfrom earning their third win of the season, as Ashland's 24-yard, partially blocked field-goal attempt rolled over the crossbar to deal Ridgeview a16-14 road loss last Friday. But now theRavensreturn home, where Ridgeview has won its last11 games. Running backTanner Stevens, who comes off a116-yard, one-touchdown performance, andTanner O'Neal, who logged two interceptions last week, leadRidgeview into a nonconference matchup with TheDalles. The Riverhawks, who fell 55-14 to visiting Summit last Friday, haveallowed the most points in Class 5A, giving up anaverage of 55 points per game. Moialia (1-0, 4-0) at CrookCounty(0-1, 2-2), 7 p.m.: Despite falling 48-21 last Friday against visiting Gladstone, the No. 1team in the OSAAClass 4A rankings, the Cowboys rose to No. 4 in4A as they prepare to take on aresurgent Molalla squad in aTri-Valley Conference contest. BlakeBartels, fresh off a101-yard rushing performance with two touchdowns, andCrook County entertain the Indians, who put up aschool-record 70 points in a shutout win at Corbett last Friday. CodyKibbons highlights Molalla after running for131 yards andtwo scores last week as the Indians look to improve on their best start since1951. Sisters (1-0, 2-2) at Cottage Grove (0-1, 0-4), 7 p.m.: With a 21-19 homewin against Sutherlin last Friday, theOutlaws doubled their victory total from 2013 asthey head into a Sky-Em League matchupagainst the Lions, the Class 4A state runner-up lastseason.LoganSchutte,whohad72yardsrushingandtwo touchdowns last week, andMitch Gibney, coming off an 88-yard rushing game, leadSisters against Cottage Grove, which dropped a 24-16 decision at SweetHomelast Friday. Quarterback Blake Sentman, who completed11 of 21 passesfor 233 yards andtwo scores against Sweet Home,guides the Lions as they seekto snap a four-gameskid. Madras (0-1, 1-3) at Gladstone(1-0, 4-0), 7 p.m.: Quarterback Chad Lindgren hit Jered Pichette for a short touchdown passto help the White Buffaloes rally last Friday, but the Buffs weredealt a14-10 Tri-Valley Conference-opening loss at Estacada. Now Madras aims to reboundagainst the top-rankedClass 4Ateam in Gladstone, which logged a48-21 victory at Crook County last week. TheWhite Buffaloes will have to deal with the Gladiators' trio of Smiths — Handsome,Sir'Ray andZach —who each ran for a score against the Cowboys. Creswell (0-4) at LaPine(1-3), 7 p.m.: TheHawks maketheir Mountain Valley Conferencedebut as they entertain the Bulldogs. La Pine hasnot opened league play with a victory since 2007, but Keegan Kriz andBenPlant, who eachrushed for a touchdown in the Hawks'54-16 home loss to Burns last week, lookto change that on Friday. Creswell, which dropped a42-7 decision at Kennedy last week, has lost nine straight dating back to last seasonand has scored just14 points in 2014. Culver (4-0) at Irrigon (2-1), 7 p.m.:As Clay McClure ran for 177 yards and two touchdowns last Friday, the Bulldogs cruised to a fourth straight win in a 52-14 homedecision over Vernonia. The Bulldogs, No. 5 in the DSAAClass 2A rankings, put their best start since 2006 to the test when they begin Columbia Basin Conference play at lrrigon, which lost 56-18 at Union/Cove last week. Gilchrist (0-1, 2-1) at Chilopuin (1-0, 4-0), 7 p.m.: After suffering a 56-0 setback to visiting Prospect last Friday, theGrizzlies return to Special District 2 action as they visit the No. 3team in Class1A. Brothers Jonny andNathanHeitzman aim to rejuvenate aGilchrist squad that averaged 44points per game before being shut out last week. Chiloquin, meanwhile, returns homeafter recording a 58-8 victory at North Lake last Friday. — Bulletin staff report
— Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbuIIetin.com.
Nextup
Oregon Continued from C1 The Wildcats intercepted Mar-
iota's pass on his first play from scrimmage,ending his Pac-12 recordstreak of353passesw ithouta pick. Oregon's quarterback would finish with 308 yards passing
Oregon will wear special black uniforms tonight with pink numbers, along with pink gloves, cleats and socks, to recognize Breast
TV:ESPN
jerseys, hats and T-shirts will also be available to fans, and a portion of the proceeds will go to the Kay Yow Cancer Fund.
Radio:KBND 1110-AM
interceptions. Mariota wore a brace on his left
and 13 touchdowns with no inter-
Think pink
Arizona at No. 2 Oregon When:7:30 p.m., today
with two touchdowns but also two
knee in that game, and later it was revealed that he had partially torn his medial collateral ligament in a game four weeks before. Much like last season before his injury, Mariota is considered a leading Heisman Trophy candidate. He has passed for 1,135 yards
C3
when quarterback Anu Solomon hit Austin Hill with a 47-yard Hail
Cancer Awareness month. Special
Fab frosh Twelve of the Ducks' 27 touch-
Mary pass on the game's final play. downs this seasonhavebeen scored Here are some other things to by freshmen, led by running back consider when Arizona visits Ore- Royce Freeman and receiver Devon gon tonight. Allen with five apiece. Freeman, a
Speaking of Hail Marys The Wildcats practice the Hail Mary every Thursday, but they
true freshman, has rushed for 261
yards on 48 carries through the first four games, and Allen, a redshirt who ran track last spring and won
ceptions. He has also run for three do not run it against a conven- the NCAA 110-meter hurdles title, scores. tionaldefense because ofthe pos- has 14 catches for 299 yards. "When watching him on film, sibility of injuries. Arizona rethe first and biggest thing that cently installed a new version of 0-line woes sticks out to me is his speed," Wild- the play, but the Wildcats called With Tyler Johnstone, Andre cats defensive lineman Dan Petti- f or the old v ersion during t h e Yruretagoyena and Jake Fishnato said. "He's quick, and I've seen game against Cal. "We always er all out with injuries, Oregon's him outrun defensive backs and catch it and we always celebrate," offensive line is unstable at best. linebackers. There are times when Rodriguez said about running The Ducks started true freshman you'll see him looking one way, the drill. Tyrell Crosby and former walk-on and then he'll end up escaping the Matt Pierson at tackle in the victoFreshman sensation opposite way." ry against Washington State, and Mariota completed 21 of 25 passSolomon has thrown 13 touch- Mariota was sacked seven times. es for 329 yards and five touch- down passes and three intercep- The bye week gave the newcomdowns in Oregon's last outing, a tions this season. Against Cal, he ers a chance to get used to their 38-31 victory at Washington State set NCAA freshman records with roles. "You have to trust them up on Sept. 20. 89 offensive plays, 73 pass attempts front," Mariota said. "We have the Arizona also had a bye week af- and 47 completions. He finished utmost confidence in those guys ter a dramatic come-from-behind with 520 yards passing and five and we're going to roll with what 49-45 victory over California, won
touchdowns.
we have."
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
Dahlberg
An all-female panel has much to sayabout sports
MLB: NL WILD CARD
Continued from C1
Set things straight Selig will be gone in January, which is probably a good thing for baseball. Selig did what commissioners are supposed to do, which is make owners money and get taxpayers to build new
New York Times News Service
"We Need to Talk," on the CBS Sports Net-
work, is an attention-grabbing idea: a talk show with a women-only cast discussing
ballparks. But he turned a
blind eyeto the steroid scandal and will leave office still thinking Barry Bonds is the career home runleader. The new commissioner should on his first day of the job declareany offensivemarkset between 1988 (Jose Canseco's heyday) and today void simply because they cannot be believed.
sports, just as men have done almost exclu-
All stars If Manfred still has time
on his first day he should abolish Selig's rule giving the league that wins the All-Star Game home-field
advantage in the World Series. The desperate attempt to make the All-Star
Game meaningful in some way was a joke from the beginning. Don Wright/The AssociatedPress
Solve the DH
Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Edinson Volquez pounds his
Either ban the designated hitter entirely or make it mandatory in the National League too. No other sport
glove as SanFrancisco Giants' Brandon Crawford roundsthird after hitting e grand slam during the fourth inning of Wednesday night's game in Pittsburgh. The Giants won the wild-card game 8-0.
plays by different rules in different divisions, butbase-
iraescrum e, ian sa vance
ball has not figured out the DH dilemma since it was
introduced in the American League 41 years ago. It is an issue in the postseason when AL pitchers are ill-prepared to hit in NL parks, and NL rosters are not built
with a slugger to plug in the middle of the lineup.
Fix instant replay Baseball was a latecom-
By Will Graves PITTSBURGH — The San Francisco Giants know what it
the game. Selig's refusal
slam by a shortstop in postseason history and the Gi-
to revisit the subject of the
ants routed the Pirates 8-0 on
hits king no longer makes sense, if it ever did. Rose has
Wednesday night. "That's crazy," Crawford
more than served his time
said. "With all the great short-
forbetting on games, yet his onlyconnectionto the game remains signing baseballs in Las Vegas. Meanwhile, others who have disgraced baseball by using steroids are working in dugouts and keep appearing on Hall of
stops that have played before, that's pretty special. I'm happy
2002.
takes to win this time of year.
its inaugural season. What
The Pittsburgh Pirates are still
needs to go away is the dance that has developed
learning. Madison Bumgarner and
when managers come out
Brandon Crawford provided
of the dugout to stall while getting word whether to ap-
a powerful lesson on the difference during the National League wild-card game. B umgarner p i tched a four-hitter with 10 strikeouts,
peal a call or not.
Let Pete in It is way past time to allow Pete Rose back into
Fame ballots.
Speed thingsup In one of his final acts
in office, Selig formed a committee to come up with recommendations to speed
up games that now top out at an average of more than three hours apiece. No com-
mittee needed because the solution is mostly common sense. Make batters stay in
the box; do not let pitchers stroll from the mound. Add to that some batting gloves
that do not need to be constantly adjusted, and the game will suddenly be half an hour shorter.
One songisenough Playing the national anthem before the game is a
Crawford hit the first grand
After silencing a black-clad crowd hoping for another Pittsburgh playoff run, San Francisco will face NL East champion Washington in the best-of-five Division Series beginning Friday. This one fizzled by the middle innings — one night after Kansas City edged Oakland postseason. Crawford's shot over the right-field wall in the fourth inning off Edinson Volquez put the Giants ahead. Bumgar-
to whom others willbe com-
pared. He is an artist on the mound, with four straight ERA titles, and will likelybe
the National League MVP as well as Cy Young Award winner. He is also the highest-paid pitcher in the game, but he and his wife are heavy into charitable activ-
ities, including building an orphanage in Africa. About the only thing Kershaw has not done is pitch well deep into the postseason. Get that done this year and lot
of people will be celebrating along with him.
Matchups:TheTigers and Orioles havenever met in the postseason, havIng shared a division for a while in the AL East.
get out there and get started,
Continued from C1 A championship cannot be won this weekend at Kan-
at Kansas," Busch said. "A
and then Charlotte is probably my best track for results."
solid top-10 (finish) is what we need to get out of there
hard to get a win the next two
All 12 drivers will be trying
sas, but it most certainly can with. I thought I was just
weeks to avoid the pressure at Talladega. That goes for on the old asphalt ... and defending champion Jimmie once they repaved it, I hav- Johnson, who has not led a en't been able to find my rear lap in six races and has yet to end with both my hands. I've show he is again a threat to definitely got to figure that win his record-tying seventh
be lost.
starting to figure it out there
Kyle Busch has rolled into the 1.5-mile speedway in solid shape in the Sprint Cup standings time and time again, only to see his title hopes slip away. He crashed out." out of the Chase race there The field has been reset the last two seasons, and since Dover last week and all he suffered the same fate drivers are again equal. That in 2007 when he arrived at means everyone has caught Kansas within a handful of up to Team Penske drivers points of the leader. Keselowski and Joey LogaUnder the new Chase for- no, who won the first two
title. "I'm not necessarily scared
of the round, but I'm scared of Talladega," Johnson said. "Talladega in the Chase is not
as fun as the Talladega spring race. I guess the only way it could change is for two fortu-
Chase races, and Kevin Har-
nate racers who win the race
vick, who has the fastest car seemingly every week.
at Kansas or Charlotte and roll on into Charlotte and have one
next round, so a bad day at
It is a comfortable spot for
of the better weekends of your
Kansas can be overcome.
Kasey Kahne, who barely
life — just chill out and have
But with Talladega, where one wiggle by one driver can
made the Chase and at one point was down four laps at
some fun."
mat, a win in any of the three races guarantees a dr iver an automatic berth into the
Dover and in danger of bewant to head to Alabama lat- ing eliminated. He raced his er this month in desperation way back into the top 12 and mode. feels good about this second Busch is doing his best to 1ound. g et to Kansas with a f i r m Kahne has an average wipe out half the field, few
mindset that he can pull out
Pure. &md.6 Co.
aj. B~ dU Bend Redmond
Hamlin, who counts Dover among his most disliked
finish of 13th at Kansas and has four careervictories at Charlotte. "I like this format a lot, this format was made for me," he smiled Wednesday. "I like
tracks, finished 12th to stave
this round, looking forward
541.382.6447
off elimination.
to this round. I'm excited to
bendurology.com
Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin last week.
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine
mance. The big left-hander, who allowed only four singles, has thrown 15 scoreless
be excited and nervous and
it may not be long before Clayton Kershaw is the one
"I don't think we are out
there to set the world on fire
latest stellar October perfor-
"If you're not playing, you can
pared to Sandy Koufax, but
NASCAR
Overpowering one of the NL's best lineups, Bumgarner walked one and threw 79 of 109 pitches for strikes in his
ally a need for another song during the seventh-inning
He is most often com-
And that is the point — it is a women's talk
show that is a sports show, not a women's show about sports.
sively for decades. "I've been thinking about a show like this By the evidence of the first episode, on Wednesday night, the compelling concept has for 10 years," Kremer said Monday at an event yielded a compelling program that should be- to promote it. "You think about it this way: come a staple on the CBS sports cable chan- Why don't they put women at the big-boy tanel. It arrives at a moment no one envisioned ble? You know, there's a big-girl table now." when it was conceived more than a year ago: She added: "Other networks might have the domestic violence crisis in the NFL, which been thinking about doing this show, but CBS has proved to be Commissioner Roger Good- is the one that decided to do it. So manypeople ell's crucible. at CBS want this show to work." Women are not the only people worth lisVisser said, "The women in this room were tening to about domestic violence, but they are chosen for this show not only for their brilliant vital to understanding how such abuse affects careers but because they're not small people its most frequent victims. ESPN has recently — we're all rooting for each other." distinguished itself with the commentary and For now, "We Need to Talk" has a commitreporting of Hannah Storm, Jane McManus, ment through the fall, which means it will Kate Fagan, Jemele Hill and Sarah Spain. have to create substantial buzz from its 10p.m. "We Need to Talk" will draw from CBS Eastern time slot and make the most out of in-house talent, like Lesley Visser, Tracy being promoted in other CBS programming, Wolfson, Allie LaForce and Amy Trask, but it including NFL games. David Berson, the preswill include reporters and commentators from ident of CBS Sports, wrote in an email: "We're other networks, like Andrea Kremer of HBO looking forward to smart discussion, a fun Sports and the NFL Network, and current and atmosphere, with well-informed and unique former athletes like Lisa Leslie, Dara Torres perspectives. If we achieve that, the show will and Swin Cash. be a success." On Wednesday, Leslie talked about a forOne way to further promote the show would mer fiancee who beat and choked her. Cash be to replay episodes on the CBS broadcast discussed being a victim. Torres recalled the network and expand its audience from the 55 pain of emotional abuse. million subscribers of the CBS Sports Net"This haunts me 20 years later," Torres said. work. Berson said that was a possibility, but he Leslie said that she left her five-year relation- added that there were no plans yet to do it. ship "without shoes, just with my keys and The opening episode suggests that CBS purse." should do what is necessary to make the show Nearly half of the hourlong show was devot- a fixture on a sports cable network that needs ed to discussing domestic violence and child good studio programming that stands out abuse. But the brisk pace and informed com- from what its competitors are doing. A likmentary did not flag as other subjects were able cast of smart and diverse voices — none discussed, including the response by Michi- of whom were given to shouting or interruptgan to a concussion suffered by quarterback ing — should be given a long-term chance at Shane Morris, the firing of the Oakland Raid- success.
a strong finish. It worked for
elimination.
every sport. But is there re-
Celebrate Kershaw
5-1.
cisco won its eighth consecutive postseason game and seventh in a row when facing
starts. "It's fun," Bumgarner said.
buy tickets for a baseball game, not a patriotic rally.
Season Series:Tigers won
ner did the rest as San Fran-
began in baseball and has been embracedby almost
ca" is a fine tune, but fans
Schedele:(All times PDT) Game1, today, at Baltimore (2:37 p.m.); Game2, Friday, at Baltimore (12:07 p.m.) Game 3, Sunday, atDetroit (12:45 p.m.); x-Game4, Monday, Oct. 6, at Detroit (TBD); x-Game 5,Thursday, Oct. 8, at Baltimore (TBD). (All games onTBS). x-if necessary.
in a thrilling start to baseball's
innings in two World Series
in the greatest country on earth? "God Bless Ameri-
Tigersvs.Orioles
to be able to do it."
time-honored tradition that
stretch to remind us we live
ers coach Dennis Allen, and swimmer Michael Phelps' arreston drunken-driving charges.
Royalsvs.Angels
The Associated Press
Schedule:(All times PDT) Game1, Thursday, atLos Angeles (6:07 p.m.); Game 2, Friday, at LosAngeles (6:37 or 7:07 p.m.i Game3, Sunday, atKansas City (4:37 p.m.); x-Game4, Monday, Oct. 6, at KansasCity (TBD); x-Game 5,Wednesday, Oct. 8, at Los Angeles(TBD). (All games onTBS). x-if necessary. Season Series:Tied 3-3. Matchups:TheAngels have won15 of the past18 season series against the Royals, going 70-38 since
er to the instant replay party but got it mostly right in
SPORTS MEDIA
By Richard Sandomir
'•
Og ge,gf'.
all that. But if you're pitching in the game, you've got to try to push that all aside and try
I 'I
to make pitches like we did tonight."
I
'
i
I
Brandon Belt drove in three
runs. Volquez was trying to cap his r e markable
HUNTING TENT & GEAR iaxio Nfhite Stag
c o meback
season by sending Pittsburgh to the NLDS for the second straight year, but he couldn't
match Bumgarner. The right-hander cruised until the fourth, when a pair of
singles and a walk loaded the bases with none out. Crawford followed with a drive that kept
carrying all the way to the seats above the 21-foot high
-
'
That was more than enough
for Bumgarner, who mixed his fastball with a slider the Pirates couldn't seem to fig-
$1375 OBO 541-000-000
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
541-385-5809
ure out. Pittsburgh, fourth in the majors in extra-base hits this season, rarely hit the ball
hard.
4I
air mattress, 2 sleeping . bags! Various other "' camping gear included.
Roberto Clemente wall to qui-
et the largest crowd in the 13year history of PNC Park.
•
CanVaSI PIUS queen SIZe
Item Priced af yourTofo(Ad gosf on • Under $500.................... -"------------------- ..... $2e • $500 Io $999................ '-'------------------- .....Sw • $1000 to $2499........... '-"-- --------- ------ ..... $4e • $2500 and over............ ---'------------------ ..... $so Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
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C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 NASDAQ ~ 7 16,804.71
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection. 1,946.16+
> 30
4,422.09
Todap Toast~ofthy quarter?
980.
Wall Street expects that Constellation Brands' latest quarterly earnings improved from a year ago. The wine, liquor and beer company is due to report fiscal second-quarter financial results today. Constellation has benefited this year from strong sales at its Crown Imports beer business, which it acquired through its purchase of the Grupo Modelo U.S. beer business last summer.
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...... Close: 1,946.16 Change: -26.13 (-1.3%)
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1,920 ' " " " ' 10 DAYS
17,600:"
2,000
16,800 '. "
'14
1,800'
A
Price-earnings ratio:
8
16 000
A
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17041.16 16776.13 16804.71 -238.19 DOW Trans. 8447.88 8221.92 8239.28 -211.82 DOW Util. 558.67 551.27 553.63 +2.34 NYSE Comp. 10688.65 10546.92 10571.55 -131.37 NASDAQ 4486.79 4409.30 4422.09 -71.30 S&P 500 1971.44 1941.72 1946.16 -26.13 S&P 400 1370.44 1348.90 1351.85 -19.12 Wilshire 5000 20760.46 20428.42 20476.54 -283.92 Russell 2000 1101.19 1083.00 1085.41 -1 6.27
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -1.40% T +1.38% -2.51% T L +11.33% $.0.42% +12.85% -1.23% T +1.65% -1.59% T +5.88% -1.32% T +5.29% -1.39% T +0.69% -1.37% T +3.91% -1.48% T -6.72%
9 Source: Faoteet
Economic bellwether Manufacturing has been a source of strength this year, helped by robust demand for new cars and other products. A surge in commercial aircraft demand helpedpropelbusiness orders for U.S. factory goods in July Outside of transportation, overall orders fell slightly. Economists anticipate that the Commerce Department will report today that factory orders fell sharply in August from a month earlier.
Factory orders Month-to-month percent change 10.5
4).G
M
1.5
est. -9.3
J
Alaska Air Group Avicta Corp A VA 25.88 ~ 33.60 30.7 1 +. 1 8 +0 .6 T T Bank of America BAC 13 . 60 ~ 18.03 1 6. 8 2 -.23 -1.3 T L Barrett Business BBSI 39.47 o — 102.20 39.82 +.33 +0.8 T T Boeing Co BA 113.34 ~ 144. 5 7 12 4.67 -2.71 -2.1 T T Cascade Baacorp C A C B 4 . 11 ~ 6.35 4.87 -.18 -3.6 T T T ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.53 ~ 3 0.3 6 24.76 -.05 -0.2 T ty Columbia Sportswear COLM 28.94 44.98 35 .42 -.36 -1.0 T T CostcoWholesale COST 109.50 ~ 1 27 .78124.76 -.56 -0.4 T > Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ 18.70 1 3. 8 0 -.60 -4.2 A A FLIR Systems F LIR 27.91 ~ 37.42 3 0. 6 1 -.73 -2.3 T T Hewlett Packard HPQ 2 0 .25 ~ 3 8.2 5 34.55 -.92 - 2.6 T T Intel Corp I NTC 22.48 ~ 35.56 3 3. 9 9 -.83 -2.4 T T Keycorp K EY 11.05 ~ 14.70 1 3.1 8 -.15 -1.1 T T Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ 52.96 5 1. 6 0 -.40 -0.8 T T T Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 9.19 7.24 -.26 -3.5 T LA Pacific L PX 12.71 ~ 18.96 1 3. 3 5 -.24 -1.8 T T MDU Resources MDU 27 . 35 o — 36.0 5 27 . 4 3 -.38 -1.4 T T Mentor Graphics MEN T 19.14 ~ 24.31 2 0. 0 7 -.43 -2.1 T T Microsoft Corp M SFT 3 2 .70 ~ 47.57 4 5. 9 0 -.46 -1.0 T A Nike Ioc B N KE 69.85 ~ 90.29 87. 7 0 - 1 .50 - 1.7 T A Nordctrom Ioc J WN 54.90 ~ 71.45 6 7. 5 8 -.79 -1.2 T T Nwst Nat Gas N WN 40.05 ~ 47.50 42.4 0 +. 1 5 +0 .4 T T PaccarIoc PCAR 53.59 ~ 68.81 5 6. 2 1 -.67 -1.2 T T Planar Systms PLNR 1.81 ~ 5.30 3.69 - .10 -2.6 T T Plum Creek PCL 38.70 o — 50.0 8 39. 0 0 -.01 ... T T Prec Castparts PCP 225.00 o — 275 . 09 229.58 -7.30 -3.1 T T Safeway Ioc SWY 26.69 ~ 36.03 3 4. 1 8 -.12 -0.3 T T Schoitzer Steel SCH N 22.72 ~ 3 3.3 2 23.94 -.11 -0.5 A T Sherwin Wmc SHW 170.63 ~ 222. 5 3 21 3.74 -5.25 -2.4 T T StaocorpFocl S FG 54.29 ~ 69.51 6 2. 5 5 -.63 -1.0 T T StarbuckcCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 82.50 7 4. 6 1 -.85 -1.1 T T Triqoiot Semi T QNT 6.80 ~ 21.48 17. 9 6 - 1 .11 -5.8 T T umppuaHoldings UM PQ 15.56 ~ 1 9.6 5 16.23 -.24 -1.5 T T US Bancorp U SB 35.69 ~ 43.92 4 1. 2 6 -.57 -1.4 T T T WashingtonFedl WA F D 20.08o — 24. 53 19.86 -.36 -1.8 T WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 0.07 ~ 5 3.8 0 51.26 -.61 -1.2 T T T Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7 .48 ~ 34.60 31. 7 8 -.08 -0.3 T
A +8.9 +20. 4 41 9 10 1. 2 7 T + 8.0 +24 . 1 86884 20 0 .20f A -57.1 - 40.3 168 1 6 0 . 72 T -8.7 +10.7 5131 1 9 2 . 92 T -6.9 - 13.4 1 07 T -9.9 +3 . 5 19 8 1 7 0 . 56f T -10.0 + 2 0.6 1 1 1 2 3 0. 5 6 T +4.8 +10 . 0 1 3 42 28 1 . 4 2 T -16.0 + 7 . 1 11 0 60 T +1.7 +1.1 650 23 0.4 0 T +23.5 +7 1 .9 13217 13 0 . 6 4 T +31.0 +55 .8 34255 17 0 . 9 0 T - 1.8 +19.0 7739 1 2 0 . 26 +30.5 +30 . 5 2 506 1 7 0 .74f T +31.9 +68 .2 1 3 36 34 T -27.9 -22.7 3322 cc T - 10.2 + 2 . 0 1 327 1 8 0 . 7 1 T -16.6 - 11.5 864 1 7 0 . 20 T +22.7 +42 .7 37108 17 1 .24f T +11. 5 +2 4 .1 4 626 30 0 . 9 6 T +9.4 +24. 0 1 9 71 1 8 1. 3 2 A - 1.0 + 5 . 0 1 2 1 2 0 1 . 8 4 T -5.0 +5 . 3 2 3 29 1 6 0 . 8 8 T +45 . 3 +1 06.0 23 7 6 2 ~ - 1 6.1 - 12.9 1223 3 3 1 . 76 T -14.7 + 4.3 1 064 1 8 0 . 12 T +17.3 +22 .8 1 2 38 3 0.92 T -26.7 - 9.8 45 8 d d 0 . 75 T +16.5 +21 .4 4 9 8 2 7 2. 2 0 T -5.6 +16.8 3 2 6 1 3 1 .10f T -4.8 -0.6 3951 29 1 . 04 T >115 .3 +134.9 4193 c c T -15.2 +5 . 2 1 9 38 24 0 . 6 0 T +2.1 +16 . 9 6 2 88 1 4 0 . 9 8 T -14.7 +0 . 4 1 5 96 1 3 0 . 59f T +12. 9 +2 8 .7 15461 13 1 . 40 T +0.7 +14. 6 3831 25 1.16f
'::"'"" General Mills plans layoffs
Laboratory products provider VWR is expected to make its market debu today. The company,which isbased in Radnor, Pennsylvania, supplies general and specialty laboratory products. It generated more than $4.1 billion in sales globally last year. Its proposed stock symbol on the Nasdaq is0VWR. 0
For the second time in a month, General Mills has announced plans to trim its workforce. The food company says it will cut approximately 700 to 800 jobs. The Minneapolis company, which ), owns the Betty Crocker and Green Giant brands, said in a regulatory filing that the job cuts will take place mostly in the U.S. It expects about $135 million to $160 million in restructuring charges and foresees
PriCe-earningS ratiO:19 56
AP
( B ased on trailing 12 month results)
Tot a l returns through Oct. 1*annualized
AmdFocus
SelectedMutualpunds
AF
Dreyfus Appreciation lnvestor didn't have a strong 2012 MarhetSummary or 2013, but is described by Most Active Morningstar as a "solid core NAME VOL (00c) LAST CHG fund" that should appeal to S&P500ETF 1656936 194.35 -2.67 risk-averse investors. 997267 868843 778852 691030 660883 548836 543434 539846 533001
40.71 16.82 107.80 31.89 13.30 14.59 76.55 3.42 97.21
-.85 -.23 -1.55 +.71 -.89 -.20 -2.49 -.07 -1.58
Dreyloc Apprecialov VALUE
DGAGX
B L EN D GR OWTH
LAST 19.00 9.01 RetractTc 3.59 AngiesList 7.59 Tekmira g 24.99 Ruthigen n 5.65 PortolaPh 29.32 Globelm n 7.89 ChinaGreen 2.25 Masimo 24.02
Ardelyx n Lakelnd
CHG %CHG +4.79 + 33.7 +2.06 + 29.6 +.69 + 2 3.8 +1.22
+3.85 +.81 +4.04 +.98 +.27 +2.74
CentrusE n Wstptlrm g DoralFin BioFuel rt CBD Enn
LAST 7.63 7.91 5.04 2.30 2.36
LAST 4,365.27 6,557.52
Paris London Frankfurt 9,382.03 Hong Kong22,932.98 Mexico 44,364.97 Milan 20,706.31 Tokyo 16,082.25 Stockholm 1,381.59 Sydney 5,334.50 Zurich 8,789.53
63
+ 18.2 073 + 1 6.7 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 6.0 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 4.2 Q + 1 3.6 average of stock holdings + 12.9 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings
CHG %CHG -2.58 -25.3 -2.60 -24.7 -1.60 -24.1 -.58 -20.1 -.56 -19.2
Foreign Markets NAME
86
+ 1 9 .2
Losers NAME
o-
CHG %CHG -50.97 -1.15 -65.20 -.98 -92.27 -.97 -296.23 -1.27 -620.70 -1.38 -1 85.80 -.89 -91.27 -.56 -21.41 -1.53 +37.70 + . 71 -45.61 -.52
CATEGORY Large Blend MORNINGSTAR RATING™ *** v t vt ASSETS $5,435 million EXP RATIO 0.94%
MANAGER Catherine Crain SINCE 2000-10-31 RETURNS3-MO -2.7 YTD +4.8 1-YR +13.4 3-YR ANNL +16.1 5-YR-ANNL +13.5
TOP 5HOLDINGS Apple Ioc Exxon Mobil Corporation Philip Morris International Inc Coca-Cola Co Chevron Corp
GIS Close:$49.98 V-0.47 or -0.9% The consumer foods company will cut up to 800 jobs, mostly in the U.S., marking the second announced workforce reduction in a month. $54 52
A 52-week range $23.72 ~
S $42 .66
J A 8 52-week range $46.70 ~ $55.64
Vol.:24.8m (2.1x avg.) P E: 2.8 Vol.:3.8m (1.4x avg.) PE: 18 . 7 Mkt. Cap:$29.42b Yie l d: 1.0% Mkt. Cap:$30.18b Yie l d: 3.3% GBX Close:$65.91 V-7.47 or -10.2% The railroad freight car company's stock is under pressure as oil and railroad companies fight proposed federal safety rules. $80
MGM Resorts MGM Close:$22.11 T-0.67 or -2.9% The casino and resort operator announced a $200 million financing deal to fund the development of an arena in Las Vegas. $28 26 24
70
A 52-week range
J $23.60 ~
8 $78 .32
Vol.:2.1m (3.4x avg.)
A 52-week range
J $18.40~
Mkt. Cap:$1.81 b
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 27 -.18+4.8 +11.9 +16.3+12.7 A A A CaplncBuA m 59.23 -.44 +4.4 +9.0 +12.6 +9.5 A 8 A CpWldGrlA m 45.87 -.54 +2.9 +9.7 +17.8+10.2 8 8 D EurPacGrA m 47.97 -.64 -2.2 +4.3 +13.5 +7.0 A 8 8 FnlnvA m 53. 3 2 - .74 +4.4 +13.8 +21.4+14.4 C C C GrthAmA m 45.05 -.70 +4.8 +13.6 +22.4+14.4 C 8 D IncAmerA m 21.29 -.16 +5.5 +11.2 +14.9+12.1 8 8 A InvCoAmA m 39.19 -.47 +8.0 +18.3 +22.2+14.4 A 8 C NewPerspA m37.59 -.53 +0.1 +7.9 +17.7+11.6 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m41.30 -.55 +6.1 +15.8 +20.7+16.0 8 D A Dodge &Cox Income 13.84 +.04 +4.9 + 6 .1 + 4.9 +5.4 A A B IntlStk 44.48 -.70 +3.3 +10.0 +18.1 +9.7 A A A Stock 177.03 -2.86 +6.3 +17.8 +26.5 +16.4 A A A Fidelity Contra 101. 1 0 .. . +6 . 2 + 17.4 +21.5+15.7 ContraK 101 . 11 . . . +6 . 3 + 17.6 +21.6+15.9 LowPriStk d 48.78 . . . +3 .3 + 11.5 +21.6+15.9 Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 70.29 . . . +8 .3 + 19.7 +22.9+15.6 FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC x 2.48-.02 +4.9 +10.2+13.4+10.7 A A A IncomeA x 2.4 5 -. 03 +5.4 +10.9 +13.9+11.2 A A A Oakmark Intl I 24.77 -.24 -5.9 -2.7 +17.6+10.8 E A A Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 31 -.29+3.6 +12.6 +18.3+13.3 D E D RisDivB m 18 . 15 -.27+2.9 +11.7 +17.2+12.3 E E E RisDivC m 18 . 03 -.27+2.9 +11.8 +17.4+12.4 D E E SmMidValA m44.58 -.69 +2.6 +11.5 +19.7+12.3 SmMidValB m37.52 -.57 +2.0 +10.6 +18.7+11.4 T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.3 8 - . 39 +3.1 +11.4 +20.7+14.2 E C C GrowStk 53.9 8 - . 87 +2.7 +13.7 +23.2+17.2 C A A HealthSci 67.8 6 - . 72+17.4 +25.7 +36.9+26.9 B A A Newlncome 9. 5 5 +.03+4.8 + 5.1 + 3.2 +4.4 C C D Vanguard 500Adml 179.59 2.40 +6.9 +17.2 +22.4+16.0 A 8 A 500lnv 179.59 2.40 +6.8 +17.0 +22.3+15.8 A 8 A CapOp 50.58 -.84 +9.5 +16.2 +27.0+16.6 A A A Eqlnc 30.85 -.38 +5.7 +14.6 +21.1+16.5 C C A IntlStkldxAdm 27.06 -.30 -1.1 +3.1 +11.9 NA 8 D StratgcEq 31.47 -.55 +4.9 +14.9 +26.1+18.9 A A A TgtRe2020 28.22 -.18 +4.1 +8.9 +13.1+10.2 A 8 A Tgtet2025 16.38 -.12 +4.0 +9.4 +14.3+10.9 A C 8 TotBdAdml 10.84 +.06 +4.7 +4.6 +2.5 +4.1 C D D Totlntl 16.18 -.18 -1.2 +3.0 +11.9 +6.2 8 D C TotStlAdm 48.62 -.67 +5.5 +15.1 +22.5+16.1 C B A TotStldx 48.61 -.66 +5.4 +15.0 +22.4+16.0 C B A USGro 30.13 -.43 +5.0 +15.5 +22.7+15.4 8 A 8 Welltn 39.42 -.25 +5.8 +12.0 +15.5+11.7 A A A
PCT 6.07 5.14 4.79 Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 4.47 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 4.17 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.
8 $28.75
PE:2 4 . 9 Vol.:9.7m (1.2x avg.) Yie l d : 0.9% Mkt. Cap:$10.85 b
PE:8 1 . 9 Yield: ...
Angie's List
ANGI Tekmira Pharma. TKMR Close:$7.59%1.22or 19.2% Close:$24.99%3.85 or 18.2% The Financial Times reported that Reports of the first U.S. case of Ebthe online consumer services and ola boosted the biotechnology company's stock as it continues to dereviewscompany could be considering a potential sale. velop a potential treatment. $12 $30 20
10
10
J A 8 52-week range $6.28~ $21.32 Vol.:10.6m (8.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$444.14 m
P E: . . Yield : ..
J A 8 52-week range $7.72~ $37.48 Vol.:28.4m (6.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$551.78 m
P E: . . . Yield : ...
Westport Innovations WPRT L akeland Industries Close:$7.91 V-2.60 or -24.7% The developer of natural gas engines cut its full-year revenue outlook, citing market uncertainty in Europe, Russia, and China. $20
IA K E
Close: $9.01 %2.06 or 29.6% The hazardous materials suits and safety equipment company's stock gained ground on reports of the first case of Ebola in the U.S. $10
15
8
10
8 $2 6.87
Vol.:5.5m (7.6x avg.)
PE: . .
Mkt. Cap:$499.41 m
Yield : ..
J A 52-week range $4.76~
8 $ 3.80
Vol.:5.9m (36.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$48.3 m
P E: . . . Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.39 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill . 0 1 .01 6 -month T-bill . 0 3 .0 4 52-wk T-bill .08 .09 2-year T-note . 5 2 .5 7 5-year T-note 1.67 1.76 10-year T-note 2.39 2.49 30-year T-bond 3.09 3.20
BONDS
...
T
-0.01 -0.01 T
T T
T T
T T
A .33 T 1.43 T 2.65 T 3.72
-0.05 T -0.09 T -0.10 T -0.11 T
Commodities
FUELS
The price of crude oil fell a second straight day, reaching its lowest settling price since April 2013. Natural gas also fell a second consecutive day, while gold rose.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
Foreign Exchange The dollar was mixed against other currencies. It dipped against the Japanese yen but rose against the euro and British pound. The dollar is close to a two-year high against the euro.
h5Q HS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
.01 .04 .09
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
*
FAMILY
Gainers NAME
TO tal r eturn Y TD GIS 2 .5%
General Mills
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.95 3.04 -0.09 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.41 4.41 . . . T T 1-yr 5-yr Barclays USAggregate 2.36 2.35 +0.01 A A 7.5% 12.9 % PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.13 6.26 -0.13 A A RATE FUNDS Source: FactSet Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.05 4.02 +0.03 T L YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.98 2.05 -0.07 T L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.10 3.09 +0.01 A L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
Wednesday's close: $49.98
52-WEEK RANGE
$47
-.0022
50
InterestRates
annual cost savings of approximately $125 million to $150 million, starting in fiscal 2016. General Mills anticipates the current restructuring to be completed by fiscal 2015's end. +7 Last month the company said it was closing a facility in Methuen, Massachusetts, which would eliminate about 250 positions. Other household names in the U.S. Iike Kelloggand H.J.Heinz,have also had to readjust to shifting American diets.
General Mills (GIS)
BkofAm iShR2K B iPVix rs Petrobras FordM Facebook SiriusXM PwShs QQQ
35
$7.40~
value on ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
iShEMkts
DAL
Close: $34.90V-1.25 or -3.5% The airline and its competitors' stocks face pressure from reports of the first diagnosed case of Ebola in the U.S. $45 40
J A 52-week range
Source:Factee DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are not included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash
1.2609+
Stocksfellsharply W ednesday on negative economic news. The Dow Jones industrial average shed more than 200 points. Prices dropped from the start after a report showed that German manufacturing contracted in September. It was the first slowdown in 15 months, and another sign that Europe is teetering on a recession. A separate survey suggested U.S. manufacturing is slowing, too. Among the hardest hits stocks were airlines. Investors are betting people will fly less now that the first Ebola case in the U.S. has been diagnosed. Nine of the 10 industries in the Standard and Poor's 500 index fell. Materials companies dropped the most, down more than 2 percent.
Greenbrier
J
Market debut
+ -.43 '
StoryStocks
Delta Air Lines
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV T +16. 5 +4 1 .0 1 651 10 0 . 5 0 A LK 30.13 ~ 50.49 4 2. 7 4 -.80 -1.8 T T
NAME
based on past 12 months' results
A
.
NorthwestStocks 2Q '13 2 Q '14
M
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DOW
Operating EPS
1 .5% 0 G
Close: 16,804.71 Change: -238.19 (-1.4%)
"
16,400:"
NYSE NASD
40
"
1,900'
1,850
$90.73
Dow Jones industrials "
17,200
Vol. (in mil.) 4,114 2,259 Pvs. Volume 3,797 2,012 Advanced 7 87 5 8 8 Declined 2384 2119 New Highs 20 17 New Lows 2 55 2 4 4
60
+ +.20
$17.21
1,950
$57.49 80
17,060"
GOLD $1,214.60I
16,760" "" 10 D AYS"
2,050
StocksRecap
$85.26
10
17,360 "
SstP 500
Thursday, October 2, 2014
STZ $100
10 YR T NOTE ~ 2.39%
-26.13
T T A A T L L
3.51 5.12 2.3 4 6.2 3 4.56 1.59 3.30
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.8 90.73 91.16 -0.47 1.53 1.59 -19.8 2.66 2.65 +0.19 -13.7 -4.9 4.02 4.12 -2.38 2.45 2.59 +0.48 -1 2.1
CLOSE PVS. 1214.60 1210.50 17.21 17.01 1287.70 1298.50 3.03 3.01 783.70 774.95
%CH. %YTD + 0.34 + 1 . 1 +1.20 -11.0 -0.83 -6.1 +0.93 -11.9 + 1.13 + 9 .2
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.62 1.60 +1.26 +20.8 Coffee (Ib) 1.85 1.85 +66.7 Corn (bu) 3.21 3.21 +0.16 -23.9 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 0.62 +1.29 -25.9 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 337.80 332.90 +1.47 -6.2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.45 1.45 + 0.10 + 6 . 2 Soybeans (bu) 9.17 9.13 +0.38 -30.2 Wheat(bu) 4.79 4.78 +0.26 -20.9 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6177 -.0026 -.16% 1.6199 Canadian Dollar 1.1 1 75 -.0031 -.28% 1.0327 USD per Euro 1.2609 -.0022 -.17% 1.3530 -.51 -.47% 9 7 .85 JapaneseYen 109.19 Mexican Peso 13. 4 582 +.0341 +.25% 13.1653 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6690 -.0141 -.38% 3.5280 Norwegian Krone 6 . 4546 +.0277 +.43% 5.9969 South African Rand 11.2518 -.0387 -.34% 10.1350 Swedish Krona 7.2 2 5 3 + .0110 +.15% 6.3679 Swiss Franc .9571 +.0023 +.24% . 9 059 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1461 +.0027 +.24% 1.0653 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1385 -.0000 -.00% 6.1219 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7653 -.001 7 -.02% 7.7542 Indian Rupee 61.610 -.300 -.49% 62.595 Singapore Dollar 1.2732 -.0025 -.20% 1.2521 South KoreanWon 1062.66 +5.51 +.52% 1074.52 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.46 + . 0 3 +.10% 2 9.47
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
BRIEFING
The foreclosurecase against the ownershipof Mavericks atSunriver, the fitness andaquatic center, maymoveforward despite oneoffour defendants havingdeclared bankruptcy, aDeschutes County Circuit Court judge ruledWednesday. The facility at18135 Cottonwood Roadwill remain openfor the foreseeable future, said Edward Fitch, attorney for Mavericks General Manager Richard Hadley and Hadley's property-management company, Mountain Resort Properties Inc. Bankof the Cascadessaid the Mavericks' ownership owes $5.6 million it borrowed going backto 2003 to build andmaintain the 32,000-squarefoot recreation center, which has Oregon's only FlowRider. The bank onAug. 1 sued Hadleyand three others — Larry W. Browning, Mark G. Halvorsen andEdward R. Willard — andtheir respective companies — Resort Realty Inc., Village Properties LLC and Sunray Vacation Rentals — alleging they failed to makeloan payments. Willard on Aug. 29 filed to discharge his debts under Chapter 7 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court. His co-defendants argued the state case should be stayedwhile the federal bankruptcy case took its course. Judge StephenForte lifted the stay automatically imposed by Willard's bankruptcy filing. He also scheduled a hearing Nov. 24to hear the bank's motion to appoint a receiver to oversee Mavericks. — Bulletin staff report
PERMITS • Andrew C. Sommer, trustee, 3347 NWStarview Drive, $574,677 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61057 SEManhae Loop, $267,881 • Pahlisch Homes Inc., 3050 NW RiverTrail Place, $222,069 • Pahlisch Homes Inc., 3044 NW RiverTrail Place, $296,840 • Donald 0. Tarlow, 19232 GreenLakes Loop, $393,097 • Getz Revocable Trust, 2100 NEWyatt Court, $300,000 • Stonegate Development LLC, 60383 Hedgewood Lane, $197,304 • Stonegate Development LLC, 60395 Hedgewood Lane, $197,304 • Stonegate Development LLC, 60387 Hedgewood Lane, $227,923 • Stonegate Development LLC,60391 Hedgewood Lane, $227,923 • Peter B. Dinsdale, 63352 Stonewood Drive, $265,751 •TennantDevelopment LLC, 20361Travelers Place, $179,289 • Creative RealEstate Soluti onsLLC,2248 NW Lakeside Place, $200,448 • Toney Construction Company LLC,20455 SE DelCocoCourt, $182,039 • Corine Clark Living Trust, 2837 NWPerlette Lane, $385,403 • Triad Homes Inc., 61919 SE JanaieePlace, $182,458 • West Bend Property Company LLC,1894 NW Fields St., $254,353 • DKS LLC, 3823 NE Purcell Blvd., $260,659
sa a - ee-a
e sa
Mavericks to stay open duringcase By Rachael Rees
fires," said Eric Folkestad,
In fact, the first FAA-ap-
The Bulletin
president of the Association
proved test flight in Oregon for the Pan-Pacific test range
the conference, which contin-
more than 70,000 jobs will be created in the U.S. in the first
ues today, include new UAV
three years of integration,
took place Tuesday at the
technology and insurance options for UAV makers. The FAA has been charged
with an economic impact of more than $13.6 billion, said
WARM SPRINGS — About
for Unmanned Vehicle Sys-
200 representatives from the
tems International Cascade Chapter. Interest in UAVs, also
unmanned aerial vehicle in-
dustry gathered Wednesday at Kah-Nee-Ta Resort & Spa — in the middle of a federal
UAV test range — to discuss commercializing drone technology. "We're taking a military technology and transitioning it over to commercial and civ-
il applications, meaning we're going to do precision agriculture, search and rescue, and
we're going to fight forest
range in Pendleton, participants at the UAV conference learnedWednesday. Flights launching from Central Oregon are not far behind, according to Brian Whiteside, who manages the Warm Springs test site. "We're fairly close ..." he said. "We're in the final stages now of the approval process. I'd say we're within a month." Along with updates on the
called unmanned aerial systems, has soared since late December when the Federal Aviation Administration
picked six U.S. sites for drone testing. One of the six, the Pan-Pacific UAS Test Range
Complex, includes the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, along with locations in Pend-
leton and Tillamook, among itstestranges.
national test sites, topics at
tion's executive vice president. "We know commercial
the nation's airspace. Who-
drones, commercial UAS is
ever figures out how to build technology to the FAA's final
a huge market that's coming. It's here, actually, and it's just going to get bigger," she said. However, "there's a lot we
standards, Whiteside said,
will become an industry leader — and he hopes it will happen in Oregon. According to a report from the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems,
need to figure out before we realize the true potential of
this technology." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulleti n.com
IndustriaI building golng upin Bend By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
A Bend firm plans to build
'
an 8,400-square-foot industrial building in southeast Bend to accommodate several tenants in a flex-style commercial space, a company manager said recently. Tyler Scharpf of Scharpf
T
Planned duilding
Investments LLC said the new building at 1020 SE Paiute
Andy Zeigert /The Bulletin
Way will mimic the building AnneCusack/Los Angeles Times
John Murdy, executive producer of Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios Hollywood, stands with one of many werewolves during a tour of the mazes that are being set up at the theme park.
0 ern scare tactics ri tu
Way, another Scharpf Investmentsproperty.Scharpfsaid
fill, having that flexibility," Scharpf said. "We can still look for that little bit bigger
he's betting the venture proves
tenant, but the smaller tenant
profitable when its available for leasing by about April, he said.
is what moves the quickest." Compass Commercial Real
next door at 1012 SE Paiute
"I think we're a little bit ear-
mercial real estate in Bend and Redmond each quarter,
most people want in rents,"
reportedthat 8.53 percent of
Scharpf said. The building planned on Paiute Waymay accommodate as many as five tenants, Scharpf said. The lot, zoned light in-
Bend industrial property was vacant in the second quarter,
is much shorter," said Lara
were so big that visitors wait-
dustrial, lies within the Reed
Los Angeles Times
Hanneman, technical director for entertainment at Knott's
edin line for up to 90minutes for the mostpopular mazes. Despite the long lines, horror fans saythe scares were
Market Business Park. Scharpf
To re-create a bloody scene from the 1981 horror flick"American Werewolf in London," crews at Universal Studios Hollywood installed
Berry Farm, athemepark in Buena Park, California. "We
need to make the scenes move worth the wait. "If they were going for refaster." computer-controlled strobe Knott's, which recast its alistic, they got it," Josh Ault lights behind the walls of a parkas Knott's Scary Farm, said after visiting the Univerdark maze to simulate the maybe takingthe biggest leap sal maze"Alien versus Predator" with his wife, Liz. flash ofbullets. in the use of technology this An actor wearing a rubber yearby arming guests with The most frightening scene, prosthesis connected to a infrared-emitting rifles to they said, showed a woman tube of fakeblood around hunt zombies through a 6-acre screaming whilebeingeaten his neck re-enacts a gruesection of the park. alive by an alien. "It's pretty "The idea really spawned some execution. It all plays jarring," said Liz Ault. out to the sound of gunfire from videogames,"saidJon To keep visitors coming, andblood-curdl ingscreams, Cooke, the leadprops design- the operators of Halloween blasted from speakers in the er at Knott's. scare fests saytheyare under ceiling. After all, bigger scares pressure to come up with The technology used at meanbigger crowds — and more realistic special effects gore- and chaos-filled mazes, higher revenue. eachyear. "The industry is evolving," hauntedhouses and other Across the country, Halscare shows has advanced loween attractions such as said John Eslich, president dramatically from a decade hauntedhouses, themepark of the Haunted Attraction ago, when rubber masks and mazes and festivals generated Association. "A lot of the elecfog machines represented the more than $300 million last tronics and controller prices most advanced special effects year, a slight increase over havebeen on the downward used to frighten guests. 2012, accordingto the trade slide so that more mainstream Now the scares are created group Haunted Attraction parkscan afford them." with the help of 30-channel Association. At Knott's Berry Farm, the audio mixers, animatronics, As many as 36percent of area known as Camp Snoopy computer-controlled lights Americans are expectedto at- willbe converted this year to and video monitors. tend some type of Halloween alandcalled"SpecialOps: In"We've made a quantum attraction this year, the group fectei." About 135 actors, made leap in technology, especially estimates. up to looklike zombies, will thisyear, "saidJohnMurdy, Theme parks don't disdose wanderthroughout the area director ofHalloween Horror attendance numbers, but Dark while groups of 12parkvisitors Nights, the annual fright fest Harbor, a Halloween event enter for periods of about 10 at Universal Studios that created by the operators of the minutes, armedwithspecially draws thousands of scare fans Queen Mary in Long Beach, made infrared-emitting rifles. over 22 nights leadingup to had more than 103,000 visitors Sound effects emitted by Halloween. lastyear,a 40 percent increase the rifles signal whenpark Scare masters such as Mur- over the previous year, accord- visitors have successfully shot dy say such high-tech gadgets ingto Long Beach officials. a zombie. But the weapons are a must toput a genuine Knott's Berry Farm eswill also signal when a zombie shock into teens who have timates that its Halloween comes too dose, temporarily become thick-skinned from
dailyexposure to gore and violence in movies and video games. "The attention spantoday
attractions draw about 15 percent of its annual attendance.
deactivatingthe rifle and en-
dangeringthe group. "It's always a challenge to
Investments paid the previous owners, the Robert and Susan
Archer Family Trust, $152,000 for the lot in April, according to Deschutes County property records. The lot previously sold for $236,000 in June 2005 and
in2008 fell into foredosure, according to county records.
space, and bidders are braced to pay what owners ask rather than negotiate a lower rate. "With the amount of pres-
sure and competition on each ing in at full price and there's still upward demand — new
lot, one of two or three vacant
construction makes sense," Huntamer said.
ones there," Scharpf said. Although vacant industrial space has been shrinking, leasing rates have made new construction impractical. Rents are nearly high enough again to supportbuilding a new warehouse, Scharpf said. Building or renovating existing structures to accommodate several tenants, a flex space, is becoming more common than
buildingto attract one major industrial tenant. "It's just the easiest to
Brian Fratzke, principal broker at Fratzke Commercial Real Estate, said demand is
high for industrial space in Bend, but the costs are still
too high to spur speculative building. "That probably will happen in 2015 as lease rates
increase and developers get the rates they need to continue their investment," he said
Tuesday. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Private sector added213,000
jobs in September, ADPsays By Jim Puzzanghera
said Mark Zandi, chief econ-
Los Ange(es Times
omist of Moody's Analytics,
WASHINGTON — The
private sector added 213,000 net new jobs last month, indicating that the labor market
rebounded after a disappointing August, payroll firm Automatic Data Processing said
be different and innovative,"
Horror Nights, the crowds
Hanneman said.
was an improvement from
Consortium:Connecting and cultivating bioscience community in Central Oregon; free; registration required;5:30a.m.-7:30 p.m.; The Loft, 919 NW Bond St.; 541-280-8311 or http:I/bitJy/YN6HbU. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
on some industrial and retail
space, especially in that area, and we were able to get that
Wednesday. The September job growth
costing, budgetsandfinancial statements; experiencewith accounti ngandQuickBooks required; registration required; SaturdaysOct.4 and11; $99; 9a.m.-2 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. MONDAY • Bend Bioscience
Competition for commercial space is heating up, said Russell Huntamer, Compass Commercial broker and leasing agent. He said property owners receive multiple offers
of these spaces — offers com-
At the openingnight of Universal Studios'Halloween
bring a current grant project to this class; registration required; $89; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; COCC- Crook County Open Campus,510 SELynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7270. SATURDAY • QuickBooksPro2014 Intermediate: Explore advancedfeatures tohelp with payroll, inventory, job
down from 10.85 percent in the first quarter.
"There's limited industrial
ADP's figure for the previous month, which it downgraded slightly to 202,000, and better
MotivationandProductivity: National speakerAbe Wagner will sharetools to motivate yourself andothers; registration required; $69; 8-1115 a.m.;Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. • Nonprofit GrantWriting: Students are encouragedto
Estate, which surveys com-
ly in building it, as far as what
By Hugo Martin
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Emotional Intelligence: Part of Central Oregon Community College Leadership Series; registration required; $95; 8a.m.-noon; COCC,2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. FRIDAY • Leadership:Increase
Gretchen West, the associa-
to integrate UAV flights into
with writing the regulations
than expectedby economists. The data bode well for Friday's government report on overall September job growth. Economists expect the Labor Department to report that the
economy added 215,000 net new jobs and that the unemployment rate held steady at
6.1 percent. "All the leading indicators for the job market look good,"
which assists ADP in preparingthe report. But the firm, whose month-
ly report is closelywatched by economists, significantly undershot the government's
142,000 job-growth figure for August. Economists believe that
slowdown was an anomaly and expect thenumbers to be revised up by the Labor Department. Zandi said he expected revisions to boost August job growth close to 200,000.
Based on the ADP figures, Zandi forecast that the govern-
ment will report the economy added 220,000 net new jobs in September
The service sector increased its payrolls by 160,000 in September, down from 155,000 in
August, the new report said.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Nutrition, D2 Medicine, D3 Money, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
NEW STARTUP
Drug-taking advice, using datafromyou By Steve Lohr
• The residents of north Lake County rely on ateam of dedicated volunteers who must bereadyto drop everything andspendhours onthe road getting patients to andfrom St. Charles Bend
New Yorrt Times News Service
SAN FRANCISCO — For
years, Thomas Goetz had been a spirited armchair
advocate of the use of digital technology and data to improve health
By Kaylee TornayeFor The Bulletin
A phone call in the middle of the night is a source of dread for most people. For Renee Baker, any night of
v
ters -
,,neville
edmIm'
the week it could mean leaving her husband and
I
their 5-year-old daughter for a four-hour round-
I I
trip ride to St. Charles Bend in an ambulance Bend
with a patient who lives a 40-minute drive away from her house. This followed by a return home to a ChristmasValley te Bend: 95miles
blessed three hours of sleep until 6 a.m., when
MONEY care. At Wired
magazine, where he was executive editor, Goetz as-
signed and wrote articles on the subject. He organized conferences, lectured and wrote a book in 2010, "The Decision Tree," which hailed
a technology-led path toward personalized health care and better treatment decisions.
In early 2013, just as he was leaving Wired, Goetz met Matt Mohebbi, a Google
engineer who shared his interest in technology and health. Their conversations
continued for months and prompted an epiphany. "It struck me that I could
she gets up to go work her regular job at the La Pine~
help make it happen, not just write about using data to personalize and improve health care," said Goetz,
who has a master's degree in public health from the University of California,
Berkeley. And so the two men
foundeda company, Iodine, in July 2013. Its offering, an online service for tailored drug-taking information and advice, was introduced last week at the Health 2.0 conference here.
Iodine reflects sharply increasinginterest and investment in digital health com-
panies. Venture investment in digital health startups in the first half of 2014 surged
to $2.3 billion, surpassing the total for all of last year, according to Rock Health,
which conducts research and provides seed funding for startups.
SeeStartups/D4
=
local Chevron.
li
This is routine for a member of the volunteer
lllllLES
20
EMS corps in north Lake County. Here in Deschutes County, medical care is rarely farther than a short ambulance
Silve La
Christmas Valley
ride or airlift away. In less densely populated parts of the state, however,
Silver Lake te Bend: 80miles
the closest medical facilities may be hours away. Because of this, rural emergency Paisley
medical services have to be
Peter Dasilva/New YorkTimes News Service
Matt Mohebbi, left, and Thomas Goetz founded lodine, an online service for drug-taking information and advice. lodine
is just one startup that has turned to data analysis in hopes of making health care better.
run smoothly, in as efficient a Andy Zeigert The Bulletin
manner as possible.
trained to varying degrees
well as a baby at home and a
based on their choice, from
second on the way. Seventeen years later, she is the training
W ieatt e m exercise ecorum
and communications officer at North Lake County EMS.
By Daniene Douglas
Members of EMS units are
ambulance drivers through firstresponders and basics up to the intermediate or
even paramediclevel.Certification is overseen by the Oregon Health Authority
and training is offered by various agencies around the state.
More than 50 years ago, one such EMS unit began operation in Christmas Valley,
a community in Lake County with a population that hovers
Wade had a full-time job as
Her three jobs around
North Lake County EMSruns its all-volunteer operation out of this building in Christmas Valley. The rural
emergency service often has to transport patients to St. Charles Bend.
people know your name. But unless you're a certified trainer, no one needs your
on a nearby hay farm and cleaning and maintenance
Spend enough time at the gym and you're bound to develop some pet peeves. It's a communal space, shared by people with
at the station. Her husband,
FITNESS idiosyncrasies think it's his duty to explain
the community include a part-time position at the North Lake Clinic, work
Chris, in addition to working as both the greenskeeper for a nearby golf course and the fire chief for the Christmas
Valley Fire Department, ports patients to St. Charles volunteers with ski patrol Bend, approximately 95 miles at Lakeview and alongside northwest. However, rathGlenna as an EMT. Through er than a tax-funded outfit all of this, the pair has also staffedby paid professionals, managed to raise three chilwhat arose was a volunteer dren, who have been involved unit that has depended large- at the station since they were ly on donations and revenue young by helping out with from their ambulance call trainings, or in the case of volume to survive. their oldest son, by receivAs a result, the volunteers ing his own first responder in Christmas Valley shoulder certification. not only the stressful work Even though the volunteers of being first responders, but do try to have backup for also the responsibilities of care for their pets and famifamilies and full-time jobs. lies, "you raise self-sufficient Take Glenna Wade, for children," Wade says. There's example. When she first bepride in her voice. gan as an ambulance driver, SeeRural/D3 around 1,000. This unit trans-
Kaylee Tcrnay/Fcr The Bulletin
The Washington Post
that can drive
others up a wall — humming while running, staring while lifting or loud-talking while doing anything. Teaching fitness classes at a gym has given me a front-
advice on their form.
This kind of gym-splaining happens way too often to women. Some dude will
the fine points of a squat or, worse yet, try to physically correct your posture. It's intimidating enough to exercise in front of a bunch of chiseled
people without a stranger singling you out for a lesson. row seat to some colorful If you are genuinely conbehavior that local trainers cerned that someone might and gym managers tell me is injure himself, tap a trainer pretty common. While there on the shoulder and politely is no way to avoid annoying say, "Hey, I think that person somebody at some point, over there could use some help." Most trainers are there are basic rules of gym etiquette to keep people from happy to help, especially if it throwing you the side-eye. means a potential new client. "If someone is in immeFocus on your workout, diate danger, help them out.
not everyone else's
Look, I get it. You read
fitness mags, have a few exercise apps on your smartphone and are at the gym so much that all of the cleaning
But otherwise, look for a trainer on the floor," said
Devin Maier, apersonal trainer at Balance Gym in
Washington, D.C. SeeDecorum/D5
Preventin i ne stonest rou ac an ein iet By Barbara Quinn
Nutrition and Dietetics. Here
The Monterey County Herald
are some things you can do, dear friend: • Salvage the stone if you
"Heck of a day," a friend emailed. "At 10 a.m. I started
having pain in my side. By 10:30, I was in the emergency room with pain so bad I could not lie still or breathe. Kidney stones! OK, dietitian, what can
academy says. In fact, a low
befo r e they can be absorbed to stones.
calcium intake can increase pro duce stones in the kidneys. your chances for formingthese • Drink lots and lots of types of stones. Eat high-calci- fl u ids, especially water. Kidcan and have your doc anaum foods (such as dairyprod- n e y-flushingfluids tothetune lyze it. Really. Various kinds of ucts) or calcium supof 2 liters or more a stones can form in the kidneys plements with meals NUTRI T I ON da y for most adults and diet recommendations that contain oxalates can help stave off are based on the type of stone — substances in foods such as the formation of kidney stones.
• Eat smaller portions of meat (no more than 6 ounces
DASH diet, for example, has
a day). Purines found in animal-based proteinsare asso-
been found to be especially effective for reducing the risk of
ciated with the formation of
kidney stones. DASH stands
uric acid and calcium stones. Liver and other organ meats, by the way, are especially rich in purines. • Pile more vegetables and
for Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension and features plenty of vegetables and fruit, 2 or 3 servings of low-fat dairy foods daily, and small
fruit on your plate. These
servings of meat and other
high-fi ber carbohydratesare
animal proteins. SeeKidney stones/D2
I do to not get this again?'?" Funny you should ask. A recent review of this topic just appeared in the latest issue of
formed.
beets, spinach, rhubarb, straw-
Calcium oxalate kidney stones are the most common.
berries, nuts, chocolate, tea,
um cancausethekidneys to
But that doesn't mean to cut
wheat bran and beans. This allows calcium to bind with the
excr e te more calcium into the u r i ne, which can increase the
the Journal of the Academy of
calcium out of your diet, the
oxalates in the digestive tract
ri s k for some types of kidney rich in nutrients that may
• Cut out extra salt. Sodi-
prevent certain types of kidney stones from forming. The
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
N
TjoN
Celiac diseaseremainsan elusive
diagnosisdespite itsprevalence By Jane E. Brody New Yorh Times News Service
The trouble for Daniel Tully, then 12 and an excellent student and athlete in New York,
these can trigger an autoim- to another condition, like irmune reaction that damages ritable bowel syndrome or an the villi, tiny projections lining allergy. the small intestine that absorb nutrients from food into
began 20 months ago, whenhe the body. Like Daniel, people developed what seemed like a with celiac disease must avoid virus that kept recurring, each wheat, rye or barley, or any of time sending him to bed and the thousands of products or keeping him from school for a ingredients made from these week.
Abdominal pain and bloat-
ing are the most common signs. But according to a recent review in JAMA Pediat-
rics, possible symptoms include chronic or intermittent diarrhea or constipation; vom-
iting; loss of appetite; weight loss (or, in children, growth failure); fatigue; iron deficienlies. First-degree relatives of cy anemia; abnormal dental someone with celiac disease enamel; mouth ulcers; arthrishould also be tested for it, tis and joint pain; bone loss even if they have no symp- and fractures;short stature; toms. If another person in the delayed puberty; unexplained immediate family has the dis- infertility and miscarriage; ease, second-degree relatives recurring headaches; loss of should be tested, Dr. Joseph feeling in hands and feet; poor Murray, a gastroenterologist coordination and unsteadiat the Mayo Clinic, said in an ness; seizures; depression; halgrains. Some must also ab-
In January, he came down stain from oats. with an intestinal bug from The disease runs in famiwhich he never seemed to re-
cover. He developed severe headaches whenever he tried to read or concentrate and be-
came extremely weak, mentally foggy and unable to go to school at all. He vomited vio-
lently after meals, lost weight and eventually could not walk
unaided. "I had to carry him to the bathroom," recalled his father, Ed Tully.
When a c h ild develops
interview. "Celiac disease is now five times more common than it
lucinations, anxiety and panic attacks. "Doctors have to raise their
was 50 years ago, and that's
index of suspicion," Murray said. "At least half of patients
such a devastating constella-
not just the result of better di-
tion of symptoms, you'd think his doctors might consider
agnoses," said Murray, who is also editor of "Mayo Clin-
testing for celiac disease, an a utoimmune reaction to d i -
ic Going Gluten Free," to be published in November. "We
etary gluten that can destroy
looked at old stored blood
the small intestine. Awareness
samples, and that showed a
of the problem has never been real increase in incidence." greater. But even in the most so-
The unknownincrease
phisticated medical settings, For reasons unknown, cethe diagnosis can be missed liac disease now affects 1 in or the tests done incorrectly. 100 Caucasians, Murray said. Over four days in a hospital, It does occur in other racial Daniel' sdoctorsperformed an groups but is believed to be intestinal biopsy. But only two much less common. samples were taken, which Hygienic extremes may be missed the severe damage in to blame for the increase: Overhis small intestine. zealouscleanliness has been He finally saw a pediatric linked to a rise in autoimmune immunologist and was given diseases. But experts speculate the blood test specific for ce- the increase also may have to liac disease. It was unequivo- do with how grains are bred cally positive. The diagnosis these days, or the over-reliance was confirmed by a second in- on formula to feed infants. testinal biopsy, this time with Although traditionally conthe recommended six or more sidered a disease that shows samples. up in childhood, people of all Daniel began a strict glu- ages may develop it. But the ten-free diet five months ago o verwhelming majority o f and is gradually recovering. people with celiac disease reWith intensive physical ther- main undiagnosed. The most apy and a diet rich in meat, recent data show that only 17 he is regaining lost strength, percent of A m ericans with weight and stamina. His doc- the disease know they have tors say it may take a year, it. Those who are not avoiding but he eventually will achieve gluten risk developing a host normal growth — as long as of debilitating, sometimes fahe sticks religiously to the tal complications, including diet.
cancer.
A main reason for this lag in detection is the long and Gluten is a protein in grains confusing list of signs and like wheat, rye and barley that symptoms, some of which contains gliadin peptides. In may be mildenough to be people with celiac disease, easily ignored or attributed
Defining the disease
don't have diarrhea. It can
present in so many ways." About one-third of his patients had asked doctors on their own for testing, he added. It is critically important
to be tested before going on
HEALTH EVENTS
TODAY LIVING WELLWITH DIABETES: Participants will learn techniques to help them deal with diabetes symptoms, through Nov. 6; $10; 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Deschutes County Health Building, Stan Owen Room, 2577 NE Courtney Drive, Bend; www.livingwellco. org or 541-322-7446. TRANSITIONINGBACK TO HEALTH:Eight-week program for male and female cancer
survivors and caregivers, twice-weekly exercise in rehab gym with specialist; free, registration requested; 4-5 p.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NE Wyatt Court, Bend;
www.stcharlescancer.org or 541-706-3754.
FRIDAY
Medical Center Drive; www. bendmemorialclinic.com or 541-382-2811. LIVING WELL WITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS WORKSHOP:Learn
tomanageday-to-daysymptoms and improve your overall quality of health and well-being, through Nov. 8; $10 for six-week series; 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 SE Reed Market Road; www.livingwellco.org or 541-322-7430. "GENETIC ROULETTE:THE GAMBLE OFOUR LIVES": Screening of Jeffrey Smith's documentary about genetically modified foods link to rising disease rates in the U.S., Q&A to follow; free; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ redmond or 541-548-0135.
MONDAY
HEALTHY BEGINNINGS SCREENINGS:Health screenings for ages 0-5; call for location; free; La Pine location; www.myhb.org or 541-383-6357.
SATURDAY BEND MEMORIALCLINIC FLU SHOT CLINIC:Walk-ins are welcome and no appointment
is necessary; open toanyone
over 3 years old; $30, billable to m ostinsurance;9 a.m.-3 p.m .; Bend Memorial Clinic, 1501 NE
BEND MEMORIALCLINIC FLU SHOT CLINIC:Walk-ins are welcome and no appointment is necessary; open to anyone over 3 years old; $30, billable to most sur in ance;9 a.m .-3 p.m .; Bend Memorial Clinic, 1501 NE Medical Center Drive; www. bendmemorialclinic.com or 541-382-2811. LIVING WELL WITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS WORKSHOP:Learn
tomanageday-to-daysymptoms and improve your overall quality
of health and well-being, through Nov. 10; $10 for six-week series; 2:30-5 p.m.; Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.; www.livingwellco.org or 541-322-7430. NAMI-FAMILYTO FAMILY CLASS:12-week course to help people caring for individuals with serious mental illness while maintaining their own well-being, Mondays and Wednesdays through Nov.12; free, registration required; 6-8:30 p.m.; La Pine High School, 51633 Coach Road; www.bend.k12.or.us or 541-480-1960. NAVIGATINGTHE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM:Learn about navigating the health care system from Dr. Michael Caravelli of The Center; $49, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Health Careers Building, 2600 NW Coll egeWay, Bend; www.noncredit.cocc.edu or 541-383-7270.
WEDNESDAY POWERFUL TOOLSFOR CAREGIVERS: Learn strategies to handle challenges that caregivers face, six-week course; free; 1-2:30 p.m.; La Pine Senior Activity Center, 16450 Victory Way; www.councilonaging.org/ lapineseniorcenter.html or 541-678-5483 ext.104.
a gluten-free diet, which can
disguise the intestinal damage characteristic of the condition. Those already eating a restricted diet would have to return to gluten (say, eating two slicesof bread a day for
FITNESS EVENTS SW SimpsonAve.,Suite200, Bend; info@REPoregon.com or 541-419-8208.
TODAY
two weeks) for the test to be accurate.
PERFORMANCEAND BIOMECHANICS CLASS: For
W hat to lookfor
$96 per eight-week session; 5:30 p.m.; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab, 1160 SW SimpsonAve.,Suite200,
Avoiding gluten has become easier in recent years as companies have loaded store shelves with gluten-free
foods. A new Food and Drug Administration rule s tipulates that any f ood labeled
gluten-free must contain less than 20 parts per million of gluten (the amount in 18 slices of glutenfree bread), consideredharmless formost celiac
intermediateandadvancedrunners;
WALKING FORWELLNESS: Cancer survivors and caregivers will learn walking and stretching techniques; free, registration requested;11 a.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NE Wyatt Court, Bend;
SATURDAY GROUPEXERCISE CERTIFICATION: Workshop for interested and current group fitness instructors to become AFAA certified, featuring practical and written certification exams; $299, $85 for AFAA certified professionals; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; www. afaa.com/302.afa, christina© athleticclubofbend.com or 877-968-7263.
Bend; info©REPoregon.comor 541-419-8208. PERFORMANCEAND BIOMECHANICSCLASS:For beginner and intermediate runners; $96 per eightweek session; 6:30 p.m.; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab,1160
www.stcharlescancer.org or 541-706-3754. TAKE STEPSBEND:A fundraising walk event to benefit the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of America; registration requested, donations accepted; 2-5:30 p.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St.; www. cctakesteps.org/bend, kbaxter© ccfa.org or 503-715-7610.
patients.
All uncoated, unprocessed meats, poultry, fish, beans, nuts, vegetables and fruits are
naturally gluten-free and can be labeled as such. But to be safe, consumers must read la-
bels diligently to spot hidden hazards, like hydrolyzed vegetable protein, and learn to ask
detailed questions about how food is prepared when dining out. Even reusing water in
ESCHUTES
How to submit
E UMATOLO G Y Rheumatology Consults
Events:Email event information to healthevents©bendbulletin. com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before thedesired date ofpublication. Ongoing class listings must beupdated monthly andwill appear onlineat bendbulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements:Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
Dexa Scans Infusion Therapy D an Fohr m a n , M D 2200 NE Neff Road, Ste+ 02
541.388.8978 ~
www.deschutesrheumatology.com
which wheat pasta is cooked can be hazardous.
How to be a rolemodelfor kids in your ownhealthyeating habits By Barbara Quinn The Monterey County Herald
With school back in full swing, what's the latest on
how to encourage good eating habits in our young ones'? Be a good role model, experts say. Like it or not, parents are the most important influence in
o u r c h i l dren's
lives. And even if we are not perfect, it's our responsibility to demonstrate healthy behaviors to our kids. That's how
they learn. Want to see how well you
are doing? Here are some questions to ask yourself, adapted from n u trition ex-
perts at the National Dairy Council: • Do you regularly skip breakfast? • Do you drink sodas rather than water or milk with your
meals? • Do you frequently go on diets to lose weight'? • Do you indicate a fear of or frequently talk about "bad"
food and meals. Again, that's • Do you eat when you are how they learn. • Teach kiddos to recogbored or under stress? Be honest. If your answer nizea "balanced" meal — one to several of these questions that includes at least three of is "yes," you are likely sending the following nutrient groups: unhealthy nutrition messages protein (fish, poultry, lean to your child. meats, nut butters, eggs), vegO K, so what can w e d o etables, fruit, whole grains or about it? Start, say experts, by beans and high-calcium foods realizing that we can encour- (low-fat milk, yogurt, cheese age healthy behaviors in our o r c alcium-fortified m i l k kids by modeling healthful ac- substitutes). tions ourselves. Here are some • Serve desserts that add ways we can start: nutrients. Fruit and yogurt, for • Eat meals at r e g ular example. times. Especially breakfast. • Pack school lunches with • Demonstrate to your child yourchild'spreferences aswell — through your own actions as nutritional needs in mind. — what a moderate portion Add extra veggies to sandwichlooks like. Example: I might es. Use a variety of whole-grain choose to eat a couple of slic- breads, crackers or "wraps." es of pizza with a large salad Vary protein sources such as instead of a large pizza with a deli meats, nut butters, humcouple sprigs of salad. mus or other bean spreads, • L imit t h e am o u nt o f eggs and cheese. Always inhigh-sugar, high-fat foods you clude a fruit or a vegetable. bring into your home. Our Pack after-school snacks such goal: a light but not depriving as high-protein cereal bars or food environment. trail mix, especially if your stu• Focus on beverages such dent has sports practice. TV?
food to your child? • Do you have frequent as water and milk instead of And don't forget, moms and snacks throughout the day soda and fruit drinks. dads, good habits are caught • Find ways to include your m ore than taught. Let t h e rather than regular meals? • Do you eat in front of the children in the preparation of role modeling begin.
Kidney stones Contlnued from D1 • Drop a few pounds if you are overweight. Extra weight makes you particular-
ly prone to uric acid kidney stones, according to the National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information Clear-
always a "nutritional cause"
for kidney stones. But if there is, your care should be individualized with a registered
inghouse. Remember too, dietitian nutritionist at your the academy says, there is not service.
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
MEDICINE
earnin owto mana e stress An experimentfor early screeningfor lungcancer e oreit ecomesconta ious By Elizabeth Hamilton
,ls sIgIsasaai i > i s p ~
The Dallas Morning News
e4
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g ssssI g ~ EN $ $ 5 $ 1 0 i + s f j j j + EI%( 1slsss Is ss g I III S N H l l s k s ~ t ~
FORT WORTH, Texas -
"Stress is higher than it's ever been before," says Cynthia Ackrill. "We have people who don't have a strategy for deal-
Melanie McMahon meets
her burn patients in the tank
ing with what life throws at them."
room deep in the recesses of
Ackrill would know: She's a sttess expert and board member of the American Institute of Stress in Fort Worth, which
conducts research on stress management and provides information to help prevent hu-
additional paperwork. Hoban can go home to his family and relax. • Melanie McMahon, bum nurse at Parkland Memorial Hospital, Dallas
Parkland Memorial Hospital, • RI I I RM N I N I I I I sgilE) Q%1II I• > where she bathes them, scraping away charred tissue and ,Ia llQiI a.lIIR II I• f f
+
QhaaamaSa
I
8 8SQ85 5 5 5 >EI I I • SQM S S S e l I I I I
•
debriding swollenblisters. She medicates the wounds, administers pain medication
kSR E M S S I I I I I IN and wraps thick white ban—.•gaesEERIIII PMNl~i around the bloody flesh. ~waaaaaaaII 0+' dages Then she moves them into the
man illness related to sttess. She cites a 2012 study by the
i RO N N I I I I I I g+ intensive care unit, where she'll employee assis tance providi/ , y g e g®I I E er ComPsych Corp., in which regulate their temperature and more than half of the employRon Baselice/The Dallas Morning News replenish their fluids. "Not manypeople want to do ees surveyed reported high Melsnie McMahon, a nurse for the burn unit at Parkland Hospital levels of stress resulting in ex- in Dallas, routinely deals with difficult tasks at work but still loves this," McMahon acknowledges treme fatigue and the feeling of her job. quietly. being out of control. People ask her, "Oh, you're "My belief i s
t h a t w e 've
overloadedthe human coping mechanism," she says. That's why i t's i mportant
to have a strategy to manage sttess in place before it happens. In fact, Ackrill says, people who feel like they have the resources,skills and power to meet the day's challenges actu-
because of the demands and
potential for crisis. Byerly knows. The responsibility for the success or failure
of the event rests on his shoulders. But like arduous training is torunners, preparation for the marathon is worth it when Byerly watches those athletes,
allythrive under stress. sweaty and spent, cross the finThose who don't will end up ishline. "You live for those types of expending energy they would otherwise use for creative moments," he says. That's what energizes him work on worrying. And that stress is contagious: The neu- in the months approaching the rons in one person's brain will marathon, when h e d oesn't pick up on the state of the neu- leave work until 10 p.m. That's rons in another person's brain, why he sleeps only six hours a she says. So if the guy in the night. That's why his wife and cubicle next to you is stressed 2-year-ol d daughtercome tothe out, you're likely to catch what
he's got. "Are you going to find the perfect job'?" Ackrill asks. "No. Does it exist? No. Every job comes with a challenge. If it didn't, you'd be bored."
Howthose in stressful positionscope
office to eat dinner with him.
To prevent the responsibility from overwhelming him, Byerly does two things. "I try to get up every morning around 5 to go out for, like, an hour run, so that gives me
time to get my body moving, get me alert, get me fresh and ready to attack the day."
So how do people with highAs the marathon approachstress jobs handle the inevita- es, Byerly turns his morning ble stress'? We went to three run into a training session for experts — people with some of his own race. "It helps me make sure I get the highest-stress jobs around — to find out how they cope. out ofbed," Byerly says. • Patrick Byerly, president of While he's juggling a million the Dallas Marathon responsibilities, waking up evOn Thursday night before ery morning to run is consisthe weekend of the Dallas Mar- tent and controllable. athon, Patrick Byerly will sleep During the workday, he allong and hard. Come the week- ways takes a break to either end, he'll be luckyto catch a few walkor drive around theblock. "That five minutes for me is hours of discontinuous rest. "That's your go-time," says an escape where I can just ... Byerly, who prepares all year take a breath and then go back for those three days in Decem- atit." ber when thousands of runners Of course, Byerly admits he descend on Dallas. thrives underpressure. "I personally feel like I perTheir fun is serious work
gets to relax, "It's like, aaah." • Tom Hoban, pilot Tom Hoban loves flying jets. Hoban, a retired Marine and 22-year pilot for American Air-
a nurse? Where do you work'? Oh, Parkland? That must be re-
ally exciting! What do you do?" And when she says, "I'm a burn nurse," even the other
nurses respond, "Eww. Why do lines, is perceptive, and he im- you do that?" mediately distinguishes one of Many of her patients have the greatest sources of stress in burns covering their entire his job: the safe operation of the bodies.Some are children. aircraft.
"I think the youngest I've
For each flight, a pilot must seen is 2 months," she says. decide the best route to naviThough it's grisly, McMahon gate the weather, how to allo- loves her job. "If you don't ... cate his fuel, whether to steer even a little bit of stress is going visually or with instruments, where to land should a mecha-
to make you leave it or just con-
S ometimes
t he
str e s s
ruptures McMahon's quiet hard, especially when sleeping strength. in unfamiliar hotel rooms. Usually, that's if a child apThe other source of stress pears in the tank room or a for Hoban is universal: job patient dies. She'll wonder security. "That's a different kind of
stress," he says. "But it's pretty significant if you've been put
percent."
PITTSBURGH — A lung
The benefits were shown
cancer screening method
in 2011 by the National Lung that i s r e commended for Screening Trial. Participants long-term smokers, whether who received the low-dose they have quit or not, prom- CT scans had a 20 percent ises to detect cancer at its lower risk of dying from lung earliest and most curable cancer t ha n p a r t icipants stages.However, most insur- who received standard chest ance does not cover the cost, X-rays. Annual scans are and participation has been recommended by the U.S. limited. Preventative Services Task To raise awareness of Force. the screening and its potenThe West Penn screening tial, West Penn Hospital in is part of a pilot project for Pittsburgh is offering low- the Allegheny Health Netdose computer tomography work here, which plans to screening for free, supported implement it throughout the by agrantfrom Highmark, a network. national health and wellness The CT test does not recompany. High-risk patients quire any preparation or inages 55 to 74 are eligible for jections. Patients can make the program and must have an appointment by calling a history of smoking a pack a a phone line. A lung cancer day for 30 years or two packs nurse navigator will contact a day for 15 years. They must them and lead them through either be current smokers or the screening process and have quit within the past 15 explain the implications of years. results. "In the future we hope This can b e a l i f e-saving opportunity, said Lana insurance companies will Schumacher, a thoracic sur- reimburse this, " Dr. Schumgical oncologist and co-di- acher said. The radiation exrector at the Esophageal and posure in the screening, she Thoracic Institute at Allegh- said, "is a little bit more than eny Health Network. Lung an X-ray, a lot less than you cancer is the third most com- get for a CAT scan. They're mon cancer in the U.S. and just looking for nodules in the leading cause of cancer the lung; they don't need death. the higher dose." People get "Some patients are too more exposure in r adiation from the environment
ried we'll find something," around them, she explained. Dr. Schumacher said, adding The oncologist said the that patients should know pilot study will follow up on that even if cancer is found, its patients to demonstrate its if it's in an early stage be- value in preventative health fore symptoms appear, "the care. "We'll track the particisurvival rate goes up dramatically, to 85-90 percent pants in a database, track over five years. Once a per- them over time and see if we son shows symptoms, it's a are makinga difference."
whom the person left behind,
and if she helped the person die with peace and dignity. If it's
OSPICE
too overwhelming, McMahon
out on the street and out of the
steps out of the room to catch
job."
her breath.
Hoban says it's important to leave those worries outside the
five-year survival rate of 15
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
worried to get a scan, wor-
tinue to just grow animosity for nism unexpectedly fail. your position," she says. "Enjoying your job keeps Getting adequate sleep is the single most important aspect of your stress level at a certain this operation, Hoban says. dull roar." He tries to get eight hours of sleep a night but admits that's
By Jill Daly
of Redmond 5 4 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3
"I generally try not to let anybody see it onthe floor, because
cockpit. if the patient or the family sees Like any job, "you're going that type of reaction, then it to have stress no matter what," makes it harder on them." says Hoban, but unlike most McMahon unwinds on her jobs, if Hoban brings his anxi- drive home, and if it's been a ety into the airplane, the conse- particularly exhausting day, quences couldbe detrimental. she retreats into her home of"Hlots aren't supermen," he fice, where several docks hang says. "We're human beings like on the walls. "I just sit there and listen to everyone else." Hoban also tries to protect them," she says. The monotohis personal life from work- nous ticking in the silent room place stress. After a six-day helps empty her head of the trip, Hoban will have a few graphic images. days home with his family, and Then McMahon can stoically he makes the most of it. return to the tank room. "I just treat them," she says. to Byerly. And sttessful: The form better the faster it goes," When he sets the parking job-search portalCareerCast he says. brake and shuts down the en- "Just kind of put it out of my ranks event planning as one of But come Sunday evening gine, "I'm done." head as to why they're there or the top 10 most stressful jobs after the race, when he finally Unlike other jobs, there's no howtheygot there."
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Food, Home & Garden
Rural
middle school math teacher) by physicians from St. Charles
Continued from D1
Especially in the winter, the drive can be closer to three
The lifestyle North Lake EMS responds
says that's rarely the case.
at all times. Anyone who can responds to the call, radios in and reportsthe level of care
"When you're talking six
or four hours, or in the case
hours each commitment, 150
of AirLink, sometimes smoke from summer fires can make
hours of basic training, that's a tremendous thing to take
to approximately 125 calls from the Lakeview dispatch an air transport impossible. center every year. There's no Respondingto a call can mean such thing as a typical call, but committing to anywhere from as far as procedure goes, there five to 10 hours before returnis a general outline. Volunteers ing to the duties of normal life. carry radios that receive the emergency signals; people A shortageofvolunteers are considered to be "on call"
or in Lakeview or online, but it's no small task in itself.
Another such volunteer-run EMS unit that connects with
St. Charles is based in Silver Lake. An even smaller rural
to which he or she has been community than Christmas trained. Once the EMTs reach Valley, Silver Lake is serviced the patient in question, it is de- by only nine volunteers. Gary termined whether transport to Brain, the director of the comSt. Charles is necessary. Com- bined fire and EMT depart-
EMT in Christmas Valley. North Lake EMS hopes to
2Aank you I!o4 you s iie usice!
gain more volunteers and will be holding an EMT training
Dr. Miller is back home and seeing patients at Bend Family Dentistry. Thank you Central Oregon for all of your donations —from Central Oregon donations alone, they had enough supplies to place over 400 sealants as well as supply children with oral hygiene instruction, tooth brushes, tooth paste and dental floss.
class at the end of October. The life of a volunteer EMT is far from convenient. It can
mean upset bosses, midnight ambulancedrives in pajamas, missed Christmas dinners. Wade and W iseman recall
out. If it's a cardiac or severe trauma situation, AirLink will
gratification that each gets
a paramedic, says it's difficult to find newpeople to sign on to this kind of obligation. "Some of the decline for us be radioed in and immediately launch to the patient's loca- is the population base. The tion. Otherwise, North Lake younger people are moving on EMS will perform a ground and out more than they used transport via ambulance. The to, ranchers are going by the EMTs are not permitted to re-
wayside, the family structure fuse if a patient requests hos- is a little bit different than it pital treatment. was years ago," Brain says. The length of the commute But, he adds, "We desperately
Servlng Bend I Redmond I Slsters I Powell Butte I Crooked Rlver Ranch I Terrebonne I Madras
gI'I y k~> » ~c i M '$~~4
ly Wiseman, an intermediate
and AirLink is vital through-
ment who has been trained as
• • Th eBulletin
on as a volunteer," says Mol-
several years when there was a call on every single holiday. "If any of them piss me off the most, it's the Super Bowl calls," says Wiseman.
munication with the hospital
In
AT HOME
And yet, there is undeniable from the job. "My contribution to the country is that I give my time for what I like to do and I
Dr. Tran Miller
like to help people," says Gary Brain.
Sue Ingalsbe goes a step further: "Most of our crew feels that
this is our way of helping out
to St. Charles is perhaps one need the help." our community. ... I d o n't of the most stunning aspects Although Christmas Val- think I would do it for pay. I of the commitment of the vol- ley has a larger base to draw know it would sound strange, unteers. A seamless one-way from, it too is hurting for new but I know other people would trip could take only around volunteers. Before any willing say the same thing. It's just two hours, but D i rector of person gets out in the field, what we do and how it is." North Lake EMS Sue Ingals- of course, he or she must be — Reporter: be (employed full-time as a trained. Training is provided k.a.tornay@gmaiI.com
DR. BRAD
HE ST E R D.M.D B END F A M I L Y
— uk ~
+ a~
DENTISTRY
anue -
541-389-1880 • www.bendfamilydentistry.com • 660 NE 3rd St, Ste 3, Bend
D4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
MoNEY
T ecostsan com icationso s arin me ica ata By JulIe Creswell New York Times News Service
As a practicing physician in
in hospitals and physicians' offices. While the vast majority of
tals all over the country as well
r
providers have installed some ear, nose and throat specialist kind ofelectronic record sysDr. Raghuvir Gelot says little tem, two recent studies have Ahoskie, North Carolina, the has frustrated him more than
found that fewer than half of
the digital record system he installed a fewyears ago. The problem: His system, made by one company, cannot share patient records with
the nation's hospitals can trans-
astovariouspublichealth agencles and reglstrles.
J
)% 1
g
mit a patient care document,
"These are hospitals that have
while only 14 percent of physicians can exchange patient
agreed to the Rules of the Road, a legal contract, that says the other organization is going to take good care of the data."
data with outside hospitals or
other providers. "We've spent half a million uses aprogrammadeby another company. dollars on an electronic health The tw o c o mpanies are record system about three quick to deny responsibility, years ago, and I'm faxing all each blaming the other. day long. I can't send anything Regardless of who is at fault, electronically over it," said Dr. doctors and hospital executives William Rich III, a member of across the country say they are a nine-person ophthalmology distressed that the pricey elec- practice in northern Virginia tronic health record systems and medical director of health they installed in the hopes of re- policy for the American Acadeducing costs and improving the my of Ophthalmology. coordination of patient careGelot, the ear, nose and a major goal of the Affordable throat specialist, uses a system Care Act — simplydo not share made by Practice Fusion. His information with competing local medical center, Vidant systems. Roanoke-Chowan Hospital, relies on a program built by Epic
I
the local medical center, which
Clock isticking
Systems. There is no evidence that ei-
The issue is especially critical now as many hospitals and thercompany does a betteror physicians scramble to install worse job of sharing informathe latest versions of their dig- tion. But Epic and its enigmatic ital record systems to demon- founder, Judith Faulkner, are strate to regulators, starting being denounced by those who the first of this month, that they say its empire has been built can share some patient data. with towering walls, deliberateThose who cannot will face ly designed not to share patient reductions in Medicare reim- information with competing bursements down the road. systems. On top of that, leading companies in the industry are Frustrating roadblocks preparing to bid on a Defense Almost 18 months after an Department contract valued at Epic system was installed at an estimated $11 billion. A pri- UnityPoint Health-St. Luke's
/
shedid — acontract tohelpproviders connect to one another and a way to authenticate that
only the correct person could view the patient information. "I'm not sure why the govAt UnItyPoInt Health-St. Luke's hospital In SIoux City, Iowa, physicians and nurses are unable to transmit patient documents to a nearby hospital that uses a records system made by another company. ernment doesn't want to do Doctors and hospital executives are expressIng frustration that hIgh expense and technical difficulties some of the things that would Inhibit a major goal of the Affordable Care Act — disseminating medical information electronically. be required for everybody to Aaron C. Packard/ New YorkTimes News Service
vide between large hospital various fees, nor is there evi- for hospitals" to interconnect systems that have the money dence that its fees are more ex- with the dinical or billing softand technical personnel nec- pensive than its peers. But the ware of other companies.
m archtogether, "Faulknersaid. Regulators responded that interoperability was a "top priority" and that they recently set out a 10-year vision and agen-
essary to transmit patient data
barrier created by these types
In a rare interview, Faulkner
da to achieve it, in an emailed
and small, rural hospitals or physician practices that are overwhelmed, financially and technologically.
of charges "affects the small and rural providersmuch more significantly," said Morgan Honea, executive director of the Colorado Regional Health
said the industry made great strides this year and noted that Epic's customers were sending increasingnumbers ofrecords each month. She and other company executives argued that the company was actually one of
statement from the Office of
was not prepared to create a
"The systems can't communicate, and that becomes
So that doctors at the University of California Davis Health
in its critical care unit or with
Information Organization, a
Backlash
clinical research, physicians' reports to the Food and Drug
ContInued from 01
Administration and surveys of
The investor enthusiasm for health ventures, said Halle
pharmacists. For hundreds of drugs, Io-
Tecco, managing director of
dine's website provides not
Rock Health, is fueled by the belief that the health care in-
only basic information about said, is that it could provide "a each drug — its purpose, window into behavioral modhow it works, side effects and els" to improve drug-taking warnings — but also a section compliance. with the upsides and downIodine's early survey results sides of taking a drug, price already raise questions and and copays, alternative drugs challenge assumptions. High and interactive tools. rates of nonadherence are ofThe interactive graphics ten attributed to older people distill and present the results resisting or forgetting to take from the Google surveys. theirdrugs.Butpeopleover55 They enable a user, for ex- years old report significantly ample, to see how people rate less "hassle" with their drugs their experiences with a drug than younger people. based on survey questions: In another analysis, the Was taking the drug worth it Iodine team compared the overall? How well did it work survey reports on five of the for you? Is taking the drug a top-selling drugs in the Unit"hassle"? The hassle factor, ed States with those of five survey takers are told, is their off-patent alternative drugs. experience of side effects and The satisfaction scores for the inconvenience caused. genericswere about the same Then, users can see in great- as for far more costly brander detail how the drug rated name drugs. If the generics for people like themselves, by w ere prescri bed instead ofthe clicking by gender and age branded varieties, the estimatgroup. The results are pre- ed savings would be $27.5 bilsented on a grid with nine lion a year. "Food for thought, at least," squares, with the upper-righthand square being ideal — re- Goetz noted. flecting the highest ratings for Iodine facesahostofhurdles. "works well" and "hassle free." There are several drug-refThe handful of questions on erence guides online, like the Iodine surveys certainly those of WebMD, Drugs.com
the medical care of 9.6 million active-duty military personnel around the globe. The contract is the latest boon to an industry that has
dustry is both huge and technologically backward, and thus ripe for an assault with clever software and data-driv-
en decision-making. Iodine joins a growing collection of health startups using data analysis in innovative ways, including Omada Health, Ginger.io and Propeller Health, sometimes employ-
ing sensors and smartphones to provide early warning signals about conditions like dia-
betes, depression and asthma.
How it works Iodine is charting new territory with its ambitious use of Google Consumer Surveys as a research tool. With 100,000
surveyscompleted and more added daily, Goetz said that
Iodine was building the largest survey ever taken of Americans' drug experience, intended to help consumers and perhaps guide policy. Clinical trials to determine drug approval, by contrast, routinely involve a couple of hundred people. Google Consumer Surveys, begun in 2012, is best known for its performance in the presidential campaign that year,being the most accurate of the Internet polls and second-most-accurate of the polls
tracked by Nate Silver, the statistician and editor in chief of the website FiveThirtyEight.
lacks the depth of clinical tri-
als, but they cast a broad net. Outside experts who have seen Iodine's early work say they are impressed. And Iodine's applied research, they say, is certainly addressing a notable information gap in health care, for consumers and providers.
Today, the Google survey service is used by more Targeting amassivemarket than 300 websites, including Seventy percent of Amerithose of The New York Daily cans take at least one prescripNews, The Boston Globe and tiondrug and 50 percenttake Bloomberg. Typically, readers two or more. Yet studies show are asked to fill out a survey for that half or more of people accessto one or a few articles. with chronic diseases do not Foreach completed survey,the take their drugs as prescribed. publishers are paid a few cents. Lack of adherence to drug regIodine's use of the service, Goo- imens is estimated to cause gle said, is on a scale matched 125,000 deaths a year and cost only by major corporations for between $100 billion and $289 marketing research. billion annually. "So the intent of the therIodine combines the survey results with other data sets apy is lost, and the killer is it taps, including published we don't know why," said Dr.
setof rules around interoperability, Faulkner said, her team began writing the code for Care Everywhere. Initially seen as a health information exchange
administration.
The potential of the research Iodine is doing, Brailer
and the Mayo Clinic website, but they lack Iodine's wide
range of material. "Our approach is data-driven, while the sites with drug informa-
tion now are mainly content-driven," said
M o hebbi,
explaining the difference. But whether that difference will attract a sizable audience remains to be seen,and Io-
dine has no business model yet. Goetz says he is leery of
my problem because I cannot send what is required and I'm
going to have a 1 percent penaltyfrom Medicare," Gelot said. for its own customers, Care Ev- "They're asking me to do someerywhere todayconnectshospi- thing I can't control."
K. ®5 II .
David Brailer, the n ational
coordinator for health information technology in the Bush
the National Coordinator for Health Information Technol-
ogy. The office's spokesman added that achieving interoperability"requires stakeholders to cometogether and agree on policy-related issues like who the first to create rules around can access information and for sharing information and a plat- what purpose." form to do so. Gelot says he hopes interopBackin 2005, when it became erability comes sooner rather dear to her that the government than later.
System can share patient data public health information exbetween its Epic system and change, in recent policy hearother internal systems, such ings in Washington, D.C. as the hemodynamic monitors
Startups
share information, allowing the department to digitally track
Careful in h e r c h oice of words, Faulkner offered muted sentially, failing to create what
been heavily subsidized by taxpayers in r ecent years through more than $24 billion in incentive payments to help install electronic health records
winning vendor must be able to
Seekingregulation criticism of regulators for, es-
some non-Epic systems outside While nearly all of the leadof the hospital, it has 22 special- ing record companies have ists installing the required tech- come under fire for their inabilhospital in Sioux City, Iowa, nologyto do so. ity to easily share information, "We'rea huge organization, Epic faced some of the stronphysicians there still cannot transmit a patient care doc- so we can absorb those costs," gest attacks this summer. ument to doctors two miles said Michael Minear, the chief A research report issued by south at Mercy Medical Center, information officer at UC Davis the RAND Corp. described which usesa system designed Health System. "Small clinics Epic as a "dosed" platform that by another major player in the and physician offices are going made it "challenging and costly field, Cerner Corp. to have a harder time." Where i n t erconnectivity Separately, through its mainbetween systems does occur, tenance contractsand other it often happens with steep agreements, Epiccharges afee upfront connecting charges to send data to some non-Epic or recurring fees, creating systems. what some see as a digital diEpic is not alone in charging
mary requirement is that the
"Let's say a patient is coming from UCLA and going to the University of Chicago, an Epic-to-Epic hospital. Boom. That's easy," Faulkner said.
What the great Cascadia earthquake could mean to Central Oregon.
Join expertsforapanel discussion on Cascadia and an in-depth look at how the major earthquake predicted to hit the Oregon coast sometime in the next 50 years could impact Central Oregon.The panel includes: Dr. Scott Ashford, Dean of the College of Engineering, Oregon State Univeristy Sgt. Nathan Garibay, Emergency Service Manager, Deschutes County Sheriffs Office Lisa Stroup, Executive Director, Oregon Mountain River Chapter of the American Red Cross
Four key organizations are partnering to bring this important preparedness event to you. Don't miss this free event for a first-hand look at the predicted Cascadia quake and for important tips on how to prepare yourself, your family and your business to survive the immediate aftermath.
Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2014 7 p.m. at the Tower Theatre A panel presentation with time for audience questions. Free and open to the public. Tickets and information: www.towertheatre.org
sc-74e-4ses
advertising, with its potential
for visual clutter and conflicts of interest. Still, just as med-
ical clinics and laboratories are valuable, Goetz said, there should be "experience value" in the aggregated, anonymous data of the drug experience of millions of people. "But our first goal," Goetz said, "is to create a consumer experience that is so compel-
ling it seals that deal."
t The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
Amerlcan Red Cross Oregon Mountain River Chapter
OregonState Cascades
I
StfCharles HEALTH SYSTEM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D5
FrmEss Decorum
Meeting goalsand new people through the 'November Project' By Vicky Hallett
you really bond," says White, memorial eight times (because the handshake opponent. "The it's August), do 20 burpees (beTechnique really matters to type of people who do this are cause it's the 20th day of the thededicatedpeoplewho work the type of people I want to m onth) and take a lap around out with the November Project, hang out with." Lincoln (because that's apa free run dub and boot camp They keep getting more p roximately 2,014 feet). Finish — when it comes to hugging, quality time together as work- early? You can do stairs or that is. outsare added to the schedule burpees or take over a strug"Your hips have to be in," in a different spot each week. gling teammate's lap around instructs Janeen Porche, 37. The group also holds special Lincoln (or join in). "No church-lady hugs," adds events, such as last month's A nd t h ey're off. And they're pal Traci Johnson, 46, demon- Better Than Bedtime, a cos- h a p pyaboutit. strating the off-limits style by tumed 5K held simultaneously C h r i stensen dashes around, sticking out her rear end and in all of the Novemoffering high-fives gently tapping Porche on the ber Project cities. and admiring the shoulders. (There are now 17 Th e y view of the WashAnd don't even think about tribes, from San Di- yyg/Cpyflgg mgton Mo n ument extending an arm instead, ex- ego to Milwaukee to against a pur plains the always-smiling Kyle Baltimore. The D.C. PBOP/8 Of plish- blue sky."It's White, 29: "We don't believe in t ribe, which attracts g// gg/I/8gjC the be s t w a y t o handshakes." up to 350 foRs for ab i / itiBS start the m orning What they do believe in is w orkouts, i s s e c in D.C.," he says. It the grass-roots movement ond in size behind tp t /16iy would be a perfect started in 2011 in Boston by Boston's.) Wpl'kpUtS. day, i f o nly Metcalf Brogan Graham and Bojan This rapid growth ~// t jl <y were h e re, too. Mandaric, two former North- has turned the NoHis co-leader is in eastern University rowers who vember project from d6 yyl 8 yldad portl a nd for surgery made a pact to exercise togeth- a weekly habit into jyl yg/Uyyl~gS t o r e move a brain er throughout the month of something m o r e ~ /I >t.fp/kS tumor .With Metcalf November (hence the name). serious. out for a month, varWhen friends — and, eventuTo u n derstand bt-' y|-'~~y ~P iou s members of the ally, strangers — began to join what inspires this S ~ gg f gyi d tribe h ave pitched m as "Danny of the them as they ran the stairs of devotion, ™ g i ne SO CIB/IZB. Day." Harvard Stadium, they decid- the scene at the Lined they didn't just want to get coln Memorial on a P art o f wh a t ' s stronger and faster. They had a recent Wednesday fueled November newgoal. morning. It's just before 6:30 Projectgrowthis FOMO — or, "We wantto change theway a.m., and the sun is struggling fear of missing out, says Chris peoplesee fitness," Mandaric to get up. The hordes arriving, Cantergiani, 45. He's the D.C. says. however, look wide awake, t ribe's unofficial photographer, They welcomed people of all especially as they form a tight known for his talent for capathletic abilities to their work- circleandstarthopping. They turing folks mid-stride with outs. All they demanded in re- go through a shouting call-and- grins on their faces."You see turn was that folks be ready to response routine. They spin t his stuff on Facebook, and you sweat and socialize. Within a around, bop their neighbors want to do it, too," he says. Special to The Washington Post
few months, hundreds had tak-
on their heads and then inter-
Mand a ric and Graham en-
en them up on the offer, and in- lock fingers with a partner, vision a future where everyterest bubbled up in exporting m ake eye contactand whisper, one everywhere can partici"Connection." the program to other cities. pate. They just need to figure They've been told to wear ei- ou t how to continue to build a
Growing interest One of these offshoots-
therblueorgraytodaybecause brand based on the idea that they'remarkingtheanniversa- no money changes hands, no
called "tribes," in November
ryoftheofficialendoftheCivil
Project parlance — launched in Washington, D.C., last year under the guidance of Danny Metcalf and Steve Christensen.
War with a themed workout. the only commitment people
n a m es are ever collected and
Their shirt color determines
m a ke is their word.
their team. Each person is supG o o d thing they're used to posed to run the stairs of the goinguphills.
trainers will even tell you that
itenhances performance. One Continued from 01 study of college tennis playFocusing on your work- ers found that their serve and out also means not staring forehand velocity increased at people as they are doing when they grunted. theirs. You can learn a lot Still, that loud exhalation from checking out some- can be distracting to everyone one else's routine, but don't else. Besides, you can forcefulogle. And if you really want ly expel air without making a to try the circuit that the whole lot of noise. Try it. "If it sounds like someone guy next to you is doing, ask him about it when it is passing a kidney stone and it's distracting to other peolooks like he's done. ple, then you need to tone it
Keep it clean
down," Maier said. "We're all If you're a sweat mon- for people exerting themselves ster, like I am, bring wipes within reason, but we don't to clean off the machines, want someone to bust a blood mats and weights. Most vessel." gyms come equipped with And another thing: There is spray bottles and paper no need to drop the weights aftowels; some even have dis- ter completing that oh-so-difinfecting wipes. Use them. ficult set. It's distracting and Slipping and b usting dangerous, Alexx Griffin, reyour behind on someone's gional group fitness director treadmill sweat trail is no at Vida, said in an emaiL "Please do not drop weights fun. Janitors can be in only so many places at once. from overhead or let t h em They need your coopera- drop from waist level to the tion to keep the gym from ground," he wrote. Instead, "maintain control of weights becoming a petri dish. If you like to shave or at all times," and safely lower w ash your hair i n t h e them to a resting position. locker room shower, take a paper towel and scoop Don'thog severalm achines up the bits of hair in the or weights at once drain. Sure, it's icky, but Rotating from one machine it's ickier when somebody to the next as part of a circuit else has to step in it. And can be a great way to break up if you need to freshen your the monotony of your workmakeup at the sink, clean out. But be mindful that othup the film of foundation er people want to use the leg or blush powder around press or Smith machine. Don't take long breaks in the edges. between each set, because Keep grunts someone will swoop in to take
should probably come in during off-peak hours," Maier said. "If you're going to the gym at 6 p.m. at night, don't do it. You're going to upset people, and everyone has got to share." All of the same advice ap-
plies to the use of weights. It's splendid that you are trying to increase the amount of weight
you can lift. You know what's not splendid? People waiting 20 minutes for the pair of 10-, 15- and 20-pound dumbbells
that you say you're "almost" done using. Not all gyms come fully stocked with multiple weights of the same size, so keep that in mind when
you pick up the last pair of 15-pound dumbbells. And "return all equipment
to its proper location after use so that it's readily available for other members and keeps the
gym floor free of clutter," Griffin said.
Confine your stuff to one area There is no reason for anyone to have their belongingswater bottle, sweatshirt, keys,
phone, wallet — strewn about. This goes for the locker room, weight room and class studio. None of these places are your house, so you have no right to throw your stuff everywhere. Not cool. There is limited space in
the gym that has to be shared by everyone, so it does no one any good to have to maneuver
around all of your things. Get a locker.Ifyou don'tfeelsafe to a minimum one of th e m achines. And parting from your wallet or Yes, that last set of curls swoopers, ask whether the cellphone, then neatly place is killing you. So much so person is still using the leg them somewhere that's not in that you're gritting your press before you start your set. the way. teeth, breaking into a sweat The frustration of having to When you're in the locker and grunting like you're wait and wait for a machine is room, don't leave your toiletC onan the Barbarian -
no excuse for rudeness.
"I'm all for people doing down. circuit training, but if you are I t is n atural t o g r u nt going to monopolize multiwhen exerting effort; some ple pieces of equipment, you but you're not, so keep it
ries in the shower stall. Same
goes for your sweaty clothes a nd worn u n dies. No o n e needs to see all that. No one. Ever.
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •
•
•
•
•
•
• • Cl a ssifieds
"It was clear this was some-
thing I would love. Nothing like it exists," says Metcalf, a proud goofball and Ironman triathlete who'd heard about
the November Project from friends. Christensen had just moved from Boston, where he'd trained with the founders,
and recognized the potential for another "weird and positive" community.
Prospective leaders "pledge" to show t h eir
c o mmitment
beforethey're allowed to use
5
S
the November Project name.
So the first D.C. gathering last September was just a handful of people running the stairs of the Lincoln Memorial at 6:30
a.m. on a Wednesday. "There were four o f
u s ,"
recalls Kathleen Hodge, Metcalfs roommate and his business partner in a line of nutrition bars. Over the next month,
they went to bed every Tuesday night asking one another, "Think anybody will come
s s I
s s
tomorrow?"
Each week, more people did. The leaders experimented on them with various break-theice activities.
At many other free fitness groups in the area, it's possible to show up and not feel as
though you've actually met anyone, Christensen says. At
•
•
•
g
•
r
I
the November Project, a work-
out without a personal connection is a failure, no matter how many calories you burn. Because November Project workouts keep participants
•
I
I
together in the same space,
there's constant interaction. "So someone like me can get a quality workout with all of my best friends. I just run extra sets," Metcalf says.
By late October, Metcalf and Christensen had earned official tribe status. It was just in time to earn a mention in a Runner's
World cover story about the November Project. The piece
chronicled the meteoric rise of the Boston workouts, which were by then attracting up to
650 people — a mix of Olympians, ex-college athletes and
St. MEDICAL Charles GROUP
recent couch potatoes.
That publicity boost brought more people to the D.C. work-
170 PROVIDERS AND 19 SPECIALTIES
outs. The quirky culture that
SChariIIHealhCan.orIISCMG SQ
had formed kept them coming despite the most miserable winter in recent memory.
Bonding through adversity "In negative-8 wind chill,
when you're doing burpees,
FANILY CARE IMMEDIATECARE PREOPERATIVECARE PEDIATRICS EMERGENCVMEDICIIIE CARDIOLOGY GENERALSURGERY SLEEP MEDIOilE BEHAVIORALHEALTH OBIGYN ANESTHESIOLOGVNEONATOLOGY PALUATIVECARE PULMONOLOGY ONCOLOGY INFECTIOUSDISEASE HOSPITAL NEDIClilE HOSPICE CARDIOVASCUIAR SURGERY
D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
om-coms mirror c assic movie emes TV SPOTLIGHT
"Yes," Amy drawls, "if you
By Alessandra Stanley
jIIItlI! 'i' I,:,:::.:"',i,:::::,":.
New Yortt Times News Service
smash your phone the Internet
flaw in the matchup service he works for. He's a hopeless
disappears."
romantic who listens to Celine
Dana is a fresh, idealistic newcomer to an endangered
industry — she quit every-
Dion; she's a tough litigator who doesn't believe in love. There's a prosaic lining to
vious thing in common — the
thing to move to New York and
the sweetness. For one thing,
perils of dating in the age of
fulfill her dream of making a the trajectory of their courtdifference in book publishing. ship is given away at the very Peter, on the other hand, is a beginning. Andrew and Zelda cynic who works in his fam- "will date for eight months, ily's suddenly booming busi- three weeks, five days and one ness: trophy manufacturing. hour," a narrator says wryly. "Selfie," which might as well "This television program is be called "My Fair Sales Rep," the comprehensiveaccount of
Three new network come-
u h!
dies this week all have one ob-
I
Twitter, Tinder and Snapchat
— what they really share is Nora Ephron.
i~-
"Manhattan Love Story,"
which began Tuesday on ABC,
I
is a riff on "When Harry Met
Sally." After a girl who looks a lot like Meg Ryan is set up with a guy who acts a little like Billy Crystal, she accidentally types something hideously embarrassing into her smartphone. "A to Z," premiering today
From left, Jade Catta-preta, Jake Mcoorman andAnaleigh Tipton
has a more limiting conceit:
speak on stage about "Manhattan Love Story," which is one of many romantic comedies entering the TV lineup.
Once the makeover is com-
"Marry Me" is the compre-
plete, then what? But Karen
hensive account of a propos-
on NBC, is partly set in the
a classic story is what Eph-
offices of an online dating
ron did with "Bewitched," a t ongue-in-cheek redo of t h e
service called Wallflower, but it's a love story that braids
coincidence and destiny. It is
Richard Shotwell /The Associated Press
cept contemporary twist on
of the auto-correct age and
classic television show that
the boneheaded things people do when communication is in-
ran from 1964 to 1972.
stant, constant, indelible and
Ephron made witty, sophisron movie, "Sleepless in Seat- ticated romantic comedies for tle," though it is also infused the movies, but that genre has with some of the bittersweet noticeably faded from the big self-consci ousness of "(500) screen in an era when the box Days of Summer." office favors animated block"Selfie," a sendup of Insta- busters, dystopian parables gram-ification on ABC, was and comic book heroes. fittingly enough released in So the director who adapted August as a sneak preview on the 1940 Ernst Lubitsch movie "The Shop Around the Corthe streaming service Hulu. It focuses on a narcissistic so- ner" toaddress the trends of cial media addict who is given late-'90s email and megastore a Pygmalionmakeover by a bookseller chains in "You've somewhat priggish branding Got Mail" m i ght c heer on close in spirit to another Eph-
guru. That's Shaw, of course,
These series tap into some of the most comical missteps
these latest efforts to keep true
not Ephron, but the high-con- love alive in the 21st century.
irreversible. On "Manhattan Love Sto-
ry," when Dana (Analeigh Tipton) tries to Google Peter (Jake McDorman) on her smartphone, she mistakenly
types his name into her status update, which is like telling the world either that they
are an item or she is a stalker. Her Type-A friend, Amy (Jade Catta-Preta), who is never not
online or on her headset, even while leading a yoga class, lets Dana know i n stantly, driv-
ing Dana to"undo" her gaffe by pummeling her phone.
itch for constant attention." When Eliza humiliates her-
lap around the Internet."
Good comedy on network self at work, she begs Henry to television is harder than ever help her "rebrand" her image when cable and the Web have and make real friends, not just access to almost all of the Facebook ones. It's a tough same talent but operate with premise to sustain for long, but less government regulation an amusing one. and many more mass audi"A to Z" is clever but almost ence constraints. So it's quite too adorable: Andrew (Ben remarkable that so many of Feldman of"Mad Men") and these prime-time shows find Zelda (Cristin Milioti, "How I new ways to tell the oldest stoMet Your Mother") meet be- ry: When Harry Friended Salcause she finds an algorithm ly and You've Got Text.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and iMAXmovies • Movie times a/e subject to change after p/ess time. I
Deer Abby: You missed the chance to communicate a life-ordeath message to your readers when you answered a letter from an "Ohio Grandma" (July 14).
Dear Abby:You dropped the ball. comes to medication. — Mesquite, Texas, Grandma No 3-year-old will respect a closed door all of the time. Grandma and
Dear Abby:"Ohio Grandma's" sto-
Grandpa are responsible for the ry of an emergency room visit for safekeeping of their meds while in suspected medication poisoning is Your reply understated the imthe child's and even the grandpar- all too common. In 2011, 67,700 todportance of storing medications ents' home. Bottles that rattle and dlers were seen for accidental medproperly and safely. What if the pretty colors in a bottle that look ication exposure. Of these, 12,390 grandmotherhad placed a loaded like candy will attract any little kid. required hospitalization. Children GUN on the desk inGrandma and Grand- 13 to 24months of age accounted for stead of medications? pa should be happy 68 percent of these visits. In ER visBoth can produce just they aren't helping to its where information was obtained, DFP,R pay for a funeral in- 38 percent involved grandparents' ABBY And w h y d i d n 't stead of an ER visit. medications,31 percent themother's those meds have safeHere are the "rules": medications, 12 percent a sibling's, ty lids? Putting them 1. All medications 8 percent the father's and 5 percent in a suitcase is not enough. They should be in kid-proof containers. an aunt's or uncle's medication. should bestored out of reach, pref-
2. All medications and over-the-
Family members MUST t ake
erably secured with a safety lock. counter drugs should be kept out of precautions to keep their meds out Or better yet, the parents should be a curious child's climbing area. of children's hands. I keep mine told you have dangerous substances 3. Poison Control numbers should under lock and key with the key in with you — and ASKED where you be posted on the fridge. my possession whenever I visit my can store them. 4. Use the original container grandchildren. While I agree with — Mom of aToddler (NOT one of those daily dosage you that children should be taught in New Jersey containers) and know how many boundariesand to respectthe posDear Mom: Iwas scolded for not pills are in it. Be sure you know the sessions of others, I believe we have placing more emphasis on the safe- name, strength and dosage for each a responsibility to provide a safe enty issue. However, the question I medication. Just telling the hospital vironment, especially when we are was asked was, "Are we obligated that it's for "blood pressure" doesn't visiting or when children are visitto help with more of the medical ex- tell themwhat it is or howto treat an ing us. The consequences of failing penses (for the ER visit) because we overdose. to do that can be tragic. — Pediatricion and have already helped (contributed 5. NEVER tell the kids that mediseveral hundred dollars) and I don't cation is candy! Grandmother in Maine think it's our job to teach our grand6. You are the adult. Don't exchild boundaries?" So that was the pect any child — or teen — to re— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com issue on which I focused. Read on: spect your private property when it or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, OCT. 2, 2014:Thisyearyou want to make a difference, and you probably will within your immediate circle. You notice that others often have a strong reaction to you, which is new. Zero in on your mutual priorities when dealing with your differences. If you are single, a friendship could evolve into something more, but it could
create someawk-
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
need to figure out his or her own priorities. You can help or comment, butyou might risk having this person close down if you do. Tonight: Visit over dinner.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
Stars showthe kind ward moments. ** * * * You might consider having a of day you'll have PerhaPs honoring heart-to-heart talk with someone who ** * * * D ynamic the friendship first seems to be in control of his or her life, and ** * * Positive wi l l help you get it could have abig effect on you. Usegood ** * Average thr o ugh this period. sense with spending. Someone will reach ** So-so If you are attached, out to invite you to join him or her for some * Difficult your significant fun. Tonight: Say "yes." other's opinions LEO (July23-Aug.22) often differ from yours. With much back** * You might be at odds with your own and-forth, you will realize thatyou both want the same things. CAPRICORN can plans now thatyou are at the point of actirritate you. ing on them. A newinsight will encourage you to back off and rethink what you are ARIES (March 21-April19) doing. Some caution could go a long way! ** * Your reactions could come across Tonight: Get several important errands as strong and harsh. You probably can't done. hide your feelings, but you might feel very awkward when dealing with a child or VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) loved one. Your response could shock even ** * * * You have a lot to share, and so you.Relaxandthinkbeforeyouspeak. do others. Your goodwill and caring will Tonight: Out and about. come through. You will see the results of someone's decisions.Communication TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * Reach out to someone you care flourishes. If you are single, you could be looking at more than a friendship. Tonight: about, but know that whatyou hear might Getintoweekendmode. surprise you. You comefrom a solid point of view. Offbeat thinking will force you to LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) stop and regroup, and you will come up ** * Keep your priorities straight, and with a practical plan as aresult. Tonight: stay anchored. Let others put in their two Let someone bedistant. cents. You might feel as if there is a lack GEMINI (May21-June28) of support from an important friend. Use ** * * * Recognize that you have control caution when spending money onan over yourself but not someone else. In fact, investment or a home repair. Investigate ala close loved one or family member will ternatives. Tonight: Hang with your friends.
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) *** * You could beoverly concerned about a call or email. Do some research before reacting — there will be another path to the same result. You might want to rethink a decision with care. Know what you desire from a situation. Tonight: Find your friends.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You will like being mellow. You might not be in the mood to take action, but a sudden reversal could cause your adrenaline to surge. Onceenergized, you naturally will respond and makethe right
choices. Thecheerleader inyou returns. Tonight: Make it OKto say"no."
GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * You willthinkthatyou are on cruise control, but you are likely to hit some obstacles if you are not careful. A well-meaning friend could makeyou feel unusually self-conscious. You might need to stop and regroup. Tonight: Decide what you want before making plans.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * You might not be comfortable assuming the role you are in, yet you'll see the benefits. You could be dealing with a difficult person and will need to revise your thinking accordingly. Trying to control this person will backfire, and it won't bring what you want. Tonight: Vanish.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * A meeting could set the tone of your day. Youhave so muchenergy that others won't be able to keep upwith you. Take an overview, and question whether you are approaching a situationin the best, most positive way possible. Tonight: Act like the weekend is here. © King Features Syndicate
8 p.m. on 5, 8, "The Biggest Loser" —Home may be where the heart is, but it's also where the scale is as one contestant goes back to his or her residence — with his or her trainer — in the new episode "The Lottery." The situation is challenging for all concerned, including those at the ranch who must stay focused on their weight-loss mission while the trainer is absent. No one is under stress more than the one who went home, though: Only that person's weight will be counted for the whole team.
their relationship from A to Z."
Gillan, who played Amy Pond aL This NBC comedy starting in "Doctor Who," is very fun- Oct. 14 stars Casey Wilson ny and captivating as Eliza ("Happy Endings") as a wouldDooley, a p harmaceuticals be bride who keeps sabotagfirm employee and self-ob- ing efforts by her boyfriend sessedsocialm ediasuperstar. (Ken Marino) to get engaged. Henry (John Cho), the firm's "Just to clarify, though, we are marketing genius, has no pa- engaged or we're not?" she tience for social media, which asks as he storms out without he describes as a "giant finger- giving her the ring. "Because nail scratching this woman's I'd just love to take a victory
ICee in me s un er oc an ey
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
I
8 p.m. oo CW, "The Vampire Diaries" — Still mourning Damon (lan Somerhalder), Elena (Nina Dobrev) heads back to college as the series starts its sixth season with "I'll Remember." Caroline (Candice
Accola) hopes for help from Stefan (PaulWesley) asan anti-magic spell continues its hold on Mystic Falls. Now back in human form, Tyler (Michael Trevino) finds his temper put to the test. A doctor (guest star Jodi Lyn O'Keefe) intrigues Alaric (Matt Davis) as he settles into his existence as a vampire. 9 p.m. on CW, "Reign" —As
the drama's secondseason opens, "The Plague" describes the problem faced by Fran-
cis and Mary (TobyRegbo, Adelaide Kane) as they start ruling France. The Black Plague spreads across the country to the castle, with Francis ending up among those in quarantine along with Lola (Anna Popplewell). Despite the crisis,
Mary and Catherine (Megan
Follows) get new challenges to their power. Greer (Celina Sinden) is stunned by Leith's
(Jonathan Keltz) newromance.
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ANNABELLE (R) 7,9:30 • THEBOXTROLLS (PG)f1:30a.m.,5,7:30 • THEBOXTROLLS3-D(PG)2,10 • DOLPHINTALE2 (PG) 1f:45 a.m., 2:30, 6, 9 • THE DROP (R) 1f:50 a.m., 2:55, 6:05, 9:25 • THE EQUALIZER (R) Noon, 3:05, 6:10, 9:15 • THEEQUALIZER IMAX (R)12:30,3:35,6:40,9:45 • THE GIVER(PG-13) ff:35 a.m., 2:35 • GONE GIRL(R) 10 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)f,3:55,7,9:50 • THEHUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY (PG)12:20,3:15,6:35 • IFISTAY(PG-f3)12:50,3:50,7:f0,10:05 • LEFT BEHIND(PG-13) 7,9:45 • LET'S BE COPS(R) 1:30, 4:10 • THE MAZERUNNER(PG-I3) 12: I5, f:10, 3, 4:05, 6:25, 7:20, 9:10,fo:10 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-I3)12:05, 3:30, 7:40, fo:15 • THIS IS WHERE I LEAVEYoij (R) 12:40, 3:20,6:50, 9:30 • TIMRICE'8 FROM HERE TD ETERNITY (noM PAA rating) 7 • TUSK(R)IO:05 • AWALKAMONG THETOMBSTONES (R)1:25,4:25,7:15, IO:05 • WHENTHE GAME STANDS TALL (PG)12:45,3:45 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
10 p.m. on 5, 8, "Parenthood" — Mayhem is on the menu for many in the new episode "Happy Birthday, Zeek." Zeek (Craig T. Nelson) himself has a major health concern to consider, while school-related matters occupy Kristina and Adam's
(Monica Potter, Peter Krause) attention. Julia and Joel (Erika Christensen, Sam Jaeger) are brought back together for a schoolmeeting aboutSydney
(SavannahPaige Rae). Sarah (Lauren Graham)has mixed feelings about Amber (Mae Whitman). Dax Shepard also stars. © Zap2it
2 Locationsin Bend Main Center 2150NE StudioRd,SuiteIO
NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suiteio
541-389-9252 sylvan©beodbroadband.com
changingSmiles Denture O Implant Center
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • HERCULES (PG-l3) 6 • SIN CITY: ADAMETOKILL FOR(R) 9 • After 7p.m.,showsare2tandolderonly.Youngerthan 2t may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian.
Call 541-388-4444 for $100 OFF your new denture
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • BOYHOOD (R) 7:15 • FRANK (R)5 I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THEBOXTROLLS (PG)4,6:I5,8:30 • THE MAZERUNNER(PG-13) 4:15,6:45, 9:15 • THIS IS WHERE I LEAVEYOU(R) 5, 7:15, 9:30 • AWALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES (R)4:30,7,9:30
C om p l e m e n t s
w ww . c o m p l e m e o r s h o m e . c o m
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Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THE BOXTROLLS (PG) 6 • THE MAZERUNNER(PG-f 3) 6:15 • THIS IS WHERE I LEAVEYOU(R) 6:15 • THE TRIP TO ITALY(no MPAArating) 6
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AM!rr150VAW
rerrraea 220CFM Exhaust
Madras Cinema 5,110f SW U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THE BOXTROLLS (PG) 4:35, 6:50 • DOLPHINTALE2 (PG)4:45, 7:10 • IF I STAY(PG-13)4:20 • THE MAZERUNNER(PG-13) 4:25,7 • NOGOOD DEED(PG-13)5:20,7:20 • WHENTHE GAME STANDS TALL (PG)6:40
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337
$g 69
Brr where the btrllders tt I
HNsoN TV.APPLIANCE
•
Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt.,541-416-1014 • THE EXPENDABLES3(PG-13) 6: l5 • THE MAZERUNNER(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine
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TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 •
•
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
kfl
Call for package rates
=e
Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
:'hours:
contact 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
Includeyour name, phone number and address
. Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
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Subscribe or manage your subscription
: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad
T he
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
B ug l e t In :
202
Want to Buy or Rent
CASHfor wood dressers & dinette sets. 541-420-5640 Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jeweliy. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 203
Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows
1 7 7g
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Antiques 8 Collectibles
Exercise Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. Furniture for Sale Cans for Cats trailer at from Log Home: Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 Oak roll-top desk. E; P e t co (near Coffee table,end W al-Mart) i n R edtables, 2 lamps. mond; or donate M-F All beautiful and at Smith Sign, 1515 reasonably priced. NE 2nd; or CRAFT, 78th S t , Tum a lo. 541-549-0805 or Leave msg. for pick up 541-588-2301 of lar g e amt s , 541-389-8420. G ENERATE SOM E www.craftcats.org EXCITEllllENT in your G en. ops. m gr. o f neighborhood! Plan a well-established non- garage sale and don't to advertise in profit cat rescue retir- forget ing due t o h e alth, classified! 541-385-5809. need new mgr. or mgrs. Volunteer, no Hide-a-bed by Basset, pay. Challenging but while, mattress good satisfying work. 541 shape. good shape, 280 3172. $75. 54'I-382-6773
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Life Fitness Life Cycle, The Bulletin reserves 9500HR, new battery, the right to publish all $195 obo. 541-388-9270 ads from The Bulletin 245 newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet webGolf Equipment site.
The Bulletin
Serwng Cerrrret Oregon sincergtg
Callaway X-12 graphite, 3-(ob, $100. Big Berthagraphite fairway metals, 3-1 3, Private collector buying $40 each. postagestamp albums & Lady Callaway collections, world-wide graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 and U.S. 573-286-4343 metals, $100. (local, cell phone). Lady TaylorMade Miscelas graphite, 240 7-SW, driver-7 wood, Crafts & Hobbies $100. (2) Sun Mountain HO TRAIN: engines, Speed Carts, c ars, t r ack, c o r k $75 ea. bed, new in boxes. 541-382-6664 $499. 541-639-6401 215
Coins & Stamps
241
People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bvllefin Classifieds
Bicycles & Accessories
CHECK yOURAD
Medium full-suspension Solo Santa Cruz Mtn racinqbike,qood cond,must sell, $20000. 541-480-2652
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn correct. nSpellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
RANS Stratus XP 2011 Recumbent
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$1100. 541-777-77439 210
Furniture & Appliances
42" TV cabinet with s late t r i m $ 2 5 0; Ethan Allen buffet, storage, to p folds out for serving, $250; Heavy metal queen bed frame, $30; Pair n n 38 x84 beige black-out d r a pes, $15; Folding table and 4 folding chairs, in the box, $40. SE Bend. 541-508-8784
S ell y o u r s tuff f a s t .
Serving Central Oregon since fetg
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Antiques & Collectibles
Antique table $125 & pedal sewing maRegistered Lab Pupchine $150. $225 for pies. Chocolate b oth. C as h o n ly. ($750), Silver and 541-389-8563 Charcoal ($1000.). All pups have dew claws removed, first shots and wormed. Contact 541-462-3946 if interested. Aussie standards, shots, worming, & tails docked, Argus 300 slide $500. 541-459-2322 A1 Washers&Dryers projector Model 111 Series. also $150 ea. Full warBoxer cross very loving ranty. slides of Drake Park, Free Del. Also 6-year-old male free to wanted, used W/D's local camping/huntgood home, must have 541-280-7355 ing/fishing trips and fenced yard or propAlaska - in erty. 541-815-0620 1950's-1960s. $75 Burgundy barrel swivel obo. 541-419-6408 Boxer/French Mastiff pups rocker & ottoman, nice! ready for new homes $75. 541-526-5774 now! Docked tails, dewOld time logging climbclaws removed, 1st shots. Couch, black leather w/ ing gear with spurs, Females, $450; males 2 recliners, like new. belt, new rope, $275 $500. Call 541-419-0149 $400 obo. 541-408-0846 obo. 541-388-9270
541-420-0577
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Bend local pays CASH!!
for all firearms & ammo. 541-526-0617
Caldwell Lead Sled DFR rifle rest, $100. Ruger 10/22 with 3x9 scope, $175. Remington 11-87 Police 12ga with rifle sights, $750. Baikal Bounty Hunter 12 ga, 20" double barrels with screw-in chokes, $350. All like new! CASH!!
For Guns, Ammo 8 Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900. Colt .38 special 6-shooter revolver, holster, gun belt, ammo, great shape! $700. 541-480-0872
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 oi'
~ee eks s N
• New, never fired Weatherby VanguardS2, synthetic stock, cal 30-06.$550. • New, never fired Howa,wood stock, cal .300 Win Mag.$725 Must pass background check. Please call 541.389.3694, leave message.
o t ksoo
or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809
www.bendbulletin.com
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbullefin.com Updated daily Thompson Center Arms muzzleloader, 50 cal New Englander, exclnt shape,$295.
Ad must include price of
~et e ts
Taurus Raging Bull 454 also 45lc great condition. Also Savage 111 cal. .300 mag, wit h M i llett 4-16X 50 scope Taurus, $595. Savage $495. Contact Jim Fields 408-309-2408 in Bend.
Sage Rodw/Tioga reei, $225. Custom TFO rodwith Redington reel, $200. Simms waders, men's Lg, worn once, $200; ladies small, new in box, $175. Simms boots,men's 13, used once, $100; ladies 9, new in box, $100.Simms wading stick,new, $50. Fishpond chest pack,$50.
541-419-1604
ThompsonContender istol w/2 barrels: 44 em Mag/Gen1 with Bushnellscope 8 carry case; & 22 LR match with Bushnell scope 8 carry case, $850. SavageMod. 116 .300 Win Mag, stainless steel w/scope & case, $550. Mossberg300A 12Ga with 2 barrels: one 22" modified; & one 181/2", $250. Background check required. Please call 541.389.3694, Iv msg.
541-382-6664 New Gun & Knife Show Oct. 3-5 Deschutes County. Fair/Expo Just too many North Sister Bldg. collectibles? $5.00; under 14 free Daily Door Prizes Sell them in Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, Wanted: Collector seeks Sun. 9-3 The Bulletin Classifieds high quality fishing items Info: Central Oregon & upscale bamboo fly Gun Shows rods. Call 541-678-5753, 541 -385-5809 541-610-3717 or 503-351-2746
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Walther P38 (German) low s.n. $1500. OBO
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
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1919 BMG 30-06/308 $3200. ALS .50 BMG/ AR-15, $3500. HK 91 .308, $ 2 0 00. HK93 . 223, $2300. HK 9 4 M P5 9mm, $2 3 0 0.
541-550-7189
LA Beach Cruiser Custom made, one of a kindno 2 alike! Excellent condition. Fun, fun, fun! $850. 541-749-8720
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Adorable AKC
9 7a •
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POODLE puppies, toy, The Bulletin LWB; exc. cond. 27 loving companions. recommends extra ' gears SRAM X9 541-475-3889 i caution when purtwist shifters; seat chasing products or • bag; specialized 12 Gauge shotshell The Bulletin recom- QueenslandHeelers services from out of I computer/odometer; reloader MEC & acmends extra caution Standard & Mini, $150 f the area. Sending f fairing, kick stand cessories. 2 Boxes of when purc has- & up. 541-280-1537 ' cash, checks, o r ' and more. primers, $475. Call ing products or ser- www.rightwayranch.wor i credit i n f ormation 541-389-8563 or $1400 dpress.com vices from out of the may be subjected to 541-504-5224 yukonwilly O msn.com area. Sending cash, Rottweiler pups, par- i FRAUD. For more checks, or credit inents on site. Call for information about an f f ormation may b e details. 541-923-2437. advertiser, you may i subjected to fraud. t call t h e Ore g ont For more informa- Scotty puppies, reserve ' State Atto r ney ' tion about an adver- now! Mom & dad on site, i General's O f fi ce tiser, you may call 1st shots. 541-771-0717 Consumer Protec- • the O r egon State tion h o t line a t I Attorney General's Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, i 1-877-877-9392. ln print and online with Office C o nsumer 2 boys, beautiful! Shots, Protection hotline at potty training, health quar. f TheBulletin > The Bulletin's Classifieds
Adopt a rescued cat or kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, more! CRAFT, 65480 78th St, Bend, Sat/ Sun 1-5. 3 89-8420 www.craftcats.org.
g 0 ~
Furniture & Appliances
208
eerteng Central Oregon sincefgtg
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208
Pets & Supplies
The Bulletin
A v e . ' • B e gd ~o
Pets & Supplies
Patchwork Antiques 2nd Annual Fall Faire King Bed and matAntiques, vintage, tress set,Sleep shabby & rustic finds, Comfort massager, furniture, quality includes linens, handmade crafts, old and electric blanket, wood creations, jams, $800 obo German Short Hair jellies, honey, baked 541-516-8578 Pups - AKC goods, and more. 541-306-9957 Fri. Oct. 3, 9-6, Sat. Oct 4, 9-4. 797 C. German Shorthair pure- Light wood dining table Avenue, Terrebonne. bred puppies, with leaf, and 6 chairs, great c o ndition, 541-419-8637 or hunting dogs! 3 fem s, 2 excellent 541-480-8469 males, ready to go 10/10. $225. 541-548-4601 Little used beige sofa & $500. 541-728-1004 Need to get an loveseat, light pattern, Kittens & cats to adopt $199 both. 541-526-5774 ad in ASAP? at Petsmart (near You can place it Target) Fri-Sat-Sun Plafform Bed 12-4. 8 1 5-7278 for Queen online at: size including www.bendbuuetin.com kitten info, 389-8420 mattress & bedding re: adult cats. duvet with cover + sheets in excellent 541-385-5B09 Nonprofit animal res- c ondition. $15 0 . cue having huge yard 541-306 -6832 205 s ale Oct. 3-5! R e quest donated items Side x side refrigerator; Items for Free to benefit homeless light beige hideabed; anFree queen mattress in animals. Need help tique china hutch, $100 good cond, come and with prep & at sale. each, obo. 541-480-4296 Also need d eposit get it! 541-693-3079 cans/bottles. 8950 S. Variety of home decor & FREE! Te n m o v ing Hwy 97, Redmond, 2 silver pieces, etc. $100 boxes, Call mi. N of Tumalo Rd. for all, or part. Call for 760-486-6860 info, 541-526-5774 541-4'I 9-7885.
1-877-877-9392.
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S ell y o u r s tuff f a s t e r w it h c o l o r . FOR JUST ADDITIONAL $1 PER DAY! SEFORE
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch! AFTER
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
Classifieds wN«w.ben«tbufletin.com
To place your photo ad,visit us online at w uinv.bendbullet in .c o m or call with questions,
5 41 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
280
Estate Sales
282
286
Estate Sale! Antiques 8 Pellet stove, antiques, ElectronicsGarage many collectibles, Chintz/ furn., pwr tools quiltSale, lots of gear glassware, fabric, pot- i n g an d more! see and wire. Sat., 10/4, tery, baby buggies, LP c r aigslist. Sat. & Sun., 9am-12. Home records, many more 10-3 65362 Saddle System Solutions great items! Fn. & Sat 541-610-7915. 20340 Drive, Tumalo. 8-4. 3145 Starview Dr. Empire Ave., Suite Two Family G arage E3. Behind shop Sale in NW Crossing, 282 in alley. NW Shields Dr, Sales Northwest Bend 2540 Sat. 8-noon, Furniture, clothes for boys ** FREE ** girls age 8-10, household items, framed art, kitchen items, bikes, equestrian toys, Nerf ~sales . Furniture, books, guns, Hobby Horse, kids items, lots of nice books ga~es Legos quality treasures Take boy and girl comforter Hwy 97 N. to Tumalo Rd., exit at overpass, 951 '587 1436 on turn'west school is a't Annual School Yard
bottom of hill. 21155 Tumalo Rd. 541-389-2091.
288
Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend
286
Saies Northeast Bend
Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!
Pond liner & pump, for water features, sml appliances. Fri/Sat., 8-4, 209 SE Soft Tail Drive 290
Sales Redmond Area HUGE Yard Sale! Sat. 10/4 & Sun. 10/5, 9:30-5. Adult clothes, furniture, old anti oes household ~ items, toys, books, all DVDs & videos, cheap! Lots of power & hand tools, & more - it all goes. 2735 NE Wilcox Aye. Terrebonne near Smith Rock State Park signs.
KIT INCLUDES:
Nonprofit animal rescue having huge yard s ale Oct. 3-5! R e quest donated items to benefit homeless animals. Need help with prep & at sale. Also need d e posit PICK UP YOUR cans/bottles. 8950 S. GARAGE SALE KIT at Hwy 97, Redmond, 2 1777 SW Chandler mi. N of Tumalo Rd. • 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
3 family garage sale Fri Cowgirl CASH thru Sun., 8:30-3:30 We buy Western Vin1169 NE Revere Ave, tage. Boots, Leather, Jeweiry 924 Brooks St corner of 1 2th. Table saws, ass't tools, lots Wed-Sat 1 1-6 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 of jewelry, and misc. MultiPle FamilY Sale! Just bought a new boat? The Bulletin Sat. 9-3. Children's Serving Cenrrst Oregon srnce«903 Sell vour old one in the clothing, furniture, sPorts classifieds! Ask about our equip, n'ousehold'goods. Super Seller rates! Fri & Sat 8-2 63140 NE 1647 NW 1st St. 541 385 5809 Watercress Way. Holiday items, tool chest, Pfennlng Estate Sale computer, bike, wheels, by Farmhouse Estate Sales vacuum, Beanie Ba65770 Tweed Rd. InTumalo bies, LB baskets, kennels, tons of misc. Friday-Saturday 9-4 and Sunday 10-3 Sat. only, 8-2, college Extremelylarge estateincluding house, fridge, holiday decor, 2 bikes, other misc. garage, largeshop, and vehicles! Camping, hunting, automotive, motorcycle, items. 20996 Spinnawoodworkinq, fishinq, and furniture items. 2 vinker, corner of Purcell tage Chevy Carryall/Suburbans, 2011 Chevy Du288 ramax, Interstate cargo trailer, Yamaha 6hp outboard, Quincy shop compressor, 2 generators, Sales Southeast Bend Flame Tamer home fire protection system, Troy-Bilt snow blower, lathe, bandsaw, chop Estate & Moving Sale! saw, planer, shop vacs, Laguna woodworking Furniture & household, benches ...too much tolist! Fri-Sat, 8:30-1, 61369 For more info, pix at and descriptions visit Whitetail St. off Brosterfarmhouseestatesales.com hous. 1/2 off 9-11am Sun!
541-419-7885. 292
Sales Other Areas Sale! 53015 Riverview Dr, La Pine (Burgess Rd., N.on Huntington, becomes Riverview, sale's on the left. Sat-Sun, Oct. 4-5th, 9-3. 623-252-7286
NOTICE
Remember to remove your Garage Sale signs (nails, staples, etc.) after your Sale event is over! THANKS! From The Bulletin and your local utility companies.
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E2 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
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Silverado 2001 5th
wheel 3-horse trailer 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277 383
Produce & Food THOMAS ORCHARDS Kimberly, Oregon
Local Vendor Fair Sun., Oct. 5, 12-4 p.m. READY-PICKED
App/es: Jonagold Cameo Pinata, Golden Delicious and Red Delicious; Plums and Prunes; Bartlett Pears, Asian Pears; Peaches while they last. New Fall Hours starting Tues. Sept. 30. Closed Tues. 8 Wed. Open
Thur. thru Mon., 10-4 only! Visit us on Facebook for updates and look for for us on Wed. at Bend Farmers Market and Sat. at NW Crossing. 541-934-2870
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Quality items. VBe aware of internaLOW PRICES! tional fraud. Deal lo150 N. Fir. cally whenever pos541-549-1621 sible. Open to the public. Y Watch for buyers 325 who offer more than 266 Hay, Grain & Feed your asking price and • Heating & Stoves who ask to have 1st Quality mixed grass money wired or NOTICE TO hay, no rain, barn stored, Like new Necky Eshanded back to them. ADVERTISER $250/ton. kia 16' kayak with Fake cashier checks Since September 29, Call 541-549-3831 rudder. B ulkheads and money orders 1991, advertising for Patterson Ranch, Sisters water tight. Seat like are common. used woodstoves has Premium orchard grass, new. Hatches, deck u'Nevergive out perbeen limited to mod- barn stored no rain, lines and grab loops sonal financial inforels which have been 1st cutting $225, 2nd all in perfect condimation. certified by the Ortion. Orig i nally s/Trust your instincts $250, delivery avail. egon Department of $1450, asking $700 541-420-9158 or and be wary of Environmental Qual- Call obo. P lease c a l l 541-948-7010. someone using an ity (DEQ) and the fed541-312-2435. escrow service or eral E n v ironmental Quality Orchard/Mixed agent to pick up your Protection A g e ncy Grass hav, between O'Brien towable 2-per- merchandise. Bend & Redmond. (EPA) as having met son tube, HD, exc. smoke emission stan- $230/ton, small bales. The Bulletin Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 $50. 541-388-3879 ServingCentral Oregon since i903 dards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e 255 Infrared Sauna, 220-V identified by its certifiLooking for your hook-up, no buildinq, cation label, which is Computers next employee? $1000. 541-536-77900 permanently attached Place a Bulletin T HE B ULLETIN r e to the stove. The Bulhelp wanted ad Sentry Fire Safe, 17" x quires computer adletin will not knowtoday and 22-1/2" x 23-1/2" $125 vertisers with multiple ingly accept advertisreach over obo. 541-388-9270 ad schedules or those ing for the sale of 60,000 readers selling multiple sysuncertified each week. tems/ software, to dis- Wanted- paying cash woodstoves. Your classlfied ad close the name of the for Hi-fi audio & stu267 will also business or the term dio equip. Mclntosh, appear on Fuel & Wood "dealer" in their ads. JBL, Marantz, Dybendbulletin.com Private party advertis- naco, Heathkit, Sanwhich currently ers are defined as sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 WHEN BUYING recelves over those who sell one computer. FIREWOOD... 1.5 million page WHEN YOU SEE THIS vlews every To avoid fraud, 257 month at no The Bulletin ~O Musical Instruments extra cost. recommends payMarePiXatBendbijletiji.CO m ment for Firewood Bulletln On a classified ad only upon delivery Classlfleds go to and inspection. Get Results! www.bendbulletin.com • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Call 541-385-5809 4' x 4' x 8' to view additional or place your ed photos of the item. • Receipts should on-line at include name, bendbulletin.com 263 phone, price and 2009 Beautiful kind of wood Lowrey Tools 341 purchased. Adventurer II Organ • Firewood ads Horses & Equipmen Absolutely perfect 60 gal. air compressor MUST include condition, not a 6hp, lightly used, species 8 cost per scratch on it, about $600. 541-385-9350 Horseshoeing cord to better serve 4-feet wide, does Tools Delt a our customers. everything! Includes C ommercial JHM 110-Ib certifier Unifence table saw, a nice bench, too. anvil, anvil stand e xtended ben c h , The Bulletin $750 obo. w/vise, all GE hand router, new lift, com541-385-5685 tools, hoof stand & plete grip m aster. forge tools, all in Many extras. $1500. All year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned; new condition, 541-923-6427 Say "goodbuy" $1600 Lodgepole, split, del, to that unused or part trade for B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 generator. or 2 for $365. Call for item by placing it in multi-cord discounts! 541-430-4449 The Bulletin Classifieds 541-420-3484.
5 41-385-580 9
SPINET PIANO 1973 Fayett S Gable made by Everett & Sons, excellent condition, recently tuned. sounds great! $1000 541-385-8367
Pine & Juniper Split
Shopsmith with bendsew, excellent condition. Customized extras. Retired shop teacher; don't need anymore! Pictures available. $400. Cell 541-598-6486
PROMPT D ELIVERY
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Craftsman 24" Snow Thrower $500. Electric start. Excellent condition. Cash only. 541-389-8563
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Lo s t & Found
BUYING & SE LLING Found a Kindle Fire, Bend Habitat All gold jewelry, silver Samsun Galaxy S4 RESTORE and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, Building Supply Resale Mini, and a book at Eagle Crest. Quality at LOW class rings, sterling sil541-306-8079 ver, coin collect, vinPRICES tage watches, dental 740 NE 1st 541-312-6709 gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-382-9419. Open to the public. REMEMBER:If you CRYPT at Deschutes have lost an animal, don't forget to check Memorial G a rden Natural gas Ruud Meadow Pond space The Humane Society tankless water 4D4 - dbl depth lawn Bend heater, brand new! crypt, full grave for 2. 541-382-3537 199 BTU, $1600. B uyer w il l ne e d Redmond granite 8 bronze dbl 541-923-0882 In Sunriver area. interment m a r k er 530-938-3003 Madras plus interment costs. 541-475-6889 $1500. For more info Prineville c all K e llie A l l e n New Trex Select 2x6's 541-447-7178 541-382-5592 or Full 20' Bundle -$1400. or Craft Cats 541-706-1331 541-389-8420. seller, 207-582-0732
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Employment Opportunities
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Midoregori
vans (no tarps to
Banking- Accounting
Midoregon Credit Union Accounting/Operations Coordinator Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a detail-oriented team player with a positive attitude to assist with general accounting duties and back office operational activities, including data entry. Maintains accuracy of Credit Union accounting systems though verification of entries, posting, adjustments and reconciliations. Balances assigned GL accounts, performs necessary entries and assists wit h m o nth-end G L ac c ruals. Processes drafts, ACHs, and wires. Provides excellent member service to internal business partners and members. Processes and/or disburses accounts payable checks and provides administrative services on debit and credit cards. Successful candidate must be PC-proficient in a W i ndows environment, including Word and Excel. Previous credit union or operations experience preferred.
Excellent benefits package and competitive salary. Visit our web site at www.midoregon.com for more details.
deal with) 40 ' -23' doubles year around work. We our looking for long term drivers, our average employee has w orked for us f o r over 8 years. So if you are looking for a home, give us a call 541.523.9202
Civil Unit Supervisor The Jackson County Circuit C o ur t in Medford, O r e gon seeks a Civil Unit Supervisor. Salary $4554 to $7417 per month. For further info and to apply go to h t t p://courts.oregon.gov/OJD/jobs and click on "paid positions" by October 5, 2014. Equal opportunity employer. •
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Please send resume, cover letter and application to: Mid Oregon FCU Attn: HumanResources P.O. Box 6749, Bend, OR 97708
Grandma Lorraine Edwards of Livingston, TX, is hoping to reach Justin, Jaxon, Pearl or Shawn. Grandma's very concerned about T hom. Please call 936-252-2168
Mld Oretfon Credit union is adrug-free workplace
or email LorrainaEEdwards ~ir
Mid Oregon Federal Credit Union is looking for a qualified candidate to fill their Loan Officer position in their Contact Center.
Due to internal promotions Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking to fill a f ull-time lending position in Bend. Position includes processing Call54I 3855809topromote yourservice• Advertise for 28daysstorting atrlfff fttfr rfiraffirrtatr t irrt arritrttr e er rntstrl loans requested by phone; processing of dealer fax and online applications; monitoring of Contact Center loan queue to i nsure turnaround time meets service standards and Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care making follow up calls to the member as n ecessary; o u t bound ca l l ing; loa n NOTICE: Oregon state m aintenance r e quests; n e w mem b er law requires anyone who con t racts for member/loan retention closure requests, ZepedQua//fI construction work to request for payoff; and other duties as Serving Central be licensed with the assigned. Zftrarg Pttrre /an, Oregon Since 2003 Construction ContracResidental/Commercial tors Board (CCB). An Position requires excellent sales and customer MANAGING active license service skills, sound decision-making, and the Central Oregon Sprinkler Bfovv-out means the contractor ability to understand and retain a variety of Sprinkler Repair is bonded & insured. LANDSCAPES complex product and services information. Back Flow Testing Slnce 2006 Verify the contractor's Successful candidate must be PC-proficient in CCB l i c ense at a Windows environment. 1-2 years consumer Malntenance www.hirealicensedFall Clean Up lending experience preferred. contractor.com Don't track it in all Winter • Fall Clean up ~Weekly Mowing or call 503-378-4621. •Leaves Go to www.midoregon.com for & Edging The Bulletin recom•Cones more information including job application. •Bi-Monthly & Monthly • Needles mends checking with Maintenance • Debris Hauling the CCB prior to conPlease send resume, •Bark, Rock, Etc. tracting with anyone. cover letter and application to: Some other t rades Winter Prep iyfidOregon FCU ~Landsca in also req u ire addi•Pruning •Landscape Attn: HumanResources Horse stalls, pasture 8 tional licenses and ~Aerating Construction P.O. Box8749, certifications. arena. Owner care. •Fertilizing •Water Feature Bend, OR 97708 F amily ranch S W Installation/Maint. Debris Removal Redmond. $150/mo. Nid Oregon Credit Union is adrug-free workplace Compost •Pavers 541-207-2693. •Renovations Applications JUNK BE GONE •Irrigations Installation Use Less Water Youa /to WILL RECEIVECLOSETo 2,000,000 0i
cl
I Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also
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Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107
Improve Plant Health
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EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential
Senior Discounts Bonded 8 Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759
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Home/Rental repairs ALL AMERICAN Small jobs to remodels PAINTING Interior and Exterior Honest, guaranteed 541-385-5809 work. CCB¹151573 Family-owned Senior Discounts Residential 8 Commercial Dennis 541-317-9768 541-390-1466 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts F. Weedon Const. & Same Dey Response 5-year warranties Home Services. DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes Summer Special! Oregon LandHandyman 8 light const. NOTICE: Call 541-337-6149 scape Contractors Law children, custody, support, property and bills 541-598-6150 CCB ¹193960 (ORS 671) requires all CCB¹186744 division. N o c o u r t a p p e arances. D i vorced businesses that advertise t o pe r formParking Lot Maintenanc FIND YOUR FUTURE jn 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. Www. Landscape ConstrucHOME INTHE BULLETIN AB Parking Lot tion which includes: paralegalalternatjves.com legalalt©msn.com Maintenance l anting, deck s , Yourfutureis just apageaway. For all your parking lot / ences, arbors, Whetheryou'relookingfor ahal or I dnveway needs. water-features, and in- • Commercial aplacelo hangit, TheBulletin sweeper stallation, repair of irD rivers-START W IT H O U R TR A I NING O R Classifiedis yourbest source. rigation systems to be • Crack fill • Seal coat CONTINUE YOUR SOLID CAREER. You have Everydaythousandsofbuyersand l icensed w it h th e • Striping Landscape Contrac- • Dust control sellersofgoodsandservicesdo options! Company Drivers, Lease Purchase or tors Board. This 4-digit • Snow Removal busi n ess i n t h es e p ag es. T he y number is to be in- • De-icing Owner Operators Needed 877-789-8518 www. knowyou can't beatThe Bulletin cluded in all adverCCB ¹203383 centraltruckdrjvjngjobs.com tisements which indi- Call Scott Classified Sedionforselection 541-815-2332 cate the business has andconvenience- everyitemis a bond,insurance and just aphonecall away. Have an item to workers compensation for their employNow seeking proctors fo r t h e 2 015 N ational TheClassifiedSectionis easy sell quick'? ees. For your protecto use.Everyitemiscategorized If it's under Assessment of Educational Progress. To apply tion call 503-378-5909 andeverycategoryisindexedon or use our website: '500 you can place it in visit http : iiwww.westat.comicareersifjeld-datathe seclion'sfront page. www.lcb.state.or.us to The Bulletin collection-jobs. S earch by state then find the Whetheryouarelookingfor ahome check license status Classifieds for: before contracting with or needaservice,yourfutureis in NAEP Assessment Administrator position. For the business. Persons lan d scape '10 - 3 lines, 7 days more information call 888-237-8036 WESTAT EOE the pagesofThe Bulletin Classlied. doing maintenance do not '16 - 3 lines, 14 days r equire an L C B Minorities/Females/Protected Veterans/Disabled The Bulletin 5tvlngc tr ror gw sinc l9tri (Private Party ads only) cense. Serving Central Oregon since 1903
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Employment Opportunities
Automotive FULL TIME SCHOOL BUS/EQUIPMENT MECHANIC - Gr ant S chool D i strict 3 If it's under (John Day). QualificaHigh s c hool '500 you canplace it in tions: graduate; experience a nd k nowledge i n The Bulletin large/small engine reTake care of Classifieds for: pair and maintenance. your investments Must have or ability to with the help from CDL, school '10- 3 lines, 7 days obtain: bus drivers' certificate The Bulletin's '16-3lines,14days and school bus tech"Call A Service nician c e r tification. Professional" Directory (Private Party ads only) $15.08-$16.86/hr. plus benefit package. Four 10-hour days. Banking Application form a vailable at 401 N . Canyon City B lvd., Canyon City or the District's website at Credit Union http://www.grantesd.k 12.or.us/District-3/hu man-resources.htm. Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for special people to join our dynamic, growing team. Submit district appliBoth positions require excellent customer cation form and other service and sales skills, sound decisionsupportive i n formation to: Cyndi Nelson, making, and the ability to understand and retain a variety of complex product and Grant School District services information. Successful candidates 3, 401 N. Canyon City Blvd., Canyon City, will be able to work in a team environment and be PC-proficient. OR 97820. Open until filled. Mid Oregon Credit Union offers a competitive 971-673- 0764. salary package an d p r ovides excellent CDL Truck Driver benefits. S e e our web site at Needed. The Bulletin www.midoregon.com fo r mo r e de t a ils Our wood tervins central oresonsince ras chip and including application form. 541-385-5809 lumber drivers average 54K annually. Bend Off weekends,paid • Member Services Representative (Teller) vacation, health inActivity Director 25 hours week s urance. Fo r 3 5 Whispering • Member Service Representative (Teller) y ears w e hav e Winds 40 hours week serviced E a s tern Bend Retirement Oregon, Cen t ral • Contact Center Member Services is seeking a f ull Oregon, S outhern Representative 40 hours week O regon an d t h e time activity d iBoise Valley a nd r ector. Must b e Please send resume, you can live in any enthusiastic and cover letter and application to: of these locations. e nergetic. M u s t Mid Oregon FCU We run late model enjoy working with Attn: HumanResources P etes an d K e n seniors. Apply in P.O. Box 6749, worths all 550 cats Bend, OR 97708 p erson at 2 9 2 0 with 13 speeds, our trailers are C urtin NE Conners Ave., Mld Oregon Credit union ia adrug-free workplace CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p portunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra c aution when a p plying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws c ontact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division,
ExposUREs FQRQNLYaso!
260
Buylng Diamonds /Go/d for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers
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Schools & Training
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCT 2, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Thursda y,october2,2014
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ](I/jii$bprtz
Sound asleep
ACROSS 1Muchof Brides magazine 8WallSt. operator 11[as per the original] 14In the general vicinity 15Toscanini, for one 17Kitschy quality 18Cornered 19Bust (laugh hard) 20 Retailer owned by Gap 22"WeThree Kings of Odent Are," e.g. 23 Part of a spiral galaxy farthest from the center 27 Oneswho cry uncle? 31Feeda line to again 32 1960s TV's Cousin 34 Stable color
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
heart, you bid one spade and he tries
Cy the Cynic, whose laziness is legendary, says that if a day had 24 hours and 30 minutes, people might get enough sleep. Cy took a nap as today's East, and it cost a vulnerable game. Against four hearts, West led his singleton club. He intended to win the fust trump, put Cy in with a diamond and get aclub ruff. South won with the ace and saw what West was up to. So South took dummy's three spades to discard a diamond and continued nonchalantly with the deuce of spades. Cy signaled with a high diamond — and South threw his last diamond, a loser on a loser. West won, but Cy could no longer gain the lead, and South lost only to the A-K of trumps, making his game.
two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner's two clubs is forcing and suggests a good hand, and you have a promising hand in support of hear t s . Of fer encouragement with a jump to three hearts. You would take a two-heart preferencewith a lesser hand such as J 1075, K6,A K J 6 2 , 5 2 or J107 5, 642,A K J 6 2 , K. West dealer E-W vulnerable
NORTH 4 IA K Q 2
9 J 75 4 04 4KQ82 WEST
COMMENTS Cy was snoozing on defense (but not after the deal; West's comments were loud enough to wake him up). If Cy is alert, he will see that he can lose nothing by ruffing the fourth spade with his lowly deuce of trumps. South has no counter. Whether he discards oroverruffs,he loses four tricks.
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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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32 Clarification lead- 43 Certain in soundboard knobs 33 "Easy there, 44Wipes out 35 Los Angeles's 46 Dugout, for one U.S.S. Museum 48 Key 37Givean alias 49 Out 51 Bausch & 38 Bud (eye-care 40 See 21-Down brand)
52
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54 Screening org. 55 It's mostly nitrogen 56 Presidential advisory grp.
58 Rx overseer
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DENNIS THE MENACE
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SAFE HAVENS
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E-mail: bholbrook1 Ogmail.com
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I Of course we'll glve you a loan of 14 million dollars for a private jet! No problem!
After the baby seal head transplant, Ricky'5 life got a lot easier 10 2
ZITS [F '(aJ AScMF THQKSSJCH ATHING /V" "TGD KCLINEP"
ACROSS 1 Hint
64 Slower than adagio
6 Insincere flattery
65 Act surprised
25 Wide key 28 Small South American
11 Town in a Hersey 66 Puts on cargo title 12 Book before Joel DOWN 13 Roadie's burden 1 Donated for the 16 Like some ALS benefit of Ice Bucket 2 One checking Challenge stories videos 3 Classic music 17 Home of the hall song that lent bush ballad its melody to the "Howdy Doody" 19 Greek letter 20 Take in theme 22 Hardest to get 4 Santa close to Mountains
23 Rocky pinnacle
5 Lake Erie city
24 Brit who might lose a stone? 26 tape
6 Trading unit 7 Apt challenger of this puzzle's
27 Cicero, for one
circled locations
29 From the top 31 Half a drink 32 CV component 33 Three sheets to the wind 34 Selassie of Ethiopia 36 Stew base 38 Snake eye? 39 Doctoral
8 Long-eared beast 9 Hit the hay 10 Painter Chagall 13 Unalaska, e.g. 14 Name inoorrectly 15 McDonald's
supply 18 Succor 21 Service station
candidate's hurdle 40 Seventh-century
offering 1
2
3
4
monkey 30 "No one knows" 33 Enthusiast 35 Yankee
suspended for the 2014 season 36 Start of a confession 37 Like family
ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: G E N U S
N A I N F A L M E A A P P A R C H A S T E P A L P L A Y P E S O E B A US E R I S L L A R A M U T P U B L I C R A D UD G A Y E S T B P L UM T O M A A T R I F A L S 0 I L F 0 I xwordeditor(Naol.com
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HERMAN
THAT SCRAIIIBLEO WORD GAME CI
Unscramble these four Jumbles 0ne letter IO eaCh Square, to form four ordinary words.
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
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54 Prepares (oneself), as for
44014 THbune Content Agency,LLC All Righls Reeenred.
DIRGI
combat 56 Pooch sans
papers FORTPI
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5HE THOO&I4T THAT WINNN& THE 9UXIOIN THE IZAFFLE WA5 ANow arrange the circled letters IO fOrm the SurPriSe anSW40 84
suggested by the above cartoon. HERMAN 0 LaughingSlock Licensing Inc., 084 by Universal Udick, 20I4
"Suppose we decidenot to watch one nlght. Do you remember how to switch It off?"
Ans here (AnsWers tamarrOW) SWIFT D O C KET WR E NCH Yesteda 4 ~ Jumbles: ONION Answer: Asked if their band would score, Pete Townshend and RogerD85rey said — WHO KNOWS
57 Diminutive, diminutively 58 Fated 60 Send, in a Way 62 Ice cream maker
Joseph 63 Bars with character, to some
I L E N E
6
pope 41 Blu-ray player ancestor 42 Swindle 43 Sturdy tree 44 Astra or Insignia 46 Salad vegetable 49 DWI-fighting gp. 51 Genesis 53 " Cried": 1962 hit for Jay and the Americans
45 Reminder of a kind 46 Slowing, in scores 47 Certain Muslim 48 Greetings 50 Room with a remote, often 52 Letterman interviewee, say 55 Old Fords 59 Reproductive cells 61 c u lpa
7
8
9
U N R A I S M C U D A M E R P N S I P E S D I 0 W E L L T O D O S T
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I O W A
A X E D
N E R O
O R E S
H A S N T
O G L E R
M I A M I
P 0 B O X 10/02/14
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48
22
23
25 28
27
29
32 37
26 31
30
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42
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44
45 51
50
52
56
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58 62
T R O Y
18
19
54
E R R S
13
16
49
B U T T
10
12
36
A P E R
59
57 61
63 65
By Jeffrey Wechsler ©2814 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
10/02/14