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SUNDAYBUSINESS• E1
TODAY'S READERBOARD
COCC •
3
s
q,i
Daylight saving time-
•
, nx
Student
stabbed; roommate in custody
Did you remember ~ tosetyourclocks back one hour?
Milk —Could drinking a lot of it actually be badfor you? A3 TraVel — Bend isn't the only city luring travelers with beer. The brew scene in theTwin Cities is hopping aswell. C1
By Scott Hammers
~4
g ,'
The Bulletin r
I
A Central Oregon Com-
g"
munity College student is
being held in connection with the stabbing of his
;j r
Gay palitiCS —Marriage
isn't the only thing that's changing. Openlygaycandidates for office are morecommon — even in theGOP.A7
roommate early Saturday,
according to Bend Police. The victim,
James Briles, 18, was in stable condition
And a WedexclusiveCivility class assignment: Put downyourphoneandcommit acts of kindness. beeclbelletie.cem/extras
Norgsard i n St. Charles Medical Cen-
• Local recreation spots face heavy use — and that could beendangering them
ter as of 7 p.m. Saturday.
Briles' roommate, Eric Norgaard, 22, was arrested in the room they
EDITOR'SCHOICE
By Dylan J. Darling
tral Oregon will likely only
The Bulletin
increase.
Anyone who has gone to
'Holistic
engineers' add art to science
climb at Smith Rock State Park or hike at Tumalo Falls on a warm, clear weekend
to do about the coming
trails means more mainte-
surge of even more users and working to deal with the
nance will likely be needed, the managers said a bigger issue comes from people blazing their own trails. "It's a constant battle to stave that off,n said Scott Brown, Smith Rock State
the existing trail," Figurski said. "It is really hard to restore an area once someone has damaged it." The marks of increased use aren't limited to trails in and near Bend. They can also be found at the bottom of the Deschutes River as it runs through the city, where
m urder, first-degree assault and unlawful use of a weapon. His bail has been set at $360,000. Police were called to the dorm shortly after midnight Friday on a report of a stabbing, and found Briles
the popularity of floating grows each summer.
in the hallway with several stab wounds, believed to be
track exact usage numbers — doing so takes money and
on the slopes of South Sister,
time — officials with the
along the Deschutes River through Bend and at the
agencies managing some of the most popular places in and around Bend say they are seeing more and more people. Response to the increasing numbers ranges from a
Park manager. Such routes have many names. Brown called them
call for more volunteers to
called them "social trails." Jim Figurski, landscape ar-
Bend continues to growthe city of Bend estimates
By Henry Fountain
population to be near
New York Times News Service
120,000 in 2030, up from the U.S. Census count of
Engineering and art
That leaves public land managers wondering what
knows well the popularity of the public lands. They're popular. Really popular. And busy. The situation is the same
trails in Shevlin Park. As
were not always complete-
81,000 in 2013 — the number
ly separate disciplines. Take Leonardo da Vinci, who seamlessly combined
of people going to the most popular places around Cen-
them "desire lines." "That does more harm than the wear-and-tear on
or limits, although there currently are no specific proposals. While more people using
effects of the current popularity. While they don't all
help take care of the lands to ongoing talks about the possibility of use restrictions
the two.
"user-createdtrails"or
"rogue trails." Chris Sabo, trails specialist with the Deschutes National Forest, chitect with the Bend Park & Recreation District, called
"We are starting to see
from a knife. Paramedics rushed him to the hospital
shed Council. See Loving /A5
s
of Illinois, Urbana-Cham-
paign. But education has become balkanized and the field of engineering, in particular, more specialized, complex and
Legislative goals hinge on control
— Jim Figurski, Bend Park & Recreation District landscape architect
director of engineering graphics at the University
By Taylor W. Anderson
'h =
i,'
ro,'
)
t
rS
ented. Today's engineering
,
on three races, lawmakers
is"
. q
are envisioning what the
-P M"
Legislature may look like after Elecuon Dsy. gS, Repub-
majors have little room for other pursuits.
"Learning how to think like an engineer is very powerful," said Domenico Grasso, provost at the Uni-
t'Xn
NOV. 4
versity of Delaware. "But
other disciplines also have very powerful approaches to thinking." Grasso has long been a proponent of holistic engineering, the idea that through cross-disciplinary learning, students will be better able to understand,
and design for, the human condition. At Delaware, the work
Small cities see an ecenomic revival By John Woodrow Cox
in 11 minutes to his favorite
land, a thriving city 45 miles
The Washington Post
upscale restaurant, eight to his
from the nation's capital with
Drew Murphy stepped out ofhis law office on a recent Thursday afternoon, walked
favorite wine bar and four to
ting Democrats and hold onto two seats in tight districts to win a majority.
Hanging in the balance are wish lists from both parties and the likelihood
boom abound: Evanston out-
once-withering downtowns,
lives nowhere near Washingwife. He seldom drives because ton. His walkable world is in
side Chicago, Pasadena outside Los Angeles, West Palm Beach
demographers and real estate experts say.
be forced to cooperate with Democrats to pass their
he doesn't have to. He canwalk
outside Miami, said Chris-
house to share lunch with his
See Holistic/A4
to live within walking distance
chamber. In the Senate, they need to upset two sit-
that Republicans will for
involves an interdisciplin-
during cardiopulmonary training, and so replace mannequins.
one-tenth of the population. his favorite park. Many of the forces fueling Murphy, 31, lives the quintes- Washington's renaissance also sential life of ayoung, success- are driving a small-cityboom ful professional inthe District nationally. Examples of the
topher Leinberger, a George Washington Universitybusiness professor who has studied the trend foryears. The desire
win five close House races to control that
ofrestaurants,bars,theaters and parks has revitalized
two blocks south to pickup
chicken salad and, four blocks later, entered his brick row-
compression simulations
w o u ld
ELECTION
of putting engineering in a broader societal context ary collaboration on a senior design prototype. Among last year's projects was a device humans can safely wear for chest
The Bulletin
SALEM — As party controlofthe state Senate rests
h
math- and computer-ori-
with life-threatening injuries, police said. See Stabbing /A4
the Upper Deschutes Water-
m SOmeOne haS damaged it.
said James Michael Leake,
on suspicion of attempted
more garbage and it is just literally debris from people floating," said Ryan Houston, executive director for
"It ts really hard to restore an area once
"Five hundred years ago, you couldn't really tell the difference between artists and engineers,"
shared at Juniper Hall, COCC's only dormitory. Norgaard is being held at the Deschutes County jail
of Columbia — except that he downtown Frederick, Mary-
TODAY'S WEATHER i<'~~
Cl o uds and sun High 51, Low33 Page B6
Ef -6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts Gf -6 Local/State B f -6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies
priorities.
See Legislature/A4
See Revival /A5
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
the second straight session
C6 D1-6 C7
AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 112, No. 30e, 4e pages, 7 sections
Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt
:: IIIIIIIIIII I o
8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0
7
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
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New health Site —The Obamaadministration has discovered a number of defects in the online marketplace that will offer health insurance to millions of small-business employees, but federal officials said the problems could probably be fixed before thewebsite goes live Nov. 15.Thewebsite, for businesses with 50 or fewer employees, was created bythe Affordable CareAct andwas supposed to open Oct. 1, 2013. Sincethen, they have beentrying to build the site. Small-business owners, employees, insurers and insuranceagents welcomed the website for the Small Business Health Options Program,known astheSHOPexchange,butsaidtheyhadfounddefects.
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Sllin trink-Or-trnntnrS — Authorities searchedSaturday for the driver and passenger of anSUVwho fled the scene after the vehicle struck and killed three teenagegirls who were out for a night of trickor-treating in Southern California. Witnesses said the black Honda was abandoned ashort distance from the Santa Anacrosswalk where the13-year-old girls were hit. OnSaturday investigators tracked the SUV to the address where it was registered, but the owner hassince moved, SantaAnapolicespokesman AnthonyBertagnasaid.
New York Times News Service
A team of about 15 investigators from t h e N a t ional
Transportation Safety Board began its inquiry Saturday into the crash of a Virgin Ga-
lactic space plane Friday in California's Mojave Desert.
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GaSpriCeS — The sight is so surprising that Americansare sharing photos of it, along with all those cute Halloweencostumes, sweeping vistas and special meals: Thegas station sign, with a price of $2-something a gallon. Thenational averageprice of gasoline fell 33 cents to endOctober at $3 agallon and dipped Saturday to $2.995, according to AAA.That marks the first time in four years that gas has beencheaper than $3 agallon.
Richard Branson, the bil-
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short flights into space, also
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plane, SpaceShipTwo, disintegrated during a test flight Friday, killing one pilot and leaving the other severely injured. "We are determined to find
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Nigerian kidnappingS —With amalevolent laugh,theleader
rocket, SpaceShipTwo, exploded and crashed in Mojave, California.
of Nigeria's Islamic extremists tells the world that more than 200 kidnapped schoolgirls haveall beenconverted to Islam and married off, dashing hopes for their freedom. "If you knewthe state your daughters are in today, it might lead some ofyou ... to die from grief," Abubakar Shekausneers, addressing the parents of the girls and young womenkidnapped from aremote boarding school more than six months ago. In anew video released late Friday night, the Boko Haram leaderalso denies there is acease-fire with the Nigerian government and threatens to kill an unidentified Germanhostage.
fore being released. Soon after son said during a news con- the space plane's motor ignitferenceatthe spaceport Satur- ed, something went wrong. day morning. The plane fell to the ground in Scaled Composites, the pieces about 20 miles northcompany that designed and east of Mojave. This was the built SpaceShipTwo, identified first test of the plane using a the crew member who died new motor. out what went wrong," Bran-
then move forward together." "Of course, anyone who
ever wants a refund will get a refund," Branson said. Branson said that on Friday
one new customer signed up for a flight after news of the
Burkina Fasn —A dayafter President Blaise Compaore fled the country, ending 27years in power in the face of revolt on the streets, military commanders in Burkina Faso onSaturday appeared to have resolved an internal power struggle by endorsing a colonel from the presidential guard to oversee atransition to elections. But after 24 hours of confusion about who would run the impoverished nationan ally of the West in regional campaigns against Islamic militants — Lt. Col. Isaac Zidasaid that he wasassuming the duties of head of state "to guarantee the continuity of the state."
crash, to show support for the
company. cluding celebrities like Ashton He said the company had The pilot, who survived by Kutcher, Tom Hanks and Katy not spent any of the $80 milparachuting from the doomed Perry, have reserved seats on lion it has collected in deposspace plane, is Peter Siebold, Virgin Galactic. The price of a its. Instead, the money "gave 43. He was badly injured and ticket is $250,000. us the confidence to do the "We do understand the risks program, because these peois to undergo surgery. "He is alert and talking with his fam- involved, and we are not going ple were so committed," Branily and doctors," Scaled Com- to push on blindly," Branson son said. posites said in a s t atement said. "To do so would be an This is the second time tragSaturday. insult to all those affected by edy has struck the spaceport During Friday morning's this tragedy. We're going to in connection w it h S c aled test, SpaceShipTwo was car- learn from what went wrong, Composites; in July 2007, ried by a larger plane to an al- discover how we can improve three people died when a rocktitude of about 45,000 feet be- safety and performance, and et system test went awry. as Michael Alsbury, 39, the co-ptiot.
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Wreckage lies near the site where a Virgin Galactic space tourism
More than 700 people,in-
FrenCh prntnStS —Ayear ago, a group set up tents to oppose the construction of a nearby dam inSouthwestern France. Last weekend, a 21-year-old student, Remi Fraisse, was killed after being hit by a stun grenadethat protesters say was thrown by apolice officer. Fraisse's death, which resulted in the temporary suspension of the construction work, has prompted criticism of President Frangois Hollande's government for its lack of response. It has also focused attention on the government's seeming failure to engage a broad segment of France's next generation. The protests havecome toembody the disenchantment andanger of young peoplewho seefew future opportunities and feel little kinship with the government.
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STANFORD, Calif. — Top medical experts studying the spread of Ebola say the public should expect more cases to
CORRECTIONS
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arrive here from West Africa,
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year'send as infected people including American doctors and nurses returning from the hot zone and people fleeing from thedeadly disease. But how many cases? No one knows for sure how many infections will emerge in the U.S. or anywhere else, but scientists have made educated guesses based on data models that weigh hundreds of variables, including daily new infections in West Africa, airline
traffic worldwide and transmission possibilities.
get on airplanes, shake hands, misdiagnose, even lie. Pandemic risk expert Dominic Smith, a senior manager
Bangladesh blackout — A powerfailure sweptthrough Bangla-
came infected in West Africa, including Thomas Eric Dun-
can, the first to arrive undiagMalaySian flight — Two Malaysian teenageboys on Friday filed a negligence caseagainst the state-owned Malaysia Airlines and the government over the disappearance of flight MH370, their lawyers said. The case,which the minors filed through their mother, was the first legal action by relatives in relation to the incident. It was brought before the KualaLumpur High Court by the two sons, aged 14and 11, ofbusinessman JeeJing Hang,oneofthe239 peopleonboardthe airline that went missing on March 8 anhour after it took off from the Kuala Lumpur International Airport for China.
nosed and the first to die. He
was cared for at a Dallas hosfornia-based RMS, a leading pital, where two of his nurses c atastrophe-modeling f i r m , were also infected. ran a U.S. simulation this week Duncan, who was initially that projected 15 to 130 cases misdiagnosed and sent home between now and the end of from the emergency room, is December. That's less than one Vespignani's worst-case scecase per 2 million people. nario for the U.S. Smith's method assumes A similar situation, if left unthat most cases imported to the checked, could lead to a local U.S. will be American medi- cluster that could infect, on the cal professionals who worked outside, as many as 20, he said. in West Africa and returned The foreseeable future exhome. tends only for the next few Smith said the high end may months. After t h at, p rojecbe a bit of an overestimate as tions depend entirely on what it does not include the auto- happens in West Africa. One matic quarantining measures scenario is that the surge in that some areas in the U.S. are assistance to the region brings implementing. the epidemic under control and for life risks at Newark, Cali-
fectiousdisease experts ran
Those quarantines "could cases peter out in the U.S. A both reduce the number of second scenario involves Ebo-
simulations for The Associat-
contactsforim ported cases,as
Last week, several top in-
desh on Saturdayafter a transmission line in theelectrical grid failed, causing a nationwide blackout. Masum-AI-Beruni, managing director of the state-run PowerGrid Co. of Bangladesh,said "the whole of Bangladesh" was "completely out of power" for an hourSaturday though the effects of the electrical failure continued well into the evening. The blackout beganaround 11:30 a.m., Beruni said. According to anofficial, by 9:30 p.m. half the coverageareahad beenrestored. Beruni said it was too soon to knowthe exact cause ofthe powerfailure.
— From wire reports
In
AT HOME • • Th eBulletin
Northeastern University pro-
professor ofinfectiousdisease, microbiology and immunology at Stanford University's medical school. "However, as
fessor Alessandro Vespignani projected between one case-
best we can tell right now, it is
quite possible that every major city will see at least a handful
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a slim chance of as many as eight cases though the end of
•
November.
"I'm always trying to tell of cases." peopleto keep calm and keep Relman is a founding mem- thinking rationally," said Vesber of the U.S. Department of pignani, who projects the Health and Human Services spread of infectious diseases at advisory board for biosecurity the university's Laboratory for and chairs the National Acad- the Modeling of Biological and emy of Sciences forum on mi- Socio-Technical Systems. crobial threats. In an article in the journal Until now, projections pub- PLOS ONE, Vespignani and lished in top medical journals a team of colleagues said the by the World Health Orga- probability o f in t e rnational nization and the Centers for spread outside the African reDisease Control have focused gion is small, but not negligible. on worst-case scenarios for Longerterm, they say internaWest Africa, concluding that tional dissemination will decases in the U.S. will be epi- pend on what happens in West sodic, but minimal. But they Africa in the next few months. have declined to specify actual Their first analysis, pubnumbers. lished Sept. 2, proved to be The projections are com- accurate when it included the plicated, but Ebola has been a U.S. among 30 countries likely fairly predictable virus — ex- to see some Ebola cases. They tremely infectious, contagious projected one or two infections o nly through c ontact w i th in the U.S., but there could be body fluids, requiring no more as many as 10. than 21 days for symptoms to So far, nine Ebola patients emerge. Human behavior is have been treated in the U.S., far less predictable — people and one has died. Seven be-
FORMERLY
2 locations in Bend
la spreading unchecked across
the most likely scenario — and
Connect Hearing YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS
ed Pressthatpredicted asfew well as increase the travel bur- international borders. as one or two additional infec- den on — and perhaps reduce tions by the end of 2014 to a the number of — U.S. volunworst-case scenario of 130. teers planning to support the "I don't think there's going effort in West Africa," he said. to be a huge outbreak here, In a s econd simulation, no," said Dr. David Relman, a
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
Parties seecampaign tilting to GOP By Jonathan Martin
Iowa. Democrats were doing ta. Though there are fewer
New York Times News Service
the same in Colorado, where
competitive House seats than
they were concerned because in past elections because of groups that tend to favor Re- gerrymandering, party strateend before the midterm elec- publicans voted early in large gists were still airing ads in 40 WASHINGTON — Republicans entered the final week-
tions clearly holding the better hand to control the Senate and
numbers, and in Iowa.
poised to add to their House majority. But a decidedly sour electorate and a sizable number of undecided voters added
hung over no fewer than nine
a measure of suspense.
The final drama surrounded the Senate, which has
dlstrlcts. "It's a grim environment,"
While an air of mystery
said Rep. Steve Israel of New Senate races, the only ques- York, the chairman of the tion surrounding the House Democratic C o n gressional was how many seats Repub- Campaign Committee. Israel licans would add. If they gain was spending the weekend a dozen seats, it will give them pleading with members of his an advantage not seen since
caucus to contribute to their
been a Democratic bulwark
1948 and potentially consign
imperiled colleagues to mini-
for President Barack Obama since his party lost its House majority in 2010. Republicans need to gain six seats to seize the Senate, and officials in
the Democrats to minority status until congressional redistricting in the 2020s.
mize losses.
But Republicans conceded that voters were hardly In a sign of a worsening embracing them. "It's not as climate, Democratic officials though people have all a sudboth parties believe there is a shifted money to incumbents den fallen in love with Repubpath for them to win at least in once-safe districts around licans," said Sen. John Cornyn that many. Las Vegas and Santa Barba- of Texas, the second-ranking Yet the racesfor a num- ra, California. And over the Senate Republican. "It's just ber of seats that will decide weekend,they put more mon- a loss of confidence in the adthe majority remained close,
ey toward television ads in
ag
Ryan Conaty/New YorkTimes News Service
Rhode Island School of Design architecture students Marielle De Pena, right, and Anya Sellsted construct Techstyle Haus, "a fabric house that will use the energy of a hair dryer," in hopes of winning the 2014 Solar DecathlonEurope competition, in Providence, Rhode Island.
ministration. It's national se-
polls showed, prompting Re- districts held by Democrats publicans to pour additional in Iowa and Minnesota, inmoney into get-out-the-vote cluding that of longtime Rep. efforts in Alaska, Georgia and Collin Peterson of Minneso-
- SS
Holistic
curity, personal security and job security. People are on edge. And that's not good if you're the party in power."
able to quickly sketch to comIsby Lubin, a Brown engimunicate an idea, he said, "is neering major, said RISD dean enormously useful tool." It sign students helped her unalso helps "see" an idea. "To do derstand how to effectivelyuse engineering you've got to be the space within the structure. able to visualize." She learned a lot about strucThe Rhode Island School of tural design, she said, and novDesign thinks so much of the el uses for strong, lightweight need to collaborate that it is materials. "It's been really spearheading a national ini- amazing to work with RISD
Continued from A1 Art students made the device look more lifelike. Theater
students, acting as patients, helped make it function more
Legislature
gram, which is set to expire ple duringtransactions with after next year. Democrats the Department of Motor
Continued from A1
also may push for statewide
paid sick leave for most workincludes proposals on clean fu- ers, which Kitzhaber has said els standards, fixing transpor- should be addressed by the tation funding, which is down state rather than local governbecause of inconsistent federal ments to avoid creating a patchmoney and dedining gas tax work system. His Republican revenues, and establishing challenger, Rep. Dennis RichFor Democrats, the wish list
statewide sick leave that could
ardson of Central Point, said
be nearly green-lighted if Dem- paid sick leave isn't a governocrats get the results they want ment issue. in Tuesday's election. M any early Republican proHouse Republicans have posals involve keeping taxes made their priorities known down and attacking governin what they called a 100-day ment waste while promoting plan, which was released at transparency. the height of campaign seaRep. Dave Gomberg, D-Otis, son. They plan to oppose tax said the two parties have a hisincreasesbutsupporttax cred- tory of compromise in Oregon its, expand charter schools and regardless of who's in power. increase transportation fund-
"Somebody pointed out to
ing. They are also interested me that I voted with Democratin tax reform, which has been ic leadership 96 percent of the a central piece of Gov. John time," Gomberg said. "And I Kitzhaber's bid for re-election. pointed out to them that I voted But Republicans are waiting for with Republican leadership 92 details before they talk about
realistically. "Engineers focus on how it works," said Jenni Buckley,
Vehicles. Johnson v oted with 14 Republicans and
an assist ant professor of mechanical engineering for the
tiative to incorporate art and
students because of how fo-
design in STEM education-
blocked it. Johnson backs up her lone wolf votes by saying she doesn't have to walk
program. "Artists focus on the
what it calls STEM to STEAM
cused they are on design," Lubin said. "We were able to meet
user experience." Few schools actually require engineering students to
lockstep with
take art, but the University of
(as in science, technology, engineering, art and math). Art education,they argue,teaches the kind of risk-taking and cre-
t h e o t h er
members of her caucus. She also said a wider Dem-
Illinois comes close. Leake in- ative problem-solving that can corporates freehand sketching be applied to, say, health care and computer-aided design in and climate change. his engineering graphics class. In one independent projMany universities have aban- ect, RISD architecture and doned such a class altogether, design s t udents b u il t an or focus on computer drawing. 800-square-foot solar h ouse Leake, whose first degree with engineering majors from is in art history, believes that the school up the hill, Brown. learning to make even rudi- The project, which culminatmentary drawings is critical ed in a textile-draped, Flinttodevelopment asan engineer. stones-meets-Jetsons creation "Typically, engineering stu- called Techstyle Haus, was one
ocratic lead in the Senate
wouldn't necessarily mean automatic bill passage. "I think the assumption
that raw numbers produce a certain predictable result is probably an auspicious premise," Johnson said. "My colleagues could easily exercise independent judgment and cometo adifferent condusion."
dents are not comfortable with
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of two American entries in the
sketching," he said. "They say, 2014 Solar DecathlonEurope
— Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com
'Oh, I can't draw.'" But being
in Versailles, France.
in the middle because we're
all trained with a really strong foundation. It's just in different things." John Maeda, who championed STEM to STEAM as president of RISD from 2008 to
2013, has degrees in electrical engineeringand computer science as well as classical design. In a commentary last year for Scientific American, he wrote
this about art/science synergy: "Both are dedicated to asking the big questions placed before us: 'What is true? Why does it matter'? How can we move society forward?' Both search
deeply, and often wanderingly, for these answers."
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percent of the time."
what tax reform they will or
An ideal bill for Gomberg would tweak a piece of what "The governor's the exec- was calle dthe "grand bargain" utive branch leader. He's the of a2013 specialsession.The one who has initiated these dis- bargain included a tax cut for cussions for tax reform," said small businesses and reformHouse Minority Leader Mike ingpublic employee pensions.
won't support next session.
McLane, R-Powell Butte. "I'm
The cut lowered the tax rate
going to allow the executive that some small-business ownbranch to be the first one to re- ers pay on income and created lease the details." a tiered tax structure for others Democrats, who had a 34-26 depending on the amount of lead in the House last session, income. are poised to keep a majority Months later, Gomberg proafter the election. posed changing the tax cut so There are several scenari- thatbusinesses making more os that are most likely to play than $1 million paid 9.9 perout next session in the Senate.
cent, rather than raising the tax
Democrats could again hold a rate on income over $5 million. 16-14 lead, or they could win a That change is still a priority 17th seat andmake itless viable for Gomberg, who represents a for a party member to vote with coastal district where businessRepublicans to block a bill. es bring in seasonal employees. The two parties could also Republicans have targeted share control of the Senate, that proposal as unacceptwhich happened for the first able next session and oppose t ime in state history in t h e Gomberg's plan. Housein2011 andhappenedin Republicans would hold the Senate in 2003.
A tie, said Chris Telfer, former Republican state senator from Bend, would make Salem
a much different place than if Democrats hold across the board control.
III " I
some power overrevenue bills
if they prevent a Democratic supermajority.
I I ' I II ' ' I
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I
Lawmakers need 36 votes in
the House and 18 in the Senate to increase taxes. Democrats also need addi-
"What happens is you can tional votes to steer dear of any kill anything, you can't neces- member who might buck party sarily get something passed, lines on dose votes. but you can kill anything," Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-ScapTelfer said. "Then sometimes poose, was a deciding vote on some compromises can take dose bills last session. She's by place." no means the only legislator Neither party has created an to vote against her party, but in-depth list of priorities ahead some of her caucus-defying of the election. They say they'll votes stood out. wait until the new leadership is
created in January. But Democrats are emphasizing removing a sunset clause on the state's clean fuels pro-
S ecretary o f
S t at e K a t e
Brown last year pushed for a law that would have increased voter registration numbers by
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Bend resident. Paradis called the stabbing
"the most significant student Continued from A1 Ron Paradis, spokesman for incident that I recall in my 23 COCC, said eight to 10 students years here," and said the colwitnessed the incident, which lege has brought in counselors police believe was unprovoked. from St. Charles Health SysP aradis said many of t he tem to work with students who roughly 100 students who live may have been shaken by the at Juniper Hallhad left campus incident. He said classes are for the weekend and were not currentlyscheduled to resume there at the time. as planned on Monday. "I think the important thing Briles, a forestry major in his first term of college, is from is that we're trying to make Monroe, in
t h e W i l l amette sure the students who live in
Valley, and had been living in a two-person dorm unit with
the residence hall are comfortable and their needs are taken
care of," Paradis said. the school year, Paradis said. Oregon courtrecords indiHe said school records list cate no prior criminal offenses Norgaard, a computer science for Norgaard. major who has been attend— Reporter: 541-383-0387, ing COCC since January, as a shammers@bendbulletin.com Norgaard since the start of
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Shop now to enroll by Nov. 15. www.ProvidenceHealthPlan.com 877-406-1714 (TTY: 711) Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
PROVIDENCE Health Plan
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Loving Continued from A1
SmithRock State Park Like other popular places around Central Oregon, Smith Rock State Park near Terre-
bonne keeps drawing more and more visitors, said Scott
Brown, park manager. Centered around namesake Smith Rock, a climbing mecca, about half the park's visitors come to climb, he said. Hikers, photographers, wildlife watchers, trail runners and mountain bikers contribute to the other half.
Over the last four years Smith Rock's visitation went
up about 5 percent per year, but Brown said this year it dramatically jumped 15 to 20 percent for day-users and
campers. "We are seeing larger groups on holiday weekends when weather is nice," he said. By the end of the year he expects the park to have had about 700,000 day-use visits and about 19,000 camping
"They need to bring that mountain. (philosophy) to the river and "Anyone can see that by to these somewhat wild places looking at GoogleEarth," he that are right here in our backsaid. yard," he said. Satellite im a ge s on GoogleEarth an d G o ogle Shevlm Park Maps show a distinct line leadOn the western edge of ing up the south face of South Bend, 652-acre Shevlin Park Sister. The more people head is the largest park in the city. up the mountain, the wider Regular visitors include dog that line grows as the trail has walkers, runners and mounbecome a "hiker's freeway," tain bikers passing through to Sabo said. connect to nearby trails. The "I mean, it is as wide as 30 park also has Aspen Hall, a or 40 feet (in some sections)," popular wedding and event he said. spot. "It is a very, very popular As climbersof different paces looktopasseach other,they park," said Figurski, the landwalk off the main trail, widscape architect with the park ening the path and sometimes district. "... A lot of people love creating braided trails at con- it and they use it heavily." gestion points. Concerned people were lovThe D eschutes N ational ing the park to death, the Park Forest requires climbers to District this summer began fill out a self-issue wilderness the process of creating a new permit before climbing South management plan for Shevlin ity has left its mark on the
Revival Continued from A1 Few places have bene-
fited more from the phenomenon than downtown Frederick, where a flourish-
ing restaurant, bar and art scene has transformed the 18th-century county seat into a mini-Washington. In
the past five years, the city has added 40 businesses to its eclectic downtown,
Frederickofficials say,and demand for houses in the
most walkable parts of the cityhas pushed up median home prices. Still, a mini-Washington is not Washington. Big housing complexes, large retailers and especially plentiful job oppor-
donates 20 percent of her earnings to charity.
"You know," Bowers said, small cities. The regulations "timing is everything."
Sister, which is in the Three
Park. The last time the Park
that mandate architectural preservation in historic
downtown sounds much like
are emptied. The bars crowd with drinkers. "It's the best of D.C. or Baltimore or New York without the
Sisters Wilderness Area, but
District crafted such a plan for
downtowns can also make that of many others. It served
hassle," said Valerie Hartman,
doesn't enforce a limit to how
Shevlin was in 1992. An 18-person citizen com-
d evelopment difficult cost-prohibitive.
who moved here with her hus-
many peoplecan make the climb on a given day. Other volcanoes around the North-
mittee, formed by the Park District, met for the first time l ast month an d w i l l m e et
west, such as Mount St. Helens park uses to count visitors. in Washington, are subject to again this month. Figurski night visits, the metrics the
The increase in visitors this
a quota.
year likely comes from the park being marketed by Travel Oregon as one of The Seven Wonders of Oregon. "That made a big differ-
Someday South Sister may have met three or four times be as well, with the possibility before the District presents a discussedfor decades, but for draft management plan. now Sabo said there are no The goal of the plan is to adimmediate plans for climber dress and find ways to allevi-
ence," Brown said.
limits.
said the committee likely will
ate potential user conflicts at
tunities are often scarce in
or
The long-term prosperity
urban house.
by mall lured away four of the
With demand strong, downtown homes that used to stay
heart of Baltimore, but he
grew up in Frederick County and w anted to m ove b ack. When a l a w f i r m
southern reaches of the De-
number of people on trails. Brown suggest v isitors come during the week and when weather isn't perfect. "They can avoid the crowds
schutes National Forest, like
The pressure that increasing popularity puts on public lands
the Diamond Peak Wilderness
isn't unique to Bend, said Matt
bites of chicken salad. "Just
near Crescent Lake Junction on Oregon Highway 58.
with a small-town feel."
that way and still have a great
he said.
Shinderman, senior instructor and program lead for sustainability at Oregon State University-Cascades. Over the past two decades, people have been
beard and arms sleeved in tattoos held a folded stackof
"Don't be part of the crowd,"
Deschutes River
drawn to cities around AmerAs more and more people ica where outdoor recreation Beauty a n d ac c essibili- float the Deschutes River in can be part of their daily lives. ty combine to make Tumalo Bend, the issue of litter has The trend d oesn't show Falls, off Skyliners Road about moved from along the river- signs of stopping, so public 14 miles west of Bend, a pop- banks out into the river itself, land managers in and around ular spot for a quick visit or said Houston, of the Upper Bend will have to contend with a day hike. The picturesque Deschutes Watershed Council. increasing visitors to trails, falls are close to the parking The Bend-based group leads parks and other hot spots. "It's a very easy place to live lot, which fills up fast on a restoration efforts on the Debusy day. People then park on schutes and its tributaries. and torecreate," Shinderman the road leading up to TumaWhile the group hasn't col- sard. lo Falls, with the line of cars lected data on the number of The people marketing Bend sometimes stretching for a people floating the river, Hous- as a place to move and visit
Tumalo Falls
quarter mile, Sabo said. He
ton said there has been a no-
South Sister
director fo r
oftenfocus on the nearby rec-
didn't have exact numbers but ticeable increase in people on reation opportunities, he said. said visitation at Tumalo Falls the water during summertime They don't often talk about keeps going up. in the past decade since the how the places where people While not a part of a fo- park district finished building go for recreation have an ecocused campaign like Smith Farewell Bend and River Bend logical value as well, being wilRock State Park, Sabo said parks. derness or other preserves for Tumalo Falls and other once The annual deanup of the landscapes and wildlife. lesser-known public places river now involves scuba divers Achieving a balance of rechave become more popular who pull trash from the depths reation while maintaining ecodue to publicity on social me- of the Deschutes. This August systems is not a trivial issue, dia, in guide books and word the cleanup had double the Shinderman said. of mouth. amount ofdivers as previous Scott Silver, executive di"There are very few plac- deanups and they reported rector for Wild Wilderness in es that are secret anymore," finding more beer bottles and Bend, agrees. His group advoSabo said. other trashthan ever before, cates for the protection of wilsaid Kolleen Yake, education derness and Silver seeks recret h e w a t ershed ation away from crowds.
council. Having been in Bend since "They found quite a few wal- the 1980s, he's seen the popters, Central Oregon's signature mountains, South Sister lets and cell phones and keys," ularity of public lands grow also happens to be the easiest she said. "... Flip flops and exponentially. "The outdoors used to be to climb. A trail leads to the top shoes. And a GoPro." of the 10,358-foot volcano. The long list of what the harder to access," he said. T he relative ease of t h e divers found also indudes biFor people looking to get climb and a trail that starts cycles and large metal debris. away from others when they about 29 miles west of Bend While one can, bottle or pair of go outdoors he recommended make South Sister an increas- glasses wouldn't be a problem, roaming out east of Bend, but ingly popular hike, Sabo said. Houston said the accumulation didn't want to reveal any of the For 15 years Sabo has tracked of trash lowers the quality of places he frequents. "You tell someone, and next use on the mountain and he the river. said he's seen as many as 300 He suggested people floating thing you know, it's gone," he people reach the summit on a the river follow advice often sard. single day. given to people headed into the — Reporter: 541-617-7812, The increased popular- woods — pack it in, pack it out. ddarling@bendbulletin.com The tallest of the Three Sis-
munity's bustling commercial band, John, after raising their center until cars triggered an three children in a larger subexodus to the suburbs. A near-
to help handle the increased
Sharing the love
for two centuries as the com-
similar places will likely depend on a steady influx of people just like Murphy and his wife, Meghan, a 27-yearold clinical social worker. They used to live in the
Shevlin Park as Bend continues to grow, he said. "People go there for all sorts of reasons," Figurski said. "And on occasion they all end up there at the same time."
The history of Frederick's
of downtown Frederick and
He expects growth won't Like Smith Rock, Sabo said be so dramatic next year, but people looking to go up South does expect visits to the park Sister with l ess company to keep going up. More visitors should avoid busy summerwill mean increased costs for time holiday weekends. For running the park, like paying people who are looking for solfor more janitorial supplies, itude while heading outdoors and more calls to volunteers he recommends going to the
experience," he said.
Andre Chung / For The Washington Post
Madiiyn Oswaid, 11, plays violin in Frederick, Maryland, as Judeh Sheooi, 3,passes by.Oswald, accompanied by her father,hes been performing in downtown Frederick since the summer; she
made him an offer last year, she was reluctant. "I'm not
ready for cornfields just yet," she told him. So they rented arestored downtown rowhouse.
"We're kind of still keeping what we had in Baltimore," she said, between
Business is booming
downtown's anchor retailers, while interstates to Washing-
on the market for three months
ton and Baltimore siphoned off now typically go in one, said jobs and remaining shopping Sue Collins, who has been dollars. selling real estate in Frederick "The very asset that made it
successful originally — that it was walkable — became a disadvantage in the late 20th century when everybody wanted to drive everywhere," Leinberger said. "Now that very asset is what's bringing it back." A 2013 poll by the Urban Land Institute helps illustrate why. Millennials — who along with empty-nesters are leading the movement back to cities large and small — place a premium on walkability and distance to work and school.
since 2001. In that time, she
has also seen the city's population grow by more than 25 percent to 67,000. Her daughter, Sarah, 26, who also sells real estate, just returned to Freder-
ick — and rented an apartment downtown — after living in Baltimore and Phoenix.
But even its biggest boosters acknowledge that Frederick faces challenges. It lacks a grocery store or much new housing. In all cities, large and small, it remains unclear
whether millennials will stick around to raise their children. found a shift in taste across all Some in Frederick are trying, generations, with more than but many others won't, includhalf saying they would pre- ing downtown devotees Drew fer to live near a mix of shops, and Meghan Murphy, who rerestaurants and offices. cently broke ground on a subThe survey of 1,200 adults also
A man with a bushy receipts. Chris Ritchie, 44, had just returned to Freder-
ick after a week of buying antiques for his 5-monthold home furnishings store, Smokestack Studios, when a fellow downtown busi-
But that doesn't mean every-
urban home that they think
one wants to move to big cities, will better suit a family. said David Versel, senior reAnd then there's jobs. searchassociateat the George Just 6,500 people work Mason University Center for downtown, though that's 1,500 ness owner stopped in to Regional Analysis. Many peo- m ore thana decade ago.City say hello. He ticked off the ple prefer smaller downtowns, officials hope the area's first new clients that had recent- where they can remain close to hotel and conference center, ly offered him work: an family and avoid big-city hous- tentatively scheduled to open upscale restaurant, a local ing prices, congestion, crime in 2017, will provide an addinonprofit group, two salons. and sometimes troubled public tional boost. "Holy cow," she said. "Over time, we're going to schools. "Yeah," he told her. "It's Liz Sizemore, 26, so enjoys have the types of jobs that amazing." living in d owntown Freder- people are looking for," said R itchie, who h a s t w o icksburg, Virginia that she Richard Griffin, director of decades of experience in takes a 90-minute train ride economic development. "It just the f u r n iture i n d ustry, to and from Washington four doesn't happen immediately." searched from North Car- days a week to her job as a gift Alyssa Molina and Gloria olina to Pennsylvania for shop manager. Majchrzak,both 22, emerged "I love D.C., but I thrive in a spot to open his store. He from a Mexican restaurant sells everything from $100 smaller towns," she said. "It's near the creek on a recent eveoriginal Swiss Army can- worth it." ning. They both grew up in the vas backpacks to $2,600 area and said they have long high-grade leather sofas Life without the hassle imagined living and working designed after Babe Ruth's By day, Frederick's down- in downtown Frederick. baseballglove. town streets are neither bigMolina has even picked "I was literally driving city loud nor sleepy-town qui- out a dream home near Bakmy car through Frederick," et. Slow-shuffling tourists take er Park. It has a garden and a he recalled, "and I said, photos on the bridges over white exterior and Victorian 'This is it.'" Carroll Creek as coffee-carryNext door t o R i tchie's ing millennials maneuver past 4 ,000-square-foot s t u d i o sidewalk signs that advertise is Brewer's Alley, which lunch specials and spa treat-
is owned by Phil Bowers, whose family in Frederick goes back at least six generations. Bowers, who also operatesfour other restaurants in town, remembers
an age not long ago when
ments, tattoos andyoga. By night, available streetside parking is sparse, especially on performance nights at the Weinberg Center for the Arts. At restaurants such
a rchitecture. M ajchrzak,
apartmentabove a now-closed deli: "I would love to have that." "Now that w e've r evitalized downtown," Molina said,
"thereneeds to be more job opportunities." Instead, she plans to start
Ritchie would have just kept
as Volt, the Tasting Room and her career in New York City. Firestone's Culinary Tavern, Majchrzak intends to move to
driving.
tables are packed and bottles
downtown Baltimore.
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F orum C e n t e r , B e n d ( A c i o s s f r o m B a r n e s 8 N o b l e ) 541-61 7- 8 8 4 0 w w w . w b u . c 0 m/b e n d
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manager at a Target 40 miles away, pointed to a second-floor
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
Could Britain replace the House of Lords? By Danny Hakim New York Times News Service
LONDON — The House of Lords tracesits roots to the
less. They blamed Miliband
community here, a small
for the failure of a move in 2012 that would have made the
minority of rice farmers and day laborers, has long
before next year's election.
governed."
The members of the House
of Lords are appointed by the queen on the advice of the prime minister or a n i n de-
The House of Lords was pendent commission, or they d issolved, along with t h e inherit their seats. In 1999, all monarchy, after the Civil War but 92 hereditary peers were of 1649, but reinstated a few eliminated as part of a reform years later when the monar- effort. Twenty-six members chy was restored. Royalists are bishops and archbishops were not in a forgiving mood; of the Church of England. they dug up the bodies of deThe house has had its share ceased rebelleaders, includ- of scandal, including one ing Oliver Cromwell, who had regarding allegations that been buried at Westminster peerages were being purAbbey, and put their heads on chased by Labour supporters spikes. in exchange for political doM iliband's proposal r e- nations or loans, though no ceived a t a mer r esponse charges were filed by prosethough the Liberal Democrats, cutors in 2007 after a lengthy who are part of the governing investigation.
An Indian courthouse investigatesghosts
important role in tryingto eradicate the dog meat trade. British celebrities like Ricky Gervais and Judi Dench were featured
New York Times News Service
land — The dog-eating
London having more mem- Such a proposal would require bers than Wales, Northern Ire- the same process as a constiland, East and West Midlands tutional change or major legisand Yorkshire combined. lation. It would have to be pro"It's an economic issue. It's posed by the prime minister's a social issue. It's a fairness government, pass both houses issue," he said during a speech of Parliament and have the asin Blackpool, in n o r thwest sent of the queen. England. "The northwest has The House of Lords and the nearly the same population as House of Commons make up London, but five times more the two chambers of the Britmembers of the House of ish Parliament, and they are Lords are from London than far larger than the U.S. Confrom the northwest." gress, which has 535 mem"No wonder the recovery bers. The House of Lords has isn't working for most parts more than 750 members, who of Britain when the voices of are known as peers. most parts of Britain aren't being heard," he added. "It's time to reform the way we are
By Thomas Fuller
coalition with the Conservative Party, assailed it nonethe-
14th century. Now the Labour Party is proposing to consign chamber largely, but not enit to history. tirely, an elected body. "This is simply lip service In a speech Saturday, Ed Miliband, the L abour lead- from a Labour Party who er, proposed replacing the have no intention of actually House of Lords with an Amer- delivering," said Sir Malcolm ican-style, elected Senate. In Bruce, the party's deputy leadhis remarks, he stressed that er, in a statement. the House of Lords was not The speech comes as the geographically representative parties position themselves of the United Kingdom, with
ai 0 meattra eun er ressure BAAN K L A NG, T hai-
1
+ PA
in a video posted on the Internet last month condemning
it. Much of the financing for Watchdog and its parent organization, Soi Dog, comes from donations from the United
understood that its culinary habits do not sit well with
people from other parts of Thailand, especially the pet-lovingurban middle and upper classes.
States and Europe.
But these days, they feel
under siege. Thailand's military government, which seized
Aaron Joel Santos/ New YorkTimes News Service
powerfrom an elected gov- Dog meat jerky is sold at a small street stand near Tha Rae market ernment in May, is consid- in Sakon Nakhon province, Thailand. Police in Thailand have arering a law that would ban rested what they describe as the country's dog meat kingpins, and the dog meat trade,a m ove the military government is considering banning the trade. that animal rights activists
backing the bill are portraying as a way the junta can enhance its image internationally.
The national police, pressured by some of the same
activists, began a crackdown two years ago on the dog trade, arresting those involved in the business on
the grounds that they did not have licenses required
for the slaughter or transportation of animals. The police have set up sting operations in the forests where dogs are slaughtered and h ave arrested
what they describe as dog meat kingpins, who export trucks loaded with the animals to Vietnam and China,
Soi Dog — soi means alleyin Thai — was founded by Dutch and English residents of Thailand and focuses on campaigns to sterilize the legions of street dogs in Thailand. John Dalley, a co-founder of Soi Dog, said he had often heard the argument that dog
eating should be allowed because it is a tradition in some Asian cultures that helps keep
herding the water buffalo. fesses to love dogs but says the Eating dog, by no means a authorities cannot wipe out the mainstream tradition in Thai dogmeat trade overnight. "You can't just cut the tree cuisine, is confined to isolated pockets of aficionados, most- down," said Lt. Chaleaw Chaily in northeastern Thailand. hung. "You need to cut one The practice has existed for branch at a time." decades, chiefly among comA half-hour drive from Baan munities of ethnic Vietnamese, Klang, in Tha Rae village, roadand was put into the national side vendors openly sell sinewy spotlight by the Thai news me- smoked dog meat, a kind of dog dia in recent years. jerky, for about $7 a pound. Praprut's wife, J antima Lamai says the dog meat Thanthongdee, was arrest- trade, which is concentrated ed in July and sentenced to a here in Sakon Nakhon provtwo-year suspended jail term ince,has existed for decades for running a small dog-meat but took on a larger commermarket. cial scale only over the past 20 She was also fined about years. $150, a large sum for a family The two police officers have that owns three buffaloes and stopped trucks carrying as a few acresofricepaddies.The many as 1,000 dogs bound for family is still embittered by Laos and Vietnam. There, in what they see as a crackdown addition to the meat, the skin, on their traditions. which is finer and more deli-
both countries where dog eating is prevalent. Dog lovers far outnumber dog eaters among Thailand's nearly 70 million "Dog meat is delicious — it's people. The residents of this like pork but without all the picturesque village profess fat," Praprut said. "There is to be both. supposedto be freedom inthis "We only eat the fierce country, and there should be dogs — the dogs that bite freedom to eat what you want." people or kill chickens," The police officer who arsaid Praprut Thanthong- rested Jantima said he saw his dee, 45, a rice farmer who work partly as a personal cruhas eaten dog since he was sade of dog compassion. "The more arrests we make, a child. As he spoke with a reporter, he stroked the the more dogs we rescue," said neck of his pet dog, Mon- the arresting officer, Lt. Lamai ey, a white and brown mutt Sakonpitak, an avowed dog who serves as guard dog, lover who has four pet dogs companion in the rice pad- at home. "I can't stand seeing dies, hunter of dangerous dogs killed tobecome food." snakes and assistant in Lamai'spartner also pro-
cate than cow leather, is har-
vested and used to make drum skins and gloves, he said. The police work is supported by civic groups that want to see dog eating eradicated and that have been instrumental in the
dog meat crackdown. Bhurita Wattanasak, a farm-
er outside the northern city of Chiang Mai, heads what she calls the suppression division of Watchdog Thailand, a civic group that encourages people
down the population of stray dogs. "It's not about cultural differ-
ence or anything else," he said. "It's a horrendously cruel business from start to finish. The
dogs are crammed into cages, and it's not unusual that live dogs are thrown into pots of
boiling water." The police in Sakon Nakhon province agree that dogs are often treated cruelly. B ut butchers h er e
ferent from the way other ani-
mals are slaughtered for meat. A butcher allowed a visit-
ing photographer to witness the slaughter of a dog, which was killed with a sudden blow to the head, then bled out. The
dog appeared to be dead within seconds. The butcher, who said print-
ing his name would be too "dangerous" in the current en-
vironment, said he killed problematic or unwanted dogs. This is the common refrain
among dog eaters — that professed pet lovers often abandon their dogs at Buddhist temples,
fueling Thailand's problem of stray dogs. "Dogs are man's best friend," said Kawai Thanthongdee, 66, to call with tips about the dog who has been eating dogs since meat trade and then passes the he was young and is Praprut's information to police. father-in-law. "But some dogs Foreigners are playing an deserve tobe killed."
By Annie Gowen
ma, a lawyer who has worked inthe courthouse since 1989. NEW DELHI — Over the New Delhi, the country's past year, a series of unusu- sprawling capital that is home al events have occurred at a to 16 million people, is known courthouse in eastern New Del- as the "City of Djinns," a refhi. Books have disappeared, erence to the genies from the strange noises have been Islamic tradition still said to heard. Computers and lights inhabit the city's shrines and have seemed to switch on by graveyards. News of the courtthemselves. house haunting, thus, "will Employees at the Karkar- bring relief to people who dooma District Court began feared Delhi's age-old djinns wondering if the courthouse and spirits are being driven was haunted. Eventually the away by the process of gentrifiThe Washington Post
e xecutive committee of
the
cation," the news website Scroll
local bar association called a noted drolly. meeting, mulled over the ev-
But there's a darker side to
idence and decided to install dosed-circuit television cameras to find out what was going on. "We were primarily con-
such beliefs. In tribal areas of eastern India, women are still accused of being witchesblamed for everything from crop failure to infertility-
cerned because we thought
beaten and sometimes killed.
somebody was stealingbooks," Villagers with little access to said Raman Sharma, the joint health care often turn to shasecretary of th e Shahdara mans, or faith healers, for help. Bar Association. But whether Last year, a prominent Indian the culprit was a book thief or rationalist who long advocatsomething more otherworldly, ed for an anti-black-magic law they did not know. was gunned down while on his In opening their investiga- morning walk in the western tion, the bar association joined
city of Pune.
a long list of other authorities
Just a block from the courthouse, a billboard advertises
who have taken complaints of
paranormal activity seriously the services of a healer who in India, a country that lives, it can solve vexing problems, is said, in several centuries at from sour love affairs to demon once.Last year,forexample,a possession. "We've got a country with a police station in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh 16th-century mind-set superwas shuttered after a "resident imposed on the 21st century," spirit" terrorized the beat con- groused Narendra Nayak, the stable on duty, according to a president of the Federation
WHAT'5 THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THESE TWO HOMESP
report in the Times of India. A state lawmaker demanded an
H INT: IT HAS TO DO WITH SAVING ENERGY AND MO N E Y .
of Indian Rationalist Associ-
ations. "People will use their inquiry. Elsewhere, a primary mobile phones to view ghosts schoolwas temporarily dosed and we will do a puja (prayer when a boy said he saw an egg- ritual) before sending a spaceshaped ghost emanating from craft to Mars. Lots of cultures a chalkboard. have learned to get over these Official police investigations things and be more rational of complaints about alleged in their approach, but we havsupernatural events occur with en't. That's the tragedy of this regularity. "We entertain all country." complaints, be it against zomThe bar association's grainy bies or werewolves," a police of- and dim surveillance video, ficer told the Times earlier this as these can be, had plenty to year, speaking about another satisfy believers — white orbs paranormal matter. floating by, computers flickerFantastical tales — of levi- ing onand off— and much to tating holy men, firewalkers, raise doubt. "It was just a virus," said conjurers, religious statues seeping saffron water — are Madan Lal Karkar, 45, a lawnot uncommon in India, an an- yer who was sitting 'Ibesday cient culture in which the line afternoon in the small cyber between superstition and belief library that was monitored. is oftenblurred. Karkar was playing computer "This is how everyone in In- chess, but otherwise, the room dia is brought up — listening to is infrequently used now. The ghost stories," said Sushil Shar- Internet isn't working.
who
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A7
Simuators eppiotso
sma panes earnsa e By Susan Jacobson Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel
OVIEDO, Fla. — Pilot James Gendreau flies over the l a ndmark S u nTrust
tower, the downtown lights glimmering in the darkness as he approaches Orlando Executive Airport. As he gets close to the
Carl D. Walsh/Tribune News Service
Maine Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mike Michaud poses for a picture with Patricia Haverly-Johndro, shot by her son Brock, 17, during a campaign rally this month. "Yes, l am gay," Michaud wrote in response to rumors about his sexual orientation. "But why should it matter?"
U..wecomes a maIIia e; 0itica an sca e c an es By Anita Kumar McClatchy Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — It would
have beenunimaginable even a couple of years ago. The most powerful Republican in Washington flew to San Diego this month to help
changed her mind. For her, it was realizing that sexual orientation is not a choice but
tive director of the Log Cabin Republicans, which calls itself
rather something that a per-
can organization advocating for equal rights for gays and lesbian. E ighty-three percent of
son is born with. "We're hard-wired, if you will, in our sexual preference,"
she said. "Once I kind of un-
raise money for an openly derstood that, then everything gay candidate for the House of started to fall into place about Representatives. same-sex marriage." House Speaker John BoehThe impact on politics is ner, R-Ohio, wasn't just trying most evident in the Republito help elect a Republican. He can Party. was trying to help his party A Republican candidate for builda new image, and reach U.S. Senate is running stateout to voters it had spent the wide TV ads in favor of samelast decade shunning. His de- sex marriage. A pair of openly cision to campaign for gay gay Republicans — Carl Decandidates was met with sur- Maio of California and Richprisingly nominal opposition, ard Tisei of M a ssachusetts which he was able to brush — are running in competitive aside quickly. House races, both featuring Little-noticed and making ads with their partners, both barely a stir, Boehner's trip backed by Boehner. At least was a potent sign of a funda- eight Republican members of mental shift in the country Congress have indicated their and its politics. supportfor same-sex marAfterdecades of solid op- riage. Leading the pack: Sen. position, a majority of Amer- Rob Portman of Ohio, who reicans now support marriage versed his longtime opposition between those of the same because his son is gay. sex, would accept it if a child of theirs were gay and say it Oregon andelsewhere wouldn't make a difference if Monica Wehby, a pediatric a candidate for Congress were neurosurgeon who's a Repubgay. The shift has come rap- lican candidate in Oregon for
the nation's largest Republi-
adults sai d
t h a t wh e t her
someone was gay wouldn't make a difference in whether they voted for that candidate, according to a recent Mc-
Clatchy-Marist poll. That's nearlydouble the 49 percent who felt that way when the
Los Angeles Times asked them in 1985.
Opponents remain,and fight back This shift i sn't universal,
however, as a large slice of
variety of conditions, the better chance he or she will
tions that represent opponents
know how to handle an emergency. "The airlines require recurrent training," said
Research Council and the Na-
tional Organization for Marriage, for example — pushed Boehner and party leaders to
the Senate, said she'd decid-
majority first supported samesex marriage. This change didn't come from political leaders. Rather,
ed to air the TV ad featuring a gay man who successfully fought the state's same-sex
after its losses in 2012 — and
marriage ban so that voters would realizeshe represented all residents in Oregon, not just a segment of the population. "The Republican Party is a big-tent party," Wehby said. "We don't have to be in lockstep on every issue." Former first lady Laura Bush and former Vice President Dick Cheney support same-sex marriage.Former
they pumped millions of dollars into the gay candidates' races. A number of lawmakers and groups have vowed to
a new era with new attitudes,
older people becoming more familiar with gays and lesbians in their families and communities, workplaces that welcome gays, changing messages in popular culture and new conversations in places of
worship.
President George H.W. Bush and his wife, Barbara, served
Politicians follow the people as official witnesses at the As people are changing their attitude, politics is changing in reaction.
d e cisions t h at
Bad w e ather,
f l awed
Pilots pay hourly rental rates
of $40 to $150, based on which simulator they use. The simulators also are available to flight
schools and instructors who want to bring their students to train. The
2 ,500-square-foot
center is an expansion of Elite Simulation Solutions, which has been manufacturing and marketing simulator hardware, software and training devices
Aviation flight school at Kissimmee Gateway Airport. He, for more than two decades. "It's like a mental gymnasitoo, said driving is considerably more dangerous than flying. um for pilots," Dixon said. "It's a "In your training, you're lot cheaper than flying the real going to learn to deal with airplane, and that's the whole every kind o f s i t uation," idea."
I ' ' i
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Preseason Sale A~fll SkiS AndkBO~OtS.LOn Sale
cost three men their lives in a crash in Indian River County last year, the Na-
• piJrrrdl/diNt-'i'
tional Transportation Safety Board found.
997ZEBB OKS
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Kit Cody, 67, was at the controls when his twin-en-
l
gine Cessna 310H crashed flying to Bartow after a trip
•
II
he planned to introduce a con-
to the Bahamas in the rain. Also killed were his brother,
@PowderHouse
stitutional amendment t hat
Barry Cody, 65, and their
311 SW CENTURYDR.,BEND • 541489-6234 • Open Daily 9-6
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would prevent the Supreme Court from striking down marriage laws. "We should remain faithful to our moral heritage and At least three states — Kansas, Montana and South Car-
olina — refuse to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples as they fight the court rulings. "The state of Kansas has voted on this; the people of
Kansas have voted on this," Republican Gov. Sam Brownback said at a rally this month.
•
•
"We need to keep pushing those issues and keep surging. ... Surge forward into the elec-
tion cycle." Republican former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who's considering another run for president in 2016, said that if the GOP didn't fight same-
Your home is filled
sex marriagehe'd leave the party.
with potential.
Still, there are signs that
even staunch
o p ponents
see the way the country is
moving. to be sure. A solid segment of races where gay candidates Victoria Cobb, the presiAmerica opposes same-sex are running. dent of the Family Foundamarriage. The Republican In M a ine, f o r e x a mple, tion, which opposes same-sex Party is torn. Some lawmak- w here Democrat Mik e M i - marriage in Virginia, said her ersare refusing to allow cou- chaud could become the first group would shift some of its ples to marry, even as an av- openly gay governor in the focusaftertherecentcourtdealanche of court rulings say nation, the central issue is his cision allowing same-sex marthey can. Religions such as rival's leadership style, not his riage in the state. "We will work," she said, "to the Roman Catholic Church own lifestyle. "Yes, I am gay," Michaud ensure that while same-sex w eighchanges,thenback off. But rapidly changing views wrote in a guest column in the marriage is legal in Virginon gays and lesbians, partic- Bangor Daily News last No- ia, the rights and freedoms of ularly marriage, are altering vember in response to rumors those who disagree with the American politics this fall, about his sexual orientation. redefinition of marriage are "But why should it matter?" perhaps for good. treated equally and are not "This cycle could make an discriminated against in their Carla Jones, 59, a real estate agent from Orange Coun- end to identity politics," said religious practice, education, ty, California, is one who's Gregory Angelo, the execu- business or employment." There are still opponents,
Camelin, director of Sun State
and a retired Army helicopter pilot. In some, there's a feeling of motion even though the machine is stationary.
judgment and inexperience
on Valentine's Day while
sard.
For years, Democratic lead-
er, 69, a longtime Boeing engineer whose distinguished career includes nearly five decades as a flight instructor. "That's part of why their safetyrecord isasgood asit
marriage in states. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said
never hesitate to defend it," he
— all have changed their po- ers opposed same-sex marsition. Many Republicans as riage. But they, too, moved in well have changed, some in the wake of public opinion. their position, some in their Obama opposed same-sex approach. marriage through his 2008 The state Republican Party election, then said his thinkin Nevada dropped its oppo- ing was evolving. In 2012, he sition to same-sex marriage. changed his mind. He said Tea party icon Michele Bach- he was influenced by his wife mann said marriage wasn't and young daughters. even an issue this election. Bill Clinton, who signed "Boring," she said. And just a a 1996 law allowing states decade after opposition to gay to refuseto recognize samemarriage helped Republican sex marriages that had taken George W. Bush win re-elec- place in other states, argued tion, his political guru said for its repeal last year. he could envision one of his Unlike previous years, gay party's presidential hopefuls and lesbian issues, includin 2016 supporting same-sex ing same-sex marriage, have marriage. garnered little attention in
of Elite Simulation Solutions
NTSB member Earl Ween-
paved the way for same-sex
September 2013.
Democrats who long op- reflected more broadly, and posed same-sex marriage quickly, in the Democratic — such as Barack Obama Party. and Bill and Hillary Clinton
fight c ourt
wedding of two women in The shifting politics were
Experts say th e m o re
sex marriage. Political groups and instituare grappling for the right way to fight back — and to win general elections. Several cons e rvative groups — including the Family
standards, trained to c heck
portation Safety Board sta- theirplanes before and after a tistics show. Of 1,297 U.S. flight and are practiced in precrashes last year, 1,222 were paring for emergencies, he said. "A lot of planning goes into a in the general-aviation category, which encompasses flight," said Desmarais, whose all civilian flying except for agency's mission i ncludes scheduled passenger-air- searching for lost planes. "Piline service. Three hundred lots know from the very get-go eighty-seven people were that you can't just pull over." Entry-level p r ivate p i lots killed. By contrast, 20 scheduled are required to receive at least commercial-airline flights 40 hours of flight training, crashed in 2013, killing two induding 10 hours solo, and people. take a written test, said Mike training a pilot has in a
idly; it was just in 2013 that a
themselves,a "rainbow revolution" propelled by a new generation coming of age in
airplanes, National Trans-
America still opposes same-
abandon gay candidates. But the leaders balked, saying the party needs to be more welcoming to gays, women, young people and minorities
it was driven by Americans
runway, Gendreau pulls the nose of his Cessna up and arcs away from his target. Then he repeats the maneuver again and again until he Joe Burbank/Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel finally touches down. Gen- Pilot James Gendreau, 48, works on his night flying on asimulator dreau, 48, didn't burn any at Elite SimCenter in Oviedo, Florida. fuel while he practiced. He was "flying" using a simulator at Elite SimCenters in friend Rob Krieger, 65, a Winter Camelin said. That's where a simulator can Oviedo, which opened this Haven businessman and decomonth. rated Vietnam helicopter pilot. help. Pilots can learn emergen"It's a great way to just The NTSB said Kit Cody cy maneuvers and how to hanbrush up," said Gendreau, wasn't qualified to fly by the dle rough weather without ever a Seminole County com- instruments required in limited leavingthe ground, said Terry mercial real estate develop- visibility. Contributing factors Lloyd, director of aviation at er with 25 years of flying were Cody's ingestion of an an- Kissimmee Gateway Airport. "It enhances training and efexperience. tihistamine that tends to cause Gendreau and the more drowsiness, his eagerness to ficiency," said Lloyd, who previthan 73,000 other pilots in get home in spite of scattered ously managed airfields for the Florida know that keeping thunderstorms and "improp- Air Force. up their skills is more than er evaluation of the weather At Elite SimCenters, airplane a requirement for maintain- conditions." and h e licopter s i m ulators, ing their certification. It can John Desmarais, director of which cost $7,000 to $250,000 be a matter oflife and death. operations for the Civil Air Pa- depending on their complexity, Pilot error is the prima- trol, maintains that it's actual- are designed as realistically as ry cause of crashes, which ly safer to fly than to cross the possible, said John Dixon, presare far more likely in small street. Pilots are held to high ident and chief executive officer
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© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
REDMOND SCHOOL DISTRICT NOVEMBER ELECTION The Nov. 4 election serves as a general election for a variety of statewide offices. Local races and measures will also be on the ballot.
BALLOTS • County election offices are reporting the following ballot returns: Crook................... 35.5% Deschutes........... 29.3% Jefferson..............34.1% Oregon .................28.3% BALLOT DROPSITES It's too late to mail your ballot, so take it to one of these locations, or view a maponline at www.sos.stute.or.us/ dropbox.Sites are available until 8 p.m. Tuesday, 24 hours unless otherwise noted. Crook County • Treasurer's Office, 200 NE SecondSt.; business days, regular business hours. • Courthouse, 300 NE Third St., drive-up box. • Library, 175 NWMeadow Lakes Drive; regular library hours. • Powell Butte School, 13650 SWHighway126; school hours. • Post General Store 8 Post Office, 28550 SE Paulina Highway; regular business hours.
NOV. 4 ELECTION
500 onuso ere to us rivers tocom ats orta eo a i cants By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin
REDMOND — In an unprecedented move, the
Redmond School District is offering a hiring bonus for new bus drivers in an effort to garner interest in its many open positions. "We have plenty of yellow buses and enough people to maintain them, just not
mented a new policy for new drivers after they complete training and an initial probationary period, by offering a $500 bonus. Currently, six to eight jobs are open. A few of Redmond's drivers are on approved leave this fall, exacerbating the problem, according to Kelly Richard, communications coordinator for the district. And a
they live in the area might be a contributor, she said. "I don't think we have
more homeless students now but I think we've gotten better about identifying
Big donors step Lip in
Central Oregon communities (if Redmond is their home district). To get around the shortage,
campaigns
the district has been forced to
use charter buses, which are more expensive, and other
By Jonathan J. Cooper
them, so they are asking for transportation more often,"
staffers with a commercial
Richard said. "We had about 20 homeless students last year receiving special trans-
driver's license, including
PORTLAND — Oregon's statewide election
portation." In those limited
enough trained people to drive them," said Superinten-
federal mandate that requires
situations, she said, a driver
school districts to provide
and bus must be sent for the
dent Mike McIntosh. This fall the district imple-
transportation for homeless
students, even if it's only one or two and they live in other
students no matter where
bendbulletin.com/elections
The Associated Press
campaigns have hauled in more than $43 mil-
substitute drivers, who are
now working every day. Redmond has also been leaning on neighboring districts, contracting to use their buses wherever possible. SeeDrivers/B5
lion. That doesn't include
the U.S. Senate race or down-ballot contests for the state Legislature and
local offices. The impact of all that money is everywhereyou can't watch television, check your mail or even
LORD'S ACRE DAY
view a YouTttbe video
without confronting political ads.
ea overs re oice in own's — ear ra iion
But where's the money
coming from'? The money in the governor's race is largely coming from within Oregon, but the ballot measures are being showered with cash from out of
state. Here's a look at the top
donors to Oregon's campaigns for governor and the highest-profile ballot measures, based on campaignfinance records filed through Thursday:
V"
k=
JOHN KITZHABER Potal
raised: $4.4million) • Phil Knight: $250,000 The chairman of Nike
Deschutes County • La Pine library, 16425 First St., drive-by box. • Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane, drive-by box; Monday, 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; Tuesday, 8a.m.-8 p.m. • Road Department,
Inc. is a big spender on Oregon elections. He
opened his wallet for the Democratic governor after backing Kitzhaber's rival in 2010, Chris Dudley, to the tune of $400,000. Nike itself separately gave Kitzhaber $90,000 this
year.
61150 SE 27th St.
• Too Extreme For Ore-
• Clerk's Office, 1300
gon PAC: $199,000 A political action com-
NW Wall St.
• Redmond library, 827 SW DeschutesAve., drive-by box. • Sisters City Hall, 520 E. CascadeAve.; business days, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tuesday, 8 a.m.-8 p.m. • Terrebonne Sheriff's Substation, 815411th St., Suite 3; business days, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tuesday, 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Jefferson County • Crooked River Ranch, 5195 SWClubhouse Road. • Culver City Hall, 200 W. First St.; business days, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tuesday, 8 a.m.-8 p.m. • Metolius City Hall, 636 Jefferson Ave.; business days, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tuesday, 8 a.m.-8 p.m. • Courthouse Annex, 66 SE DSt.; business days, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tuesday, 8 a.m.-8 p.m. • Warm Springs Fire 8 Safety, 2112WascoSt.
mittee newly created
to go after Kitzhaber's Republican rival, Dennis Richardson, Too Extreme
For Oregon counts labor unions, abortion-rights groups and the Democrat-
'-'e ":i"''f'-"' -:=':-
Richardson. Meg Reussos/The Bulletin
DENNIS RICHARDSON
Carroll Penhollow, of Redmond, right, uses a hook to grab a sack of beef from the meat hole during the68th annual Lord's Acre Day in Powell Butte on Saturday. The meat wes put in the ground the night before to cook overnight.
(Total raised:$2.8million) • Jones sisters, Seneca
By Scott Hammers
side Powell Butte Christian
The Bulletin
Church, Penhollow said some
POWELL BUTTE — Even
though he's been manning the barbecue pits at Lord's Acre Day for several decades, Carroll Penhollow hasn't settled
on what to call the small army of men who help him serve up as many as 2,000 lunches in half an hour or so. Standing in a moist, meat-
tinged billow of smoke out-
A few things have changed
tohim. "Call us whatever you want, just don't call us late for
over the years. There's now a 10K run and a 5K walk — win-
leans toward meat runnersthey are, after all, running or at least walking very quickly across the parking lot weighed down by pounds and pounds of ham, lamb and beef. Hefting a pair of anvil-size beef roasts, still steaming in-
dinner."
ners take home a pie — but the
Held on the first Saturday of November for the past 68
barbecuepitworks the same
side burlap sacks, Sam Platt,
made pies and bid on quilts
31, said it doesn't much matter
and other crafts at an auction.
call them pit runners, but he
years, Lord's Acre Day is easily the biggest day of the year in tiny Powell Butte, attracting
a crowd of thousands to feast on pit-roasted meat and home-
Jones Timber Company and Seneca Sustainable Energy: $591,000 Jody Jones, Rebecca Jones and Kathy Jones-McCann, along
as it always has, with giant cuts of meat wrapped in wet burlap sacks and buried in a bed of smoldering oak coals at midnight the day before.
with the Seneca timber
companies they own, gave Richardson a much-needed
boost when he desperately needed cash. SeeDonors/B3
"If it works, I say, don't
change it," said Penhollow. SeeLord's Acre/B3
YESTERDAY
BRIEFING
e •
Pedestrian dles in La Pine A woman was fatally struck by a pickup Friday night in La Pine, and a man was arrested in connection with the incident. Angela Michelle Bartleson, 44, of La Pine died at the scene, according to a news release from the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. The driver of the vehicle that struck Bartleson allegedly fled the accident on foot, the sheriff's office said. Jerry Steven Hannu, 45, of La Pine, was jailed on an accusation of failure to perform the duties of a driver to an injured person. SeeLocal briefing/B3
ic Party of Oregon among its donors. The group paid for an advertising campaign criticizing
Small buckstalks local boysin '64 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies ofThe
Almost positively, Jefferson county carried. With but
it. And we believe that very
Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
two precincts to be heard
persuaded to vote against the
from therequired 65 percent is assured, with a margin of
new county will have reason to regret their move and will
100 YEARS AGO
about 50 votes. It is not be-
see that they bit off their nos-
lieved that the vote of the precincts in question can alter
es to spite their faces.
For the week ending Nov. I, 1914
the outcome.
The solidest support for
soon many of those who were
From the start, Bend, and those affiliated with us in
the cause, have made a clean fight. As time goes on it will
Divisionbarely defeated
Deschutes division came from La Pine, Laidlaw, Millican,
The project to form Deschutes county from Crook
Imperial and Bend. La Pine
all the arguments advanced
produced 100 votes for divi-
county was defeated yes-
sion and only four against it.
in favor of division were sound. Likewise, experience
here
terday by a narrow margin, probably not fifty votes preventing the division. Division obtained about 61 per cent of the total vote of the question,
No new county(Editorial) Deschutes county is
mated vote is 1519 for division
beaten. It was beaten because, we honestly believe, many of the voters were misled. We regret the defeat, and we regret the
and 955 against.
methods that accomplished
instead of the 65 per cent
required by the law. The esti-
be seen, and understood, that
'
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B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
E VENT TODAY HAPPY GIRLSRUN— SISTERS: 5K race from Peterson Ridge Trail System to Three Creeks Brewing; $35, registration required, free for spectators; 7:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Three Creeks Brewing, 721 Desperado Court; www. happygirlsrun.com/sisters or 541-323-0964. HALLOWEEN CYCLOCROSS CRUSADE:Costumed competitors navigate an obstacle-laden bicycle race, with a beer garden, live music and more; free for spectators; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery, 901 SW Simpson Ave., Bend; www. crosscrusade.com. BEND INDOOR SWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: Featuring ceramic demonstrations, potter booths, children's area, raffle
ENDA R California bluegrass band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
MONDAY KNOW EXPLORING:FIRST APPROACHESTOTHE FARWEST: Learn about Spanish, French, Russian and English explorers who preceded Lewis and Clark; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. "REEFERMADNESS, THE MUSICAL":A musical comedy based on the1936 film of the same name that takes a look at kids and drug use; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626.
and more; freeadmission; 10a.m.-
TUESDAY
4 p.m.; Highland Magnet School, 701 NW Newport Ave., Bend; www. clayguildofthecascades.com or 541-388-4589. "REEFER MADNESS, THE MUSICAL":A musical comedy based on the1936 film of the same name that takes a look at kids and drug use; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. DIA DELOS MUERTOS: Discussion of the significance of the holiday followed by a community gathering and potluck, costumes
KNOW EXPLORING:FIRST APPROACHESTOTHE FARWEST: Learn about Spanish, French, Russian and English explorers who preceded Lewis and Clark; free; 4:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; www. deschuteslibrary.org/sunriver/ or 541-312-1080. NORTH AFRICANSOIREE: Featuring presentations on North Africa's history, religion and culture, with food, music and more; free; 4:30 p.m. round-table discussion, 6 p.m. reception; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.
are encouraged; $5suggested
donation; 5:15-10 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www.oldstonechurchbend. com, sacbend©gmail.com or 541-508-1059. CARAVAN OF THIEVES: The Connecti cutgypsyjazzband
performs; $15plusfees in advance, $18 at the door, $10 students; 7-10 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. SINK & SWIM:The Portland folk band performs; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www. btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. SWEETWATER STRINGBAND:The
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvM/.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
cocc.edu.
GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: A screening of the documentary "YERT: Your Environmental Road Trip" about a yearlong adventure in personalizing sustainability; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; www.bendfp.org or 541-815-6504. NITTY GRITTY DIRTBAND:The California Americana-roots band
performs; $55-$66 plusfees; 7p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "RIFFTRAX LIVE: ANACONDA": A showing of the 1997 film with humorouscommentary added; $12.50; 7:30 p.m.;RegalOld
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
The cast of "Reefer Madness: The Musical," a satire of the1936 anti-marijuana propaganda film, rehearses together at 2nd Street Theater. Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 541-312-2901. METHOD MAN ANDREDMAN: The
American hip-hopduoperforms,
from Wisconsin performs; $20 suggested donation, registration sug gested; 6:30 p.m., potluck starts at 5:30 p.m.; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 NW Stannium Drive, Bend; houseconcertsintheglenO
with B-Real, Berner and SmokeDZA; $32.50 plus fees in advance, $35 at the door, $75 for VIP package; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.randompresents.com or 541-408-4329.
541-480-8830. THE OH HELLO'S:The Texan folk-rock duo performs, with The Collection; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend;
bendbroadband.comor
www.mcmenamins.comor
WEDNESDAY KNOW EXPLORING:MOUNT HOOD, EXPLORINGOREGON'S PERILOUS PEAK:Learn about the millions drawn to climb Oregon's tallest mountain every year; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. WATER MANAGEMENT INTHE WEST, PART III:Learn about finding water in the Cadillac Desert with curator Dr. Margaret Lee; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers, registration requested; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: CARMEN":Featuring Bizet's melodrama about an ill-fated gypsy temptress; $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. JOHNSMITH:The folk musician
541-382-5174. THE REQUISITE:The Seattle indie-rock band performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
THURSDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SATURDAYMARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. KNOW EXPLORING:MOUNT HOOD, EXPLORINGOREGON'S PERILOUSPEAK:Learnaboutthe millions drawn to climb it every year; free; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/lapine/ or 541-312-1090. "NATIONALTHEATRELIVE: OF MICEAND MEN": Featuring James Franco, Chris O'Dowd, Leighton Meester and Jim Norton
in the Broadway production of the classic novella; $18; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. AN EVENINGOF EMPOWERMENT: A fundraiser featuring empowering speakers and live music to benefit Kids in the Game; $25, $15 for students age 16 and younger; 7-9:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. eveningofempowerment.com, kenstreater©gmail.com or 541-325-2027. HANZ ARAKI:The Celtic-inspired singer and flute player performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "REEFER MADNESS, THE MUSICAL":A musical comedy based on the1936 film of the same name that takes a look at kids and drug use; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626.
FRIDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music
and more; freeadmission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food indowntown Bend and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. "THESE GROUNDS":Learn about coffee farms and coffee beans' journey to the shop; free; 6-9 p.m.; Backporch Coffee Roasters, 70 SW Century Drive, Suite130, Bend; www.backporchcoffeeroasters. com, backporchcoffeeroasters© gmail.com or 541-323-3224. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: R. Gregory Nokes discusses "Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory," Jane Kirkpatrick discusses "A Light in the Wilderness" and Rick Steber discusses"Red White Black: ATrue Story of Race and Rodeo"; free admission; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Jon
Abernathy will speak about his book"Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon"; 6:30 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.deschuteshistory.org or 541-389-1813. "ATOMB WITH A VIEW": Adark comedic play about a family that inherits a large fortune; $5; 7 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; www.bend.k12. or.us or 541-355-4401. SLEDFILM2014:A screening of snowmobile films, different each night; SOLD OUT; 7 p.m.,doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "REEFERMADNESS, THE MUSICAL":A musical comedy based on the1936 film of the same name that takes a look at kids and drug use; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "THE ROCKET":A screening of the 2013 film about a boy who enters the dangerous Rocket Festival; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351.
SATURDAY BEND INDOOR SWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. MUSEUM EXPLORERS: MIGRATION:Learn about native birds in Central Oregon and where they go for the winter; $3 for members, $5 for non-members, registration requested; 10-11:30 a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. HOEDOWN FOR HUNGER: Performances by local Americana, folk and bluegrass bands, with a chili feed and silent auction; proceeds benefit the center's
Feed theHungry program; $20,
free for children12 and younger; 1-9 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 NEFifth St.; www. bendscommunitycenter.org or 541-312-2069.
Visit Central Oregon's
Soviet council admits
Yesterday
"Mills and Schul proved Ukrainia —former Polish that long distance running can Continued from B1 territory in Soviet Union be glamorous," Wilson added. W e entertain th e w a r m Wilson said he found it hard est appreciation for the loyal The supreme soviet council to find enough words of praise supportand assistance ofour voted today to admit western for the performance of the friends. The splendid vote of Ukrainia, part of former Pol- U.S. athletes and for the way several precincts showed a ish territory occupied by the the Japanese conducted the notable spirit of co-operation. red army, in the soviet union. games. "Things could not have It will be Bend's duty and our The decision followed pleas pleasure to see that full recip- by delegates from western been more perfect from our rocation is made as opportuni- Ukrainia that they be admit- standpoint," said Wilson, who ty offers. ted into the union as part of competed in the 1920 games F or t h o s e
who
vot e d
soviet Ukrainia.
against division we entertain The admission was voted no slightest rancor. The great on motion of Vice Premier Anmajority honestly believed drew Vishinsky, who said: "Never again will Polish they were working for their best interests when they vot- landlords enslave the western ed as they did. The fault lies
Ukrainians."
chiefly with those who manuVishinsky was prominent factured that belief. Ultimate- as the prosecutor in chief at ly a day of reckoning will recent treason trials which accome. companied the soviet "purge"
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Nov. 1, 1939
at Antwerp and has seen each
just rolled in a bank of ruddy clay.
"I don't see how any city
Small buck tags along after
boys
dedicated to promoting the Ki-
" That's the on e I w a n t . ger mustangs and preserving That's the l i t tle claybank," their gene pool both domestisaid Rick Littleton, peering be- cally and in the wild.
tween the rough boards of the Over the past two years corral fence. "There are only news of the herd has been six or seven like her in the spread across the nation and whole herd." demand for the Kiger horses "The herd," in this case, is has grown beyond supply. the Kiger mustang herd, a To handlethe high demand band of 80 to 90 wild horses the BLM d evised a l ottery roaming the Steens Mountain country south of Burns. Blood
Olympics since as a top U.S. tests andbody characteristics official. have led specialists with the ever will surpassthe Tokyo games," Wilson said.
people from across the nation
system.
No one was more surprised than Littleton when his number was the first chosen, but
he wasted no time in selecting agement to believe the horses the claybank mare. Federal Bureau of Land Man-
of the Kiger herd are direct descendants ofthe first hors-
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He named the mare Kiger
Mestena, the female form of es brought to the Americas by the Spanish word "mesteno", Spanish conquistadores near- from which the English word ly five centuries ago. mustang is derived,
This really happened, acnWe want to make her the cording towitnesses. Littleton, of Bend, is t h e of Trotskyite elements. Saturday about 5:30 pm president of the Kiger Meste- show horse for our Kiger Mus"No force in the world can two youngboys were walking no Association, a group of tang Ranch," Littleton said. turn history's wheels back- along Highway 20 near Pilot ward," Vishinsky said. "For- Butte. A small spike buck deer ward c ommunism u nder started to tag along behind Stalin!"
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s• •
•
'
'
•
them.
Allies elated and Nazis The delegates cheered for 10 Theboys attempted to chase angered at Senate action on minutes. the deer away, fearful that he neutrality On Vishinsky's motion it would be hit by a car or spotGermany may
i ntensify was voted to organize elec-
its war preparations in an attempt to strike an immediate knock-out blow at Great Britain before the revised Ameri-
can neutrality can become effective, inspired Nazi sources intimated today.
The senate's passage of the bill was the second blow to the Nazis during the day. The first was the encyclical in which Pope Pius XII spoke strongly against the N azi-communist t yp e o f dictatorship. U nofficially t h e Na z i s made no attempt to hide their displeasure at the prospect
tions i n
ted by some eager hunter. The
w e stern U k r ainia deer wouldn't leave them.
to the supreme soviet and the council adjourned until tomorrow.
50 YEARS AGO
So they went to a nearby house and called police. Police arrived and decided tocatch
the deer, tie him up and take him out of town where they would turn him loose. Trou-
For the week ending Nov. 1, 1964
ble was, the deer wouldn't let
Wilson predich era of distance running
a new Cadillac. He opened the door, whistled, and the young
them tie him up. Just then a fellowpulled up in
Kenneth L. (Tug Wilson), deerbounded into the car. Then president of the U.S. Olympic the Cadillacpulled away. Committee, predicted today "a Police said the driver told good era of distance runners"
them the deer was a pet that
ahead for America as the wandered away. The police result of Uncle Sam's break- didn't get the driver's name. that the United States would through in the longer races in soon be selling to the allies the 1964 Olympics. 25 YEARS AGO arms which, though GermaThe most significant triny could buy also, it could umph for the U.S. was Billy For the week ending not get through the British Mills' victory in the 10.000 me- Nov. 1, 1989 blockade. ters, and Wilson said "add that "This bill may cause us title to the 5000 meters won Owning a piece of the wild to hurry up," said one Nazi by Bob Schul and there is just There was something differclose to the foreign office, in no limit to what it is going to ent about the small gray mare advancing the idea that Hit- do for long distance running trotting with t hree dun-coller might order an immediate back home." ored companions around a ruthless war against Britain, Those victories, Wilson be- cornerofthew ild horsecorral. hoping that by some means lieves, will result in more track She was gray enough, all Germany would win a quick athletes trying for the long dis- right, but her coat was also vlctory. tance races. tinged with orange, as if she'd
P
P
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
ave's I er rea co-oun er or insani oun UI • Dave Dahlwascharged with two counts of third-degreeassault, oneweaponscharge The Associated Press H ILLSBORO —
A n O r - had non-life-threatening inju-
egon judge has decided the c o-founder of
patrol cars. Three deputies
ries. The weapon in the case
D a v e's K i l l - was the SUV.
er Bread is guilty except for insanity on two counts of
The Oregonian reports the charges stemmed from a Nov. 14 confrontation with Washington
Countydeputies.Dave Dahl was accused of leading the deputies on a half-mile chase and ramming two patrol cars. Three deputies had non-life-threatening injuries. The weapon in the case was theSUV.
Washington County Circuit Judge Kirsten Thompson rethird-degree assault and one viewed police reports, psychocount of unlawful use of a logical evaluations and toxiweapon. cology reportsbefore ruling decide whether to send the The Oregonian reports the Friday. 51-year-old Dahl to the state charges stemmed from a Nov. The judgment does not hospital or whether to allow 14, 2013, confrontation with
count as a conviction, but puts
him to remain on conditional
history that includes 15 years
in and out of prison. Prosecutor Chris Quinn said doctors for both the state
Washington County deputies. Dahl in the jurisdiction of the release. Dave Dahl was accused of state Psychiatric Security ReT he face o f t h e M i l leading the deputies on a half- view Board. waukie-based whole grain mile chase and ramming two On Dec. 8, the judge will breadcompany has acriminal
and defense determined Dahl was not mentally sound at
UMATILLA
WASHINGTON
the time of his run-in with
AROUND THE STATE Utility bOard in turmOil —Tenhours of recorded conversations between the general manager of a Eugeneutility and a board member were put on a CD and distributed without either person's knowledge. The conversations between Emerald People's Utility District manager Scott Coe andKatherine Schacht of its board of directors were recorded from January to August. The Eugene Register-Guard reports Coe andSchacht were recorded discussing other board members and strategies Coe might use to get a raise. The EPUDrecords all calls at its headquarters. Coe offered to resign, but the board declined his offer and instead put him on probation for six months. Agency expenses haveoutstripped revenue every year since at least 2010, and EPUDhas had to dip into its cash reserves to make up the difference. Man COnviCted in ShOOting —A jury has convicted a Cave Junction man of assault and firearms charges for shooting a friend after a night of drinking, but acquitted him of attempted murder. The Grants Pass Daily Courier reports 60-year-old gold miner Ronald Fehlhaber was accused in the shooting of 34-year-old Immanuel Day. According to testimony, the two spent the evening of Memorial Day 2013 drinking and playing pool in the bar of the Junction Inn motel in CaveJunction. Surveillance video showed Day jumping up and down, throwing fake punches at Fehlhaber, and throwing him to the ground. Later in the parking lot, Fehlhaber shot Day, who was left paralyzed and using a wheelchair. Fahlhaber's lawyer argued it was self-defense. The jury handed down its verdict Thursday. A sentencing date wasn't set.
deputies.
— From wire reports
A fence and a hot pink sign Jedi lawyerchallengescity's pot ban
put strip club, ci at odds The Associated Press UMATILLA — The own-
er of an Eastern Oregon stripper ba r
i s c r o sswise
with the city government again, this time over a wooden fence he put up to so the
dancers could leave the building without provoking complaints from passersby about what he calls "scantily clad women."
The HunnyBunnz Hideout has been at the center of contention since the summer when it opened as the third stripper business on
the main drag of Umatilla, population 7000. One city board member resigned in protest after saying he had no choice under the law but to vote for a permit.
provided the business can sub-
The Honey Bunnz Hide-
The moratorium on recrereally itself a mural and not
a sign as defined by city codes, Bunn argued, because it doesn't include the
words "gentleman's club" to indicate what sort of business is inside. Since the city has declined
to give him a sign permit while it rewrites that part
of the code, he said, "I have to promote my business in some way, shape or form." The upshot of the objections: Sharp told Bunn he's helping to improve the city The American Civil Liber- ble," commission Chairman by spurring a rewrite of the ties union called the morato- Boyd Sharp said. sign rules, and Bunn said rium a violation of the state B unn said h e w a s t r y - he'd work with city officials constitution. ing to forestall complaints to see whether there's a way H oney B u n n z ow n e r he assumed he would get to make the historical mural Steve Bunn was before the about dancers leaving the visible again. "I'll see what I can do," he Planning Commission this building. week to answer complaints As for the pink sign, it's sard.
Continued from B1 Clyde Penhollow, Carroll's
"It's really more of a homecoming. People are coming up,slapping you on the back, 'I haven't seen you in years!'"
brother, was at the very first
— Clyde Penhollow, Lord's Acre Dayorganizer
Lord's Acre celebration and is reasonably certain he hasn't
ational marijuana sales within the Clarkston city limits will
raised: $4.6million) • Michael Bloomberg: $1.9 million The billionaire former mayor of New York has a history of bucking the major political parties and trying to diminish theirinfluence. • John Arnold: $1.8 million
needed time to get the zoning
ational marijuana in 2012.
Laws, who is representing Clarkston business owners
Kelly and Julie Jackson, said the city and the councilors are beingsued fordamages in "an amount to be proved at trial."
When reached by phone Friday night, Clarkston Mayor Kathleen Warrensaid she had
not seen the lawsuit but the city has received notice of it. "It wasn't unexpected," she
said. "He has talked about suing. I wasn't surprised at it."
The lawsuit also seeks a statement from the court declaring a ban on marijuana sales unconstitutional.
Barnett said the event is
very likely Powell Butte's greatest claim to fame. Campaigning politicians have made it a regular stop for years, he said, including a F. Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline. After the traditional b arbecue lunch, t h e
K en-
nedys bought a quilt at the auction. "You go around the state,
tell people you're from Powell Butte — they don't know Powell Butte from anything," Barnett said. "But they know Lord's Acre." — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin,com
the roadway; several people ran to help him. TheChrysler then Continued from Bt turned north on Huntington Hannu was northbound in a Road, ran a red light and headed full-size pickup on U.S.Highway east onto Burgess Road,state 97 when heallegedly struck police said. Bartleson, who was in the roadIt was passing vehicles at way, the sheriff's office said. The a high rate of speedandwent out of control as it turned north incident shortly before 9 p.m. onto Skidgel Road.Thecar went occurred in front of the LaPine into a ditch, through a couple of Inn Restaurant near William fences and hit a tree, according Foss Road. to state police. Bateswas taken The investigation is continuinto custody. ing, the sheriff's office said. The trooper found the driver's 11-year-old sister holding a dog La Pine manaccused about 25 feet awayfrom the of fleeing crash vehicle, where shesaid shehad A La Pine manwas arrested run to get awayfrom her brother. Friday night after he allegedly Bates had allegedly punchedher fled a traffic crash in his car with in the face before the hit-and-run three of his younger siblings in- crash, state police said. side, according to OregonState The boy who hadearlier run Police. across the roadwas Bates' A trooper wasassisting pe14-year-old brother who had destrians at U.S. Highway 97at jumped out of the moving vehiFirst Street shortly before 7 p.m. cle. And another brother, 9, was when an SUV that was stopped also found uninjured. He,too, was struck from the rear by a had gotten out of the moving car 1998 Chrysler Sebring going when the driver fled the rear-end about 25 mph. crash. A girl inside the Chrysler Bates was lodged in the yelled through anopenwindow Deschutes County jail on that she wanted out, the trooper suspicion of DUII, reckless said. But the car's driver, Tylor driving, felony hit and run, Brenton Bates, 22 of LaPine, felony attempt to elude in a veput the car in reverse anddrove hicle, five counts of recklessly off at a high rate of speed, state endangering another person, police said. fourth-degree assault and secThe trooper pursued the ond-degree criminal mischief, Chrysler west on First, where state police said. a boy was seenrunning across — Bulletin staff reports
LOCAL BRIEFING
ricultural business, based in
er. He retired in his late 30s to
Johnston, Iowa.
Both the state and f ederal
laws around the country.
pose Measure 90. Unions have 91also contributed directly to the NO ON MEASURE campaign opposing Measure LEGALIZEMARIJUANAPotal 90.
YES ONMEASURE91LEGALIZEMARINANA(Total raised: $3.6 million) • New Approach: $2 million Two political action committees — one registered with
raised:$179,000)
• Oregon State Sheriffs Association: $145,000
Oregon's elected sheriffs are being badly outspent by proponents of legalizing marijuana.
YES ONMEASURE92(Total raised: made his fortune as a natural federal government — have GMO LABELS Arnold, who lives in Texas,
the state, the other with the
gas trader, first at Enron and
providedmuch of the money
$7.5 million)
Clarkston," he said. "So they're imposing their personal agenda on the will of the people,
regulations in place," Laws and that's not what they were said. "Well, the zoning regula- elected in office to do."
then as a hedge fund manag- for the legalization initiative.
lion's share of the money to op-
ers asked for, even the voters in
The Lewiston Tribune reports. Washington legali zed recre-
• Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps: $1.7 million Continued from B1 focus on charitable giving and PACs are heavily supported A California-based producA big chunk of their mon- political causes. by the family of Peter Lewis, er of natural hygiene products, ey paid formassive, crypthe Progressive Insurance ex- Dr. Bronner's has been a big 90tic billboards in downtown NO ON MEASURE ecutive who died last year. contributor to failed food laTOP-TWOPRIMARYPotal Portland. • Drug Policy Action $1.5 beling initiatives elsewhere. • Freres Lumber Co., and raised: $1.4million) million • Center for Food Safety AcRob Freres: $205,000 • De fend Oregon PAC, The New York-based group tion Fund: $1.2 million Rob Freres and his Ly- $950,000 is backed by liberal billionaire The nonprofit organization ons-based timber company Backed almost entirely by George Soros and has been advocates organic foods and provided Richardson another public-employee unions, De- instrumental in pushing for sustainable agriculture boost. fend Oregon has provided the more permissive marijuana
YES ONMEASURE90TOP-TWOPRIMARY(Total
SBld.
expire at the end of this month,
1959 visit by then-Sen. John
with coffee and a doughnut coming," he said. "People are father, Penny Penhollow, who were sold for50 cents,and the coming up, slapping you on started the event as a way to church raised nearly $6,000 the back, 'I haven't seen you raise money to build a new to start work on a new brick in years! '" church. chapel. Bob Barnett, financial offiThe elder Penhollow, pasClyde Penhollow said while cer for the church, said plantor of the congregation, asked Lord's Acre still supports the ning for Lord's Acre Day is a individual farmers and ranch- church — these days, funds go year-round affair. Between ers in the area to contribute toward missionary work and meat runners, servers, the the harvest from an acre of scholarships for seminary stu- auction and t h e i n evitable their land. Donated potatoes, dents — its become a commu- cleanup, he said it takes close grainand livestock were auc- nitywide reunion of sorts. to 200 volunteers to make ev"It's really more of a home- erything happen. tioned, barbecue sandwiches missed one since. It was their
Donors
Similar local efforts to ban tions came back from the planretail marijuana shops have ning commission months ago. been launched in Colorado and The zoning regulations were torney sued the city and four Oregon. adopted by the council weeks city councilors who voted to Laws said his clients have ago, at which time they admitprohibit retail marijuana sales "been injuredbythe loss of rev- ted it's happening." within city limits. And he did it enue for the last four months Laws said he had a number in a Jedi costume. during this moratorium when of reasons for seeking a lawRick Laws says the city's ban they could have been open, suit against the city, including is unconstitutional. He filed the and also for the time going Clarkston's vote in favor of lemotion on Halloween on be- forward." galizing marijuana by a vote of half of Canna41ife LLC, which The m oratorium's i n itial 1,373 to 1,137. "It's contrary to what the votis scheduled to open Nov. 25, purpose has run its course, he CLARKSTON, Wash. — A Clarkston, Washington, a t-
"The moratorium was put mit a retail marijuana license to the state of Washington. out there withthe idea that they
out has been at the center of about the fence, where the contention since the summer name of the bar has been when it opened as the third painted in hot pink, the East stripper business on the Oregonian reported. main drag of Umatilla, popM embers of t h e b o a r d ulation 7,000. said the fence obscures one One city board member of the historical murals on resigned i n p r o test a f t er the building walls, and Bunn saying he had no choice un- had promised to maintain der the law but to vote for a them when he opened the permit. club. "When we agreed the I n September th e C i t y Council imposed a 120-day murals on both sides of the moratorium on n e w a d ult building would be mainbusinesses while it tries to tained, I a s sumed t hat sort out its rules on them. meant they would be visi-
Lord's Acre
The Associated Press
•A number offood companies, including PepsiCo, Coca-Cola, Kraft Foods, Land
O'Lakes, General Mills and Kellogg Company have written large checks to help the
Measure 92 opponents become the best-funded ballot
measure campaign Oregon has seen.
NO ON MEASURE 92GMO LABELS Potal raised:
$19 million) • Monsanto Company: $4.6 million
The St. Louis-based biotechnology giant has aggressively fought campaigns to require labels for genetically engineered foods, and it's not
shrinking from the fight in Oregon. • Du P ont P i o neer: $ 4.5 million
DuPont is another large ag-
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B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
BITUARIES Ivan Francis Jensen
DEATH 1VOTICES Carl Lewis Patten, of Bend
Jean Black Crutchley, of Redmond
Patrick R. O'Keefe, of Bend
Sept. 16, 1948-Sept. 18, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: For more information about the service please call Justine 541-410-4444
Jan. 27, 1924 - Oct. 28, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: There will be a celebration of her life next summer in Sunriver, Oregon, when all of her family will be together.
April 27, 1962 - Oct. 20, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592
Harry Marton Norris, of Bend Jan. 5, 1916 - Oct. 27, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: A private service will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend 97701.
Clifford Darrell Nelson, of Bend, OR
(Recently from Fairbanks, Alaska) Feb. 17, 1935- Oct. 26, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private service will be held in Alaska at a later date.
Brett Jerrod Morrow, of Bend
Garry Wayne
Nov. 19, 1983 - Oct. 23, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private family services were held.
June 24, 1933 - Oct. 29, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.
Alvis Joe Carder,of Redmond Aug. 28, 1932 - Oct. 20, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: An Urn Committal Service will take place Friday, November 7, 2014 at 2:00 PM at Terrebonne Pioneer Cemetery in Terrebonne, OR.
Adele Irene Teater, of Powell Butte Jan. 18, 1925 - Oct. 25, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service will take place Saturday, November 22, 2014 at 2:00 PM at Powell Butte Christian Church, located at 13720 Hwy 126, Powell Butte, OR 97753.
Samuel P. Dockrey,of Redmond May 31, 1920 - Oct. 23, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family please sign our guest registry
book
www.redmondmemoriai.com 541-548-3219
Services: No service will be held at this time. Contributionsmay be made to:
Bright Side Animal Center, 1355 NE Hemlock Ave., Redmond, OR 97756, 541-923-0882 or a Humane Society of ones choice.
Sally Jeanine Crandall, of Madras Mar. 26, 1938 - Oct. 27, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deechuteamemorialchapel.com
Services: A celebration of Sally's life will be held at 3:00 PM on Sunday, November 2, 2014 at Metolius Friends Community Church in Metolius, Oregon. Contributionsmay be made to:
The Susan G. Komen Foundation, P. O. Box 650309, Dallas, TX 75265-0309 or to the National Breast Cancer Foundation, Inc., 2600 Network Blvd., Suite 300, Frisco, Texas 75034.
Albert "Red" Stanley
Nance, of Redmond Aug. 25, 1922 - Oct. 24, 2014
Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service will take place Saturday, November 8, 2014 at 11:00 AM at Highland Baptist Church, located at 3100 SW Highland Avenue in Redmond, OR. A luncheon will follow. Contributions may bemade to:
Oregon High School Rodeo Association, PO BOX 607, Terrebonne, OR 97760, 541-546-7007.
McKinney, of Bend
www.deachuteamemorialchapetcom
Services: No services are planned. Contributions may bemade to:
Patrick O'Keefe Memorial Fund, First and Farmer's Bank, 124 Center Ave. S., Mayville, ND 58257, to support Patrick's daughters' educations.
Jean MacCrae Black Crutchley Jan. 27, 1924- Oct. 28, 2014 Jean Black C r utchley of Redmond, Oregon, passed away on October 28, 2014. She was 90. There will b e a c e l ebration of her l ife n e x t summer in Sunriver, Or '
e~
egon,
w hen a l l of her family will be together. Jean Crutchley Jean was born J anuary 27 , 1 924, i n O r a nge, N e w Je r s ey , t h e d aughter of M a l c olm a n d Oec. 13, 1928- Oct. 23, 2014 Ruth (Atwood) Black. J ean leaves behind h e r Ida Lorraine Popish was husband of 68 y ears, Bud born to Shelburn Dale and her d a u ghters, Alice (Blanchard) Ayres on Crutchley; December 13 , 1 928, n e ar M arcia ( h u sband, S c o tt ) Prineville, O r egon . Sh e Hudson, Susan ( husband, S tew) E v es, A n n e ( h u s passed away on band, Ron) Levy and Sandra ( husband, K e r r y ) October 23, 2 0 1 4, K emp; and a s o n , B r y a n at the age Crutchley. Other survivors include 15 g r a ndchildren, of 85. 21 gr ea t - g r andchildren Her childand on e gr eat - g r eath ood w a s lived in grandchild. S he w a s pr e c eded i n Powell death by her p a rents; her Butte, Ors ister, Betty C o oper; a n d Lorraine Popishegon ' where her p a rents owned two sons, G ar y M a l c o lm an d M ar c the Powell Butte Store. She Crutchley w ent t o g r a d e s c hool i n Edward Crutchley. She was loved and cherP owell B utte, an d g r a d ui shed by al l w h o m e t h e r ated from Redmond Union and will be greatly missed High School in 1946. It was t here sh e m e t h e r hi g h by her family and friends. A utumn Fun e r a l s of school sweetheart, C h uck P opish. T h e y w e r e m a r - R edmond h a s b e e n e n ried on June 28, 1949. She trusted wit h t h e a r r a ngements, (541) 5 04-94g85. was a l i f elong resident of C entral Oregon, l i v in g i n www.autumnfunerals.net. Redmond all of her adult life. S he wa s a me m b e r o f P owell But t e Ch ri s t i an Church, and as a teenager Jan. 5, 1931 - Oct. 21, 2014 w as b aptized t h e re. H e r L yle A r t hu r R o r i c k o f mother was a charter memPowell Butte, Oregon, went ber of that church. t o be w i t h h i s L o r d a n d Lorraine was a dedicated Savior Jesus Christ on Ocand loving wife and mother. tober Zl, 2014. He was 83. H er fullest joy w a s w h e n A Celebration of Life will h er f a m il y c o u l d b e t o - b e held o n N o v e mber 7 , gether. S h e w a s s elfless 2014 at and always put others be1 1:00 a m f ore herself. She had a at the quiet and gentle spirit. H er Powell children couldn't have had Butte a better m o ther...she was Christian "Mom". Church, The joys of her l ife were located at simple ones...a maple b ar 13720 and cup of coffee,a drive H wy 1 2 6 through the countryside, a in P o w ell l.yle Rorick puppy, a bird eating in one Butte, OR. of her bi rd f ee d ers, a Lyle was born January 5, strawberry sundae, baking 1931 in Coloma, Michigan, one of her f a bulous apple to Will and Rachel (W1iite) ies...but most of all a visit Rorick. He graduated from r om f a m i ly . Sh e and C oloma H i g h S c h oo l i n C huck m ad e m an y s h o r t 1 949 and j o ined th e U . S . road trips around the state Army, servrng in Japan as a and especially loved going demolition expert. In 1956, to the Oregon Coast. he married Dori Ann DockS he is survived b y c h i l - ter in Watervliet, Michigan. dren, Sue (Clyde) Williams, Lyle and Dori owned and J ulie (Bob) W i l l iams, L ou operated Rimrock Sporting (Deena) Popish, Mary Lee G oods i n Pr i n e v ill e f o r (John) Hargis and Chuck t hirty y e a r s . L y l e al s o ( Kathy) P o p ish; s e v en served as the President of g randchildren; a n d e i g h t t he K iw a n i s Cl ub of eat-grandchildren. Sh e Prineville and served as a as one surviving brother, board member of the comRobert A y r es ; 3 si s t e rs- munity church. in-law; an d m a n y n i e c es Lyle ha d a mar v e l ous and n e p hews. S h e w as sense of h u m or . C h i l dren loved by many and will be w ere drawn t o hi m l i k e a greatly missed. magnet and he loved them She was preceded in death so much. by her husband of 62 years, L yle i s s u r vived b y h i s Charles N i c holas P o pish; wife of 59 years, Dorr Rorher parents; four brothers; ick of P owell B utte; sons, and two sisters. T im (Bonnye) Rorick o f In lieu of fl owers, memo- A tlanta, GA , T o m ( A m y ) rial gifts sent to Partners in Rorick of Spring, TX; and a C are, 2075 NE W y at t C t . daughter, Juli (Jay) LaFonB end, OR 9 7 701, o r T h e t aine o f V a n couver, W A . Alzheimer's A sso c i ation O ther s u r v i v or s in c l u d e N ational O ff i ce , 2 2 5 N . seven grandchildren. Michigan Ave, Flr. 17 ChiHe is preceded in death by c ago, IL 6 0 601 w o uld b e his parents and a grandson, appreciated. C had Austin W h i te , w h o A Celebration of Life will w elcomed Gr a m p a i n b e held a t P o w el l B u t t e heaven. Christian C h u rch H i s t oriB urial in th e f a mily p l ot cal Chapel, 11:00 a.m. No- will take place at C oloma v ember 8, 2014. A l u n c h C emetery in Col oma , w ill be p r ovided after t h e Michigan. service. A rrangements ar e b e i n g h andled by R edmond M eFood, Home 5 Garden morial Chapel, Redmond, In AT HOME O regon. P lease s ig n o u r guest book at • I Th e Bulletin www.redmondmemorial.com
Ida Lorraine
(Ayres) Popish
Lyle A. Rorick
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
Aug. 17, 1918 - Oct. 27, 2014
1000's Of Ads Every Day
Ivan F . J e n se n p a s sed away at St. Charles Hospital at the age of 96 with his family at his side. Ivan was born in Pegram, I daho o n August 17, 1 918. H i s parents were J ames P .
!
j~
BSSl It
Mark Wayne Solorz no Sr. r
Sept. 10, 1960 — Sept. 27, 1
Mark was 54, when he passed away in Salem, OR, after a two year battle with cancer.Mark was blessed to have his children by his side. A chef by trade he was never happier than when he was cooking a meal for his large family. Mark was a brother, uncle and friend to many, but hewas most proud of being a father to Mark Jr. (Ashley), Trisha (Jeff), Angels (Brian) and Andrew. He also took great pride in his seven beautiful granddaughters Isabella, Genesis, Payton, Kali, Mia, Ariana and little Abigail. Mark was born fifth out of seven children. He leaves behind sisters Juanita and Mary; and brothers, Armando, Mike and Matt.He was preceded indeath by his parents,Glenda CrossDvorak and Armando Solorzano Sr.; and his sister, Elizabeth. Mark was born in Long Beach, California, but went on to live all over the west including California, Nevada, Washington, O regon and Utah. The last months of his life were spent in Oregon Ducks country, his true home. Mark loved to bowl, golfand was a big fan ofthe LA Dodgers, St.Louis Rams, Portland Trailblazers and the Oregon Ducks. He couldrecite sports statsw ith the bestofthem and would watch any sports on TV. Mark loved music, movies, and books. Mark had a quick, witty sense of humor and was king of the one liner. Mark will be forever missed by his large family who pray he isat peace and enjoying the company ofhisMom, Dad and sister Bethie.
and An n a
Christine Jensen. T he f a m ily m o ved Ivan Jensen to Bend in 1923. He attended Reid and Central schools, graduated from Bend High School in 1936 and began working for a local sign company. Following Pearl Harbor he e nlisted in t h e N a v y a n d served aboard PT boats in the Mediterranean (PT 213) and South Pacific (PT 482). After the war, he returned to Bend where he married Patricia Moffitt on Nov. 18, 1947. He worked for Carlson Sign Company for a total of 45 years before retiring in 1983. H e was a member of th e Deschutes Pioneers A ssoc iation, V eterans o f F o r eign Wars, and PT B o ats, I nc. He e n j oyed t h e o u t doors, fishing and hunting, and having coffee with the gang at Fred Meyer. He is survived by his wife, P at; tw o s o n s a n d t h e i r wives, Bob and Carol and Mick and Peggy; two grandchildren, Angela Green and J amie; two n i eces, Ma r y Rudarmel and Marilyn Constable; and t w o n e p hews, Ron and Roy Moffitt. He was preceded in death by two brothers, Walter and Clarence; a sister, Lauretta; and a great-granddaughter, Mahayla. A s m al l f a m i l y s e r v i ce was held. Memorial contributions can be made in his memory t o t h e o r g a nization of one's choice. 1
VI I S 1940 — 2,014 David L. Swan, 74, died October 24, 2014 in Mansfield, Texas. A longtime resident of Bend, Swan died suddenly of a pulmonary embolism
Born in Helena, Montana to Cecil and Doroth)t (Woods) Swan, Dave attended high school irr~~ pokane, Washington and was an alumnus of Brooks Institut, f Photography in Santa Barbara, California. .Arriving in Bend in 1964, Dave was photo editor of the Bend . Bulletin for 17 years. In 1975, he accompanied Bulletin pubiishe .RObert W. Chandler on a historic trip to the People's Republib,'rr mf China, with representatives of the American Assn. of News„, ~gdritors. Swan's photos illustrated the stories filed from editors iQf the nation's top newspapers. Among his many awards, Swag gas shortiisted for a Pulitzer Prize for his photo of migrari " orkers in Madras, Oregon.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around
'ave and his wife, Susan (Sam) owned and operated Q Photo, St, ertustom photo lab in Bend from 1991 to 2004. When they retired, ' they bought a motor home and traveled the country for eighI,, .years. They wofked for Southeast Publications, making maps fo «~RV parks. They settled in Arlington, Texas in 2012.
the world:
lan Fraser, 81: Emmy-winning music conductor, arranger and composer who worked e xtensively wit h
S
J u li e A n -
drews and oversaw a famed Bing Crosby/David Bowie hol-
Dave waspreceded indeath by hisparents,and a granddaughte, "Olivia Ann Swan. In addition to his wife of 36 years, Sam, Dave is survived by his sons, Kevin Muiiin, and wife, Shelly o Tacoma, WA; and Jason Swan, and wife, Jamie of Mansfield, TX;. 'grandchildren, Morgan Muiiin, Susie, Becca, Katie and Xander Swan; a sister, Caroie Swan, and three nephews and a niece.~' He is also survived by his first wife, and goodfriend, Linda Merker, of Bend, OR.
iday duet. Died at home in Los
Angeles on Friday. David Abshire, 88:A leader among Washington decision-makers who h elped found one of the capital's
.ave was cremated, per his wishes. &'web memorial is established at swansonthego.com. Friends are ncouraged to visit the website ' and contribute memories they Ji,have of Dave. The memorial will be made into a book for the grandchildren.
most influential think tanks,
served as U.S. ambassador to NATO and was tapped to lead the Reagan administration's
response to the Iran-Contra controversy. Died Oct. 31 at a
nursing home in Alexandria, Virginia. — From wire reports
r
' Revere ndQosephNicholasReiaig Ma)(20,1 932-OC tOber 24,2014 Reverend Joseph Nicholas Reinig, retired pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, passed away onOctober 24, 2014, comforted by the Rites of the Catholic Church, at SI. Charles Medical Center, in Bend, Oregon. Fr. Joe was born on May 20, 1932, in Berkshire Heights, PA, to Hubert and Barbara Reinig. Joe had a brother, Paul Reinig, and a sister, Martha Ritner, who preceded him in death. He grew up in Reading, PA.andwent to Central Catholic High School. He married Helen B. Macey in 1953, and they'had nine children, in exactly twelve years. Joe worked at Martin Marietta in the space program a's an engineer, and was employed by Mobility Systems. For a time he owned the The Burger Pit in Dublin, CA, eventually selling il and going back into engineering. During the recession in the eighties, he volunteered his time as a construction manager for St. Elizabeth's Church. He and Helen joined Cindy and Mark's family, in moving Io Bend in 1989, where he becameowner of Mugsy's Cafe. Mark Reinig and his family joined them later. Helen passed away on July 18, 1993. Following her passing he entered the Seminary Io study for the priesthood. He was ordained for the Diocese of Baker in 1998. He served in Hermiston and Bend, Oregon, and was responsible for spearheading the building of the new St. Francis Catholic Church. Fr. Joe then became theVicar General of the Baker Diocese, retiring in 2013. Fr. Joe was a Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus. Before hewasordained he was a Past Grand Knight. He had also served as Oregon State Chaplain. He is survived by children, Robert (Joy) Reinig, CA, Michael Reinig, CA, Mark
(Sharon) Reinig, OR, Lawrence (Cheryl) Reinig, WA, Cindy (Mark) Kuykendall, OR, Adrienne Reinig, OR, Denise (Tom) Wong, CA, Teri Reinig and Michelle, CA, Kathy (John) DiGirolamo, of CO.'Fr. Joe also had 22 grandchildren and many great grandchildren. Recitation of the Holy Rosary will be Wednesday, November 5, 2014, at 7:00 P.M. at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, 2450 NE27th SI., Bend, OR.Mass of Christian Burial is Thursday, November 6, 2014 at11:00A.M. at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church. In lieu of f lowers, contributions may be made to the Diocesan Health and Ret irement Fund:Diocese ofBaker,P.O.Box 5999,Bend,OR 97708.
1
Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored Io serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family www.niswonger-reynolds.com
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
WEST NEWS
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
Counsel to PresidentFord and chairman ofthe SEC
Oil irmsspen heavilyto e eat propose Cai ornia rac in ans By David R. Baker
But come 'Ibesday, voters there will decide whether to
ban fracking, acidizing and other "high-intensity" forms of
in Santa Barbara County's Santa Ynez Valley
With a population of just 55,000 scatt ered among its hills, Sa n
B e nito C o unty
seems an unlikely threat to California's oil industry.
NewYork Times file photo
Roderick Hills, who was counsel to President Gerald Ford, at his home, in an Oct. 1, 1975, file photo. Hills, later appointed chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, died Oct. 29, in Baltimore. He was 83.
By Douglas Martin New York Times News Service
Roderick Hills, who mar-
called the president saying: "Rod's trading three lawyers and two automatic typewriters.
shaled political acumen and That's not so bad, is it'? At least legal agility to become an in- we get rid of the lawyers." fluential counsel to President
As SEC chairman, Hills and
Gerald Ford and was later his fellow commissioners votappointed chairman of the Se- ed to allow limited trading of curities and Exchange Com-
certain types of stock options.
mission, died Wednesday in
They also started using computers to track market fluc-
Baltimore. He was 83 and lived
in Washington. tuations and modernized reThe cause was heart failure, cord-keeping. As a former exhis son, Roderick M. Hills Jr., ecutive, he had a reputation for sald. being sympathetic to businessHills was half of one of es' complaints — prompting America's most visible political The Times to report that some power couples in the 1970s. His
considered him "a toothless ti-
better-known wife, Carla Hills, ger" — but he fully backed the was secretary of housing and efforts of the notoriously tough urban development at the same
SEC enforcement chief he in-
time he headed the SEC. At a
herited, Stanley Sporkin.
Senate hearing in 1975, Hills volunteered to hitch rides in his
"From the very start, other than some minor points of
wife's government limousine to methodology, he's been tresave federal money. mendously supportive," Spor-
ty's borders. And the industry isn't taking the challenge lightly. The rain we've had has been San Benito is one of three absorbed by the ground. The C alifornia c o u nties w i t h creeks don't run." fracking bans on this week's Oil companies consider ballot. And together, oil com- fracking safe, saying they've panies induding Chevron used it in California for deCorp. and Occidental Petro- cades without a single doculeum have spent $7.7 million to mented caseof groundwater defeat them. That's more mon- contamination. They consider ey than California's Republi- the proposed bans little more can gubernatorial candidate,
kin told The Times in 1975. Roderick Maltman Hills was
California, where he played post. gt quoted the secretary of high school football under the
Drivers
a Wall Street executive as calling him, "Mr. Whatchemacallit.") But the truth was that Hills
same coach as former President Richard Nixon. A janitor's
Continued from B1 Getting kids to and from school is the No. I prior-
1931, and grew up in Whittier,
As a W h it e H ouse aide, to help start the firm of MungHills worked with the SEC to er, Tolles, Hills 8 Rickershausdo away with fixed brokerage er in 1962. Carla Hills, a Yale-
In an interview for the Ger-
trained lawyer whom Hills had married in 1958, joined the Los Angeles firm shortly after its founding. In addition to his son, Hills
is survived by his wife, the former Carla Helen Anderson;
his daughters Laura, Megan and Allison, all of whom have
ity for the t r ansportation
in San Benito have raised
by the same San Francisco
$120,000. law firm, don't just target The ballot fight comes as oil fracking. They would also companies try to develop the block acidizing, which uses Monterey Shale, a vast oil-lad- acid to create tiny channels en rock formation beneath the
in subterranean rocks. And they would prohibit "steam
southern San Joaquin Valley. Although the federal government this year slashed its estimate of the amount of oil
flooding," in which steam is pumped underground to heat thick, heavy oil and make it
flow more easily.
thatcan be squeezed from the
wife, Sen. William Proxmire
of Wisconsin asked Hills if he
Council of Economic Advisers, required a limousine, mentionsupporting him, Hills offered ing in passing that he himself to lay off a lawyer or two in or- jogged to work. "I shall not, nor shall I jog," der to hire an economist. In his oral history, Hills re- Hills replied.
Obituary policy Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708
with other Central Oregon
districts and pooling resources might work, he said, but things such as varying school calendars and employee bargaining agree-
•
n D C)
C9
i FREE!
is complicated by dealing
trict, said his district is experiencing a similar shortage
B IN A F IEN> an youb ta r t,for 9
with the schedules of other
schools. Field trips and o ther
of drivers but so far it has
school activities come last,
buses.
not resorted to hiring private
"There's always that poand although nothing has had to be canceled because tential, however, and we're of the driver shortage, as concerned about this spring far as he knows, the extra because it gets very busy costs are expected to add with activities," he said. Up.
"Redmond is like every
"I lost 56 pounds!" Mebbole Reseaxh Center Clent
The district is nearly 10 drivers short, he said, and is
Jumpstart Your New Year's Resolution!
o ther district i n f i n d i ng using its staffers with comdrivers," M c I ntosh s a i d. mercial licenses to help fill
This year seems particularly difficult, however, and he suspects the recovering economy might be siphoning off job seekers who now have more options. "We also think some of it is our pay rate, which was
the gap. "Every year is a challenge,
fourth out of six districts," McIntosh said. "Our more recent experience is that we train new drivers, then
— Reporter: 541-548-2186, lpugmire@bendbulletin.com
Start NOW and LOSE before the holidays! ("with program purchese. Products not included. One ofhr perperson)
but this has been particu-
larly so," he said. Hearing about Redmond's hiring bonus, he added, "Gosh, I hope
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8
RESEARCH CENTER
wfIGHTLossspsclAasT$ 'OnMehMc More', moal Chentacen expedlo kae1-2 lle. per week. Resulh vay pemonlo psnen.
they leave for a more lucra-
now earn $14.61 after training and a probationary period of 90 days. In addition, drivers working at least 18 hours a week receive benefits, including health insurance with premiums largely paid by the district, depending on the plan chosen by the employee. "Drivers typically work
Fax: 541-322-7254
than an attempt to strangle oil
dent of Jefferson School Dis-
economist. With Alan Greens pan, then chairman of t h e
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com
In San Benito County, a company called Citadel Exploration has been probing for oil on a 688-acre site that the company says holds enormous promise. Developing the the state's oil industry. No one field, near Pinnacles Nationexpects a ban there anytime al Park, would likely require soon. But other counties may "several hundred wells," Citafollow if San Benito, Santa del announced in August. Barbara and Mendocino votGiven the scale of Califorers block fracking. That, ban nia's oil industry, San Benito supporters say, explains the residents pushing for a ban industry's heavy spending. doubt the ability of state reg"They might think that, as ulators to protect them. The goes Santa Barbara Coun- state government doesn't have ty, so goes the state," said the resources to make sure Rebecca Claassen, a chiro- every well is correctly depractor and c o-founder of signed and drilled, said Andy Santa Barbara County Water Hsia-Coron,a retired teacher Guardians. who helped launch the ban Chevron, based in San Ra- proposal. "I don't think they're up for mon, has donated $2.6 million to defeat the ballot measures, policing this process across according to state records. the state," he said. "From earAera Energy has given $2.1 ly on, I thought it was going million; Occidental Petroleum, to require counties to defend $2 million. themselves." Backers of the Santa BarThe proposed bans in bara ban r eport r aising San Benito and Santa Bar$400,000. Their counterparts bara counties, both written February. The vast majority of fracking reported in California to date has taken place in one county — Kern, the heart of
McIntosh said. The latter
tive position."
Phone: 541-617-7825
residents. Fracking for oil and naturalgas has transformed
department, followed by ments w o ul d c o m p licate busing s t u dent-athletesmatters. to s p o rt s c o m p etitions, Rick Molitor, superinten-
ald R. Ford Oral History Proj- the last name Hills; and five ect in 2009, Hills told how he grandchildren. had pressed tohire the comAt the hearing in which he mission's first p rofessional volunteered to carpool with his
Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
The idea of an oil boom, however, troubles many rural
born in Seattle on March 9,
son, he was the first in his famhad already been playing an ily to go to college. important behind-the-scenes His family said he liked role in the White House as dep- to tell the story that when he uty counsel to the president. boarded the train in Los AnHe was the administration's geles to go to Stanford in Palo point man in the day-to-day Alto, California, he did n ot negotiations with two congres- know whether he was going sional committees that were north or south. (He had gotinvestigating abuses by the ten on the correct northbound Central Intelligence Agency. train.) He advised the president on As a history major at Stanthe energy crisis stemming ford, he financed his education from the Arab oil embargo of by working as a construction 1973 and on regulatory affairs, laborer, bartender,steelworker particularly the deregulation and teamster. He stayed on at of trucking and airline prices, Stanfordto earn a law degree, both of whichwere accom- then clerked for Justice Stanley plished in the succeeding ad- Forman Reed of the U.S. Suministration of President Jim- preme Court. He worked for a my Carter. private law firm before leaving
commission rates, another example of what he derided as "price fixing" by the federal government. As SEC chairman, he successfully pushed for sharper economic analysis in monitoring financial markets.
nanza for the state.
traffic and air pollution.
Neel Kashkari, has raised production in the state. "No one, to m y k n o w lduring his entire campaign. Only one of the counties, edge, has fracked a well in Santa Barbara, is a major oil San Benito County, and to producer. San Benito has just my knowledge, no one is pro26 wells, and none has been posing to do that," said Steve fracked. The t h ird c ounty, Coombs, whose small oil comMendocino, has no active pany, Patriot Resources, has a oil wells, according to state dozen wells in the county. "So records. why are we having an initiaBut ban proponents con- tive about banning fracking? sider hydraulic fracturingAt the end of the day, it's anwhich uses pressurized water, ti-fossil fuels." sand and chemicals to crack Fracking opponents have open oil-bearing rocks — a pushed repeatedly for a statedanger to California's ground wide ban or moratorium, only water supplies, particularly to see the idea die in Sacraat a time when three years of m ento. Last year,Gov.Jerry historic drought have drained Brown threw his weight beaquifers. Better to stop it now, hind legislation that let fracktheysay. ing continue while creating "To me, the water is the new regulations for the pracstory," said Tom Shepherd, tice and launching a study of an organic farmer in Santa its potential dangers. Barbara County's Santa Ynez Frustrated, e n v i ronmenValley. "Here we are, in the talists shifted their focus to midst of a drought, and you're local politics. Santa Cruz not concerned about your wa- County adopted a moratoriter and fracking? The aqui- um last year. The Los Angeles fers have been drawn down. City Council followed suit in
When Ford appointed him to the SEC, The New York Times suggested that he was best known as the husband of the third woman to hold a Cabinet
gy, drillers continue probing the formation, saying it could one dayyield an economic bo-
— Tom Shepherd, an organic farmer swaths of N o r t h D a k ota, Pennsylvania and Texas, filling them with drill rigs, truck
oil extraction within the coun-
'4
shale using current technolo-
"To me, the water is the story. Here we are, in the midst of a drought, and you're not concerned about your water and fracking? The aquifers have been drawn down. The rain we've had has been absorbed by the ground. The creeks don't run."
San Francisco Chronicle
To forestall that problem, the district has raised pay for new drivers, who can
Toppriorities for asecondterm: The Urban Growth Boundary CompletetheUGBexpansion remandwithin the timelinesetbyCity Council to ensureBendprovides alforrfability il opportunity forallits'citizens.
split shifts, which is not the
LlvlngWagejobs
most attractive for some people," McIntosh said.
Continueandexpandourefforts to attract and support companiesin ourcommunity thatplovide living-wagejobs. Anenvironmentandculture where businesscanthrive andgrowis essential to the sustainability of ourcity andregion.
Three times over the past
20 years the district has looked at the idea of contracting out student trans-
portation instead of pro-
J
viding the service itself, but
the concept never passed muster with task forces formed to vet the idea.
"We've done a lot of research on that and found
www.scottramsay.com
that, while contracts for private transportation ser-
vice work well in places like the Valley with larger populations, it w o uldn't work well here for a single district," McIntosh said.
Forming a consortium
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ASoundLongRange Plan Maintainandexecute amanageable plan for growth Ind llvablllty, includinginfrastructure upgrades& improvements,Nlfordable houslng needs,public safety, transportation, and the challengesresulting from theaddition of a4-year unlversltyin our city limits. • 'I
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B6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
'
d
d
TODAY
I
TONIGHT i
HIGH 99o I f '
Intervals of cloudsand sunshine
I
ALMANAC
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WED NESDAY
"'"
LOW
54'
54'
33o
39o
39o
Mainly cloudy with spotty showers late
Cloudy with spotty showers
of showers
TRAVEL WEATHER d
Yesterday
•
New
First
l i~. Q Nov 6 Nov 14
N ov 22 N ov 29
THE PLANETS T he Planets Ris e Mercury 5:03 a.m. Venus 6:54 a.m. Mars 11:24 a.m. Jupiter 11:46 p.m. Saturn
Set 4: 1 9 p.m. 5 : 0 2 p.m. 7 : 5 9 p.m. 1 : 5 5 p.m. 5: 4 1 p.m. 4: 3 2 a.m.
7:52 a.m. 3:49 p.m.
Uranus
1 N(~ 2
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exlrsms.
POLLEN COUNT
Gra ra
0'
• Silver Lake 49/32 50/31 Chiloquin
1 M edfed
Nyssa
• Burns Juntura 53/30 Riley 47/24 48/29
Chr i stmas alley
•
Beaver Marsh
61/49
9/ G old ach 5'
•
48/33
Ros eburg
59/52
• Burns Jun tion • 49/26 Rome 49/25 McDermi
51/29
IOamath • Lakeview
49/29
55/
57/
46/29
48/30
• Paisley
49 / 3 2
Jordan V Hey
Frenchglen
50/30
• Ashl nd 'Falls
Bro ings
48/2g
47/24
47/24
Yesterday Today Monday
Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City Portland Prinsviiis Redmond Rossburg Salem Sisters The Dsllss
54/4 4/0.0055/50/r 57/53/r 49/ 3 8/0.0054/33/pc 52/41/c 52/ 35/0.0052/33/pc 57/41/c 57/ 4 7/0.0561/49/pc 64/53/sh 54/46/0.01 56/50/r 58/53/r 47/34/0.01 52/35/pc57/42/ c 59 / 42/0.0058/46/pc 59/50/r
Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-psrtly cloudy,c-clcudy, sh-shcwers, t-thundsrstcrms, r-rsin, sf-sncw flurries, sn-sncw I-ics, Tr-irscs, Yesterdaydata ssci 5 p.m. yesterday
Wee d s Abs e nt
NATIONAL WEATHER
Source: OregonAiisrgyAssccistss 541-683-1577
~ fos ~os ~ o s WATER REPORT As of 7 s.m. yesterday NATIONAL Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity EXTREMES C rane Prairie 321 5 9 58% YESTERDAY(for the 32'yo 48 contiguousstates) Wickiup 63653 Crescent Lake 5 6 5 95 65% National high: 88 Ochoco Reservoir 14918 34% at Death Valley,CA Prineville 84556 57% National low: 7 River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t .lsec. at Brimson, MN Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 192 Precipitation: 1.63" Deschutes R.below Wickiup 44 at Wrightstown, NJ Deschutes R.below Bend 481 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 560 Little Deschutes near LaPine 92 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 14 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 19 Anchorage Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 73 38/2 Crooked R.near Terrebonne 161 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 2
~ t o s ~ 208 ~ sos ~40s ~sos ~608 ~708 ~aos ~90s ~toos ~ff os ds ds
55/49
dx
/O /O /O /O dvdsds ds Xd d '
w
d d d
i nipeg ' rok 47 3 63/34 •
Que
Tshnder aay 457
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Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 68/39/0.00 71/60/c 78/59/1 Akron 42/40/0.16 46/30/s 55/39/pc Albany 47/40/0.04 45/28/pc 50/31/pc Albuquerque 69/51/0.01 66/44/pc 57/38/s Anchorage 34/27/0.00 38/27/c 37/23/pc Atlanta 47/38/Tr 59/36/s 67/44/s Atlantic City 49/48/1.71 52/38/s 58/47/pc Austin 69/41/0.00 74/57/c 78/63/pc Baltimore 52/46/0.11 50/34/s 59/39/pc Billings 66/45/0.00 53/32/c 51/35/c Birmingham 53/35/0.00 61/35/s 68/43/s Bismarck 51/30/0.00 63/34/pc 51/27/c Boise 52/39/0.37 50/33/c 54/41/c Boston 49/41/0.57 43/32/c 46/35/pc Bridgeport, CT 48/46/0.52 50/35/s 54/41/pc Buffalo 38/37/0.13 42/34/s 53/43/pc Burlington, VT 42/34/0.06 42/28/pc 45/32/pc Caribou, hiE 39/35/0.00 33/26/sn 34/18/pc Charleston,Sc 48/44/0.27 56/36/s 67/41/s Charlotte 53/39/0.54 53/28/s 63/38/s Chattanooga 45/38/Tr 54/32/s 65/41/s Cheyenne 66/32/0.00 62/33/pc 45/26/r Chicago 43/35/Tr 49/38/pc 60/46/pc Cincinnati 42/34/0.05 50/33/s 60/43/pc Cleveland 41/40/0.73 45/34/s 57/43/pc ColoradoSprings 71/35/0.00 65/34/c 45/26/r Columbia, Mo 50/24/0.00 58/42/pc 69/48/sh Columbia, SC 53/34/0.74 56/29/s 65/37/s Columbus,GA 55/37/0.00 61/35/s 68/42/s Columbus,OH 42/37/0.02 47/30/s 58/39/pc Concord, NH 43/30/0.24 41/23/sn 45/25/pc Corpus Christi 75/55/0.00 78/70/pc 82/71/pc Dallas 62/37/0.00 68/55/c 73/64/1 Dayton 42/33/Tr 49/34/s 59/44/pc Denver 72/33/0.00 69/35/pc 50/28/r Dss Moines 48/23/0.00 59/48/pc 64/42/pc Detroit 43/33/Tr 48/34/s 56/44/pc Duluth 39/22/0.00 47/34/pc 52/35/c El Paso 77/57/Tr 80/55/pc 71/46/s Fairbanks 20/0/0.00 16/2/pc 15/0/s Fargo 50/30/Tr 54/35/pc 54/30/c Flagstaff 57/49/0.03 44/21/pc 49/22/s Grand Rapids 44/26/0.00 50/35/s 56/48/pc Green Ssy 44/28/0.00 49/35/pc 55/48/pc Greensboro 53/41/1.09 52/28/s 64/39/s Harrisburg 51/45/0.02 49/33/s 58/38/pc Hsrffcrd, CT 47/45/0.25 47/29/c 53/31/pc Helena 63/34/0.01 44/32/sn 48/34/pc Honolulu 86/75/0.12 86/75/sh 86/73/pc Houston 65/47/0.00 71/57/pc 80/65/pc Huntsville 50/37/0.00 57/34/s 66/43/s Indianapolis 43/30/0.06 51/36/s 60/45/pc Jackson,tus 56/33/0.00 63/37/pc 73/50/pc Jacksonville 57/43/0.00 61/39/s 70/52/pc
O
en m
53/32
Amsterdam Athens
60/50/pc 64/54/s 68/59/pc 76/59/pc 9O/76/r 57/35/s 71/64/c
61/51/pc 66/47/r 51/37/pc
s O,
62/59/r 88/72/I
84/64/pc 39/25/pc 80/68/s 53/39/sh 53/41/pc 63/42/pc 86/62/pc 86/69/pc 78no/ic 57/48/pc 55/48/pc 68/53/pc 65/52/sh
•
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L ow ~ o d~erate ~ L ow ~
Source: USDA Forest Service
56/46/sh 64/52/s 64/54/r 78/56/sh 89/76/pc 61/35/s 72/61/sh 61/48/pc 69/47/pc 53/40/s 67/51/r 86//0/I 80/61/s 42/30/pc 81/71/s 50/39/sh 50/38/sh 62/47/I 87/63/pc
76/59/I 76/57/I 71/61/pc 71/60/pc
67/57/pc 60/49/r 69/47/pc 90/77/s
65/56/pc 54/43/sh 62/46/pc 91/77/pc
Yesterday Today Monday
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 44/40/1.10 45/37/r 45/36/r 50/27/0.00 62/49/pc 65/43/sh 40/29/0.00 49/34/s 56/44/pc 73/57/Tr 66/48/pc 66/46/s 41/35/0.09 50/34/s 62/44/pc 54/22/0.00 67/52/pc 66/35/c Litiis Rock 56/34/0.00 60/41/c 71/53/pc Lcs Angeles 67/56/0.43 69/53/pc 74/52/s Louisville 45/35/0.11 53/38/c 64/46/pc Madison, Wl 44/23/0.00 50/38/pc 59/47/pc Memphis 53/35/0.00 59/42/pc 68/51/pc Miami 78/61/0.00 72/61/pc 78/70/pc Milwaukee 42/35/Tr 50/39/pc 57/50/pc Minneapolis 42/23/0.00 53/38/pc 59/36/pc Nashville 50/37/0.00 55/35/s 67/44/pc New Orleans 61/46/0.00 65/52/s 76/63/pc New YorkCity 47/45/0.37 48/38/s 56/45/pc Newark, NJ 48/45/0.60 51/36/s 58/41/pc Norfolk, VA 54/51/0.11 54/40/s 62/44/s OklahomaCity 61/35/0.00 65/51/pc 68/48/I Omaha 52/28/0.00 64/48/pc 64/38/c Orlando 64/53/0.00 67/50/s 75/60/pc Palm Springs 69/62/0.00 74/54/pc 78/54/s Psoris 50/29/0.00 50/39/pc 63/48/sh Philadelphia 49/45/0.92 51/37/s 58/42/pc Phoenix 83/69/0.00 73/54/s 75/55/s Pittsburgh 44/40/0.12 46/29/s 53/38/pc Portland, ME 44/40/0.35 42/27/sn 47/29/pc Providence 47/44/0.29 44/29/c 49/33/pc Raleigh 51/45/0.61 54/30/s 65/38/s Rapid City 61/33/0.00 69/34/pc 53/28/pc nsno 53/40/0.30 50/26/pc 54/29/pc Richmond 51/41/0.05 54/32/s 65/40/s Rochester, NY 44/37/0.46 44/34/si 55/41/pc Sacramento 67/52/0.12 67/40/s 68/42/pc Si. Louis 50/30/0.00 55/41/pc 68/50/pc Salt Lake City 72/55/Tr 47/35/sn 47/29/pc Ssn Antonio 71/50/0.00 75/66/c 80/69/pc Ssn Diego 70/63/0.25 69/56/pc 73/54/s Ssu Francisco 65/55/Tr 69/54/s 70/54/s Ssn Jose 63/51/0.02 65/45/s 68/45/s Santa rs 67/40/0.00 61/38/pc 54/29/s Savannah 53/43/Tr 59/36/s 68/42/s Seattle 52/47/0.00 55/49/r 57/53/r Sioux Falls 49/27/0.00 58/39/pc 57/31/pc Spokane 48/44/0.08 48/37/c 49/44/c Springfield, Mo 54/22/0.00 59/44/pc 67/54/I Tampa 64/60/0.03 68/48/s 75/60/pc Tucson 86/67/0.00 73/47/s 69/45/s Tulsa 57/27/0.00 64/50/pc 67/54/I Washington, DC 54/50/Tr 52/40/s 62/44/pc Wichita 56/30/0.00 68/51/pc 68/43/c Yskims 60/39/0.00 58/38/pc 58/43/sh Yums 79/65/0.00 75/55/s 77/56/s City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vsgss Lexington Lincoln
d
ronto /3 uffslo43
64/52/0.00 61/54/0.00 uke Auckland 63/56/0.00 oxx • 63/38 8 /3 es/34 ou Yudio Baghdad 79/54/0.12 o oi Choyeun Bangkok 91/77/0.03 59/48 ssijing 61/45/0.00 Ics90 il utigis Col mb Beirut 73/61/0.43 h S hoddoo /38 1/37ssy 47 Omah t ~ ~ Berlin 65/50/0.00 dv/54 Lo Iovili luttsbd nouvor so x x N ss 8 Bogota 68/48/0.04 xssx 44// Kansas Gty st. u' Budapest 46/28/Tr 62/49 55/4 Buenos Ai r es 61/52/0.04 d • X SX S X • uohvn Chorlo Loo Au Ioo pohosn i ~d Csbc SsnLucss 93/70/0.00 55/3 8 L' Cairo 82/64/0.00 73/54. dd \ ii dklbuque ue kls h omscd • At • Calgary 37/30/0.11 4 41 ~ ~ '66/44 u o 89/34 Csncun 82/66/0.09 air innhs d d d 6 /56 • Dslls nl Ps Dublin 59/48/0.14 et 5 d d Ax esl/s 0/5 Edinburgh 56/50/0.08 Geneva 63/41/0.00 * • dtdihdtd Hsrsrs * * t x x xx x 86/58/0.00 // w Orleans 1/57 6 so Hong Kong 86/75/0.00 HOnOlulu odsd, Chihushus 68/82 Istanbul 55/52/0.02 I 81/49 hsismi Jerusalem 62/53/0.08 Monte 72/iht 77/d1 Johannesburg 80/62/0.15 Lima 69/62/0.00 Lisbon 72/64/0.03 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 63/60/0.01 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 72/46/0.00 Manila 89/76/0.00
FIRE INDEX
dod/d 'o dd d/M d Sisters Prineviffe La Pine/Gilchrist
• Fort Rock Cresce t • 50/31
H i/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astcris 57/39/0.00 57/51/r 59/54/r Ls Grande 46/39/0.07 51/35/pc55/42/c Baker City 45/39/0.07 49/27/c 52/32/c Ls Pine 43/34/0.00 49/34/pc 52/39/c srcckings 60/42/Tr 57/48/pc 58/53/pc Msdicrd 5 5 /43/0.00 56/41/pc 60/48/c sums 42/38/0.30 47/24/c 51/29/c Ne wport 54/4 3 /0.00 56/51/r 5 8/54/r Eugene 57/41/0.04 58/48/c 61/52/r No r th Bend 59 / 46/0.01 60/51/c 62/55/r Klsmsth Falls 47/38/0.04 49/29/pc 51/34/pc Ontario 54/44/0.24 53/31/c 55/34/c Lsksvisw 48/37/0.02 47/24/pc50/28/pc Pendleton 48/44/0.37 55/42/pc 58/46/c
~ 2~ N 1
T r ees L o~ w
Bandon
/44
Ham ton
La pjne
city
The highertheAccuWssihsrxmmUVIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eyssudskin protscgcn.0-2 Low,
G rasses Absent ~
High: 60' at Brookings Low: 33' at Rome
57/47
Yesterday Today Monday
UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon
• 49/ Grove Oakridge
OREGON EXTREMES Co 60 1 YESTERDAY
Today Monday
city
•
Last
59' 36'
Mostly cloudy with a shower possible
Mostly cloudy andwarmer
OREGON WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST: Mostly cloudy ria TEMPERATURE and chilly today. Umatiaa Seasid Hood Yesterday Normal Record 58/41 Partly to mostly cloudy 57/52 RiVer Rufus • ermiston 48 54 75' in 1949 tonight. Cloudsand Cannon l43 lington 58/41 36' 31' portland ss/4s 1'in 2002 Meac am Lostl ne intervals of sun 56/53 / • W co 5 l41 49/32 Enterprise tomorrow. PRECIPITATION dl N, 45(3 he Daa • 47/30 o Tdlamo • • 55/ 2 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday O.oo CENTRAL:Timesof andy• 56/51 Mc innviH • 58/46 JosePh Record 0.44oin 1994 Goveu • HeP Pner Grande • clouds andsunshine nt • u pi Condon o d 4/38 • 55 51 35 M onth to date (normal) O.o o (0.03d) today. Mostly cloudy Lincoln Union 45/ Year to date (normal ) 6.41 " (7.80 ) and chilly tonight. Cool 56/52 Sale o • pray Graniteu B arometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29. 8 5 with clouds andsun 56/5 • 5/40 'Baker C Newpo 45/31 tomorrow. • 55 38 SUN ANDMOON 7/49 56/51 • Mitch 5 49/27 Camp Sh man Red WEST: Mostly cloudy 51 /36 Today Mon. n U uu Yach 51/36 • John Sunrise 6:43 a.m. 6 : 4 4 a.m. with a touch of rain 56/52 57/50 • Prineville Day /29 tarlo Sunset 4:54 p.m. 4: 5 3 p.m. today, mainly later. 54/33 • P a lina 4 9/ 3 5 5 31 On-and-off r a i n a nd Moonrise 2:3 7 p.m. 3:1 1 p.m. Flofen e • Eugene ' Se d Srothers Valeu 57/53 Moonset 1:41 a.m. 2 : 5 2 a.m. drizzle tonight. • @® Su wer e 5 1 /33 54/31
MOONPHASES
"'"
63' 39'
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
Full
THU RSDAY
8
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Mecca Mexico City
97/75/D.OO 99/74/s 66/48/0.00 71/47/pc Montreal 45/36/0.03 43/26/s Moscow 36/33/0.18 31/21/pc Nairobi 81/61/0.07 81/60/pc Nassau 81/76/0.13 79/68/pc New Delhi 82/65/0.00 86/63/s Osaka 70/63/0.25 73/50/c Oslo 51/34/0.80 56/51/r Ottawa 43/34/0.00 41/22/s Paris 68/50/0.00 62/50/I nic ds Janeiro 93/75/0.00 86/72/pc Rome 70/46/0.00 68/49/s Santiago 72/46/0.00 71/41/s Ssu Paulo 88/70/0.26 80/68/I Ssppcrc 61/43/0.29 62/43/c Seoul 68/50/0.06 59/38/pc Shanghai 68/58/0.04 69/49/pc Singapore 90/78/0.02 9008/pc Stockholm 46/28/0.36 54/49/c Sydney 82/67/0.24 71/56/s Taipei 84/72/0.21 75/64/sh Tsi Aviv 78/62/0.22 80/66/s Tokyo 63/59/1.07 73/62/pc Toronto 37/34/0.07 45/33/s Vancouver 52/39/0.00 53/47/r Vienna 52/39/0.00 54/43/pc Warsaw 48/32/0.00 51/40/pc
99/74/s 73/46/pc 44/29/pc 33/29/$1 80/60/pc 81/70/pc 87/66/s 61/44/pc 55/47/sh 44/29/pc 57/45/pc 87/72/pc 70/57/pc 74/45/s 83/70/I 46/39/r 57/40/s 65/50/s 91/78/sh 55/46/sh 70/59/pc 71/65/c 76/62/sh 68/53/pc 52/39/pc 55/49/r 52/44/s 54/38/pc
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of RedmondApply Online
Nilson's
for Credit at: 207$ S Hwy 97, Redmond • 541-548-2066
www.wilsettsefredmeal.aet
Olive Garden
G allery - B e n d 634$51ltwI 97,Bend.541-330-5084
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
SPOTLIGHT
Veteran's Dayat Tower Theatre The Tower Theatre and The Notables Swing Band are teaming up to offer a Veteran's Day celebration that will feature music, dancing and a few other activities designed to make people feel nostalgic for the Big Band era. During a pre-show picnic dinner that will start at 5:30 p.m. Nov. 11, the TowerTheatre's staff will show a collection of vintage news reels and cartoons that will take people back to the1940s and the 1950s. The Notables will take the stage an hour later at 6:30 p.m. and play a concert featuring songs written by Count Basie, Duke Ellington and Glenn Miller.
Tickets to the event cost $7 per person, though veterans can take advantage of abuyone-get-one-free deal if they use the promotional code "SWING"when making their purchases through the TowerTheatre's website. Proceeds from the event's ticket sales and the sale of boxed dinners during the picnic will be given to Caring for Troops and the Central Oregon Band of Brothers. For more information visit www. towertheatre.org or call 541-317-0700.
Kids' coat drive underway The fourth annual Koats for Kidz drive is taking place. There are 44 kids in needof new winterjackets. The jackets are donated to children with parents currently in the Deschutes Family Drug Court Program. The court program is designed to help parents get clean, get their kids back from state custody and learn better ways to parent. Call 541-728-6933 or
visit the Koats for Kidz 2014 Facebookevent page to find a numbered list of children's first names/si zesandleavea comment with the number of the child you're donating to so that specific donations aren't doubled. New coats can be dropped off at Pack, Ship & More at the Wagner Mall,1990 NE Third St., Bend. Please include the number of the child you aredonating to on the store tag or on a note in the pocket. Coats will be distributed on Dec. 8. To learn more call 541-728-6933 or visit the Koats for Kidz Facebook page.
Sale supporting Full Access Full Access, an organization that provides opportunities for people with developmental and intellectual disabilities, is holding a GoodStuff Sale Nov. 8-9 at Full Access at Abilitree in Bend. There will be nearly 5,000 square feet of furniture, sporting goods, clothing, tools and kitchen items to choose from at the Good Stuff Sale, plus more. The sale will be open both days from 9 a.m.to4 p.m.at2680 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Bend. This is a free event. For more information call 303-579-7023. — From staff reports
• Bend isn't the only town using hops to draw thirsty travelers ByMayaRaoe (Minneapolis) Star Tribune
MINNEAPOLIS-
Kyndell Harkness/(Minneapolis) Star Tribune
isa Faletti-Watkins was wearing a hat from Fulton Brewery in Minneapolis. The growler in front of her wife, Sarah, was wrapped in a cozy from Pitchfork Brewing in Hudson, Wisconsin, one of the many places theyvisited from their home in search of thebest localbeer.
Jerry Helget, left, and Steve Marier share stories as they drink beer
and eat spicy almonds at the BigWood Brewery taproom inWhite Bear Lake, Minnesota.
the brewersguild,described
at the different corners of the
such trips as in concert with
state, there should be a craft
beer destination somewhere along the way," said Roberts.
Some breweries are already used to being destinations.
They sat at the bar at the
expand around the region
breweries around the state,
Big Wood Brewery in White
and interest in craft beer in-
from Baxter to Rochester and
the philosophy ofcraftbeer drinkers. "They're looking for adventure, they're looking for exploration, they're looking for new
Bear Lake, Minnesota, on a
Marshall, after the legislature
experiences — that's the ethos
passed the "Surly bill" allowing local brewers to open tap-
of what a craft beer consumer is," he said.
more-distant brewery as a
tensifies, Minnesota tourism leadersaretryingto encourage people to travel farther to experience them. Explore
And now, he added, Minne-
friend asked if they wanted
Minnesota and the Minnesota
rooms where customers could come in and try their beer.
Saturday night when conversation turned to a fourth, even
to go to Fitger's Brewhouse in Craft Brewers Guild are proDuluth one weekend. moting "brewcations" with "We should go up there," brochures at 10 visitor centers, Sarah Faletti-Watkins agreed. Web pages and social media. As breweries open and There are now nearly 60
The question is, how many people are willing to drive a few hours out of their way just to try a new brewery or two? Clint Roberts, who heads
"It does stretch the state now,
more than it has in a long time." "We get quite a few out-of-
town people at our brewery
sota has breweries across the — we count on it," said Dustin region. The guild has added 15 Brau, owner of Brau Brothers members this year. Brewing Co. in Marshall, pop"The Twin Cities metro ulation 13,000 in southwest has a good brewing scene, Minnesota. certainly, but when you look SeeBrewcations/C6
Un erstan in t e irstCentra Ore onians • Director of UO'snatural history museum will speak onthe area'searliest inhabitants
said,referringto agroup of people who lived 11,000 to 11,500 years ago and used a distinctivetypeofspearhead
who lived in Central Oregon
first found near Clovis, New Mexico. "But the Paisley Caves
later inhabitants built shelters
By Mac McLean
ic humans who lived on the
The Bulletin
Oregon Coast, the Columbia (near Summer Lake) has a River Gorge and the High Des- record of occupation that goes ert between 9,000 and 15,000 back nearly 15,000years." years ago. Other discoveries also He saidCentralOregon suggest that this area was a has played a huge role in his hotbed for pre-Clovis activity, research because the region is including a pair of 9,200- to home to a handful of sites10,500-year-old sandals found
Archaeologists credit a series of environmental laws adopted in the 1970s with their
ability to continue making discoveries in their quest to learn
developeda more permanent,
residential lifestyle. Living in large family groups, these to protect themselves from the elements and dug large storage pits where they kept food, trash and other items. "It was a different kind of
the Paisley Caves, Fort Rock
near Fort Rock and a handful
pattern," Connolly said, explaining this transition was probably made because the region's population reached a point where it was hard to be
"Our work is continuous,"
and the Deschutes River's
of obsidian points found at the
truly nomadic without tram-
said Tom Connolly, director ofanthropologicalresearch
Lava Island — that turned
Lava Island rock shelter that date back 7,000 to 10,500 years.
pling on someone else's turf. The weather also warmed up a
more about the people who
lived in Central Oregon 15,000 years ago.
at the University of Oregon's
Museum of Natural and Cultural History. "(Because of these laws,) we pay attention to
what happens to water quality, wildlife and history.... If ac-
what archaeologists previously thought about the country's earliest inhabitants completely on its head.
Connolly will discuss the archaeology behind Oregon's
Connolly said the people
little bit, he said, which meant
who left these artifacts behind
people could stay in a single place longer than they could
led a largely nomadic life of hunting, fishing and gathering
Ifyou go What:Tom Connolly presents"Before the Oregon Trail: An Archaeological Perspective on theOregon Story" When: 7 p.m. Nov.11 Where:Father Luke's Room, McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. in Bend Cost:Free Contact:Reserve a seat online through the High Desert Museum's website at www.highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp
before.
commodations can be made to
prehistory at a special event at McMenamins Old St Francis
preserve these values, then ac-
School on Nov. 11 (see "If you
commodations will be made."
go")
During his career as an archaeologist, Connolly
"Most scientists thought the people who made the Clovis
Connolly said Central Orfrom wild plants for food. Once egon features prominently in they exhausted an area's rethis era of human development sources — a process that rarely as well, and he knows of at tookmore than asingleseason least two places — one outside Bend and one outside Ma-
has focused his research on
artifacts were the first people
— they would move to another place and do the same. But over time, these behav-
learning about the prehistor-
on this continent," Connolly
iors changed and the people
shelters and storage pits that
seeds, roots, nuts and berries
dras — where archaeologists discovered the remnants of
date backmore than 5,000 years. He said that although
and featured floorboards from
the Madras site was older, the
one in Bend, known as the Bond Site, was more complete the Wickiup-style dwelling its inhabitants used for shelter.
SeeEarly settlers/C6
C2 T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
M II ESTON'
ts + ~ L7
For ms f o r e ngagementw,eddinganniversary orbirthday announcements areavailableat TheBulletlnl,777gytrchandlerdve v Bendor by em ai l i ng milestones®bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-633 2117.
K ee in we i n ca etraitions w i e maintainin etites
MARRIAGES
By MauraJudkis ~The Washington Post
WASHINGTONhe face my husband made after I offered up a forkful of wedding cake was like the one a child makes when offered a first taste of an unfamiliar food. A wrinkling of the eyes, lips slightly pursed, his twitching nose betraying the search for comprehension of what this aroma was, exactly. "Pork shu mai," he said. i
•
Thlnkstcck
The almond cake with a
labeled and transferred to the
custard filling had not smelled freezer. Putsome fresh baking like that a year ago, when it sodainyourfreezerto capture was covered w it h f o ndant odors. You'll have better luck with and flowers for our October 2013 wedding. That day, when a chocolate cake than with vaScott and I traded bites, pho- nilla, Tomason said, and fruit
With many still observing the tradition of freezing part of a wed-
ding cake to eat on the first anniversary, making sure the cake is packaged properly can makequite the difference to your taste buds.
mysteriously begin tasting fillings don't always freeze like cheese." That's why Tiffany MaI hadn't realized it was the well. You'll also have an easier cIsaac, who recently started only taste we'd get. Greeting friends and relatives took us time if you're fortunate enough Buttercream Bakeshop, would away from our plates for the to have enlisted the services of like the tradition to die a frosta high-end cake designer, such bitten death, already. rest of the night. "I want the experience to be We hadn't thought about the as Maggie Austin. The Alextradition of freezing the top andria, Virginia-based Austin as great as it was on the night layer to eat for an anniversa- — who received a shower of of their wedding, not some ry celebration, a custom that media attention for designing subpar, tas t es-like-frozendates to when weddings cakes the cake for the Blake Live- steak experience," said Mawere liqueur-soaked fruit- ly-Ryan Reynolds weddingcIsaac, former longtime pascakes, saved to celebrate the provides a separate preboxed try chef for the Neighborhood first child's christening. But and sealedcake forcouples to Restaurant Group. when the caterer sent us home freeze. She tells couples that a top with the top boxed up, well, Her anniversary cake does tier that won't be eaten on what else were we to do'? The not look like the original. their wedding day is a cost"The anniversary tier is ly memento. "You're paying cake, wrapped in two layers of aluminum foil, went hap- supposed to be the flavor that a lot more for that five-inch hazardly into the freezer as the couple enjoyed on their cake than you would pay for we rushed out the door for our wedding day," said Austin's a five-inch cake alone," she honeymoon, forgetting it until managing director and sister, said. Better to order anoththe next year. Jessica Rapier. "You're ap- er cake the next year — or That haphazardness was pealing to the taste senses of do away with the t radition our first mistake. the memory that they had of altogether. "I haven't heard of anyone eating the cake on that day. It's MacIsaac might get her not enjoying it if they freeze not a visual repeat." wish, if only because more it correctly," said M eredith For couples who don't want people seem to be serving Tomason, pastry chef of the to commit freezer space, Aus- anything but wedding cake. soon-to-open RareSweets at tin, as do most other wedding A colleague of mine opted CityCenterDC. cake providers, offers an alter- for doughnuts, and a friend's Proper technique, says To- native: a fresh cake delivered wedding featured macaroons. mason, starts with refrigerat- on the anniversary. There "When I feel in need of a weding the cake for a few hours are just too many variables ding reminder, I just get a to solidify the icing, whether involved in keeping a frozen box at Paul," my friend said. cased in fondant or not. Once cake in good condition, said "They're identical." the decorati ons are removed, Rapier. The anniversary cake Our own cake had been in the cake should be swathed is "an option for couples who our freezerfor a year,nextto in plastic wrap and placed in are traveling after their wed- fish fillets and smoothie-ready a cake box or another airtight ding or live in a nanoapart- frozen fruit and, yes, pork shu container, positioned so it is ment and can't keep anything mai. Days before our first annot touching the sides. That in their freezer, or they don't niversary, I began to defrost it. box should then be generous- trust Pepco," she said. "Your I'd already called Tomason for ly wrapped in plastic wrap, power could go out, or it could advice. tographer snapping away,
Though we f eared t he worst, we followed her defrosting instructions to the letter, transferring the cake to
our fridge more than 24 hours
ee
before we planned to eat it, then letting it sit on our coun-
tertop for an hour to return it
b
to room temperature.
We unwrapped the foil and peeled off the fondant. And then weended up scraping off
PyI
the rest of the icing, too, be-
cause of the aforementioned freezer odor. But the cake it-
self was surprisingly good: light and fluffy, with a custard that had retained the proper
consistency. If you closed your eyes and imagined it as a gro-
Kathryn Sunnell and Trent Henson
Sunnell — Henson
cery store cake, then it wasn't
K athryn S u n nell an d Trent Henson, both of San
too bad.
Clemente, California, were
"It makes me wonder what the cake actually tasted like at
married Sept. 6, 2014, at Bro-
our wedding," said Scott. Because that's the thing about a wedding cake: You might not get a chance to enjoy it on your wedding day. And if you don't do a good job of freezing it, you won't enjoy it on your anniversary, either. You run the risk that the taste
of year-old cake will replace the memories of those first bites at your wedding. Only a year in, I'm certainly no expert, but one piece of advice MacIsaac off ered for eat-
ing year-old cake struck me as applicable to marriage, too. "If you have a good sense of humor about it and your
Tribune News Service
you'll be comfortable that this course, but seeing someone person is someone you'd like once or twice a week for the to spend time with beyond the
she said, "it's going to be fine."
Some might say I'm an impulsive person. I get an idea, first month of a new relation- initial infatuation. And with and I act on it. Case in point: ship is a healthy choice. This the right person, that infatua- your life together, then what's quitting my former job as an way, you'll have the anticipa- tion will linger for a long time, the big hurry now'?" He's now economist and started A Little tion and excitement of the next if not forever, so there's noth- in a happy relationship with Nudge (although, admitted- date, and you'll have enough ing to worry about. someone he took the time to ly, that did involve some re- to talk about since you didn't As I said to a former client get to know. search). Basically, when I want just see each other the night something, I go for it. And yet, before! Use this time to get to I've also learned that in dating, know each other's hobbies, slow and steady wins the race. things that make each of you When it c ame to d ating, tick, life ambitions, etc. I was always someone who The same philosophy goes m • m m preferred to jump two feet in for when to be intimate for m • • before testing the water. I fig- the first time, if you catch ured that if I liked someone, it my drift. It's certainly temptmust be a good idea to see him ing early on, but once you go seven nights a week, right? down that path with someone, And if he learned all my lit- getting to know each other oftle idiosyncrasies early on, it ten takes a backseat to, well, would be endearing, wouldn't the things you can do in the it? I was a full-fledged jumper. backseat. It takes time to get Parkinson's Resources of Oregon And where did it leave me? Of- to know someone before you ten having what should have can properly determine if you and OSU-Cascadesare conducting been a yearlong relationship even want to open yourself a Needs Assessment Survey in — meeting,the honeymoon up to that kind of intimacy. If Central Oregon. phase, our first fight and a friend asks you (after you've breaking up — all within the done the deed) what your date's hobbies are or what he span of a month or two. Help us, help you and take part! When you like someone or she does for a living, you'll who likes you back, the antic- p robably want to k now t h e ipation of seeing each other answers. again is often the best part of The early parts of a relaa d • a new relationship. The be- tionship are often the most ginning of a relationship is exciting, so enjoy them and •
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try not to hit the fast forward
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Oregon State UNIVERSI TY
~
Parkinson's Resources of O re g o n
graduate of Summit High School and a 2010 graduate of Southern Oregon Univer-
sity, where he studied business. He works at Unique
Lighting. School and a 2009 graduate The couple plan to honeyof Southern Oregon Univer- moon at a later date. ate of Mountain View High
sity, where she studied mar-
T hey will settle in S an
keting and business. She Clemente.
Get ATaste For Food. Home Sc Garden '
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TheBulletin
Find It EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Services
bendbulletin.com
Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-OOOG www.evergreeninhome.com
The Bulletin MI LESTONE ' G UI
INES
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to jump in is going to be there. button too soon. Get to know Remember, though, that if this each other over ice cream, go person is going to be around to a baseball game, check out for a while, it's not necessary a new band, try a new restauto hit the accelerator when you rant, and all the while, learn can simply cruise at a steady about each other. That way, speed until you're ready to when you're ready to start take it to the next level. There seeing each other more often,
Tim and Kristina Henson, of San Clemente. He is a 2005
expectations are reasonable,"
of mine who tended to quickly "fall in love" with every new woman he met, "If you're really meant to spend the rest of
is no hard and fast rule, of
works in the marketing department at Smart Stop Self Storage. The groom is the son of
ken Top Club. A reception followed. The bride is the daughter of Ken and Lynn Sunnell, of Bend. She is a 2004 gradu-
Sowan stea winst e atin ame By Erika Ettin
•i
fh,
Cascades
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bend Metro Park 8 Recreation District The Bend Trolley
Bend Wedding& Formal Black Butte Ranch The DD Ranch Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Faith Hope Charity Vinyards & Events Ida's Cupcake Cafe Lake Creek Lodge M.Jacobs McMenamins Old St. Francis School Northwest Medi Spa Salon Jtb Danke
Socailly Yours Taps Mobile Pub The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
K emoreA e , Irean 'smostromanticcaste By BobDowning eAkron (Ohio) Beacon Journal
r'
LETTERFRACK, COUNTY GALWAY, Ireland-
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+f •,»@ tia»: i
ylemore Abbey belongs in a fairy tale.
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The Tudor-style/Neo-Gothic castle
» I.' ' CI
is one of the biggest tourist attractions in western Ireland and one of its most
photographed spots. It sits near the village of Letterfrack in
I
Connemara, a wild corner of County Galway.
It lies at the edge of Pollacappul Lough (Lake) In lff
and is flanked by the Twelve Bens, a series of
Il,
I
small mountains that rise above the wind-swept
'
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boglands. • »»»I»
Kylemore Abbey has its his-
The Henry tract eventual-
ly covered 13,000 acres. The family had n ine children old structures and ruins found when they moved into Kyleacross Ireland. The 70-room more Abbey. It had been built castle is a love story. It was of granite from Dalkey and built by a wealthy English limestone from nearby Coundoctor for his wife. Some have ty Roscommon. hailed it as the most romantic The castle contains 40,000 building in Ireland. square feet and includes a Only a few rooms in the main wall that is 2 to 3 feet castle are open to the public, t hick. T here a r e 3 3 b e d because the abbey is still in rooms, four bathrooms, four use by Catholic nuns. There sitting rooms, a ballroom, is a Gothic chapel and mau- billiard room, library, study, soleum, plus a 6-acre Victori- school room, smoking room, an walled garden. gun room and various officIt is an impressive castle, es and living spaces for dostriking when viewed from mestic staff. Rooms open to across the lake. Some have the public include the dining hailed it as the perfect view. room, drawing room, comKylemore is a Gaelic term munity or middle room and for Big Woodland. The wood- three hallways. ed grounds cover a thousand Henry began reclaiming acres. the land, and he encouraged
tory, but it's a modern history
compared with many of the
his tenant farmers to do like-
A property rooted in love
Photos by Bob Downing i Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal
Kylemore Abbey in western Ireland was built by an English doctor for his wife. It is one of the biggest tourist attractions in County Galway. The walls of the castle are 2 to 3 feet thick. It contains 40,000 square feet of space.
Margaret Henry died in Egypt of dysentery while on a family vacation. Her body is entombed in a mausoleum. Mitchell was later buried
wise. He planted 300,000 The abbey, built from 1867 trees, both native and import- there. to 1871 by 300 workers, was ed species. The mausoleum sits near constructedas a private resHe built a walled garden in the stunning church built by idence for M i t chell H e nry what had been a boggy area, Mitchell Henry in memory of (1826-1910), a wealthy doctor not an easy task. It included his wife. from London, and his wife, 21 glass greenhouses for exotIt is a miniature cathedral Margaret (1829-1874). ic plants. They were heated by i n N e o-Gothic s t yle. T h e Tradition says they fell boilers and hot water pipes. gargoyles normally found in love with Connemara on Today the gardens feature on Gothic buildings have their honeymoon when they only plants introduced to been replaced by angels. The rented Kylemore Lodge, the Ireland before 1901. A small church is built of marble and original building on the site. white cottage was formerly limestone with one beautiful The region was popular with home to the head gardener. stained glass window. It feaanglers and hunters. It was H enry t r e ated h i s 1 2 5 tures internal columns and their wish to live there. tenant farmers with compas- delicately carved sandstone Henry got a sizable inher- sion. He provided work, shel- flowers and birds. itance after the death of his ter, good pay and a school for The most famous visitors father, a t e x t il e m e rchant the children. to Kylemore were England's in Manchester, England, in He paid to install windows King Edward VII, Queen Al1862. in their dwellings, something exandria and Princess VictoHe decidedto give up med- they could not afford because ria, who visited in 1903. They icine and turned to business of a local tax on glass. Build- arrived in Connemara by and politics. He used the ings had little light and little royal yacht. money tobuy the lodge and circulation of air, and Henry to construct the castle, garwanted to change that. The A change of hands dens, walks and woodlands tenantswere recovering from The castle was sold that in Connemara to please his a cholera outbreak and be- year to the Duke and Duchwife. He was elected to rep- fore that from the Great Irish ess of Manchester. He had resent Ireland in the British Famine, which ran from 1846 gone bankrupt at age 23 from Parliament for 14 years. to 1850. gambling debts, then married
In the 17th and 18th centu-
others. Actress Anjelica Hus-
Polladirk River. A visitor center at Letter-
frack, open from March to October, was once part of the Letterfrack Industrial School.
Park admission is f ree. For more information, go to
www.npws.ie. Nearby is Clifden, the largest city in Connemara, where
you can access the Sky Road, Twelve Bens or Beanna Beola a breathtaking 7-mile loop range. The heart of the park, with scenic views of the Irish established in 1980, is Gleann coast.
Today the nuns remain in
residenceat Kylemore. They pray, run their farm and make handcrafted products.
Openingto the public The nuns opened the abbey to the public in 1993 to raise money for their operations.
The church reopened in 1995 and the gardens in 2000.
Kylemore Tourism L t d. took over operations of the estate in 2009. The abbey to-
merman, of Cincinnati, main-
c hurch. Guided t o ur s
ly financed the purchase of Kylemore. They resided there for a few years before being forcedto sellbecause of the debts. A banker and property speculator, Ernest Fawke, acquired Kylemore in 1914. He
available daily from April through October.
never took up residence and
52001.
are
You can arrange a bus tour
from Galway, an hour to the southeast. For more information, go
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to www . k ylemoreabbeytourism.ie or call +353 (0) 95
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Bend High School Auditorium
Part of the abbey's land
In 1920, the Irish Benedictine nuns purchased the cas-
Mur (The Big Glen) and the
tains are part of the famous
ton is a graduate. The school and abbey were damaged by a fire in 1959. The school closed in 2010.
baron father, Eugene Zim-
rarely visited.
Richard Martin, who helped
ries, many Irish families sent found the Society for the Pretheir daughters to Belgium vention of Cruelty to Animals to be educated by the Bene- in the early 19th century. dictines. In Ireland, the nuns The park, generally south of continued to offer education the abbey, covers nearly 4,950 to Catholic girls, with a day acres of scrubby mountains, school for locals and an inter- heaths, bogs, grasslands and national boarding school for woodlands. Some of its moun-
day includes a visitor center, a tea room, a store, a cafe, a craft and design shop and a pottery studio. The estate offers an array of guided tours, walks and dinners. There are also music programs in the Gothic
a wealthy American heiress, Helena Zimmerman. Her oil n
war-ravaged Ypres, Belgium, Another portion of the park during World War I. was previously owned by
now belongs to Connemara National Park, one of six na-
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tle and surrounding lands tional parks in Ireland. with the help of public loans after they were forced to flee
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Videopreviews ateugeneballet.org,FacebookandTwitter
Rr Only a few rooms at Kylemore Abbey in western Ireland are open to the public, because the abbey is still used by Catholic Benedic-
tine nuns.
SOLUTION TO TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD L O W R
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JIIISBCX Answer: TACKLE A L WAYS C U RFEW E NOUGH U P R OA R INCOME The new grocery store was so successful thanks to its-
SUPER MARKETING jUMBLE IS ON C6
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
Te eau
0
itieso wor wi ecemeteries
By Jill Schensul • The (Hackensack, N.J) Record
emetery. Burial ground. Memorial park.
•
$•
Boneyard. Whatever you call it — and Edgar Allan Poe had at least 100 phrases for it — they are home to the dead. Final resting place for the once-living and a place for the survivors to come and pay respects. Now, as thoughts turn to the creepy, the shadowy and possibly the supernatural, cemeteries are becoming the haunts of choice for those in search of a good shiver and tours with scar y stories, candlelight and costumes. I find cemeteries irresist-
ible, and not because they're creepy. I go because they're kind of beautiful, and peaceful, and they're a sort of wil-
today is home to anywhere from 60,000 to 100,000 graves.
Nobody is really sure of the number, however, because this isn't your usual well-oiled-ma-
chine sort of cemetery. Along know what might happen or with many unmarked graves what you might find. You can and lost records is the strange learn a lot about aplace, a time, custom to bury people on top a culture, from its cemeteries. of one another. In some casReading inscriptions, getting es, the white tombstones are the language of the period, stacked three or four levels seeing the inexorable march high — an arrangement that's oftime across the eroding and the same below ground, too. They've been called condos for smoothing carved markers. T raveling gives yo u a the dead. It's all about saving glimpse into other cultures, space; one family plot with sevand those cultures all have en spaces has had at least 28 their own ways of dealing with known burials. Families have derness of the dead. You never
death. I will never forget the morn-
ing I spent in India on the banks of the Ganges, with the acrid smell of pretty foul smoke and incense wafting in the heavy air, as I gazed through the haze down into
the muddy river and watched family members carry their sari-wrapped dead intothe water on narrow litters, set them on fire and let them drift away.
I remember learning from my guide in Saigon that the Vietnamese don't really cele-
brate birthdays — many people didn't know the exact date they were born, in fact. Babies
all turn a year old on Tet, the first day of the lunar new year. What is much more important,
my guide explained, and what is celebrated instead of birthdays, are the dates of death of
one's ancestors. The Vietnamese keep a shrine to their ancestors and also visit the cem-
etery, spending the whole day remembering their relatives. I visited a cemetery on Me-
morial Day in Israel. It is the day when every Israeli who has died in war or because of
terrorism since the country was established is honored. Families arrived at the cem-
etery, gathering around the gravesite of a loved one. Some remain all day, with their food, their folding chairs or blankets and a radio to listen as the
names ofthe 26,000-plus deceased are announced. Then there was that moment in the Buenos Aires cemetery.
I was walking slowly down a vault with niches for urns of
cremated remains, looking at the various trinkets, photos, dolls and wedding-cake toppers that were left as symbols of the lives of the departed. Then, all at once I came to a
niche with a sign on it: "For rent," it said, with a phone
ones. Graves look like small landscapes, complete with gravel pathways, mlniature trees and seasonal flowers. Watering cans are provlded at regular intervals throughout the cemetery.
to not fall over anything. But also, if you're kind of afraid
233rd Street, the Bronx, New
big metal basins for doing
York. The Mystery & History
whatever it is one does when
so, depending on the location and size of the cemetery. You have the option to renew your
tours meet at the Jerome Av- gardening (I not only don't exactly afraid of the dark, you enue entrance, Jerome and have agreen thumb, but am lease on the plot, but if you don't, they dig up the remains, even sold "internment rights" might start wishing it was a Bainbridge avenues, and be- c ursed with th e T humb of to their plots, sort of like those little less dark after listening gin at 7 p.m. Tickets are $20, Death). put them in a bone heap and let time-share deals offered by to a few of the tales of woe and seniors and students $15; don't Germans don't simply place the next deceased person have Florida condominiums. inexplicable postscripts that forget your flashlight. For in- flowers at a grave. They plant ago. But I digress. Back to the belong to some of the residents formation or to make reserva- them. Water t h em. P r u ne While most German cemewords. The most famous odd of Woodlawn. Which is exact- tions, 718-920-0500 or 877-496- them. If they can't do it, they teries will have nice gardens, epitaph here is marble tablet ly what we've come to hear on 6352, or go to woodlawncon- hirea gardener to keep things for amother lode offlora,try on the Roberts mausoleum this night, when Woodlawn servancy.org. looking nice. Hamburg's Ohlsburg Cemein which Pearl Roberts is inoffers its two-hour History and Cemeteries in Germany are tery. At nearly 1,000 acres, it's terred, reading, "I told you I Mystery Tour, starting at 7, Life, risingfromthe dead almost exclusively state- or the largest cemetery in Europe I'd just gone out for an ear- church-operated, and there are and thelargestpark cemetery was sick." Right above it is the after the very seriously gothic m ore good-natured plaque for iron gateshave closed forthe ly-evening stroll from my ho- guidelines for what types of in the world, featuring 450 Gloria Russell, who assures evening. tel in Papenburg, Germany. plants you can use, what colors species of deciduous trees and visitors, "I'm just resting my We trot past many of the And this part of town, outside of stone, etc. conifers; a spectacular colleceyes." most famous and upstanding the city center, was charming Maybe it's just as well, then, tion of r h ododendrons that Also popular is the grave of citizens, instead getting a gan- and unusual enough to keep that in Germany — as in more are spectacular when they're Edwina Lariz, "Devoted Fan of der at Orrando Dexter, whose me busily snapping photos of and more countries in Europe in flower; ponds; paths for cySinger Julio Iglesias." murder at his Adirondack es- its little canals, colonnades of and elsewhere — your plot be- clists and pedestrians; and Allan Dale Willcox's epi- tate remains unsolved to this trees, even a horse clopping longs to you only for a certain some rarebird species,includtaph seems to indicate he was day; Olive Thomas Pickford, down the cobblestone Main period. Maybe 15 to 25 years or ingowls. always concerned about othonce the "Most Beautiful Girl Street. ers. "If you're reading this," his in the World," who died of merBut then I came upon a relmarker chides, "you desperate- cury poisoning and, some say, atively huge Catholic church can't stay away from the foot- and, past its high walls, a ly need a hobby." You getthe idea. The cem- lights; her ghost still haunts graveyard. In I went. etery has character and gives Broadway's New Amsterdam And before I'd g otten a you an inkling of the charac- Theater. Then there's Ruth third of the way down a row ters who live in Key West, a Snyder, the Queens housewife of graves, I realized I wasn't place that gives all comers the who killed her husband in 1927 just strolling through a gravefreedom to be themselves. As and was sent up the river to yard. It had headstones, flowlongasthey're notm ean. Sing Sing, where she met her ers, statuary, yes. But here, the The cemetery is also distinc- death by electric chair. basic elements had been deftly tively multicultural. There's a Then too, the fine upstand- — you might say obsessively Saturday, November 15, 2014 gate to the section for Jewish ing citizens of Woodlawn, es- — arranged into a veritable boburials, and one for Catholics. tablished in 1863 and designat- tanical garden. Riverhouse Convention Center - Bend, Oregon The monument to Los Mar- ed a national historic landmark Each plot — they weren't Cocktails, dinner, dessert dash, tires de Cuba honors those in 2011, also have spooky tales. much wider than a single or silent and live auctions, and who fought to free Cuba from Money can't buy happiness, double burial plot, had been beautifully decorated Spanish rule during the 10 and despite this opulent mau- planted and clipped and detrees and wreaths Years War (1868-1878). An- soleum, FW. Woolworth, the signed and adorned into, Ticket price $100 (Sponsorships available) five-and-dime-store magnate, other monument remembers well, a scaled down front- or the more than 260 American had a life full of misfortune and backyard landscape. Some sailors who died when the is now said to haunt his former had foot-wide gravel, winding USS Maine blew up on Feb. 15, Long Island estate. paths leading to a headstone 1898, in Havana Harbor. Amid the creepy tales was (front door?). Some had hearts There are the Key West one really sweet — well, bit- inlaid in different colored pebmovers and shakers as well as tersweet — one. That of Isidor bles. Some had lachrymose those who just scraped by. The and Ida Straus, who owned miniature t rees. C herubs Otto family plot includes doc- Macy's and were among the peered from under hedges. tors, pilots and artists — also passengers on the Titanic All was well-sculptured and buried there are three York- (there's also a monument to shorn. I noticed, then, a large shire terriers and a domesti- all those who perished). When man with a hoe, tending to one Join Assistance Leayk of Bend in our cated Key deer ("Elfina"). The the call came for women and of the plots at the end of the of the dark. Even if you're not
Save the Date
headstone for Thomas Romer, a n A f r ican-Bahamian w h o served in the War of 1812 as a
privateer, features an epitaph Big or small, far or near, fa- that says he was a "good citimiliar or totally exotic, a cem- zen" for 65 years (he lived to be etery visit is guaranteed to be 108, but I guess .602 is a good atmospheric — as well as a re- batting average). minder how brief life really is One more quirk of Key and the need to make the time West's Old Cemetery. You'll you have above ground count. notice footlong, intricately colHere are a few recent cem- ored and scaled iguanas doetery finds I thought I'd share ing pushups on the graves, on withyou: the paths, in the trees. They're harmless (I think) and beautiFamous last words ful. No plebian colony of cats I love those lists of best for this town's cemetery! funny epitaphs, marking the Info: The Historic Florida graves of the famous - "I'll Keys Foundation offers walknever get out of this world ing tours twice a week. They alive" (Hank Williams), and also have a map of the ceme"I am ready to meet my Mak- tery you can download at the er. Whether my Maker is pre- website. 305-292-6718, hispared for the great ordeal of toricfloridakeys.org. meeting me is another matter" the (Winston Churchill) — and the Mysteryamong average — "I knew this would monuments happen" and"Well, this sucks." It's dark. Filthy dark. TowThese things take some ering-trees-and-no-streetlights nerve, I would imagine. After dark on a fall evening. The all, these are the last words roads are gravel, the lawns are you'll ever get. I can't remem- shot through with big old tree ber if I'd ever even seen any- roots, and my flashlight's dead, thing even a little outrageous in dead, dead as the 300,000 or so my graveyard explorationsunderground inhabitants of until I visited Key West, Florida. Woodlawn Cemetery, the big At the Key West's Old Cem- old spread in the Bronx, New etery, I hit pay dirt. Or pay York. My husband gives me granite. his flashlight; that's why I marThe cemetery was estab- riedhim. lished in 1847 on 19 acres, and You need a good flashlight number.
Jill schensul/The (Hackensack, N.J.) Record
In thls area of Germany near the Dutch border, cemeteries are thought of as gardens, and relatives come to tend the plots of thelr loved
children first to board the life-
boats, Ida stayed put. Isidor urged his beloved wife of 41 years to get on a lifeboat, but
she wasn't going to leave him. Straus, 67, was also offered a
mission to help those in need in Deschutes County.
row. That was when I first saw
the watering cans hanging from poles. And stations with
assistance league Bend
seat in one of the lifeboats, but
said he wouldn't leave until all the women and children had been safely taken away. So Ida stayed on the ever-more-listing deck with him. "We have lived together for many years," she said. "Where you go, I go." She removed her fur coat and gave it to her maid, Ellen Bird, who
State Representative
was seated in the lifeboat. The last they were seen,
they had been fiercely holding hands, like an old, devoted married couple. Isidor Straus is buried next to hi s w ife's
Trusted Leadership
empty tomb — her body was never found. Their mausoleum
is shaped like a ship — more Egyptian style than Titanic — and it bears the inscription: "Many Waters Cannot
Quench Love — Neither Can the Floods Drown It."
The tales were fun, but the darkness, the glimpses of shadowy weeping angels and especially the glints from the stained glass in mausoleum
Proven Record Please Vote
@ John Huffman State Representative
doors that made me t h i nk
somebody was in there, alive and maybe watching TV, pro-
votehuffman.com
vided the real spookiness.
Info: Woodlawn Cemetery is at Webster Avenue and East
Paid for by: Committee To Elect John E. Huffman
For Tidrets: 541-389-2075 or AssistanceleagueBend.com
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C5
F ori a's Ame ia Is an oasts tran ui i an i s t o By Marjie Lambert Miami Herald
A sliver of light peeked between the drapes of my hotel
Nl@Q g N' I I IfI I ~;.
room and woke me. The sun
was not yet above the horizon, and I watched a shrimp boat move slowly across the water,
the arms holding its trawl nets spread wide. I squinted, looking for the halo of seabirds that follow a working shrimp boat, but the view was blurry in the dim light, as if the day was not yet ready to come into focus. Suddenly the sun appeared, a half-globe of deep orange, and illuminated a small flock of sea gulls that flew close to
the water's edge. Then a maintenance ATV noisily fired up and drove onto the golf course
immediately under my win-
.a
dow. My silent sunrise over Amelia Island had finished its
1 "'C
performance. Amelia Island is at Florida's northeast tip, about 25 miles
northeast of Jacksonville and s urrounded by
w a te r t h a t
seems tokeep the fastpace of life at bay. Sunset at the Fernandina Harbor Marina on Amelia Island, Florida.
Photos by Marjie Lambert/ Miami Herald
The Amelia Island Museum of History is located in the old Nassau County Jail, which still has one or two of its jail cells.
Toward the southern end
are golf courses and luxury resorts. At its northern end is the port was used for gun-runFernandina Beach, a laid-back ning and for steamboats filled Old Florida town where people with tourists from New York. stroll the historic downtown
Fernandina Beach claims
after dinner, stopping at Fan- to have been the birthplace of tastic Fudge on Centre Street the commercial shrimp fleet in for an ice cream cone. the early 1900s, the first place M ost of t h e h o t els a n d to use weighted baglike otter restaurants are independent of trawl nets to catch shrimp in chains, and menus are domi- deep water. The island still nated by old-fashioned South- has a working fleet of shrimp ern favorites — crab cakes, boats, although it is much shrimp and oyster po'boys, smaller than it was a century pulled pork sandwiches, fried- ago. fish baskets.
I
a
Cruising the waterways
t
Rooted inhistory
Amelia River Cruises ofAmelia Island has a unique fers a variety of boat rideshistorical distinction: It is the sunsetcruises,cruises along only U.S. site that has been Cumberland Island and occaunder the flags of eight na- sional ecocruises, on which tions (including the flag of the shrimping is discussed and Confederacy). The first was use of the trawl net is demon- A beach on the eastern shore of Amelia Island. the French flag, flown by Hu- strated. The ecocruises have guenots who landed on the ended for the season and will island in 1562. The island was resume in June. But plenty of berland Island on foot. the beach in Amelia Island named after Princess Amelia,
boat trips, tours of Fernandina
daughter of King George II of England. Fernandina Beach was named in honor of King Ferdinand VII of Spain. Thirteen miles long and two
Beach's history and Civil War Fort Clinch re-enactments are available When I next r eturned to year-round. Amelia Island, a visit to Fort My introduction to Amelia Clinch was at the top of my Island was a cruise out of Fer- agenda. The brick fortress,
miles wide, the island has a
nandina Beach along the west
built in the mid-19th century
state park at both ends — one shore of Cumberland Island, after Spain ceded Florida to with a 19th century fort and a offthecoastofGeorgia. the United States, is the heart half-mile fishing pier, the othThe boat m otored away of Fort Clinch State Park. Viser with a mile-long fishing pier from the marina and along itors can walk atop the walls, — and a continuous strip of Amelia Island's west coast, where cannons point toward beach along its Atlantic side.
past shrimp boats and Fort
The maze of islands, marsh- Clinch State Park, where people explored the fortress walls and sunbathed on the beach. land is part of what makes it As we sailed slowly along es and riversthat separates Amelia Island from the maindistinctive as a vacation spot,
the Cumberland Island shore,
providing the settings for fish- our guide pointed out some of ing, kayaking, nature walks, its famous wild horses grazing bird-watching, s u nbathing in the swampy meadow and and sunset-watching. talked about the dilemma that Amelia Island turned out the National Park Service facto be the perfect overnight
es — let the beasts live as wild
stop — or longer — for my animals, or provide them with road trips into the Carolinas, an artificial environment that
State Park. I took the ride on
an overcast fall day, when brisk winds and a slow drizzle made the beach feel less like
Florida and more like Northern California. I was on Blaze, a chestnut
American quarter horse, as our guide led us along a nar-
In the early evening, the anna Beach to Cedar Key on the swer was easy: Watch the sunGulf Coast; the Victorian-style set. I walked to the marina and
train that ran from Fernandi-
Nassau County Courthouse,
a no-nonsense brick structure that now houses The Amelia
tic Ocean on the east, Cumberland Sound on the north, the Amelia River on the west and Nassau Sound on the south. Three centuries ago, Ame-
Island Museum of History. cabbage palms and live oaks, The small museum includes across a creek, over dunes and old jail cells as well as exhibthe sea. On the first weekend onto the beach, where dredges its on the Timucuan Indians, of every month, costumed vol- were replenishing the sand on the island's first r e sidents; unteers do historical re-enact- the eroded shore. Spanish missions; the Civil ments of the life of Civil War The wind got under my War; and the island's various soldiers, and rooms are setup worn canvas fisherman's hat industries. with the tools of that era. and sailed it across the sand. I left as the museum closed, The park has campgrounds, At the edge of the sand was ev- and Idebatedwhere togo next. beaches and a half-mile fish- idence of how powerful those ing pier. Only a few anglers winds can be: beheaded palms were using the pier on the day and oaks that stood naked, I walked out to the end; most their leaves and small branchof the people were there for es stripped by the wind. the walk in the salt air. A pel-
been converted into a luxury inn. That cruise does not dock at the island, so on another trip,
bot Island State Park, a barri-
I took a National Park Service ferry from St. Marys, Georgia
er island with beaches on one side, salt marshes on the other.
— not far f rom Fernandina
The sun l owered toward
the horizon, painting the sky with orange and pink, against
row trail that was lined with
of the city of Jacksonville, but
which the masts of sailboats
docked at the marina were silhouetted. Just before the sun disappeared, I spotted the
shrimp fleet docked beyond the sailboats, perhaps including the shrimp boat I had watched at sunrise on a different morning.
We rode into the water at
ican, unperturbed by people the ocean's edge but never got a bit of a detour, but a charm- includes food and veterinary that posed next to it for photos, above a leisurely pace. ing alternative to the budget care'? perched on the railing, its eyes Over several trips, I got betmotels along Interstate 95. F urther on, we saw w i l d fixed on a fisherman. ter acquainted with A m elia Other times I went to Fernan- turkeys on the narrow sand At the opposite end of the Island on tours — a guided nadina Beach just for its own beach. We passed a dock from island is Amelia Island State ture walk at sprawling Omni sweet self. Watching the beach which visitors could walk Park, which has a mile-long, Amelia Island Plantation Refrom the tiki bar at Sliders on to the ruins of Dungeness, a pedestrian-only bridge across sort, an unguided nature walk the east side or enjoying the castlelike mansion built by a Nassau Sound, where peo- at Fort Clinch State Park and sunset at an outdoor table at member of the Carnegie fam- ple fish for whiting, redfish, a walking tour of FernandiBrett's on the west side, I could ily, and the private dock for flounder, speckled sea trout, na Beach's historic buildings, feel the stress of the work Greyfield Inn, another former jacks and tarpon. Just across guided by a free app I downweek dissolving. Carnegie mansion, which has the sound are the far reaches loaded to my iPad. Much of life on the island is lived onthe water — the Atlan-
Brett's on the Waterfront. The
now 123 years old; 19th centu- wait staff quickly filled drink ry houses and churches, still ordersfor other sunset-watchin use. ers, and the air was scented by I ended at the old county jail, just-cooked shrimp.
" •
•
•
•
• •
•
' 0
•
On my most recent visit, the
no sign of urban life intrudes walking tour took me to the here, just the quiet of Little Tal- old depot that was built for a
lia Island's location on the
as the crow flies, but 27 miles
Horseplay
water turned it into a center of
via a roundabout route — and
smuggling and piracy. Later
spent the day exploring Cum-
Kelly Seahorse Ranch conducts horseback rides along
BUV NEW ... BUV EOCAE I' I •
•
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I
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N-LINE BIDING ENDS NOVEMBER 11 AT 8P.M.
wwvv. BulletinBidnBuy.com
'i:ft 't •
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Cannons still stand atop the fortifications at Fort Clinch.
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C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
SU D O K U
~et FR ~ et ~ ~ Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square,
co mpletegri the d so
that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
to form six ordinary words.
TH A T SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L Hoyt and Jaff Knurak
'ia S tgc ay m t4awr= ~
CLEATK
Continued from C1
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The brewery hosted its first,
already called annual, HopFest in September.
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Brau Brothers draws people
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Now arrange the circled letlers
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon. PRINT YOUR ANSWER INTHE CIRCLES BELOW
DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
Brewcations
on their way to go pheasant hunting and attracts others from just over the border in South Dakota and Iowa in addition to the Twin Cities. Now,
Brau said, brewing companies are looking "more outside the box" for customers. "The people who follow craft beer know we're here ... now it's about going out to people that maybe they're winery people or m aybe they're looking to do something else in the area, and this
is a nice little addition to fill
*
out the weekend or the week," Brau said.
JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
Bob Erler, marketing manager for Explore Minneso-
range of breweries there,
increase ofbreweries in the
rather than an influx of urbanites traveling in the other
area, and there was nobody it. "It becomes not really somethat was really tying it all together and talking about the thing that's pushed on people, North Shore craft beer scene." it's something that people acTourists go behind t he tually want to do; they want scenes at nine local breweries to explore the world of beer and learn their stories, includ- rather than being told they ing Bent Paddle, Castle Dan- should be exploring the world ger and Blacklist. of beer," he said. And business is growing, In White Bear Lake, Big Grandmaison said, adding W ood Brewery o pened i t s that the company might add taproom in February and is breweriesin Grand Marais to already attracting people from
might be morepeople com-
Sunday, November2, 2014
Warning label By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
"I don't know why he acts that way," I said to Cy the Cynic in the club lounge. "His demeanor is terrible." "All I know," the Cynic shrugged, " is that t h e worse things get, demeanor he gets." Grapefruit, our club member with an acid disposition and a matching tongue, b a dgers h i s pa r t ners unmercifully. That of course makes them play worse. Grapefruit wa s t o day's E ast. West's double of South's preempt promised a hand worth at least 17 points. When North raised to four spades, Grapefruit had enough to d ouble bu t w a sn' t w i l l in g t o speculate with a bid at the five level. West led the king of diamonds. He shifted to a trump — too late. South won, ruffeda diamond in dummy, took the ace of clubs, ruffed a club and ruffeda diamond. He took five more tricks with trumps for 10 tricks in all, plus 590 points, and Grapefruit told the kibitzers that West needed a warning label on his forehead. "You can't blame me for leading a h igh diamond when I h a d t h e A-K-Q," West growled. "You have a point," Grapefruit snarled. "But if you wore a hat, nobody would notice." Four spades should fail. If West were focused on picking a good lead instead of on the prospect of hearing from Grapefruit, he might reflect that
ing from outstate Minnesota to the Twin Cities to try the
rick Sundberg. Grandmaison said that when But Sundberg said he's the company started arrang- spending his efforts on making tours in July last year, ing morebeer — demand is "there was this trend and this exceeding his capacity now-
ta, acknowledged that there
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
his side has most of the high-card s trength, an d N o r th-South a r e bidding on distribution. In such c ases, a trump opening lead i s mandatory. If West leads a trump, he escapes Grapefruit's wrath. South will win and lead a diamond, but the defense can lead a second trump. South will fall a trick short. South dealer Neither side vulnerable
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a little bit like the old corner
go to if you're from out of town and go in and experience that — that's part of the attraction."
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uI think the appeal of these
smaller taprooms and the smaller breweries is they're kind of quaint, maybe they're Erler. nBut that's kind of fun to
CCt
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direction.
bar in a way for locals," said Ct5
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Photos by Kyndell Harkness/(Minneapolis) Star Tribune
Krtstina Van Moer, right, and Brianna Neil chat on the upper level of Fitger's Brewhouse in Duluth, Minnesota. and Wisconsin. CEO David
Duluth is also becoming the tour. known for its sizable concenIn Baxter, near Brainerd, tration of breweries. most of the people in the tapThe Duluth Experience, room of theJack Pine Brewwhich offers tours of North ery on weekdays are from the Shore breweries, along with area, but weekends feature its more traditional offer- more out-of-towners. " Beer tourism is a t h i n g ings of adventure and history tours, draws people from the people are willing to go out of
as far as Mankato, Duluth and
Twin Cities, the Iron Range
small percentage of total beer
their way for," said owner Pat-
St. Cloud, according to owner Jason Medvec. "It's a very attractive busi-
ness to be in — you really can't go a week without seeing an article or a story on the craft
brewing industry," he said. But with craft beer still only a sales, he added, "We've got a m long way to go. The Faletti-Watkins couple
CLt
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heard about the new taproom and "We ... were like, 'Heck
C3
yeah!'" said Sarah Faletti-Wat-
SOUTH 4 IAJ10 9 7 6 4
kins. "We don't drink the kiddie beer anymore, the Millers
cct
93 0 J432
Light, the Bud Light." They've been so busy travelingnearby to check out new
h
ctg
gog8 South W est 3 4b Dbl All Pass
rather than trying to promote
Nor th 44
breweries that they haven't
CLt CLt
E ast Dbl
headed to the North Shore for beer — yet. "We want to go .. . because they've got a bunch of
CD
Opening lead — Choose it
Veronica Larson pours a beer for a customer at Big Wood Brewery
breweries up t here," Sarah Faletti-Watkins acknowledged while drinking the Bark Bite IPA. "The hoppier the better." Added Lisa: "That's how we
in White Bear Lake, Minnesota.
roll in our house."
(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris an d Joyce Nichols LeWIS "FOLLOW THE MONEY" By ED SESSA
15 " Splash": 93 New Yeartn 127 Menlo Park Hanoi monogram Bobby Darin hit 94 Pertinent, In 128 Spire sites Ie eHOld legalese 129 Dadaist Max answerable ACROSS 97 *Abundant yield 130 "That smarts!" 17 Serving a I Young boy 102 Really selling 13I Jack , lead purpose 4 Dallas 105 Shows singer for the 18 See-through quarterback astonishment IengsmenIn 24 Unpleasant Tony "Louie Louiea 107 MartIRI's partner noise 8 Binding piece 108 Antipollution gp. 28 "What a shame" 13 Olympics 109 *Ncvel about a DOWN 30 Staltofan Ed spinner world traveler? I With little at MCMahon intro 19 pro nobis I I3 Verbal attentionstake 32 Belle of the ball 20 NastaSSOf grabbefs 2 DIYS's encore 33 More kindly tennis I Is Work on, In a 3 Slowpoke 34 RIng result, 21 Itmaybeputon way, as furniture 4 Brand made briefly 8 dOg IIe TV spots with vermicelli 37 Steinbeck 22 Sci-fi psychIC II7 Reaffirming 5 Norwegiansaint migrants 23 *LlnpredIctable response e slimy soil 38 parlay, e.g. influence II9 Doles CUI 7 WordsmIIh's ref. 42 Summer mo. 25 Go around 120 Present one's 8 Accessoryfor a 43 Nouveau 2e Baseball Hall of view marksman 45 wall st. Journal Famer Fingers 123 Rebate, and, 9 Defeat badly concern, WIth 27 Take over for 10 Eye's genesi s "thee literally, what 28 Luxury hotel the end of each 11 Baba or a boxer 47 Basic shelters facility 12 Re-Iiring 48 'eos attorney answer to a 29 Velvety sweater starred clue can workforce? general fabric be 13 Removal of 5I Ingenue quality 31 Turner II may be lined restdctions, 53 Watch displays, autobiography 124 WIth cedar informally for short 32 *eNC idea" 14 oLSI me take 54 Incantation COWIWearefs 35 Fr. holy woman 125 care of this!" start 3e Regal regalia 12e plus 39 Trail user I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 40 aAS to breathe were 20 life!": Tennyson 41 'Where words 23 25 may be mangled 27 28 44 Intimidated 4e Igub quaff 32 33 34 49 Tranfusion quantity 35 36 3 7 38 39 50 Eat in style 52 Comforted 55 bag 42 43 44 58 Sources of energy 49 50 51 e1 YOUTUbevideo SOUICS
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55 5 6
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13 14
17
18
Continued from C1 The Bond Site was discov-
ered by a team of archaeologists conducting a federally mandated survey of the area that had to be f i nished be-
fore U.S. Highway 97 and part of the U.S. Highway 97U.S. Highway 20 interchange could be expanded.
view the earliest humans who lived in the Pacific Northwest. The discoveries could also
the South Pacific to Indonesia,
help answer a long-burning question: How did these people get here? Connolly said the previous theory was that early humans
He said this theory can ultimately be proven only by making new discoveries and adding to the wealth of infor-
settled the Americas by cross-
over the past century. Even if the sites of the dis-
ing a land bridge that linked w hat i s
the Polynesian Islands, Hawaii and eventually the Americas.
mation that has been found
n o w S i beria w i t h coveries are not preserved-
Alaska and slowly migrated as was the case with the Bond " Most of w hat w e k n o w their way to the south and the Site — the information they (about prehistoric people) has eastfrom there. yield only gives people more been discovered in the last 35 But b ecause d i scoveries clues that could solve this to 40 years," Connolly said as like the Paisley Caves pushed mystery. uWe're just doing an explorhe was conducting a similar back the earliest date of husurvey outside of Redmond man occupation by 3,000 or atory process," Connolly said at the site of the proposed 4,000 years, archaeologists as he summarized his work Tetherow Bridge replacement are now wondering if that's on the Tetherow Bridge site. nIf project. the case. there's something here, there's Connolly said most of these An alternate theory is that something here and we'll archaeological surveys don't the earliest humans came to make a note of it. If there's not, yield anything significant. the Americas on boats they then we'll move on.n But those that do can fun- took from Southeast Asia — Reporter: 541-617-7816, damentallychange how we through the warm waters of mmclean@bendbulletitLcom
22 26
UV
29 30
s 4 6 47 52
59 6 0
66
1 5 16
Early settlers
67
48
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Scoreboard, D2 N B A, D3 College football, D4-5 Sports in brief, D2 Golf, D3 Preps, D5-6 Motor sports, D2 NHL, D3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
PREP CROSS-COUNTRY STATECHAMPIONSHIPS
COLLEGE FOOTBALL WSU's Halladay breaks leg PULLMAN, Wash. -
Washington State lost much more than the game on Saturday. Quarterback Connor Halliday, the nation's leading passer, was knockedoutofthegame in the first quarter and rushed to surgery. The senior may bedonefor the season. Washington State coach Mike Leachdoes not publicly discuss injuries. He saidafter the game that Halliday was taken into surgery, but he declined to release any other details. Halliday cameinto the game having thrown for 3,833 yards, with 32 touchdowns and 10 interceptions in the firsteight games of the season. Heset an NCAA single gamerecord earlier this year by throwing for 734 yards against California. Last year he set an NCAArecord with 89 pass attempts against Oregon. Freshman LukeFalk, a former walk-on with little playing experience. threw for 370 yards and two touchdowns in the 44-17 loss to Southern California on Saturday. The Cougars tavel to Corvallis next Saturday to face OregonState.
C
Ryan Kang /The Associated Press
Oregon's ThomasTyner runs for a third-quarter touchdown against Stanford on Saturday night in Eugene. The Ducks won 45-16.
• Summit's Matthew Maton shatters Galen Rupp'scourse record by10 seconds,while Stormset all-time state mark byfinishing with 19 points
MARK
MORICAL
Fina y, Duc s in irection vs. Car ina
s
— TheAssociated Pess EUGENEure, he would love to win a national
PAC-12 No. 5 Oregon Stanford
16
S
No. 5UCLA
1
year's NFL draft.
N o. 14 Arizona
championshipand the Heisman Trophy, and be the No. 1 pickin next
7
But before any of that, there was something else
'551
No. 15 Arizona St 1
No. 18 Utah 16 (OT)
Marcus Mariota wanted
to accomplish more than anything.
c««ss «««
ashington Colorado
8 23
Beat Stanford.
He finally did that on a cool Saturday evening at
Washington State 17 alifornia Oregon State
5
31
Arkansas
No. 6 Notre Dam Navy
39
Florida No. 9 Georgia
20
No. 10 TCU
for the national title. But
Oregon's "Stanford problem" is no more. SeeDucks/D5
No.11Kansas tae 48 O klahoma State 1 4 14
No. 13 OhioState lllinois
14
No. 17 Nebraska Purdue
14
HALL
ship race on Saturday at Lane Community College in Eugene.
By Beau Eastes
No. 24 Duke 51 Pittsburgh 48 (20T)
ning-savvy crowd roaring in appreciation of what it was about to witness, Summit's
The Bulletin
EUGENE — With a run-
© See more photos from the state cross-country championships on TheBulletin's website:hendhniietin.cnm/ spnrts/highschnni
Matthew Maton ran into the
Kevin Durant? Out for a few more weeks. Russell Westbrook? Outfora month with a broken hand. Andwith just eight players taking the floor, OklahomaCity beats Denver102-91 on Saturday night. NBA roundup,D3
D4
ZACK
Jce Kline/The Bulletin
emple 0 No. 21 EastCarolina 10
NBA Depleted Thunder down Nuggets
• Auburn tops Old Miss. Top 25 roundup,
fast for Beavs Summit's Matthew Maton celebrates as hecrosses the finish line in the Class 5Aboys cross-country state champion-
14
win,DS
go downhill
*
in
N .12B o
Kansas
• Duckscan now look ahead after
Game,season
1
No. 20 West Virginia 30
No. 19 Oklahoma lowa State
Inside
the Ducks out of the hunt
No. 4 Auburn No. 7 Mississippi 31
Radio:
another Heisman-worthy performance, only this Losses to the Cardinal the past two seasons kept
10
TV:ESPN
Autzen Stadium with yet
No. 2 defense.
TOP 25
No. 5 Oregonat No. 18 Utah When:7 p.m., Sat., Nov. 8 KBND-AM 1110, FM-100.1
time against the nation's
4
Nextup
record books Saturday afternoon at Lane Community College, shattering Olympian Galen Rupp's Oregon high school state cross-country course record en route to Ma-
ton's second straight individu-
al state title.
Maton, one of the fastest prep distance runners in
the country, crushed the 5,000-metercourse with an all-time-best mark of 14 min-
utes, 45 seconds, easily best-
ing Rupp's previous record of 14:55 set in 2003.
Averaging4:45 permile, Maton topped runner-up Justice Lamer of Crescent
Valley (15:34) by almost 50 seconds. With the record in reach as Maton hit the final 300 meters on the LCC track, the
crowd erupted in applause as he sprinted his way into history. See Maton /D6
Storm girls win 7thstraight state title By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
EUGENE — When Olivia Brooks hit the track at Lane
finish, she immediately thought about her Summit High track coach, Dave'Ibrnbull, and one
Community College on Satur-
ofhis favorite sayings. "It's going to hurt either
day about300 meters from the
way," Brooks said after top-
ping Marist's Olivia Powell in a sprint finish for the Class 5A girls cross-country individual state championship. "You might as well win." See Girls X-C/D6
Inside • Results fromthe crosscountry finals in Eugene. Prep scoreboard, Dg • White
Buffs advance with
shutout. Prep soccer roundup, DS
• Bulldogs move onto2A playoffs. Prep volleyball roundup, DS
CORVALLIS-
A
11 it takes sometimes is a play or two to
swing an entire season. On a chilly Saturday night at Reser Stadium
Oregon State's season went up in smoke. Until it wasn't. Before it was
again. In the end, that play
never came. If there was a problem that glared above all oth-
ers in a heartbreaking 45-31 loss at the hands of California on Saturday
night at Reser Stadium, is that the Beavers seemed incapable of making that playwhen theteam needed it most. It turns out, Oregon
State has a big-play problem. SeeBeavers/D4
Nextup Washington St. at Oregon St. When:1p.m., Sat., Nov. 8 TV:Pac-12
Radio:KICEAM 940,
KRCO-AM690, FM-96.9
Inside • Arizona State survives overtime against Utah. Pac-12 roundup,D4
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
NBA ROUNDUP
NHL ROUNDUP
Power playlifts Wild
u In un eI'
to 4-1 win over Stars The Associated Press
Jets 1, Rangers 0: NEW
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Thom-
ea u es
off a textbook behind-the-
)
)'W' )I
P erry Jones
isn't Kevin Durant or Russell Westbrook, though he's been close enough lately. The 6-foot -11forward scored 23 points and hit a clutch 3-pointer to help the
en at home with a 4-1 victory
over the Dallas Stars. Mikael Granlund a nd
't'/I / /
short-handed Oklahoma City Thunder
M att Dumba s t ruck
beat the Denver Nuggets 102-91 on Saturday night for their first victory of the
for the Wild, the first goal
for at least a month with a broken right
)
%f
I $ '::
star point guard, had successful surgery on his broken right hand Saturday morn-
'
!t .
' tt
I
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ik
contested 3-pointer with 1:46 remaining
that put the Thunder up 94-87. The ball was thrown inbounds with 2.2 seconds left on the shot clock, and Jones' shot set
off a celebration and ended Denver's furious rally. "It was a good feeling, especially looking at the bench and how wild they were getting," Jones said.
„JW
Westbrook was injured early in Thurs-
day's game against the Los Angeles Clippers, and Jones scored a career-high 32 points to keep the Thunder close in a 9390 loss. On Saturday, he shot 9 of 18, posted the second-highest point total of his
career and even helped out some at point guard. Jones said teamwork is allowing
seconds beforethe intermission. Vanek skated emotion-
less off the ice, only slightly shaking his head. He said he's not much of a celebrator. "It was more a relief more than anything," said Vanek, who signed athree-year, $19.5
ing and also will miss at least a month.
Durant and the injured players looked like they were healed after Jones hit a
ond period, and Boston beat Ottawa.
Penguins 5, Sabres 0: PITTSBURGH — Marc-An-
dre Fleury made 18 saves for his second consecutive shutout and Chris Kunitz scored
came when Vanek scored 57 twice and Pittsburgh earned
I I:,,'']t
foot, announced that Westbrook, their
f i r st
for each this season, but the loudest roar from the crowd
0'I. I '
season. The Thunder, already without Durant
RISE, Fla. — Roberto Lu-
g oal-line pass b y Z a ch ongo made 36 saves, rookie Parise, Vanek crossed both Aaron Ekblad scored his items off the to-do list on Sat- first NHL goal and Florida urday night. beat Philadelphia. Vanek capped a threeBruins 4, Senators 2: BOSgoal second period with his TON — Matt Fraser scored first score for his new team, his first two goals of the and the Wild stayed unbeat- season 1:28 apart in the sec-
/
/j.
YORK — Evander Kane and Blake Wheeler scored in the
as Vanek was bound to get a goal for Minnesota soon. shootout to lift Winnipeg to The Wild's power play was victory over the New York well overdue, too. Rangers. Scoring with a snap shot Panthers 2, Flyers 1: SUN-
r
k
)
The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY —
D3
Garett Fisheck/The Associated Press
him to shine.
"We're just sticking together," he said. LEANS — Chandler Parsons scored 20 "Running offense the way you're sup- points and Dallas won its second straight, posed to run it." over New Orleans. SergeIbaka scored 23points,Kendrick Hawks 102, Pacers 92: ATLANTAPerkins had 17 and Steven Adams add- Jeff Teague scored 25 points and Al Hored 13 for the Thunder, who won despite ford added 20 in Atlanta's home opener. having just eight available players. The Raptors108, Magic 95: ORLANDO, Fla. Thunder injury report included Durant, — DeMar DeRozan scored 26points, Kyle Westbrook, Reggie Jackson (right ankle Lowry added 21 and Toronto beat Orlansprain), Grant Jerrett geft ankle surgery), do for the eighth straight time. Jeremy Lamb gower back sprain), Mitch Heat 114, 76ers 96: PHILADELPHIA McGary geft foot fracture) and Anthony — Chris Bosh had 30 points and eight Morrow geft MCL sprain). rebounds for Miami, which won its secBeforethe game, Thunder coach Scott ond straight. Mario Chalmers scored Brooks only mentioned Jackson as being 18 points, and Dwyane Wade had nine close to coming back. points and 10 assists.
Mich. — Joe Johnson scored 15 of his 34 points in the fourth quarter as Brooklyn got its first win.
Devils 3, Blue Jackets 2: NEWARK, N.J. — New Jersey defenseman Adam Larsson broke a tie with 9:25 left
in the third period, and the Devils earned a come-from-
m illion contract w it h t h e Wild. "Even though it didn't look like much, it felt great."
behind win over slumping Columbus. Hurricanes 3, Coyotes 0:
Not only did the puck that whizzed past goalie Kari Lehtonen's glove give Minnesota a 3-1 lead, it gave Vanek his first goal in 10 games with the Wild and gave them their first goal in
RALEIGH, N.C. — Elias
29 extra-skater opportunities. They were the last NHL Oklahoma City's Serge lbaka takes a shot against Denver's Arron Afflalo in the second half of Saturday night's game in Oklahoma City. Ibaka had 23 points in the Thunder's win.
its fourth win in a row with a victory over Buffalo.
team to get one. Also on Saturday:
Lindholm scored two goals, and Carolina beat Arizona.
Lightning 4, Capitals 3: TAMPA, Fla. — Jason Garrison scored the tiebreak-
ing goal in the third period, and Tampa Bay beat Washington. Canucks 3 Oilers 2: EDMONTON, Alberta — Derek
Blues 3, Avalanche 2: ST. Dorsett had a goal and an asLOUIS — Brian Elliott made sist, and Vancouver stretched 27 saves in his 100th game its winningstreakto four with with St. Louis and stopped all three shootout attempts to
a victory over Edmonton.
lift the Blues over Colorado. MapleLeafs3,Blackhawks
JOSE, Calif. — Logan Couture scored the tiebreaking
James Harden had 26 points and eight rebounds, and Houston took a 37-22 lead
2: TORONTO — Peter Hol-
land scored at 2:21 of the
goal with 8:10 remaining to help San Jose win for the
after one quarter in starting 3-0 for the
third period and James Re-
third time in four games, a
second straight season.
imer made 45 saves and To- victory over the New York ronto beat Chicago. Islanders.
Rockers 104, Celtics 90: HOUSTON-
Bulls 106, Timberwolves 105: MINNEAPOLIS — Jimmy Butler made a surprise return to the starting lineup and made
Sharks 3, lslanders1: SAN
two free throws with 0.2 seconds left to help Chicago weather another absence
from starguard Derrick Rose. Jazz 118, Suns 91: SALT LAKE CITY — Derrick Favors scored a career-high 32
Wizards108, Bucks 97: WASHINGTON points and added nine rebounds, Gordon — Paul Pierce was tossed before halftime Hayward had 24 points and 10 boards, they wasted their chance. in his first home game with Washington, and Utah beat Phoenix. "A huge opportunity," Lawson said. "I and Otto Porter picked up the slack with a Warriors 127, Lakers 104: OAKLAND, mean, wecould have been 2-0 rightnow career-high 21 points. Calif. — Klay Thompson scored a cagoing home to play Sacramento, but this Grizzlies 71, Hornets 69: CHARLOTTE, reer-high 41 points in his first game since is huge in the West. You can't just give N.C.— Marc Gasol scored 22 points,Zach signing a contract extension, teaming away games." Randolph had 12 points and 12 rebounds, with backcourt star Stephen Curry to lead Also on Saturday: and Memphis opened 3-0 for the first time. Golden State past the winless Los AngeMavericks 109, Pelicans 104: NEW ORNets102, Pistons 90: AUBURN HILLS. les Lakers. Ty Lawson scored 20 of his 25 points in the second half for the Nuggets, but he felt
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All TimesPDT
d-Miami
astern Conference W L P ct 2 2 2 2 I 1 1 I 1 1 I I 0 0 0
d-Toronto d-Chicago Washington Boston NewYork Charlotte Atlanta Brooklyn Cleyelattd Indiana Milwaukee Detroit Orlando Philadelphia
0 1 . 000 0 1 . 000 1 .6 6 7 I/2 1 .6 6 7 I/2 I .50 0 1 .5 0 0 1 .5 0 0 1 tI I .50 0 1 .5 0 0 1 .5 0 0 2 .3 3 3 1)/t 2 .3 3 3 I)/t 3 .0 0 0 21/2 3 .0 0 0 2'/r 3 .0 0 0 21/2
INestern Conference W L Pc t GB d-Hotts 3 0 1 . 000 Ion Memphis 3 0 1 . 000 d-Golden State 2 0 1 . 000 d-L.A.Clippers 2 0 1 . 000)/t d-Pottland 1 1 .5 0 0 1)/2 Dallas 2 1 .6 6 7 tI Phoenix 2 I .66 7 Sacramen to 1 1 .5 0 0 1)/2 SanAntonio 1 1 .5 0 0 t)/t Denver I I .50 0 1)/t NewOrleans 1 1 .5 0 0 1)/2 Minnesota 1 2 .3 3 3 Oklahoma City I 2 .3 3 3 2 Utah I 2 .3 3 3 LA. Lakers 0 4 .0 0 0 31/2
Saturday'sGames
Dallas109,NewOrleans104 Miami t4, 1 Philadelphia96
Washington108,Milwaukee97 Toronto108,Orlando95 Memphis71,Charlotte 69 Atlanta102,Indiana92 Brooklyrt102,Detroit 90 Oklahoma City t02, Denver91 Houston104,Boston 90 Chicago106,Mirtrtesota105 Utah118,Phoenix91 GoldenState127,LA. Lakers104 Today'sGames Sacramento atLA. Clippers,t2:30 p.m. TorontoatMiami, 3p.m. CharlotteatNewYork, 4:30p.m. GoldenStateat Portland, 6p.m. Monday'sGames Houston at Philadelphia,4 p.m. Oklahoma City at Brooklyn,4:30p.m. NewOrleansatMemphis, 5 p.m. Bostonat Dallas, 5:30p.m. SacramentoatDenver, 6p.m. Utah atLA.Clippers,7:30p.m. Tuesday'sGames MilwaukeeatIndiana, 4p.m. Houstonat Miami, 4:30p.m. Washi ngtonatNewYork,4:30p.m. Oklahoma City atToronto, 4:30p.m. OrlandoatChicago, 5p.m. CharlotteatNewOrleans,5p.m. ClevelandatPortland, 7 p.m. PhoenixatLA. Lakers,7:30 p.m.
Summaries Saturday'sGames
Heat114, 76ers 96
MIAMI (114) Deng 7-11O-t 15, Williams5-9 2-2 15, Bosh Iizards108, Bucks97 9-1710-u 30, Cole4-7 0-010, Wade4-181-3 9, Andersen0-2 0-0 0, Chalmers5-8 6-1018, Napier MILWAUKEE (97) Parker5-172-2 13,Middleton2-7 I-2 6, Sand- 3-4 0-0 7, Ennis2-3 0-0 5, McRobertst-3 1-2 3, ers 2-4 4-4 8,Knight 9-153-4 24, Dudley2-5 0-0 Hamilton1-t 0-0 2,Dawkins0-00-0 0. Totals 414, Pachuliat-30-02, Mayo1-71-t 3, Hettson1-1 83 20-29114. PHILADELPHIA (96) 0-0 2, Antetokouttmpo2-3 0-1 4, Bayless5-10 8-8 Mbah aMoute4-10 1-2 9, Noel1-40-0 2, Sims 20, Marshal1-2 l 0-0 3,llyasova3-6 t-2 8. Totals 4-91-2 9, Wroten 6-11 8-1121, Thompson 4-8 0-0 34-80 20-2497. 10, Davies7-93-418, Thomas4-4 0-0 8, Johnson WASHING TON(108) 2-4 0-0 5, McDa niels2-4 3-4 8,Shved1-4 3-3 6, Pierce0-3 2-22, Nene10-122-322, Gortat9-14 2-4 20,Wall 6-146-919, Temple 6-94-518, Hum- Sampson0-00-00.Totals35-67192696. Miami 32 28 27 27 — 114 phries0-20-00, Porter Jr. 7-11 6-721, Rice Jr. 30 2 4 29 13 — 96 1-32-34, Gooden1-50-02, Miller0-00-00, Blair Philadelphia 0-00-00. Totals40-7324-33108. Milwaukee 17 27 24 29 — 97 Raptors108, Magic 95 Washington 29 20 34 25 — 108 TORONTO (108) Ross 3-72-210, A.Johnson7-9 0-214, ValanciMavericks109, Pelicans104 unas2-86-810, Lowry5-129-0 21, DeR ozan 9-18 8-10 26,Pattersort1-70-02, Hansbrottgh1-3 0-12, DALLAS (109) iams0-35-55,J.Johnson4-64-512,Vasquez Parsons7-134-420, Nowitzki 8-191-217, Chan- Will 1-9 4-4 6, FieldsO-I 0-0 0.Totals 33-83 38-48 dlei 5-71-411, Nelson3-80-08, Ellis 7-143-317, 108. Harris 4-7 2-4 t2, Amittu1-3 0-2 2,Wright6-7 0-0 ORLANDO I95) 12, Barea470 08, Jefferson1-40 Oz Totals 46Harris4-152-411,Frye4-101-211, vucevic/-0 8911-19109. 0-2 15, Paytott 6-124-8 16, Fottrnier 6-105-7 18, sEW ORL EANS(104) Evans8-193-322, Davis9-2113-1631, Asik5-8 Ridnour2-4 0-0 4,A.Gordon0-1 0-0 0, B.Gordon 3-6 t3, Holiday10-191-124, Gordon0-60-00, An- 3-8 0-0 7,Dedmon3-3 0-0 6, Harkless3-6 0-1 7, derson5-1t 0-0 0, Rivers1-31-2 3, Salmons0-2 Marble0-1 0-0 0, Nicholsott 0-00-0 0. Totals 38000,Fredette00000.Totals388921-28104. 81 12-24 95. 29 20 38 21 — 108 Dallas 32 34 20 23 — 109 Toronto 26 26 26 17 — 95 Newarleans 26 2 637 15 — 104 Orlando
Nets102, Pistons 90 BROOK LYNI102) Johnson14-233-3 34, Garnett 7-15 4-4 18, Plumlee4-6 2-4 10, Wiliams7-190-0 15, Bogdattovic 1-r 0-02,Andersott1-20-03, Teletovic4-7 2-2 t2, Jack1-40-0 2, Jordan3-3 0-0 6, Karasev 0-0 0-0 0, Kirilenko0-10-0 0. Totals 42-87 1113 102. DETROIT (90) Singler 2-70-05, Smith6-152-814, Drumm ond 6-9 2-4 14, Jennings6-14 6-7 18, Caldwell-Pope 3-104-4 t0, Monroe 7-124-5 t8, Butler 1-43-35, Augustin1-54-46. Totals 32-7625-3590. Brooklyn 33 26 22 21 — 102 Detroit 25 22 28 15 — 90
Grizzlies 71, Hornets 69 MEMPHIS (71) Prince1-5 0-0 2, Randolph 6-12 0-0 I2, Gasol 9184522, Cottley3-14339,Allen3-70-1 6,Carter 3-8 0-0 9,Pondexter 0-1 2-22, Koufos0-21-2 t, Udrih 3-80-0 6,Leuer1-50-0 2. Totals 29-80 10-1371. CHARLOlTE (69) Kidd-Gilchrist 2-4 7-1011, Wiliams1-3 0-0 3, Jefferson 8-193-419, Walker1-112-35, Stephenson 1-60-02, Henderson 4-70-08, Zeller3-70-06, Neal 4-101-1 10,Maxiel 0-10-0 0,Roberts2-4 0-05. Totals 26-7213-1869. Memphis 23 13 15 20 — 71 Charlotte 15 15 16 23 — 69
Bulls106, Timberwolves105 CHICAGO (106) Dunle avy3-8 4-5 t3,Gasol7-126-920,Noah
4-7 0-0 8,Hinrich 3-85-611, Butler6-120-15 24, Brooks6-11 1-116, Mirotic 3-6 4-412, Moore0-0 0-0 0, Snel0-1 l 0-00, McDermott 1-4 0-0z Totals 33-69 31-40 106.
MINNESOT A(105) Wiggin s3-102-2 8,Young4-90-08,Pekovic 6-14 5-617, Rubi3-10 o 0-0 6, Martin9-141I-u 33, Brewer2-5 0-0 4, Diettg 3-4 4-5 10, Williams 1-71-2 3, Bennett6-7 O-t 12,Muhammad 0-21-2 1, Httmmel 1-10-02, Budinger0-21-21. Totals 3885 25-31 105. Chicago 27 36 22 21 — 106 Minnesota 25 24 32 24 — 105
Thunder 102, Nuggets91
Hawks102, Pacers 92 INDIANA(92) S.HIII 3-8 2-210, Scola5-9 2-3 12, Hibbert 4-8 6-6 14,Sloart4-144414, Miles3-132-210,Stuckey 0-2 0-0 0,Copeland7-16I-3 21, Allen 3-7 0-06, Mahinmi2-21-15, RudezO-20-00. Totals31-81 18-21 92.
ATLANTA (102) Carroll 4-9 3-411, Millsap5-9 2-4 13,Hoiford 9-14 2-220,Teague7-14 IO-IO25, KorveI351-2 9, Antic2-42-37, Bazemore t-30-03, Sefoloshat-5 1-23, Mack252 26,Scottt-t 2 45. Totals 3569 25-33 102. Indiana Atlanta
Jau118, Suns 91 PHOENIX (91) Marc.Morris 5-8 0-0 12,Mark.Morris 6-121-2 13, Plumlee 3-40-06, Bledsoe3-114-510, G.Dragic 513 00 10, Len22 0 04, Tolliver 2 3 0 05, Green 6-18 2-216,Thomas3-11 2-210, Goodwin1-23-4 5, Randolph0-10-00, Enttis0-20-00. Totals 368712-15 91. UTAH (118) Hayward 9-153-324, Favors12-228-932,Kanter 1-31-1 3,Burke3-121-3 7, Burks2-86-610, Booker 790014, Hood2 63 37, Extim341-410, Gobert 1-34-46, Ingles0-30-00,Novak1-20-03,Clark1-1 0-0z Totals 42-8827-33118. Phoenix 22 33 20 16 — 91 utah 33 26 30 29 — 118
Rockets104, Celtics 90 BOSTON I90) Green7-192-2 17,Sullinger6-15 2-314, Olynyk 3-62-28, Rondo 2-9 t-04, Bradley3-110-06,Bass 4-80-08, Smart 0-72-22, Turner3-82-28, Thornton 4-101-1 9,Zeller2 24 58, Young3301 6, Pressey 0-00-00. Totals37-9815-1890. HOUSTON (104) Ariza 4-90-0 9,Jones10-16 3-3 25, Howard 5-9 410 14,Canaan311 02 9, Harden514141426, Black0-02-42, Terry2-51-1 7, Papanikolaott 1-40-0 3, MotieIunas1-44-6 6,Dorsey0-1 0-0 0, Daniels 1-2 0-0 3,Johnsono-t 0-00. Totals 32-76 28-40 104. Boslon 22 16 24 28 — 90 Houston 37 20 24 23 — 104
Warriors127, Lakers104
LA. LAKERS (104) Johnson6-91-1 15,Boozer4-91-1 9, Hil10-14 DENVER (91) 3-423, Lin0-66-66, Bryant12-283-628, PriceO-4 Gallinari 3-60-0 7, Faried3-8t-2 7, Mozgov4-6 2-2 10, Lawson 8-128-12 25, Afflalo 5-112-214, 1-21, Davis5-73-513,Ellingtont-20-02, Sacre2-4 1-5 0-0 3, Henry 0-00-0 0. Totals Chandler2-121-2 5,Nurkic 1-20 02,Arthur1-6 0-0 0-0 4, clarkson 2,Foye2-60-05,Robinsont-20-03,McGee4-60-0 41-8818-25104. GOLDENSTATE(127) 8, Gee 1-30-03. Totals 35-8014-2091. Barnes5-6 4-515, Green3-92-2 9, Bogut 3-10 OKLAHOMA CITY (102) Jones9-182-4 23,Ibaka10-19 0-0 23,Adams 0-06, Curryto-t9 8-831,Thompson14-188-9 41, 6-101-2 13,Telfair 1-102-44, Roberson2-4 4-48, Barbosa4-81-2 9, Igttodala4-80-0 9, Ezeli 1-1t-2 Collisott 0-32-2 2, Thomas3-9 6-912, Perkins6-t 3, Speights1-2 0-02, Livingston1-20-0 2, Holiday 0-00-00. Totals 46-8324-28127. 5-617. Totals 37-8022-31 102. Denver 17 16 23 35 — 91 LA.Lakets 35 20 31 18 — 104 Oklahoma Cit y 2 9 2 6 21 26 — 102 Golden State 29 3 2 32 34 — 127
Ann Heisenfelt/The Associated Press
Minnesota goalie Darcy Kuemper (35) deflects a shot in front of Dallas right wing Erik Cole (72) and Wild defenseman Marco Scandella, left, during Saturday's game in St. Paul, Minnnesota.
GOLF ROUNDUP
Perry, Perniceshare lead after Haascollapse The Associated Press SCOTTSDALE,
first event since regaining A r iz.
the No. 1 spot in the world
— Kenny Perry and Tom from Stacy Lewis on MonPernice Jr. shared the lead day, the South Korean had Saturday in t h e C h ampi- an eagle, four birdies and ons Tour's season-ending three bogeys at Miramar Charles Schwab Cup Cham- in wind gusting to about pionship, taking advantage 30 mph. In calm conditions of Jay Haas' third-round the first two days, she shot collapse. 64-62 to take a three-stroke Perry shot a 2-under 68, lead. and Pernice had a 70 to finMoore, Na tied at CIMB: ish at 8-under 202 on Desert Mountain's Cochise Course.
The 60-year-old Haas, four strokes ahead after opening with rounds of 66 and 62 to break the tour record for consecutive rounds
KUALA LUMPUR, Malay-
sia — Defending champion Ryan Moore and Kevin Na shot 5-under 67 to share the lead in th e C IM B
C lassic
at Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club. Moore and Na
of par or better at 38, had a
were at 12-under 204 in the
75 to fall a shot behind. He had a double bogey, six bogeys and three birdies. Also on Saturday: Park increases lead in Tai-
event sanctioned by the PGA
wan: TAIPEI, Taiwan — Inbee Park shot a 3-under 69
France opened with t hree
Tour and Asian Tour.
Levy shoots 9-under to t ake lead: SHANGHAI -
France's Alexander Levy of
in windy conditions in the
straight birdies and kept firing at flags until he had a
LPGA Taiwan Champion-
9-under 63 and a four-shot
ship to increase her lead to lead over Wales Jamie Donfour strokes. Playing her aldson in the BMW Masters.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D5
PREP VOLLEYBALLROUNDUP
OLLEGE FOOTBALL
Bulldogsmoveonto
With Stanford behind,Duckslook ahead 2A state tournament By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
EUGENE — It is now on to the
2)g
Bulletin staff report
4A playoff match. The eight-time state champions open tournament to take the opening set, Culver col- play at Lane Community College in lected itself and cruised to a 27-25, 25- Eugene on Friday with a quarterfinal 11, 25-8 victory over Reedsport in the match versus Hidden Valley. Against first round of the Class 2A volleyball Sutherlin, the Cowgirls served 94 CULVER — After needing a rally
rest of the season and perhaps a shot at the playoffs after fifth-
ranked Oregon snapped a twogame losing streak to Stanford with a 45-16 victory Saturday night.
$$%1S
Quarterback Marcus M ariota passed for 258 yards and two touchdowns and ran for two more
scores for Oregon (8-1, 5-1 Pac-12). Thomas Tyner returned from an injury to run for two touchdowns.
For the past two seasons Oregon has looked to have a good shot at a national championship berth, and
both times Stanford derailed the Ducks' season. This season Oregon climbed to No. 2 in the AP rankings
but stumbled with a home loss to Arizona on Oct. 2. "I know we're on a path to be a
really good team in our conference," Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said. "Our guys are tough. We're physically tough. They're mentally tough." Stanford's defense had allowed a total of just four rushing touchdowns through the season's first
eight games; Oregon finished Saturday's game with four. "The bottom line is we played against one of the best teams in the nation tonight and we fought them as hard as w e
c ould," Stanford
coach David Shaw said. "We tried to stay close and we got within a score inthe second half.We had to
play a near perfect second half and we didn't do that."
Ryan Kang /The Associated Press
Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota runs in a touchdown during the fourth
quarter against Stanford on Saturday in Eugene. scoringon Mariota's 6-yard scor- end zone on a 1-yard touchdown ing pass to true freshman Charles run to make it 24-13 at halftime. Nelson. Stanford answered on its Stanford was driving early in the opening possession with Jordan third quarter when Erick Dargan Williamson's 47-yard field goal. intercepted Kevin Hogan's pass at Mariotafaked a handoff and in- the Ducks' 1-yard line. Stanford's stead ran untouched for 22 yards Alex Carter intercepted Mariota into the end zone to give the Ducks on Oregon's ensuing series, and the a 14-3 lead. Stanford countered Cardinal went on to score on Wilwith Williamson's 43-yard field liamson's 25-yard field goal to nargoal. row it to 24-16. Tyner, who sat out Oregon's 59Tyner got into the end zone 41 victory over Cal last weekend again, this time with a spin move to with an undisclosed injury, mus- elude defenders on a 21-yard scorcled his way into the end zone for a ing run to close out the third quar1-yard scoring run to make it 21-6. ter. Mariota added a 7-yard keeper Oregon starting defensive end early in the fourth after Oregon Arik A r m stead, w h o r e t u rned recovereda Hogan fumble forced from a left ankle injury, was hurt by Dargan, then Mariota found again in the second quarter and Darren Carrington with a 25-yard had to be helped off the field by his scoring pass to make it 45-16.
The Cardinal (5-4, 3-3) had allowed opponents an average of just 250.6 yards a game. Opponents were averaging only 12.5 points. Oregon had 525 yards in total teammates. Tyner finished with 10 carries for offense. After Aidan Schneider kicked 63 yards. "We ran into a buzz saw today," The Ducks efficiently marched a 40-yard field goal for the Ducks, down the field on their first series, Stanford's Patrick Skov got into the Shaw said.
state playoffs on Saturday.
percent as a team, led by Abby Smith,
Class 5A state playoffs. Summit advances to the state tournament at Lib-
three blocks.
Storm's eighth trip to the final site in
tus, the White Buffaloes are returning to the Class 4A state tournament thanks to a 23-25, 25-15, 25-16, 25-18 win in the first round of the Class 4A
"We just had a little nervous ener- who was 20-for-21 with six aces, and gy we had to work out," said Bulldogs Laura Fraser, who was 9-for-9 with coach Randi Viggiano, whose team two aces. Smith also had eight digs, advances to the state tournament for as did Laken Berlin. Karlee Hollis the fourth straight season. had nine kills, and freshmen MadiCulver, the No. 2 seed, now pre- son Kussman and Cassidy Dill had pares for a quarterfinal matchup three kills apiece. against 10th-seeded Faith Bible of Sisters 3, Estacada 1: SISTERSHillsboro. The state tournament be- Nila Lukens posted 25 kills, five digs gins Friday at Ridgeview High. and four aces to lead the No. 2-seed On Saturday, Culver's Shealene Outlaws to a 25-8, 17-25, 25-20, 25Little racked up 27 kills, nine digs 14 win in the first round of the Class and two aces, while Lynze Schon- 4A state playoffs, Sisters advances to neker posted nine kills and four digs. the state tournament at Lane ComJenny Vega had four kills and four munity College in Eugene on Friday, block kills, Kaylee Aldrich totaled where the Outlaws will face No. 7 three block kills and two aces, and Cascade in the quarterfinals. Hawley Margie Beeler posted 38 assists. Harrer chipped in with five kills and Also on Saturday: 29 assists for Sisters, and Allie Spear Summit 3, Sandy 0:Behind 15 kills logged eight kills. Jessie Brigham by Haley Smith, the fourth-seeded had five aces and 22 digs, Alex HartStorm eased past No. 13 Sandy 25-16, ford dished out 20 assists, and Brooke 25-15, 25-12 in the first round of the Knirk finished with six kills and Madras 3, La G rande 1: L A erty High School in Hillsboro — the GRANDE — After a one-year hia-
the pastnineyears.Renee Kenneally had 11 kills for Summit, Brenna Roy logged 19 digs, Haydn Quatre posted 12 kills to go along with an ace, and Anna Omizo went 19-of-19 from the service line with two aces. The Storm
state playoffs. Madras, the No. 9 seed, will take on top-seeded Banks in the quarterfinals on Friday at Lane Com-
take on St. Helens in the quarterfinals on Friday. Bend 3, Hermiston 1:The visiting Bulldogs stole the opening set, but the No. 2 Lava Bears rebounded to se-
munity College in Eugene. Following a second-set victory, the Buffs closed
cure a 22-25, 25-20, 25-15, 25-12 in the
er 1: For the second straight season, the Saints of Bend advanced to the Class 1A state tournament. After trailing the first set 8-1, Trinity rallied for a 25-17, 25-17, 23-25, 25-16 victory
first round of the Class 5A state playoffs. Tatiana Ensz had 17 kills and 12 digs for Bend, which advances to the
the third game with an 11-2 run to take control en route to the win.
Trinity Lutheran 3, Condon/Wheel-
quarterfinals at Liberty High School in Hillsboro. Molly Warinner racked in the second round of the state playup 13 kills and three blocks, Alexa
offs. The Saints, the No. 6 seed, were
Evert had 37 digs, and Callie Kruska finished with nine kills for the
led by Katie Murphy's 13 kills and 12 digs. Mariah Murphy had seven kills, Taylor McCabe logged seven kills and 12 digs, and Megan Clift finished with 10 kills and 10 digs. Allison
Lava Bears, who face No. 7 Marist on
Friday. Crook County 3, Sutherlin 0:
PRINEVILLE — Cr o o k C o u nty Jorge dished out 33 assists, and Embooked a state tournament berth ily Eidler totaled six aces. The Saints
for the 12th year in a row, sweeping take on No. 3 Dufur in the quarterfiSutherlin 25-8, 25-16, 25-13 in a Class nals at Ridgeview High on Friday.
PREP SOCCERROUNDUP
Buffs blank Cottage Grove,
THTg ppA
advance toClass4A playoffs Bulletin staff report MADRAS — Five different players scored for Madras as the White Buf-
faloeskept theirboys soccer season
• IIIII
alive Saturday with a 5-0 Class 4A
g IIIII , Ryan Kang1The Associated Press
Oregon fans hold up asign Saturday. The Ducks had beenknocked out of championship contention the past two seasons by Stanford.
Ducks Continued from 01 In last season's 26-20 loss at Stan-
ford, Mariota was hobbled by a knee injury and rendered mostly immobile. Saturday's game was thecomplete opposite, as he rushed for 85 yards and two touchdowns in leading the No. 5 Ducks to a resounding 45-16 vlctory.
"To get this win was huge," Mariota said. "It'll build a lot of momentum heading into the rest of the year. It's
good to kind of get one under your belt, and bury the hatchet. They're a great program, and they're led by a great coach. The last two years they just out-executed us. This year it was awesome to run a little bit, finish
to continue to battle."
endzone.
"He escaped in the pocket, and the first nine minutes, which does he's so good at improvising and not seem terribly impressive — ex- making plays," Frost said of Mariocept that Stanford (5-4) was allowing ta. "He's just the best player I've ever 12.5 points per game coming into the been around." contest. Carrington, who had four catches The Ducks piled up 312 yards in for 58 yards, was all smiles when he just the first half, and Stanford was talked about the play after the game. "To me, it's a big deal to play with holding opponents to 250.6 yards per game. TheCardinal had held oppo- Marcus," Carrington said. "He's a nents to under 30 points in each of Heisman candidate, and I'm just a its past 31 games entering Saturday, little freshman. Marcus is ... man, which was the nation's longest such he's amazing to me. A play is never streak. ended with Marcus back there. You Yes, the Ducks did not just beat the just know something's going to hapCardinal, they hung 45 on thempen. He's like Houdini. When you and Heisman voters were watching. have a leader and quarterback like "We designed a few things for Marcus, things just seem to fall in Marcus,and then on some other place." things he was just Marcus," said The win puts Oregon in the drivOregon (8-1) scored 14 points in
drives, andscoresome points." Oregon offensive coordinator Scott Mariota's passing numbers were Frost. "I thought he actually missed not his best — he completed 19 of a couple throws that I never, ever see 30 attempts for 258 yards and two him miss, but he made some sensatouchdowns — as he missed some tional throws that nobody else in receivers andthrewone interception. the country can make. He's such a But he made that up with some spar- weapon with his feet, his arm, and kling plays with his feet. his mind." He fooled the entire Stanford deMariota put the game out of reach fense, faking a handoff then running with yet another touchdown run, untouched for a 22-yard touchdown sprintinguntouched aroundthe right to give Oregon a 14-3 lead in the first side 7 yards for a 38-16 lead early in quarter. the fourth quarter, sealing the victo"They gave me a lot of opportuni- ry and avenging two years of heartties to pull (the ball) on some of the break against the Cardinal.
er's seat to win the Pac-12 North
and aearn a spotin the conference championship game on Dec.5. Also, Oregon should be ranked in the coveted top four of the College Football Playoff rankings on Tuesday. But while the Cardinal roadblock is gone, Oregon moves on to its next
"faceless opponent," as the program mantra goes. The Stanford problem is now a Utah problem. Well, not so
much a problemas a challengethe Utes in Salt Lake City just might prove much tougher than the Cardi-
nalinEugene. "That's a fantastic place to play," guys outside did a good job blocking. saved his best for last on a 25-yard said Oregon coach Mark Helfrich That's what really triggered a lot of touchdown pass to Darren Car- of Utah. "It's a tough, tough environyards and a lot of first downs. With rington. M a riota p u mp-faked, ment. Their crowd is crazy." these defenses,they're so stout,that scrambled out of the pocket, then Luckily, the Ducks have their sometimes you'll get a yard or two on threw a strike to Carrington, who Houdini-like leader. first down, and you can't think that's m ade great a play to securethe pass — Reporter: 541-383-0318, the end of the world. You've just got and stay in bounds on the side of the mmorical@bendbulletin.com. zone reads," Mariota said. "And the
But Mariota was not done. He
The visiting Lava Bears had chances but could not convert, falling to Liberty in a rematch of a 2013 Class
5A play-in contest. After the Falcons scored in the 25th minute, Bend
play-in victory over Cottage Grove. countered with offensive pressure. Madras (10-5) will be on the road "We responded real well," said Bears for a first-round state playoff game coach Nils Eriksson. "We had a couWednesday against an opponent to ple point-blanks (shots) — we hit their be determined. keepermore than he saved it....W e Jose Romero scored in the 18th had some good chances but couldn't minute with an assist from Mario Urieta for a 1-0 lead that the Buffs
took into halftime. A Cottage Grove player was issued a red card late in the first half for tackling a Madras player, leaving the Lions a player short for the rest of the match.
stick one in the net." Bend lost a play-
er to a second yellow card midway through the second half and played a man down the rest of the way. The
Lava Bears finished the season 9-6-1 overall. North Valley 5, Crook County 2:
The Buffs dominated the second GRANTS PASS — The visiting Cowhalf, getting goals from Urieta and boys trailed 3-1 at the half before Manny Diaz in the first three min- falling to North Valley in a Class 4A utes of the period to take a 3-0 lead. play-in contest. Crook County, the Giovanni Aguilar added a goal for No. 3 team from the Tri-Valley ConMadras, and Oved Felix capped the ference, finished the season 8-5-2 scoring with less than two minutes overall. left in the match. Sean Leriche, Jonathan Reynoso, Felix and Obed Er-
GIRLS SOCCER
La Salle 1, Mountain View 0:MIL-
iza each had an assist for the White WAUKIE — In a Class 5A play-in Buffaloes. match against No. 5-ranked La SalGoalkeepers Bryan Renteria and le, the visiting Cougars fell 4-2 in Simon Sangha combined for the shut- a shootout after losing what coach out, aided by what coach Clark Jones Donnie Emerson believed was two called a strong defensive effort on the goals o n co n t roversial n o -calls back line by Omar Dominguez, Ri- duringa scoreless80 minutes ofregcardo Salgado and Gustavo Alonso. ulation play and two 10-minute overAlso on Saturday: times. In the 65th minute, a shot by BOYS SOCCER Taryn Poole from 45 yards out got Mountain View 5, Milwaukie 0: Be- past the La Salle goalie, and "we felt hind Zach Emerson's two first-half it broke the plane (of the goal line)goals, the Cougars grabbed a 3-0 our players had already started celehalftime lead en route to a Class 5A brating," Emerson said. But the refplay-in victory over the visiting Mus- ereeruled otherwise, and play contangs. Mountain View (8-4-2) advanc- tinued. Another long shot by Poole in es to a first-round state playoff game the second overtime period was bobon Wednesday; site and opponent bled by the Falcons' goalie along the have yet to be determined. Emerson's goal line, and again Mountain View two scores sandwiched a 28th-min- felt the ball had crossed the plane. ute goal by Taylor Willman — a blast RosalieMendez and Poole scored for from 20 yards out that Cougars coach the Cougars in the shootout. "We put JerryJimenez described as the "goal together a very special game today," of the year." Willman, who also had said Emerson. "A hundred minutes an assist, added a goal in the 66th of our best soccer of the year. And in minute on an assist from Emerson,
the end, when you get to a shootout,
and Kevin Pfeil capped the scoring in the best team doesn't always win." the 71st minute. Liberty 3, Bend 0: HILLSBORO-
M ountain View f i nished with overall record of 7-7.
an
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'Ihis periodical is intended to present information we fed is valuable to our customers. Articles are in no way to be used as a prescription for any specific person or condition; consult a qualified health practitioner for advice.'Ihe artides appearing in Health Hotline' are either original artides wriuen for our use by doctors and experts in the field of nutrition, or are reprinted by permission from reputable sources. Artides may be excerpted due to this newslener's editorial space limitations. If you would like to be added or removed komthe Health Hotline Mailing List or have a change of address, please call 303-906MOO or online at naturalgmcera.comiaubacribe. Pricing and availability may vary by store location. All prices and offers are subject to change. Not responsible for typographic or photographic errors.
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New Research Reveals How Healthy and Unhealthy Foods Affect Our Moods
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References: White BA, Horwath CC, Conner TS. Many apples a day keep the blues away —daily experiences of negative and positive alfect and food consumption in young adults. British Journal ofHealth Psychology, 2013:doi 101111bjhp 12021. Yoto A, Motoki M, Murao S, et aL Effects of L theanine or caffeine intake on changes in blood pressure under physical and psychological stress. Journal of Physiological Anthropology, 2012;31:28
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Yoto's study focused on eight men and eight women whose averageage was 23 years.The subjectswere given either 200 mg of L-theanine or 100 mg of caffeine. After taking one supplement or the other, the subjects were placed in a stressful setting, such as trying to answer math problems with one hand in a bucket of ice water. Subjects were classified as "highresponse" if they developed high blood pressure while hying to solve the problem. Those subjects had a decrease in anxiety and a smaller increase in blood pressure after taking L-theanine.
The foods included fruit, vegetables, chocolate-coated or creamfilled cookies, chips, and cakes or buns. The negative-mood adjectives were depressed, sad, unhappy, anxious, nervous, tense, angry, hostile, and short-tempered. In contrast, the nine positive-mood adjectives were calm, content, relaxed, cheerful, happy, pleased, energetic, enthusiastic, and excited
•
•
In separateresearch,Ai Y oto,PhD, and her colleagues atthe University of Shizuoka, Japan, studied the effects of L-theanine and cafFeine on stress and anxiety. L-theanine, found in green tea, has neurotransmitter-like effects, improving both mental focus and a sense of calm. CafFeine, also found in green tea, tendsto increase blood pressure.
moods.
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"Meaningful changes...were observed with the daily consumption of approximately seven to eight servings of fruit and vegetables," wrote Conner and her colleagues.
Tamlin S. Conner, PhD, and her colleagues at the University of Ota g o s t udied the e a t ing habits of 281 students, whose average age was 20 years. The students kept an internet-based food diary each day for three weeks, while also reporting their consumption of five specific foods and their positive or negative
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The individual students reported significantly better moodssuch asbeing happy, calm, and energetic— on the days they ate more fruits and vegetables. A "lagged analysis" showed that eating fruits and vegetables predicted a positive mood the following day, suggesting that the healthy foods were leading to better moods (and not vice versa).
I
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Many nutrients, such as omega-3 fish oils and B vitamins, are known to enhance ~ mood and reverse depression. Now, a studyby a team ofNew Zealand 'e) researchershas shown thateating fruits and vegetables can help "keep the blues away."
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E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
B USINESS MONDAY Microsoft Certification Prep — Excel 2013: Mondays and Wednesdays Nov. 3-12; $159 plus testing fee, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. BusinessFundamentals
Bootcamp — HumanResources: Series of workshops for anyone interested in tuning up or starting up an organization; call to register; $10 per course; 6:308:30 p.m.; COCC — Crook County Open Campus, 510 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-447-6228.
TUESDAY SCORE free business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute oneon-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend
END A R
Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.SCORECentral0regon.org. Basic Business Financials for Artists and Entrepreneurs: Learn how to improve your financial knowhow; $60, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; The Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; 503-853-9662, classes© theworkhousebend.com or www. theworkhousebend.com.
WEDNESDAY Online Marketing with Facebook: Learn hands-on how to create an
online presence andsuccessfully
market and advertise your small to medium business with this social media site; Nov. 5 and 12; $69, registration required; 9 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
Business Start-up Class: Learn the basics ofturning a greatidea
into a successful business; $29,
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
registration required; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837290, sbdc@cocc.edu or www.
cocc.edu.sbdc.
THURSDAY Problem Solving 8 Decision Making: Learn to handle your emotions and your reaction to others; part of the COCC Leadership series; $95, registration required; 8 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. PMP Exam Preparation: Classroom instruction for those close to meeting the requirements to take the Project Management Professional certification exam; Nov. 6 and 13; $289 includes textbook, registration required by Oct. 23; 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. Getting Traffic te Your Website
the Easy Way: Learn to use Google AdWords to get targeted traffic to your website; must have existing website, Nov. 6, 13, 20; $89, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541383-7270. Successful Customer Service Strategies: Learn to implement a customer service program that ensures a positive experience for your customers; Nov. 6 and 13; $69, call to register; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541383-7290.
FRIDAY Refine Your Website with HTML and CSS: Learn to use coding languages that work on all sites; Nov. 7 and14; $149, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend;541-383-
7270.
SATURDAY Beginners QuickBooks Pro 2014: Learn to do your own bookkeeping; $85, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-3837270.
Scrapie Workshop: Learn about diagnosis and treatment within sheep; free, registration required; 9-11:30 a.m.; COCC — Crook County Open Campus, 510 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-4801340 or tcfocbbmail.com.
MONDAY
optimization and more; must have existing WordPress site and intro class or equivalent; Mondays and Wednesdays Nov. 10-19; $129, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270.
TUESDAY Nov. 11 Estate Planning Workshop: Learn to secure your estate and retirement planning; free, registration required; 9:30 a.m.1:30 p.m.; Red Lion Hotel, 1415 NE Third St., Bend; 866-2528721, bmorphisowsimail.com or
www.claestateservices.com.
SCORE free business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-
on-one conferences with local
Nov. 10 Build Your Business Website with WordPress H: Learn to modify themes, customize content, use
advanced plug-ins, search engine
entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.SCORECentral0regon.org.
• Lesley Kannier to Erin E. andJay D. Henderson,Oakview, Phase6, Lot24, $297900 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Tyler W. Herrick, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 78, $265,000 • Robin L. andTimothy W. Thomas and Sherry A.Harmon toBradley A. Bassett, trustee ofthe BradleyA. Bassett RevocableTrust, and Leota M. Bassett, trustee ofthe Leota M. Bassett RevocableTrust, Ridge at EagleCrest 15, Lot 14, $327,000 • Darin M. and AmyA. Burgstahler to Thomas P.andDeborah A. Harbolt, Ridge atEagleCrest 37, Lot1, $165,000 • Riviera BendLLCto Nadine B. Dubrule, CarriageAddition, Lot1, Block 4, $240,000 • Phillip E. Helfrich andBeverly J. Davis-Helfrich, trustees ofthe Helfrich RevocableTrust, to Andrew K. Bialkowsky,Township18, Range12, Section17, $317000 • Holly J. Cannon to Gregory andKristi Erickson, Township18, Range12, Section 2, $230,000
• Charles D. andElizabeth A. Christman to Jon D.and Sharon L Golden,Yardley Estates, Phase1, Lot 25,$375,000 Crook County • Todd, Courtney, Dominic andJennifer Albertini to Patrick Clark, Brasada Ranch 2, Lot225, $285,000 • East Tricopro LLC to Corina M.and Robin L Wright, Barron's Subdivision, Lots4and 5, $169,900 • Ronald B. Hegli, trustee of the Hegli Family Trust, to Jeffrey W.andAnn E. Roberg, Partition Plat2003-39, Parcel 2, $250,000 • G.W. Stafford LLC toPrineville Hospitality LLC,Township15, Range 16, Section 4,$2,300,000 • G.W. Stafford LLC,Mark Stafford, Benjamin B.Groff III, trustee ofthe Benjamin B.Groff III Trust, andJacki L. Groff, to Prineville PetroleumLLC, Township15, Range16,Section 4, $2,900,000 • Catherine A. Howard,trustee ofthe Catherine A.Howard Trust, to JamesR. and Tiffany Fewell,Township14, Range 17, Section 22,$390,000
• Washington Federal, N.A., successor by merger toSouthValley Bank, toGary A. and Joyce M.Smith, Township14, Range14, Section 21 and 28,$620,000 • Gutierrez Cattle Company Inc. to Kirk D. and Paige Winebarger, Township17, Range 22,Section 8, $350,633 •VanceW .Tongto LauraM.Jenkins, Hudspeth Addition, Phase 5, Lot51, $167,160 • Melva D. Grizzell to TheRussell LLC, Township15, Range17,Section16, $240,000 •BrasadaRanchDevelopmentLLCto Alan Henry Hirsch, BrasadaRanch8, Lot 604, $158,400 • Donald M. andPatricia R. Pitman, cotrustees of thePitman FamilyTrust, to Stephen H.Pitman, RedCloud Ranch, Lot9, Block3, $470,875 • Brasada Ranch LLCto Richard W. Olson, trustee ofthe Olson Living Trust, BrasadaRanch8, Lot610, $170,100 •BrasadaRanchDevelopmentLLCto Richard W.Olson, trustee of the Olson Living Trust, BrasadaRanch 8, Lot 605, $169,200
multiple times. But in June 2013, Elliott and Scott became the first in Oregon to receive state and city
built at market value.
their project to a higher level of green building standards.
DEEDS Deschutes County • Shelley L Asgharian to Sophia Development LLC,Bend Park,Lot6, Block 7,$151,000 • Provident Funding Associates to Russell L andJeanA. Parker, Willow Springs, Phase1, Lot19, $159,000 • Lawrence R. andTrisa Lindsay, who acquired title asTrisa Russell, to Steven S. and Gail A.Merydith, Township16, Range12, Section10, $417000 • Pat M. and TheresaA. Korish to Stephen D.Naseand Belinda Bowden, Eastside Business Industrial Park, Lot1, Block 5, $300,000 • Marsha J. Anderson to Peak Holdings One LLC,RiverTerrace, Lot14, Block 15, $285,000 • Federal Home LoanMortgage Corporation to John J.Wright and Darlene E.Nastansky, Forest Hills, Phase1, Lot 83,$410,000 • Federal Home LoanMortgage Corporation to Daniel I.andMauryA. Marmor, MeadowviewEstates Second Addition, Lot13, Block6, $180,500 • Charles Cannan and Laurie King to
Desert Rain Continued from E1 They've set precedents that will create opportunities for sustainable construction. And their team has proven that a residential home can be built
to the guidelines of the Living Building Challenge —a set of green buil ding standards designedtobethe mostadvanced possible — in hopes that one day those standards will be-
come mainstream for homes and evensubdivisions. "Thirty years ago, when my ranching operation in Montana first shifted to a certified organic standard, there was
no market for organic," Elliott said. "There was not much understanding of how it was
done.There were no systems in place. You certainly didn't see it in restaurants or Safeways
or Albertsons.And today, you walkinto any supermarket and
there's anorganic section. "We'replanting a seedhere. All peoplewho are working on LivingBuilding Challenge projectsare planting a seed for the future."
Thecouple expects construction on Desert Lookout, the
Therese E.Langley, PanoramicView Estates, Lot15, Block 3,$200,000 • Timothy T. andLinda F.Chatton, trustees of theChatton Family Trust, to Douglas G.and Lucy L.Houser,Indian Ford Meadows,Lot 3, Block3, $274,500 • Douglas L and JamieP.Zielinski, trustees of theZielinski Living Trust, and Steve andMary Rentfro, to HomerA. and Deborah A.Marcum, Ridgeat Eagle Crest15, Lot 28, $325,000 • Bella Villa Homes Corporation to Alan N. and SusanH. Grahame,Caldera Springs, Phase3, Lot 22,$510,000 • Pacific CoastConstruction Inc. to Richard S.andKelly J. Vessey,Amber Springs, Lot10, $225,000 • John R. Cyrto Lola J. Nick, Circle C Acres, Lot 8, Block 4,$237,000 • Joshua P. and Sarah Mosleyto Jonathan T.Brower andFaith A. Powell, Parkside atPilot Butte, Lot 4,$230,000 • Norman C.Lamb, trustee of the NormanC.LambRevocableTrust and successor trustee ofthe Virginia B. LambRevocableTrust, to Janine Meyers, Mountain VillageEast4, Lot6,
The LivingBuilding Challenge Like Leadership in Energy 8 Environmental Design (LEED) standards, the Living Building Challenge provides guidelines and requirements for constructing an environmentally friendly building. The challenge, created bythe International Living Future Institute, "defines the most advancedmeasureofsustainability in the built environment possible today," according to the institute's website. It rests on seven areas, or petals, that must be achieved to meetthe challenge. Highlights of the seven petals: • Site: Requires that building take place on brownfield or grayfield sites to cut down on urban sprawl. • Water: 100 percent of water used must come from collecting precipitation, and wastewater must be treated on-site and reused. • Energy: 100 percent of the energy needs must comefrom on-site renewable sources.
Block 23, $319,000 • Elaine Sigvaldsen to Kirk B. and Ruth M. Woolpert, FairwayCrest Village 2, Lot15, Block10, $340,000 •RonnieC.and Bonita M.Chaseto Liam J. Hughes,TollgateSeventh Addition, Lot 354, $255,000 • Mathew E. Burnsto Kimberly A. and DavidStevens, OregonWater Wonderland Unit2, Lot10, Block25, $201,500 • Lee and JaninaA.Agee,trustees of the Leeand Janina A.AgeeRevocable Trust, to Alyson K.Belcher andMaryJ. Eisenberg, BadgerForest, Phase1, Lot 37, $187,400 • Paul B. and Laura L Leighton to Prima LLC, AwbreyVillage, Phase2, Lot 25, $465,300 • Ryan C. and Denise Hirschberg to Christopher J.Watson and Hanako Kubori, Millcrest, Lot 6, $325,000 • Margaret Moore andMichael Golden, trustees of theJosephand Myrtle Golden FamilyTrust, to DennisandJulie Mills, TimberCreek2, Phase1, Lot45, $297,500
• Health: The project's air quality is monitored, including testing for particulates and volatile compounds before occupancyandninemonthsinto the occupancy. Nosmoking is allowed within the project's boundaries. • Materials: No toxic materials can be usedduring construction, and the teammust advocate for sustainably sourced materials and consider materials sourced within certain geographic limits. The project must conserve, reuseand recycle throughout all phases. • Equity: The project must be built on a humanscale, not automobile scale. It must be accessible to all people, including providing handicapped access. • Beauty: The project must contain design features intended solely for humandelight and the celebration of culture. A final element requires the project to be operational and meet the standards for12 consecutive months. Source: International Living Future Institute
has the potential tobe the first single-family homein the U.S. "That's the promise we've tobe fully certified, he said. "We're advocating for an beengiven,and we'resticking to it," Scott said. entirely different approach The couple began moving to building," Freed said. "Our into their home Dec. 2, 2013. strategy is not to encourage Over the past year, they've peopleto be lessbad, because made lifestyle adjustments and we know that we can't recylearned to operatetheir cut- cle our way out of it. Instead, ting-edge systems. Andon Jan. we advocate for a whole oth1, theyhope to start a 12-month er approach. We're aspiring period of living in the house for buildings that regenerate and using no outside electrici- the environment, that avoid ty,water or sew er services.It's using known cancer-causing oneof the final requirements of chemicals,that conserve and the Living Building Challenge reuse their own water andprobefore the project gets audited duce more energy than they to ensure compliancewith the consume." StafldBI'ds. "The audityear is important,"
Scott said. "Theyrequire it. But as soon as we are living here andusing these systems, in my mind, it's working. I mean, we havebeen living on rain and solar for nearly a year." Worldwide, only 225 buildings have gone through the Living Building Challenge process, said EricFreed,vicepresi-
site, without putting it into the
The beauty of Desert Rain:
It provides peoplewith a true road map and an example of how to achieve the challenge, Freed said. So what does $631.65 per squarefoot getyou? • A total of 5,518 square feet
tem to monitor and track water
and energy use, accumulate data and alert thecoupleto any problems. Scott said the Living Building Challengedid not require the monitoring system. The
couple installedit for their per-
terials used in the project to be
documented. "I think (Desert Rain) rep-
of the LBC will become entrenched in the development
and construction of our homes
tures will be much simpler in designand will leverage all of theknowledge we and our collaborating trades have developed overthe past six years." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbuffetin.com
and will accomplisha lot more
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and communities." After Desert Rainis finished,
Elliott and Scott have noplans of stopping. "I've been on this treadmill
doingthis work." They expect their n ext
I
i
I
Scott said. "I can't imagine not demonstration project to b e
buildingtwo homes on a neighboring pieceof land to Desert Rain. They call it Jefferson Lot,
namedfor the street, Jefferson Place.
project manager and co-ownElliott and Scott plan to take er of Timberline Construction, what they learned from Desert said the precedents set by Des- Rain and apply it on a more ert Rain should help similar
email. "The Jefferson struc-
platinum-level home is a much more m a instream t h ought
values in residential construc- planned on building a LEED tion," he wrote. "Moving for- Platinum home, but decided ward, I would hope in 5 ... 10 to scrap those plansand take ... 20 years much of what we accomplished here will become the norm. I am sure the future methodology will be different
of the project was to construct living spacethatwould houseup to eight people, sothe systems generate enough water and
James Fagan, Desert Rain
"We've identified materials
and systemsthat can be designed, approvedand built for a fraction of what our original costs were," Scott wrote in an
in the end," hesaid. Elliott and Scott originally edge of current sustainable
and amped up for so long,"
solar-electric system will also chargetwoelectricvehides.
However, they intend to seek LEED-Platinum certification for Desert Rain. The cost to bu ild De sert Rain wa s e x orbitant, they
resents and realizes the cutting
sonal interest. He also noted that the intent
power to meet those needs. The
To build a L E E D P l a ti-
sewer lines. The blackwater num home today in Tetherow systemcostabout$49,000,and would cost about $325 per the graywater system cost the square foot, he said. Desert Ra i n see k s to couple $26,000. Those figures do not indude design and reg- demonstrate the highest level ulatory fees. of sustainability, he said. But The second biggest chal- it's not practical from a purelenge: finding, vetting and ly financial standpoint for 90 tracking building materials, percentof thepopulation. "I applaud t hem f or t h e Fagan said. The Living Building Challengerequires all ma- project,but I think building a
and elegant, but the principles
NW Shasta Place, to be completedDec. 1.
to sit down with a pencil and show me how it 's done be-
approval to treat and reuse causeit's not possible," he said. graywater by having it filtered Olsenhas built over several through a constructedwet- years threeLeadership in Enland. And in April, they were ergy andEnvironmental De- agree, but Elliott and Scott the first in the state within a sign (LEED) Platinum homes, believe they can take the lescity sewer district to receivea in Shevtin Ridge, Brasada sonslearned and cutcostsfor future projects. permit to treat blackwater on Ranch andin Tetherow.
and most likely more efficient
fifth and final structure at 22
"Somebody is goingto have
economical scale. They want
projects get approved in the to build two homes at current market value on the westside future. "It has been many things: of Bend that meet the Living fun, challenging, difficult, re- Building Challengestandards. "We are looking for people warding, frustrating andin the asbuilt. end, a great learning experi- to invest in this project, and if • A property that captures ence," Faganwrote in anemail. somebody is interested, that andprocessesrain and melt ed The biggest challenge was would be the best thing for us, snow on-site for drinking and pulling the various water sys- not to have to fund the whole dent of the International Living other householdneeds. tems together, Fagansaid. thing," Scottsaid. • Homesbuilt with all nonShayne Olsen, owner of Future Institute — the organiThe city of Bend rejected the zation that created the chal- toxic materials. couple's plansto reusegraywa- Bend Trend Home — a con• An LED lighting system. ter — wastewater from sinks, struction companythat speciallenge.And only five out of 50 • Solar electric and solar showers and laundry — and izes in high-end, enetrgy-effisingle-family homes that have registered for the challenge thermal systems that provide treat blackwater — water car- cient homes —doesn't believe a have achieved ce rtification. powerand heat. rying human waste and waste- home thatmeets Living Build• And a $58,000control sys- water from di s hwashersing Challenge standardscanbe Once completed, Desert Rain
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
E3
Learnin to mana e' estructive ero'em o ees By John Grossrnann«New York Times News Service
he results are always blindingly good. That is why so many small-business owners and chief executives are slow to recognize the
"-V I
dangers posed by employees sometimes known as destructive heroes. At the building products company Dave Sullivan headed morethan a decade ago, itw as atop
r
salesman who caused the havoc.
f - .'S
"They're always high per- com and is writing a book formers, otherwise you'd nev- to help companies deal with er put up with their behavior," such employees (Oxford also said Sullivan, recalling his wrote about the topic for The first experience with a 'love- New York Times' You're the em-hate-em'genre ofemploy- Boss blog.) ee he is now quick to spot. Oxford and others suggest "This salesman was threat-
ening his sales manager — 'If
the following: Confront the destructive hero with his or
her unacceptable behaviors; get agreement that specifmake what I want to sell, I'll ic changes are necessary; leave and take my customers and seta deadline of several you don't do it the way I want,
and if manufacturing won't with me.'" Over the years, Sullivan
has retold this story often, as partof courses and training seminars he has taught for organizations like the American Management Association and Aileron, a non-
months to make and maintain
the turnaround necessary for continued employment. Along the way, they advise, be sure to document the changes or lack of changes that ensue, that way estab-
lishing grounds for dismissal profit that offers businesses and protection against retalmanagement support and iatory lawsuits. guidance. Sullivan, now presOf course,managing a deident and managing partner structive hero is easier said at the Shamrock Group, a than done.
management consulting firm in Denver, does not claim to
"It got to the point," said
the founder and president of
a West Coast e-commerce crafts supply company with envisioning a comic book su- 45 employees and annual perhero who vanquishes an sales of $8 million, "that we archvillain, but in the process had people saying: 'I don't leaves a city in ruins. want t o w o r k w h e n s h e's here.' Or, 'I love working here, Tell-tale signs but I'm going to quit because Also known a s b r i l l iant of my manager.'" This company founder, jerks,destructive heroes are egotists, prima donnas, any- who spoke on the condition thing but team players. The that she remain anonymous, drain on company morale can saidthe career ofherdestrucbe stark. People wonder why tive hero began with a typical the boss is not dealing with honeymoon period. "She started here picking such an obvious bad apple. And because destructive he- and packaging orders and roes typically fashion their was phenomenal," she said. fiefs and achieve their results "Hard-working. Loyal. But as by intimidating co-workers, we started to grow, she kept the abused colleagues may telling me about problems run for the exits. with her manager. She'd text In his training seminars, me at home at night." Sullivan could count on two The destructive hero essenthings whenever he asked, tially forced out her manager "How many of you have had and assumed her role. And a destructive hero in your continued to behave badly. "She was a faster pullermidst?" About half of those have coined the term, but he said it occurred to him when
Maddie McGarvey/The New YorkTimee
Scott McGohan, chief executive of McGohan Brabender, a health insurance and benefits broker who had to deal with destructive heroes, recalls that he was once one himself. A business will want the revenue they haul in, their crackling insights and bursting energy. But the hit to company morale just isn't worth it, some managers say.
"We got a team of people together and looked at how much time we were spending on this individual (the 'destructive hero'). How many meetings in HR. How much leadership time was taken up talking about his problems. How much time he was costing various employees. It's pretty simple. Youjust take the salaries of the people and the time theyspend on the problem, and you come up with a number." — Scott McGohan, chief executive of McGohan Brabender,
week, even though it generally took the company's research analysts three or four weeks. Work backed up. Employees in the hero's wake grumbled. But because the salesman had received so many accolades, the employees did not complain to management, at least not right away. Even when they did, McGohan found excuses to skirt the mounting issues. Eventually, however, he be-
Been there, done that The son of the founder of
the company, McGohan was then a high-flying salesman who was undermining his ordained path to the top with his own destructive behavior.
It was not a superior who confronted him but his assistant, Victoria Rieger, who got tired of covering for him. "He was overpromising to
Atlanta, who has registered nice to them and she'd comthe URL w w w .brilliantjerk. plain about them to me."
gan to question whether the clients, but he wasn't the one a health insurance and benefits broker employee's vaunted sales cov- who was going to have to deal ered all of his hidden costs. with it. I was," said Rieger, "We got a team of people who told McGohan she was It took the beleaguered tive of McGohan Brabender, together and looked at how on the verge of quitting. "What would it take for you boss nearly two years to re- a health insurance and ben- much time we were spending solve the situation. efits broker with 120 employ- on this individual," McGohan to stay?" he asked. "I thought it was my fault ees and annual revenue of said. "How many meetings Rieger, who is a few years she's not a good manager," more than $25 million, hired in HR. How much leadership older than McGohan — and she said. "I tried reading a salesman who lacked expe- time was taken up talking now works as his executive asmanagement books with her, rience in benefits consulting. about hi s p r o blems. H ow sistant — told him she would not realizing it was some- Still, in a field with a tough much time he wa s costing stay only if he worked with a thing intrinsic and could not learning curve, the new sales- various employees. It's pret- life coach. She attended some be changed." Eventually, she man thrived. ty simple. You just take the of those meetings and remind"He was probably the best salaries of the people and the ed McGohan whenever he was said, she took "the chicken's way out." She m oved h er salesman in the history of the time they spend on the prob- "backsliding." Perhaps thanks problem employee into an company," said McGohan, lem,and you come up with a to an uncommon, protective administrative position with whose company is based in number." big sister element to t h eir much less responsibility and Dayton, Ohio. "Honestly, we That number did not in- working relationship, the seckept increasing the routine were kind of drunk on reve- clude the obvious costs to ond chance proved successful. tasks until she quit. (The nue, infatuated by the results. morale. A n e x i t i n t erview McGohan said, "If you can't founder said she remained He was very successful at indicated t h a t McG o h an get someone to admit they have "conflicted" as to whether she bringing business in the door Brabender had lost at least a problem, you have no other — but v ery c o mbative re- one employee because of its choice than to let them go." should have reached out to the manager who had been garding how business moves "hero." But happy endings to de"I was leading that person, structive hero sagas are rare. wrongly fired.) through the organization." "Teaching over 100 coursSometimes, he would tell I was his mentor, which is emA ticking timebomb p rospective clients that h e barrassing," McGohan said. es," Sullivan said, "I've never About seven years ago, could get them a financial "The other sad part is, about had one person tell me they Scott McGohan, chief execu- projection by the end of the 15 years ago, I was the same converted a destructive hero."
Manufacturing
en believe, in order to be in-
"We need to be sure that we are branding
Continued from E1 "The nice thing about my job is that I can do it all. I can dream something up, model it on the computer and actually
telligent and a world-problem solver, you have to wear ny-
manufacturing for what it is today, and not what it has been in the past."
have it in my hands," Bannink sard.
boots ... You can be intelligent
in attendance would raise a hand. And of those, "Almost 100 percent said the same
the best person on custom-
thing: 'We waited too long to deal with it, and it cost us a
the founder. "When a new
lot.'" "Get rid of the brilliant jerk
as fast as you can," said Cliff Oxford, founder of the Oxford Center for Entrepreneurs in
er service — and that was part of the problem," said employee wasn't as good as her, she'd get mad. If we hired someone she perceived as a threat, maybe someone smarter, maybe more attractive, friendlier, she was not
"I think a lot of young wom-
lons and stilettos. I want them
to know that there's nothing wrong with rockin' steel-toe
and be a builder, and in fact "The worst thing you can do you have to be intelligent for is break something. And then this job," Bannink said. "You can change the world you learn that almost everything is fixable," she added. through manufacturing. A lot Bannink grew up on a dairy of the things that we do save farm where she loved tinker- lives," she added about proding with engines. A tractor, ucts from her employer, Philshe said, didn't care whether lips-Medisize Corp. you were male or female when
A home at Harley it came to fixing it. She left a four-year universiAt a Harley-Davidson Inc.
— Rhonda Matschke, senior vice president of humanresources at Generac Power Systems current job. "I have always been treated with respect, but I am kind of
an outspoken person, too. I think that has a lot to do with
it," she said. About 25 percent of Harley-Davidson's workforce is female. Harley works with local and n a t ional
pursued various temporary jobs, eventually settling into
plant in suburban Milwaukee,
to work, according to local
companies. "We need to be sure that we are branding manufacturing for what it is today, and not what it has been in the past," said Rhonda Matschke, se-
nior vice president of human
p r o fessional resources at Generac Power
women organizations, atErin Spengler has worked in tendscareerfairsand campus both machining and assem- events specifically targeted metal fabrication work. bly. She was hired by Harley to women, and leverages its "I realized there was no in 2001 after about four years Professional Women's Busihappiness for me in a cubical. I of working at a machine shop ness and Employee Resource yearned to work behind a tool- and a metal fabrication shop Group to a ctively recruit box again," Bannink said. where she gained technical other females in their social Her career trek wasn't easy, skills but also experienced network, said Tony Macrito, though, as she suffered inju- some gender bias. manager of corporate media "It was ultimately why I left ries, a layoff and gender bias relations. at manufacturers before she my first job," Spengler said went back to school, also at about having to train a man 'Bright, automated Wisconsin Indianhead, for for a position that she wanted workplaces' training that led to better em- but was not offered. Manufacturers say one reaployment in the field. A m otorcycle enthusiast, son they have difficulties at"I think a lot of the challeng- Spengler aspired to work at tracting female talent is that es made me a bettermachin- Harley-Davidson. too many people have outdat"Harley is really good about ed, negative perceptions of the ist, a better person, and gave me tougher skin," Bannink hiring women. I would like careers. Today'sfactories are more sard. to see more women step up She painted her old toolbox in manufacturing and not be likely to be clean, bright, autopink, to make a statement held down at lower positions," mated workplaces, compared about women in the skilled Spengler said. with some dark, dirty plants trades, and she would encourSpengler, who has been a of the past. It's not all that way, age women togive manufac- union steward, says she hasn't and there's nothing wrong turing a try. personally felt any bias in her with getting a little dirty when ty after her freshman year and
the job requires it, but overall the plants are better places
Systems. Nearly 30 percent of Generac's 2,400 employees in Wisconsin are women, many of whom work in the plants that make generators. One of them is K r isty Westenberg,
who started at the company as an assembler in 2002 and
now tests equipment before it's shipped to customers. Westenberg said she was the first female in her job, as an equipment tester, on the
Generac encourages its em- career fields, which is frustratployees to refer friends and ing for both employers and family members for jobs, thus employees. giving the company a wider Hladilek, from Wisconsin talent pool to draw from. Indianhead Technical College, says she's experienced some 'Just a normal thing' sexism at companies where M anufacturers ought t o she's worked as an automotive seek a diverse workforce that mechanic or a welder. "Some people have said represents their community, so they don't become stagnant things like 'you don't look like in their thinking, said Eric Is- a welder,'" said Hladilek, who bister, president of GenMet on her desk has a photograph Corp. from 1944 that depicts a group GenMet makes a variety of of women welders. products, from metal shelves Companies such as Briggs to parts for the military. The 8r. Stratton Corp., of Milwaucompany, with a female chief kee, have a history of men and executive officer, Mary Isbis- women working alongside ter, has had trouble finding each other in the plants. "It was just a normal thing women in the skilled trades, despite intensive recruiting at Briggs," said Ross Winklefforts for both males and fe- bauer, a U n ited Steelworkmales at schoolsand career ers subdistrict director who fairs. worked at the company years "It's kicking my butt... I ago. would like the same ratio (of Some men felt that women men and women) inside my couldn't do certain jobs in the building as outside of it," Isbis- plant, but they were quickly ter said. proved wrong, Winklbauer There's gender bias in many SBld.
product line where she works.
It was a way to move up the career ladder, she said, and she enjoys it.
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Funding
l
Continued from E1 That's probably because Roberts, 46, spent a decade in the movie business. He's a native Californianwho grew up in Manchester, England, doodling tanks as a child and prograInming games as a teenager. He started his career as a game designer, then formed Digital Anvil, a game company thatdeveloped the highly successful "Wing Commander"space combat video game fran-
C
-v "i
chise. In 1999, he turned the game into a feature-length
movie as its director for 20th Century Fox. The film was a critical flop, though it scored high marks for special effects. Roberts continued in
Los Angeles in the producer ranks on movies including "Lord of War," starring Nico-
David Swaneon /Philadelphia Inquirer
Matthew Reale andhis wife, Laura, are business partners inAquaReale, their steadily growing company.
AquaReale
complete pond installation The Reales came home is $8,500. Cleanings start invigorated. They changed at $500, as do renovations/ the name of their business restorations. "really b r ought to reflect water and added Laura industry.
Continued from E1 Matthew was strong on ser-
vice and design, he said, but he couldn't compete with the pricing of contractors using immigrant laborers and paying them poorly.
pond installation to the ser-
things that I don't think half
vices AquaReale would offer asa certified Aquascape
of the people in my business
contractor.
is in charge of seeing that ordered projects get done."My
Nor did he have the time or They persuaded a local acumen for networking and garden center to let them inotherwise beating the bush- stall a display pond there es for more work, he said. He free of charge, for marketing was close to folding the busi- purposes. ness and going to work for Laura was no w a c tively somebody else. involved in business developThen his wife stepped in ment, customer service, emwith her public-relations and ployee oversight and marketmarketing skills, and what a ing. She arranged speaking college professorremembered engagements for her husband as her "wired energy." on storm-water management. The couple had been talking Pond jobs have gone from about switching the focus of one-twentieth of AquaReale's
know," said Matthew, 42, who business would have never
They would no t
formative influence — even in
sands interact in a virtual
the face of personal strife — is Clarke Caywood, professor of integrated marketing com-
reality. Money remained an issue. Investors and publish-
•
world that "talented kids who
"The ability to create new content endlessly ... I think it shows how big it could possibly get," said Robin Kaminsky, entrepreneur-in-residence at
•
in 1993.
d i sclose
In Laura's case, it was a
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66.3 ESB Financial ESBF -9.5 Vitae Pharmaceutical VTA E 15.2 ARC Group Wwde ARCW 16.9 Omeros Corp OMER 53.3 CHC Group Ltd HELI -3.0 skywest SKYW -4.4 Atara Biotherpeutics ATRA 54.1 Novadaq Technologies NVDQ 12.8 Inteliquent IQNT 40.2 Svc Source Intl SREV 73.6 Oplin kCommun lnc OPLK 31.5 ICAD Inc ICAD 31.4 Gain Capital Hldgs GCAP 9.5 Blue Nile Inc NILE 29.5 RTI Surgical Inc RTIX
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FRIDAY C L OS E
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
18. 6 6
5.97
470
57.6
41.1
13. 2 4 13 . 6 4 16 . 5 7 6.72 11 . 5 2 19. 1 8 15. 6 2 16. 8 3 3.82 20. 8 5 11. 2 5 8.56 35. 5 0 5.09
4.13 3.89 4.36 1.66 2.62 4.29 3.46 3.68 0.82 4.26 2.25 1.70 6.84 0.98
45.3
88. 9
0.0
39.9
-19.2
69.7
35.7
27. 2
64.1
32.8
25.1
0.0
29.4
48.6
28.8
80.1
28.5
14.4
28.0
35.6
2 zs
14 . 7
25.7
24.6
25.0
14.8
24.8
29.5
23.9
19.4
23.8
4.5
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
ARCP
erated a lot of people," he said.
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% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Amer Rlty Cap Prop Twitter Inc Goldcorp Inc Mewmont Mining Barrick Gold Kohls Corp Crown Castle Intl Freepolt McMoRan FacebookInc Westlake Chemical
challenge "the big guys." "Digital distribution has lib-
y(g f1't ty05l) f1e55 •
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
$CHG %CHG %CHG IW K 1W K 1MO
tions" have fertile ground to
pwnVptff ~
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers COMPANY
can inspire people's imagina-
from which Laura graduated
r I
Mercedes-Benzes.
have to take this kind of funddownloadedon acomputer,not ing seriously, but we should bought in a store. also remember the novelty of The revenue indudes sales the situation." of virtual goods, a theoretically But, he added, "the lesson to inexhaustible resource as long the broader gaming industry as fans keep buying. Cloud is that players matter. They Imperium's marketing budget vote with their feet, and now includes large dollops spent with their wallets — and if they on keeping the community have new ways to vote, they'll engaged, holding live events, use them. In a way, (Cloud Improducing regular programs perium is) reducing the noise on YDINIbe and 7witch, and that middlemen bring to the pumping out p r omotional process." videos that trumpet the latest As for Roberts, he's encourspaceships on sale as if they aged by the message "Star Citiwere the newest must-have zen" is delivering to the gaming
where players by the thou-
Call Us Today! I
normal'?" he said. "I think we
munication at Northwestern,
c ompany f i nancials b u t leap of faith in herself and her cago for the water-gardening said their lowest price for a husband.
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that revenue comes from digital content like "Star Citizen,"
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an Internet-hosted universe
"She has a business aptitude that many communicators don't have," Caywood said. the business ever since a rep- work to one-third, said the That, and the requisite entreresentative for Aquascapes Reales, who want the business preneurial nerve, he added. "You have to decide you're of Delaware Valley LLC, a e ventually to f ocus on w a wholesaler of l a ndscaping ter featuresand storm-water able to take a leap of faith in equipment and supplies, in- management exclusively. yourself," Caywood said. vited them in 2009 to Pondemonium, a convention in Chi-
ers gravitate to games with alytics firm Ninja Metrics, said wide appeal because sales can "Star Citizen" is drawing inbe astronomical. dustry attention, though some The video game market wonder whether the project is a is huge: $15.4 billion in U.S. one-off exception made possisales alone in 2013, according ble by a cult hero like Roberts. "Is this an outlier or the new to NPD Group. About half of
las Cage, and "Who's Your Caddy?" He labored in Hollywood for a decade because he could astonish viewers with venture capital f ir m R u stic richness in detail and emo- Canyon Partners and former tion that technology and executive vice president at low budgets prevented him Activision. from achieving in games. Dmitri Williams, head of anBy 2011, technology had "massively changed," he said. Powerfulgraphics processors, computer chips and memory cards had become cheap enough for Roberts to deliver a game that drops people and their friends into
grown. Not surprised by her trans-
E5
s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
LAST 2018.05 9326.87 6546.47 23998.06 4233.09 16413.76
FRI. CHG +23.40 +212.03 +82.92 +296.02 +91.85 +755.56
FRI. CHG WK MO +1.17% L L 2 33% L L +1.28% +1.25% +2.22% +4.83%
QTR YTD +9.18% v -2.36% -3.00% v T
+2.97% -1.46% +0.75%
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA
-30.5 Buenos Aires Merval 1 1 019.43 +479.99 + 4 .55% 4 T L X 0.0 MexicoCityBolsa 45027.52 +428.25 +0.96% S ao Paolo Bovespa 5 4 6 28.60 +2291.77 +4.38% 4 4 -17.8 Toronto S&P/TSX 146 1 3.32 +154.63 + 1 .07% L V 65.1 /AFRICA -70.0 EUROPE -7.8 Amsterdam 18.3 Brussels Madrid -35.6 Zurich -14.9 Milan 60.8 Johannesburg Stockholm
411.32 +7.61 3157.15 +36.44 I 062.15 +22.43 8837.78 +118.75 19783.99 +589.38 49722.88 +1 062.44 1412.84 +1 5.66
+1.88% L +I 17'/ +2.1 6% L +I.36% +3.07% +2.18% +1.12%
1964.43 + 5 .50
+0.28% X +1.23% +0.88% +0.98% 4 +1.22%
4
+104. 4 0% 4 + 5.3 8% 4 +6.06 % V + 7.28%
2 37% +7 98'/ +4.96% +7.74% i16.56%
+7.49% +5.99%
ASIA
NKA
5.79
-6.04
-51.1
-54.0
-46.3
BBSI
23.51
-20.33
-46.4
-43.3
-75.0
ANV
1.39
-0.91
-39.6
-54.0
AKBA
12.96
-6.76
-34.3
-37.4
AEGR
20.19
-10.47
-34.1
-42.3
Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times -63.6 Sydney All Ordinaries 0.0 Taipei Taiex -59.9 Shanghai Composite
RM
11.66
-5.63
-32.6
-34.4
-44.3
SRPT
16.17
-7.39
-31.4
-30.6
-59.3
Quotable
8.60
-3.87
-31.0
-33.4
-39.8
TRX
1.25
-0.44
-26.0
-31.3
-35.6
"The next couple of months will see spending pick up strongly as people start to spend their windfall from falling gas prices."
FSM
3.49
-1.18
-25.3
-6.2
-8.0
MGI
3274.25 5505.00 8974.76 2420.18
+39.94 +47.90 +86.69 +29.10
T
V
-2.33% +3.37% +2.84% +4.22% +14.38%
— ian Shepherdson,chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, commenting after U.S. consumer spending fell in September for the first time in eight months
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
Seein stea I s'der Who he Is: Chief economist at Nationwide What he suggests: With low inflation, the already half-decade old economic expansion could continue.
David Berson
Almost every year in the now five-year recovery, analysts say that economic growth will eclipse 3 percent —only to be disappointed by the results in December. But 2015 might finally be the year when 3 percent growth becomes a reality, says David Berson, chief economist and senior vice president at Nationwide, the Columbus, Ohio-based insurance and financial services firm.
You expect the U.S.economy togrow more than 3 percent In 2015. Why? We've already seen annual growth that's been above 3 percent in four of the past five quarters. The only exception was the start of this year with the Polar Vortex. Now, that's like saying you bowled a 300, other than the gutter
balls. But what this suggests is that the trend is around 3 percent. We should also expect the economy to be much stronger. Housing hasn't contributed much to this recovery, but it should pick-Up more than it has. That's because jobs and mortgage rates influence home sales. We've seen strong job growth this year that should lead to more people buying and mortgage rates remain relatively low. Plus, more credit is becoming available and younger workers will start to form households.
We've seenblg slowdowns In Europe and China, leading to volatility In the U.S. financial markets. What does thls mean for the economy?
It's a negative. But it's probably not big. The United States sells lots of things to Europe and China. And slower growth in those countries means our exports will go down. But we sell lots of things to other parts of the world where growth is still pretty good, such as Canada andMexico.So a slowdown in Chinaand Europe should be off setby other countries and the the positives that we're seeing with jobs and potentially housing. Low inflation below 2 percent a year appears likely to continue. Should we be relieved or worried? I started my economic career in a time of high inflation. Low and stable inflation is a positive for the economy. Now, that's different from deflation, or
falling prices. We don't want zero inflation because we may not be measuring it accurately and we don'I want to actually have declining prices.
Should we expect the yield on the 10-year Treasury to remain below 3 percent? I don't think so. A 2.25 percent 10-year is not sustainable in the long-run. Nor is the Federal Reserve keeping its shorter-term rate near zero. What Is sustainable? Probably a 10-year yield of 4 to 4.5 percent. But are we likely to get there anytime soon? No. It's a long way out. It's not this year or next year. Or even the year after that. Interviewed by Josh Boak. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, October 31, 2014
I7 39P 52
+
+585.1 1
NASDaa ~ 14 7 g2 4,630.74
s&P500
+
2,018.05
53 47
RUSSELL2000 I,173.5I
+
54 69
WILSHIRE5000
+
21,256.74
+566.61
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
UNDAY D
R
heatshield enc arms Cracked may becausingrattle
u aru as By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News
As quirky Subaru knows, eccentrics can easily stumble into the murky mainstream. It just happens, kind of like 40th birthdays. One day you wear a tiny earring and Doc
• looked up Ford technical service bulletin No. 14-0090, rattle on the driver's side, dated May 2014,in my ALLthe same side where the DATA database. It describes exhaust pipe is located. The an "intermittent click or snap-
rattle doesn't happen above type noise from the rear axle
Welcome, my son, to the
machine. The first Subie I droveo n e th a t
REVIEW seared me like a prison tattoo — sported eye-frying electric-blue paint, gold wheels and a wing so big it prob-
• type of exhaust rattle
flat, hoarse honks and mumbled growls from cylinders seemingly cast in some mystical garage in Japan. Boost in the turbocharged STI came on with a bang,
t hreatening t o p o p the hood loose and shoving the squat little sedan down the
road with fine, tire-clawing violence. I liked it so much I kind of
wanted to sleep in it just to absorb its odd, intergalactic energy.
ably stuffed with granola and trail mix — churn highly successful Subarus these days.
In fact, the Japanese automaker sells more vehicles in the U.S. now than Volkswa-
gen, something that would have seemed improbable 15 years ago. But high-riding, all-wheeldrive Subarushave never left
The 2015 Subaru Legacy 2.5i has a likeable engine, all-weather traction from all-wheel drlve and a few hldden handling charms.
2015 Sudaru legacy 2.5i Premium Base price: $21,695 As tested: $27,480 Qpe: Five-passenger, allwheel-drive midsize sedan Engine: 2.5-liter, horizontally opposed four-cylinder with 175 horsepower and 174 pound-feet of torque Mileage: 26 mpg city, 36 mpg highway
much of a mark on the lucrative midsize sedan segment, which might explain t he bigger, heavily restyled 2015 Legacy. tuned for low- and mid-range On the day it was delivered, response, generally feeling I walked right past the stol- pretty lively around town and id-looking tan sedan, figuring pulling to 60 in a fairly reamy extrovert Subaru must sonable 8.8 seconds, accordbe parked on the other side ing to Car and Driver. of that Camry or A ltima or whatever. N ot exactly. W h i l e t h e
Legacy sported metallic tan paint — whoopee — it mostly
looked unremarkable. Which is not necessarily a bad thing in midsize sedans. Slightly wider and longer than last year's model, the new Legacy felt large and offers the most interior space in the segment, Subaru says. A long, flathood added to that impression, while a slightly rounded front featured a three-bar grille and
projector-style headlampspretty standard fare in midsize cars.
lined. If the first repair — ap-
plying a Motorcraft penetrant to each of the U-joint retaining clips — does not stop the dunk, the second step outlines the procedurefor removing the pinion gear flange, replacingthe oil slinger, adjustingthe pinion bearing pre-load and reassembling the flange and U-joint coupling with four new
ken or cracked heat shield
bolts. It would appear the dealer
surrounding the bottom of
has performed the second-step
the catalytic converter. I've
repair. Since the vehicle is still
seen the shield repaired by under warranty and the repair welding or wrapping with was not successful in stopping a steel shipping strap. I've the clunk, I would suggest you also seen the entire heat encourage the dealer to pershield removed, although form the repair again. Unless this exposes the extreme- Ford develops an updated rely hot catalytic converter pair for this issue, your options to potentially combustible are limited. materials like leaves and newspaper. At the gas station, if the I'd suggest getting a sec• car before me was refuond opinion, perhaps at a eled with 87 octane and I se-
Q•
Courtesy Toyota viaTribune News Service
had recently tested — nor was overs — their consoles prob-
from a stop while in drive or reverse." Two repairs are out-
A is often caused by a bro-
never heard before, emitting
I supposed to. A wave of cheery cross-
on initial l i ght a cceleration
happens while stopped or backing up on my driveway. The dealer says a piece of metal broke off inside the exhaust muffler. lem without replacing the whole exhaust system for $700. They said it won't be a problem for the car itself. What do you think'? • In my experience, this
the
I didn't feel that way about
5 to 10 miles per hour; it
They can't get to the prob-
jetstream. My neighbors probably thought I had joined a cult. That STI made noises I had
the 2015 Subaru Legacy 2.5i I
an old clunker. • That's a tough one. I
Q
a Brooks Brothers suit and Capital One haircut.
a bly caused a shift i n
that makes the truck feel like
(Minneapolis) Star Tribune
• I have a 2008 Chevy • Malibu with 7 2,000 miles. Last week I heard a
Martens to work and the next,
t he
By Paul Brand
expect.
rial and offered pretty good support. Handling A broad black-plastic conM uch o f t h e t i m e , t h e sole curved up into a promLegacy stepped gently and i nent center stack w i t h a c onfidently over r oad s u r - 7-inch touch screen capable, faces, rarely hinting at any I'm pretty sure, of patching athleticism. B ut push it h a r d i nt o a corner, and it turned in with
you through to the Prez via
satellite if that's your idea of
infotainment. good-natured compliance, Overall, the materials were leaning some but ultimately OK, the execution better.
digging in with almost STI resolve. Between the grip from allwheel drive and the low center of gravity provided by the boxer four-banger, the Legacy could hustle through corners with some grace.
and legroom in back were expansive. Maybe Subaru will finally get lucky with this Legacy. The car provided more than I had anticipated in a
lect 92octane, how much 87
nician to check the convert- octane fuel is pumped into my er shield. If it is not broken gas tankbefore the 92 octane and there actually is broken
fuel is delivered? Also, I've
metal inside the muffler, I
read that there is no difference
see no reason the muffler
between 91, 92 or 93 octane
itself cannot be replaced. fuel; it is just a difference in One morething.Thefed- how the octane is calculated. Is erally mandated emissions warranty covers the cat-
alytic converter and computer for eight years/80,000 miles. If the rattle is coming from the converter itself, it may be covered by the emissions warranty.
this true?
• Interesting question. My A • neighbor, who like me uses non-oxy gas in his boat, tells me that as much as half a
gallon of the previous octane choice will be pumped before your octane choice begins to fill your tank. I don't know if I bought a new 2013 this is accurate, but even if half
And as you might expect in this segment, headroom
pedestrian sedan: a likable, sometimes mildly amusing off-center, the steering kept engine, all-weather traction Unfortunately, the p ower things interesting. from all-wheel drive and a flowed through a continuEvery time I t h r e atened few hidden handling charms. ously variable transmission, to get a little carried away, Now, Subaru, how about which, with no real gears, though, I could look around fishing the car out of the moaned and brayed a bit. at the Subaru's fairly well-ap- mainstream and giving us an Although the sedan jumped pointed interior and remem- edgier sport variant? pretty smartly away from ber I was in a s olid-citizen You don't have to include a stops, any deep dips into the grocery-getter. wing. throttle quickly elicited the Mine was cast in tan and barnyard noises. black. A conventional black Personally, I would be will- plastic dashboard housing ing to give up some of the black-faced gauges rolled Legacy's impressive mileage down onto a tan lower dash. and even pay more for a real The Legacy's door panels eight-speed automatic. also were mostly black plastic However — like a surpris- with tan centers and padded ing blind date — the big, kind armrests. Meanwhile, the of soft -feeling sedan offered car's seats were stitched in some moves you might not a grippy tan cloth-like mateIts steering even seemed in-
volved. Quick with decent feel
muffler shop. Ask the tech-
Q •• Ford F150 that now
has 6,600 miles on it. From
day one, it has clunked when I acceleratefrom a
a gallon of 87 octane is added to
15 gallons of 93 octane, it won't significantly affect the octane level reaching your engine.
stop. The dealership in-
In the United States, the oc-
s talled a shim kit i n t h e
tane rating shown on the pump
rear end, greased the U-joints and said the clunk was gone. It isn't gone. It's worse, if anything. A Ford field representative said this was perfectly normal and was engineered to do
is the fuel's "motor" octane
this. Do you think this is
actually the case? I didn't spend $40K to have to live with an irritating problem
number (MON), developed from a test engine under load, added toits "research" octane
number (RON) from a laboratory engine, divided by two. — Brand is an automotive troubleshooterand former race car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. Include a daytime phone number.
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate
Big doors and mostly flat
TheBulletin
A Free Public Service
sides got a bit of definition from character lines running
the length of the body while smallish 22 5/55 tires rolled on 17-inch wheels.
Fine features I n b ack,
S u baru m a i n -
tained the Legacy's born-tobe-mild image with a polished exhaust tip proudly sparkling from a tiny single pipe. Point me toward the Autobahn,
Andy. But I really should be more open-mindedabout the Legacy, a sedan that has features and value that few in the midsize segment can match. Consider this: Beneath the
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
Legacy's milquetoast exterior lies an unusual horizontally
opposed four-cylinder engine spinning all-wheel drive. Moreover, those features
come in a sedan that is competitively priced ($21,695)
I
and gets dramatically better
fuel economy than last year's model — 26/36 compared with 21/28.
That's pretty compelling
stuff.
As you might expect, the Legacy is no sport sedan like my first WRX STI.
At 3,455 pounds, the Legacy is almost too heavy for the modest 175 horsepower
produced by its 2.5-liter boxer engine. But th e
e n g ine s eemed
I
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ig or use the • l 33 0 QKg©Zgg) service to be automatically emailed of notices that match your needs.
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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
DAVID
SUNDAY READER
BROOKS
'Partyism' infecting social life
A
college student came to me re-
cently with a quandary. He'd spent the summer interning
at a conservative think tank. Now he
was applying to schools and companies where most people were liberal. Should he remove the internship
from his resume? I advised him not to. Even if people disagreedwith his politics, I argued, they'd still appreciate his public spiritedness. But now I'm thinking
that advice was wrong. There's alot more political discrimination than I thought. In fact, the best recent
research suggests that there's more political discrimination than there is racial discrimination.
For example, political scientists ShantoIyengar and Sean Westwood gave 1,000people student resumes
and askedthem which students shouldgetscholarships.Theresumes had some racial cues (membership in African-American Students Association) and some political cues (member of Young Republicans). Raceinfl uenced decisions.Blacks favored black students 73 percent to
lllustration by Anastasia Vasilakis New York Times News Service
27percent, and whites favored black
students slightly. But political cues were more powerful. Both Democrats and Republicans favored students
who agreed with them 80percent of the time. They favored students from their party even when other students
hadbetter credentials. Iyengarand Westwood conducted other experiments to measure what
Cass Sunstein of Harvard Law School calls "partyism." They gave subjects implicit association tests, which
measure whetherpeople associate different qualities with positive or
negative emotions. Theyhad people playthe trust game, which measures how much people are willing to trust different kinds of people. In those situations, they foundpervasive prejudice. And political biases were stronger than their racialbiases. In a Bloomberg View column in September, Sunstein pointed to poll-
By Joyce Wadler• TheNew York Times
ing datathat capturedthe samephenomenon. In 1960, roughly 5 percent
y mother, Milli, is 87 and has
of Republicans and Democrats said
they'dbe"displeased" if their child married someone from the other party. By 2010, 49 percent of Republicans and 33percentofDemocrats saidthey would mind.
been cheerfully planning her designated to write her checks now can't
Politics is obviously apassionate ac-
tivity, inwhichmoralvalues dash. Debates overObamacare,charterschools
Yes, folks, the person my mother
~
p'
exit for years. Living will,
write checks for herself. "Man plans, God
executed power of attorney,
laughs," the expression that makes me
>key to the safe deposit box and the names
regret being an atheist. I can't drive, either.
or whether the U.S. should intervene
in Syriastirserious disagreement. But these studies are measuring something
of the lawyer, doctor and financial planner
But it was off to join my two younger
different. People's essential worth is
were sent to me decades ago, along with
brothers at the hospital to see what was left
whether they shouldbe hired, married, trusted or discriminated against.
jolly "Death to me is just another adventure"
The broad social phenomenon is that as personal life is being demoralized, political life is beinghypermoralized. People are less judgmental about
missives. My name has been on her
of our mother. "You gonna write about this'?" Ma says
checking account for 20 years, so that I can
when I arrive a few days later. "You should.
different lifestyles, but they are more
start paying the bills before rigor mortis sets
You got plenty of material."
beingmeasuredby apolitical label:
judgmental aboutpolicylabels. The features of the hypermoralized mindset are all around. More people arebuildingtheir communal and social identities around political la-
in, a Depression-era concern I have never
bels. Your political label becomes the
been able to dispel. "What do you care if they get the
prerequisite for membership in your social set.
electricity check a few weeks late'?" I say to
Politics becomes a marker forbasic
decency. Those who are not members of the right party are deemed to lack basic compassion or basic loyalty to country. Finally, political issues are no longer just about themselves; they are
symbols of worth and dignity. When many rural peopledefendgun rights, they're defending the dignity and respectofruralvalues againsturban snobbery.
my mother. "You'll be dead." "The checks are in the bottom drawer in the computer room," Ma says. "You won't have any problems." Of course, when that check-writing day arrived late last month and I
This mentality ruins human inter-
action. There is atremendous variety ofhumanbeings within eachpolitical party. To judge human beings on political labels is to deny and ignore
got the call that my mother had had a major stroke at her home
what is most important about them. It is to profoundly devalue them. That is
in Daytona Beach, Florida, my
the core sin of prejudice, whether it is racism or partyism. The personal is not political. If you're judging a potential daughterin-law on political grounds, your values are out of whack.
right arm was in a cast because I
— David Brooks is a columnist for the New York Times. John Costa's column will return.
See Stroke /F6
had shattered my wrist in a bike accident three weeks earlier.
"Sometimes they drag me into the ha/I, hoping to stave off fear with good news from the miracle workers. What are the
doctors saying? Subtext: Will she a/ways be like this? When it's my turn, will I be like this? Please, God, let mine be mild. A little weakness in my arm, I can live with that. Just don't touch the brain."
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
EDj To
IS I'I
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roy Field, the green space owned by Bend-La Pine Schools in downtown Bend, is up for sale. The district hopes to use money from the sale of surplus landto fund all or part of a new elementary school inthe next fewyears. The field, on NW Bond Street across from the district's administration building, is popular with dog owners, lacrosse players and others who like the convenience of open space downtown. It's so popular, in fact, that local residents told the district last week they'd like to see the property remain free of buildings. To that end, Paul Dewey of CentralOregon LandWatch wrote to the school board urging it to contact the Bend Park 8 Recreation District before selling to a private developer. That's all well and good, but if those who wish to prevent development of Troy Field are serious, they must be willing to put up their own money, not expect the district to take less than full value for the field. The school district, after all, has an obligation to taxpayers to use their money wisely. It is not in the park-building business, but in the business of building schools, and that costs millions of dollars. If district officials can come up with the cash to build a new elem entary school, or even most of a new elementary school, from the sale of Troy Field and other property, that's money they don't have to ask school-district taxpayers to spend. And that's important in an era when district residents already are in the process of pay-
If district officials can come up with the cash to build
a newelementaryschool, or even most of a new elementary school, from the sale of Troy Field and other
property, that's money they don't have to askschool
district taxpayers to spend. ing off four earlier construction bonds. We called the park district. Don Horton, the park district's executive director, said the district could not afford Troy Field and would have to sacrifice something else it is working on to do so. So those who hope to "save" Troy Field might want to try to raise the money privately, purchase it and give it to the park district or put it to other use. They should not, however, expect the school district to sell low for the sake of a relatively large open space in a downtown where land is in short supply. That's simply unfair to district taxpayers, who will have to pay more for schools in a growing district.
H
Federal • Senate: Monica W ehby • House D!strict 2:Greg Walden
State
Editor's note:We have hit a deadline for election letters. While we still have room in the print edition for more election-related letters, we are out of space in the print edition for the longer columns — what we call "ln My View." We will still publish additional letters and columns that we don't have room for in the Web edition. Letters or columns that attempt
to bring up new allegations against candidates will be rejected, because there is no longer time for candidates to respond.
Wehby for Senate
has paid and continues to pay property taxes, business license fees or other corporate taxes; who probably
provides employment to other people who live in the city of Bend for which those people pay property or other taxes; someone who likely supports other businesses in Bend; who was involved in the construction of his
family's home on land for which even more property taxes were paid,and will continue to be paid, even having, presumably, hired a local contractor or contractors, thus supporting additional employment for those who
thinker Unfortunately our political process has stagnated due to officials
the city for over 12 years. The fact
that Casey sold his principal residence immediately before planning and construction of a replacement
Have you voted? If you have and being more concerned with their chose MonicaWehby forU.S. Sen- next election and the invasion of
residence (both within the city) illustrates not only significant fiscal
locusts, aka PACs, and special in-
responsibility but clear intent to remain a resident of Bend.
ate, thank you. If you haven't yet voted,please choose Monica. Here's
why: The SenateMajority Leader will control confirmation of retiring Attorney General Eric Holder's
replacement. Mr. Holder is held in contempt by the House for refusing to investigate several instances of government corruption and mal-
terest groups. Independent-thinking politician is almost an oxymoron. However, the citizens living and
Casey did not purchase or rent a residence outside of the city but tem-
voting in Deschutes County have porarily lived with family members an opportunity to re-elect someone while his new residence was under who is not afraid to ask questions
construction. Oregon law allows for
and make decisions with his constituents as the first priority. Tony
temporary absences without the loss of residency status. Casey's many years of volunteer work and committee service have proven his commitment to Bend. It
I have had many discussions with Tony about issues affecting not
will continue Mr. Holder's corrupt tenure.
only southern Deschutes County but the entire county. There have
A recently revealed example of
been times when I do not agree with
individual with Casey's level of character and integrity would be dis-
the Department of Justice's behav-
his decisions, but I respect his rea-
suaded from serving at a time when
soning for the decisions. He asks probing questions of county staff,
effective and competent leadership is essential for the future of Bend.
stakeholders and constituents, and
It is also apparent that no other
• Deschutes County Commission Po-
ior under Holder is the Sierra Pacific Industries litigation in California. The courts, relying on fraudulent DOJ evidence,found the company liable for damages caused by a
sit!on 1: Jodie Barram
65,000-acrewildfire.To avoid oner-
and social-services impacts a de-
• Bend City Council Pos!t!on 5:Mark Capell • Bend City Council Position 6: Ca-
ous legal fees, Sierra Pacific paid a cision will have on all Deschutes an investigation to be credible, and not viewed as purely partisan, it $55 million fine and forfeited 22,000 County residents.
sey Roats
Two former DOJ lawyers recent- missioners, Tammy Baney and ly revealed clear and compelling Alan Unger, have done an excel-
ny to all candidates.
evidence that federal lawyers con-
lent job in their "board of director"
spired to develop a fraudulent case against Sierra Pacific. This included withholding or destroying evidence, coaching deposition witnesses and
positions, allowing the county ad-
gation may have served another purpose, to shift the discussion sur-
ministrator, Tom Anderson, and his staff to operate county business and
rounding this election to residency issues from the issues that are much
programs. As the old adage goes, "If it ain't
more critical and important to the
broken, why look for a reason to fix it." Your vote for Tony DeBone will
Cody Mart!n andRyanPatrick
Deschutes County
• BendCity Council Posit!on 7: Scott Ramsay • Sisters City Council:David Asson, Nancy Connolly, Bob Wright • Sisters legalize medical mar!juana d!spensar!es: No • Sisters school bond:Yes • Redmond City Council:Tory Allman, Anne Graham, Jay Patrick
acres of timber land.
this fraud; lands are being returned,
would indeed be unfortunate if an
then examines the possible quali- candidate in this race has been subty-of-life, e conomic-development ject to the same level of investigation
Tony and theother county com-
presenting false statements to the court. The courts are now rectifying
and personal scrutiny. In order for must apply the same level of scrutiIt is disturbing that this investi-
citizens of Bend. Bend
• La P!ne City Council:Don Greiner, Stu Martinez
Letters policy
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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.
Ben Counci races ou city of Bend; someone who, I assume,
CaseyRoatseligible
is a weak and diffuse power, but it is for city council the primary tool for controlling a corrupt government agency. Voting for In issues of this nature, it is imMonica is a step in the right direction. portant to consider intent. It was Jared Black never Casey Roats' intent to abanBend don his Bend residence. Casey is a fourth-generation Central Oregon Elect an independent resident and has resided within
DeBone is this person.
• Cloverdale Rural F!re Protect!on D!str!ct bond:Yes • House D!strict 54:Knute Buehler • Newberry Estates Special Road • House D!strict 55:Mike McLane D!str!ct dust-abatement levy:Yes • Measure 86 — Tu!tion endowment fund: No crook county •Measure 87— Judges employment: • Crook CountyCourt: SethCrawford Yes • Bowman Museum levy:Yes • Measure 88 — Dr!ver cards:Yes • Measure 89 — Oregon ERA:No Jefferson County • Measure90 — Top-two open prima- • Jefferson County Comm!ss!on Pory: Yes sit!on 1:Tom Brown • Measure 91 — Recreational marijua• Madras City Council: Richard na: No Ladeby, Jim Leach, Bill Montgomery • Measure 92 — GMOlabels: No • Culver City Council:Daryl Lonien
tg
ernment abuseis through elections. It
leadership, you can be sure he will confirm a political ideologue who
• Governor:John Kitzhaber
By Les Scott uess I must be missing the point. Someone who has lived in the city of Bend previously, who owns and operates a place of business in the
the $55 million judgment was re- be a reaffirmation for a leader who voked, and the company was award- is an Independent Thinker! Monte Dammarell ed $35million for legal expenses. The only power private citizens Sunriver have to combat such egregious gov-
feasance. If Harry Reid retains the
Election endorsements ere are The Bulletin's endorsements for th e N o v. 4 election. The editorial board interviews candidates only in contested races. Ballots must be returned to county clerks' offices by 8 p.m. on Election Day. To read the full endorsements online, please go to www.bend bulletin.com/endorsements.
M 1Vickel's Worth
need it; and who is reportedly currently living in said house ...and yet
IN MY VIEW
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: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth/ In My View
P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
e a o u t ci t issues
them. What I have gleaned from the tigators in following general investinewspaper makes me want to think gative protocol won't come cheap. As there are those who portray this man enforcing the letter of the law can, that both candidates are nice people well, I have seen cases where states as a "nonresident" of the city of Bend in many cases, do more harm than and both very qualified for office. I require reimbursement by local entiforelection purposes. good. I came to clearly understand agree, or disagree, with points both ties for such things. Having read the newspaper arti- the value of treating each case with have made, and neither stick out as Nonetheless, I would simply rather cles dealing with this matter, I simply a great measure of reason and ratio- better or worse than the other. What vote for candidates who stick to the don't understand what all the hubbub nale. Human judgment wields great does stick out is manufacturing a issues ... issues central to the busiis all about. Coming from a law en- power, and how it is used general- "scandal" when most voters, espe- ness of city management, our city forcement background, now retired, ly leaves a marked impression on cially this late in the election process, management.Those are the people I became very familiar early in my those who are subject to it. In Mr. arerepulsedby negative campaign- I vote for. I don't know if Ms. Seales career with a standard that greatly Roats' case, I believe this clearly ing. I know I am. endorses any of the efforts made by influenced how I went about enforc- calls for some reason and for which Now, even worse as I am to un- her supporters who want to further ing the law. the spirit of the law would be intend- derstand, is someone clamoring for this negative nonsense. In my view, Most states have statutes that de- ed. As I understand it, supporters of an investigation ... yes, another one. however, it would definitely be refine the letter of the law as opposed Lisa Seales, another candidate for Let's spend more of our hard-earned freshing for any candidate to take a to the spirit of the law, where it be- city council, have decided to make tax dollars for an investigation only stand against negative campaigning, comes necessary to examine the spe- an issue of what, in my opinion, is a to have the state come back and lay even if it means telling a supporting cific intent of a law and the "climate" nonissue. the problem back in our own laps, PAC to stand down. But I guess that's one might want to create following Now I d o n't k now e ither L i sa or that of our city councilors. And, a different discussion. the enforcement of such law. Blindly Sealesor Casey Roats — never met believe me, the efforts by state inves— Les Scott lives in Bend.
© www.bendbuiletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
m oe er's mi career memoir issma, unn an a i emess "Yes Please" by AmyPoehler (DeyStreet 329 pages)
braver, has made "Yes Please" even more f r ee-form t h an most. If Fey's "Bossypants" or
Kaling's "Is Everyone Hang-
By Mary McNamara
ing Out W i thout Me?" feel
Amy Poehler has written a book. Called "Yes Please,"
has the more manic air of a
Los Angeles Times
like a chatty beach weekend with a f r iend, "Yes Please"
it is, as Poehler fans might ex- snowbound situation. Truths will be told, yes, pect, funny, wise, earnest, h o nest,
spiritually ambitious, occasional-
L
and an e c dotes recounted, b ut the attic and the
ly self-indulgent and structurally messy. It also feels a bit overdue. So many of her f r i ends and c o lleagues
cellar will also be raided, for funny hats and canned goods. There is also something of a
— Tina Fey, Min-
hler signals with h er t i tle. T h e
dy Kaling, B.J. Novak — have
p oint, a s
Po e -
already w r i t t en their books; heck,
h er b r other's l o vely n e w
show, even though it is a halfhour comedy with Swedish subtitles. She is also, as she
explains, raising two young sons, getting a divorce and falling in love. (Despite many misleading headlines to the contrary, you will not be hear-
ing much about any of this in "Yes Please" because, as she explains in big letters: "Nothing is anybody's business.") More important, she fears she hasn't "lived a l ife f u ll
enough to look back on, but I'm too old to get by on being pithy and cute." Few people would admit to not being the right age to write a book. Way back in the
condition, but in t his book, as with her work elsewhere,
with creative lists and random more wild-eyed than m o st
to and divorce from Will Arnett; a treatise on the frustrations of modern motherhood
comedians, which is to say
(Poehler is just grateful for
thoughts. Poehler, being a bit
Jordan Strauss/The Associated Press
Amy Poehler at ELLE's Women In Hollywood Awards In October. Poehler's first book, a memoir, published on Tuesday.
all the help she can afford) or a lot of self-deprecating nonsense about luck. This last one alone makes
"Yes Please" worth reading. Too many women at the top of their c a reers inevitably
discuss their job as if it were you get the sense she does it something anyone with a pair because she believes every- of sweatpants, a childhood one is capable of change. She and a laptop could do. is ruthless but in a generous Poehler knew early on she way. wanted to be a performer, and "Yes Please" is a memoir in she worked hard to become that it contains some mem- one. Although she acknowlories, many of which are of- edges the help of others and fered as hard-won ... advice the good fortune involved in seems too preachy, so we'll go any big career, she resents the with helpful suggestions. (A overnight-success myth and chapter called "I'm So Proud our dependence on it. A brief of You" should be required description of the rage she reading in h i g h s chools.) feels when some guy drops Also featured: haiku about a script in her lap while she's plastic surgery, a chapter by asleep on a train is both hilarPoehler's mother, a s a t iric ious and righteous — success birth plan, a chapter by Seth is not something that rubs off Meyers, an annotated history or can be doled out. It's not of "Parks and Recreation," a pixie dust. letter from Hillary Rodham The day everyone underClinton, sex advice, a hilar- stands this, Hollywood as we
late 1980s, Kenneth Branagh took a lot of flak for writing an autobiography at 28, but nowadays, the midcareer memoir ious list of p otential books is de rigueur. Increasingly about divorce and a moving these books are not so much account of an apology. memoirs as musings, colMercifully, the book does lections of essays that could not include recipes; any disappear in magazines, along cussion of Poehler's marriage
Like most comedians, Poehler is happy to point out the glaring flaws, contradictions and cruelty of the human condition, but in this book, as with
her work elsewhere, you get the senseshe does it because she believes everyone is capable of change. She is ruthless but in a generous way. Poehler is no one's doormat,
lot of noise," she writes, "be-
but she clearly does not want to be a jerk. This is a worthy goal for anyone but particularly difficult to achieve here, given Poehler's line of busi-
cause I felt bad about hurting someone's feelings and
are no accident. For Othniel
from the Hebrew by Steven
Hilik Yisraeli, their community is no less than a birth-
Cohen(Scribner, 448 pages) By David L. Ulin Los Angeles Times
Assaf Gavron's 2010 novel
"Almost Dead" does something I would have thought impossible — it makes satire
out of terrorism. The story of
Assis and his fellow settler
figure out how I felt." It's a great story, and not
because it's full of famous names (which it is) or that attention, and the demands it ends in a highly emotionof success, particularly from al and effective way (which an audiencedesiring ever-in- it does), but because it is creasing intimacy with per- self-damning and hopeful at ego, ambition and a desire for
formers, are as constant and
the same time.
"Yes Please" is at times absurd as the benefits. Just look at all these midca- choppy and self-consciously reer memoirs. Not that Poehler complains about this; on the contrary, she seems eminently clear-
right, a connection to geography, to history, that stands
outside government or politics.
It d o esn't h urt that I srael's bureau-
a man who becomes an Israeli national hero after surviv-
c racy is s o labyrinthine
ing three attacks in a single
that one dep ar t m en t
week, the book offers a sharp-
ly ironic look at the intersec- doesn't know what the next tion of image and reality. This character is no r ole is doing. "The model; he's a guy in the wrong n ew tr ai l place at the right time. Gav- ers," Gavron ron, who was born near Jeru- writes, "were salem and lives in Tel Aviv, is
suggesting that we are all of us (citizens, nations, even, to
some extent, terrorists) making it up as we go along. A similar sensibility centers "The Hilltop," Gavron's seventh book, although only the second (after "Almost Dead") to appear in the United States. A sprawling novel
most impossible to get them bulldozer to bring it to a halt." he introduces characters on every side of the situation, including Othniel and Hilik and their families, a section commander of the
Those olive groves are the
source of a key subplot: a proposed partnership between one of the settlers, a former
eccentric. It has two introduc-
tions, which is at least one introduction too many, and why
too, required authorization, which they didn't have. And
to close the deal, he is outsmarted. "I give to someone P Gavr o n de- from the village," Musa tells s cribes all t h i s him. "His brother is lawyer in with a measured Bethlehem." m atter - o f - f a c t For Gavron, that highlights ness, complicat- the way nothing (or no one) is ing the tensions isolated anymore. Investment with fami l i a r i- bankers may become Israeli ty. In this world, settlers; Palestinian villagers S. t hen, Arabs a r e have lawyers in the family. not the other but "Those trees," Musa thinks, rather un e a sy "were here for hundreds of neighbors who share many of years before him and were the same hopes and dreams. supposed to remain hundreds When the IDF decides to of years after him, the earth's
thus the soldiers loaded the build a security fence that settlers onto the military ve- w ill encroach on b oth t h e hicles and drove them away settlement and the village's — with the records of the olive fields, Jews and Palarmy and Defense Ministry e stinians alike p r otest t h e duly noting that the outpost
that revolves around a small had been evacuated. The setsettlement in t h e o c cupied tlers returned the very next
move. "The incident climaxed in a bizarre act of solidarity," Gavron writes in the voice of
territories, its focus is less
day, and the brigade com-
a Washington Post reporter
satirical than absurdist, of-
mander turned his attention
whom he places at the scene.
fering a middle vision be- to more pressing matters." tween the ridiculous and the Here, Gavron sets up the sublime. essential push-and-pull of "In the beginning were the the novel: The settlers may fields," Gavron starts things have laid claim illegally to off, and the biblical rhythms their enclosure, but it is al-
"The Hilltop" is not without its flaws, especially two
extended digressions about Roni and his brother Gabi,
who end up at the settlement Roni, and t h e P a lestinian, to escape their pasts. These Israeli D e f e n se Musa, who owns the fields. stories are interesting but F orces and t h e Roni has a scheme to sell take us out of the main narr esidents of t h e Musa's olive oil to boutiques rative. More important is the neighboring Pal- in Tel Aviv, but when he goes human drama and, yes, the Kharmish.
t here w i t h o ut a per mit. However, their removal,
only option is to persevere.
investment banker named
estinian village of
l
"The Palestinian owner of the olive groves, a religious settler woman, and an Israe-
BRIEFLY
ness. Entertainment rewards
would I need blank pages on eyed aboutthe profession she which to write a story about know it will cease to exist. has chosen. But she's much the day I was born? But none Not everything in "Yes more interested in the con- of that matters much because Please" works (I love Seth stant maintenance required to in between, sorting through Meyers, just not here), but be a strong and decent human all the crazy wigs and canned many things are funny, and being. In th e chapter titled beets, is a smart and funny as with most of her comedy, "sorry, sorry, sorry," Poehler woman who i sn't either of Poehler is attempting some- details a painful episode in those things all the time and thing that seems simple but is which she could not bring her- doesn't mind admitting it benot: to chronicle not so much self to admit an error in judg- cause she thinks that's imher success as her maturity. ment, until she did. "I made a portant, too.
out. To make that explicit,
Lena Dunham(Random House) 3. "Food" by JimGaffigan (Crown Archetype) 4. "You Can,YouWill" by Joel Osteen(FaithWords) 5. "Agents of theApocalypse" David Jeremiah(Tyndale) 6. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan) 7. "GuinnessWorld Records 2015" by GuinnessWorld Records (GuinnessWorld Records) 8. "As YouWish" by Cary Elwes (S&S/Touchstone) 9. "ChooseYour OwnAutobiography" by Neil Patrick Harris (Crown Archetype) 10."Your HiddenRiches" by Chris Attwood (Harmony)
I didn't want to get quiet and
'Hilltop' viewseverydayabsurdismin occupied territories "The Hilltop: A Novel" by AssafGavron, translated
Publishers Weekly ranksthe best-sellers for theweekthat ended Oct. 26. HARDIIVER FICTION 1. "Gray Mountain" by John Grisham (Doubleday) 2."LeavingTime"byJodi Picoult (Ballantine) 3. "Burn" by Patterson/Ledwidge (Little, Brown) 4. "Edge ofEternity" by Ken Follett (Dutton) 5. "Deadline" by JohnSandford (Putnam) 6. "Mr. Miracle" by Debbie Macomber (Ballantine) 7. "Desert God" byWilbur Smith (Morrow) 8. "SomewhereSafewith SomebodyGood" byJan Karon (Putnam) 9. "Personal" by LeeChild (Delacorte) 10. "Beautiful You" byChuck Palahniuk (Doubleday) HARDIIVER NDNFICTIDN 1. "Killing Patton" by O'Reilly/Dugard (Henry Hold) 2. "Not That Kind of Girl" by
"yes," she writes,
"comes from my improvisationLena Dunham just released al days and the opportunihers, and her entire career ties that come from youth, spans fewer years than "Parks and the 'please' comes from and Recreation." the wisdom of knowing that But as Poehler explains in agreeing to do something usuher preface, she wasn't quite ally means you aren't doing it sure this was a good time for alone." Like most comedians, Poea book. She has been busy, starring in "Parks and Rec," hler is happy to point out the hosting the Golden Globes glaring flaws, contradictions and persuading NBC to air and cruelty of the human
BEST-SELLERS
human comedy. "Winds will change," Gavron writes, "and days will end, and life will go on. The children will grow, the worshippers will pray ... and the soldiers will continue to come
and go, to climb and descend, to be replaced and return, and eyes will open in the morning and the sun will rise over the desert, and set in the evening b ehind th e
m o u ntain a n d
eyes will close, and in between work, and prayer, and rest, and love."
RollingStonesbook: Decemberrelease The nextRollingStonesproject will costyou alot morethan the averageconcert ticket. A boxed,collector's edition of "The RollingStones," acoffee table bookfeaturing hundreds of famousandlittle-known photographs,willbe released in December.Thepublisher Taschenannounced Monday that bandmembersMick Jagger, Keith Richards,RonWoodand Charlie Wattssignedeachofthe available1,150copies.Theasking price: $5,000.Theregular edition, unsignedandslightly smaller in dimension,hasalist priceof $150. In astatementissuedthrough Taschen,Jaggersaid the book captures"manymagicalmoments," andRichards calledit a"roller coaster" throughthe band's 50yearhistory.
GeorgeI. Bush promotingnewbook Former PresidentGeorgeW. Bush willbe back in the public eye as he promotes"41," hisupcoming bookabout hisfather, former PresidentGeorgeH.W.Bush. George W.Bush's interview with CBSnewsmanBobSchieffer will air intwo parts onSunday, Nov. 9: thefirston"Sunday Morning," thesecondon"Face the Nation." Aninterview with NBC'sSavannahGuthrie airs on the"Today"showonNov. 10. Forpublication day,Nov.11, both formerpresidentswill be on"Today" for adiscussion with George W. Bush's daughterand "Today" correspondentJenna Bush Hager. OtherappearancesbyGeorge W. BushannouncedTuesdayby Crown Publishersinclude interviews onthe FoxNews Channel and NPR anda private eventat the GeorgeBushPresidential Libraryand Museum in Texas — Fiom triirrerepoits
trees, not Palestine's and not
Israel's, trees that don't care who's there and who's in control and who builds above the
Find It All
earth. That's all nonsense to them, the real world is under
bendbulletin.com
the earth, and there they are
deeply and widely rooted." This is not to say that Gavron overlooks th e p o litics,
just that he puts them in their
Online
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place. Politics, after all, be-
gins with people's hopes and li man whose ties to the area fears. And yet the pleasure of remain unclear all leaped to- "The Hilltop" is that it doesn't gether onto the blade of the offer easy outcomes — the
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
ice ta s ernew oo, Ievlvln vam ire creations million books worldwide may
By Carolyn Kellogg
firms. "I've had some pretty
have assistants taking care of
their social media presence. "It's totally me," she con-
Los Angeles Times
"Superstorm: Nine Days Inside Hurricane Sandy"
of Grey" has brought renewed attention to Rice's Sleeping
its art, architecture and music.
368 pages)
Beauty books. "They went
By Herman Y.Wong
mainstream because of it. The publishers reissued them for
Newsday
nasty exchanges on the page Walmart and T arget," Rice When Anne Rice published with people who didn't be- says. "It was a riot, really." "Interview With the Vampire" lieve it. I remember one womRice, of course, has thought in 1976, she didn't just launch an came on, she said, 'I know a great deal about the erotic her own vampire series — her Anne Rice, I've been in her element of her vampire myth. sexy tragic vampire antiheroes house in New Orleans and you "The vampireishyper-romanare not she.' .... I tic, a Byronic hero — a largeralso launched an entirely new genre. finally got angry than-life, extremely strong, T he phr a se enough to block mysterious, tragic personality," her." she says. "It's Mr. Rochester p aranormal r o mance "didn't exist The Anne Rice and Jane (Eyre) over and over when I wrote the of today does seem again.... Basically the vampire vampire novels in different from the is untamed mystery, and that's the b e ginning," one a fan might what men seem to women. It's Rice says. But the h ave met y e a r s a deep, deep metaphor for sexago. She sold her ual difference. Every man's a genre, she adds, "is here to stay." g rand New O r - vampire to us, in a way." Indeed, after an leans man s ion, Which makes the reader not 11-year break, the the t h r ee-story,the victim but the chosen part47,000-square foot ner. "I'm sure every boy and grande dame of vampire fiction has former o r phan- girl out there reading a vamrevived her famous vampire age she'd restored, and lives in pire novel is convinced that clan with "Mnce Lestat." relative quiet in Palm Desert. the vampire would never bite That supernatural romance Rice is petite, more than 100 them," Rice says, rapping at her has become a f l ourishing pounds lighter than she was at table on the last three words: part of pop culture has been a her heaviest (she was an undi- Never. Bite. Them. blessing and a curse. The field agnoseddiabeticand hassince In hernew novel, vampires is crowded with hits such as had gastric bypass surgery). live in the modern world, lis"7wilight" and "True Blood," She's surrounded herself with tening to Internet radio and and numerous other television paintings by her late husband, duckingcellphone paparazzi. shows, movies, graphic nov- Stan, forsaking many of the Most of them have figured out els and books, and for a long gothic antiques and religious how to use immortality to their financial advantage and live in time, Rice avoided it all. "I was artifacts she once owned. always frightened of being too Rice was raised Catholic in luxurious surroundings. And influenced, and I would get a working-class family in New yet there is a threat that seems blocked," she admits. Orleans and has had an in- to be converging on them from Serving up lunch on formal tense, on-again, off-again rela- all sides — crowds of young china in her house, she ex- tionship with the church. She's vampires keep getting torched, plains that she thought she had a believer and admires the a terrifying and complete closed the book on her "Vam- church's centuries of history, death. "I agonizeover some of the pire Chronicles" with 2003's the sense of social justice and "Blood Canticle." After that,
'Superstorm' focusesondays leading to HurricaneSandy by Kathryn Miles (Dutton,
""Prince Lestat" byAnne Rice(Alfred A. Knopf, 458 pages)
dark and cruel things that I write. I want them, for me, to
she allowed herself to enjoy But, she says, she "suffered other people's vampire stories. agonies" as a teenager over her be effective and authentic and "I got less scared in my 60s.... priests' declaration that kiss- dramatic and moral, I guess," I came to realize we all make ing and necking were a mortal she says. our own cosmology, and there sin. "I'll never entirely get over When she lived in Berkeley are certain traits that are com- the damage done to me by the in the 1960s and '70s, Rice says, mon to all of the fiction in this Catholic attitude toward sex. she used to debate with her area. I just grewup." The hatred of sex, the loathing friends about the demands of Emotional maturity aside, of it and the denial of the loath- art. "If great art is really great t he 73-year-old author h a s ing of it," she says. art, it shouldn't depress you. some of the habits of a teenThat seems unusual, per- We would argue about, like, ager. A poster-sized picture haps, for someone who writes the movie 'The Blue Angel': Is of actor Matt Bomer hangs on erotica. "That's protest," she it depressing or is it uplifting'? her bedroom wall — "because says, laughing. "I'm very proud If it's great art, it should be so I think he's gorgeous, and I of my erotica." uplifting that you come out of it like to look at him," she trillsInitially published under the feeling joy." and she spends hours a day on pen name A.N. Roquelaure, She explains that she gave Facebook. her Sleeping Beauty trilogy up on "Breaking Bad" because Unlike most teenagers, her is an explicit S&M fantasy. it was too depressing. So is she Facebook page has 1.1 million "What I write is out-and-out in the uplifting camp'? "Not necessarily. I can't refans. Rice is so engagedpornography," she says. "I linking to news stories, asking think it's a f i n e w ord. The solve it," she says. That kind provocative questions and re- only reason I don't use it more of tension — between tragedy sponding to comments — that often is it gets all misunder- and transcendence — is what some don't believe it's actu- stood, and people want to call it takes to spend half a lifetime ally the author. Other writers it erotica." writing stories of the glamorwho have sold more than 100 The success of "Fifty Shades ousundead.
who can find drama in the
cal from warnings the year
issuance of a storm briefing, which one meteorologist lik-
before about Irene, a hurricane-turned-tropical s t orm
ens to "sounding the a l arm to a p o t enflal five-alarm fire."
N IN E DAYs IN s I DE H UR R I D A M E
How do you make sense of She skillfully a storm like Sandy, a "hur- w eaves in t h e ricane that wasn't a hurricane" and was "so immense
dictable, and mor-
troubled histo-
ry of weather it caught the attention of forecasting and scientists on t h e I n t erna- tales of s a il- S T tional Space Station"'? Two ors surviving years on, Kathryn Miles storms, going
phing from a hurricane to a posttropical storm wouldn't
O
confronts this question in back to Aristoher ambitious new b o ok, tle and Christo-
"Superstorm."
pher Columbus.
The story focuses on the
that had d r iven people from their homes but proved less deadly. Sandy was more unpre-
What becomes clear is that
eight days leading to San- precedents meant little with dy's destructive arrival in the a storm the likes of which most populous region of the "the world has simply never United States. At the heart witnessed." What was supof this journey are Ameri- posed tobe the more "manca'sweather forecasters,the ageable" side of a hurricane meteorologists who struggle for ships, according to nauto make sense of an unprec- tical books, had with Sandy edented storm and to warn become the dangerous side, the public in time. Separate with fatal consequences. story lines follow the crew The course of a hurricane of the sailing ship "Bounty" i s difficult t o n a i l d o w n ; and a family on a Disney "many experts say there is cruise, as well as the pilots only a one in five chance that of the 53rd Weather Recon- a hurricane will land within naissance Squadron as they the predicted warning area," fly into hurricanes to gather writes Miles. This natural undata. certainty only sowed doubt Miles is a gifted writer in a public already skepti-
Q IV I
le s sen its impact. The book begins and ends at land-
MIUE s
fall, a tragic frame that reminds us of
"just how vulnerable weare"to storms. The National Weather Service did
make changes to its warning system after Sandy,and unveiled a storm surge map to show potential flooding zones, but issues with funding and decaying equipment remain. If the cast is too large and the historical exposition bogs down the narrative at times,
Miles can be forgiven. Sandy was no ordinary storm: "There was no precedent, no authoritative model or sooth-
ing data to help make sense of what was happening." But Miles' "Superstorm" comes
pretty close.
New booksdealwith resisting bullying By Sarah Kaplan
on, she joins in on the bullying — at least until Jill
The Washington Post
has to find a way to stand up for herself and
Looking for more stories herself becomes the about overcoming bullying? target. "Each Kindness" Here are six new books about kids who deal with being By Jacqueline Wooddifferent. son,for ages5 to 8. "Absolutely Almost" Chloe doesn't think By Lisa Graff, forages 8 to twice about b e ing 12.
Ten-year-old Albie gets
make it up to her friends.
"The Paper Cowboy" By Kristin Levine,
for age 10and older. It's
hard for Tommy to dothe right thing when
mean to the new girl,
Maya, who wears teased by h i s c l a ssmates ragged clothes and and criticized by his parents doesn't fit in with the for being only almost good rest of the class. But enough. Can a new babysitter then Chloe's teacher gives a
his life at h ome
is so difficult: His mom is sick, and his sister is in the hospital. When one of
help him learn to take pride in
lesson about kindness, and
himself?
Chloe starts to wonder if she his pranks spirals out of con-
"Blubber" By JudyBlume, for
should have acted differently.
"Harriet the Spy"
ages 8 to 12.
By Louise Fitzhugh,
Fifth-grader Jill interested in planning her Hallow-
for ages 8 to 12. Aspiring author Harriet Welch has no problem writing
een costume than
down exactly what
B renner i s
more
making fun of her
trol, he has to find a way to
act like a brave cowboy rather
than an outlaw.
"Stargirl" By Jerry Spinelli, for age 12 and older. Stargirl, the new student at Leo Borlock's school, doesn't
she thinks — that is, seemtocarewhat anyone else
c lassmate L i n d a Fischer, whom the
until her classmates thinks of her — but Leo does. find her notebook. As the bullying gets worse, class p r e sident N ow t h e ent i r e Leo has to choosebetweenhis calls "Blubber." But school has teamed friendship with Stargirl and once the nickname catches up against her, and Harriet his desire to fit in.
William Gibsontravels backto future "The Perlpherai"
soaring health care costs and
er. But getting her there alive
will require more than technam'sSons, 486 pages) putting their lives back togeth- nical cunning on both sides of er, most folks are just hanging the looking glass. It's been a while since GibBy Chris Foren on. Drones are commonplace Milwaukee Journal Sentinel — for delivery and defense son — the guy who coined In a d e ad-end American — and so are corruption, t he term cyberspace in hi s town, a young woman named 3-D-printed weaponry, illegal landmark 1984 novel "NeuFlynne fills in for her brother, pharmaceutical s and the cyn- romancer" — has been this beta-testing an ical use of power. Fly- science-fictiony. His last three online game that nne and other decent novels, capped by 2010's "Zero seems to involve History," were set in a very people survive by fending off pakeeping their heads near future at once familiar down and conscienc- and alternate-universe. (Gibparazzi in some son's other often-quoted statefuturistic London es clear. T skyscraper. The future world ment, "The future is already PERIPHEPtAL When she witthat Flynne gets a here — it's just not very evenly E nesses a murder, glimpse of is domi- distributed," echoes through she decides maynated by kleptocracy, all of his writing.) be it's not a game M achiavellian p l o t But even when "The Pe• after all — a fact ting, frantic innova- ripheral" is dealing in futuresc onfirmed w h en tion and an alarming capes — as in a tour of London disregard for conse- post-"jackpot," a tumultuous gunmen hired by forces from the 22nd centu- quence. When the murder she time between both realities ry show up to kill her and her witnesses brings the k illers when, basically, everything family, leaving her caught be- into her timeline, a rival fac- went to hell — Gibson doesn't tween superpowerfulorgani- tion from the future steps in to obsess with explanations of zations in a swiftly escalating protect her — and, in the pro- how the tech works, or how conflict that could reshape cess, changes the present in the universe operates. their present and alter her a way that severs its relationInstead, he focuses on his future. ship to the future. characters' interactions with Although it veers back and Flynne's principal c on- the worlds around them, teasby William Gibson (G.P. Put-
forth between near-future and
further on, "The Peripheral," science-fiction master William Gibson's first novel in f o ur
years, is not really a time-travel story. It's a story of people making choices — sometimes by habit, sometimes forced
soldiers from unnamed wars
nection to that future is Wilf Netherton, a publicist whose brief affair with a client — a
ing out answers in real nar-
performance artist w hose self-celebrity styling makes
make their own adjustments
the Kardashians look naive
— is tangled up in what Flynne witnessed. They connect
not by physically traveling guided by the better angels of through time, but through their nature — and how those "peripherals": drones inhabchoices can ripple through ited virtual-reality style that allow them to experience and time, or spiral out of control. And as in the best of Gib- communicate in t h e o t h er son's novels, it's a story of reality without leaving their people taking a stand, often own. despite themselves. To bring matters to a head, In Flynne's world, domi- Flynne must "travel" to Wilf's nated by giant corporations, world and identify the murderby circumstance, sometimes
I r. The best time tolearn abouthospice is beforetheservices are needed. The earlier hospice isinvolved,the morewe canhelp makea patient's final days,weeksand months ascomfortable aspossible. Wegive families relief andfreedomto spendmorequality time together. Now available inDeschutesCounty,St. CharlesHospicehas been providingcomfort anddignity for patients - andsupport for Central Oregonfamilies - for 25 years.Aspart of St.Charles Health System,ourwell-trained, compassionatecaregiverscan easily provide a seamless continuumof careto patients. Don't wait to getthe careyour lovedone needs.
St, CharlesHospice,Apromise of comfort.
rative time and allowing the characters, and readers, to as needed in realities that feel organic and adaptable. And for all o f G ibson's gloomy prognoses about where things are headed, and how much worse they
could become, "The Peripheral" has a stubborn streak of
hopefulness. More than in any of his past novels, the future in "The Pe-
ripheral" is a moving targetand, as he makes a good case, regular people can move it to a better destination.
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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014
U If ia'. "Welcome to Subirdia: Sharing Our Neighborhoods with Wrens, Robins, Woodpeckers, and Other Wildlife" by John Marzluf j(YaleUniversity Press, 303 pages) By Mary Ann Gwinn The Seattle Times
John Marzluff bought two
acres in suburbia 17 years ago. Marzluff and his wife,
have attracted 60 bird species in all, including west-
bird and wildlife art by Jack DeLap, one of Marzluff's doc-
bute to adaptation to an urban he does worry about the gange nvironment. A dapters i n buster pace of development clude red-winged blackbirds, in the city and the suburbs. found birds even in degraded th at "the greatest diversity killdeer, American goldfinch- Right now Seattle sustains a reas such as the industrial w as not in the most forested e s, Bewick's w r ens, b a r n between 40 percent and 60 neighborhood setting. I nstead, owls, Cooper's hawks and percent of its tree cover, dealong the Dubird di v ersity white-crowned sparrows. pending how it's measuredwamish River, rose quickly from Avoiders, birds that need if that number drops below 30 w here t h ey the city center to habitat that only relatively percent, the fragile balance of spotted C a sthe suburbs and wild places can provide, don't "subirdia" will be threatened, 'a.m(<lt . • IAhl Vl l t l, then dr o pped fare so well. They include according to landscape-ecolopian t e r n s, again in the ex- the yellow-billed cuckoo, the gy theory. p ere g r i n e f alcons a n d tensive f o r est marbled murrelet, the pygmy For the health of this sysbelted k i ngthat eases Seat- owl, Wilson's warbler, Swain- tem to endure, people must son's thrush and the Pacific pitch in. Subdivisions can be f ishers. B u t tle into the high the g r e atest Cascades. W e wren. The Pacific wren needs designed with less lawn and bird diversity had discovered a thick n a t ive u n derstory more forest. On a recent walk occurred not subirdia." usually removed by develop- in his own neighborhood, downtown, or M ar z l u f f ' s ment, and is often shoved out Marzluff showed off a subeven in f orteams conducted by its larger Bewick's cousin. division laid out with smallest reserves, studies of selectExploiters include birds er lawns and tractsof forest b ut i n out ed areas before, t hat we al l k n o w w e l l that undulate in belts behind lying suburduring and after Canada geese, European the houses. His neighborhood ban neighborhoods - " the d e velopment; birds were dis- starlings, house sparrows, surveys have showed high j umbled collection of hous- p l aced during development, mallards, rock pigeons and bird counts in these areas, es, allotments and gardens, bu t many species came back. crows. These birds thrive side but not so much in another "This is not an observation d erelict an d v a c ant l a n d , by side with humans — crows nearby neighborhood, platted g olf courses and other recre- t hat comes from a quick and "love grass and a little gar- out with maximum lawn and ational sites, and by the cem- di rty look," he said in a recent bage," Marzluff says. minimum trees. eteries, schoolyards, highway in terview. "This is 12 years of Why are birds so adaptAs an academic who has and railway verges, business re search. Birds can thrive in able? "Flight, for one," Mar- s pent his life's work i m zluff says. A bird can escape mersed in the animal kingparks and shopping centres, ou r presence." situated amid the greenways Not all bird species are threat through flight — a dom, Marzluff has harbored t hat c omprise suburbia," e q ually resilient. Marzluff salamander or toad cannot. plenty of dark thoughts about
toral students at the UW.
Marzluff wrote in a
ern tanagers, Pacific wrens,
sparrows, towhees, juncos, Anna's hummingbirds and owls, plus native red squirrels, Townsend's chipmunks, tree frogs and coyotes. Marzluff's academic work and his lifelong passion for birds have merged in his beautiful
a n d i n f o r mative
Colleen, are world-renowned
wildlife researchers, and they
new book, "Welcome to Subirdia: Sharing Our Neighbor-
purchased the forested tract
hoods with Wrens, Robins,
in Snohomish County as a Woodpeckers, and O t her home for their nine sled dogs, Wildlife." His conclusions oftheir partners in previous re- fer hope in an era of despair search on raven behavior in at what humans' destructive habits are doing to wildlife: the brutal Maine winter. The dogs have passed to Given a little help from hutheir reward, but M a r zluff man hands, birds can thrive has turned his piece of sub- in the midst of development. urbia into Subirdia, using Marzluff is a n o r n itholoknowledge gleaned from a gist, University of Washinglife's work with birds to turn his land into a haven.
The Marzluffs allow dead trees to stand — they're visited by pileated woodpeckers, who dine on the termites within. (On one recent August day, Marzluff saw three of these majestic black, red and white birds.) Salmonberry hedges shelter Pacific wrens. Though the hum of the highway a block away is audible through the trees,
the brush piles and feeders the Marzluffs have installed
Stroke Continued from F1 Sounds OK. Then she's in-
ton professor and author of
several previous books, including two on crows and ravens. "Welcome to Subirdia"
offers a similar words-andpictures combination — it's b eautifully i l l ustrated w i t h
sound right to you?"
She cannot stand, let alone
walk. Her right arm and leg are not moving. When the
doctor asks what year it is, she says 1914. Her politics, however, remain intact. "Who's the president, Mrs.
Wadler'?" the doctor asks. "Obama, the big liar," Ma says. Her personality has also r emained
e s sentially u n -
changed. She wants all the medical people who walk into the room to read an ar-
ticle I wrote about a road trip we took i n C a l ifornia that stars her and was recently
reprinted in Reader's Digest. She'd had one of my brothers bring it from the condo, along with her Book of Psalms. This is very flattering: King Solomon and me, neck and
neck, though in Ma's head it is more likely King Solomon and her, neck and neck. She
even recommends the story to me, on one of the days she
does not recognize me. "There's a funny story in
that magazine over there,"
she says. "You should read it." "I wrote it, Ma," I tell her. "But thanks." This has to be one of the
i n Scotland and Auckland, N ew Zealand. In urban Seat-
t ha n 100 locations in a n d a round Seattle, M arzluff tle, Marzluff's research crew wn 'tes in his book, revealed
r e cent c lassifies birds as "adapters,"
Also, birds d on't
t h r eaten the rate of h a bitat extinction worldwide. But he also
opinion piece for Aeon Mag- "avoiders" and "exploiters." people — large mammals represent decades of study azine. These areas offer shelAdapters learn to live side tend to bring out a defensive b y Marzluff an d o t her r e - t er and food, including both b y side with humans. Scien- response in humans. searchers in areas as close b ird feeders and a rich mix of t i sts have even documented Marzluff is relatively opas Seattle and as far afield as plant species birds rely on. ch anges in coloration and timistic about the future of London, Berlin, St. Andrews Bird surveysfrom more ge ne makeup that they attri- birds in the Seattle area, but The book's conclusions
planner and the Publix and
to forge my signature on checks, figures it out. The
I throw out interconnected, corroded, vertical skirt hangers that make the closet look
crawl on Fox is shooting out
like a World War I barbed-
scare words and Ma's brain stantly off the tracks. "They'retorturing me,"she has them linked. "ISIS isn't a disease, it's a says. "They stole my orange. I had it on the bottom of the terrorist group, Milli," says refrigerator and t hey s t ole Herb, who has known my it. I'm gonna sue when I get mother for 40 years. out. I'm thinking 10 G's. That
riveinsu ur anareas
wire no man's land. I remove
wadded-up tissues and hidden $20 bills from cracked plastic handbags. I get skinny, bright pink and velvety black Velcro hangers and "I've got ISIS," Ma insists. separate silky s y nagogue "I'm gonna make them test blouses and casual knit tops, me." trying to hang things up Which is not to say the perfectly with my one good basic personality has dis- hand. appeared. It's just a l i ttle I throw out shelves jerrawer. I always thought Ma ry-built from plastic milk carwas pure id, saying whatev- tons and scraps of plywood. I er came into her head, but make Herb drive to the malls, now we are really down to where I buy even more Velcro bedrock. Sitting in a visitors' hangers, dozens and dozens. lounge or the dining hall, she When my bad hand starts to shouts out news about her di- throb, I sit down on the floor and admire how beautifully gestive tract that you would hesitate to confide to your pri- the closet is coming along. mary physician. Four a.m., 6 a.m., left to On good days she's close right: knit shirts, pedal pushto the old Ma, joking with ers, casual skirts, dress skirts, Herb, saying that the apple- good pants, synagogue bloussauce in the cafeteria is the es, good suits. Lower level, only thing they haven't man- cold-weather clothes for goaged to kill. On bad days she ing north. Boxes on opposite doesn't recognize him or tells wall, waist level; shorts, beme about the batch of kittens cause you wear a lot of shorts thatsomebody dropped offat in Florida. Shoes where Ma the hospital, and I sit on the can easily see them, though floor out of her line of vision I have to get them where she and cry. can more easily reach them, H erb and I s tay a t M a 's off the floor. "What are you doing?" condo, a shrine to off-brand peanut butter and ' 70s orHerb asks one daybreak, ange sheets and towels with hearing me. "I'm making it nice for her ducks on them. Two days in, my guts are frozen and I am when she comes home," I say. getting up in the middle of Then I amend it. "I'm trying to fix it," I say. the night, every night. I set about organizing Ma's walk- "I'm trying to make believe it in closet. can be fixed."
knows firsthand that birds can thrive, with a little help
from humans, one block at a time. "Where you live is a great place to start," he says.
Connelly'sHarryBoschis backwith a new partner,old political battles By Oline H. Cogdill
attention for a decade. Mari- nutiae of a police procedural, achi musician Orlando Mer- making the most mundane "The Burning Room" cedwasshot 10years agoin aspects of an investigation by Michael Connelly (Little, the middle of a busy plaza, exciting. becoming the living symbol Si n ce his 1992 debut "The Brown, 400 pgs., $28) of urbanviolence and a cam- Black Echo," Connelly has uncovered m o re Politics often seeps into po- paign slogan for lice investigations, especially when a high-profile case Sun Sentinel
MIGHAEL „"
has officials from the city to
GONN ELLY "'
the state level jockeying for a piece of the action.
even more tired of this intru-
Unit — the official
,"
;
„-
,'
;." , '
tiredofthepolitics, case d epartment ~ L. IA both e x ternal and — to reopen the within the departcase. If Boschandhispartner m e nt, that he welcomes recan find a match to the bullet, t i r i ng'? Harry's new partner,
sion, which erupts constantly in "The Burning Room," the which has been lodged in Or- Lucy, further energizes "The e xcellent 19th novel in M i lando's spine, they might be Burning Room," as the vetchael Connelly's series. "The able to find the murderer. The eran detective relishes being Burning Room" excels as a demand for a quick solution her mentor and showing her look at how power, prestige starts with H a r ry's L AP D h o w t h e L APD works, and and themedia can override boss, who is pressured by f a ils. Lucy makes mistakes, the best intentions. Connel- Zeyas,nowthefrontrunnerto but she also shows that she ly also weaves in a bit of the be L.A.'s next mayor. has the insight and the grit immigrant experience that The case leads Harry and to make it as a detective. helped shape — and continues Lucy on a trek through Los Connelly will be keeping her to mold — Los Angeles. Angeles'poorest and wealth- around for several novels, But Harry, as Connelly has iest neighborhoods. They a nd she has the potential to shown in novel after novel, link the shooting to the arson lead her own series. refuses to let his mission of of an apartment building in Ev e n i f Harry leaves the uncovering the truth about which several children died LAPD, a year can result in a crime be altered by others. and a bank robbery. several novels and, as he has Harry and his new partner, One of the pleasures of a proved, Connelly still has Lucia "Lucy" Soto, are hand- Connelly novel is how he im- much to explore in Harry's ed a case that has attracted merses the reader in the mi- personalgrowth.
c all i t o u r
her brain explodes and she is talking about a new way to
do CT scans, with a cat on her chest, hahaha. Friends from t h e c o n do
and the synagogue and the ham radio club come in, and you can read the fear of the
future in their eyes as they
take it in.
Stroke. Again. Oh, boy, and it's bad. We s at next t o e ach o t her a t the opera club and now she
doesn't even know me. Sometimes they drag me into the hall, hoping to stave
off fear with good news from
•
the miracle workers. What
•
•
•
e •
• e
•
are the doctors saying'? Subtext: Will she always be like this? When it's my turn, will I b e l i k e t h is? Please,
God, let mine be mild. A little weakness in my arm, I can live with that. Just don't touch
the brain. "They're torturing me here," my mother tells them,
as Fox News, to which she has fallenasleep for years, plays silently in the background. "I've got Ebola. I have ISIS."
f r iend, Herb,
hospital and Ma's financial
„
has he grown so
~~~
name for the cold
puzzles in ink. The next day
My best
"
with the LAPD, or
plague'?One day my mother is walking 2 miles on the beach and doing crossword
who has flown in from New York after my brothers have to leave, to drive me to the
;
willhefighttostay
)AAg "'t
the Open-Unsolved
modern circles of hell, stroke. O r should w e
;
TIIf IIIJHNIIIQ year of his job.But
L.A. Police D epartment lyzed Orlando has Detective Harry Bosch has died, p r ompting
seen enough of politics interfering with his investigations through the years. Now, as he supposedly enters the last year of his career, Harry is
„
e ~™'.-" " ;
•
I
'
' I'jlH II
'
I
I
I
'
I I II
I' ll IIIII I I
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I I
I I I
'
I
' I
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'
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I
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l l
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ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 • •
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264- Snow Removal Equipment 210 265 - BuildingMaterials I H u sqvarna/ 266- Heating and Stoves Furniture & Appliances Viking, 10-ft bed, 267- Fuel and Wood computerized, 541-280-0892 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers $85OO. A1 Washers&Dryers ¹11948 built in 1870 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment $150 ea. Full wari5 41-416-0538 by New England ranty. Free Del. Also 270- Lost and Found Organ Co. wanted, used W/D's !T O'ORKS! GARAGESALES 541-280-7355 241 Beautiful carved 275 - Auction Sales cabinet. In 1878t it Bicycles & 280 - Estate Sales took 2nd place in Accessories 281 - Fundraiser Sales Sydney, Australia. Tempur-Pedic® Was presented to a 282- Sales NorlhwestBend Contour Elite King after his ser284- Sales Southwest Bend size mattress 8 founda- minister vice in the Civil War. tion, BRAND NEW. 286- Sales Norlheast Bend $350. 541-385-4790 New cool model. 288- Sales Southeast Bend Purchased; then spent 290- Sales RedmondArea Antique table: summer in Alaska, and The Bulletin reserves engraved with sail292 - Sales Other Areas it was past time to ing ship on top and the right to publish all LA Beach Cruiser return to store. FARM MARKET has an old oak capads from The Bulletin Custom made, Paid $3600; 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery stan base. very newspaper onto The sell for $2600. one of a kind316- Irrigation Equipment Bulletin Internet webheavy, Very unique 541-548-3810 no 2 alike! 325- Hay, Grain and Feed piece. Askinq $500 site. Excellent condition. 541-419-6408. 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies The Bulletin Fun, fun, fun! The Bulletin 341 - Horses andEquipment SewingCentral Omgonsince fgte recommends extra ' $850. 345-Livestockand Equipment 541-749-8720 I caution when pur-I M ore P i x a tB e n d b o ll e tin . c o jn 240 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals products or • I chasing services from out of I 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers Crafts & Hobbies area. Sending l 358- Farmer's Column I the Santa Cruz Solo cash, checks,, or I• 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing AGATE HUNTERS mtn. racing bike, I credit i n f ormation I 383- Produce andFood Ponahega • Saws med. full-suspenmay be subjected to sion, good cond, I FRAUD. For moreI 208
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Pets & Supplies Yorkie Terrier adorable 7-week male, $650. 503-317-4590
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
lg
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information about an c advertiser, you may I
Beautiful Oval Table Solid walnut, hand- I c all t h e Pete & Supplies • P ets & Supplies Oregone crafted by an Amish State Attor ney ' artisan for Schanz Lost nGracien PomeraI General's O f f i ce The Bulletin recomnian, 5th & I r v ing, Furniture Co. Excellent Consumer Protec- • mends extra caution Bend, microchipped. condition w/lovely patina. tion h o t line at I when purc h as- 541-279-4226 27" H, top 30" L and 20" i 1-877-877-9392. ing products or serwide. Graceful curved n vices from out of the legs with 2-1/2 l TheBulletin l hand-turned center serving centrai oregonsince lgos area. Sending cash, checks, or credit in- P eople giving p e ts support. Orig. $649; sell $275. f ormation may b e away are advised to 212 541-385-4790 subjected to fraud. be selective about the Antiques & For more informanew owners. For the Collectibles tion about an adver- protection of the aniBid Novr! tiser, you may call mal, a personal visit to www.BucetinBidnBuy.com the O r egon State the home is recomHow to avoid scam Attorney General's mended. and fraud attempts Office C o nsumer The Bulletin YBe aware of interProtection hotline at national fraud. Deal 1-877-877-9392. locally w h e never POODLE or POMAPOO possible. The Bulletin puppies, toy. Adorable! Bay New...Bay Local Serving Central Oregongnce tgte 541-475-3889 V Watch for buyers You Can Bid On: who offer more than $2 000 Gift POODLES, Standard your asking price (2) extra large pet carriCertificate purebred puppies, and who ask to have ers/kennels; 1 pet Igloo, Retail Value $2,000 ready 11/7. $750. m oney wired o r $60 ea. 541-312-8367 M. JacobsFine (541) 310-0077 h anded back t o Furniture them. Fake cashier Adopt a rescued cat or Poodle Toy puppy, black (Bidding closes & white male, cute, sochecks and money kitten! Altered, vacciTues., Nov. 11, ciable, shots, wormed, orders are common. nated, ID chip, tested, at 8:00 p.m.) Y N ever give o u t more! CRAFT, 65480 $350. 503-779-3844 personal f i nancial 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Queensland Heelers SOM E information. 1-5. 5 4 1 - 389-8420Standard 8 Mini, $150 G ENERATE EXCITEMENT in your s/ T rust y o ur in www.craftcats.org & up. 541-280-1537 Plan a stincts and be wary www.rightwayranch.wor neighborhood! garage sale and don't of someone using an dpress.com forget to advertise in escrow service or agent to pick up your Aussie pups mini/toy, Scotty AKC pups, ready classified! 541-385-5809. now! Mom/Dad on site, merchandise. all colors, 1st shots, 1st shots. 541-771-0717 $360 cash. The Bulletin 541-678-7599 Shih Tzu, AKC female King Bed and matServing Centrer On'gonsince twe puppy, $450. tress set,Sleep Call 541-788-0234 Comfort massager, Antiques wanted: tools, or 541-548-0403 includes linens, furniture, pre-'80s John and electric blanket, Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W $800 obo hotography, advertising, 541-516-8578 eer cans. 541-389-1578 Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Pups, AKC Champion Pedigree, health guarantee, Tri, S ponsor needed f o r Blenheims. $1000Wlnky, about 2 mo. old, who was just res$1800. 541-848-7605 cued with 2 siblings Great-Grandma's Chihuahua puppies (2) after b e ing a b a nTrunk! 1st shots, dewormed. doned. He was born About 150 yrs old, w ithout e yelids 8 $250. 541-977-0035 CA King Henredon this piece came from needs surgery. One Sleigh Bed with OrPrussia and is in Donate deposit bottles/ eye is already damganic Mattress and very good condition! cans to local all vol., aged & he could end Bedding. It's magAlso comes with non-profit rescue, for up totally blind. He is nificient. $4500 some written history very sweet & adoptferal cat spay/neuter. Cash only. from that era. T railer a t Jak e ' s able to the right home 541-390-7109 $425 cash. Diner, Hwy 2 0 E; at some point. He will 541-383-9308 Petco (near Wal-Mart) have surgery, but this is a big cost for a small King size mattress, exc. in Redmond; or doDonations are c ond. $ 30 0 ob o . Mahogany GlassChina nate M-F a t S mith rescue. needed & are tax de- 541-382-0217 Closet, 68nH x 39 nW x Sign, 1515 NE 2nd CRAFT, PO 16 nD, 3 d r awers, Bend; or CRAFT in ductible. 6441, Bend 97708 NEED TO CANCEL glass front d o ors, Tumalo. Can pick up Box or at www.craftcats.org good shape. $425. YOUR AD? large amts, 389-8420. 8 PayPal. for more 541-382-6773 www.craftcats.org The Bulletin info, 541-389-8420 Classifieds has an Just bought a new boat? "After Hours"Line German Shepherds Y o rkie pups AKC, 2 girls, Sell your old one in the Call 541-383-2371 w ww.sherman-ranch.us 2boys,baby dolls!Shots, classifieds! Ask about our Quality Germans. p o tty training, health guar. 24 hrs. to cancel Super Seller rates! 541-281-6829 $700 & up. 541-777-7743 your ad! 541-385-5809
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Repair & Supplies s
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must sell, $2000. 541-480-2652
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Bid Novr!
H lyltyj~
541-647-1444
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Ski Equipment
• •
Bay New...Bay Local
Bid Novr!
You Can Bid On: 10 Rounds of Golf Punch Card Retail Value $400 Juniper Golf Course (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 11, at 8:00 p.m.)
www.BuiietinBidnBuyreom
I ''
Bay New...Bay Local
You Can Bid On: Family Season Pass Retail Value $1,650.00 HoodooSki Area (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 11, at 8:00 p.m.)
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809
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CHECK YOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn correct. nSpellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
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, Per eet Fii~,
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Cute black and white Shepherd
seeks a young friend to grow up together with. 555-9999
BSSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •541-385-5809
G2 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014•THE BULLETIN
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D
WINNERS' CIRCLE
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BY CALEB EMMONS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
Note: When this puzzle is completed, the eight circled letters, starting in the upper left and proceeding roughly clockwise, will spell an appropriate word ... or a different appropriate word. ACROSS
51 Opponent of 28-Down, in comics 53 Martial artist Jackie 54 Animal also known as a hog-nosed coon 55 ss sur" ("Of course": Fr.) 56 Mouth, slangily 60 Opponent of 49-Down, in film 6218 or 21 66 NPR's Shapiro 87 It may be taken from the neck of a superhero 68 Red topper 69 Snaps 70 Rough track condition 71 Baja aunt 72 Fernale gametes 73 A case might be made for one 75 Relative of neo-soul "A = L x W" 77 Challenge 33 Mexico City sight 79 Hatfieldsor 36 Any ship McCoys 37 Banjoist Fleck 80-What 39 Steep slope (Mark Twain essay) 41 March birthstone, traditionally 82 The works 4$ "Siegfried," e.g. 83 Unusual diacritic used in 47 Yellow diner packet Portuguese 48 Cue user, maybe 85 Jack on "24" 49 Google 86 Long-distance Online subscriptions: swimmer Nyad Today's puzzle aud more 87 Lila , Oscar than 4,000 past puzzles, winner for "Zorba nytimesreom/crosswords the Greek" ($39.95 a year).
I Boors 8 Latin dances 14 Opponent of 14-Down, in sports 17 Park place 18 Woodworker's vise 19 Flip 21 Opponent of 3-Down, in Greek myth 22 Opponent of 9-Down, in classical literature 23 Certain markeddown item: Abbr. 24 Like court testimony 25 Product once pitched by Michael Jackson and Mariah Carey 27 Where some "K-I-S-S-I-N-G" is done 29 Least taut 31 The "L" of
90 Opponent of 64-Down, in the Bible 92 Brackish water locales 83 Missouri tributary 94 Chirpy greeting 85 Knot 86 Opponent of 78-Down, in fable 87 Cousin of ibid. 101 Opponent of 86-Down, in games 106 Ornamental pond feature 108 Tickle 110 Pasta seasoner 112 Rear 114 Where to emulate the locals, it's said 116 English city where the Magna Carta originated 118 Take over 118 Ideal world 120 Soothed 121 Part of a clown outfit 122 Second 123 X's DOWN
1 A whole lot 2 Wassail 3 See 21-Across 4 Part of many a silo 5 Address letters 6 Obsolescent sumtnoner 7 Postpaid encls. 8 The 12 of the Pac-12: Abbr.
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24 26 26 9 See 22-Across 10 Inc.'s cousin 20 11 Subbed (for) 12 f rien d s 36 37 38 13 Sardinelike fish 41 42 43 44 14 See 14-Across 15 Sleep (with) 49 60 16 Dutch financial 64 63 giant 17 Acidity measures, 60 61 62 infortnally 18 Diver's supply 67 68 68 20 The City 72 73 74 (New Orleans) 26 W.W. II craft 77 78 78 28 See $1-Across 30 Prefix with plunk 83 84 32 Wave catcher? 87 8 8 80 90 01 34 Windy City terminal code 03 35 Collection of marks, for short? 38 Leader of ancient 106 107 Ephesus? 40 '70s radical grp. 1 12 1 1 3 114 116 41 Good thing to hit 118 iio 42 Attain 43 What "America" 121 122 has four of 44 Beer 46 Arafat successor 63 What fog might 81 3 x 3 x 3 container? 47 Stanley, for one delay, for short 84 Day-care attendee 49 See 60-Across 64 See 90-Across 85 Riboflavin, e.g. $0 Be behind 65 Hall-of-Fame 86 See 101-Across $2 Not do well outfielder Roush 87 Autobahn speed 54 By force 69 Getting just a slap meas. $7 Knock on the wrist, say 88 She, in Rio 58 Reservation 74 Loony 89 Sweetie pie holder? 75 Zion Church 91 Tuna often served 59 Squares seared 61 One of the brands of 76 Lock up 82 Start of a bear 78 See 96-Across Yum! Brands market
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95 f ly 98 Viceof Dorian Gray 99 "The Divine Comedy" division 100 Download alternative 102 Civil war president 103 North African capital 104 Missouritributary 105 Creepers
107 Latin law 108 Essential part 111 Drug sold in microdots 112 Like some talent and emotions 113 Singer DiFranco 115 Reveal, poetically 117 Form of digital communication?: Abbr.
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place 8photo in your private partysd for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour adfor accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewil gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject anyadat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 246
246
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Bend local pays CASH!!
Oregon Trail Gun Show
for all firearms 8 ammo. $41-526-0617
Bid Now!
www.euuetineidneuy.com
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p
Btor New...suy Local
You Can Bid On: $100 Rifle Scope Gift Certificate Ken'8 SpOrting Goods (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 11, ai 8:00 p.m.)
Bird hunting in Condon, OR - 201 4. Also big game hunting access in 201 5. 54f -384-5381 CASH!!
For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 54f -408-6900.
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?
257
260
Musical Instruments
Misc.ltems
Remington 11-87 semi-automatic Police 12gauge with rifle sights, $700. Baikal Bounty Hunter 12 gauge, 20" double barrels with screw-in chokes,$350. All like new! 541-550-7189
Sears VCR w/remote and manual. $ 2 0. 541-383-423f
541 -389-6655
255
Computers
Wurlitzer
Buy New...auy Local
You Can Bid On: $100 gift card toward snowmobile clothing/Accessories Retail Value $100 Sweeney'8 (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 1 f, at 8:00 p.m.) 248
I
Health tk Beauty Items
T HE B ULLETIN r e Ultra Console quires computer adModel ¹2636 vertisers with multiple Serial ¹1222229. ad schedules or those Made in USA. selling multiple sysmaple wood. tems/ software, to dis- Genuine Includes matching close the name of the bench.$1,000. business or the term (54f) 598-4674 davs, "dealer" in their ads. or (541) 923-0488 Private party adveriisevenings. ers are defined as those who sell one computer. Yamaha piano / harpsichord, CP-3 w/pedal & 257 cord, $1 75. 541 -385-4790 Musical Instruments 259
Iillemberships
Bid Now!
Bid Now!
www.eulletineidneuy.com
Smith and Wesson MBP f5 . 2 2 r ifle, afiermarket p i stol and fore-grips, BSA red dot sight, 4 exira mag a zines. $500 OBO. C all/ text (541)219-0082 for more information
'j -li Buy Netar...suy Local
You Can Bid On: $250 Gift Card Retail Value $250 Esthetix MDSpa & Laser Center (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 11, at 8:00 p.m.)
www.euuetineidneuy.com
Buy New...suy Local
2009 Beautiful Lowrey Adventurer II Organ Absolutely perfect condition, not a scratch on ii, about 4-feet wide, does everyihingl Includes a nice bench, ioo. $450 obo. 541-30$-5685
ThompsonContender isiol w/2 barrels: 44 em Mag/Genf with Bushnell scope & carry Grand Piano case; & 22 LR match Lowest P r ices on Beautiful American with Bushnell scope & Health & Denial Inmade (1 926) carry case, $850. SPECIALe surance. We have the Kurtzmann parlor SavageMod. 1 16.300 best rates from top 1 week3lines 12 grand piano for Win Mag, stainless or companies! Call Now! sale. 5'5", masteel w/scope 8 case, a e eks 2 N 877-649-61 95. hogany case, ~ $550. Ad must (PNDC) matching bench, reMooohorg300A 12Ga include price of cenily serviced and with 2 barrels: one 22" 253 tuned. Family ~en le tem of ssoo modified; & one or less, or multiple owned since origi• TV, Stereo & Video 181/2", $250. items whosetotal nal purchase. Background check does not exceed $3200 (appraised DirectTV 2 Year Savrequired. Please call $500. value) or OBO. ings Event! Over 140 541.389.3694, Iv msg. 541 -306-6770. channels only $29.99 Call Classifieds at a month. O nly Di541-385-5809 Wanted: Collector seeks recTV gives you 2 www.bendbulletin.com high quality fishing items YEARS of s a vings Have an item to and a FREE Genie & upscale bamboo fly sell quick? rods. Call 541-678-5753, upgrade! Call Ithaca Model 37 Feaih1 -800-259-5f 40. or 503-351-2746 If it's under erlight, 1 6 g a uge, (PNDC) good condition, 1952, '$00you can place it in 438,0xx, $275, Garage Sales DISH T V Ret a i ler. The Bulletin 541 -61 0-9063 Starting at Classifieds for: $19.99/month (for 12 It's hunting season and I Garage Sales mos.) & High Speed have 2 new rifles for sale: Garage Sales '10 - 3 lines, 7 days I nternet starting a t 1) Ruger Hawkeye 7mm $14.95/month (where '16 -3 lines, 14 days Rem Mag. s t ainless Find them available.) SAVE! Ask matte finish, grey lamiAbout SAME DAY In- (Private Party ads only) naied stock, VXII Sx9 in stallation! CALL Now! scope. Gun has never The Bulletin 1 -800-308-f 563 been fired; asking $850. (PNDC) 2) Browning X-bolt hunter Classifieds 325 WSM, beautiful wood REDUCE YOUR gun, blued finish, fired 54t -385-5809 CABLE BILL!* Get a maybe 10 rounds. 40 rds whole-home Satellite ammo included;asking Wyndham AR15, like system installed at $7S0. $41-4fe-Seof SPINETPIANO new, some ammo incl. NO COST and pro- 1973 Fayeit S Gable M arlin 91 7V 1 7 c a l $750 - R uger LC9 ramming starting at made by Evereti & H MR, Sx9 sco p e with 2 clips. $300. 1 9.99/mo. FR E E Sons, excellent concustom thumb hole R uger LC P .3 8 0 . HD/DVR Upgrade io dition, recently stock, 5 magazines $250. - Martin Mag- new callers, SO CALL tuned. sounds great! 3750 rounds of 1 7 num Bow, 5 0 ¹ -70¹ NOW $1000 HMR ammo. $2000. soft case and target. 1 -800-871 -2983. 541 -385-8367 541-728-1 900. $200. 541 -61 0-4538 (PNDC) Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH
-
Buying Diamonds /Gotd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers
www.eulletineidneuy.com
Central Oregon's Original &Largest GunShow Nov. 8th & Nov. 9th SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 Deschutes Co. Fairgrounds Buy - Sell - Trade 12 &under free! For info: 541-404-1890
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253
TV, Stereo & Vide
Bid Now!
$8 Admission,
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247
Sporting Goods - Misc.
MOIININlj STAR
I-Year Middle School'Ibition You Can Bid On: One Year Middle School Tuition Retail Value $5,520.00 iyforning Star Christian School (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 1 f, at 8:00 p.m.) 260
Misc. Items Are you in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled iax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Seen on CNN. A B BB. Call 1-800-989-f 278. (PNDC) Bend'8 Indoor Swap Meet - 8Mini-Mall full of UniqueTreasures! NowOpen Thurs.-Sun. for the holidayseason! Thurs-Fri-Sat-Sun. 10-5 SE 3rd St. & Wilson Ave (by Grocery Outlet) Old, new, vintage, antique, handmade...
Bid Now!
www.euuetineidneuy.com
BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541 -408-2f 91 . Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands of readers!
Call 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds BUYING a S E LLING
You Can Bid On: Case of Hard Cider Atlas Cider Co. Retail Value $60 (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 11, at 8:00 p.m.)
EMPLOYMENT 410 -Private Instruction 421 - Schools sndTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic 8 In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions
FINANCEANDBUSINESS $07- Real Estate Contracts $14 - Insurance $28- Loans andMortgagos $43- Stocks andBonds $58 - Business Investments $73 - BusinessOpportunities
260
266
267
Misc. Items
Heating & Stoves
Fuel & Wood
All gold jewelry, silver Wanted- paying cash and gold coins, bars, for Hi-fi audio 8 siurounds, wedding sets, dio equip. Mclntosh, class rings, sterling sil- JBL, Marantz, Dyver, coin collect, vin- naco, Heaihkit, Santage watches, denial sui, Carver, NAD, etc. gold. Bill Fl e ming, Call 541 -261-1808 54f -382-94f 9.
NOTICE TO ADVERTISER
Pine & Juniper Split Since September 29, 1991, advertising for PROMPT DELIVERY 541-389-9663 used woodstoves has been limited io models which have been 269 certified by the Oregon Department of Gardening Supplies Environmental Qual& Equipment iiy (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e ncy BarkTurfSoil.com (EPA) as having met smoke emission stan- PROMPT DELIVERY dards. A cer t ified 541-389-9663 woodstove may be identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached For newspaper to the stove. The Buldelivery, call the letin will not k now- Circulation Dept. ai ingly accept advertis541 -385-5800 ing for the sale of To place an ad, call uncertified 541-385-5809 woodstoves. or email
DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 261 1 0 Americans or 1 58 Medical Equipment million U.S. A d ults r ead content f r om Shower seat, plastic & n ewspaper m e d iametal w/wide seat, good each week? Discover cond, $30. 541 -706-1 251 the Power of the Pacific Northwest News263 paper Advertising. For Tools a free brochure call 916-288-60f 1 or Campbellemail Hausfeld cecelia@cnpa.com z I shop com(PNDC) j pressor How to avoidscam • 60 gal. • 5hp and fraud attempts • 230v YBe aware of interna$4$0. iional fraud. Deal lo541 -41 9-5060 cally whenever posPellet stove, Whiffield, sible. C ommercial Delt a used, good cond., $700 sI Watch for buyers Unifence table saw, cash. 541 -389-91 38 who offer more than xtended ben c h , your asking price and erouter, new lift, comwho ask to have 267 plete grip m a ster. money wired or Fuel & Wood Many extras. $1500. handed back to them. 541 -923-6427 Fake cashier checks and money orders WHEN BUYING 265 are common. FIREWOOD... YNever give out perBuilding Materials To avoid fraud, sonal financial inforThe Bulletin mation. Bid Now! recommends payYTrust your instincts www.euuetineidneuy.com ment for Firewood and be wary of only upon delivery someone using an and inspection. escrow service or • A cord is 128 cu. ft. agent io pick up your 4' x 4' x 8' merchandise. • Receipts should The Bulletin Buy New...suy Local include name, sarrlng central oregon sincetses phone, price and You Can Bid On: kind of wood Private Garage Sale! Flooring Voucher Great quality coats, men's/ Retail Value $1500 purchased. women's jackets clothing. • Firewood ads Interior Ideas Nyy Bv the piece, or 5500 for it MUST include (Bidding closes ali! Info, call 54f -61 7-7486 species 8 cost per Tues., Nov. 11, cord io better serve Reduce Your Past Tax at 8:00 p.m.) our customers. Bill by as much as 7$ Percent. Stop Levies, The Bulletin Liens and Wage GarServlne Central Oregon slncaSaet Natural gas Ruud nishmenis. Call The iankless water Tax DR Now to see if heater, brand new! Qualify you 199 BTU, $1600. After rain, dry, split 1 -800-791 -2099.
(PNDC)
Buy Hevv...suy Local
Can be found on these pages:
In Sunriver area. 530-938-3003
delivered $160 cord (La Pine)
oleeeified@bendbulletin.oom
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon sinceSate
270
Lost & Found
Found stamp collection book in Sunriver area. Call Sunriver police io identify. 541 -593-391 1 Lost: Smm Mauser w/Sx9 scope, near Crane Prairie, Cow Meadows CG. Reward! 503-550-3456
REMEMBER: If you
have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541 -382-3537
Redmond 541-923-0882 Madras 541 -475-6889 Prineville 541-447-7f 78 or Craft Cats 541-889-8420.
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
The Bulletin Offers 541-876-7426 Free Private Party Ads ...don't lei time gei • 3 lines - 3 days away. Hire a • Private Party Only REDMOND Habitat Aff YearDependable • Total of items adverRESTORE Firewood: Seasoned; professional out tised must equal $200 Building Supply Resale Lodgepole, split, del, of The Bulletin's or Less Quality ai B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 "Call A Service FOR DETAILS or to LOW PRICES or 2 cords for $365. PLACE AN AD, 1 242 S. Hwy 97 Call fo r m u lti-cord Professional" Call 541-385-5009 54f -548-1 406 discounts! Directory today! Fax 541-385-5802 Open to the public. 541-420-3484.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
G4 SUNDAY NOVEMB ER 2 2014 •THE BULLETIN 860
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination
based on race, color,
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AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
882
882
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Four Winds 2008 18' travel trailer used very little
Laredo 30'2009
1
2001 Honda Goldwing 1800cc w/2005 California side car trike conversion, 40K actual miles, every option imaginable! CD, AM/FM, cruise, has 5' Brake, side rails, some riding gear. Well serviced. located in Mt. Vernon, OR. Trailer optional.$22,500. 541-350-5050
746
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory FSBO. 2nd Price Reduction $52 5 ,000. is all about meeting your needs. 2403 Brickyard Ave., Bend. B e autiful 4 Call on one of the bdrm, 2.5 bath home. professionals today! Granite, knotty Alder, master bdrm on main, 3 car tand e m.
BM R@R6la
Northwest Bend Homes
744
541-419-7078
Open Houses
• Redmond Homes
Open 12-3
religion, sex, handi- 2321 NE Acorn Ct. cap, familial status, Elegant Single Level marital status or naBonus Over Garage tional origin, or an inKerri Sfanderwick, tention to make any Broker 541-325-2534 such pre f erence, limitation or discrimiTheGarnerGroup.com nation." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and Open 12N people securing cus- 61060 Ruby Peak tody of children under Ln. 18. This newspaper Appealing New will not knowingly acHome cept any advertising In Hidden Hills for real estate which is Davis, Broker in violation of the law. Rob 541-280-9589 O ur r e aders a r e ThaGarnerGroup.com hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of Open 12-3 d iscrimination ca l l HUD t o l l-free at 62782 Imbler Dr. 1-800-877-0246. The New View Home toll f ree t e lephone In Shevlin Pines Phyllis Mageau number for the hearing im p aired is Broker 1-800-927-9275. 541-948-0447
Q l2KIH
3 bdrm 2.5 bath custom home on 1.48 ac in Terrebonne. 2450 SF, Mtn views, canal, shop, with bonus room. By owner, $365,000. 541-923-4995 Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
ThaGarnerGroup.com
652
Houses for Rent NW Bend
881
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Houses for Rent General
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Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
2005 HD Heritage SoftTail, Big Bore kit, lots of extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt cond., $9750 firm 541-318-8668
$8500.
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523
Freightliner 1994 Custom IV!otorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6
speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
541-516-8684
Harley Davidson 883 Sportster 1998, 20,200 miles,
exc. cond.,
$3,800.
541-548-2872.
Open Road 36' with 3 slides! king bed, hide-a-bed sofa, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $17,500 541-419-0566
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
$22r500
541-419-3301
2006 Bayliner 185 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Heartland P r owler Great family boat HOLIDAY RAMBLER 2012, 29PRKS, 33', Priced to sell. VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, like new, 2 slides-liv- MONTANA 3585 2008, $11,590. la r g e 541-548-0345. workhorse, Allison 1000 i ng area 8 exc. cond., 3 slides, 5 speed trans., 39K, closet, 15' power awking bed, Irg LR, NEW TIRES, 2 slides, ning, power hitch & Arctic insulation, all Onan 5.5w gen., ABS stabilizers, full s i ze options - reduced by brakes, steel cage cock- queen bed, l a rge $3500 to $31,500. pit, washer/dryer, fire- shower, porcelain sink 541-420-3250 lace, mw/conv. oven, & toilet. ree standing dinette, $25,000or make offer. was $121,060 new; now, 541-999-2571 2007 Bennington $35,900. 541-536-1008
Pontoon Boat
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
2275 GL, 150hp
Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500
Harley Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today
541-403-2465
Motorhome+ Dinghy! 2011 Georgetown 34' by Forest River. 14,900 mi, 503-646-1804 2 slides, 5.5 KVA generator, In Motion satellite, BIG COUNTRY RV leveling, 7-yr/50K mi Bend: 541-330-2495 2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like auto ext'd warranty. ImmacuRedmond: new, ActiV hull, safe late, always garaged. 541-548-5254 lock canister, 15HP 2007 Jeep Wrangler, 47K Yamaha w/ t r ollingmi, exlnt cond, tow ready. plate, 6 gal Transom Both for $83,000Looking for your tank, less 30 hrs, 2 or motorhome only, next employee? chest seats, full Bimini $71,000. 541-420-5139 Place a Bulletin help top, Transom wheels, wanted ad today and cover, RV's special. reach over 60,000 $5500. 54'I-923-6427 readers each week. Your classified ad Ads published in the "Boats" classification will also appear on bendbulletin.com include: Speed, fishwhich currently reing, drift, canoe, Providence2005 ceives over 1.5 milhouse and sail boats. Fully loaded, 35,000 lion page views evFor all other types of miles, 350 Cat, Very ery month at no watercraft, please go clean, non-smoker, extra cost. Bulletin to Class 875. 3 slides, side-by-side 541-385-5809 Classifieds Get Rerefrigerator with ice Call 385-5809 maker, Washer/Dryer, sults! or place your ad Flat screen TV's, In serv>n central ore on since7903 on-line at motion satellite. bendbulletin.com 875 $95,000 541-480-2019 Watercraft
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THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
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TEAM DELAY
Adoption PREGNANT? CON S IDERING A D O P SERVING CENTRAL OREGON TION? Call us first. since 2003 Living exp e nses, Residential & Commercial housing, medical, and continued support af Spnnkler Blow-Out terwards. C h o ose Sprinkler Repair a doptive family o f your choice. Call 24/7. MAllVTRjtjAjtjCI 855-970-2106 • Fall Clean Up (PNDC) • Weekly Mowing Get your & Edging business Bi-Monthly& Monthly Maintenance
LAMSCAPIM • Landscape Construction • Water Feature Installation/Maint. • Pavers • Renovations • Irrigations Installation
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional"
Directory Building/Contracting
NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for Senior Discounts construction work to Bonded &Insured be licensed with the Construction Contrac- 541%1%4458 tors Board (CCB). An Lcsas759 active license means the contractor is bonded & insured. NOTICE: Oregon LandVerify the contractor's scape Contractors Law CCB l i c ense at (ORS 671) requires all www.hirealicensedbusinesses that adcontractor.com vertise t o pe r form or call 503-378-4621. Landscape ConstrucThe Bulletin recom- tion which includes: mends checking with p lanting, deck s , arbors, the CCB prior to con- fences, tracting with anyone. water-features, and inSome other t rades stallation, repair of iralso re q uire addi- rigation systems to be tional licenses and l icensed w it h th e certifications. Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit Debris Removal number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and
workers compensation for their employees. For your protec-
Will Haul Away
tion call 503-378-5909
+ FREE® FOr SalVabrek. ; Any Location. .:4 Removal Also Cleanupsv' '
'
'
jai Cleanouta'
I®hj
Q,,
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or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing lan d scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i -
cense.
Painting/Wall Covering
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin Handyman
I DO THAT!
Handyman/Remodeling Residential/Commercial
All American Painting • Interior and Exterior • Family.Owned • Residential & Commercial • 40 years experience • Senior Discounts • 5.year Warranties
Aakaboutour FAIL SPECritl.r
Call 541.337~6149 CCBa193960
Small Jobs to Eaure RoomRemodels
Garage Orcaaiarrrioa Home Iaspcctioa Repairs Quality, Honest Work
Dennis 541-317.9768 ccanars73rovdednnramd
MARTIN JAMES
Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway.
European Professional Painter
This advertising tip brought toyouby
Oregon Llcense
The Bulletin
Repaint Specialist! ¹186147 LLC
541-815-2888
58Nag CNtbBI OKgtN SIIKQ ISB
I I THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM
I
I sa
Homes starting in the Iow
Homes Stardng Mid-$200s lk
Principal Broker
ro mote o ur service
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Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SEGoldenGatePlace,Bend of walking trails. Tour a Directions:From theparkuay, east variety of single level and on ReedNarirer, south on 15th, then 2 story plans. follow sl8ns.
HOSted 6 LiSted byr
541-548-5254
Call 541-385-5809
Harley Fat Boy 2002 882 14k orig. miles.. Exds published in "Wa Fifth Wheels Open House RV cellent cond. Vance & tercraft" include: Kay Sun. 11-2pm CONSIGNMENTS Hines exhaust, 5 aks, rafts and motor 3131 NW 39ffr Sf., WANTED spoke HD rims, wind 541-385-5809 Ized personal We Do The Work ... Bend • $335,000 vest, 12" rise handle watercrafts. Fo You Keep The Cash! bars, detachable lug"boats" please se 756 On-site credit ELEGANT CUSTOM gage rack w/back Class 870. approval team, Brand new smart home. Jeffer son County Homes rest, hwy pegs & many 541-385-5809 web site presence. 3500 sf, never lived in. 3 chrome accents. Must bdrm/4 bath. Great room We Take Trade-Ins! FSBO, In byThanksgiving, see to appreciate! Alpenlite 28 ft. 1987, perfect for entertaining. Quick Escrow, $10,500. In CRRarea new appliances, Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 Awesome view of Bend 10 acres of Peaceful Quality, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, BIG COUNTRY RV call 530-957-1865 everything works, and July 4th fireworks. Paradise! This im1400 sqft. home Bend: 541-330-2495 good shape. 880 Spacious gourmet kit- p eccably Redmond: mai n - Move-in Ready, $205K. Includes queen Motorhomes chen. Walnut flooring tained, 541-279-8783 541-548-5254 tr a d itional HOFatBo 1996 bedding, micro, with knotty alder cabin- s tyle home & s eDVD, hitch, tripod. etry and impressive rock rene property fea$4500. work. 2 Irg. decks. Triple tures a Min i mal Lots 541-977-5587 garage. Family rm w/the- Maintenance Yard. • '~ ~ oemc atre rm & k itchenette. RV parking, huge — rvv =~ Master8 off ice space on 2 4'X40' shop w / 2 CHECK YOUR AD Bid Novv! main. Great location near b ay doors 8 m a n www. Bull atineidnBuy.com Completely Rivers Edge Golf Course. door. Cozy & invitRebuilt/Customized 2007 Winnebago Winnebago 22' $2950 mo. Call for per- ing Sunroom, where 2012/2013 Award sonal showing: Outlook Class "C" 2002 - $28,500 you will enjoy a full Winner 31', solar panel, Cat. KOZAK PROPERTY Chevy 454, heavy view of the stunning Showroom Condition MANAGEMENT CO. heater, excellent duty chassis, new Cascade Mountains on the first day it runs Many Extras 541-382-0053 condition, more exbatteries & tires, cab from Mt Bachelor to to make sure it is corLow Miles. tras. Asking $58K. 8 roof A/C, tow hitch Boy New...aoy Local Mt Hood! Also take rect. "Spellcheck" and 654 $15,000 Ph. 541-447-9268 w /brake, 21k m i ., You Can Bid On: in great views of human errors do oc541-548-4807 Can be viewed at more! 541-280-3251 Houses for Rent Lot 29 at Yarrow S mith Rock f r o m cur. If this happens to Western Recreation Community, Madras SE Bend front windows. your ad, please con(fop of hill) Retail Value $24,000 Directions: Hwy 126 tact us ASAP so that in Prineville. Sun Forest west, north on 27th, corrections and any Construction HD Softtail Deuce 2002, west on Antler, north adjustments can be (Bidding closes broken back forces o n 35th, west o n made to your ad. Tues., Nov. 11, sale, only 200 mi. on S pruce, north o n 541-385-5809 at 8:00 p.m.) new motor from Har39th. The Bulletin Classified Ready to makememories! ley, new trans case MLS¹ 201407894 Top-selling Winnebago STUNNING and p arts, s p o ke Hosted by 31J, original owners, nonPAHLISCH HOMEwheels, new brakes, Nary Henderson, Manufactured/ 3 Bdrm / 2.5 Bath in n early all o f b i k eAllegro 32' 2007, like smokers, garaged, only Broker miles, auto-levelStonegate subdivision of Mobile Homes brand new. Has proof new, only 12,600 miles. 18,800 360-609-4689 ing jacks, (2) slides, upluxurious appointment. of all work done. Re- Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 graded queen bed bunk Close to pool, pavilion 8 3ohn~coff' movable windshield, transmission, dual exNew Dream Special beds, micro, (3) TVs, hot tub, river trails 8 Freighthner custom 3 bdrm, 2 bath T-bags, black and all haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- sleeps REAL esTATE 10! Lots of storeling system, 5kw gen, playground. Lovely floor 5th wheel puller, $50,900 finished chromed out with a power mirrors w/defrost, age, maintained, very plan with front office and sleeper cab, rebuilt on your site. willy skeleton theme 2 slide-outs with aw- cleanlOnly $67,995! Exextra large romantic 745 J and M Homes on all caps and cov- nings, rear c a mera,tended warranty and/or fi- engine with 20k miles, master bathroom. Well541-548-5511 6.5 generator, 120 cu. ers. Lots o f w o rk, trailer hitch, driver door nancing avail to qualified Homes for Sale appointed decor adds ft. storage boxes - one heart and love went w/power window, cruise, buyers! 541-388-7179 interest. Bonus rm could 8' long. Gets 10.9 into all aspects. All exhaust brake, central be 4th bedroom. Triple NOTICE mpg, many more done at professional vac, satellite sys. Asking 881 tandem garage. Fenced, All real estate adverfeatures. All in good shops, call for info. $67,500. 503-781-8812 landscaped back yard. tised here in is subTravel Trailers shape. See to appreMust sell quickly due 2545 sf. $1950/mo. ject to th e Federal ciate (in Terrebonne to m e d ical bi l l s, Must see! F air Housing A c t , area). $24,000. $8250. Call Jack at KOZAK PROPERTY which makes it illegal 503-949-4229 541-279-9538. ,'i MANAGEMENT CO. • .Q H @„ to advertise any pref541-382-0053 erence, limitation or KAWASAKI discrimination based 675 KLX125, 2003, on race, color, reli850 2007 Jayco Jay Flight good condition. RV Parking ion, sex, handicap, Beaver Marquis, 29 FBS with slide out 8 Snowmobiles $1100. jamilial status or na1993 awning - Turn-key ready 541-593-8748 Full hookup RV s ite tional origin, or inten40-ft, Brunswick to use, less than 50 to- Keystone Raptor, 2007 avail. through April tion to make any such tal days used by current 37 toy hauler,2 slides, floor plan. Many 30th, $425 + e l e c. preferences, l i mitaYamaha V-Star, 250cc Never smoked in, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, extras, well main- owner. Central Oregon KOA tions or discrimination. 4-place enclosed Inter- 2011 motorcycle, new no indoor pets, excellent satellite tained, fire supsystem w/auto 541-546-3046 We will not knowingly state snowmobile trailer custom seat for rider, cond., very clean. Lots of seek, in/out sound syspression behind accept any advertis- w/ RockyMountain pkg, vinyl coating on tank, bonus features; many Legal RV space with ing for real estate $8500. 541-379-3530 refrig, Stow Master have never been used. tem,sleeps 6,many ex2 helmets included. Canyon views between which is in violation of $29,999. In Madras, 5000 tow bar, Asking $18,000. C a l l tras. Gets 60mpg, and has 541-771-9607or Redmond & Terrebonne. this law. All persons 860 $22,995. Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r call541-475-6265 3,278 miles. $300/mo., incl water & are hereby informed 541-383-3503 more info / more photos. Motorcycles & Accessories Asking $4700, firm. sewer. 541-419-1917 that all dwellings adCall Dan 541-550-0171 vertised are available 1985 Harley Davidson Dutchman Denali BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS on an equal opportu- 1200C with S portster 870 32' 2011 travel Search the area's most nity basis. The Bulle- frame and '05 Harley Boats & Accessories trailer. 2 slides Evcomprehensive listing of tin Classified crate motor. Rat Rod erything goes, all classified advertising... look, Screaming Eagle 16' Valco aluminum Drift kitchen ware, linens real estate to automotive, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! tips, leather saddlebags, Boat & trailer, $3200. Kit Companion 26', '94 etc. Hitch, sway merchandise to sporting e xtras. S acrifice a t Call 541-480-1633 1 slide, new stove/fridge, Fleetwood D i scovery bars, water & sewer goods. Bulletin Classifieds Door-to-door selling with $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, Gd for hunting/campingl 40' 2003, diesel, w/all hoses. List price appear every day in the fast results! It's the easiest 458-206-8446 (in Bend). 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, options - 3 slide outs, $2500 541-389-5788 $34,500 - asking like new, 135hp I/O, low satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, print or on line. way in the world to sell. FIND IT! time, Bimini top, many $26,800 Loaded. Call 541-385-5809 etc., 32,000 miles. Must see to appreciFind It in extras, Karavan trailer BVY IT! www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classified swing neck current Wintered in h eated ate. Redmond, OR. The Bulletin Classifiedsl SELL IT! with shop. $82,000 O.B.O. registrations. 47000. 541-604-5993 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 The Bulletin The Bulletin Classifieds 541-447-8664 Serving CentralOregon since 1%8 541-350-2336 ~
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
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to
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
EDIE DELAY
$200,000s.Brand new homes ro Bend with the quatuy Pahlisch is kn own f o r stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma qu artz counters (even in baths) with
20781 NE Comet I,ane
under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention DirectionsrNorth on Boyd Acres,
given io allow for tons of Right on Sierra, Le f( on Black Poirder, natural light & much more. Right on Cometlane.Lookfor signs. Come by the model home for starting in the low more information and plans.
HOSted & LiSted byr
$200,000s
RHIANNA KUNKLER Broker
541-420-2$50 R E A L T 0
R 8
541-306-0939
R E A L 7 0
R S
TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 885 916
Canopies & Campers
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Caribou 1992 Camper Model 9ES. All appli- Peterbilt 359 p otable ances work, memory water truck, 1 990, 5hp foam mattress, deep 3200 gal. tank, ump, 4 - 3 N hoses, cycle battery, 5 gallon p $ 25,000. LP gas tank, and new camlocks, Olympian Wave Cata- 541-820-3724 lytic Heater in addition Just too many to furnace. Some prior leak damage but ready collectibles? for more adventures. $1,500. (360) 789-2479 Sell them in (in Bend) The Bulletin Classifieds Skamper 1990 8-ft popup cabover camper, immaculate, many extras, 541 N385-5809 3-burner stove, heater w/thermostat, hot water SEMI-DRYUVAN heater, oversized pres- 53' long x102 wide, sure water s y stem„ good tires, no dings, Fantastic Fan, fots of storage, sleeps 4, $3750. $8500. 541-403-2465.
541-617-0211
931
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Automotive Parts, Service 8 Accessories
0R
00 908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2 2014 932
933
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Nissan Frontier 2013, (exp. 11/2/14) Vin ¹717729
Mercedes 450SL, 1975 97K Miles $8999. 541-504-8399
1/3 interestin
Columbia400,
Financing available.
$150,000
(located O Bend) 541-288-3333
(4) M&S-rated winter tires, Toyo 225/45-R17 94H, very good tread, $275. 541-788-2056
'65-'66 Mustang original bucket seats, completely rebuilt, better than new. 1957 DeSoto 341 cu. in. dis. headers, unused. 390 Ford cu. in. dis. headers, just like new. Plus other older Ford & Chevy parts.
equipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-41 9-9510 www. N4972M.com
Shop automotive 6hp 60-gallon special vertical air compressor tank, $600 541-385-9350 932
Antique & Classic Autos
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent periormance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007 Say Ngoodbuy
U
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds 5 41-3 8 5 N5809
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Vans
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Jeep Cherokee 1995 green with tan leather interior. Good shape, no damage history. $2200 or best offer. 541-410-1135. Jeep Liberty 2012
proved credit. License and title included in payment.
S UBA R U
SUSSRUOIRRMD.OOM
Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149708
21,977
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
2
877-266-3821
1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399 933
Pickups
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ROBBERSON
Dlr ¹0354
V W CONV.
LINC NLN ~
II IR W R
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. Where can you find a helping hand? CrewMax, 2011 - Only 29,700 miles & loaded! From contractors to 381hp, TRD off road pkg, yard care, it's all here Bilstein shocks,18" alloys, sunroof, rear s l iding in The Bulletin's window, backup camera, "Call A Service 12-spkr JBL sys, running Professional" Directory brds, hitch/trailer sway kg, 10-way adj leather td seats, dual climate control, sonar, 6-disc CD, Jee~Patriof 2014 Bluetooth, more!$37,900. 541-390-6616 935
Sport Utility Vehicles
Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
only 7k miles a lot of vehicle for$16,977 Vin¹619102
LINC NLN ~
BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transfer-
able warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, nayigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500.
Cadillac Escalade
Chevy Si l verado 1500 2 0 1 4, L T , 4 WD, crew c a b , short box, 5.3L, new Feb. 28, 2014. Not driven since June 2014. Gar a ged. Loaded, brown tan cloth interior, 4900 m i., $34,9 9 0 .
gythrp@gmail.com
Chevelle Malibu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.
2011 Has everything, seriously!! Vin¹301832 $49,977 ROBBERSON LINCCLN ~
IM RO R
(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)
Ford F-150 1991
JEEP WRANGLER
US
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2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt 8
cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.
$22,500.
541-419-5980
SubaruForester
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
Cadillac Escalade
Chevy Silverado 2012 4x4 Crew Cab 39K miles, White Diamond paint, Tonneau cover, leather heated seats, running boards, tow-ready, new tires (only 200 miles on them), like CHEVELLE MALIBU new inside and out! 1969 350-4spd, 3" $31,500 exhaust. $12,000. 541-350-0775 541-788-0427
1999 runs good! Vin ¹715926 Bargain Corral price $3,977 ROBBER N L INCOLN~
2011 Has everything, seriously!! Vin¹301832 $49,977
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
©
LINCCLN ~
II RSRR SR
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
VyyTouareg Diesel
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ways garaged, all
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maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
Get your business
975
Automobiles
Ford Fusion SE
Ford Focus2010
i
Veh/cle~ Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our 'Wheel Deal"! advertisers
high miles per gallon $15,977
Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154827 $11,977
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Vin¹302474
ROBBERSON I I N CC LN ~
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(exp. 11/2/1 4)
Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹83065
$15,979 or $199/mo., Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well maint'd, 95K mi., clean. 1 owner. Reduced $8250 firm. 480-266-7396 (Bend)
(exp. 11/2/1 4)
Honda Fit2013,
VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014
(exp. 11/2/1 4)
Vin ¹002246
$13,979 or $195/mo.,
Stock ¹83064 $ 2000 down 7 2 m o . 4 49'/ A P R o n a p - $15,979 or $199 mo., proved credit. License $2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap and title i ncluded in proved credit. License payment. and title i ncluded in
s u a aau
877-266-3821
Dlr ¹0354
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Toyota Corolla2013, readers each week. (exp. 11/2/1 4) Your classified ad Vin ¹053527 will also appear on Stock ¹83072 bendbulletin.com which currently re$15,979 or $199 mo., $2000 down, 84 mo., ceives over 1.5 mil4 .49% APR o n a p lion page views proved credit. License every month at and title i ncluded in no extra cost. Bullepayment. tin Classifieds Get Results! Call © s u aAau 385-5809 or place 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. your ad on-line at 877-266-3821 bendbulletin.com Dlr ¹0354
SURSRUOM N D ID ODM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
proved credit. License and title included in payment.
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SuaARU. Check out the classifieds online 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 wviNv.bendbulletin.com Dlr ¹0354 Updated daily
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Infiniti l30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, $12,979 or $169/mo., 127k miles. $2500 down, 72 mo., $5,900 obo. 4 .49% APR o n a p 541-420-3277
SUSMIUOSSRND OOM
On a classified ad
$2000 down, 84 mo., go to 4 .49% APR o n a p - www.bendbulletin.com proved credit. License to view additional and title i ncluded in photos of the item. payment.
payment.
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Chrys/erPacifica
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MorePixatBendbjjlletin.com
Lookfng for your next employee?
Chrysler 200 LX 2012,
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WHEN YOU SEE THIS
ScionXB 2013,
CHECKYOUR AD on the first day of publication. If a n e rror may occur in your ad, p lease contact u s and we will be happy to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: Honda CR-V Weekdays 12:00 noon EXL 2012 for next day, S at. 17,000 miles, 11:00 a.m. for Sun- Leather, Navigation, day; Sat. 12:00 for Body side moldings, Monday. running boards, mud 541-385-5809 flaps, all weather The Bulletin Classified mats $23,950. (541)521-8400
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory VW Passat, 1999, 182K miles, runs 8 looks ood, needs work. 1200. 541-977-5112
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
541-419-5060
J
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 11/30/14
ROBBERSON 4
Buick LeSabres, 2002 132k $3999; 2005 179k $4999.
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f o r private party i
2012. Low miles-
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Only $4,998 Vin¹A10401
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$3900 down, 84 mo. at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 4 .49% APR o n a p 877-266-3821
Good runner 4x4
ROBBERSON
Dodge T&C Ltd 2000, loaded, 48K orig. mi., 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 $9995. 541-416-0382 Dlr ¹0354
proved credit. License Dlr ¹0354 Chevrolet Trailblazer and title included in 2008 4x4 payment. Good classified ads tell Automatic, 6-cylinder, S UBA R U . the essential facts in an In Madras, tilt wheel, power winROBBERSON 4 call 541-475-6302 dows, power brakes, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not air conditioning, key877-266-3821 the seller's. Convert the HANGAR FOR SALE. less entry, 69K miles. Dlr¹0354 541-312-3986 facts into benefits. Show 30x40 end unit T Excellent condition; Dlr ¹0205. Pricing tires have 90% tread. 940 the reader howthe item will hanger in Prineville. good thru 11/30/14 Dry walled, insulated, $11,995. help them insomeway. Vans Call 541-598-5111 and painted. $23,500. This Ford F250 1984 4x4 King Tom, 541.788.5546 advertising tip Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift brought to youby kit, 90% tires, good wood truck! $2000 or best ofThe Bulletin fer. 541-279-8023 SIDISS CCIMISIOregan SinCe 1RS Jeepster Commando 1968 GMC Pickup 1993 4WD DID YOU KNOW 'I44 Ext'd cab, very good 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, comChevyExpress Cargo million U.S. A d ults FordEscape cond, many m otor pletely restored. $12,000 Van 2011, read a N e wspaper Save money. Learn Limited 2010, modifications, $6500 obo. 808-430-5133 or (exp. 11/2/1 4) print copy each week? to fly or build hours (exp. 11/2/1 4) obo. 541-548-3064 541-382-6300 Vin ¹126159 Discover the Power of with your own airVin ¹B21115 Stock ¹44535A PRINT N e wspaper c raft. 1968 A e ro Stock ¹83028A or $279/mo., Advertising in Alaska, Commander, 4 seat, $17,979 or $199/mo., $22,979 $3000 down, 84 mo., Idaho, Montana, Or150 HP, low time, $3500 down, 84 mo., U t a h and full panel. $21,000 4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n a p - egon, proved credit. License Washington with just proved credit. License and title included in obo. Contact Paul at and title included in one phone call. For a 541-447-5184. payment. FREE ad v e rtising Mercedes 380SL 1982 GMC Sonoma 1991 4x4 oavment. network brochure call black on black, Ext. Cab, 6-cyl, AT, runs S UBA R U . S UBA R U . Need help fixing stuff? Roadster, 916-288-6011 or soft & hard top, excellent great, new radiator, AC, Call A Service Professional condition, aiways ga- power, tow pkg, bedliner, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. email 877-266-3821 find the help you need. raged. 155 K dam age. 877-266-3821 m i les,155K, n o ceceliaOcnpa.com Dlr¹0354 www.bendbulletin.com $11,500. 541-549-6407 $4500. 541-385-4790 Dlr ¹0354 (PNDC)
hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-
1993 sharp, well maint. Vin¹857877 Bargain Corral Price $3,977
S UBA R U
2005, (exp. 11/2/1 4) Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A
ROBBERSON
$31,999 or $395/mo., Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
Chrysler Town & Dodge Avenger2013, Country LXI 1997, (exp. t t/2/14) beautiful inside & Vin ¹535474 out, one owner, nonStock ¹83015 smoker,. loaded with $13,979or $195/mo., options! 197,892 mi. $2000 down, 72 mo., Service rec o rds 4 .49% APR o n ap available. $4 , 950. proved credit. License and title included in Call Mike, (541) 815payment. 8176 after 3:30 p.m.
I M Z OR
2012, (exp. 11/2/14) Vin ¹004148. Stock ¹83142
1965 Mustang
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
G5
Mercedes 300E
ROBBERSON
541-915-9170
541-480-5634
1974 Bellanca 1730A
975
$3900 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap -
541-447-7272
1/3 interest in well-
975
Stock ¹83155
2005 Diesel 4X4
(4) 225/60R-17 studded tires off Honda CRV, less than 1000 miles on them, $350. 541-350-2336
940
$26,977or $339/mo.,
©
2 new studded tires on rims, 165SR-15, $75 both. 541-550-8384 (4) 185/55/R-15 Dunlop Winter Maxx tires, off Fiat 500. Bought Nov. 2013, less than 500 m iles, $ 35 0 ob o . L 707-206-7770,Bend
935
Ui
Nearly perfect! Must see! vin¹ 142671
$11,977 ROBBERSON ~
SSRSRRMS ~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 11/30/14
MAZDA 3 S2011
Certified preowned with warranty. ¹401047 Onl $16.947 ROBBERSON I I N CC LII ~
IM RO R
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 price
good thru 11/30/14
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE The regular meeting T he Bend Park & of the Board of DiRecreation D i s trict rectors of the DesBoard of Directors will chutes County Rural meet in a work sesFire Protection Dis- sion at 5 :3 0 p . m., trict ¹2 scheduled for Tuesday, November November 11, 2014 4, 2014, at the district has been cancelled. office,799 SW CoInstead a sp e c ial l umbia, Bend, O r meeting of the board egon. Agenda topics will be held Tuesday, include staff introducNovember 4, 2014 at tions and the Simp1 1:30 A.M. a t t h e son Pavilion. A reguNorth Fire S t ation lar business meeting c onference ro o m , will convene at 7:00 63377 Jamison St., p.m. for the board to Bend, OR. Items on consider approval of the agenda include: the Pickleball Court the fire d epartment Construction Contract, report, the P r oject Simpson Pav i lion Wildfire report, a sta- Construction Contract, tus report on the con- and a Simpson Pavilfined space and pre- ion Contract Adminisdictive software tration contract projects, a discussion amendment. The of strategic goals, and board will conduct an financing of v arious executive s e s sion p rojects, and a r e - upon adjournment of view of a board policy the regular meeting. on best practices. The The executive sesmeeting location is sion will be held puraccessible to persons suant to ORS with disabilities. A re- 192.660(2)(h) for the quest for interpreter purpose of consultafor the hearing im- tion with legal counpaired or for other ac- sel concerning legal commodations for rights and duties reperson with disabili- garding current litigaties should be made tion or litigation likely at least 48 hrs. before to be filed. the meeting to: Tom Fay 5 4 1 -318-0459. T he a g enda a n d TTY 800-735-2900. s upplementary r e ports are posted on the district's website, The Bulletin www.bendparksanTo Subscribe call drec.org. For more 541-385-5800 or go to information call www.bendbulletin.com 541-389-7275.
•
•
*Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)
InCludeS UP
to 40 words Of text,2" in length,
Item Priced af:
• Under $500 ----.
Your Total Ad Cost onl: -------------- $2rri
• $500 to $eee ....
............................$39
with border, full color photo, • $1000 to $2499 bold headline and price. • $2500 and over
The Bulletin 541- 5 - 5
........................... $49
........................... $59
9
• The Bulletin, • ce n t i'al or e g on Marketplace • The central oregon Nickel Ads ® bendbulletin.com 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycjes, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Some restrictions apply.
wrscked Sled. Affsr m rket motor upQmde. Ys0 Fast and F Un. e allService recoms I/lovingfrirces s I i $2000080 541-PPP 0pp
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
G6 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014•THE BULLETIN
Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?
II
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1lM
l® • IW II
0 0 0 0
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Ir
List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) 'Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.