Serving Central Oregon since1903 75l t
THURSDAY October 3, 2013
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- res man oo a aceo ReedMarketupdate SPORTS• C1
LOCAL• B1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD CanCer Care —A healthy diet is important. Here are
some tips.D1
Plus: ourdiet report
card —The news isn't all bad, but we have along way to go.DS
Odituary —TomClancy, the master of the adrenalinepumping military-espionage thriller.BS
In the Ducks' footsteps — More Pac-12teams arefor-
By Lauren Dake
with the state public pension system. "The Public Employees Retirement System is off the table for this governor," Kitzhaber said. At the heart of the special legislative session, which ad-
The Bulletin
SALEM — After three long days at the state Capitol, Gov. John Kitzhaber said Wednesday the special legislative session had successfully taken care of issues
journed Wednesday, was the governor's push to reform PERS. The measure passed by the Legislature reduces retirees' cost-of-living adjustments and, prospectively, reduces the $14 million un-
funded PERS liability by 25 percent. "We are done," Kitzhaber said. "We are going to move on to other things that are important to Oregonians." It's a political victory for the governor, who is ex-
VOTED YES ONALL BILLS
"Weare done. We are going to move on to other things that are important to Oregonians."
VOTED NOATLEAST ONCE ~3te
Email wrangling — unFerrioli
new light on the legal tussle over Lavabit, the email service
McLane
Huffman
Knopp Whitsett No on COLA No ontax bill and tax bill bill
Inside:For a breakdown of all five bills,see Page A4
used by EdwardSnowden. A6
Conger No on tax bill
Whisnant Noon COLA bill and tax bill
— Gov. John Kitzhaber
Many poor eft out by heath aw
Changes at McDonald's — The fast-food giant rolls out
healthier options in 20 of its largest markets.C6
By Sabrina Tavernise
E
And a Web exclusiveThe Army's push to gogreenis fueled by saving lives. bendbulletin.com/extras
and Robert Gebeloff New York Times News Service
Enrollmentvs.capacity at Bend-LaPineSchools
Tea party laid the groundwork for closure By Zachary A. Goldfarb The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — The federal shutdown this week represents the culmination of a sustained attack by a group of conservative Republicans on the size and scope of government that has been years in the
making. A core group of House
Repub-
ANALYSIS licans elected inthetea party wave of 2010 has
largely succeeded in its aim of scal-
ingback federal spending, despite fervent opposition from President Obama and the Democratic-controlled Senate. "This moment feels very much like the inevitable outcome of a series of events that dates at least back to the 2010 midterms," said Jared Bernstein, a former White House economic adviser who opposed the anti-government wave. Even before the shutdown that began at midnight Monday, the tea party efforts greatly reduced the paceoffederalspending. To the dismay of many Democrats and supporters of a robust federal government, the consequences of tea party efforts are likely to remain even when the shutdown ends. SeeShutdown/A5
SeeBargain/A4
The governor'stake
ee
EDITOR'SCHOICE
began.
All bills pass:HowCentral Oregon's lawmakers voted(allareRepublicans)
going the huddle to ratchet up the tempo on offense.C1
sealedcourtdocumentsshed
pected to announce whether he is running for an unprecedented fourth term later this month. But the special legislative session nearly imploded before it officially
Enrollment numbers and capacity at the start of the 2013-14 school year Enrollment (over capacity);e Capacity
•
Enrollment (under capacity)Enrollment/capacity
ementary schools started the aca-
ELEMENTARYSCHOOLS
demic year over capacity. 1 73 lree
Eight of the district's 17 elementa-
687/eoo
Bear Creek
Buckingham
ry facilities host more students than
, '485/ooo , '232leee
Ehekrorth ~
they are built to handle, an increase , '507/ooo
Elk Meadow Highland
of two schools from the beginning
394/3/o
High Lakes
of the last academic school year.
639/eoo 610/ooo
R.E. Jewell
Juniper
613/5/5
La Pine
, '427/eoo
Bear Creek faces the
,'133 leee
Roeiehd ~
Lava Ridge
; '567/ooo ' ,582/eoo
Miller
628/ooo
Pine Ridge
, '575/eoo
Ponderosa Weetetde Village ~
1 31 lree
T hree • iyere~
,' 223 rt e o
MIDDLE SCHOOLS Cascade
891 /800
High Desert
, '776/800
, '662/ooo
Pilot Butte
La Pine
, '308/55o
Sky View
,' 795/aoo
Westside Village ~' ,88/o5 Three Rivers ~
The Bulletin
Nearly half of Bend-La Pine's el-
•
Amity Creek ~
By Tyler Leeds
, 116/315
In side
greatest challenge, enrolling • Mapping 687 students in a 600-stuthecrowds dent building. High Lakes at district and Juniper are both nearly elementary 40 students over capacity. Of the dtstrtct s middle and high schools, only Cascade Middle School and Bend High School are over capacity. "In the recent past, this is a little more of an issue than usual," said Bend-La Pine Chief Operations and Financial Officer Brad Henry. "But the capacity issue is not surprising overall; it is in line with projections we have seen and is why we felt the need to go to the voters to build new schools and increase capacity." In May, voters approved a $96 million bond to fund the construction of a new middle school and a new elementary school. At the district board meeting Sept. 24, Superintendent Ron Wilkinson presented the architects'proposed construction schedules for the new schools, though he urged the board to "not get too attached to this timetable, as we are on a very tight timeline." SeeSchools/A5
Marshall ~
1,663/t,o5o 1 33 looo
, '1,337/t,o5o
Mountain View
, '1,455/1,500
Summit
La Pine
, '453/650 Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
Source:Bend-La Pine Schools
Race fees ending for top runners By Mary Pilon New York Times News Service
The sport of road running, from small-town 10kilometer races to big-city marathons, has long supported its top athletes with
appearance fees. Come run our race, and you will be paid something regardlessofyour performance — that's the model. The fees are a crucial source of revenue for those swift runners who have gotten a massage and are back home napping by the time the main pack approaches the finish line. But the days of being
HIGH SCHOOLS Bend
A sweeping national effort to extend health coverage to millions of Americans will leave out twothirds of the poor blacks and single mothers and more than half of the low-wage • Glitches workers who do not have pers i st in insurance, the O r e gon very kinds of and U.S., B3, AS people that the program was mtended to help according to an analysis of census data by The New York Times. Because they live in states largely controlled by Republicans that have declined to participate in a vast expansion of Medicaid, the medical insurance program for the poor, they are among the 8 million Americans who are impoverished, uninsured and ineligible for help. See Health/A5
paid just for showing up may soon be ending. See Fees/A4
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly sunny High 52, Low 34
Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX 01-6 Obituaries Business/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 06 Sports Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Lo c al/State B1-6 TV/Movies
B5 C1-4 06
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 110,No.276, 30 pages, 5 sections
+ .4 We userecycled newsprint
:: IIIII o
88 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
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MiChael JaCkSOn laWSuit —A jury cleared a concert promoter of negligence onWednesday in acase that attempted to link the death of Michael Jackson to the company that promoted his ill-fated
comebackshows.ThepanelrejectedalawsuitbroughtbyJackson's mother claiming AEG Live was negligent in hiring Conrad Murray, the
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.powerball.com and www.oregonlouery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn
Wednesday night are:
4z Qs~ Q4QsgzsQ ® The estimated jackpot is now $86 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn
Wednesday night are
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doctor who killed Jackson with an overdose of a hospital anesthetic the singer used as a sleep aid. The five-month trial provided the clos-
est look yet at Jackson's drug useand his battles against chronic pain and insomnia.
NSA tracking —National Security Agency chief Gen. Keith Alex-
By David Espo
ander revealed Wednesday that his spy agency once tested whether it could trackAmericans' cellphone locations, in addition to its practice
The Associated Press
of sweeping broad information about calls made.Alexander denied a
WASHINGTON — P r esident Barack Obama brought congressional leaders to the White House on Wednesday for thefirst time since a partial g o vernment s h utdown began, but there was no sign of progress toward ending an impasse that has idled 800,000 federal workers and curbed services around the country. Obama "refuses to negotiate," House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio., told reporters after private talks that lasted more than a n h o ur. "All we're asking for here is a discussionand fairness for the American people under Obamacare." But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada said moments later, "We're locked in tight on Obamacare" and n either th e p r e sident n o r Democrats will accept changes in the nation's 3-year-old health care law as the price for spending legislation needed to end the two-day partial shutdown. With the nation's ability to borrow money soon to lapse, Republicans and Democrats alike said the shutdown could last for two weeks or more, and soon oblige a divided government to grapple with both economy-threatening issues at the same time. The White House said in a statement after the meeting that Obama had made it clear "he is not going to negotiate over the need for Congress to act toreopen the government or to raise the debt limit to pay the bills Congress has already incurred." It added, "The president remains hopeful that common sense will prevail." The high-level bickering at microphones set up outside the White H ouse reflected the day's proceedings in the Capitol. The Republican-controlled House approved legislation to reopen the nation's parks and the National Institutes of Health, even though many Democrats criticized them as part of a piecemeal approach that fell far short of what was needed. The bills face dim prospects in the Senate, and the White House threatened to veto both in the unlikely event they make it to Obama's desk. "What we're trying to do is to get the government open as quickly as possible," said the House majority l eader, Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia. "And all that it would take is us realizing we have a lot in agreement." Earlier, an attempt by Democrats to force shutdown-ending legislation to the House floor failed on a 227-197 vote, with all Republicans in opposition. That left intact the tea party-driven strategy of demanding changes to the nation's health care overhaul as the price for essential federal financing, despite grumbling from Republican moderates. The stock market ended lower as Wall Street CEOs, Europe's central banker and traders pressed for a solution beforeserious damage is done to the economy. Chief executives from the nation's biggest financial firms met Obama for more than an hour Wednesday, some of t hem p l ainly frustrated with the tactics at play in Congress and with the potential showdown coming over the debt limit. "You can re-litigate these policy issues in a p o l itical forum, but we shouldn't use threats of causing the U.S. to fail on its obligations to repay its debt as a cudgel," Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, said after the meeting. Democrats were scathing in their criticism. "The American p e o ple would get better government out of Monkey Island at the local zoo than we're giving them today," said Rep. John Dingell of Michigan. A sampling of federal agencies showed how unevenly the
New York Times report published Saturday that said NSA searched
/ NUUC' O trOy. Q O!POg n I x,in r
social networks of Americans searching for foreign terror connections, and detailed12 previously revealed cases of abuse byNSA
OEg!t "! Oy~R
employees who used the network for unsanctioned missions like
'"fg4R<
spyingonaspouse.Hesaid allemployeeswerecaughtandmost were disciplined.
I •
TenneSSee duS CraSh —A bustaking a church group home to North Carolina blew atire, veered across a highway medianand
NO POV'I
' gpgWN OVÃ' OPAeACAe! "
crashed into a sport utility vehicle and tractor-trailer Wednesday in a fiery wreck that killed eight people, authorities said. Fourteen other
people were hurt in the accident in northeastern Tennessee, including eight who were in critical condition. The bus was carrying members of the Front Street Baptist Church in Statesville, N.C., which is about
i oj Jae C. Hong /The Associated Press
Barbara Samuels, 86, joins a protest against the government shutdown Wednesday outside the federal building ln Los Angeles.
140 miles east of the crash site. BerluSCOIIi reVerSal —In a startling move, a shakenSilvio Berlusconi stood before Italy's Senate onWednesday and announced that his center-right party would support the fragile coalition government, a dramatic reversal after the former prime minister had spent
Veterans visit WWII memorial
days vowing to bring down thegovernment andforce new elections.
WASHINGTON —Veterans groups that planned trips to the World
War II Memorial onthe National Mall are beinggranted accessde-
The backing of Berlusconi's People of Freedom Party allowed the prime minister, Enrico Letta, to easily win a confidence vote in the
spite the government shutdown, while the Republican National Com-
Italian Senate onWednesday afternoon. Letta is expected to win a
mittee offeredWednesdayto payfor guards to keepthe site open. More than125 World War II veterans from Mississippi and
secure majority.
lowa were initially kept out of the memorial Tuesday, but mem-
bers of Congress intervenedand helpedpush aside barriers to escort the veterans into the memorial. National parks across the country closed Tuesdaydue tothe federal budget impasse. Now the World War II Memorial has become a political symbol
in the bitter fight between Republicans andDemocrats over the government shutdown and who is at fault. RNC Chairman Reince Priebus went to the memorial Wednes-
similar vote in the lower house of Parliament, where he commands a
RuSSia GreenpeaCe ChargeS —Defying complaints from international human rights and environmental organizations, as
well as the apparent wishes of President Vladimir Putin, Russian prosecutors brought piracy charges onWednesday against13 Greenpeace activists and a journalist who covered their protest.
The activists and the journalist were among 30 people aboard a
day and said the committee would pay to keepfive guards on duty
Greenpeace lnternational ship, the Arctic Sunrise, that was seized by helicopter-borne Russian border guards in the Arctic Ocean, off
to keep it open. "The Obama administration has decided they want to make
tempted to board a Russian offshore oil platform using inflatable
the government shutdown aspainful as possible, even taking the unnecessary step of keeping theGreatest Generation awayfrom a monument built in their honor," he said.
the coast of NovayaZemlya, after several members of the crew atboats. The piracy charges carry a maximum sentence of 15years in prison. BP Settlement —A federal appeals court gave BP apartial victory Wednesday by ordering a lower court judge to reconsider his inter-
The Democratic National Committee quickly responded. "We've already beenworking on a plan to openthe memorial close," said DNCspokesman Mo Elleithee. "It's called a cleanfund-
pretation of a settlement with claimants who filed billions of dollars in claims against the oil company after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon
ing resolution, and it sounds like the votes are there if the Speaker would just call for a vote. It would save the economy a lot of money
cess, arguing that the program's administrator, Patrick Juneau, was
— and the entire government — after the GOP caused them to
and get the memorial andgovernment open awhole lot faster." — The Associated Press
oil spill disaster. BPhas repeatedly complained about the claims proapproving fabricated payments for business economic losses based on an unsound interpretation of anagreement the company reached with victims last year. — From wire reports
shutdown was felt across the government. The Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Housing and Urban Development listed only six percent of their employees as essential, and therefore permitted to work during the impasse. James Clapper,director ofnational intelligence, said about 70 percent of civilian employees in agencies under his control had been sent home. By contrast, about 86 percent of employees of the Department of Homeland Security remained on the job, and 95 percent at the Veterans Affairs Department. One furloughed employee, m eteorologist A m y Fr i t z , said, "I want to get back to work." At a news conference
Ar
1 in 8 Women ffected By BreastCancer
arranged by congressional Democrats, the 38-year-old National Weather Service employee said she has more than $100,000 in student loan debt and is looking at ways to cut her budget. In an interview with CNBC before meeting with lawmakers, Obama said he would not negotiate with R epublicans until the government is reopened and Congress votes to raise the debt limit. "If we get in the habit where a few f o lks, a n e x t remist wing of one party, whether it's Democrat or Republican, are allowed to extort concessions based on a threat (to) undermine the full faith and credit of the United States, then any president who comes after me, not just me, will find themselves unable to govern effectively," he said. The H o us e s i d etracked legislation Tuesday night to reopen some veterans programs, the national parks and a portion of the Washington, D.C., municipal government. All three bills fell short of the two-thirds majority n eeded when Democrats voted overwhelmingly against this. Republicans tried a g ain, this time under rules requiring only a s imple majority. The parks measure was approved on a vote of 252-173, with 23 Democrats breaking ranks and voting in favor. The vote to reopen NIH was 254171. The House also voted to allow the Washington, D.C., government to use the taxes it collects to operate programs.
Early Detection Is The Best Cure. October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month
Look Past The Pink & Schedule Your Mammogram Today
CentralOregon
a ioo ASSOC., I.C. 541.382.9383 www.corapc.com
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Thursday, Oct. 3, the 276th
day of 2013. Thereare 89days left in the year.
SCIENCE
RESEARCH
HAPPENINGS RuSSia —Lawyers for Greenpeacesaythe hearing against activists over protests at an offshore oil platform
could continue, with more charges possible.A2 FIFA —The executive committee of world soccer's gov-
erning body meets to discuss possibly changing the 2022 World Cup in Qatar from summer to winter.
w eB 0
New Alzheimer's tests mayimprove diagnosis, treatment
33
OLin inw ae rea Researchers extracting and measuring the breath, or "blow," of whales and dolphins, aim to improve the health of captive creatures and also develop an unobtrusive technique for studying them. By Rebecca Kessler
Highlight:In 1990, West Ger-
New Yorh Times News Service
manyandEastGermanyended 45 years of postwar division,
MYSTIC, Conn. — On her trainer's command, an a l abaster-skinned beluga whale named Naku placed her chin on thedeck ofhe routdoor pool and exhaled several times, e mitting a ho l l ow "chuff" sound with each breath. The vapor rose into a petri dish a researcher held over her blowhole. Those tiny drops contain a wealth of information, it turns out. Researchers at M y stic Aquarium and elsewhere are learning how to use the breath, or "blow," of whales and dolphins to extract and measure hormones, m i croorganisms, DNA and the byproducts of metabolism. T heir goal is not only to improve the health of captive cetaceans like Naku, but also to develop a powerful, unobtrusive technique for studying them. While blood is the gold standard in physiological research, it can be hard to obtain — and all but impossible from large whales. Three new studiesdescribe advances in breath analysis, which may prove to be the next best thing. "I suspect that everything that's in the blood is in the blow, just at much lower concentration, a little harder to measure," said Kathleen Hunt, a research scientist at the New England Aquarium i n B o ston. "All kinds of goodies that we could learn a lot from that we've never been able to get from these animals." Doctors have long sniffed their patients' breath to diagnose a variety of diseases. But
founder of the Franciscan order, died; hewas canonized in1228. In 1789, President George Washington declared Nov. 26,
1789, a day ofThanksgiving to express gratitude for the creation of the United States of
America. In1863, President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November
Thanksgiving Day. In1929, the Kingdom of
Serbs, Croats andSlovenes formally changed its name to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the Office of Economic Stabilization. In1951,the New York Giants captured the National League
pennant by ascore of 5-4 as Bobby Thomson hit a threerun homer off the Brooklyn Dodgers' Ralph Branca in the
"shot heard 'round the world." In1961, "The Dick Van Dyke
Show," also starring Mary Tyler Moore, made its debut on CBS. In1962, astronaut Wally
Schirra blasted off from Cape Canaveral aboard the Sigma 7 on a nine-hour flight. In1970, the National Oceanic 8 Atmospheric Administration was established under the De-
partment of Commerce. In1991, Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton entered the race for
the Democratic presidential nomination. In1995, the jury in the O.J. Simpson murder trial found the former football star not guilty of the 1994 slayings of his former wife, Nicole
Brown Simpson, and Ronald Goldman (however, Simpson was later found liable in a civil
trial). In 2002, five people were shot to death in the Washington, D.C. area within a14-hour period, beginning the hunt for
the "Beltway Sniper." (In all, ten people were killed; mastermind John Allen Muham-
mad and teenageaccomplice Lee Boyd Malvo were later
caught.) Ten years ago:A tiger attacked magician RoyHornof duo "Siegfried & Roy" during a performance in LasVegas, leaving the superstar illusionist in critical condition on his 59th birthday.
Five years ago: Amid dire warnings of economic disaster, a reluctant Congress abruptly reversed course andapproved a historic $700 billion government bailout of the battered financial industry; President George W. Bush swiftly signed it.
One year ago:Anaggressive Mitt Romney sparred with
President BarackObamaon theeconomy and domestic issues in their first campaign debate.
BIRTHDAYS Rockand roll star Chubby
Checker is 72. Magician Roy Horn is 69. Blues singer Keb' Mo' is 62. Civil rights activist
Rev. Al Sharpton is 59. Rock musician Tommy Lee is 51. Actor Clive Owen is 49. Singer
Gwen Stefani is 44. Actress Neve Campbell is 40. Rapper Talib Kweli is 38. Actor Seann William Scott is 37. Actresssinger Ashlee Simpson is 29. — From wire reports
that uses a radioactive dye, k nown c o m mercially a s Although my grandmoth- Amyvid, to light up amyloid er received a diagnosis of plaques in a PET scan. Alzheimer's disease in her T he F DA appr o v ed 80s, my family was never A myvid t o r u l e ou t A l z sure that's what she had. heimer's when the scan is She certainly s u f fered negative and to confirm the from dementia: She was able presence of plaques when to recall childhood memo- positive, but that does not ries but couldn't remember necessarily indicate the diswhat she had had for lunch. ease is present. However, But dementia and Alzheim- some doctorsare using the er's are not s ynonymous. scans to confirm the di sBack then, the only way to ease, which experts say is look for the telltale Alzheim- misdiagnosed up to a quarer's plaques — deposits of ter of the time. Paul Aisen, the protein fragment beta director of the Alzheimer's amyloid that accumulate in Disease Cooperative Study the spaces between nerve at University of California cells — was through an au- at San Diego, calls Amyvid topsy, which we didn't do. an "enormous a d vance" Over the past 15 years, because a p o sitive scan, researchers have developed combined with his clinical a g r eater u n d erstanding diagnosis, means he can tell of how the disease works. patients and their families We now have more accu- the disease is "present, not rate ways of d iagnosing probable." Alzheimer's and are moving However, the scans are closer to developing drugs to not available everywhere, directly attack the disease. cost $3,000 to $4,000 and Much of this work is still in are not covered by Medicare the early stages, but experts or other insurers. are growing more hopeStill, says John Morris, a ful about dealing with the neurologist at Washington debilitating disease, which University School of Medicurrently has no cure. cine in St. Louis, "families Now, for example, we no want to know." A few of his longer have to rely on autop- patients have paid for the sies to confirm the existence test out of p o cket. "They of Alzheimer's plaques. In want to put a name on it, a major advance last year, to deal with it, even if there the Food and Drug Admin- isn't a curative therapy for istration approved a method it Special To The Washington Post
HISTORY
declaring the creation of a reunified country. In1226, St. Francis of Assisi,
By Kendall Powell
gi
,'r,
(< f,'x r
," j; •i *
n. I
l
Rebecca Kesslervia New YorkTimes News Service
Lindsey Nelson and Justin Richard work with Naku, a female beluga whale, to get her exhaled breath in a petri dish. Researchers are learning how to use the breath of whales and dolphins to extract and measure hormones, microorganisms, DNA and the byproducts of metabolism. nals of Improbable Research.) After those papers, others dived in, several financed by the federal Office of N aval Research. Scientists at Mystic Aquarium are studying reproductiveand stress hormones, as well as DNA, in the breath of Naku and her three poolmates. Not only do the four belugas blow on demand, but they also flop their tails onto the pool deck so researchers can draw blood and collect fecal samples. They open their jaws for saliva swabbings (and toothbrushings) — all in exchange for a few fish or some pats on their
bubble-gum-pink tongues.
Being able to compare results from all four bodily fluids is a huge advantage in working gadgets may soon replace nos- out study methods, said Tracy es, with chemical breath tests Romano, the project's leader. under development for a host So is being able to monitor and of human ailments, including control virtually every aspect asthma, cancer, diabetes and of the belugas' lives. "We know tuberculosis. the health of the animals," she Trainers and veterinarians said. "We know the age; we working with captive whales know what the animals are and dolphins also routinely eating; we know th e w ater smell their b reath. Normal chemistry." dolphin breath has a f i shy In San Diego, scientists at smell; rotten-egg scents sig- the National Marine Mamnal digestive problems, and mal Foundation are studying sweet ones indicate bacterial a group of highly cooperative pneumonia,according to Sam dolphins trained to locate sea Ridgway, a veterinarian and mines and swimmers for the neurobiologist at the National U.S. Navy. Their breath has Marine Mammal Foundation already yielded hundreds of in San Diego. In 1969, Ridgway compounds — a f o rtune in published the first basic ceta- molecules. "We looked at the samples cean-breath study, exploring a dolphin's diving ability. and were like 'All right!' There Four decades later, advances is so much stuff in there," said in chemical sensing, comput- the study's director, Cristina ing and human breath analysis Davis, a chemical sensing exdrew Ridgway's team and per- pert at the University of Calihaps a half-dozen others back fornia, Davis. "There's a treto cetacean breath in earnest. mendous amount of room for In 2009, researchers reported dlscovery. detectingthehormonesprogesThe team is now scrutinizterone and testosterone in blow ing the compounds for useful from humpback and North At- indicators of dolphin health. lantic right whales — potential A paper in Marine Mammal cluestotheirsex and reproduc- Science takes a closer look at tive state. The paper, published one, nitric oxide, which signals in the journal Marine Mamrespiratorydisease when elmal Science, showed that blow evatedin humans and may do analysis might really work. the same in dolphins. A few months later, another Great whales are not so easiteam using a remote-controlled ly studied. They spend so much helicopter to collect blow sam- time offshore and underwater ples reported finding potential- that even basic observation ly pathogenic bacteria in the is difficult. Most species have breath of five whale species. failed to fully recover from The whales watched the heli- centuries of whaling, and scicopter buzz overhead, but oth- entists suspect they are under erwise seemed unperturbed, stress fro m h u m an-caused said the lead researcher, Kar- problems like pollution and ina Acevedo-Whitehouse, a overfishing of the whales' prey. molecular epidemiologist at Blow testing, along with new the Autonomous University techniques for analyzing skin of Queretaro in Mexico. "In and blubber biopsies, feces and terms of what we normally do photographs should help idenwith wildlife — restraint and tify the culprits, according to a capture and collecting samples paper published in the journal — this is as noninvasive as you Conservation Physiology. can get." (The paper, published Hunt of the New England in the journal Animal Conser- Aquarium, the paper's lead vation, earned its authors the author, spent years studying satirical but coveted Ig Nobel hormones in the feces of terresPrize from the magazine An- trial animals. She and her col-
leagues successfully translated those methods to large baleen whales, enlisting trained sniffer dogs to track down whale feces. But while "poop's great," Hunt said, "whales won't poop on command." Maybe not,but they do exhale frequently, in conspicuous sprays that have longbeckoned whalers and scientists alike. In 2011, Hunt's team went to the Bay of Fundy to streamline the system for collecting blow from endangered North Atlantic right whales. The Mystic technique, placing Petri dishes neatly over blowholes, was not an option. "I'm fairly jealous of their belugas," Hunt said. After much experimentation, her team settled on a cutoff Hawaiian Punch bottle stuffed with bridal-veil tulle at the end of a 32-foot pole, an apparatus that requires a synchronized shipboard ballet to operate smoothly. In a paper set for publication this month in Marine Mammal Science, Hunt's team reports that a simple, portable, lowcost test can detect hormones in blow, which should open the field to any curious whale scientist. Plenty of work remains. But Ari Friedlaender, a Duke University marine-mammal ecologist not involved in the studies, had nothing but praise for the new line of research. "The door is open for this work to be done in a lot of different places, on a lot of different populations," he sa>d.
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
UPDATE: CHEMICAL WEAPON DISPOSAL
Fees
Weaponsexperts start Syriamissionamidclashes
Continued from A1 The shift is thanks to a recent competitor in the running world: private equity. C ompetitor G r oup, t h e organizer of more than 80 high-profile events around t he w o rld, r e cently a n nounced that it would no lon-
By Barbara Surk
estimated 1,000-ton arsenal of chemical weapons. BEIRUT — Deadly clashes The i n spectors' m i ssion raged on the edge of Damascus — endorsed by a U.N. Security on Wednesday andrivalrebel Council resolution passed last factions battled each other in week — is to scrap Syria's canorthern Syria as international pacity to manufacture chemical chemical weapons inspectors weapons by Nov. I and destroy began tosecure the sites where its entire stockpile by mid-2014. they will work. A convoy of SUVs with U.N. The fighting underscored the markings departed the cenimmense security challenge tral Damascus hotel where the that the dozens of disarmament team from the Organization experts must negotiate as they for the Prohibition of Chemiwork amid the civil war to meet cal Weapons is staying as the tight deadlines for eliminat- inspectors headed out for their ing President Bashar Assad's first full day in the country. The Associated Press
Bargain
The U.N. and OPCW said in a statement that "joint work with the Syrian authorities has begun on securing the sites where the team will operate, especially in outlying areas." It added that planning continues for disabling production facilities as do discussions on the size of Syria's stockpile. One of the challenges the inspectors face is navigating the war itself. On the northern edge of Damascus,fierce clashes between Syrian troops and al-Qaidalinked fighters killed at least 19
the special session. Knopp voted against Senate Bill 861, which reduces the cost-of-living adjustments to public employees. He did vote in favor of the PERS bill, Senate Bill 862, which will remove future lawmakers from the system and prevent some felonsfrom receiving their benefits. He said the bill addressing the cost-ofliving adjustment was bad policy and did not substantially reform the system. House B il l 5 1 0 1 s e n ds about $200 million to education programs throughout the state and creates a dedicated stream of revenue for mental health programs. The investment in mental health, Rep. Sara Gelser, D-Corvallis, said
Bill breakdown
Continued from A1 By Wednesday, lawmakers had recovered and passed a
SENATE BILL 861 • Changes the Public Employees Retirement System, including lower cost-of-living adjustments. For benefits up to $60,000, the
package of five bills, compris-
COLA drops to1.25 percent; for benefits greater than $60,000,
ing the so-called grand bargain, out of both chambers. Senate P r esident P e t er Courtney, D - Salem, n o t ed specialsessions can end disastrously, and he would know; he's been through more than 15 of them. This three-day session seemed headed at times in that direction. Kitzhaber expected it would last only
the rate becomes.15 percent. A component softens the blow for retirees making less than $20,000. • The measure may reduce the $14 billion unfunded PERS liability by nearly a third.
SENATE BILL 862 Removes future lawmakers from PERS, could take benefits from
convicted felons andchanges howthe "final average salary" for some PERS retirees is calculated.
SENATE BILL 863
one day.
Prohibits local counties from regulating genetically modified
"We a re f i n i shing o n Wednesday, when on Sunday we didn't have a plan, and we were in deep trouble," Courtney said before pounding his
crops. Excludes JacksonCounty. HOUSE BILL 3601 • Raises taxes on somecorporations and tobacco products. • Gives a tax break to some small businesses.
gavel and marking an end
"is a game changer."
• Expands a tax break for low-income families, curtails the senior
to the 2013 special session Wednesday evening. Talk throughout the week focused on how th e g r and bargain offered "plenty to like and plenty to hate." It consisted of a complex package of bills that touched on a wide
medical tax break. HOUSE BILL 5101 The appropriation bill, sends $100 million to K-12andcommunity colleges and dedicates certain funds for mental health and senior
programs.
range of subjects from raising spite it all, we came here totaxes on some, lowering taxes on others, trimming public pensions and tackling regulation of genetically modified agriculture. The first tw o d ays w ere m arked by d elays and r e scheduled hearings. Wednesday morning also started off rocky with a crucial bill unable to find enough votes to pass on the first attempt. Eventually, three Democratic l awmakers switched their votes and cleared the way for the entire package to pass. As part of the deal, Kitzhaber said he would only sign the bills into law if the entire package passed both chambers. Despite the early d elays, Kitzhaber a n d l a w m akers were quick to point out how Oregon overcame partisan gridlock, unlike their counterparts at the federal level. "I hope Oregonians today see we showed up. We showed up for work. We didn't draw a line in the sand and demand retribution. We d i dn't p out and we didn't walk away, de-
day and got something done," said House Republican Leader Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte. The first, and perhaps the most difficult vote for some lawmakers Wednesday, was on a measurethatraised taxes on some corporations and cut taxes for eligible small businesses. Ultimately, it passed. But not without first bringing the chamber to a standstill. After nearly an hour of behind-the-scenes conversations, three Democratic lawmakers changed theirvotes to ensurethe provision's passage. Raising taxes requires a supermajority vote. Rep. Phil Barnhart, D-Eugene, chairman of the House R evenue C o mmittee, s a i d House Bill 3601 had "some really good things," but it also had components that "terrify" him. Several lawmakers railed against the tax provision, in particular t h e co m p onent that cuts taxes for some small businesses. Rep. Brent Barton, D-Or-
soldiers and pro-government militiamen in the past three days, according to the Britainbased Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The fighting in the contested district of Barzeh flared Monday when the army stepped up attacks against opposition forces who have been trying to capturethe area for months, the Observatory said. Districts such as Barzeh, on the edge of Dam ascus, areimportant forrebels based in the capital's outer suburbs as the fighters try to move closer to the heart of the city.
egon City, said it amounted to a "cash giveaway" to well-off lawyers,doctors, accountants and lobbyists. He asked what kind of message the Legislature is sending, when on the same day taxes are cut on lawyers and doctors, "we cut benefits for retirees'?" The measure raises taxes and generates $244 million in revenue in the current twoyear budget cycle. It also lowers the tax rate for some small businesses, i n cluding "S" corporations, limited liability companies and partnerships. Rep. Tobias Read, D-Beaverton, spoke in favor of the measure. "It doesn't contain a Republican tax cut or a Democratic cigarette tax i n c rease," he said. "It's a compromise." On the Senate side, Tim Knopp, R-Bend, blasted the plan, saying if the state would "go far enough on PERS, we (wouldn't) need to raise taxes." And Knopp, who has been a vocal proponent of PERS reform, did not think the Legislature went far enough, despite
"I believe we may be the first state with a d edicated source ofrevenue forcommunity-based mental health," she said. Sen. Mark Hass, D-Beaverton, said the bill that will help local school districts hire more teachers felt like "the reward, the payday for those difficult votes we had earlier." And l a w makers p a ssed Senate Bill 863, a later addition to the grand bargain, and meant to make the deal more palatable to Republicans. The measure would prohibit local government from regulating genetically m odified c r ops. Proponents said it prevents a patchwork of laws and makes it less chaotic for f a rmers. Opponents feared it w o u ld prevent local control and help spread genetically modified
crops. Speaking as the Legislature n eared adjournment of t h e special session Wednesday, McLane noted the many tense moments during the session and the months of negotiations that preceded it. "It hasn't been smooth," he said. But later, he added, he's proud of t h e L e g islature's work. "All's well that ends well," he said. — Reporter, 541-554-1162 IdaheC<bendbulletin.com
ger pay appearance fees to elite athletes. The decision by Competitor Group, which is owned by the private equity firm Calera Capital, was met with indignation and might leave some holes at the front of the pack during the fall marathon season. As private-equity groups
have aggressively gained control of s ignificant portions of this niche industry — in which race fields are ballooning w i t h r u n n ers eager to pay top dollar to participate — the sport is discovering something that the hospital and newspaper industries have learned in recent years: When Wall Street money gains sway, old methods are often dispassionately cast aside if they do not help the bottom line. "When you think about the strategic impact of an appearance, we're not getting that," said Scott Dickey, Competitor G r oup's c h ief executive. "It's the coldhearted reality of sports marketing," he added. The decision roiled those in the road running industry who believe the struggling sport needs more money, not less, for its top athletes. Ap-
pearance fees range widely from race torace — some major events pay r unners tens of thousands of dollars. Some runners earn a large portion of their income from the fees, while others receive most of their income from sponsors. "It's absolutely ridiculous," David Wallach, a race organizer in Chicago, said of Competitor Group's decision. Wallach, on his blog, called for a boycott of the company's events. "It's being greedy and sending a bad message." When Competitor Group was acquired by Calera Capital in December 2012, it was the latest sign of interest in endurance events from high financeinrecent years.Providence Equity Partners owns the popular Ironman Triathlon. Berkshire H a thaway controls the shoe and apparel company Brooks Sports, and Fireman Capital Partners reportedly pumped $20 million into the Newton Running shoe company. Road races and triathlons can be l u crative. Despite dismal statistics related to obesity i n A m e r ica, d i stance events — marathons, half-marathons, t r i athlons and Ironman competitions — have soared in popularity. The p articipants tend to wield vast disposable in-
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come, making the events appealing to outside investors. But critics complain that the infusion of money has been funneled away from top-tier athletes, many of whom say they struggle to earn a living in the sport. Appearance fees have long been used to attract elite runners who can add credibility to a race. But some race organizersseem to be concluding that their money is best spent on the swelling masses of recreationalrunners, most of whom pay little attention to the front-runners. Dickey said his company would continue to cover the costs of elite athletes' travel and lodging expenses, as well as provide prize money to top finishers. The majority of Competitor Group events, including races i n P r o vidence R.I., and M ontreal, never paid appearance fees. But the "seven figures" that was devoted to elite appearance fees will be directed to the expenses focused on the broader swath of r u nners, including things like music performances at its events, he said. (Dickey, like most race organizers,declined to say exactly how much was spent on appearance fees.) "We've made a decision to reinvest those dollars into a good race weekend for all runners," Dickey said. "Not just the front of the pack. "We just don't believe appearance fees are the right strategic thing." Dickey said the decision to remove appearance fees had been "an ongoing debate within our organization for years," he said. "But it's not an easy discussion." Several large endurance events, including the New York City M a rathon, will continue to pay appearance fees, concurrent with their missions as nonprofits developing the sport at all levels, said Mary Wittenberg, who as presidentand chiefexecutive of New York Road Runners directs the New York race. Mike Barnow, who coaches elite runners in his Westchester Track Club, said he had long opposed appearance fees and would rather see that money used for the podium prizes to spur greater competition among top runners. "Appearance fees are an a ntiquated thing from t h e 1960s," Barnow said. "But as somebody whose life is helping runners survive, yeah, I'm unhappy to hear they're taking the money from the elites." Even with the appearance fees at Competitor Group events vanishing, elite athletes will be able to find races to run, said Ray Flynn, an agent who represents elite runners. "There was a sport before Competitor G r oup came along," he said, "and there will be a sport after."
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Shutdown
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Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Juniper Elementary kindergarten students wash their hands Friday alongside a disabled stove in their classroom, which was formerly the teacher's lounge but was repurposed because of crowding. Juniper is nearly 40 students over capacity.
Schools Continued from A1 According to the proposed schedule, both schools will be ready by f all 2015. The district has yet to announce where these schools will be located. In the m eantime, Henry says the district has "decided to look at all spaces available in the schools to serve the needs of students." As a result, some rooms are being repurposed intoclassrooms, such as a teachers'lounge at Juniper, according to Lora Nordquist, assistant superintendent for primary education. The district has also added more trailers outside of schools, or what the district terms "modular classrooms." Nineteen classrooms are housed in trailers, with four being added this year, two at Bear Creek and two at Pine
Ridge. While a modular classroom can prevent students from having to attend class in a room not designed to hold one, it can't create a larger gym or cafeteria, which are designed according to the school's intended capacity.
Half ofBendelementaries overcapacitV
"We try to treat modulars as short-term solutions to reAt the beginning of the 2013-14 school year, almost half of the elementary lieve capacity issues until we schools in Bend reported having more students than their official capacity. can get permanent solutions ~ r m "But in place," Henry said. KEY schools are designed for a • More than110% of capacity . Lava Ridge certain number of students, Elementary so common areas aren't de• 10 0-110% School; i signed to h o l d t h e a d ded • 90 -99). numbers." • Less than 90% Once the new schools are Note: Bend's magnet schools do ( t i' ', Elementary built, the district will have to not have specified boundaries. ' g School f,t redraw school boundaries to balance enrollment. "It's a difficult process; it's orth an emotional process, but in '. EfPnfeng Westside Village 'bchoet the end the goal to balance enMagnet High Lakes So hool H i ghland ' rollment across the district is — Elementary Magnet bestfor every student," Henry Buckingham , School g Junipew Elementary said. Elementat School Redrawing boundaries is a chool%y difficult endeavor; predicting L', Amity Creeftma where development will occur W. E. Miller Magnet School, Elementary Bear Creek and families move is possible School Elementary but problematic. School "When we opened PonderoPine Ridge sa in 2008, we moved a lot of Elementary the families from Buckingham School because itwas over capacity at the time, but we have may ,, A.E.Jewelt have gone too far," Henry said. ', Elementary "Ponderosa is not yet over ca, Elk Mea ow Sch g La Pine Elementary pacity, but it's close, and there Elementary f Rosland Elementary is construction happening in School that boundary." g Three Rivers Elementary
«'T<"'"'
~JWg.:,:
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbuffetinicom
Continued from A1 The government is now subject to historically tight constraints that are causing a sharp decline in federal spending, with the exception of mandatory spending on the safety net. Few expect those constraints to be loosened in coming years.As a result, conservativessay they take pride in what they have achieved even if they have been unable to eliminate their biggest target, the Affordable Care Act. "I think th e conservatives in the House have had some notable successes," said Rep. Joe Barton, RTexas, a member of the tea party caucus. "You're never 100 percent successful, but we certainly saved lots and lots of money." P resident Obama ' s d eclining a m bitions f o r domestic spending underscorethe success ofthe tea party m ovement. W h en he came to office, he projected that agencies would spend $1.2 trillion in 2014. But this week, Obama was calling for a bill funding agencies at a level of $986 billion — a n 1 8 p ercent decline from hi s e a rlier projections. "The Senate-passed measure to keep the government operating represents an enormous compromise byprogressives to
avoid a damaging government shutdown," analysts at the White House-aligned Center for American Progress wrote this week. "This concession is only the latest of many such compromises over the past several years." The new spending reality is the result of several events over the past three years. First, in 2011, Republicans and the White House came to an agreement to trim discretionary spend-
AS
ing over 10 years. They also said that if they could not find more budget savings, they would trigger automatic spending cuts at defense and domesticagencies. Those cuts, known as sequestration, took effect this year, and few see a strategy to stop them. " Finally, D e mocrats a c cepted much ofthe sequester. We've made some progress," said Rep. Ti m H u elskamp, R-Kan., a leading tea party lawmaker. At the same time, public trust inthe federal government has fallen to historic lows. I n a r e cent poll b y t h e Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, just 28 percent of Americans rated the government favorably. By contrast, 63 percent of Americans see their local government in a positive light, and 57 percent of Americans view their state government favorably. "It's hard to imagine it can go lower," said Paul Light, a professor of public service at New York University. "They just think the federal government can't pound sand into a hole." The consequences of sequestration and brinksmanship are also taking a toll on the civil service. The federal workforce is shrinking, the number of new hires is plummeting and m orale among workers is declining. The constant assault on government service is "a devastating thing," said Max Stier, president of the Partnership for Public Service. "We see a freezing of new talent coming into government ... and morale is getting crushed." Barton said he is not opposed to all government, and is proud of his staff and has family members who w ork there. "I think government service is an honorable thing," he said. "But there's a limit to what the government should be doing for people."
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Health Continued from A1 The federal government will pay for the expansion through 2016 and no less than 90 percent of costs in later years. T hose excluded w il l b e stranded without i nsurance, stuck between people with slightlyhigher incomes who will qualify for federal subsidies on the new health exchanges that went live this week, and those who are poor enough to qualify for Medicaid in its current form, which has income ceilings as low as $11 a day in some states. People shopping for insurance on the health exchanges are already discovering this bitter twist. "How can somebody in poverty not be eligible for subsidies?" an unemployed health care worker in Virginia asked through tears. The woman, who identified herself only as Robin L. because she does not want potential employers to know she is down on her luck, thought she had run into a computer problem when she went online Tuesday and learned that she would not qualify. At 55, she has high blood pressure, and she had been waiting for the law to take effectso she could get coverage. Before she lost her job and her house and had to move in with her brother in V i rginia, she lived in Maryland, a state that is expanding Medicaid. "Would I go back there?" she asked. "It might involve me living in my car. I don't know. I might consider it." The 26 states that have rejected the Medicaid expansion are home to about half of the country's population, but about 68 percent of poor, uninsured blacks and single mothers. About 60 percent of the country's uninsured working poor are in those states. Among those excluded ar e a b o ut 435,000 cashiers, 341,000 cooks and 253,000 nurses' aides. "The irony is that these states that are r ejecting Medicaid expansion — many of them Southern — are the very places where the concentration of pov-
Officials move to strengthen sites Federal and state of-
ficials movedWednesday to strengthen the computer
underpinnings ofthenew online healthexchanges, which proved inadequate to
handle aflood of consumer inquiries that began as soon as the systemopenedon Tuesday and continued into the next day. On the second day ofthe
exchanges' operation, users were still encountering long waits, malfunctioning
Web pagesandmessages telling them totry again later, particularly in the 34 states
where themarketplacesare being managedbythefederal government. "While this overwhelm-
ing interest is continuing to cause wait times, there will
be continuing improvements in the cominghours and days," said JoannePeters, a department spokeswoman. On Wednesday, federal officials declined to discuss whether they had found
design flaws intheir system, but their comments ap-
peared to place most of the blame onthe sheervolume of traffic. People have until Dec.15
to sign upfor plans that take effect Jan.1, and can enroll as late as March 31 without
incurring financial penalties in the law for not having
insurance.Forthatreason, counselors saidthey were not very concernedabout problems with enrollment in the first few days. — Nevr YorkTimes News Service
erty and lack of health insurance are the most acute," said Dr. H. Jack Geiger, a founder of the community health center model. "It is their populations that have the highest burden of illness and costs to the entire health care system." The disproportionate impact on poor blacks introduces the
prickly issue of race into the already politically charged atmosphere around the health care law. Race was rarely, if ever, mentioned in the statelevel debates about the Medicaid expansion. But the issue courses just below the surface, civil rights leaders say, pointing to the pattern of exclusion. Every state in t h e D e ep South, with the exception of Arkansas, has rejected the expansion. Opponents of the expansion say that they are against it o n e x clusively economic grounds, and that the demographics of the South — with its large share of poor blacks — make it easy to say race is an issue when it is not. In Mississippi, Republican leaders note that a large share of people in the state are on Medicaid already, and that, with an expansion, about a third of the state would have been insured through the program. Even supporters of the health law say that eventually covering 10 percent of that cost would have been onerous for a predominantly rural state with a modest tax base. "Any additional cost in Medicaid is going to be too much," said state Sen. Chris McDaniel, a Republican, who opposes expansion. The federal government provided the tally of how many states were not expanding Medicaid for the first time Tuesday. It included states like New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Tennessee that might still decide to expand Medicaid before coveragetakes effect in January. If those states go forward, the number would change, but the trends that emerged in the analysis would be similar. Mississippi has the largest percentage of poor and uninsured people in the country13 percent. Willie Charles Carter, an unemployed 53-year-old whose most recent job was as a maintenance worker at a public school, has had problems with his leg since surgery last year. His income is below Mississippi's ceiling for Medicaid — which is about $3,000 a year — but he has no dependent
children, so he does not qualify. And his income is too low to make him eligible for subsidies on the federal health exchange. "You got to be almost dead before you can get Medicaid in Mississippi," he said. He does not know what he will do when the clinic where he goes formedical care,the Good Samaritan Health Center in Greenville, closes next month because of lack of funding. The states that did not expand Medicaid have less generous safety nets: For adults with children, the median income limit for Medicaid is just under half of the federal poverty level — or about $5,600 a year for an individual — while in states that are expanding, it is above the poverty line, or about $12,200, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. There is little or no coverage of childless adults in the states not expanding, Kaiser said.
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Dr. Neuhaus is excited to be a part of the Central Oregon community and is accepting new patients at both Bend locations.
BendDermatology Clinic -Bend and DermaSpa, 2705 NE Conners Ave,DermaSpa -Bend Bend Dermatology Clinic and DermaSpa, 2855 Northwest Crossing Drive Suite 104 Bend DermatOIOgy CliniC — RedmOnd, 413 NW LarCh AVe, Suite 202(locatedift theMerlinMedicalBuilding)
541-382-5712 www.bendderm.com
A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
IN FOCUS: DRUG BUYING ONLINE
UPDATE: SECURITY LEAK FALLOUT I
U.S. agents bust
now ens secureemai service in a e a u o war wi e
Internet drug site By Tom Hays
A criminal complaint said Ulbricht "has controlled and NEW YORK — A h i dden overseen all aspects of Silk w ebsite operated by a S a n Road." Francisco man using an alias He announced in a website from "The Princess Bride" be- forum last year that to avoid came a vast black market ba- confusion he needed to change zaar thatbrokered more than his Silk Road username, court $1 billion in transactions for papers said. He wrote, "drum illegal drugs and services, ac- roll please ... my new name is: cording to court papers made Dread Pirate Roberts," an appublic Wednesday. parent reference to a swashA criminal complaint in New buckling character in "The York accused Ross William Ul- Princess Bride," the 1987 combricht of being the mastermind edy film based on a novel of the and charged him with narcot- same name. ics trafficking, computer hackThe court p apers cite a ing and money laundering. A LinkedIn profile that says Ulseparate indictment in Mary- bricht graduated from the Uniland accused him in a failed versity of Texas with a physics murder-for-hire scheme. degree and attended graduate The website, Silk Road, al- school in Pennsylvania. It says lowed users to anonymously he has focused on "creating browse through nearly 13,000 economic simulation" designed listings under categories like to "give people a firsthand ex"Cannabis,""Psychedelics" and perience of what it would be "Stimulants" before making like to live in a world without purchases using the electronic the systematic use of force." currency Bitcoin. One listing Along with drugs, the webfor heroin promised buyers site offered various illegal ser"all rock, no powder, vacuum vices. Under the "Forgeries" sealed and stealth shipping," category, sellers a dvertised and had a community forum forged driver'slicenses, passbelow where one person com- ports, Social Security cards mented, "Quality is superb." and other documents. The website, whose other As of July, there were nearly categories included "Erotica" I million registered users of and "Fireworks," protected us- the site from the United States, ers with an encryption tech- Germany, Russia, Australia nique called onion routing, de- and elsewhere, the court pasigned to make it "practically pers said.The site generated impossible to physically locate an estimated $1.2 billion since the computers hosting or ac- it started in 2011 and collected cessing websites on the net- $80 million by charging 8 perwork," court papers said. cent to 15 percent commission Federal authorities shut the on each sale, it said. site down and arrested UlIn July, customs agents as bricht on Tuesday afternoon part of a routine search interin a branch of San Francisco's cepted a package from Canada public library. Ulbricht was on- that contained counterfeit idenline on his laptop chatting with tifications, all with Ulbricht's a cooperating witness about photo, the papers said. When Silk Road when FBI agents confronted by agents at a San from New York and San Fran- Francisco address where he cisco took him into custody, au- was renting a room for $1,000 thorities said. a month, he "generally refused A library system spokes- to answer questions ... however woman, Michelle Jeffers, said volunteeredthat'hypothetically' she was told by staffers that anyone could go onto a website on Tuesday afternoon they named Silk Road and purchase heard a loud commotion in any drugs or fake identity docuthe science fiction section of ments the person wanted." the library and saw a young The Maryland indictment man, who appeared to offer no alleges Ulbricht told an underresistance,pushed up against cover investigator posing as a a floor-to-ceiling window by drug dealer this year he would plainclothes FBI agents as they pay the undercover to "beat up" handcuffed him. a former employee he believed Ulbricht, 29, made an initial had stolen money from Silk appearance in a San Francisco Road. Later, it said, he wrote to court on Wednesday, authori- ask whether he could "change ties said. A bail hearing was set the order to execute rather than for Friday. There was no imme- torture"and agreed to make diate response to messages left two payments of $40,000 each with Ulbricht's attorney. to get the job done. The Associated Press
By Nicole Perlroth and Scott Shane New Vorlz Times News Service
DALLAS — One day last May, Ladar Levison returned home to find an FBI agent's business card on his Dallas doorstep. So began a four-month tangle with law enforcement officials that would end with Levison's shutting the business he had spent a decade building and becoming an unlikely hero of privacy advocates in their escalating battle with the government over Internet security. Prosecutors, it turned out, were pursuing a notable user of Lavabit, Levison's secure email service: Edward Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor who leaked classified documents that have put the intelligence agency under sharp scrutiny. Levison was willing to allow investigators with a court order to tap Snowden's email account; he had complied with similar narrowly targeted requests involving other customerssome two dozen times. But they wanted more, he said: the passwords, encryption keys and computer code that would essentially allow the government untrammeled access to the protected messages of all hi s customers. That, he said, was too much. "You don't need to bug an entire city to bug one guy's phone calls," Levison, 32, said in a recent interview. "In my case, they wanted to break open the entire box just to get to one connection." On Aug. 8, Levison closed L avabit rather than, in h i s view, betray his promise of secure email to his customers. The move,which he explained in a letter on his website, drew f ervent support f ro m c i v il libertarians but was seen by prosecutorsas an act of defiance that fell just short of a crime.
Case unsealed The full story of what happened to Levison since May has not previously been told, in partbecause he was subject to a court's gag order. But on Wednesday, a federal judge unsealed documents in the case, allowing the tech entrepreneur to speak candidly for the first time about his experiences. Hehadbeensummoned to testifyto a grand jury in Virginia; forbidden to discuss his case; held in contempt of court and fined $10,000 for handing over his private encryption keys on paper and not in digital form; and, finally, threatened with arrest for saying too much when he shuttered his
The Associated Press file photo
The FBI wanted to tap Edward Snowden's account on Lavabit,a secure email service. But they also asked for the passwords, encryptlon keys and computer code that would essentially allow the govemment access to the protectedmessages of aii Lavabit's customers. business. Spokesmen for the Justice Department and the FBI said they had nocomment beyond what was in the documents. Levison's battle to preserve his customers' privacy comes at a time when Snowden's disclosures have ignited a national debate about the proper limits of surveillance and government intrusion into American Internet companies that promise users that their digital communicationsare secure. Levison, who studied politics and computer science at Southern Methodist University, started Lavabit in April 2004, the same month Google rolled out Gmail. On occasion, he was asked to comply with government requests for specific email accounts, including that of a child
pornography suspect in Maryland this year. Levison said he had no qualms about cooperating with such demands, but the latest request was far broader, apparently to allow investigators to track Snowden's whereabouts and associates. When Levison called the FBI agent who had left the business card, the agent seemed interested in
learning how Lavabit worked and what tools would be necessary to eavesdrop on an encrypted email account. The agent did not mention at first who the government was pursuing, and Levison will not name the targets of the government's investigation. The name was redacted from the court order unsealed Wednesday, but the offenses listed are violations of the Espionage A ct, and the timing of t he government'scase coincides with its leak investigation into Snowden, which began last May when he fled Hawaii for
Snowden's encrypted email account.The order,from theU.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., required Levison to log Snowden's account information and provide the FBI with "technical assistance," which agents told him meant handing over the private encryption keys, technically called SSL certificates, that unlock communications for all users, he sald. "It was the equivalent of asking Coca-Cola to hand over its secret formula," Levison said. When it was clear Levison had nochoice butto comply, he devised a way to obey the order but make the government's intrusion more arduous. On Aug 2., he infuriated agents by printing the encryption keys
— long strings of seemingly random numbers — on paper in a font he believed would be hard to scan and turn into a usable digital format. Indeed, prosecutors described the file
as "largely illegible."
On Aug. 5, Judge Claude Hilton ordered a $5,000-a-day fine until Levison produced the keys in electronic form. Levison's lawyer, Jesse Binnall, appealed both the order to turn over the keys and the Hong Kong carrying laptops fine. containing thousands of clasAfter two days, Levison gave sified documents. in, turning over the digital keys — and simultaneously closing 'Secret formula' his email service, apologizing By then, Snowden's Lavabit to customers on his site That email address was already double maneuver, a prosecupublic. He had listed his per- tor later told his lawyer, fell just sonal Lavabit email address in short of a criminal act. January 2010, and was still usMeanwhile, he h opes to ing a Lavabit address this July, resurrect th e b u siness he when he summoned reporters spent a decade building. "This to a news conference at the wasn't about one person," LeMoscow airport. vison said. "This was about But a m onth before the the lengths our government news conference, court docu- was willing to go to conduct ments show, Levison had al- Internet surveillance on one ready received a subpoena for person."
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5
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©
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
BRIEFING
3 arrested in fraud for meth Bend Police arrested three people Tuesday as part of an investigation into the creation of fraudulent credit cards that were traded for
methamphetamine. In a news release, police stated an in-
vestigation of Stevan Lyle Hemingway,29, of Bend, beganabouta month ago. Police said Hemingway hadhacked
www.bendbulletin.com/local
Ben consi erin watertreatmento tions By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
A citizen committee is divided on how Bend should treat city drinking water from Bridge Creek watershed in the Cascades foothills. Committee members told the City Council Wednesday night that five of thembelievethe cityshouldproceedwith an earlier plan for a membrane filtration system, and five believe the city should opt for less expensive ultraviolet treatment and build new wells as backup. The membrane system would cost an estimated $31 million to $36 million,
and ultraviolet with construction of additional wells for backup would cost an estimated $28 million, according to a committee report. The City Council asked the committee to reevaluate the previous council decision to build a membrane filtration system in order to comply with a federal regulation and protect against debris from future wildfires. The federal Safe Drinking Water Act required municipalities to begin filtering surface water — such as creeks and lakes — in 1991.However, there was an exemption for relatively pure water systems, which allowed Bend to delay treatment.
A new federal rule required Bend and other cities to treat surface water for the
microorganism cryptosporidium by 2012, but the city received an extension to October 2014. City councilors voted 43 in February to re-examine which type of treatment facility the city should use. Some committee members also threw a new idea into the mix of options: ultraviolet light treatment, with additional new groundwater wells as backup. Under this alternative, the city could draw from wells if debris from a major wildfire forces it to stop taking water from Bridge Creek in the Cascades foothills.
There are many questions about this idea, and city employees have few answers. Tom Hickmann, Bend's engineering and infrastructure planning director, said the city based all of its planning for the future of the water system on the previous City Council decision to install a membrane system. City employees believe that with this filter in place, Bridge Creek will be "a very reliable supply" in the future, Hickmann said. As a result, they did not require a consultant to analyze issues related to building additional wells as backup. See Council/B2
into financial databases
to obtain information he used to create fraudulent credit cards, which
were in turn traded for methamphetamine by
various subjects who thenused the cards to make purchasesat numerous businesses in Bend. Officers executed
a search warrant at Hemingway's homeon
ee e o a 10 ec e es e uurean sae
Fairway Drive in Bend
on Tuesdayevening, where they allegedly located numerous fraudulent credit cards
and a small amount of methamphetamine.
Hemingway was arrested on10 counts each of computer crime, identity theft, criminal
conspiracy and possession of a forged instru-
ment, and onecount each of fraudulent use of a credit card, seconddegree theft, metham-
phetamine possession and frequenting a location where drugs are kept, used or sold. His roommates, Carol Lynn Darling, 40, and Andrew
Wayne Brown, 38, were arrested on charges of methamphetaminepos-
session and frequenting a location where drugs are kept, used or sold. — t3ulletin staff reports
NOV. 5 ELECTION • Last day toregister to vote:Oct.15 (21 days
before theelection) • Ballots mailed:Oct. 18 • Election Day:Nov. 5
• Where toregister: County elections offices, Oregon secretary of state's office, DMV,
www.oregonvotes.gov
ON THE BALLOT Cityof Bend
• Measure 9-94: Increase the temporary lodging rate from 9 to10 percent, then to
By Sheila G. Miller
/i
The Bulletin
Even if it's only one-third of a mile so far, the change to Southeast Reed Market Road is remarkable. Where once stood a two-lane road, curbless and without bike lanes or sidewalks, there is now a rebuilt concrete stretch with medians, turn lanes, and all the trappings of a modern roadway. But Reed Market Road is a long way from completely reborn, and the project is not without detractors. A $30 million bond approved in 2011 by Bend votersincludes the upgrade of Reed Market Road. When finished, the city will have rebuilt three miles of road between Third and 27th streets, including a new roundabout at the intersection of Reed Market Road and 15th Street. David Abbas, a city of Bend principal engineer overseeing the project, said the first section of the project, from Newberry Drive to Shadowood Drive, took a bit longer than expected, reopening at the beginning of September. But he believes the section currently closed and under construction, from Shadowood to Orion Drive, will be completed by the Nov. 15 deadline. Once that section is complete, the project will be on hold until the end of February, when crews are expected to start on the stretch between Orion and Camelot Place. Abbas noted that Reed Market Road from Camelot Place to 27th Street will not be rebuilt, in part because it already has medians and
The Bulletin
f„j
Ryan Brennecke l The Bulletin
Traffic drives down a recently completed section of Reed Market near the Bend Senior Center on Wednesday. sidewalks, but it will receive some improvements. "It will get an overlay of asphalt, and we'll get in and do that as a one- or two-day thing with flaggers," he said. According to previous reports in The Bulletin, in July 2007 officials announced a 20-year plan for revamping Reed Market Road, starting in spring 2008. That project, obviously, never got underway, but like the current upgrade would have included the three-lane option that allowed one travel lane each direction and a center turn lane atcertain cross streets. It also included a wide variety of roundabouts, and a planned overpass over the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad tracks sometime before 2026. In the past, when the train passed across Reed Market Road, traffic sometimes backed upsever-
al blocks in both directions. But those plans had to change, Abbas said. "It all comes down to funding," he said, noting the previous plans changed along with budget alterations and new traffic estimates. In 2011, voters passed the GO Bond, which is paying for $30 million worth of improvements around Bend, including the Reed Market project. The train overpass was scrapped,atleastfornow, due to expense. Some roundabouts are also no longer part of the plan. Randy Potter, for one, would like to see a roundabout added back into the project. Potter lives with his wife, Lynn Potter, at the corner of Orion Drive and Reed Market Road, and their backyard isacross from Pettigrew Road.
T stop Just two weeks ago, a car broke through a fence and careened into their backyard, a fairly common occurrence.It's notuncommon, they say, for cars to miss the stop sign at the T intersection, head across Reed Market and into their backyard or against their fence. Sometimes, the drivers stop. Other times they don't. Years ago, a driver ran into their natural gas box. Today, two poles stand in front of the box to prevent a repeat. The Potters bought their home in 1985. In 1986, Randy Potter said, city planners told neighbors they'd soon build a three-lane road with a center turn lane, sidewalks and curbs. That upgrade is underway now, 27 years later. See Reed/B5
First stagesofReedMarket Roadconstruction continue
DeschutesCounty • Measure 9-96: Increase
The first stage of the first phase of the city of Bend's reconstruction of Reed Market Road was finished in the beginning of September, with crews finishing up sectionQ, Newberry Drive to the west side of Shadowood Drive. Section0, Shadowood Drive to the west side of Orion Drive, is currently under construction and should be finished Nov. 15. SectionQ, Orion Drive to Camelot Place, is slated to begin in February.
areas by 1 percentage point, from 7 to 8 percent.
DeschutesandCrook counties • Measure 9-95: Form Al-
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Phase2 Cl
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per $1,000assessed property value.
Reed Market Rd C)
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district at a rate of $1.75
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1/4 Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
Read ourstories Coverage leadingup to the election is at beadbulletia.com/
election2013
Deputy sayssoldier did not abuse11-year-old girl By Branden Andersen
Correction A report headlined "Still time to get a flu
shot," which appeared Tuesday, Oct. 1, onPage B1, incorrectly identified Mindy Stomner of the
Crook County Health Department as asource of information. Stomner was not interviewed for that report. The Bulletin
regrets the error.
stormwater By Leslie Pugmire Hole
10.4 percent.
the transient room tax outside incorporated
Redmond implements new feesfor
The Bulletin
An Oregon National Guard soldier on trial in Bend did not dispute that his friend's 11-year-old stepdaughter was sexually abused, only that he "personally did not abuse her," a detective testified Wednesday. Deschutes County Sheriff's Deputy Brent Crosswhite took the stand on day two of the bench trial of Florentino Allen Valdez,35, ofBend. A county grand jury in March 2012 indicted Valdez on two countseach offirst-degree rape and sodomy and eight counts of first-degree
sexual assault. According to D eputy District Attorney Van McIver, Valdez sexually abused a fellow guardsman's stepdaughter multiple times while her parents wereabsent or sleeping in another room. Circuit Court Judge Stephen Forte is hearing the case. Employees from the KIDS center, a Bend organization providing counseling and services to child sex abuse victims, also testified Wednesday about interviews with the victim after the alleged incident. Molly Bean of the KIDS center testi-
fied that she interviewed the girl the day after she reported the alleged abuse to her mother and stepfather. During the interview, Bean said, the girl disclosed information about the extent of the attack. "(She) said a bunch of different acts happened over 10 days," Bean said. Valdez's defense a t torney, T erry Rahmsdorff, asked Bean if c h ildren, in general, lie during sexual assault interviews. " Occasionally, statements that a r e made are not true," Bean said. "About 2 to 8 percent of disclosures aren't real." SeeTrial/B2
When the majority of Redmond home and business owners receive their next city services bill, it will be unremarkable at first glance. Water and sewer charges? Check. Garbage service? Check. Stormwater charges? Check. Wait. Stormwater? The new fee, implemented Oct. 1, reflects the desire of the city to better balance operating costs based on user impacts to the sewer and stormwater systems. Redmond's stormwater system is funded through sewer user fees, so customers will see a $4-$6 drop in monthlysewer charges when the new stormwater fee begins. However, for more than 500 households and businesses inside city limits that aren't connected to city services, this new fee — from $7 to more than $10 — will be a new bill. "I haven't directly heard from any of those garbageonly customers but they were never part of the conversation as this idea was being developed," said Redmond City Councilor Ed Onimus, who opposed the stormwater fee. City well and septic customers inside city limits are required to pay for city
garbage services. The stormwater fee doesn't represent a lot of money for most users, he said, but might irk some as just another governmental fee caused by federalmandates. Ensuring that the city meets requirements for the Safe Drinking Water Act is the main reason the city implemented the new fee. The act requires infrastructure and monitoring to ensure pollutants have not entered the city water supply, which is obtained from groundwater wells. According to Larry Morse, environmental programs manager for Redmond's public works department, Redmond's stormwater system is bit unique. "Most cities have some surface water (rivers or creeks ) to discharge stormwater, but here we have nowhere to take our water," he said. Redmond must therefore invest in drywells and bioswales for water runoff, in addition to some drains with outlets in Dry Canyon, he said. While development codes for new nonresidential construction require infrastructure that keeps stormwater on site, the city must build and maintain stormwater drains for water that runs off public streets and paved areas. The variable part of the stormwaterfee for nonresidential buildings in based on "trip generation," using the theory that a high-traffic business/parking lot will have a larger amount of pollutants washed into the stormwater system than a business with relatively light traffic. SeeRedmond/B2
B2
THE BULLETIN•THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 20'I3
E VENT
AL E N D A R
a special program featuring the chamber sonatas of Sergei Prokofiev; $35, $10 students and PUMPKIN PATCH ANDMARKET: children18 and younger; 7:30 p.m., Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; doors open at 6:30 p.m., pre- concert free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central talk at 6:45; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504www.highdesertchambermusic.com. 1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. SOPHISTAFUNK:The NewYorkWILD & SCENICFILM FESTIVAL: based funk act performs; free; 7:30 A screening of environmental and p.m.; Riverfront Plaza, 875 N.W. adventure films; proceeds benefit the Brooks St., Bend; 541-389-3216 or Oregon Natural Desert Association; www.p44p.biz. $6 in advance, $9 at door; 4 p.m., WILD 8[ SCENICFILM FESTIVAL: doorsopen at3:30 p.m.;TheOld A screening of environmental and Stone, 157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend; adventure films; proceeds benefit the 541-330-2638, corie©onda.org or Oregon Natural Desert Association; www.onda.org/wild&scenic. $7 in advance, $10atdoor; 7:30 p.m., MEET YOURFARMER DINNER: doorsopen at7 p.m .;The Old Stone, Students prepare the foods of local 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541farmers in Elevation, the fine dining 330-2638, corie@onda.org or www. area; $35, reservation requested; onda.org/wild8 scenic. 6-9 p.m.; CascadeCulinary THE GIFTOFGAB:Theindie rapper Institute, 2555 N.W.CampusVillage from Blackalicious performs, with Way, Bend; 541-420-8603 or Landon Wordswell, Tim Hokeand centraloregonlocavore.com. more; $10 plus fees in advance; $10 "UNSTOPPABLE":A screening of at the door; 9 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, the Kirk Cameron film investigating 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; www. the moral origins of good and j.mp/giftofgabinfo. evil; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. FRIDAY LUCREZIO:The Chicago-based "FIREARMS:STORIESOF acoustic soul duo performs; free, SURVIVAL ANDDEFENSE" artist donations accepted; 7-9 p.m.; EXHIBITOPENS:Featuring historic Broken Top Bottle Shop & AleCafe, photographs, artifacts, artwork and 1740 N.W. PenceLane, Suite1, Bend; more than fifty firearms; included in 541-728-0703 or www.btbsbend. the price of admission; $15 adults, com. $12ages 65and older, $9ages 5-12, REEL ROCK TOUR8:A screening free ages 4 andyounger; 9 a.m.; of four climbing and adventure HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. films, raffles and give-aways; $10 in Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754. advance, $15 at door; 7 p.m., doors PATCHWORK ANTIQUES& FALL open at 6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, FAIRE:Featuring antiques, fall 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541wreaths, homespun crafts, baked 923-6207 or www.reelrocktour.com. goods and more; free admission; 9 "THE DIXIE SWIMCLUB":A a.m.-6 p.m.; Private residence, 797 comedy about five Southern women C. Ave., Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. who met on their college swim team CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN and get together once ayear; $19, PATCH:Aneight-acre corn maze $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; with pumpkin patch and market Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389train, pony rides and more; $7.50, 0803 or www.cascadestheatrical. $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5and org. younger for corn maze; $2.50 for HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC most other activities; noon-7 p.m., SERIES:The Los Angeles-based pumpkin patch open until 6 p.m.; group Thies Consort performs Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250
TODAY
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at v[[v[[v[[.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
fateful romance; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH:Aneight-acre corn maze with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5and younger for Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other activities; 10 a.m.-7 p.m., pumpkin patch open until 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. Andy Tullis/The Bulletin file photo FALL BOOK SALE:The Friends of the Students in a Culinary Arts 2 class listen and watch their instrucBend Public Libraries hosts a book tor, Chef Jon Calvin, center. Today, students prepare a fine dining sale; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; experience for patrons at the Cascade Culinary Institute. It's SATURDAY Deschutes Library Administration requested that those attending make reservations. Building, 507 N.W.Wall St., Bend; VFW BREAKFASTA community 541-617-7047. breakfast; $8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFW RUNNING ON FAITH: Featuring a N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541CANYONRANGERS:Anevening Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 5K race, free kids mini run, bouncy 504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. of comedy and bluegrass with the 541-389-0775. house, games,facepainting and famous comic actor, the North BEND FALL FESTIVAL: Featuring HARVESTFESTIVALANDFLEA more; proceeds benefit St. Francis Carolina band and special guest Edie MARKET:Featuring local artists, fall-themed activities, homebrew school; $20, $35 couples, $15 per competition, live music, art and food; Brickell; $44-$85 plus fees; 6 p.m., craft and jewelry vendors, antiques person for families of 4 or more, in free admission; 5-11 p.m.; downtown doors open at 5 p.m.; Les Schwab and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 advance; add $5 day of race;10 a.m.; Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Bend; www.c3events.com. p.m.; Long Hollow Ranch, 71105 Troy Field, Bond Street and Louisiana Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-322-9383 or Holmes Road, Sisters; 541-504-2881 Avenue,Bend;541-382-4701 or FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: www.bendconcerts.com. or www.lhranch.com. Event includes art exhibit openings, www.saintfrancisschool.net. artist talks, live music, wine and food "THE PEOPLINGOF THE HOLIDAYBOUTIQUE: Featuring BEND FALL FESTIVAL: Featuring AMERICAS" SERIES:Oregon State in downtown Bend and the Old Mill handmade crafts, baked goods, silent fall-themed activities, homebrew Parks resource specialist Paul District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout auction and more; proceeds benefit competition, live music, art and food; Patton discusses the "Solutrean Bend. Family Kitchen, Bethlehem Inn and free admission; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; hypothesis"; free, $5 day-use pass other local programs; free admission; downtown Bend; www.c3events. FIRSTFRIDAY SNOW DANCE permit; 7-8:30 p.m.; Smith Rock 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; First United Methodist com. AND JUBELALE CELEBRATION: State Park Visitor Center, 10260 N.E. Church, 680 N.W.BondSt., Bend; A celebration of the coming of CLASSICCARSHOW: Featuring Crooked River Drive, Terrebonne; 541-382-1672. winter with live music, ski swag, prizes for the top three best cars of 541-923-7551 ext. 21 or www. ski and snowboard footage, art PATCHWORK ANTIQUES& FALL the show; registration fees benefit oregonstateparks.org. from Cathleen Powers, the return of FAIRE:Featuring antiques, fall local charities; adjacent to pumpkin "42":A screening of the 2013 seasonal beer Jubelale and signed wreaths, homespun crafts, baked patch; free admission; 11 a.m.-4 posters from the label artist, Avlis film about the life story of Jackie goods and more; free admission; 9 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., Leumas;free;5-10 p.m.;Deschutes a.m.-4 p.m.; Private residence, 797 Robinson (PG13); free; 7:30 p.m.; 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; Brewery & Public House,1044 N.W. Rodriguez AnnexJefferson County C. Ave., Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-9242 or Library, RodriguezAnnex,134 S.E. E PRINEVILLEFARMERS com. www.deschutesbrewery.com. St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. MARKET:Free; 9a.m.-12:30 HARVESTFESTIVAL: Featuring jcld.org. MAKERECHAPMAN:The New p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 candle making, apple cider press Zealand elder shares the world of "THE DIXIE SWIMCLUB":A N.E. Third St.; 541-447-6217 or and a working still at the Miller the Waitaha (Nation of Peace) and comedy about five Southern women prinevillefarmersmarket©gmail. Family Ranch; included in the price its ancient culture; $20 suggested who met on their college swim team com. of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages donation; 6-8:30 p.m.;The Old and get together once ayear; $19, "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free Stone, 157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend; $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; EUGENEONEGIN": Starring Anna ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; 541-325-3000 or lisa©bendreiki. Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Netrebko and Mariusz Kwiecien HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. com. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389as the lovestruck Tatiana and the Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or STEVE MARTIN &THE STEEP 0803 or www.cascadestheatrical. imperious Onegin in Tchaikovsky's www.highdesertmuseum.org. OIg.
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SASSPARILLA:The Portland based indie roots band performs, with Strangled Darlings; $10; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents. com. FINN-DOXIE:The Portland modernalternative band performs; free; 9-11 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 541-3892558 or www.bluepinebar.com. TWANGSHIFTERS: The Portland Americana band performs, with Long Tall Eddy; $8 in advance, $10 at door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; VolcanicTheatrePub,70 S.W . Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.
Mountain Medical
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such arequest is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT DUII —Hannah Joyce Selb, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:05 a.m. Sept. 29, in the area of Northeast Greenwood Avenue and Northeast First Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:14 a.m. Sept. 30, in the100 block of Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:54 a.m. Oct. 1, in the100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. DUH —Nicholas Aloysius Welch, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:29 p.m. Sept. 30, in the 2000 block of Northeast Third Street.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT
Red~Qgd Contlnued from B1 Bob Eberhard of Eberhard's Dairy in central Redmond said the new fee system is still not totally clear but he's not particularly worried about the fee changes because as a wholesale business the amount of its vehicular traffic is light. "Guess we'll see when the
Council
want to meet againin a work session to discuss treatment Continued from B1 options before Oct. 23. "It was not a condition we Members of t h e W a t e r saw as a reality at that time," Treatment Ad visory Co m Hickmann said of the need mittee met Tuesday night to for additional wells. "Keep decide on their recommenin mind, we thought by now dation to the City Council. we were going to be com- Several members said they pliant (with federal regula- did not have enough time tions) and operationaL" to find answers to key quesBend officials pr omised tions. Cindy Tisher said she to inform the Oregon Health just found out Tuesday that Authority of their decision it would be a lengthy proon how to treat the water by cess for the city to change the end ofOctober, so the its planning documents to City Council should decide prepare for new gr oundat its Oct. 23 meeting, said water wells, which several City Manager Eric King. committee members agreed City councilors said they would be necessary if the
Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:30 a.m. Oct. 1, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at10 p.m. Oct. 1, in the areaof Northwest Beaver Street.
Trial Continued from B1 She said false disclosures typically come from older teenagers and children who have a motive —getting out of trouble or gaining something from the situation. "In order for the child to lie, there has to be some sort of knowledgeabout what they are lying about," she said. Celeste Hasbrouck, a KIDS center interviewer, said the girl returned to the center in September 2012 to disclose information about a different sexual assault a couple of years ago. The victim said hercousins, one of similar age andone younger, had sexually assaulted her and her sister. — Reporter:541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletir[.com
Director Bill Duerden said notices of coming rate changes were mailed to city customers during the lastyear. Additional attempts to notify users not paying for city services were made aswell through mailings and media. Onimus isn't so sure the word has gotten out. His wife, who h andles he r f a t her's household bills, was unaware
city cho o s es ult r a v iolet treatment. "These people have been working on th i s f o r d ecades," Tisher said. "I think we're locked." Eric Bercot said Wednesday night that he supports ultraviolet l i ght t r e atment and bu i l d i ng add i t i onal wells for b a ckup, in p a r t because a membrane filtration system might also run into problems — al though not as long-lasting as without filtration — after a major wildfire. "At the end of the day I wasn't convinced a membrane system was the be-all,
For The Bulletin's full list, visit wwv[[.bendbulletin.com/o fficials.
CONGRESS U.S. Senate • Sen.JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone[ 541-330-9142
U.S. House ofRepresentatives • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. Bond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. JohnKitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax[503-378-6872
Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary ofState KateBrown, 0 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1616 Fax:503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sosOstate.or.us • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General EllenRosenblum,
of the new fee until Onimus told her about it. "It doesn't always register for some people until they open the bill, even though the information has been out there," Onimus said. "Hopefully, people will realize we're responding to regulations from
Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us W eb: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp
Immediate Care 541-3SS-7799 1302 NE 3rd St. Bend www.mtmedgr.com
BEAD SALE
higher-ups." — Reporter: 541-548-2186, IpugmireC<bendbulletir[.com
end-all," Bercot said. In other business Wednesday night, the City Council u nanimously voted t o a p -
prove a preliminary engineering contract for ne arly $190,000, for a co n s ultant to design a plan to improve GalvestonAvenue. The street currently l acks co n tinuous sidewalks, and so me b usiness owners want to l a ndscape the corridor and take other steps to make the area more attractive. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@ben[dbulletin.com
E LEVATIO N
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 11:57 a.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 60461 Zuni Road. 19 —Medical aid calls.
bills come this month," he said. J.B. Demaris,director of supportservices for the Redmond School District, said the fee changes are expected to come out about even for the district. "I expect the charges for some of our school buildings to go up a bit and some will go down," he said. R edmond Public W o r k s
Elevation Capital Strategies 775sw Bonnetw aysuite lzo Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapitabbiz
Vickie Hrehocik, owner of L i t tl e I n d ulgences Beads in Portland, will bring 1000s of strands of semi-precious beads, pearls, and mother-ofpearl, to Bend for a sale this weekend. She is a direct importer of beads from various factories in the orient and b r ings low prices and g r eat quality directly to you. The public is welcome a nd there are n o r e quirements to buying at wholesale prices. This is a great sale for jewelry designers and hobbyists alike. T he sale d a te s a r e Friday, October 4th and Saturday, October 5th from 10 am to 5 pm. The sale location is the Shilo Inn Hotel, 3105 OB Riley Road, Bend. C ontact: 503-309-4088.
D
1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doi.state.or.us • Laber CommissionerBradAvakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
'I
LEGISLATURE Senate • Sen. TedFerrioli, R-District 30 (includesJefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp,F-District 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
Report: Sex offenders lackoversight
AROUND THE STATE PentIletutl hOuSe fit'e —Authorities say three victims of a Pendleton house fire last month were children of one of the survivors.
Police Chief Stuart Robert said autopsies showedthe children and The Associated Press convicted of failing to regisP ORTLAND — Or e g o n ter in March 2012 in Clatsop has, per capita, more regis- County and wa s sentenced tered sex offendersthan all to life for aggravated murder but one other state. It also has and assault eight months ago one of the worst records in the in Multnomah County. country for following federal Among Th e O r egonian's standards intended to keep findings: sex offenders from moving to • Oregon is two years beavoid supervision, and it has hind entering names into its become a haven for offenders electronic database of regisdodging stricter rules else- tered sex offenders. It's so out where, a newspaper investi- of date that local police don't gation has concluded. rely on it. "We don't like where we're Often,officers came across at," said Capt. Calvin Curths, sex offenders violating the terms of their sentences only commander of the State Pobecausethe offenders commit lice criminal investigation dianother crime, they're pulled vision. "We're trying to fix it." over for atraffic stop or someThe registration unit h as one reports them, The Orego- 12 people, but r e t irements nian reported Wednesday. and job changes last summer "Most ofthese cases,to be turned over t hree quarters blunt, are dumb luck," said of the staff. Only one perJosh Marquis, the C l atsop son is now qualified to log in County's d i strict a t t o rney more than 1,200 offenders who handled one of the state's registering for the first time most notable cases, that of sex since 2011. Also in the queue: offender Mark Beebout. More than 13,000 updated Beebout moved from Cali- change-of-address or annual fornia to Oregon, never telling registrations. police where he was living as • Oregon is a mong four required.Once in Oregon, he states that have done the least beat up one woman and killed to comply with r egistration two others. and community notification He still isn't in t h e state guidelines under the Adam registry, even though he was Walsh Child Protection and
photos, names, addresses and places of employment, except "We don't like where those convicted of misdewe're at. We're trying for meanor sex offenses that into fix it." volve an adult victim. • Oregon is out of step with — Capt. Calvin Curths, State federal c lassification r u l es Police criminal investigation that call for offenders to be division put in one of three categories based on convictions. The L e gislature p a ssed Safety Act passed seven years a law this year setting up a ago to tighten a patchwork of three-tiered registration sysstate laws. tem based on risk and makOnly 19 states have sub- ing it easier for some offendstantially met the standards. ers to petition for relief from A study by the U.S. Govern- registration. ment Accountability O f f ice Defenders of the bill say the showed Oregon has complet- list of offenders is growing ed eight of the 14 guidelines. too large to follow and focusStates that don't comply ei- ing on those posing the greatther lose 10 percent of an an- est risk will be more effective. nual federal c r ime-fighting R isk a s sessments h a v e grant or, as in Oregon's case, been done for about 16,000 of must use the 10 percent in Oregon's offenders. The state compliance efforts. parole board could finish the • The names, photos and rest in another four years if criminal histories of only 649 it gets two additional staffof Oregon's 25,354 sex offend- ers, said Jay Scroggin, who ers appear on the state's pub- recently served as the board's lic website. executive director. Oregon law limits the list to • Oregon has 496 regissex offenders designated as tered sex offendersfor each predatory and includes other 100,000 people. The highest q ualifications. Federal l a w proportion in the nation is in calls for states to publicize Delaware, 537 offenders per all registered sex offender's 100,000 people.
two adults died of smoke inhalation on Sept. 22 in a fast-moving fire. The paper reported the children were 5-year-old Evan Williams, 2-
year-old RowanHarveyand 5-month-old Annabelle Williams. Their mother, 27-year-old Kay Williams, was hospitalized along with 49year-old David Eickstaedt, both tenants at the rental house. Roberts
said they jumped out awindow. They were released from the hospital last week. Roberts said the adults who died were guests: 29-yearold Kristopher Lee Morton and 46-year-old Treasa Marie Philpott.
Authorities haven't pinpointed a causebut ruled our arson involving accelerants or a drug labaccident. Dt'ugS fut' tOOIS —A Southern Oregon manwho traded drugs for stolen power tools has been sentenced to more than a year in prison. The Mail Tribune reported that 35-year-old Tommy James Loftis
pleaded guilty Tuesday in JacksonCounty Circuit Court to six counts of theft. Judge Benjamin Bloom sentenced Loftis to a year and three months in prison. Authorities say police looking for drugs raided a
house in Gold Hill where Loftis was living and found stolen welders, drills, air compressors, chain saws, weed trimmers and other tools, most of which were returned to their owners. Prosecutors agreed
to dismiss charges of burglary, criminal mischief and methamphetamine possession in return for the guilty pleas.
SWBIIOW dl8-OffS —Oregon scientists say thousands of swallows died during recent Willamette Valley rains, likely of starvation because the birds feed on insects while flying, and they couldn't get
out in the weather to feed.Veterinarians said four days of steady rain and wind helped make September the wettest on record in the valley.
They came at a time when birds would have beenfeeding in preparation for winter migration to Central andSouth America. The Department of Fish and Wildlife says it got calls about dead and dying birds from residents ranging from the Port of Saint Helens on the Columbia
River to Junction City north of Eugene.Groups of10 to 200 barn and violet-green swallows were reported dead or dying in barns and other
structures where they perch. KilliNg S88 IiutlS —An appeals court has upheld killing sea lions that eat too many salmon at Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had told NOAA Fisheries Service it needed to do a better job of explaining why it was authorizing the killing of dozens of sea lions, which are protected
SOME THINK THEGOVERNOR'S PLAN IS A BIT FISHY
by the Marine Mammal Protection Act. And last week, the court affirmed that the latest explanation filled the bill. The court said the service examined the relevant data, and explained the rationale be-
hind killing up to 92 sea lions a year to reduce the loss of threatened and endangered salmon. The Humane Society of the United States had challenged the killing, arguing that fishing and the dams kill far
more salmon than sea lions. Bctl'I'Sd OWI Sh00'tlllg — An animal rights group has sued to
stop the federal government from killing thousands of barred owls in the Northwest to see if that will help the threatened northern spotted owl turn around its population declines. The lawsuit was
filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Sacramento, Calif., by Friends of Animals. It claims the plan by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to kill 3,600 barred owls violates the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.
The group's attorney, Michael Harris, says the act requires that any killing of birds for research must benefit the bird that is killed, and in this case the experiment benefits another bird, the spotted
owl. The agency did not respond to a call for comment due to the government shutdown.
B88CIl CI88tlupS —High winds forced the SOLVEenvironmental group to cancel last weekend's cleanup onthe Oregon coast, although volunteers did work on 50 inland projects. Maureen Fisher,
the group's executive director, said 47 beachcleanup projects will be rescheduled, but probably not on a single day. About1,300 volunteers on 50 inland projects last Saturday collected more than 12
tons of waste andmaterials from neighborhoods andnatural areas, cleared invasive vegetation from about two acres, and planted 420
trees at parks, schools and natural areas. — From wire reports
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ferredfrom the Cover Oregon Associated Press website and making appointOr- ments to help people sign up GRANTS PASS, egonians shopping for health in November, when the webinsurance under the nation's site is expected to be fully n ew health c ar e l a w s t i l l functional. People could sign c ould not s i g n u p o n l i n e up with a paper form and send Wednesday, but private insur- it in, but it would take up to 45 ance agents were taking calls, days to be approved, so Fratelling people about plans and lich said his agency decided to premiums, and even signing wait until the website makes up some people for coverage. sign-ups instantaneous. "We had a few individuals Cover Oregon spokeswoman Amy Fauver said problems trek in, f r antic, afraid that with a computer program that Oct. 1 was the first and last determines a person's eligibil- day you could apply for it," ity for Medicaid and tax cred- said Bisi Carter, Cover Oreits that reduce premiums still gon coordinator at the Urban has too high an error rate, but League of Portland. it's expected to be working Aflac agent Darrin Anselm correctly by the end of Octo- in Grants Pass said he had ber. The deadline to enroll is received calls from 11 people Dec. 15 to qualify for cover- who wanted to talk about covage starting Jan. 1. erage since the website went "That's been our plan all up Tuesday. Most were people along," she said. "With any in their 60s without health inIT rollout you know there are surance who want coverage going to be glitches that didn't for a year or two until they get identified in our testing." qualify for Medicare, or parAs of 11 a.m. Wednesday, ents between 21 and 35 lookabout 146,000 people had vis- ing for coverage for themited the website http://www. selves and their children. coveroregon.com, and 3,500 Anselm said he and other had called the hotline, Fauver agents were able to use the sa>d. website to go over plans with Hart Insurance co-owner clients and c a lculate their Erinn Fralich in Grants Pass premiums. said it was getting calls reT he n o n p rofit in s u r er
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River management overhauls, seine nets that encircle rather than snag
with alternative gear to avoid being shunted to side channels for using gillnets, which have been criticized as damaging to salmon restoration. fishing to areas off the main channel of the Columbia. They're being
725 NE Greenwood, Bend
TheBulletin
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Some commercial fishermen onthe Columbia River areexperimenting
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ers have to make a month's payment when they sign up, so he expects more to do that closer to the first of the year, when coverage starts. He noted that the monthly premium for plans offered on Oregon's exchange r a ng e b e t w een $180 and $400, and he expects insurance shoppers to check out between three and five carriers before making a decision.
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t least two high schools in Central Oregon, Marshall High School in Bend and Madras High School, have shown in the last couple of years how an influx of extra money and hard work on the part of staff can make a difference in how students perform The money for each,$3 million for Madras and $2 million for Marshall, came from the U.S. Department of Education's School Improvement Grant program. The program sends extra money to states for low performing schools that also have high poverty rates, among other things. Now the money has been spent, and it will be up to the schools to demonstrate that they can continue providing students with the tools they need to succeed. There are some similarities in the way the two schools approached the problem of low test scores and low graduation rates. In each, struggling students were given extra instruction in areas in which they struggled. In fact, officials in both schools told Bulletin reporter Tyler Leeds that struggling students were offered a double dose of instruction in some areas. The extra teaching paid off with higher scores in both schools.
Both schools did something else, as well. Faculty in each worked to create proficiency-based programs that rewarded students for understanding the material they were being taught. And, in both, teachers themselves got extra instruction in professional development. At Marshall, part of the effort went toward preparing to use Common Core curriculum in math before it is adopted statewide. Madras High School used some of its $3 million — stretched over three years — to hire additional faculty. Without the extra money, at least some of those teachers have or will disappear, and remaining faculty will have to pick up the slack. At Marshall, a high student turnover rate makes continuity in education a continuing challenge. The trick for both now will be to make the improvements last now that the extra money is gone.
Millican Roadeases traffic, needsrepairs Y ou may not know it, but you're a l most c e r tainly grateful for Millican Road. Because Millican Road is there, traffic on U.S. Highway 97 is not the mess it could be. The road is a 19-mile link between U.S. Highway 20 and state Highway 126 west of Prineville. According to the Central Oregonian newspaper, it began life in the 1980s, when, piecemeal, Crook County began paving the road in 2-mile stretches to provide access to the Prineville Reservoir. The job was nothing fancy, and it does not meet the requirements of the loads the road is being asked to handle now. Then in 2002, the road got a big boost when President George W. Bush signed federal legislation that allowed Crook County to realign the road, abandoning part of the Old Millican Road and assuming responsibility for part of West Butte Road in its place. Meanwhile, in 2004 Crook and Deschutes counties combined efforts to extend the road 14 miles to Highway 20.
There were good reasons for doing so. Les Schwab Tire Centers was looking for a more direct route, lightly populated, for its trucks from Prineville, and both counties hoped that the new road would ease traffic on U.S. Highway 97. The road has lived up to its promise. Today, as many as 100 socalled super loads are hauled on the road each year. They can be as big as 23 feet wide, 17 feet tall and 223 feet long. Loaded, they weigh upward of 500,000 pounds. Because of Millican Road, the trucks have another way to avoid passing through Bend or Redmond on U.S. Highway 97. The loads can be literally, traffic stoppers. But the older section of the road is now in such bad condition that the road might essentially have to be closed to big trucks. And that's why the Oregon Department of Transportation, the counties and anyone else with influence over the matter, must examine if they can afford to have the old portion of Millican Road decline.
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M IVickel's Worth We need a newCongress Protectyour privacy "Save your Confederate money, boys, the South shall rise again!" — this used to be a joke. But now it appears that the old Confederacy, aided and abetted by Quantrill-like take-no-prisoners Tea Party guerrillas, has decided to give it another shot. In response, the Democrats have occupied their ideological Fort Sumter, seemingly prepared to go down in flames and take the population with them. As I remember, the last time this happened it didn't end well for those south of the MasonDixon Line; this time the Republicans will likely rue these vitriol-filled days. But nobody involved in this legislative quagmire deserves to get off the hook. We elected them, and this particular fault is not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we accept the role of underlings; we expected them to work together to solve the country's problems and lead effectively. But these politicians (an eighth word that should no longer be said in public?) — D's and R's alike — are instead putting their own re-election, their political parties and their re-election funding lobbyists' interests in front, leaving the citizens' hopes and needs to the end; it's not difficult to conclude from this that they're venal and/or incompetent. We should fire them all and start over with a new bunch. Granted, there would be problems if we had nobody with national experience in D.C., but could it be very much worse than what's been going on the past few years, and especially the last several weeks? I genuinely doubt it. William Walker Redmond
I have just received another annoying phone call for the umpteenth time, from a f oreign-accented individual stating his name as Jack Daniels (Whiskey Brand?) from the federal health department. The purpose of this call was to inquire if I was or was not diabetic. With all the scams that are perpetrated against senior citizens, my antenna went up. I informed this individual that I do not give out personal information about my health to anyone over the phone, especially to an individual who sounds like he is calling from India or any other foreign country. I also told him if the federal health department wanted that information, they could send me a letter with an appropriate telephone number that I could call if I so desired. I also demanded my name and number be removed from his scam calling list. When he realized I was onto him,
aware that your rights as a U.S. citizen are being eroded by the political left to retain their advantage in future elections. Granting more of our exclusive rights as citizens to illegals and "noncitizens" is a maneuver to secure enough future votes from people receiving benefits (i.e. welfare, food stamps, housing, driver licenses, in-state college tuition and the right to sit on juries and election boards). If this trend is ignored, citizen-
ship may no longerbe required
to vote when so many will be socalled nnoncitizens." If achieved, the folks receiving such special benefits and treatment will, along with th e s o cialist l eaning l e ft , have enough votes to control any election. The number of p eople r eceiving some s or t o f p u b l i c monies for no work is atrecord l evels and approaching half o f America's available workforce. Are they going to vote those out that grant them this windfall'? Of he hung up very quickly. course not. Let this letter be a fair warning Some say, "This can't happen to all not to give away information here." We are approaching a point about themselves to anyone calling at which m a n y o t h e r n a t i ons and asking for said information. i n history c o llapsed under t h e Protect your privacy — stop giving weight of their own foolishness. up your privacy even though our so- S ocialism and c ommunism ar e ciety as a general rule today is freely not viable forms of fair governdoing so. If you don't watch your ment and fail due to corruption back, no one else will. a nd an inability t o support t h e Beverly Scallse masses. Don't become complaBend cent. Act now. Contact your representatives and tell them to proRights eroded by the left tect the rights of those who are U.S. citizens or face removal for Re; "California noncitizens win someone who will. even more rights" by Jennifer MeGregory Pluchos dina, New York Times News. Be Redmond
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The perilous task of unionizing a U.S. Volkswagen plant By James Sherk Btoomberg News
olkswagen Group of America's plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., has experienced something unusual:a union welcomed by management but faced with resistance from some workers. A combination of outdated labor laws and union intransigence has created this oddity. German law requires "works councils" in which management and labor groups meet to collaboratively sort out workplace issues. Consequently, there is a works council at every Volkswagen plant — except the one in Chattanooga. Now, under pressure from IG Metall, the German union, Volkswagen AG's headquarters has decided it wants a works council in the U.S., too. But there's a hitch. U.S. Iabor laws prohibit companies from discussing working conditions with employee representatives — unless they belong to outside unions. In the 1930s, Congress feared businesses would create bogus "company unions" to
keep union organizers at bay, so it banned "management-dominated" labor organizations. This outlaws even innocuous employee-involvement programs. For
management has welcomed this overture with open arms. A group of Volkswagen workers in Tennesseehas been less enthusiastic. They are aware that almost every job example,Webcor Packaging Corp., lost in the auto industry over the past based in Flint, Mich., created a council three decades has been a union job. of elected employees and appointed With rare exceptions, nonunion auto managers to suggest improvements to plants have avoided mass layoffs, itswork rules,w ages and benefits.The while unionized facilities have downcompany wanted their employees' in- sized again and again. Hopping on put, yet the government ordered the that bandwagon holds little appeal. council disbanded.. The UAW says it has majority supThis restriction makes little sense port for union representation based on today. Few businesses feel the need publicly signed cards. But some workto ward off organizing drives with ers at the Chattanooga plant claim the company unions. Even without them, UAW misled them about what signing private-sector union membership has thecards meant, an d several have filed fallen to below 7 percent. charges with the National Labor RelaM ost companies won't risk t h e tions Board. downsides of unionizing to get an For the UAW, whose membership employee-involvement program. The has plummeted,the stakes are enorpressure from IG Metall has made mous. In announcing a push to orgaVolkswagen the exception. The United nize Southern automakers a few years Auto Workers wants to unionize the ago, UAW President Bob King said: "If Chattanooga plant and create a legal we don't organize these transnationworks counciL Volkswagen's senior als, I don't think there's a long-term
future for the UAW.H While u n i onizing V o l kswagen would obviously benefit the UAW, it is less clear how it would benefit the workers. They already make slightly more than UAW pay scales in Detroit. If the union used its power as a cartel to raise wages too much, it would make Volkswagen's cars less competitive and put their jobs at risk. The UAW also makes removing poor performers almost impossible. It even got Chrysler workers who were suspended for smoking pot on the job reinstated. UAW work rules further hamper productivity. Before GM's restructuring, each plant had as many as 15 categories of workers, all strictly prohibited from doing one another's jobs. If one worker's absence stopped the assembly line, a worker of another type could not step up to the plate. T he union swears that i t h a s changed, and that its works council will improve productivity. But workers would have to take the UAW's word
for it. The law won't stop the union from negotiating a broader collectivebargaining agreement. Many Volkswagen workers — correctly — look warily at the experience of Volkswagen's only other U.S. plant, in New Stanton, Pennsylvania. The UAW organized the plant in 1978. Almost immediately, the workers went on strike. The plant lurched from strike to strike and shut down 10 years later. Volkswagen's employees in Tennessee have a good thing going. Some want more say in t h e w orkplace, but others fear winding up like New Stanton. They should not have to make that choice. Congress should reform U.S. labor laws to allow employee participation — without requiring that an outside union get involved. Why should the government prevent companies from giving their workers a voice on the job'? — James Sherh is the senior policy analyst in labor economics at the Heritage Foundation.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
BITUARIES DEATH NoTIcEs Ruth Mabel 'Florence' Coats Richard Bruce Laurion, of Bend Feb. 17, 1935 - Sept. 23, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592; www.deschutesmemohalchapehcom
Services: No Services are being scheduled at this time.
Frances Jean Kerkoch July 18, 1928 - Sept. 29, 2013 F rances J e a n K e r k o c h passed away from n atural causes September 29, 2013 at the age of 85. She was born July 28, 1928 in Elmh urst, Il l i n ois to Frank and Nora Rathje. After graduati ng f r o m Elmhurst High School, Frances she w as Kerkoch u nited i n marriage with Frank Robert Kerkoch September 3, 1 949 i n El m h u r st . T h e c ouple and t h ree o f t h e i r c hildren l a t e r m o v e d t o Bend, Oregon in th e summer of 1960. Frances spent her life as a devoted wife and a l o v i ng stay-at-home mom t o her four children. She was a g o u r m e t co o k w h o hosted extravagant dinner arties f o r f am i l y an d r iends. Sh e a n d Fr a n k enjoyed h o li d a y s an d t ravel w i t h f a m i l y . T h e y also liked having romantic g etaways o n t h e i r o wn . During t h e i r r et i r e m ent years they traveled extensively t hr o u g h ou t t h e world. "Jean" was a g o od sport a b ou t p a r t i cipating in anything her a dventurous h u s ban d s u g g ested. One of her favorite things w as e n j oyin g a m ar t i n i l unch w it h o n e o r mo r e members of her family. I n addition t o h e r p a r e nts, F r a n ces w a s pr e ceded in death by her husband of s i x ty-three years, Dr. Frank Kerkoch. Frances is survived by he r d a ughters, Cheryl Krkoc'-Parker, S andy O'Boyle an d N o r a H amilton, a n d h e r son , Doug Kerkoch. She is also s urvived b y h e r b r o t h e r , Norbert Rathje of Addison, I llinois; s i x n ie c e s a n d nephews; seven grandchild ren; a n d ni n e gr e a t grandchildren. Funeral ser v i c e s for F rances Jean will b e h e l d 10:00 a.m. Monday, October 7, at the Saint Francis of Assisi Historical Catholic Church in Bend. In lieu o f f l o w e rs , a mem o r i a l fund as been established in h er name a t P a r t n ers I n C are, 2075 NE W y att C t . , Bend, Oregon 97701. The entire Kerkoch family would like to t h ank al l the staff o f C l ar e B r i d ge, Partners in Care and Debbie Bunting for t h eir h e lp a nd su pport d u r i n g t h i s difficult time.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
James Berado
t )eq d
April 27, 1957 - Sept. 26, 2013
J im Berado g r aced t h i s earth w i t h a n en e r g etic Florence, age 105, passed spirit, l o v i n g de m e a n or p eacefully f r o m li f e on and unique passion for life. September 2 9 , 20 1 3 at B orn i n C h i c ago, I L , o n h ome i n B e a v erton, s u r - April 27, 1957, Jim spent r ounded b y fa m i l y . S h e his ch i l d h oo d i n hi s w as b o r n birth-city, in Yankfollowed ton, SD to by h omes Peter an d m Elgm, Alma ) La Hanson, Grande, the oldest Corvallis of th ei r and Bend, f ive c h i l Oregon. dren. FloHe en rence Florence Coats married Jim Berado Eternal Everett Coats October 15, L ife, loved b y h i s f a m i l y 1932 in Grafton, ND. They and friends,September 26, lived in North Dakota and 2013. h ad f ou r c h i l d r en: F a ith , Jim graduated from Lane C layton, Zona an d P a t ty . Tech High School in 1975, I n 1 964 t h e y m o v e d t o followed by attendance at B end an d i n 19 8 2 r e l o - University of I l l i nois, Chic ated t o S t a y t on , w h e r e c ago Campus. He met h i s they were l ong t im e r e si- first wife, Susan Eder, and dents. Florence is survived t ogether t h e y m o v e d t o b y d a u ghters: Z o n a P a - O regon an d b e g a n t h e i r dilla D a vi s o f B e a v erton family. He a t tended Eastand Patty Hedahl of Sacra- e rn Oregon U n i v ersity i n mento, CA ; s t ep- b r other: La Grande and finished his Dean Benson of Chicago, IL; education at Oregon State fifteen grandchildren; fortyU niversity in Co r v a l l i s . two great-grandchildren; and Jim g r a d u ated w i t h a twenty-three g r e a t -great- B achelor o f S c i e nce D e g randchildren. She i s p r e- gree i n A cco u n t in g in ceded in death by her hus1 986. He enjoyed a d e d i band, E v e rett; d a u g hter, cated 27-year career as an EIFaith Prescott; son, Clayton a ccountant w i t h Or e g o n Coats; and one granddaugh- Department of Revenue. ter, Belinda Coats. J im celebrated hi s t i m e Florence loved watching with us by encompassing a the hummingbirds outside full l i f e of fam i l y an d h er w i n dow w h i l e d r i n k - f riends. Har d w o r k , p l a y ing her morning coffee; the a nd creativity m a r ked a l l c olor p u r p le; an d w a t c h - h is endeavors. Hi s m a n y i ng her f a m ily g r ow . S h e i nterests i n cluded a n i n w as l o ve d b e y on d m e a - tense camaraderie through sure and will be missed so s ports and a d v entures i n much. f ishing, h i k i n g , c a m p i n g Services will be I:00 p.m. and the great outdoors. He Saturday, October, 5, 2013 l oved p i c n ic s a n d l on g a t C a s cade V i e w Fr e e w alks at T od d L ak e w i t h M ethodist C h u r ch , 8 4 5 4 his wife and two dogs. He Golf Club Rd. SE, Sublimattended and v o l u nteered i ty. I n t erment w i l l b e i n at the Catholic Church and L one O ak Cemet e r y , w as a fo un d i n g bo a r d S tayton. Serving the f a m m ember of th e B end V o l i ly, N o r t h Sa n t i a m F u - u nteer Corps. Ji m w a s a neral Service, Stayton. regular attendee at sporting, school and extra-curr icular events for hi s k i d s and g r a n d k ids. H e h ad May 26, 1927 • Sept. 29, 2013 countless relationships, and h is greatest jo y w a s h i s Donald L. Hanna, a Powell Butt e r e sident p a ssed family. Jim is now joined with his a way o n S e p t ember 2 9 , m other an d f a t h er , J o h n 2013, in Prineville. He was and Lorraine Berado; and 86. sister, Julie B erado K r u eHe was born in Portland, ger-Wade in restful peace. Oregon on May 26, 1927 to He is survived by his wife, C has an d Shirley Brewer Berado; his b rother, John B erado; hi s samond c hildren, Je n n y Jar v i s , Hanna. Jocelyn, Jacob and Jordan T he f a m Berado; his grandsons, Matily m oved thew, Brandon an d I s aac; around and ste p - children/grandquite a bit children. when Don A M e m o ria l M a s s a n d was C elebration of Life will b e growing held 2:00 p .m., Saturday, Donald Hanna up Oct. 5. For details, please g raduated f r o m L ow e l l contact, Pau l Ev er s, High School in 1944, then h e served our c o u ntry i n paul®tbdagency.com. The family extends deep the Navy. D on's car e e r star t e d g ratitude f o r t h e man y physicians, n u r s e s an d working in the woods as a caregivers i nv o l v e d in cat skinner, and later went J im's jo urney. I n l i e u o f i nto law enforcement. H e flowers, the family appreworked for the Eugene city c iates donations m ade t o police as a d e t ective and the f o l l o w in g or g a n i zal ater a s a Or e g o n S t a t e P olice gam e o f f i cer, a n d tions that w ere special to Jim: Cancer Research In eventually being Sheriff of s titute, O ne Ex ch a n g e Crook County. He then rePlaza, 55 Broadway, Suite tired to running his r anch 1802, New York, NY 10006 in Powell Butte. (www.cancerresearch.org); Don m a r r ied the love of Partners In Care, Hospice h is life, L eona B l ower a t N orthwest C h r i stian C o l - House, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., OR 9770 1 l ege i n E u g en e i n 1 9 4 9 . Bend, (www.partnersbend.or); The couple are members of the P r i n e v ill e Ch r i s t i an Bend Park and Recreation Foundation, Recr e a t i on Church. Scholarship Fund, PO Box Don was a talented fiddle 1 212, Bend, O R 9770 9 p layer, an d w o n t h e O r - (www.bendparksandrec.org) egon State Fiddle ChampiB aird Fu n e r a l Ho me , o nship i n 1 9 97 . H e w a s 2425 NE Tweet Pl., Bend, a lso a member of th e Ol d OR 9 7 701; 5 4 1-382-0903; Time Fiddlers Association. www.bairdmortuaries.com B esides f i d dl e p l a y i n g , D on l o ve d t h e o u t d o o r s and loved fishing and deer DEATHS and elk hunting. D on l e aves b e h in d h i s ELSEWHERE l oving w i f e o f 6 4 y e a r s , L eona H a nn a o f Po w e l l B utte, OR ; son s , G l e n n Deaths of note from around ( Amy) H a n n a o f Po w e l l the world: Butte, OR and Bob (Julie) Lee Thornton,71: First black H anna of K a i ser, OR; h i s daughter D e b b i e ( Frank) woman to cover the White L oyd o f A s t o r ia , O R . ; 7 House regularly for CBS in g randchildren , an d 6 1977, Thornton later taught g reat-grandchildren w i t h journalism and was an adone on the way. ministrator at the University There will be a memorial of Maryland. Died Sept. 25 at service for Don at P r inevi lle C h r i stian C h u rc h o n her home in Bethesda, Md. Albert Wheelon, 84: A physMonday, October 7 , 2 0 13 i cist whose early w ork o n at 2PM. s atellites for the CIA in t h e In lieu of f l o w ers, donat ions may be m ade to t h e 1960s helped lay the groundPrineville Christian work for a vast U.S. arsenal Church 1 6 8 5 SE L yn n of aerial spying machines. Blvd., Prineville, OR 97754 Died Sept. 28 in Santa BarA rrangements are in t h e bara, Calif. care of P r i neville Funeral R uth Maleczech, 74 : A H ome. Plea s e v i sit reigning figure of the New www.PrinevilleFuneralH ome.com t o s h ar e y o u r York avant-garde theater for more than four decades. Died memories or express your condolences by signing the Sept. 28 in Brooklyn. on-line Guest Book. — From wire reports Fed. 20, 1908 - Sept. 29, 2013
Donald L. Hanna
,.E ncL
Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
A pair of handmade signs warn drivers being detoured from Reed Market that Southeast Arborwood Avenue is not a through street.
Reed Continued from B1 Potter is pleased the project will add center turn lanes, he said.But he prefers no median on Reed Market, because turning left out of side roads will still require long waits instead of being able to cross into a center lane and wait to pull into the travel lane. But more than anything, he worries about the safety of the intersection, which he said in previous versions of the project featured a roundabout to slow traffic and prevent highspeed collisions. In July 2011, a 16-year-old boy was struck and killed near the intersection; Potter said dozens of crashes occur there, although most go unreported. According to Bend Police Lt. Chris Carney, nine crashes were reported to dispatch during 2009, 2010 and 2011. Over the years, Potter estimated about 30 cars have plowed into his yard. He's asked the city fo r r u m ble strips on Pettigrew, or concrete blocks to be placed at the T intersection. What he's gotten is a large yellow sign telling motorists they're not at a four-way stop. With sidewalks and bike lanes, Potter worries more people will be in danger. And with a new 144-unit development proposed for a property just north of Reed Market along Pettigrew Road, Potter believes the number of people traveling through
the intersection will increase dramatically. "We're going to have hundreds of kids walking, riding their bikes ... and texting and not paying attention," he said. "If we can't build a safe intersection here, they'll be in
jeopardy."
Project underway Abbas said he understands Potter's and the neighbors' concerns, and he's glad to listen to them. But, he said, the project is underway and will go on as planned. To deal with
the ongoing challenges of that intersection, Abbas said, the city will add signs and reflectors to help catch drivers' attention. "Prior to my time here, they went through and looked at the whole corridor and identifiedsome improvements to be made," Abbas said. "A number of things were identified as potential improvements, like roundabouts, but it got refined with traffic numbers and designs and budgets and funding. It went to the council, the GO bond went to a vote, and the projects we have are what we're going forward with." Others have grown a bit weary of the extensivedetours to allow stretches of road to shut down for several months at a time. Handmade "dead end" signs on the corner of Arborwood Avenue and Teakwood Drive alert drivers looking for a shortcut around the roadwork.
"What's happened is people have driven up Arborwood looking for an outlet and they didn't find one, so they were making t u rnarounds, over and over and over again," said Carl Elliott, who lives at the corner of Teakwood Drive and Reed Market Road near the construction. "People who lived at the end of the block got tired of it, so they put up signs.... People were inteifering with the life we had to live, and they were also jeopardizing the children playing up there. They weren't always the safest drivers up there when they'd find out they didn't have an outlet." Abbas said he knows the detours in the area have been challenging, given the neighborhoods in the area don't necessarily follow a grid pattern. But he said so far, he's heard positive reviews of the newroad. "I'm pleased, we're getting good feedback," he said. Next up, crews will stripe the lanes and add some landscaping to the medians and the space between the sidewalks and roadway. Abbas said the city is going to finish planning and go out for bids this winter for the second half of the project, from 15th Street west toward Third Street. Work on the new roundabout at Southeast 15th Street and Reed Market is slated to begin in June. — Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com
FEATURED OBITUARY
Tom Clancy'sappeal crossed demographicsand decades By Hector Tobar Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Tom Clancy, who died Tuesday at age 66, was an author who created imaginary s t ories from the raw material of a real world in c onflict. His audience seemed to grow exponentially as he conquered one media platform a f t er another. In his 1984 debut, "The Hunt for Red October,"he proved himself a master of the late Cold War espionage novel, with assorted Russian generals an d c o m missars as his foils. But his fictional c reations also took l ife i n movies, television programs and even ina series of video games to which he lent his name.
Today, millions of young people who've never read his novels, and who weren't alive when the Soviet Union existed, storm Russian (and Mexican and Kazakh) cities in the virtual worlds of video games that bear C l ancy's name. In recent years,the value of his film, book and game empire surpassed $100 million. In his novels, Clancy gave his readersthe old-fashioned escapism of richly detailed worlds where simple moral dramas play out to unambiguous endings and where compassionate but t ough American men u s e their courage and smarts to defeat evil empires and cruel warlords. Clancy came to the book world in m i dlife, after years as an insurance broker and military history buff. And his "military fiction," as it came to be known,
helped c r eate rubble of cities in the Cauan A m e r ican cusus and assumed the roles archetype: the of U.S. special-ops troops savvy spy or fighting a Russian nationalw arrior who ist army. The game spawned C lancy parac h utes i n many sequels. "Colonel, the United States to sort out the mess created by a ssorted o f A m e rica o n c e a g a i n c riminals, d i c tators a n d emerged the victor in a great bureaucrats. worldwide conflict," Scott "The Hunt for Red Octo- Mitchell, the hero of many ber" opens with a s y mpa- "Ghost Recon" game, intones thetic portrait of a S o viet in the sequel, "End War." naval officer (played by Sean "History won't soon forget Connery in the movie) that's what w e 've a c complished colored with rich specificity: together." from the "five layers of wool Clancy more than likely and oilskin" the officer wears did not write that stilted diaat an Arctic submarine base, logue. The best of his 18 novto his "half Lithuanian" heriels were lively, original and tage and his father's past in unfailingly realistic. The late "the Great Patriotic War," David Foster Wallace was a as World War II is known to fan: He reportedly admired Russians, with Clancy filling the novels for their ability to in the father's military back pack in facts. story wit h m uch a ccurate In recent years, Clancy historical detail. kept the literary department On screen, h eartthrobs of his brand going by relying on "collaborators." The 2010 like Alec Baldwin and Harrison Ford gave Clancy's hero, " Dead or A l i v e" credited Jack Ryan, a sex appeal and Grant Blackwood, a veteran emotionality he l acked on of s i m i la r c o l l aborations the page — the result was with Clive Cussler, to tell the several ni ne-figure H o llystory of American operatives wood blockbusters. hunting down an Osama bin Clancy's books appealed Laden-like terrorist. "to the most boy part of you," In his review of "Dead or as the novelist Bob Shaco- Alive" in Th e T i mes, Tim chis wrote in a r e view of Rutten wrote t hat C l ancy "Sum of All Fears" for the "has a tendency to both panLos Angeles Times in 1991. der to popular fantasy (in Video game versions of those this case, revenge) and, siboy-friendly w o r lds w e r e, multaneously, to play against perhaps, inevitable. it with hard-headed insights Inthe"Ghost Recon" game, into the real world of milireleased in 2001 and an early tary and intelligence operahit of the then-new Xbox and tions. It's a fruitful tension Playstation platforms, one that lends his books a quirky, could enter fantasy worlds appealing u n p r edictability where the details were con- that sometimes can survive structed with screen pixels. even the author's eye-rolling Players walked through the politics."
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
MLB COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Tampa Baywins wild-card game Rays beat Cleveland 4-0; will play Boston
in American League Division Series,C3
®
Pac-12 hurries up in
Washington has sped up its offense behind quarterback Keith Price (17) and running back Bishop Sankey (25).
a„:
Ted S. Warren / The Associated
wake of Ducks'success By Anne M. Peterson
off more than 90 plays per game.
Taking a cue from Oregon football's success with the blur offense, a majority of the Pac-12 Conference has moved to some type of hurry-up, no-huddle system. Washington and Utah installed up-tempo offenses this season, joining the other teams that had already jumped on the bandwagon. Cal brought in new head coach Sonny Dykes, whose Bear Raid attack is peeling
Holdouts still running largely prostyle offenses include Oregon State, Stanford and USC — and there is no telling where the Trojans are headed now that Lane Kiffin is gone. The two contrasting styles will be on display this Saturday night when No. 15 Washington visits the No. 5 Cardinal at Stanford Stadium. SeePac-12/C4
The Associated Press
Tampa Baycloser FernandoRodney celedrates after the final ont in the Rays'
win in Clevelandon Wednesday night.
GOLF
PREP FOOTBALL: WEEK 6 PREVIEW
GOLF
Patriot
Scott eager for Pres Cupvictory DUBLIN, OhioAdam Scott was in the middle of all the chaos in South Africa as dark-
Cha enge
ness gathered. Tiger Woods and
the second green at Fancourt when a tie
to tee off at area courses
was proposed. That's
By Zack Hall
when U.S. captain Jack Nicklaus reminded
The Bulletin
Ernie Els, in a sudden-
death playoff to decide the 2003 Presidents Cup, halved three
straight holes andcould barely see the last two putts fall. Both teams
and captains were on
International captain Gary Player that the Americans would retain
the cup as thedefending champion. "Let's keep playing!" Scott demandedover the din. He was 23, two
i/
r
months removed from his first PGA Tour win. It was his first Presidents
es
/f
tion got the attention of his teammates. The to share the cup. Scott
would not haveguessed it would be ascloseas
t
g '!
Cup. The burst of emoteams eventually agreed
'~A
Rg
- ((I I
he would get to being on a winning team at the
Presidents Cup. The10th edition of the Presidents Cup starts today, and the odds do not exactly favor the International
team. It has sevenrook-
sussau.i'XL
Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Crook County quarterback Mike Irwin, left, and Redmond quarterback Bunker Parrish, right, are both starters as freshmen.
ies, and Scott is the only
• When Crook CountyandRedmondsquare off this Friday, a pair of youngquarterbackswill be taking the snaps
team member to have won on the PGATour this year. The American
team is regarded asone of the strongest ever for any cup — all 12 players are amongthetop 30 in the world ranking, and four other players from the top 30 were left
out (Jim Furyk, Dustin Johnson, Nick Watney
and BubbaWatson). The Americans havenever lost the Presidents Cup on home soil, which is not all that unusual considering they have
only lost once since the Presidents Cupbegan
•
Inside
By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
This matchup is unheard of, at least at this level. It is not terribly uncommon to see a freshman quarterback running a varsity offense, as Redmond High coach Nathan Stanley points out. But at 7 p.m. on Friday, a pair of freshman Central Oregon signal callers will go head to head. They are freshmen, Crook County's Mike Irwin and Redmond's Bunker Parrish. But they do not look, act or play as such — notaccording to their coaches.
second-year Redmond coach. "Maybe the first game or so, you're thinking about him as a freshman, but we don't really think about our sophomores as being sophomores; they're varsity footBuilt similarly — Irwin is listed at 6 ball players, and that's who you have to feet and 170 pounds; Parrish at 5-10, 175 get it done." — these young quarterbacks are beginAt Crook County, the Cowboys (2-3) ning their high school varsity careers have Irwin to get it done. After splitearly, while also making their marks. ting time with sophomore Blake Bartels But age is no factor, at least not for during the first three games, the freshStanley. man has taken over. And he has not "You earn the job because you're the disappointed. SeeFreshman/C4 best player at your position," says the • A rundown of all the Central Oregon football teams that are in action,C4
paper," Scott said Wednesday after the
final day of practice. "It's hard to write off
guys who are top 60 in the world, becauseon any given day,anyone can beat anyone. And we've seen that a million
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Low-spending teamsget chancein playoffs By Ronald Blum The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Hey big spenders! Baseball's playoffs are no longer your exclusive
times, especially in18-
hole match play.Yeah, I see how that looks. I also seeseven guys
playground.
here for the first time
pumped upand ready to go. And I think that's
giving me agreat feeling about a newexperience in the Presidents Cup af-
ter having a run of really big defeats." • Today's pairings, Scoreboard,C2. — The Associated Press
Beck Diefenbach /The Associated Press
The OaklandA'swon theAmerican League West despite one of the lowest payrolls in baseball.
Pittsburgh, 26th among the 30 teams with a $73.6 million payroll, rolled past Cincinnati on Tuesday night and into an NL division-series matchup against St. Louis. Oakland, 27th on the spending list at $71.1 million, according to Major League Baseball's latest figures, won the AL West and faces Detroit. And Tampa Bay, 28th at
PatriotChallenge What:54-hole, twoperson best ball to benefit
the Folds of Honor (a
reference to the folding
of the American flag) Foundation, an Oklahomabased charity that provides
postsecondary educational scholarships to families of U.S. soldiers who have been disabled or killed in the line of duty. When:Friday-Sunday.
Participating clods: Aspen LakesGolf Course
in1994. "I understand that
and how it looks on
The Patriot Challenge did not have to happen this year. After all, the golf tournament's founder, former Aspen Lakes Golf Course head professional Josh McKinley, moved earlier this year to Spokane, Wash. And with McKinley, a U.S. Army veteran who served in the Iraq War, went his passion for the 2-year-old tournament he had spearheaded. But through the efforts of the three golf courses that host the tournament — which benefits the Folds of Honor Foundation, a national charity that provides postsecondary educational scholarships to families of American soldiers disabled or killed in the line of duty — the Patriot Challenge lives on. "It was started (in 2011) because Josh was a vet and it was near and dear to his heart," says Rob Malone, the director of golf at Aspen Lakes in Sisters. "And we believe strongly in veterans here (at Aspen Lakes) so we wanted to continue it." See Patriot/C4
$65.6 million, won the wild-
card game on Wednesday night against Cleveland, 21st at $88.6 million. "We've created things that have really helped our sport. They've really helped us in a myriad of ways," Commissioner Bud Selig said Tuesday. "The economics — they were archaic. I used to joke that we were still back in the Ebbets Field-Polo Grounds days. What I call the reformation of the economic system certainly created a lot of this, there is no question." See Playoffs/C4
in Sisters, Bend Golf and Country Club, and Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend.
Cost:$565 per team and includes golf, cart, range balls, contests, lunch each
day and teeprizes. To register ordonate: Aspen Lakesgolf director Rob Malone at 541-549-
4653 or rob@aspenlakes. com; Bend G&CC head pro Erik Nielsen at 541-
382-2878 or erikn©
bendgolfclub.com; or Widgi
Creek general manager Brad Hudspeth at 541-382-
4449 or brad©widgi.com. For moreinformation: www.aspenlakes.com, www.patriotgolfday.com,
www.playgolfamerica.com, www.foldsofhonor.org.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY
COREBOARD
TV/Radio
GOLF
European Tour,SeveTrophy PGA Tour, Presidents Cup
Golf Golf
SOCCER UEFA Europa League, Anzhi Makhachkala vs. Tottenham Hotspur
9 a.m.
Fox Sports1
UEFAEuropa League, Swansea City vs. St. Gallen
noon
Fox Sports1 Pac-12
College, Washington at Stanford 7 p.m. BASEBALL MLB, Division Series, Pittsburgh at St. Louis 2 p.m. TBS, 940-AM MLB, Division Series, L.A. Dodgers at Atlanta5 p.m. TBS, 940-AM VOLLEYBALL W omen's college, Penn State at Indiana 4p . m. ESPN2 FOOTBALL College, Texas at lowa State 4:30 p.m. ESPN College, W. Kentucky at Louisiana-Monroe 4:30 p.m. ESPNU NFL, Buffalo at Cleveland 5:25 p.m. NFL College, UCLA at Utah 7 p.m. Fox Sports1 HOCKEY NHL, Los Angeles atM innesota 5 p.m. NBCSN MOTOR SPORTS Formula One,KoreanGrand Prix, practice 10 p.m. NBCSN
FRIDAY Time 6 a.m.
GOLF
European Tour,SeveTrophy
TV/Radio Golf Golf Golf
PGA Tour, Presidents Cup LPGA Tour, Reignwood LPGA Classic MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR, Sprint Cup,
10 a.m
Hollywood Casino 400, practice
9:30a.m. FoxSports1
1 a.m.
NASCAR, Nationwide,
Kansas Lottery 300, practice
11 a.m. Fox Sports 1
NASCAR, Sprint Cup,
Hollywood Casino 400, qualifying
2 p.m.
ESPN2
IndyCar, Grand Prix of Houston,
4 p.m.
NBCSN practice/qualifying ARCA, Kansas Lottery 98.9 5:30 p.m. Fox Sports1 F ormula One, Korean Grand Prix, qualifying 10 p.m. NBCS N BASEBALL MLB, Division Series, Pittsburgh at St. Louis 10 a.m
MLB, Division Series, TampaBayat Boston noon MLB, Division Series, L.A. Dodgers at Atlanta3 p.m. MLB, Division Series, Detroit at Oakland 6 : 3 0 p. SOCCER
Women's college, Arizona State atCalifornia 2 p.m. Women's college, OregonState at Colorado 2 p.m. W omen's college, Arizona at Stanford
High school, Bend at Summit VOLLEYBALL
Women's college, Cal atUCLA
6 p.m. Pac-12 Women's college, Oregon St. at Arizona St. 6 p.m. Pac-12 Oregon
Women's college, Stanford at USC
8 p.m.
Pac-12
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL Armed forces games will
nessesand imagesinavideo game.
de Played — U.S. military academy football teams will
play this weekend, despite the government shutdown. A senior defense official said
Wednesday thedecision affects thisweekend'sgames only,and
GYMNASTICS Biles, Ross lead at worlds — The United States is still
dominating all-around qualify-
future games will be evaluated
ing at the world gymnastics championships, even without its
as events unfold. The official
defending champion or Olympic
was not authorized to discuss
gold medalist. In the absence of Jordyn Wieber and Gabby
the matter publicly so spokeon condition of anonymity. Navy later confirmed its home game
Douglas, a couple of16-yearolds are setting up the U.S. team
against Air Force in Annapolis, Md., would be played assched-
for a spectacular final weekend at the Antwerp Sports Palace in
uled Saturday. The Navy-AFA
Belgium. U.S. champion Simone
game and Army's gameat Boston College were in jeopardy after the Defense Department
In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. rhst. by Umversar Ucucs www.gocomics.comnnthebleachers
Biles used superb floor and vault exercises to sweeppast teammate KylaRossWednesday
temporarily suspendedsports competition at the service acad-
and clinch a1-2 finish ahead of
emies as a result of the budget
impasse in Congress.
was the only gymnast to break the 60-point mark with 60.133,
NCAA facing another
well behind with 59.198 in sec-
COnCuSSiOn laWSuit —Two more former college football
ond place overall. YaoJinnan of
Friday's all-around final. Biles
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT
EasternConference Atlantic Division Detroit
Boston Florida Ottawa
TampaBay Bullalo Montreal
UnitedStates. 9:13 a.m.—LouisOosthuizenandCharl Schwartzel, Intemationalvs. , Phil MickelsonandKeeganBradley, UnitedStates. 9:27 a.m.— Ernie ElsandBrendondeJonge, International, vs.SteveStricker andJordan Spieth, UnitedStates. 9:41 a.m.— Angel CabreraandMarcLeishman, Intemational, vs. MattKucharand TigerWoods, UnitedStates. 9:55 a.m.— BrandenGraceandRichard Steme,International, vs.ZachJohnsonand Jason Dufner, UnitedStates.
Batimore Cleveland Cincinnati Pittsburgh
L T 1 0 W 0 1 0 2 3 2 0 4 0 North L T 2 0 W 0 2 0 2 2 0 4 0
West
P c t P F PA . 500 91 67 . 500 64 7 0 . 5 00 6 1 6 1 . 000 69 110
L T P c t P F PA 0 0 1 .000 179 91 0 0 1 .000 102 41 2 0 . 500 106 102 1 3 0 250 71 91 NATIONA LCONFERE NCE East L T P c t P F PA Dallas 2 0 . 5 00 104 65 11 3 0 . 2 50 99 136 2 Philadelphia W Washington 3 0 . 250 91 112 N.Y.Giants 0 4 0 . 000 61 146 South L T P c t P F PA NewOrleans 0 0 1 .000 106 55 W 11 2 0 . 3 33 6 6 3 6 4 Carolina Atlanta 3 0 . 250 94 104 TampaBay 0 4 0 . 000 44 7 0 North L T P c t P F PA Detroit 1 0 . 7 50 122 101 W 31 1 0 Chicago . 750 127 114 GreenBay 2 0 . 333 96 6 6 Minnesota 1 3 0 . 2 50 115 123
Denver Kansas City San Diego Oakland
W 4 4 2
P c t P F PA . 750 105 51 . 750 96 69 . 500 90 105 . 000 31 129
West
Seattle SanFrancisco Arizona St. Louis
L T P c t P F PA 0 0 1 .000 109 47 W 1 2 0 . 500 79 9 5 2 4 2 0 . 500 69 69 3 0 . 250 69 121
Today's Game Buflalo atCleveland5:25 p.m. Sunday's Games Detroit at6reenBay,10am. NewOrleansatChicago,10 a.m. Kansas CityatTennessee,10a.m. Jacksonville atSt. Louis, 10a.m. NewEnglandatCincinnati,10a.m. Seattle atIndianapolis, 10a.m. Baltimoreat Miami,10a.m Philadelphiaat N.Y.Giants, 10a.m. CarolinaatArizona,1:05p.m. Denver at Dallas,1:25 p.m. Housto natSanFrancisco,5:30p.m. San Diego atOakland, 6:35p.m. Open:Minnesota,Pittsburgh,TampaBay,Washington Monday's Game N.Y.JetsatAtlanta, 5:40p.m.
leaving overnight leader Ross College Schedule
OT 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PfsGF GA 4 7 4 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 3 4
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT PfsGF GA 0 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia 1 0 1 0 0 1 3 Washington 1 0 1 0 0 4 6
Western Conference Central Division
"The trick is to add enough powdered toad warts to fool the performance-enhancing drug tests!"
All Times PDT (Subjecf fo change) Today's Games
N. Illinois Mississippi
95 3 S. CARO LINA 21.5 S. MISSISSIPI 15 BOWLINGGREEN 25.5 UAB 5 TexasTech 17 E. Carolina 7 Ohio U 6 a-AruonaSt 5 BAYLOR 27 UTEP 1 OhioSt 55 PennSt 3.5 SanJoseSt 4.5 a-Arlington,Texas
SOUTH
W. Kentucky at Louisiana-Monroe,4:30p.m. MIDWEST TexasatlowaSt., 430 pm FAR WEST UCLAatUtah,7p.m.
Friday's Games
FAR WEST BYU atUtahSt., 5p.m. NevadaatSanDiegoSt., 6p.m.
Pac-12 Conference All Times PDT North Stanford OregonState Oregon Washington WashingtonState California ArizonaState UCLA Arizona
ulah Colorado USC
South
9 2.5 21 17
Conf. 2-0 2-0 1-0 1-0 1-1 0-1
Overall
Conf. 1-1 0-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-2
Overall
4-0 4-1 4-0 4-0 3-2 1-3 3-1 3-0 3-1 3-1 2-1 3-2
GP W L OT 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pacific Division GP W L OT Calgary 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles 0 0 0 0 Phoenix 0 0 0 0 SanJose 0 0 0 0 Vancouver 0 0 0 0
Colorado Chicago Winnipeg Dallas Minnesota Nashville St. Louis
PfsGF GA 2 6 1 2 6 4 2 5 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PfsGF GA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4 5 KENTST Edmonton 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 6 AUBURN Anahelm Twopoints lor a win, onepoint for overtime Kentucky NOTE: loss. FloridaInt'I
25.5 Massachus etts 4.5 Fla Atlantic 175 KANSAS 7.5 MID TENN ST 5 AKRON 5 NotreDam e W. Virginia 26 PK La Tech 7 NORTH WESTERN 3 INDIANA 4.5 HAWAII
Note:(I) — lowaopenedasfavorite
Today'sGame UCLAatUtah,7p.m. AMERIC AN CONFER ENCE Saturday's Games East WashingtonStateatCalifornia,1 p.m. L T P c t P F PA CoioradoatOregon,3p.m. Stateat Notre Dame,4:30 p.m. NewEngiand 0 0 1 .000 69 57 Arizona Miami W 2 1 0 . 7 50 9 1 9 1 WashlngtonatStanford, 7:30 p.m. 3 4 N.Y.Jets 2 0 . 500 66 6 6 Buflalo 2 0 . 500 66 9 3 Betting line South Indianapo is Tennessee Houston Jacksonville
W L 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
Carolina 0 0 0 0 0 0 Columbus 0 0 0 0 0 0 NewJersey 0 0 0 0 0 0 N.Y. Islanders 0 0 0 0 0 0 N.Y.Rangers 0 0 0 0 0 0
GOLF Presidents Cup Pairings Today At Muirfield Village Golf Club Dublin, Ohio All Times PDT FourbaUs 6:45 a.m.— JasonDayandGrahamDeLaet, International,vs.HunterMahanand Brandt Snedeker, UnitedStates. a, 6:59 a.m.— Adam ScottandHideki Matsuyam Intemational, vs. Bill HaasandWebbSimpson,
GP 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 1
Toronto
NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times PDT
ESPN2 CBSSN 6 p.m. ESPN 7 p.m. COTV, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
College, Nevadaat SanDiegoState
Saturday Football: Molaga vs. Madrasat Culver,1 p.m. Boys soccer: Riverside atCulver, 1 p.mcCrook Countyat Sweet Home,1 p.m. Girls soccer:CrookCountyat Sweet Home,1 pm Volleyball: La Pineat Junction City, 9a.m.; Culver at WafdportfTofedoat Santiam, TBD,SouthWasco County atCentral Christian, 4p.m.;Bend,Crook CountyatMt. HoodTourney,6 a.m.;Trinity Lutheran at Paisley,2:30p.mcGilchrist at Gilchrist Tournament, 9a.m. Cross-country: Madras at Harrier Classicin Albany, 9.30 a.m.
NFL
5 p.m. 5 p.m.
Thursday,Oct. 10: MinnesotaatAtlanta, 5:30p.m. x-Sunday,Oct.13: MinnesotaatAtlanta, 5p.m. x-Wednesday,Oct. 16:Atlantaat Minnesota, 5p.m.
IN THE BLEACHERS
Friday Football: Bendat Summit, 7 p.m.; CrookCounty at Redmond,7 p.m.; Pendletonat MountainView,7 p.m.; Ridgeviewat TheDales Wahtonka 7 p.m., Sisters at Junction City,7 p.mcLaPine at Cottage Grove,7p mc Regis atCulver 7p m.;CamasValley at Gilchrist, 4p.m. Boys soccer: Long Creek/Uklah at Central Christian, 4 p.m. Volleyball: Camas Valleyat Gilchrist, 6 p.m.; Central Christian atArlington, 4pm. Cross-country: Bend, Mountain View, Summlt, Redmond,CrookCounty, Ridgeview,Sisters, La Pine atOxfordClassicatDrakePark,11 a.m. Boys waterpolo: MadrasatSummit, TBA Girls water polo: MadrasatSummit, TBA
FOOTBALL
FOOTBALL
College, BYU at Utah State
Today Boys soccer: Bend at Mountain View,3 p.mcRidgeviewatRedmond,3p.mcSisters at Sweet Home, 4:30 p.m.;Madrasat Molala, 6 p.m.; LaPineat CottageGrove, 4:30 p.m.; CrookCounty at Summit,3 p.m. Girlssoccer:RidgeviewatRedmond,4:30p.m.; Sweet Home atSisters,4:30 p.m.;Molagaat Madras,4:30 p.mc Cottage Groveat LaPine, 4:30 p.m.; Bendat MountainView,4:30p.m.; CrookCounty atSummit JV, 4:30p.m. Volleyball: Redm ondat Ridgeview 6:30p.mcSisters at JunctionCity, 6:45p.m.; Madrasat Molala, 6 p.mc LaPineat Sweet Home, 6:45 p.m.; Culver at Kennedy,6p.m.; CrookCounty atSummit, 6:30 p.mJ Mountain ViewatBend,6:30p.m Boys water polo: MountainViewatRidgeview,TBA
4 p.m .
Women's college, Washington State at UCLA4 p.m. MLS, Chicago at D.C. 5 p.m. High school, John Curtis (La.) vs. St. Augustine (La.)
ON DECK
Wednesday'sGames Toronto3, Philadelphia1 Detroit 2,Buffalo1 Colorado 6,Anaheim1
Today'sGames TampaBayat Boston, 4p.m. NewJerseyatPittsburgh, 4 p.m. CalgaryatWashington, 4p.m. l.os Angeleat s Minnesota, 5p.m. Nashville at St. Louis, 5:30p.m. Florida atDallas,5:30p.m. N.Y.RangersatPhoenix, 7p.m. VancouveratSanJose,7 p.m.
TENNIS
DEALS
Professional
Transactions
China Open Wednesday At The Beijing TennisCentre Beijing Purse: Men,$3.67million (WTBDO); Women, $5.19 million IPremier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men SecondRound Fabio Fognini, ltaly,def.LleytonHewitt, Austraia,
6-0, 6-2. John Isner(6),UnitedStates, def.Roberto Bautista
Agut Spain,6-2, 6-7(3), 6-4. RafaelNadal(2), Spain,def.PhilippKohlschreiber, Germany,6-4,7-6(3). Women SecondRound AndreaPetkovic, Germany,def. SvetlanaKuznetsova, Russia,4-6, 6-4,6-1.
JelenaJankovicIB), Serbia,def. GalinaVoskoboeva, Kazakhstan,6-3,5-7,6-3. PolonaHercog,Sovenia, def AnaIvanovic (14), NFL Serbia,6-4, 6-4. IHometeamsin CAPS) Agnie szka Radwanska(3),Poland,def.Madison Favorite Opening Current Underdog Keys,UnitedStates,6-3,6-2. Today Third Round 4 4.5 BROWN S Bigs PetraKvitova(9), CzechRepublic, def. SaraErrani Sunday (5), Italy,6-4, 6-7(3), 6-3. 2.5 2.5 TITANS Chiefs Li Na(4), China,def. SabineLisicki (13),Germany, DOLPHINS Ravens 7-5, 6-4. 3 3 RAMS 13 11 5 Jaguars BENGAL S 1 1 Patriots JapanOpen Seahawks 3 3 COLTS Wednesday PACKER S 6 .5 7 Lions At Ariake Colosseum BEARS PK PK Saints Tokyo GIANTS 25 2.5 Eagles Purse: $1.44 million (WT500) CARDINAL S Panthers 15 2 Surface: Hard-Outdoor Chargers 5 4.5 RAIDERS Singles Broncos 6.5 7.5 COWBO YS First Round 49ERS 7 7 Texans Milos Raonic(3), Canada,def. GoSoeda, Japan, Monday 6-4, 7-6(0). FALCON S 9 10 Jets JeremyChardy, France,def. Marco Chiudinelli, Switzerland,7-6(2), 3-6,7-6 l6). College SecondRound Today Juan Martindel Potro(1), Argentina,def. Carlos Texas 9 6.5 IOWA ST Bertocq,Argentina,6-2, 6-2 W. Kentucky 45 UL-MONR OE 7 JarkkoNieminen,Finland,def. Michal Przysiezny, 4 5 UTAH Poland,6-7(4), 6-4,6-2. Ucla Friday Ivan Dodig,Croatia,def.Jo-Wilfried Tsonga(2), UTAHST 5.5 6 Byu France, 6-4, 7-6(5). SANDIEG OST 4.5 5 Nevada Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine, def. JankoTipSaturday sarevic(Bl, Serbia,6-3,7-6(2). NAVY 1 1.5 1 1 .5 Air Force MichiganSt IOWA 1.5 (I) 1 TEMPLE SOCCER Louisville 33 34 TOLEDO 2 0.5 2 1 WMichigan BUFFALO 13.5 1 3 .5 E. Michigan MLS ALABAMA 56.5 56 GeorgiaSt M AJOR LEAGUE SOCCER 1 2 1 1 . 5 Army BOSTON COL AU TimesPDT C Michigan MIAMI-OHIO 35 3 VIRGINIA 5 5.5 Ball St Friday's Games FLORIDA ST 15 16 Maryland hicagoatD.C.United, 5 p.m. MIAMI-FLA 5 5 GeorgiaTech C Clemson 1 3.5 13 SYRACU SE MontrealatHouston,5:30pm. Saturday'sGames REST Nc State 9 .5 9 WAKEFO NEBRA SKA 1 0.5 10 lginois NewEngandat NewYork,4p.m. SporlingKansasCity atColumbus, 4:30p.m. MARSH ALL 13.5 14 Tx-SanAntonio N.Texas 3 3 TULANE TorontoFCatPhiladelphia, 4:30p.m. Oregon 3 6.5 39 COLOR ADO FC DallasatRealSalt Lake,6p.m. Georgia 11.5 11 TENNE SSEE SeattleFCat Colorado,7 p.m. Sunday'sGames FLORIDA 11 11 Arkansas Lsu 95 9. 5 MISSISSIPPIST ChivasUSAat LosAngeies, 2p.m. Portland at Va n cou ver,5 p.m. TULSA 3 3 Rice VIRGINIA TECH 7 7.5 N. Carolina 11 10 . 5 OKLAHO MA Tcu BASKETBALL Cincinnati 12 11 . 5 S. FLORIA D OKLAHOM AST 1 4.5 14 KansasSt VVNBA VANDE RBILT 15 15 Missouri Minnesota WOMEN'SNATIONAL MICHIGAN 2 05 195 C. Florida 10 1 0 . 5 MEMPHIS BASKETBALLASSOCIATION Rutgers 6.5 5.5 SMU Playoffs FrensoSt 24.5 27 IDAHO AU TimesPDT UL-LAFA YETTE 1 0 10 . 5 Texas St TROY S Alabama FINALS 35 3. 5 NEWMEXICO 65 9 NewMexicoSt (Best-of-6) California Sunday,Oct.6:Atlanta atMinnesota, 5:30pm. Washington St 1 1.5 STANFO RD 7 7 Washington Tuesday, Oct.6: Atlantaat Minnesota,5 p.m.
BASEBALL COMMISSIONER' S OFFICE— Suspended Mil-
waukeeRHPDylanBrock 50 game s for a violation of the MinorLeagueDrug Prevention andTreatment Program. AmericanLeague HOUSTO N ASTROS—Selected 1BJon Singleton to themajorleague40-manroster. ClaimedLHPRaul ValdesfromthePhiladelphia Philies. SentRHPPhilip Humber,CCody Clark, INFBrandonLaird andCMatt Pagnozzioutright totheir minorleaguecamp. MINNES OTATWINS AssignedRHPsCole DeVries, ShaironMartis andJosh RoenickeandOFClete Thomas outright to Rochester (IL). TEXASRANGERS—Announced the contracts of first basecoachDaveAnderson and benchcoach JackieMoorewil not berenewed.
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CHICAGO BULLS ReleasedGsKalin Lucasand PatrickChristopher. NEWYOR KKNICKS—Signed GChris DouglasRoberts.ReleasedFJustin Brownlee. SANANTONIO SPURS—Named DaveTelep draft scoutingcoordinator. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONACARDINALS Pl aced LB VicSo'oto on injuredreserve.SignedLBMarcusBenard. TradedOT Levi Brown to Pittsburghforaconditional draftpick. CINCINNATIBENG ALS Released DB Curtis Marsh.SignedLBMichael Boley. INDIANAPOLI SCOLTS— ReleasedGThomasAustin fromthepracticesquad JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS— Traded OT Eugene Monroe to Baltimore fortwoundiscloseddraft picks. KANSAS CITYCHIEFS—Released LBDarin Drakeford from thepractice squad.Signed GChandler Burdento thepractice squad. MIAMI DOLP HINS—Reeased S Kelcle Mccray and FB Tyler Clutts. SignedLBAustin Spitler. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS Re-signedSKanorris Davis tothepractlcesquad. NEWYOR K GIANTS—Released OT Steven Baker from thepracticesquad.SignedWRMarcus Harris to the practicesquad. NEW YORKJETS— SignedWR David Nelson. ST. LOUISRAMS—SignedWREmoryBlaketo the practicesquad. SAN FRANCISCO49ERS Signed QB John Skelton toaone-yearcontract andLBJermalne Cunningham.ReleasedQBB.J. Daniels and RBOwen Marecic. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS— Released LBJohnLotulelei. ReleasedFBJameson Konzfrom the practice squad.ClaimedQBB.J. Daniels off waiversfromSan Francisco.SignedWRArceto Clark to the practice
squad TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS—Signed WRChris Owusu.ClaimedS Kelcie Mccrayoff wawersfrom Miami. HOCKEY
NationalHockeyLeague SANJOSESHARKS—AssignedF Freddie Hamilton toWorcester(AHL).Recal edFMat Pelechfrom SanFrancisco(ECHL).
COLLEGE ALABAMA —Suspended S HaHa Clinton-Dix indefinitelyfor violatingteamrules. PURDU— ESuspendedWRsB.J. Knauf two games and Jordan Woods lndeflnltely.
FISH COUNT Upstream dadymovement ofadult chinook,jackchinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselectedColumbia RiverdamslastupdatedonTuesday.
Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd McNary 9 , 569 7 3 0 3 , 174 1,033 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadandwild Fridayat selectedCo-
lumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd
Bonneville 1,062,166 160,462 225,634 129,166 The Dages 669,196 129,734 170,025 72,229 John Day 512,636 126,045 121,776 50,402 McNary 504,462 61,564 103,301 36 917
China was third with 57.965.
players have filed a lawsuit against the NCAA stemming
from concussions and brain injuries. John DuRocher, aquarterbackat Washington and Or-
LOCAL GOLF Bend yro slips in North-
egon, and Darin Harris, a safety
WBSt PTO —Tim Fraley, the at Washington, are seeking more head professional at Awbrey than $5 million in damages. Both Glen Golf Club in Bend, slipped
say they sustained repeated head injuries, despite promises
Wednesday into a five-way tie
that they would be competing
for13th place after the second round of the Pacific Northwest
in a protected college environ-
PGA Professional Champion-
ment. The class-action suit was filed Tuesday in the U.S. District
ship. Fraley shot a 4-over-par 76 to land at 5 over for the
Court of Southeastern Indiana.
tournament. TonyRobydek, a pro from Tacoma,Wash., leads
Helmet-manufacturer Riddell
and its parent company,EastonBell Sports, are also namedin the complaint. It's another legal headache for the NCAA, which
is facing another concussion lawsuit in lllinois federal court and a California suit to recover
money from using players' like-
the 54-hole Northwest PGA Pro
Championship at 2 under. Fraley will try in today's final to become
one of the lowest eight professionals who qualify for the 2014 National PGA Club Professional
Championship. — From wire services
Wings top Sabres with pair of early goals The Associated Press DETROIT — Th e D etroit Red Wings had a successful debut as an Eastern Conference team, scoring early and holding on late. Pavel Datsyuk and Mikael Samuelsson scored 36 seconds apart midway through the first period and Detroit beat the Buffalo Sabres 2-1 Wednesday night in the season-opener for both teams. "When you start off at home, you always want the first goal and we got two," Samuelsson said. "After that, we slowed
NHL ROUNDUP
hit him and ended right on the guy's stick," Howard said. "My
bad." doW11.
Detroit goalie Jimmy Howard turned the puck over, allowing Zemgus Girgensons to score in his NHL debut with 7:24 left in the game. Howard tried to clear the puck from behind his net, but it hit Buffalo's Brian Flynn and popped over the net to set up Girgensons' backhander that pulled the Sabres within
a goaL "It was unfortunate that it
Howard made 19 saves, playing an Atlantic Division game against the young Sabres. Buffalo had a two-man power play for 1:31 early in the first period and for 51 seconds late in the second, but couldn't take advantage. Also on Wednesday: Maple Leafs 3, F lyers 1: PHILADELPHIA Dave Bolland scored twice and Phil Kessel added a goal to lead Toronto over Philadelphia. The
Maple Leafs, off to a 2-0 start, spoiled Philadelphia's season opener one night after ruining Montreal's. Jonathan Bernier stopped 31 shots for the Maple Leafs. Avalanche 6, Ducks1: DENVER — S emyon Varlamov was sharp in making 35 saves, and Jamie McGinn scored two
goals, leading Colorado over Anaheim in Patrick Roy's successful coaching debut with the Avalanche. Ryan O'Reilly, John Mitchell, Matt Duchene and Steve Downie added goals for the Avalanche.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
NFL
Turnovers more critical than ever for today's defenses By Dave Campbell The Associated Press
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
PITTSBURGHPIRATES VS. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS Season Series:Pirates10-9. Projected Lineups:
Barmes (.211, 5, 23).
speed of the game only increasing and
67, 10 SB), RF Carlos Beltran (.296, 24, 84), LF Matt Holliday (.300. 22, 94, .389
defense's only hope. Just ask Pittsburgh and Houston, two teams that have historically relied on stout defense and are giving up yards and points in huge chunks this season. "It's a huge point of emphasis for us. ...That's a huge momentum-changer. I mean, it's just one of those things that gives everybody energy," Houston AllPro defensive end J.J. Watt said. "We need to do it. We need to give our offense the ball on a short field. We need to make sure that we provide that spark." The Texans are one of a handful of prime examples of the significance of the turnover in the early going this season. Through the first three weeks, they allowed only 249 yards per game, the second-lowest average in the league behind the Seattle Seahawks. But they gave up 82 points in that span, nearly one-third of which was attributable to turnovers by the offense or mistakes on special teams. With only one takeaway over those three weeks, the Texans were fortunate to have won twice. They forced two turnovers by Seattle last weekend, but lost in overtime. "You just keep working at it and you keep stressing it, continuing to do it in practice," Texans linebacker Brian Cushing said. "Hopefully, it just transfers over to the games." Pittsburgh has been feeling this pain even more. The Steelers have lost their first four games and failed to force a turnover in any of them. That defense is 12th overall in the league in yards allowed, but it doesn't matter. Like the Texans, not only have theSteelers not produced enough takeaways, but the offense has had too
many giveaways. The Steelers have ranked in the top 10 in the NFL in fewest yards allowed in each of the past nine seasons, including finishing with the lowest in the league four times. But they have only been among the top 10 teams in turnovers forced once in that stretch. "We've got to find ways to get the ball. That's what great defenses do," defensive end Brett Keisel said. "It's been one of those things for a while now we haven't been able to get turnovers. Hopefully it will change." There's no secret the NFL has developed into a pass-driven product. More strong-armed quarterbacks are making their mark on this league than ever, and some of them have become dangerous dual threats with their read-option run-
ning plays.
There were 155 touchdown passes thrown through the first three weeks, the most ever in that span to top the previous such high of 153 in 2011. The first three weeks also brought 30 individual performances of 300 yards passing or more,
including seven of 400-plus, trailing only the 34 that were registered in 2011. Scoring is about the same. The average of combined points per game last season was 45.5, according to research by STATS. Through the first three weeks this year, the number was 45.2. When that ball pops out or gets picked off, though, all bets are off. "I think the biggest thing still, no matter what, is the turnover battle and the way it's hurting our football team and the way it's putting us in a bad situation," Texans coach Gary Kubiak said. "It's something we have to get back on track." San Francisco took a step toward that last week. The 49ers had a total of one takeaway in their two losses. When they beat up on the Rams in St. Louis, they forced two turnovers to go with their five sacks. "On this defense, we've definitely got to stop the run," cornerback Carlos Rogers said. "Stopping runs is our No. I thing and making a team pass the ball. Once we get back to that, getting back to creating turnovers, we'll be back to the same defense." Want a small-sample-size success story? Try Tennessee. The Titans were 27th in the league in yards allowed last year and minus-four in turnover differentiaL Through the first three games they were plus-nine, tied atop the NFL with K ansas City. They were 11th in yards. "The old school saying, 'Offense wins games, defense wins championships,' I think that's still true," cornerback Jason McCourty said. Keep taking away that ball and, well, he could prove himself right.
Summit's coach honored by marathon in Europe
Both postseason series start today:
Whatever happened to the old mantra that defense wins championships'? With more rules designed to protect offensive skill players from injury, the the number of elite quarterbacks continuing to rise, turnovers could be more than just a defense's most important tenet. If the air-it-out trend in the NFL keeps going, takeaways might be the
PREP NOTEBOOK
National leagueDivision Series, at aglance
Pirates: LF Starling Marte (.280, 12 HRs, 35 RBls, 41 SBs), 2B Neil Walker (.251, 16, 53, 24 2Bs), CF Andrew McCutchen (.317, 21, 84, 27 SBs), RF Marlon Byrd (.291, 24, 88 overall; .318, 3, 17 in 30 games with the Pirates), 1B Justin Morneau (.259, 17, 77 overall; .260, 0, 3 in 25 games with the Pirates), 3B Pedro Alvarez (.233, 36, 100, 186 strikeouts), C Russell Martin (.226, 15, 55), SS Clint
Y
Cardinals: 2B Matt Carpenter (.318, 11 HR, 78 RBls, ML-leading 199 hits, 55
doubles,.392OBP), CF Jon Jay (.276, 7, OBP), CYadier Molina (.319, 12, 80), 1B Matt Adams (.284, 17, 51 in 108 games), 3B David Freese (.262, 9, 60), SS Pete
Kozma (.217,1, 35) or Daniel Descalso (.238, 5, 43). Projected Rotations: Pirates: RH A.J. Burnett (10-11, 3.30 ERA, 209 Ks in191 IP), RH Gerrit Cole,
(10-7, 3.22), LH Francisco Liriano (16-8, 3.02), RHCharlie Morton (7-4, 3.26). Cardinals: RH Adam Wainwright (19-9, 2.94, T-1st in NL in wins, NL-leading 241 2-3 innings, 3rd with 223 Ks), RH Lance
Lynn (15-10, 3.97), RH Joe Kelly (10-5, 2.69), RH Shelby Miller (15-9, 3.06, led
ML in rookie wins).
Watch For: • Big hit: Carpenter was1 for10 during the final weekend, falling one short of 200 hits. It's been a spectacular year for the St. Louis leadoff man, who led the majors in hits, runs, doubles and multihit games and broke Stan Musial's franchise record for doubles by a left-handed hitter. Plus,
he was a quick study at anewposition after learning second base inspring
Phil Long /The Associated Press
Cleveland catcher Yan Gomes leaps for a high throw as Tampa Bay's Evan Longoria (3) slides home to score on a two-run double by Desmond Jennings in the fourth inning of the AL wild-card game on Wednesday night in Cleveland.
as 0
n i a nS
i nwi -car a me
training.
• Momentum factor: The Cardinals won 17 of their final 22, clinching the Central
with two games to spare, not much time to get complacent. Holdovers are driven by asense of unfinished business last October. Manager Mike Matheny
used his starting lineup almost to the finish, holding out Holliday on Sunday
to preserve a.300 averageandgiving Molina a ceremonial start so hecould depart to an ovation. Opponents averaged one run per gamethe final homestand. Cole train: All due respect to Liriano's
comebackyear,Colewaseasily Pittsburgh's top starter down the stretch. The 23-year-old right-hander — who can hit 99 mph on the radar gun — went 4-0 with a1.69 ERA in September. The top pick in the 2011 draft has grown up in the
middle of a pennant race. LOS ANGELESDODGERS VS. ATLANTABRAVES Season Series:Braves won5-2. Projected Lineups: Dodgers: RF Yasiel Puig (.319, 19 HRs, 42 RBls, 11 SBs), LF Carl Crawford (.283, 6, 31, 15), SS Hanley Ramirez (.345, 20, 57,
10), 1B Adrian Gonzalez(.293, 22, 100), 2B Mark Ellis (.270, 6, 48), 3BJuan uribe (.278, 12, 50), CF Skip Schumaker (.263, 2, 30), C A.J. Ellis (.238, 10, 52). Braves: CF Jason Heyward (.254, 14 HRs, 38 RBls), RFJustin upton (.263, 27, 70, 161 Ks), 1B Freddie Freeman (.319, 23,
109, .396 on-baseaverage), LFEvan Gattis (.243, 21, 65), C Brian McCann
(.256, 20, 57), 3b Chris Johnson (.321, 12, 68), SSAndrelton Simmons (.248, 17, 59), 2B Elliot Johnson (.209, 2, 19 with
Braves andRoyals). Projected Rotations:
Dodgers: LH Clayton Kershaw (16-9, 1.83 ERA), RH Zack Greinke (15-4, 2.63),
LH Hyun-Jin Ryu (14-8, 3.00), RHRicky Nolasco (8-3, 3.52). Braves: RH Kris Medlen (15-12, 3.11 ERA), LH Mike Minor (13-9, 3.21), RH Julio Teheran (14-8, 3.20), LH Paul
Maholm (10-11, 4.41) or RHFreddy
By Tom Withers
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — The Tampa Bay Rays' road show rolls on. Next stop: Boston. Alex Cobb dodged trouble for nearly seven innings and the Rays pitched their way to another must-have win on the road, beating the Cleveland Indians 4-0 Wednesday night in the AL wild-card game. Cobb, who missed a chunk of the regularseason after he was hit in the head by a line drive, quieted a thundering Cleveland crowd and ended the Indians' unexpected season. "Can't put into words the appreciation I have celebrating on this field," Cobb said. "I knew how close it was to not coming back. Sitting on the couch watching these games, I knew we had a good chance.We have a greatteam. I was going to do everything I could to get back and be a part of it." D elmon Young homered in t h e third inning off rookie Danny Salazar as the Rays, playing in their third city over four days, advanced to face the AL East champion Red Sox in the division series starting Friday. "I felt like we've done it and been here before," said Desmond Jennings, who hit a two-run double. "The road we took to get here was pretty tough going to New York, Toronto, playing a game in Texas." Cobb's comeback in August from his frightening injury helped stabilize the Rays, who have spent the past two weeks winning crucial games to reach the postseason for the fourth time in six years. Cobb pitched out of massive jams in the fourth and fifth, and allowed two runners to reach in the seventh before turning it over to Tampa Bay's dependable bullpen. Joel Peralta struck out Nick Swisher on three pitches, ending Cleveland's last real chance. Fernando Rodney worked a perfect ninth, striking out Lonnie Chisen-
lester will start ALDS Game 1forRedSox
Braves). Watch For:
player of week Portland State's Torie Morris, a 2012 Mountain View graduate, was named the Big Sky Conference women's soccer co-defensive player of the week, the confere nce a nnounced o n Tuesday. Morris, a Class 5A first-team all-state selection at M ountain View in 2010, recorded
all of his players safely made it out of si amulatedgame onWednesday before confirming what he'd only
hinted at before: Left-hander Jon Lester will start Game1 of the AL division series.
"He's been outstanding in the
second half," Farrell said in the clubhouse. "The last couple of
starts he's put together for us have been very strong." Lester was15-8 with a 3.75 ERA
this season, but hewonhis first
the game-winning goal
six decisions and seven of his last
in the Vikings' 1-0 win over the University of North Dakota on Sunday. A defender, Morris helped PSU log its fifth shutout of the season, limiting North Dakota to just two shots — the fewest the Vikings have allowed m a game smce 2002. The sophomore, who e arned s econdteam all-Big Sky honors last season, shared the weekly award with Sacramento State goalkeeper Kimberly Mata.
nine.
hall to end it. Rodney dropped to one knee, pointed skyward and soon was mobbed byallthe Rays,who may be a little homesick but are Boston-bound. "Go out and play our game," Jennings said. "It's going to be tough anytime you play Boston." Unfazed by a r aucous, red-clad, towel-waving crowd of 43,579 that roared like a jet engine inside Progressive Field, the Rays handled the Indians and will now face their division nemesis, the Red Sox, who went 12-7 against Tampa Bay this season. David Price set the tone for the Rays' postseason run by throwing a complete game to beat Texas in the wild-card tiebreaker Monday night, and Cobb picked up where his teammate left off. After he was pulled in the seventh, Cobb walked to the dugout, where he was first greeted with a high-five from Price. "The adrenaline was going pretty fast there in the early going," Cobb said. "Once Delmon hit that home run, I tried to fill up the strike zone. My stuff wasn't the best, but I made my defense work. They were awesome."
were second at 3.25. • Home, SweetHome:The Braves are baseball's best team home, going 5625 at Turner Field. The Braves haven't
lost more than two games in arow ona homestandsince July 3-4,and the only time they have lost as many as three in a row in Atlanta was May1-3. Of course, playing the first two games at the Ted may not matter as much against the Dodgers, who had the NL's best road
record (45-36). • Postseason Floppers: Atlanta's reputation as a poor playoff team is well-
earned, going back to arecord streak of 14 straight division titles (1991-2005) that resulted in only one World Series
championship .TheBraveshaven'twona postseason series since 2001, dropping the past seven in a row. Six times in that stretch, they lost the deciding game at
Turner Field. Thelast thing the Braves want is a decisive Game 5 at home.
MLB SCOREBOARD postseason Glance
x-Wednesday Oct. 9: l.osAngelesat Atlanta
All TimesPDT
Summary Wednesday'sGame
WILD CARD
Tuesday, oct.1: Nu piNsburgh6, cincinnati 2
wednesday, oct. 2:AuTampaBay4, cleveland0
Rays 4, Indians 0
IBest-OF5;x-if necessary) American League Boston vs.TampaBay Friday,Oct.4: Tampa Bay(Moore17-4) at Boston(Lester15-8), 12:07p.m.(TBS) Saturday,Oct. 5: Tampa Bay(Price10-8) atBoston (Lackey10-13), 2:37 p.m. (TBSI Monday,Oct.7: Boston(Buchholz12-1) atTampaBay x-Tue sday,Oct.8:BostonatTampaBay x-Thursday,Oct.10. TampaBayat Boston Oakland vs. Detroit Friday,Oct.4: Detroit (scherzer21-3) at oakland(colon 18-6), 6:37 p.m. (TBSI Saturday,Oct.5: Detroit (Verlander13-12)at Oakand (Gray5-3), 6:07 p.m. (TBS) Monday,Oct.7.Oakland(Parker12-8) at Detroit(Sanchez148) x-Tuesday, oct. a oakland(straily10-8) at Detroit (Fister14-9) x-Thursday,Oct.10: Detroit atOakland National League St. Louisvs. Pittsburgh Today,Oct.3: PittsburghatSt. Louis(Wainwright19-9), 2:07p.m. (TBS) Friday,Oct.4. Pittsburghat St. Louis (Lynn15-10), 10:07a.m. (MLB) Sunday,Oct.6: St.Louis atPittsburgh x-Monday,Oct.7: St.Louis atP> ttsburgh x-wednesday Oct. 9: pittsburghatst. Louis Atlanta vs. LosAngeles Today,oct. 3: LosAngeles(Kershaw16-9) at Atlanta(Medlen1512), 5:37p.m.ITBs) Friday,Oct.4: LosAngeles (Greinke15-4) at Atanta(Minor13-9 or Teheran 14-8), 3:07p.m.(TBsl Sunday,Oct. 6: Atlanta(Minor 13-9orTeheran14-8) at LosAngeles(Ryu14-8) x-Monday,Oct.7. Atlantaat LosAngeles
TampaBay Cleveland ab r hbi ab r h bi DeJesslt 4 0 0 0 Boumcf 4 0 0 0
DIVISIONSERIES
Bulletin staff report As part of the 90th anniversary ce l e bration of the Kosice Peace Marathon i n K o s i ce, Slovakia, Summit High c ross-country coa c h Carol M cLatchie h as been invited to attend as a past winner. In 1990, McLatchie became only the second American runner to win the Kosice Peace Marathon, taking first in 2 hours, 46 minutes. The victory came 27 years after American Buddy Edelen won the men's marathon and just a few years after McLatchie f inished ninth i n t h e racein 1987. The 61-y e a r-old McLatchie,who guided the Storm boys and girls teams to Class 5A state championships last season in her first year at the helm, remains the only American woman to have won the event, w hich dates back t o 1980 for women and to 1924 for men. The weekend of festivities for the 90th anniversary c elebration, w hich includes a r u n of 1,000meters or more for past winners, kicks off on Friday and wraps
up on Sunday evening. Former Cougar named
BOSTON — Boston Red Sox manager John Farrell waited until
Garcia (4-7, 4.37 with Orioles and
• Cy Young favorite: Kershaw was the only Dodger on the All-Star team. He won the Cy Young in 2011 and is a favorite again. He led the majors in ERA for the third straight year, and his1.83 mark was the lowest since Boston's Pedro Martinez had a 1.74 in 2000. • Going low: The Braves led the majors with a 3.18 team ERA, and the Dodgers
C3
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on Sunday, leading Trinity University (Texas) to a sweep of the singles and doubles crowns for the fourth straight year. As the No. 5 seed, Deuel defeated second-seeded Greg Haugen and eighth-seeded Charlie Curtis, both teammates of Deuel's, to pick up the singles title. The sophomore, who transferred from the University of Portland, earned a trip to the USTA/ITA National S m al l C o l lege Championships, which will be held Oct. 10-13 in Fort Myers, Fla. Redmond hurler lands
scholarship
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4 4 1-3 0 12-3 1 Masterson 2 1 1-3 1 Alien 2-3 1 J.smith Salazarpitchedto 1baterin the5th. Shawpitchedto 1baterin the7th.
HBP by Masterson(DeJesus). T—3'40. A—43,579(42,241).
singles championship
Two-time Intermountain Conference pitcher of theyear Ashley Pesek was named one of four
35 0 9
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Deuel moves on to tennis nationals Paxton Deuel, a former t w o -time C l a ss 5A boys tennis state champion at S u m mit High, cruised to an Int ercollegiate Ten n i s Association r e g i onal
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to receive the Bob Rapp Memorial Scholarship, awarded t o s t u d entathletes who played on teams associated with the Amateur Softball Association of America. The former Redmond
High ace, who gradua ted last spring a n d is currently attending Division-II N o r t hwest Nazarene University in Idaho, received a $500 scholarship.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
Pac-12
Prep footballthisweekend,at aglance Here is a quick look at the games involving area teams on Friday and Saturday, with records in parentheses:
Bend (0-0 IMC, 0-5 overall) at Summit(1-0 IMC, 3-2 overall),
Sisters (0-1 Sky-Em,0-5 overall) at Junction City (1-0 Sky-Em,
Friday, 7 p.m.:Despite a fifth straight loss to open the season, a 35-33 decision against visiting Ridgeview, the Lava Bears head
4-0 overall), Friday, 7 p.m.:Tristan Lewis hooked up with Isaac Mackenzie for a 44-yard touchdown last Friday, but the Outlaws
into lntermountain Conference play with a quarterback who is
were held to a season low in points in a 28-6 Sky-Em Leagueloss
hitting his stride. Creighton Simmonds comes off a 325-yard performance on 23-of-32 passing, including his first three
at Sweet Home. On Friday, Sisters visits Sky-Em foe Junction City, which remained undefeated with a 34-22 victory at La Pine
touchdowns of the season. Opposite him is Bransen Reynolds
last week.
for the Storm, who opened up IMC action with a 48-20 home win over Redmond last week. Reynolds completed 12 of 13
Le Pine (0-1 Sky-Em,0-4 overall) at Cottage Grove(1-0 SkyEm, 3-2 overall), Friday, 7 p.m.:The Hawks snapped a two-
passes for 215 yards against the Panthers, including six passing touchdowns.
game scoreless streak in a 34-22 loss to visiting Junction City last week. Matt Heal, who rushed for two touchdowns against
Crook County(2-3) at Redmond(1-4), Friday, 7 p.m.: After
the Tigers, leads La Pineinto Cottage Grovefor a Sky-Em League
three straight losses to open the season, during which they were outscored 99-48, the Cowboys have turned it on, reeling
matchup on Friday. The Lions picked up their third straight win in a 55-16 road rout of Elmira last week and feature quarterback
off back-to-back wins. TheCowboys' athleticism poses athreat
Scotty Hitner, who has thrown for18 touchdowns andaverages nearly 265 yards passing per game.
to the Panthers, according to Redmond coach Nathan Stanley.
Crook County's dynamic play has led to anaverage of 50 points per game the past two weeks, including a 49-0 win against Madison of Portland last Friday. Cowboys coach Ryan Cochran
Regis (2-0 TRC, 4-1 overall) at Culver (0-1 TRC, 1-2 overall), Friday, 7 p.m.:With118 yards of total offense in last week's 28-
has his team focused onstopping the Panthers' run game, which has accounted for13 of Redmond's15 touchdowns this
River Conference battle against the visiting Rams. McClure, one
14 win over Vernonia, Clay McClure leads the Bulldogs into a Triof three Culver players to accumulate more than 50yards rushing last Friday, ran for 71 yards and atouchdown against Vernonia
season. But Redmond, which has dropped three straight and fell 48-20 at Summit last week, has a threat in quarterback Bunker
while completing three of five passes for 47 yards. The Bulldogs will have to deal with Regis, which has won two straight,
Parrish, who is just two games removed from a four-touchdown performance through the air.
including last week's 41-6 TRC victory over Waldport.
Pendleton (5-0) at Mountain View (3-2), Friday, 7 p.m.:After
Camas Valley (3-0 S02, 5-0 overall) et Gilchrist (2-2 S02), Friday, 4 p.m.:The Grizzlies have dropped two straight, scoring
snapping a two-game skid with a 26-13 home victory against
Wilsonville last week, KeenanSpringer and the Cougars stay in Bend to host former Intermountain Conference foe Pendleton. Last Friday, Springer posted his second straight100-yard
a total of just 24 points in those matchups after piling up 124 points in their first two games. On Friday, Gilchrist hosts the
rushing performance andthird of the season, surging for162 yards and three touchdowns to bring his seasonaverageto
two-time defending Class1A state champion Hornets in a Special
just less than100 yards per game. Mountain View's defense, which recorded four sacks against Wilsonville, will have to deal
points per gamethis season and rides back-to-back shutouts.
District 2 contest. Camas Valley, which has not lost a game since the 20101A state final, has outscored opponents by nearly 40
with Buckaroo QBChad McCoy. Thesenior signal caller has completed nearly 70 percent of his passes en route to nearly 250
yards per gamefor the undefeated Bucks. Ridgeview (4-1) at TheDalles Wahtonka (3-2), Friday, 7 p.m.: Ravenscoach Andy Codding, who guided the Class5A Eagle Indians from 2008 to 2010, returns to The Dalles with a 4A
Molalla (0-1 TVC,2-3 overall) at Madras (0-1 TVC,2-3 overall) in Culver, Saturday, 1 p.m.:After committing a season-high four turnovers in a 34-12 Tri-Valley Conference loss to visiting
North Marion last week, the White Buffaloes take onMolalla for their second straight"home" game. Devon Wolfe, who filled in at quarterback for the injured Chad Lindgren last Friday and finished
program on the rise. Ridgeview rides a three-gamewinning streak — including last Friday's 35-33 nail-biter at Bend High
— during whichtheRavenshaveaveraged morethan400yards rushing per game. Led byBoomer Fleming's172 yards per
with a touchdown passing and arushing score, guides Madras into a conference matchup against the Indians. Molalla dropped a27-24 home contestagainstEstacada lastweek,a second
straight loss for the Indians.
contest and total of nine touchdowns, as well as Tanner Stevens'
89.4 yards rushing per game, Ridgeview takes onTheDalles Wahtonka, which saw its own three-game winning streak get snapped by visiting Hermiston last week in a 51-0 decision.
Freshman Continued from C1 In leading his team to two straight wins, Irwin has completed 13 of 22 passes for 289 yards and three touchdowns. He has also rushed for five scores, as Crook County has routed its past two opponents by a combined score of 100-13. Irwin's performance, even his stature, still has Crook County coach Ryan Cochran doing a double take. "Looking at him, he doesn't look like a freshman," Cochran says. "I thought I heard wrong. I didn't think he was a freshman. It was like, 'Wow, this kid can definitely play! '" On Friday night at Redmond High, the youngest quarterback in Stanley's nine years as part of the Panther football program will line up under center for the home team. Parrish is young, b ut man, as Stanley puts it, i s h e
physical.
Through five games, the Panthers (1-4) have totaled 15 touchdowns. Of those, Parrish has had a hand in eight
— four passing, four rushing.
"One of the issues I think you worry about with younger kids is their resiliency, that if they get hit by bigger, faster, stronger athletes — which is a reality for all quarterbacks at all levels — will he be able to withstand that?" Stanley says. "He (Parrish) is a physical kid. He's a wrestler, so you know he's a hard worker and has the ability to take and give punishment." The likenesses between Parrish and Irwin are numerous, from their size to their statistics. On top of that, both have displayed characteristics rarely found in high school freshmen. For Parrish, it is his calming personality on the field, Stanley says. Parrish is consistent and steady, rarely, if ever, letting his emotions get the better of him. And that, Stanley says, sets a tone for the entire team and is crucial for a
Playoffs
clever with trades. "I think t hat th e playing Continued from C1 field is not level, never will Sure, some of the big spend- be. But we as the Pittsburgh ers found their way into Octo- Pirates have committed ourber. The Los Angeles Dodg- selves to never using that as ers raised their spending to an excuse," controlling owner $236.8 million during the sea- Bob Nutting said just before son and are currently about the team's first postseason ap$100,000 behind the Yankees. pearance since 1992. "Is it eas(Final figures may change ier to build a great club with depending on award bonuses $200 million than with $75and revisions). $80 million? Absolutely. But I Despite a No . I p a y r oll, believe, have always believed the Yankees finished tied for and will continue to believe, third in the AL East following that we can be competitive at an injury-filled season. that level. We need to make Boston is t h ird a t $ 174.1 different decisions. We need million, Detroit fifth at $153.4 to make smart decisions." m illion, St . L o ui s 1 1th a t Parity has increased mark$119.3 million and Cincinnati edly. No team has won consec13th at $113.3 million. utive World Series since the But half the playoff teams New York Yankees took three are from the bottom 50 per- in a row from 1998-2000. c ent in spending, with t h e Half of the 30 teams have A's, Rays, Pirates and Indi- made the expanded playoffs ans joined by Atlanta (16th at in the past two years. Twenty$95.3 million). one have reached postseason Increased revenue sharing play in the last five, and evhas helped. But a team must ery club except Kansas City make good draft picks and be and Toronto has appeared in prudent with contracts and the playoffs over the past 13
Patriot Continued from C1 The 54-hole, t w o-person best ball tees off Friday at Bend Golf and Country Club, continues at Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend on Saturday and concludes Sunday at Aspen Lakes. Despite the departure of McKinley, th e t o u r nament has grown from 48 participants last year to an expected 62 this year. And Malone says the 20D t o urnament could raise more than $10,000 for the Folds of Honor. "Really, the (annual) donation has ramped up maybe
a little quicker than we expected it would," Malone says. "We're getting outside donations from people who aren't
playing, so it's not just a golfrelated donation."
The money goes to good use. The Folds of Honor Foundation was created in 2007 by Dan Rooney, a PGA pro in Oklahoma and an F-16 pilot in the Oklahoma Air N ational
Guard who has logged three tours of duty in Iraq. With the help of the PGA of America, the charity has become inseparably linked to golf. That has helped the charity award 3,800 educational s cholar-
quarterback. At Crook County, it is Irwin's work ethic that belies his age. He devoutly studies the game, Cochran says, and constantly pushes his team — sometimes literally, as I r w i n h a s b e en known to help his linemen down the field during drives. High school quarterbacks typically get a year or two — three years at best — to start for the varsity. But the impact that these two freshmen have made so far this season is impossible not to recognizeand reward, especially considering the vast difference between the varsity game and the eighth-grade football for which Irwin and Parrish were suiting up last year. A freshman starting quarterback is not totally uncommon. But when two of them face off in the same varsity game — as Parrishand Irwin are expected to do Friday night — that is a rare thing. — Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucas@bendbulletin.com.
Continued from C1 Washington c o ac h S t e ve Sarkisian has seen success going to the no-huddle this season. The Huskies (4-0, 1-0) are off to their best start since 2001. Washington has not started 5-0 since 1992. Stanford coach David Shaw has taken note. "It's all about being efficient," Shaw said. "There are teams that are doing the hurry-up that are nothaving the same success that Washington is. Washington's having great success, it fits their quarterback, it fits their personnel."
— Stanford coach David Shaw
Former Oregon coach Chip
P hiladelphia Eagles, but t h e Ducks have not changed much under former offensivecoordinator Mark Helfrich. Twenty-six of O r egon's 31 tough, physical play — because offensive touchdown d r i v es it works for them. this season have taken less "I only laugh because it's not than two minutes. Oregon has like this (the hurry-up) was just scored 50 or more points in invented," he said. "Whereas I four straight games for the first remember Mouse Davis' teams, time in history, yet the team's the K-gun offense in Buffalo, time of possession ranks 122nd and watching Warren Moon among the FBS-level schools down in Houston running fast- (23:53). "You might be better off if paced, no-huddle offenses. So this is not a completely new they have the ball a long time," thing. It's just a lot more teams MacIntyre offered. "With lonare doing it." ger drives, there's more chances Utah ha s g on e u p -tempo forturnovers,there's more posunder new co-offensive coor- sibilities of making them have dinator Dennis Erickson. Last to do more third downs. So, if season, the Utes ranked 73rd you come out of it and they got nationally with an average of it 30 minutes you might have 25.9 points and 105th with an played better. I'm being seriaverage of 324.42 yards in total ous because then they'd have to offense per game. put drives together and there'd This year, the Utes (3-1, 0- be more times they might turn I) are averaging 42 points per the ball over. They'll have more game and 504.8 yards in total third downs. That's more longoffense per contest. down situations where you can "I think it's going well so far," kind of go after them." Utah coach Kyle Whittingham Oregon State's Mike Riley, said. "We obviously made the the Pac-12's longest-tenured move because we felt it would coach, is staying old school and help us. We didn't snap the ball sticking with the offense he has a whole lot of times last year, we always run. The Beavers (4-1, were very deliberate, we hud- 2-0) stumbled in their opener dled up virtually every snap. against l ower-division E astWhen Dennis came on board, ern Washington but have since the primary reasons for the hire reeled off four straight wins. was to jump-start the offense. Beaver quarterback S e an He's done a very nice job of that, Mannion is thriving in Riley's and part of the jump-start was system. He was the Pac-12 playchanging the tempo. er of the week for the second "We don't go so fast that we time this season after he passed s acrifice execution. I th i n k for 414 yards and a school-rethat's important. Th e f a ster cord six touchdowns in a 44you go andcontinue to execute, 17 victory last weekend over obviously the better. But we're Colorado. The junior leads the really not ready to go much fast- nation with an average of 403.6 er than we're going right now." yards passing per game and is Along with Dykes introduc- on pace to throw 50 touchdown ing the Bear Raid, new Colo- passes. " We have examined it f o r rado coachMike MacIntyre has rebuilt the Buffaloes' complicat- ourselves and messed around ed formerpro-setattack. Speed with it a little bit," Riley said of is emphasized in practice for the going to the no-huddle scheme. Buffaloes. "Because of what we do and Colorado, which at 2-1 has al- how we play, we just couldn't ready improved on last season, make it fit comfortably with our hosts theleague's speed mas- system of calling plays and how ters, the No. 2 Oregon Ducks (4- we do it. So, we're still doing it 0, 1-0), on Saturday. the old-fashioned way." quicker offense when Andrew Luck wa s t h e q u a rterback, Shaw said, but they are really sticking with their own style, which places an emphasis on
ager who made "Moneyball" famous. Cleveland manager Terry Francona has seen the dollar divide from both sides. He led the large-market Red Sox to World Series titles in 2004 at $143.4 million), defending and 2007, and then took over champion San Francisco (sev- the more-limited Indians last enth at $141.3 million), Texas fall. "Once the game starts, dol(eighth at $134.5 million) and Toronto (ninth at $125.9 lar signs go out the window," million). he said. "It's more helpful in O akland, Pittsburgh an d the winter when you're tryTampa Bay have found suc- ing to sign guys, but I've imcess with youth. Only Hous- mensely enjoyed this team ton ($29.3 million) and Miami and that has nothing to do $42.3 million had lower pay- with money. It's the characrolls than the Rays, and they ters and the character on this jettisoned veterans in favor of team, and whether we win or young players. While they en- lose won't have anything to dured terrible seasons — the do with money." Astros were 51-111 and the Revenue sharing came in Marlins 62-100 — they hope a with the labor agreement in young core will transform into 1997, two years after the end a contender in a few years. of a strike that wiped out the "If you place that type of World Series for the first time faith in them, a lot of times in n in e d e cades. Revenue they'll come through for you," sharing was boosted again said Athletics manager Bob in the 2002 labor deal, when Melvin, wh o w o rk s u n der a tougher luxury t a x w a s Billy Beane, the general man- agreed to. That tax has got-
ships (through January 2013)
Washington's having great success, it fits their quarterback, it fits their personnel."
The Cardinal (4-0, 2-0) ran a Kelly has moved on to the NFL's
seasons. M any accustomed to t h e October spotlight already are home. Missing out along with the Yankees were Philadelphia (fourth at $166.2 million), the Los Angeles Angels (sixth
t o recipients f ro m a l l 5 0 states, according to The Folds of Honor. And Patriot Challenge organizers are hoping for more. "It is something that hope-
"It's all about being efficient. There are teams that are doing the hurry-up that are not having the same success that Washington is.
ten stiffer, and in 2011 players agreed torestraints on bonuses for amateur draft picks and international signings. "I took a lo t o f c r i ticism back in t h ose days," Selig said. "Is it worth it now? You bet it is. Because I knew we were doing the right things." Rays manager Joe Maddon thinks there's another factor at play: drug testing, which began in 2003. "I thought that the elimination of PEDs in the game p ermits teams w it h l o w er payrolls to compete and win." he said.
Salary may be the key figure from November to February, but once players are on the field, pitching and execution usually matter most. "It could be a guy making minimum versus a guy mak-
ing $30 million, that guy makmg mm>mum can still beat him," Oakland catcherDerek Norris said.
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-OOOG www.evergreeninhome.com
P
We're Cutting Prices.
!
a
The Patriot Challenge teed off in 2011 with a h a ndful
of players playing at Aspen
Lakes. Last year, McKinley helped persuade the two Bend courses to participate and the field expanded to 48. fully will grow as people reOrganizers believe more alize what we are doing with growth is in the tournament's it and the cause," says Matt future. " There are a l o t o f f a l l Phillips, head p r ofessional at Widgi Creek. "It's a great events, especially i n g o l f ," event to have a great time, says Erik Nielsen, the longbuild some camaraderie and time head pro at Bend Golf still provide a source of fund- and Country Club. "But the ing to a group of people who weather is usually good and have really done a lot for our this is a great fall event. Hopefully it will continue to grow." country." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, What are the tournament's chances of more growth'? zhall@bendbulletin.com.
R R D
Q D L F ' play smart I
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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 NASDAO ~ 3,81 5.02
15,133.14
Toda+
Thursday, October 3, 2013
investments paying off? Wine, beer and liquor company Constellation Brands reports fiscal first-quarter earnings today. Investors will be listening for an update onhow the company's bid to meet increasing demand for wine is proceeding. Constellation announced in July that it would invest more than $20 million in several of its California wineries and vineyards this year. Investors also will want to see how Constellation's acquisition of Grupo Modelo's U.S. beer business factored in sales.
S&P 500 1,693.87
1 760
S&P 500
1,700
Close: 1,693.87
1,640 '
ppp+
Change: -1.13 (-0.1%)
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Close: 15,133.14 Chan g e: -58.56 (-0.4%)
$
15,040 .
+34 60
10 DA Y S
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15,600
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StocksRecap
DOW DOW Trans. DOW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
NYSE NASD
M
HIGH LOW CLOSE 15182.65 15044.71 15133.14 6662.92 6598.13 6643.89 485.70 480.70 484.80 9689.29 9614.53 9689.29 3819.28 3788.45 3815.02 1693.87 1680.34 1693.87 1260.06 1249.33 1258.39 18146.59 17993.51 18127.60 1087.39 1077.90 1082.55
CHG. -58.56 -28.35 +0.64 -3.99 -2.96 -1.13 -3.98 -18.99 -4.88
J
A
%CHG. WK MO OTR
-0.39% -0.42% +0.13% -0.04% -0.08% -0.07% -0.32% -0.10% -0.45%
L L
L
L L
YTD
+15.48% +25.20% +7.00% +14.75% +26.35% +18.77% $-23.32% +20.89% +27.46%
NorthwestStocks
4 CLQS ou Bo!!
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Cementing growth Bank of America Wall Street expects that Texas Barrett Business Industries' latest quarterly report card Boeing Co will show improved results from a CascadeBancorp year ago. Columbia Bukg The cement and building materials Columbia Sporlswear CostcoWholesale company has benefited this year Craft Brew Alliance from increased demand for cement FLIR Systems as construction ramps up on more buildings and other structures. That's Hewlett Packard Home FederalBucpID helped boost growth in shipments and prices for Texas Industries. The Intel Corp Keycorp company is due to report fiscal Kroger Co first-quarter results today. Lattice Semi LA Pacific TXI $67.02 MDU Resources $80 Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp $40.84 Nike Iuc 8 55 NordstromIuc '12 , ''13 Nwst NatGas OfficeMax Iuc S-0.09 S0.02 PaccarIuc Operating Planar Systms Plum Creek 1Q '12 1 Q '13 Prec Castparts Price-to-earnings ratio: 77 Safeway Iuc based on past 12 month results Schuitzer Steel Sherwin Wms Dividend: none Staucorp Fucl Source: FactSet StarbucksCp Triquiut Semi UmpquaHoldings Spotlight on Comtech US Baucorp WashingtonFedl Softer demand for Comtech Wells Fargo &Co Telecommunication's wireless Weyerhaeuser communication products has cut
into the company's earnings this year. The company, which makes products that enhance wireless communications, has reported lower earnings and revenue for the nine months ended April 30. Investors find out today whether Comtech's sales turned around in the May-July quarter.
CMTL
$24.35
'12,"13
25
$27.7,4 20 • • Sales (miliions) 3Q 1 3
Price-to-earnings ratio:
I I
ALK 34.57 — 0 68.00 AVA 22 78 ~ 29 26 BAC 8. 8 5 ~ 15.03 BBSI 26 19 — 0 7349 BA 69 . 20 ~ 1 20.38 CACB 4.65 ts— 7 1. 8 COLB 16.18 — 0 25.59 COLM 47.72 ~ 66.69 4y- 120.20 COST 93.51 BREW 5 62 — 0 1400 FLIR 18 58 ~ 33 82 HPQ 11.35 ~ 27.78 HOME 10.26 ~ 14.81 INTC 19.23 ~ 25.98 4yKEY 78 . 1 12.63 KR 2 3 09 — 0 41 42 LSCC 3.46 ~ 5.71 L PX 12.50 ~ 22.55 MDU 19.59 ~ 30.21 MENT 13,21 — 0 23,77 4y- 36.43 MSFT 26.26 NKE 4 4.83 ~ 75.25 JWN 50.94 ~ 63.34 NWN 39.96 tt — 50.8 0 OMX 6. 2 2 — o 13.22 PCAR 39.52 ~ 60.0 0 P LNR 1.12 ~ 2.36 PCL 40 .60 ts— 54. 6 2 4y —270.00 PCP 160.78 SWY 15,00 — 0 32,72 SCHN 23.07 32.99 SHW 138.36 194.56 SFG 31.15 56.40 SBUX 44.27 77.85 TQNT 4.30 8.49 UMPQ 11.17 17.48 USB 30.96 38.23 WAFD 15.64 22.78 WFC 31.25 44.79 WY 2 4.75 33.24
25
CRUDEOIL $104.10
+
-.35 -0.5 L 25 -0.9 L
L L w L
d!v!Ltentt was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pa!d th!s year a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y!eld not shown. 7 - Declared ur paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approxuoate cash value on ex-Ltistrit!ution date.Pe Footnotes:Lt- Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months
Kraft raises dividend::;";.
Investors in Kraft Foods Group are set to receive larger dividend payouts. The food and beverage company is boosting its quarterly dividend by 5 percent Il to 52.5 cents per share from 50 i(lt AFT cents. Kraft Foods, which produces brands including Jell-O, Oscar Mayer and MaxwellHouse, said late Tuesday that the dividend will be paid on Oct. 25 to
based on past 12 month results
Total return YTD: 19%
Dividend:$1.10 Div. yield: 4.5%
AP
shareholders of record on Oct. 11. Kraft Foods split from Mondelez International last ~r " , yea r . The split was intended to help the two companies each focus on a more targeted lineup of brands. Kraft Foods carries the North American grocery brands, while Mondelez handles the global snack brands such as Oreo, Chips Ahoy and Cadbury chocolates.
52-WEEK RANGE
$4 3 ~ ~
1-Y R :20%
~
~
59
Annual dividend: $2.00 Div. yield: 3.6%
Dividend payout ratio: 48.5%
Pric e -earnings ratio (trailing 12 months):17
Market value: $31.6 billion Source: Factset
Total returns through Oct. 2
Source: FactSet
FundFocus
SelectedMutualFunds
EURO 1.3583
2' i)6
StoryStocks Stocks fell Wednesday amid worries about weaker-than-expected hiring. The federal government's partial shutdown extended into a second day, and if it continues, the Department of Labor won't release its regular jobs report scheduled for Friday. The report is one of the most anticipated monthly gauges of the economy's strength. Without it, investors may pay more attention to the monthly report produced by payroll processor ADP. It is less comprehensive, measuring monthly hiring only by private employers. It said on Wednesday that private payrolls rose by 166,000 in September, weaker than the 180,000 hiring pace that economists expected. GPN Close:$56.49%5.79 or 11.4% The electronic transactions processor named a new CEO and boosted its outlook for the year after a strong first quarter. $60
IMAX
30
50
25
J
A 52-week range
$41.01 ~
S $57.42
IMAX
Close:$28.40 V-1.30 or -4.4% The Benchmark Company initiated coverage but is leery about the theater company and sees a disappointing second half. $35
55
J
A 52-week range
RMTI Close:$11.99 %0.55 or 4.8% The medical products company will present clinical trial data for its experimental anemia drug Triferic at a conference in November. $15 10
S
$20.07 ~
$30.34
Vol.:8.2m (10.1x avg.) PE: 20.5 Vol.:1.4m (2.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.27 b Yiel d : 0. 1 % Mkt. Cap:$1.92 b
L + 50.6 +8 6 . 1 420 15 0 .80 L +10.0 +8.5 338 18 1 .22 +.16 $.1.2 L +2 1 . 1 $ . 55.686246 25 0 . 04 +.29 +0.4 L + 83. 7 +1 45.4 17 34 0 . 52 +.09 +0.1 w +56.4 +70.9 2792 22 1 . 94 09 -1.5 V W V -8.1 +7 .9 5 5 04 -0.2 L L L +38.0 +34 . 7 113 20 0 . 40 J A 8 77 -1.3 V L V +12. 4 $- 1 4.4 31 19 0 . 88 52-week range -.18 -0.2 w L w +16. 3 $. 2 2.51585 25 1 . 24 $3.15~ $13.00 +.20 +1.5 w L L +109 .9 + 6 9 .6 29 cc Vol.:7.4m (2.8x avg.) P E: .. . +.04 +0.1 w L +4 2 . 1 $ . 59.4 523 20 0 .36 Mkt. Cap:$478.6 m Yield: ... +.09 +0.4 V L +5 0 . 2 + 2 7.016085 dd 0.58 -.12 -1.0 W L W -0.4 +14.0 69 cc 0. 2 4a Electronic Arts EA +. 0 6 +0.2 V L W +11. 0 +4. 3 2 2596 12 0 . 9 0 Close:$25.62 V-0.80 or -3.0% -.11 -1.0 L w L +35. 6 +3 4 .8 10316 13 0 . 2 2 Afinancial analyst raised concerns -.07 -0 2 w L L +56 0 +73 , 5 2 9 41 1 4 0 , 66f about first week sales for the popular -.05 - 1.1 w w ~ + 11.8 $.21.2 9 4 7 d d FIFA soccer video game, which fell -.09 -0.5 L L L -6.5 +43.2 2318 11 markedly in the U.K. -.45 -1.6 L L w + 31. 5 +3 2 .8 5 9 2 c c 0. 6 9 $28 ~ -.50 - 2,1 V L W + 35, 8 +5 5 ,3 6 6 7 2 4 0, 1 8 26 +. 3 4 +1 .0 L L L +27.0 +17 .0 46123 13 1 .12f 24 -.53 -0.7 V L V + 39. 3 +5 3 .3 4 3 04 2 5 0. 8 4 +.8 5 +1 .5 L L L +6.2 +2.5 28 2 7 1 5 1. 2 0 J A S -.17 -0.4 W L W -5.3 -11.0 181 2 0 1. 8 2 52-week range -.11 -0.8 L L L +49.2 +85 .4 1 5 43 2 0 . 0 8 a $11.80~ $28.13 - .02 . . . V L L + 23.2 +4 1 .2 1 046 19 0 .80a Vol.:6.1m (1.6x avg.) P E: 67 .4 -.02 -1.1 w w w +27. 3 +3 6 .3 5 dd Mkt. Cap:$7.86 b Yield: ... -.29 -0.6 L L L + 6.9 +15. 1 68 4 3 2 1.7 6 230.15 -2.06 -0.9 L L L +21.5 +40 .8 6 5 1 2 2 0. 1 2 Omeros OMER 32 .11 + . 1 4 +0,4 W L L +77, 5 + 1 03,2 3476 15 0 , 8 0 Close:$11.19 %1.51 or 15.6% 27 .62 +.02 +0.1 L L L - 8.9 + 0 . 7 2 2 0 9 9 0 . 7 5 The company said U.S. and Europe184.69 +.17 +0.1 L L L +20.1 +25 .8 4 5 7 2 6 2. 0 0 an regulators will review its ophthalmology drug OMS302, and Wall 55 .07 -.43 -0.8 w L L +50.2 +7 9 .4 2 3 8 1 3 0. 9 3f Street grew more optimistic. 77 .19 + .03 . . . V L L +43.9 +55 .5 2 9 93 3 7 0. 8 4 $15 8 .3 4 +.18 +2.2 L L L +72.7 + 62 . 6 2 2 81 d d 16 .37 -.04 -0.2 L L L + 38.8 +33 .5 1 1 68 1 7 0 .60a 10 36 .39 32 -0.9 w L w +13. 9 +1 0 .2 6 691 12 0 . 9 2 20 .73 23 -1.1 L L L + 22.9 +31 .3 3 0 8 1 5 0. 4 0f 41 .26 23 -0.6 w w w +20. 7 $ -22.7 17355 11 1 . 20 J A S 52-week range 29 .07 06 -0.2 L L L + 4.5 +14. 5 2 9 79 2 7 0 . 88f $3.55~ $11.85 Dividend Footnotes: 3 Extra - dividends were paid, t!ut are not included. L7-Annual rate plus stock 0 - Liquidating dividend. 8 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current Vol.:4.0m (4.7x avg.) PE: .. annual rate, wh!ch wasmcreaseu bymost recent div!dend announcement. i - Sum ut dividends pad after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum of d!vidends L!ad th!s year. Most recent Mkt. Cap:$334 m Yield:..
Kraft Foods GrouP(KRFT) Wednesday's close:$53.06
4Q
64.90 26.52 14.06 69.99 117.84 5.75 24.75 60.00 114.82 13.60 31.70 21.40 1 2. 3 8 22. 8 9 11 .42 40 .58 4.46 1 8. 0 7 2 7.9 2 23 .12 33 .92 7 1. 8 9 56.8 0 4 1. 8 6 12 .86 5 5. 7 2 1.82 47 . 4 5
73
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52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
NAME
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$21.85
Global Payments
14400 ' "A
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Dow jones industrials
I 15 380.
1 0 DA Y S
Vol. (In mil.) 3,125 1,734 Pvs. Volume 3,130 1,773 Advanced 1 339 9 9 4 Declined 1698 1521 New Highs 1 15 169 New Lows 32 24
$30
10 YR T NOTE 2.62%
P E: .. . Yield:...
Pandora P Close:$26.89 A1.36 or 5.3% The online music service reported a 25 percent increase in listeners over last year, and an increase in listener hours. $30 25 20 15-
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8
$7.08 ~
$27.50
Vol.:20.0m (2.0x avg.)
P E: . . .
Mkt. Cap: $4.74 b
Yield: ...
Tesla
TSLA Close:$1 80.95 V-12.05 or -6.2% The electric car maker was downgraded by R.W. Baird, which believes the meteoric rise of company
shares can't continue. $200 150
100
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8
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$25.88 ~
$134 .50
Vol.:20.7m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$21.98 b
P E: . . . Yield: ...
Zogenix
ZGNX Close:$2.24 %0.29 or 14.9% The pharmaceutical company's long-delayed pain drug Zohydro ap-
peared to move a few steps closer to approval. $2.5 2.0 1.5
J
A 52-week range
S
$ 1.11 ~
$3.30
Vol.:5.4m (9.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$229.27 m
P E: .. . Yield :... AP
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.62 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
. 01 .01 . 0 4 .04 .08 .09
2-year T-note . 3 2 .33 5-year T-note 1 .38 1 .43 10-year T-Ltote 2.62 2.65 30-year T-bond 3.70 3.72
BONDS
w
. 09
-0.01 V
W
V
.13 .15
-0.01 W -0.05 V -0.03 W -0.02 L
W V W W
T T L L
.24 .61 1.62 2.82
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclays LoogT-Bdldx 3.49 3.51 -0.02 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.12 5.12 . . . Barclays USAggregate 2.37 2.34 +0.03 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.21 6.23 -0.02 RATE FUNDS MoodysAAACorp Idx 4.59 4.56 $0.03 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.59 1.59 . . . 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3 .32 3.30 +0.02 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
L W L W L W L W L W L W L W
L L L W L L W
2 4. 9 4.17 1 6. 0 6.4 9 3 4. 1 .91 2. 7 8
AP
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK This foreign large-cap blend fund FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 has more than $20 billion in assets, FAMILY Marketsummary American Funds BalA m 22.93 - . 0 2+13.9 +14.9 +12.8+10.2 A A A even so, its short- and long-term Most Active CaplncBuA m 56.61 +.02 + 10.1 +10.8 +9.3 +8.0 6 A C performance ranks at the top of its CpWldGrlA m 42.71 -.03 +17.0 +20.6 +10.5 +9.2 C C D NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG peer group. S&P500ETF BkofAm Facebook BlackBerry MicronT Microsoft iShEMkts
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870197 862455 614890 544877 472131 461232 456899 414207 392934 383976
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—.16 + . 16 -.14 Oakmark Intl I + . 04 + . 06 VALUE $-.34 + . 16 cC o 03 + . 01 LO +.45 DL -.03
LAST 3.40 CorpResSv 4.11 Fonar 7.27 BLottg h 21.75 Sky-mobi 4.50 InvCapHld 6.45 Prothe!ta r! 23.37 NeptutteT g 3.57 HeatBiol n 14.60 Omeros 11.19
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LAST 2.28 34.45 8.81 18.60 2.00
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+ 3 6 .0 + 2 2 .7 «C + 2 0 .8 00 + 2 0 .5 «C + 2 0 .3 Oakmark Do + 1 8.8 Mornirtgstar OwnershipZone™ Oppeuheimer + 1 6.6 + 1 6 .3 O o Fund target represents weighted + 1 5 .9 average of stock holdings + 1 5 .6 • Represents 75% of fu!td's stock holdings
CHG %CHG -.37 -14.0 -5.55 -13.9 -1.41 -13.8 -2.73 -12.8 -.29 -12.7
Commodity prices rose Wednesday, reEurPacGrA m 46.46 +.03 + 12.7 +17.9 +6.8 +8.5 D D 8 FrtlrtvA m 48.7 7 - . 03+ 20.6 +22.7 +15.0 +11.3 8 C 8 covering some GrthAmA m 42.38 -.02 +23.4 +25.4 +15.8+11.7 A C C of their earlier IrtcAmerA m 19.74 -.01 + 12.1 +13.3 +11.5 +9.9 6 A B losses. Crude IttvCOAmA m 36.02 . . . + 20.9 +21.2 +14.2+10.2 C D C oil rose for the NewPerspA m 36.71 -.05 + 17.4 +21.3 +12.4+11.3 C 8 8 first time in four WAMutlttvAm 37.09 -.08+20.6 +20.6 +16.2+10.2 C 8 8 Income 13.49 +.01 - 0.5 + 0.3 + 4.1 +7.8 A 8 A days, settling at IntlStk 4 1.06 -.03 +18.5 +27.5 +9.0 +9.5 A A A its highest price Stock 152.68 -.16 +26.7 +29.7 +18.0 +12.2 A A A since Sept. 20. Contra 94.04 -.13 +22.3 +20.1 +15.8+12.4 C C C Gold also rose.
Growpo 120. 42 - . 06+29.2 +25.7 +19.9+16.5 A A A LowPriStk d 47.23 +.04+ 25.5 +29.2 +18.0+15.8 8 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500 l dxAdvtg60.34 -.03+20.7 +19.8 +16.3+11.2 C 8 8 FrankTemp-Fraukliu Income C m 2. 35 ... +8 . 5 + 10.0 +9.4+11.1 A A A IncomeA m 2. 3 2 ... +8 . 6 + 10.7 +9.9+11.7 A A A FrankTemp-Templetou GIBondAdv 12.98 +.02+0.2 +4.1 +4.8 +9.7 A A A
CATEGORY Foreign Large Blend MORNINGSTAR
PIMCO T Rowe Price
R ATING™ *** * *
ASSETS $23,772 million EXP RATIO 1.06% SpanAm MANAGER Robert Taylor Coeur wt SINCE 2008-12-31 RETURNS3-MO +12.9 Foreign Markets YTD +24.5 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +39.5 Paris -38.44 -.92 4,158.16 3-YR ANNL +14.1 London 6,437.50 -22.51 —.35 5-YR-ANNL +15.4 Frankfurt -59.72 —.69 8,629.42 Hong Kong 22,984.48 + 124.62 + . 5 5 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico -34.61 -.08 Credit Suisse Group 41,300.66 Milan 18,098.44 + 121.38 + . 68 Daimler AG Tokyo -314.23 -2.17 14,170.49 Stockholm 1,260.24 -8.11 -.64 Itttesa Sartpaolo Sydney + 8.60 + . 1 7 BNP Paribas 5,214.90 Zurich 7,964.44 -94.57 -1.17 Lloyds Banking Group PLC StarBulk rs
Dodge 8 Cox
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Losers NAME SinoGlob
GR OWTH
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CHG %CHG +.90 +.76 +1.25 +3.70 +.76 +1.02 +3.33 +.50 +2.00 +1.51
BL EN D
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Gainers NAME AehrTest
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Commodities
Vanguard
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26.05 -.13 $.24.5 +39.5 $.14.1 $.15.4 A A A
RisDivA m 20. 17 - .05+16.8 +16.8 +14.0 +8.7 E D E RisDivB m 18. 26 - .05+ 16.0 +15.7 +13.0 +7.7 E E E RisDivC m 18 . 17 - .04+ 16.2 +16.0 +13.1 +7.9 E D E SmMidVBIA m41.45 -.06 + 27.9 +34.0 +13.5+11.1 A E E SmMidVBIB m34.78 -.04+27.1 +32.8 +12.6+10.2 A E E TotRetA m 10 . 83 +.02 -2.1 -1.3 +3.4 +7.5 C C 8 Eqtylnc 31.37 +.02 +20.2 +21.9 +15.6 +10.2 C 8 6 GrowStk 4 7.47 -.03 +25.6 +24.4 +18.1 +15.0 6 A A HealthSci 58.23 -.05 +41.3 +36.3 +31.5 +21.6 6 A A 500Adml 156.19 -.08 +20.7 +19.8 +16.4+11.2 C B B 5001!tv 156.19 -.08 +20.6 +19.6 + 16.2+11.1 C 8 8 Capgp 45.01 -.22 +33.9 +39.8 + 18.7+14.9 A A A Eqlnc 28.37 -.05 +19.8 +19.2 $ .17.8$.11.2 D A A StratgcEq 27.68 -.05 +29.0 +33.5 + 207+143 A A 8 TgtRe2020 26.38 . . . +10.7 +11.8 + 10.0 +9.0 8 A A Tgtet2025 15.26 . . . +12.3 +13.5 + 10.8 +9.3 8 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.66 +.01 -1.9 -1.9 + 2.8 +5.2 D D D Totlntl 16.20 -.01 +10.3 +16.7 + 5.7 +7.0 D D C TotStlAdm 42.98 -.04 $-22.3 +22.1 + 17.0+12.0 6 A A TotStldx 42.97 -.04 +22.2 +21.9 + 16.8+11.9 8 A A USGro 26.18 -.01 $-23.1 +23.4 + 17.8+12.4 8 A C Welltn 37.54 . . . $-13.0+13.6 $ -11.7 $-10.5 6 A A
PCT 4.88 4.1 3.65 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1spaid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 3.46 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 3.07 redemption fee. Source: Mornngstar.
Foreign Exchange The euro rose to its highest level against the dollar since Feb. 4 after the European Central Bank held steady on interest rates and refrained from offering any new stimulus
measures.
h5N4 QG
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 104.10 102.04 +2.02 +13.4 Ethanol (gal) 1.79 1.88 -0.05 -18.5 Heating Oil (gal) 2.99 2.96 $-1.27 -1.7 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.54 3.61 - 1.86 + 5 . 7 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.63 2.61 +0.69 -6.5 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE
CLOSE PVS. 1320.60 1286.00 21.85 21.12 1389.80 1381.70 3.31 3.27 720.20 717.90
%CH. %YTD +2.69 -21.2 +3.42 -27.6 -9.7 +0.59 $-1.21 -9.1 + 0.32 + 2 . 5
CLOSE
PVS. %CH. %YTD -2.0 1.27 +0.04 1.14 +0.31 -20.4 4.39 4.39 -37.1 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.85 0.85 +0.32 +13.4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 335.70 338.10 -0.71 -10.2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.27 1.28 - 0.35 + 9 . 8 Soybeans (bu) 12.74 12.68 +0.45 -10.2 Wheat(bu) 6.81 +0.70 -11.8 6.86
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
1.27 1.14
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6223 +.0024 +.15% 1 .6140 Canadian Dollar 1.03 3 1 + .0004 +.04% . 9 8 42 USD per Euro 1.3583 +.0053 +.39% 1 . 2917 —.47 —.48% 78.13 Japanese Yen 97.38 Mexican Peso 13. 1 045 —.0608 —.46% 12.8890 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5390 +.0110 +.31% 3.8844 Norwegian Krone 6. 0 172 + .0203 +.34% 5.7071 South African Rand 10.0494 —.0856 —.85% 8.3757 Swedish Krona 6.37 9 8 + . 0119 +.19% 6.6149 Swiss Franc .9028 —.0031 —.34% .9364 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0655 + .0002 +.02% .9 7 50 Chinese Yuan 6.1210 -.0009 -.01% 6.3251 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7546 +.0004 +.01% 7 .7548 Indian Rupee 62.475 -.120 -.19% 52.405 Singapore Dollar 1.2489 -.0032 -.26% 1.2310 South Korean Wott 1073.20 -1.32 -.12% 1113.40 Taiwan Dollar 29.48 + .01 +.03% 29 . 30
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
BRIEFING
Ventue conference finalists picked Five companies have been selected to compete during the Launch Stage of the10th annual Bend Venture
Conference onOct. 18, organizers announced Wednesday. Investors havenarrowed down thefinalists from 37 companiesover the past two months and
made their final decision on the top five Tuesday night, said Ruth Lindley,
marketing managerof EconomicDevelopment
for Central Oregon. The five companies will compete for an investment targeted to reach
$250,000. The businessesselected are:
• Droplr, a Bendcompany offering an online file-sharing service. • The Flybook LLC,of Bend, which has devel-
a rove
i na oost or By Tim Doran The Bulletin
Bend's classic rock station will get a power boost. The Federal Communications Commission approved an upgrade for KTWS-FM — known as Classic Rock 98.3, The Twins — on Friday, nearly five years after station owner Combined Communications of Bend filed its application. The FCC denied arguments m ade byfour current or former residents with homes located near the antenna farm on top of Awbrey Butte where the company has its tower. But agency officials will require Combined Communications to conduct testing after it completes the improvements, accordingto records from the FCC's Media Bureau. The approval allows KTWS to increase its signal from 7,000watts to 50,000, sending the music of Led Zep-
pelin, The Who, Pink Floyd and othersto the far reaches of Central Oregon. "It will make a difference," Chuck Chackel, owner of Combined Communications, said in reference to the
Stationupgrade The Federal Cummunications Commissionapproved an upgrade for KTWS-FM, Bend's classic rock station, The Twins. Nlt. Wasttyyy xoizr
upgrade.
O~
The station will also slightly change its location on the FM dial, from 983 to 98.5. Upgrading KTWS will not require additional antennas or other changes to Combined Communication's 300foot tower on Awbrey Butte, Chackel said. While the first tower went up on Awbrey Butte in 1960, theirpresence became increasingly contentious with the addition of housing and more towers. Opponents protested to the city, state and federal government over much of the last decade. To the FCC, they raised issues about radio-frequency radiation exposure and in-
KTWS-FMg towsr e ew ortAve
Andyzeigert/The Bulletin
terference from the station's signal. The agency relied on tests submitted by Combined Communications that radio-frequency levels will not exceed federal regulations, according to Friday's
decision. But it also required the company to check after the upgrade. Chackel said the company had already planned to conduct the test. Combined Communications must also handle any complaints of interference as requiredby federal regulations, the FCC stated. A timeline for the power upgrade has not been set, Chackel said. The company, which has four FM radio stations, one AM station and a regional magazine, has several other projects. It also owns a license for a television station, which is not yet operating commercially, he said, and KBND-AM, which is celebrating its 75th anniversary, expanded its signal to FM, broadcasting at 100.1. "It's kind of like our 75th birthday present," Chackel said. — Reporter: 541-383-0360, tdoran@bendbulletin.com
oped Web-based reservation and businessmanagement software designed for the outdoor
an n'? irs ime
industry. • MedRock, a Port-
land company that develops andmarkets medical devices for the
physical therapy market. • Nouvola, of Portland, which helps small
to medium-sized companies scale their websites for higher traffic. • Syndical, a Portland
companythat has created an online events
publishing system.
Beanie Baby billionaire pleads Businessman TyWarner, a college dropout who became a billionaire
after creating BeanieBabies collectibles, pleaded guilty Wednesday to tax
evasion andapologized in a choked-up voice for hiding millions of dollars
in a Swiss bankaccount. His lawyer said Warner will pay $53.5 million in civil penalties
for not disclosing the existence of a foreign bank
account. Warner ranks 209th in a recent Forbes list of the richest Americans. His net worth is estimated at $2.6 billion. — Staffand wire reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY
• Basics ofSupply Chain Management(CPIM): Course covers basic concepts in managing the complete flow of materials in a supply chain from suppliers to customers; registration required; $659; Thursdays through Dec. 12, 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Essential Leadership Series:Improve communicati on,enhance collaboration, develop confidence in supervisory abilities and increase workplace productivity; registration required; $725, $95 for individual sessions; meets once permonth through June 5; 8:30 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 54 I-383-7700. • Women's Roundtable Series — It's OKto Be theBoss:Learn to be a better manager or boss; registration required; $25 for members, $35 for nonmembers; noon; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E.Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www. bendchamber.org. • Project Management: What is it?Introduces the project management lifecycle,management techniques for projects and project managementas a profession; registration required; $39; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletirtcomlbizcal
By Stephanie Strom
1971 You deserve a break today
New York Times News Service
Under pressure to provide healthier meals, McDonald's has announced that it will no longer market some of its less nutritional options to children and said it also planned to include offerings of fruits and vegetables in many of its adult menu combinations. It plans to make the changes to its menu in 20 of the company's largest markets, which account formore than 85 percent of its overall sales, including overseas. But it will take threeyears ormore to put them into place in about half the restaurants in those markets, and the remainder may not have the changes until 2020. The offerings, which were announced in conjunction with the Clinton Foundation's campaigns to reduce childhood obesity, are part of McDonald's efforts to compete for health-conscious customers by featuring food choices that are lower in fat, salt or sugar content than its more traditional burger-and-fries options. Although it has added salads, fruits and cut raw vegetables to its menu in recent years, the chain has experiencedflatsales across much of its business in the United States and Europe and forecast this summer that little would alter the company's financial picture anytime soon. The millennial generation, a key demographic that is being wooed by fast-casual restaurants like Panera Bread and Chipotle, in particular has not become a loyal patron of McDonald's. As part of the new menu changes, the company said it would use its arsenal of marketing tools, from menu boards to national television advertising campaigns, to helpcustomers under-
1988 Good time, great taste
O 19e7 McDonald's is your kind
of place
1974
McDonald's sure is good to have around
1966 McDonald's ... The closest thing to home
1975 We do it all for you
1965 McDonald'swhere quality starts fresh everyday
1976
You, you're the one
golden arches 1960 All American menu — a hamburger, fries and a shake
McDonald's I +ugh the years
and you 1981 You deserve a break today
(reintroduction)
1980 Nobody makes your day like McDonald's can
1991 Food, folks and fun 1992 What you want is what you get
1983 McDonald's
1979 Nobody can do it like McDonald's can
1962 Go for goodness at McDonald's 1961
1984 It's a good time for the great taste of McDonald's
1995 Have you had your break today? 1997 My McDonald's
The fast-food giant has had a steady flow of memorable advertising themes. The current "I'm lovin' it" campaign was introduced 10 years ago.
1997 Did
somebody say 2000 We love to see yousmile
Source Mcoonald's Graphic: Chicago Tribune
2003 I'm lovin' it
© 2013 McClatchy-Trihune News Service
stand the nutritional choices available. "Companies like McDonald's play a powerful role in shaping the culture and environment that influences the health-related behaviors of young people," said Howell Wechsler, chief executive of the Alliance for a Healthier Generation, an organization set up by the Clinton Foundation and the American Heart Association to reduce obesity in children. This latest move by McDonald's, which it estimated would cost about $35 million, is one in a series of steps it has taken toward changing its menu to suit contemporarytastes and to tryto address health concerns raised for years by nutritionists and other critics about the fat and caloric content of its food. It has added calorie counts to its menu boards in advance of a federal requirement for such labeling that goes into effect next year, and now sells options
like egg-white McMuffins and premium wraps, which offer a choice of grilled rather than fried chicken rolled into a flour tortilla with lettuce, tomatoes and cucumbers. The company also has faced rising competitive pressure from Subway, which has courted women aggressively with marketing promoting its healthier options, as well as fromotherchains. Burger King has unveiled a new way of making fries that reduced fat and calories, and this year that chain added a turkey burger to its menu. "We've been trying to optimize our menu with more fruits and vegetables and giving customers additional choices when they come to McDonald's," said Don Thompson, McDonald's chief executive. He ticked off some of those additions, like smoothies, salads and whole grains in oatmeal. "This is a particular
opportunity to partner with the Clinton Foundation and the alliance to leverage our scale and size and marketing prowess to be able to influence more purchases of fruits and vegetables," Thompson said. He said McDonald's would be working with its supply chains to ensure that it had access to enough produce and to add different types of produce to its lineup. "We don't go down to the grocery stores," he said with a chuckle. "It does put some strain on the supply chain, but one of the great things about this partnership is that we have some time to make sure there are ample fruits and vegetables for us to use." Customers choosing one of its "value meals," which typically include a sandwich or wrap, fries and a drink, will have the option of having a side salad or a piece of fruit or a vegetable in lieu of the fries.
September job figures disappoint at 166,000 By Jim Puzzanghera Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON — The private sector added a disappointing 166,000 net new jobs last month and significantly revised down its estimate for August in a sign that labor market growth weakened through the
summer,payrollprocessing firm ADP said Wednesday. The figure for last month was below analysts' projections that the closely watched report would show that businesses added 180,000 jobs in September. September's job growth was an improvement from the previous month, but only because ADP revised its August figure down to 159,000 from the initially reported 176,000. "The job market appears to have softened in recent months," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, which assists ADP with its monthly report. The ADP figures take on added significance this month because the partial federal government shutdown probably will delay Friday's release of the Labor Department's Septemberjobs report. Economists have been projecting that report would show the economy added 184,000 net new private and public sector jobs last month, up from 169,000 in August. The unemployment rate is projected to have heldsteady at7.3 percent.
Monsanto buys data
company New York Times News Service Big Data's push to remake the industrial economy took a big step forward Wednesday, when Monsanto announced it would buy the Climate Corp. Monsanto, which also on Wednesday reported worsethan-expected losses, said it was paying $930 million in cash for the company, which looks at data like historical rainfall and soil quality to help farmerspredictcrop yields. Monsanto hopes to apply Climate Corp.'s data analysis insight across the company, to createwhat a Monsanto executive called "the next level of agriculture." "A farmer should be able to grow on farmland square meter by square meter, for lots more yield, planting seeds at different rates foreach meter," saidKerry Preete,Monsanto's executive vice president for strategy. "We're a data company at heart, breeding seeds and helping farmers optimize yields and manage risk." Monsanto also plans to extend overseas the crop insurance products that Climate Corp. bases on a wealth of public data on rainfall, temperature and soil types around the United States. It is not clear how well or how quickly this can be deployed internationally.
PERMITS City of Bend • Deschco Limited, 2988N.E Hope Drive, $169,579 • GW Land Acquisitions LLC, 63415 N.E Lamoine Lane, $206,717 • William Osborne, 63151 N.E Beaufort Court, $184,578 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20775 N.E Smoke Stack Lane,
$193,473 • Tom Ponte, 1758 S.W. Knoll Ave., $393,759 • Colleen Dougherty, 2459 N.W. Crossing Drive, $206,393 • Shevlin Dental Properties LLC, 910S.W. Simpson Ave., $105,532 • J and K Partners LLC, 20979 S.E Avery Lane, $353,277 • Jeffrey L. Robberson,
891 N.W. Stonepine Drive, $720,000 • Pacwest II LLC, 3221 N.E. Sandalwood Drive, $206,717 • GW Land Acquisitions LLC, 63331 N.E Lamoine Lane, $202,327 • FC Fund LLC,3018 N.E. Red OakDrive, $206,717 • William Osborne, 63147 N.E Beaufort Court, $184,578
• Hidden Hills Bend LLC, 61080 S.E Ruby Peak, $259,220 • Murray W. Perkins LLC, 19544 Century Drive, $174,700 • RF Wilson Trust, 2318 N.E. Atherton Court, $282,682 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20779 N.E. Smoke Stack Lane, $172,164
• Hidden Hills Bend LLC, 61089 S.E. RubyPeak, $200,255 • Robertson Living Trust, 3495 N.W. McCready Drive, $339,612 • Hayden HomesLLC, 61145 Brosterhous Road, $210,037 • Deschutes County, 63319 Jamison Road, $100,000 • Long Term Bend
Investors LLC, 21179 S.E. Caleb Place, $180,716 • Yelas Developments Inc., 3457 N.W. Bryce Canyon Lane, $353,240 • Tennbrook Financing LLC, 62764 N.W. Idanha Court, $381,150 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC, 653 N.E. Providence Drive, $226,652 • Rivers Edge lnvestments
LLC, 3137 N.W. River Trail, $299,329 • Craig Smith, l226 N.E. Shane, $221,324 • Ralph Giffin, 21125 Bear Creek Road, $371,277 City ofRedmond • Karoma Properties LLC, 2221 N.E Sixth St., Redmond $273,364 • Karoma Properties LLC, 2205 N.E Sixth St., Redmond $204,078
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Money, D2 Fitness, D3 Nutrition, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
Healthy diet plays a central
role in cancercare By Helena Oliviero The Atlanta JournalConstitution
ATLANTA — Chemotherapy took its toll on Steven Satterfield. The coowner and executive chef of Miller Union in Atlanta lost his
NUTRITION
spunk, and his
skin turned grayish-green. But Satterfield, a local and nationally acclaimed chef, battled back by turning to what he loves and understands well — the health benefits of eating nutrient-dense, fresh, and locally grown fruits and vegetables. Diagnosed in February 2012 with stage III testicular cancer, Satterfield underwent surgery and three rounds of chemotherapy — one week on, and two weeks off. By day 6 and 7 during the on-weeks, Satterfield, known for boundless energy, was virtually bedridden. During chemotherapy, Satterfield gave in to weird cravings — like sudden
MEDICINE By James Walsh and Jim Spencer
/g
Jay Alva's sneakers pounded the treadmill, set to the speed of a brisk walk. Sweat dripped off the 53-year-old as he hit f a groove during a recent workout. For almost two decades, the youth soccer and footballcoach from Eagan, Minn., moved like a man who needed a walker. A degenerative hip condition prevented Alva from running with his players or even doing basic things like tying his shoes. Brushing off a doctor's advice that he was "too young," Alva got artificial hips four years ago. Now pain-free, he moves with the energy of a man in his 30s, amused at the notion that he wasn't old enough Richard Tsong-Taatarii / Star Tribune for such treatment. "I am living so much betPeter Quimby, who is awaiting a heart transplant, works out while hooked up to his ventricular assist device. His doctors have told him not to overexert himself, but he still exercises six days a week. ter now in my 50s than I did
Of
urges for spicy Thai food. But he also satisfied his continuous yearning for carbs
by filling up on vegetableladen pasta dishes and a Gumbo z'Herbes, a green gumbo, traditionally served at Lent and packed with greens — collards, kale, tur-
Minneapolis Star Tribune
• Middle-age Americans are rejecting that idea, electing to undergo treatments typically reservedfor the elderly. Therearerisks involved, but the payoff can bea physically active life.
nip greens and spinach. The way he nourished his body during his cancer
journey helped him get through a tough time and paid off in health. Just one week after completing chemotherapy in Juneoflastyear, Satterfield returned to work at the restaurant full-time. During a recent afternoon, clad in jeans and plaid shirt, and sipping sparkling water, the chef said he believes his vegetable and fruit diet helped him bounce back fast. Satterfield is part of a growing number of cancer patients paying closer attention to nutrition every step of their journey. It's no longer considered "alternative" care, according to doctors. Instead, eating a well-thought-out diet is playing a more central role in overall care. See Cancer /D5
Ehzabeth Flores/ Star Tribune
Teri Wagner-Morley, 55, had a faulty replacement hip removed, but infection prevented doctors from putting in a new one. "As I get older, I'm probably going to be wheelchair bound," Wagner-Morley said. "I might have a positive view, but really, I'm pissed off."
The long wait for mental health coverage By Reed Abelson New York Times News Service
The first time Melissa Morelli was taken to th e hospital, she was suicidal and cutting herself, her mothersays. She was just 13, and she had been transferred to a psychiatric hospital, MONEtf' w h e re she stayed for more than a week. Her doctors told her mother, Cathy Morelli, that it was not safe for Melissa to go home. But the family's health insurance carrier would not continue to pay for her to remain in the hospitaL The second time, the same thing happened. And the third and the fourth. Over the course of five months, Cathy Morelli took Melissa to the hospital roughly a dozen times, and each time the insurance company, Anthem Blue Cross, refused to pay for hospital care. "It was just a revolving door," Morelli said. "You had not been getting better in a significant way," Anthem explained in one letter sent directly to Melissa, then 14, in July 2012.
Christopher Capozziello/ New York Times News Service
Cathy Morelli, right, fought her insurance company after it initially refused to pay hospitalization costs for her daughter, Melissa, 15, left, who was repeatedly hospitalized for psychiatric issues. "It does not seem likely that doing the same thing will help you get better." Desperate toget help for her daughter, Morelli sought the assistance of Connecticut state offi-
cials and an outside reviewer. She eventually won all her appeals, and Anthem was forced to pay for the care it initially denied. All told, Melissa spent nearly 10 months in a hospital; she is now at home. An-
them, which would not comm ent on Melissa's case, says its coverage decisions are based on medical evidence. Melissa's treatment did not come cheap: It ultimately cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, Morelli said. Patients often find themselves at odds with health insurers, but the battlesare perhaps nowhere so heated as with the treatment of serious mental illness. It was not supposed to be this way. A federal law, the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008, was aimed at avoiding fights like this over coverage by making sure insurers would cover mental illnesses just as they cover treatment for diseases like cancer or multiple sclerosis. Long a priority of Sen. Edward Kennedy o f M a s sachusetts, it was squeezed into a bank bailout bill with the help of Christopher Dodd, then a Democratic senator from Connecticut, after Kennedy learned thathe had brain cancer, which turned out to be fatal. See Mental health /D2
in my 40s," Alva said. Hundreds of thousands of Americans are receiving medical devices that were once considered nearly exclusive to the elderly. The shift is profoundly changing patient care and expanding the fortunes of the medical-technology industry while amplifying concerns over the safety and oversight of some products. The movement is so dramatic that the futures of major medical device companiesare increasingly tied to younger groups and the new markets they represent. Middle-age Americans, in particular, are driving this trend as they seek ways to remain physically active. The number of patients ages 45 to 64 who had a hip replacement more than doubled from 2000 to 2010, according to a Star Tribune analysis of data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. See Devices/D4
Healthier habits are cited in leveling of teen obesity rate By Melissa Healy Los Angeles Times
It's little more than a glimmer of hope, but a comprehensiverecent report suggests that a trend toward healthier habits may have halted the rise of obesity among U.S. teens. In 2009 and 2010, American
FITNESS adolescents exercised more,
watched less TV, ate more fruits an d v e getables and drank fewer sugar-sweetened beverages than did children of the same age in 2001 and 2002, the national study found. The research was published last month in the journal Pediatrics. Despite steady improvements in behaviors linked to excess weight, rates of overweight and obesity among children in grades six through 10 continued to rise until 2005. But something happened between 2005 and 2010that's scarcely been seen for more than 30 years among the nation's young teens: Obesity rates held steady at 12.7 percent for this age group nationally. See Obesity/D3
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
HEALTH EVENTS POWERFUL TOOLSFOR CAREGIVERS:Learn how to take care of yourself while caring for a relative or friend; free, registration required, $25 optional textbook; 1:30-3 p.m. Thursday; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-678-5483. HEALTHY BEGINNINGS SCREENINGS:Health screenings for ages 0-5; call for location; free; Friday; La Pine location; 541-3836357 or www.myhb.org. LEARN TO RUN: Learn good running habits; $75, $65 each for two, registration required by Monday; 5:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays for four weeks; FootZone, 842 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3173568 or www.footzonebend. com/events/weekly runs. HEALTHYBEGINNINGS COMMUNITYFLU SHOT CLINIC: Walk in and get a flu shot, no appointment necessary; Medicare, Pacific Source, Regence BlueCross and ODS/MODAare health providers that can be billed; a portion of the proceeds benefit Healthy Beginnings; $25; noon-6 p.m. Thursday; Newport Market, 1121 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-7211. LIVING WELLWITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS:Learn a healthier way of living for people with ongoing health conditions; $10 includes the book, "Living a Healthy Life with Chronic Conditions," registration required; 5:30 p.m.-8 p.m. Thursdays Oct. 10 through Nov. 14 at Stan Owen Room at Deschutes County Health Building, 2577 N.E. Courtney Drive, Bend; 1:30 p.m.-4 p.m. Mondays Oct. 14 through Nov. 18 at Jefferson County Health Department, 715 S.W. Fourth St., Suite C, Madras; 1:30 p.m.-4 p.m. Tuesdays Oct. 15 through Nov. 19 at Mosaic Medical, 375 N.W. Beaver St., Prineville; 541-322-7430 or www.livingwellco.org.
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information tohealthevents© bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of
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DISPATCH • St.Charles Health System and Bend Memorial Clinic have teamed upto expand the region's vascular program. As part of the expanded program, Wayne Nelson, afellowship-trained vascular surgeon, joined BMC in July and St. Charles is designing astateof-the-art hybrid operating room that combines the functions of a catheter lab with the surgical functions of an operating room. Thehybrid operating room is scheduled for completion in early 2014.
Colon cancer screening is effective, study says By Eryn Brown Los Angeles Times
Getting a colonoscopy is not something most people look forward to — but a new analysis suggests that it's worth it to follow screening recommendations and have the test done every 10 years (or every five for those at high risk.) Writing in The New England Journal of Medicine last month, Harvard r esearcher Reiko Nishihara and co-authors assessed colonoscopy use, colorectal cancer cases and colorectalcancer deaths a mong participants i n t h e multidecade Nurses' Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study. Following 88,902 subjects over 22 years, they found that people who underwent endoscopic screenings were less likely to develop colon cancer than people who didn't. Subjects who had clean colonoscopies, sigmoidoscopies and polypectomies were, respectively, 56 percent, 40 percent, and 43 percent less likely to develop the disease than subjects who were not screened.
MONEY
ne state's wa to oostcovera e ort e oor By Robert Pear
Iowa, Pennsylvania and Ohio, have expressed interest in WASHINGTON — Federal similar approaches. Low-income parents and officials have approved a novel proposal from A r kansas adults without any dependent to expand Medicaid bybuy- children are expected to be ing privatecoverage for poor the main beneficiaries of the people through the insurance Arkansas initiative, w hich marketplace being set up un- was devised by a Democratic der the new federal health governor and a Republicancare law. controlled state legislature. The A r kansas program, Kathleen Sebelius, the secexpected tocover more than retary of health and human 200,000 people, sets a prec- services, disclosed her apedent of national significance. proval of the plan Friday in It offers a hybrid coverage a telephone call to Arkansas plan calculated to appeal to Governor Mike Beebe. "Arkansas came up with its Republicans, taking federal money for the expansion of own plan to expand Medicaid Medicaid and using it to pur- using the private insurance chase commercialinsurance. market,and Secretary SebelOther s t ates, i n c luding ius and her team worked to enNew Yorh Times News Service
Mental health
ministration had delayed the rulesbecause officials were Continued from 01 preoccupied with the presThe law requires larger ident's broader legislation employer-based i n surance and needed the insurance plans to cover psychiatric ill- companies' support. nesses and substance-abuse President Barack Obama "needs the private insurers to disorders inthe same way they do other illnesses. implement this law or it's not But five years after Presi- going to work," said Patrick dent George W. Bush signed Kennedy, who has t alked the law, there is widespread openly about his struggles agreement that it has fallen with depression and bipolar short of it s goal of c reat- disorder. He has held hearing parity for mental health ings on mental health issues coverage. across the country to talk to While enrollment in cov- patients and their families, erage under the Affordable i ncluding one earlier t h is Care Act became available year where Cathy Morelli Tuesday, the rules underly- spoke. ing mental health coverage Insurance companies, for in general — for both pritheir part, say they would vate insurers and the new welcome final rules under health care exchanges — are the 2008 law. "We think it may create still unclear, mental-health patient advocates say, leav- better clarity," said a spokesing patients and families to woman for A e tna, w hich grind through the process as says it f u lly supports the best they can. 2008 parity law. Deciding how mental illThe administration says it ness should be treated — and will draft the rules by yearat what cost — is no easy end. While the act was clear matter. Unlike some physical about preventing insurers ailments for which there are from setting strict time limreams of studies suggesting its on treatment, it is vague a relatively clear standard a bout how parity is to b e of care, there is often little achieved. The most contenaccepted medical evidence tious areas ar e i n tensive to support the range of treat- treatments at a doctor's ofments for many mental illfice or clinic as well as potennesses, like schizophrenia tially lengthy hospital stays. and severe depression. If an insurer does not typi"It's very different from cally limit outpatient medithe approach to a b y pass cal treatments, for example, procedure or a hip replace- there is debate over what ment," said Karen Ignagni, standard it can then apply to the CEO of America's Health outpatient therapy sessions Insurance Plans, a trade as- that could go on for months, sociation representing the if not years. It is those kinds nation's health insurers. of details that the final rules At issue is not coverage for are expected to address. run-of-the-mill care like prescription medications for de- Insurance battles pression or a few visits with Like many others, Cathy a therapist. Insurers general- Morelli fought for a child's ly coverthese costs the same care outside of the courts, way they cover medications but some patients and their for, say, high blood pressure. families have filed lawsuits But when patients need against large insurance commonths of residential care, panies. And they cite the for example, or m eetings 2008 law. with a th e r apist s everal Jonathan D e n bo , t h e times a week, insurers balk. director of m a rketing f or The insurance executives CBS Sports Network, filed say that the medical benefits a lawsuit against the Unitof such treatments are not edHealth Group earlier this clear and that the industry year. Denbo, who had generis essentially being asked to alized anxiety disorder, bewrite a blank check. gan seeing a therapist twice a week after his mother died. Seeking clarity The sessions cost $250 each, Mental health accounts for according to his lawyer. Last a small part of total health year, UnitedHealth told him care spending — by one esti- that it would no longer cover mate, $113billion annually, or his treatment, saying that he lessthan 6 percent ofthe $2.6 was "generally functioning trillion overall health care quite well" and that he should bill. But pressure is intensi- be able to manage his condifying on insurers under the tion on his own or through Affordable Care Act, which community resources, acincludes mental health care cording to the suit. "The use of multiple weekas an essential benefit, becausethey are already trying ly therapy sessions is limited to keep the premiums they to acute exacerbations of illcharge for plans on the new nesses or in the context of a state marketplaces as low as clinical urgent situation in possible. Insurers are con- orderto prevent a higher levcerned about the potential el of care," UnitedHealth said for new costs, while patient in a letter sent to Denbo. advocates worry that mental The psychotherapist for health will be neglected. Denbo said U n itedHealth Both sides say Washing- was violating th e m e ntal ton is partly to blame. The health law because, under federal government has yet the employer's plan, the into write the mental health surer does not require prior act's final regulations for inapproval of out-of-network surance companies, leaving outpatient care. Denbo dea crucial gap between the in- clined to be interviewed for tent of the measure and how this article. He and other pait actually works. tients are plaintiffs in a fedKennedy's son, P atrick eral lawsuit against UnitedKennedy, the former conHealth that is seeking classgressman from Rhode Isaction status. l and who was one of t h e In another case from the law's main backers, said he same lawsuit, Brad Smith, a worried that the Obama ad- marketing associate at the
sure that we had the flexibility to make that plan a reality," Beebe said. "Our actions have drawn positive attention from across the country, and now we will focus on getting this insurance to the Arkansans who need it to lead healthier, more productive lives." In the 2010 health care law, President Barack Obama and congressional Dem ocrats sought to provide insurance to millions of Americans in two ways: by expanding Medicaid eligibility and by offering tax credits to people with somewhat higher incomes, to help them pay premiums for private insurance. The Obama administration agreed to waive certain pro-
Seattle subsidiary of Sysco, a food products distributor, was urged to consider residential treatment for his teenage son, who was suffering from severe depression. Last March, the young man was involuntarily hospitalized at the Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center, where the staff recommended residential treatment. UnitedHealth agreed b ut then stopped paying for the care nine days after the young man was admitted. In its letter to the boy's parents, UnitedHealth said stopping the treatment created only " l i mited risk" that the teenager would return to the hospital. There is "no expectation of further improvements in the shorter term," the letter said, suggesting that it would not pay for care that would not result in his getting better a nytime soon. Smith nonetheless continued with his son's care and, he says, he and his former wife have spent $100,000 trying to help him. "I'm currently way over my head in debt," he said. He recently sold his house at a $31,000 loss. He now lives with his sister. His son came home in August, and Smith says he thinks the treatment was successful. "It was, oh my God, we've got this kid back," he said. The idea that UnitedHealth would cover care only if patients could show that their conditions were likely to worsen without it represents a clear
visions of Medicaid law for three years to allow Arkansas to demonstrate the effectiveness of "premium assistance." The state will u s e f ederal Medicaid money to pay premiums of health plans offered in the new insurance marketplace, known as an exchange. Cindy M a nn, a d e p uty administrator of the federal Centers for M e dicare and Medicaid Services, said that most newly eligible beneficiaries would receive Medicaid coverage from the same health plans that serve other A rkansas residents in t h e exchange. The program w il l c over people ages 19 to 64 with incomes up to 133 percent of the
double standard, said D. Brian Hufford,the lawyer representing plaintiffs in the UnitedHealth case. Hufford is seeking a preliminary injunction for some of his clients, who, like Smith, cannot afford to pay for continuing treatment. UnitedHealth declined to comment on the lawsuit, which it is seeking to have dismissed. UnitedHealth says that it uses case managers to help patients find alternatives when it will not pay for certain treatments and that it is pushing for additional research into what treatments are effective.
A wake-up call Regulators have also raised concerns. In another case that is not part of a lawsuit, and which involves a young woman from California, Anthem Blue Cross cut off b enefits for residentialcare after five days. The facility temporarily placed the woman in a conference room. "I was very confused the whole time," said the woman, whose parents hired an expert to help appeal the Anthem decision. An independent review, authorized under state law, found that Anthem had to cover the treatment. Anthem
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poverty level ($15,280 for an tndtvtdual). Under the current Arkansas program, childless adults are generally ineligible for Medicaid, and parents who have dependent children are eligible only if they have incomes less than 17 percent of the poverty level. Federal and state officials said the Arkansas program would allow people to stay in the same private health plan, with the same doctors, when their income fluctuates. In other states, it is expected that many people will move back and forth between Medicaid and private health plans sold on the exchange as their income goes up or down.
tried to deny the care again but was overruled. The cost of her treatment was around $100,000. Regulators concluded that Anthem did not comply with the state's insurance law, which is similar to the federal act. Anthem declined to comment. Determining what the 2008 law requires "is challenging," said Brent Barnhart, the director of the California Department of Managed Health Care, one of two regulators overseeing health insurance in the state. In late June, Barnhart's department fined the state's largest health plan, run by Kaiser Permanente, $4 million for deficiencies that limited access to mental health care under California law. In one location, the state found a website that seemed to indicate members could not get care if they had a "chronic mental illness." "What we found was they were falling way, way short," Barnhart said. "The fine was intended as a wake-up call."
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D3
FITNESS
rancercise: ace ra lon 0 i ness, se -ex ression By Vicky Haiiett The Washington Post
One day in 1989, Joanna Rohrback was strutting along the Hollywood Beach boardwalk near her Florida home.
"A really good song came on my Walkman," says Rohrback, who soon found her arms and legs bouncing to the beat. As she began to trot and then gallop, she recognized what had been missing in her exercise routine: some horsing around. That epiphany led her to create Prancercise,a fitness concept inspired by e quine movements that took the Internet by storm in May. Millions have watched Rohrback hop around in tight white pants and ankle weights explaining the four basic steps in a YouTube video. It's a nice introduction, Rohrback says, but anyone who really wants to "cut the noose and let it loose" needs more instruction. As she explains in her book, "Prancercise: The Art of Physical and Spiritual Excellence," the overall Prancercise philos-
ophy goes well beyond footwork and shadow boxing. This style of fitness is a celebration of self -expression. She doesn't expect anyone to mimic her exactly, but to find inspiration from her movements. "If you were to look at horses, they spring off the ground, using all four limbs and their heads," says Rohrback, who's always had a fascination with the animals. "But every horse moves a little differently, too." Rather than follow a choreographed routine - "This is not Zumba," she vows — Prancercisers are encouraged to explore what feels right for them. There's no need to use ankle weights, and people can choose their level of i ntensity. They can do it anywhere. ("I've done it on m ountains and in cornfields," she says.) All that matters to Rohrback is that students tap into muscles that are usually ignored and improve their range of motion by opening up their hips and shoulders and blowing off some steam. R ohrback c r e d it s th a t combination w i t h he l p i ng her reclaim her life last year
Courtesy of Joanna Rohrback via The WashingtonPost
Joanna Rohrback created Prancercise, a fitness concept inspired by equine movements that took the Internet by storm; she has also written a book about the exercise routine. after more t han a d e cade of setbacks. She developed Prancercise and penned her book in 1994 but couldn't find a publisher. Then she was forced to shelve the project to be a caregiverfor her mother, and eventually she had health troubles of her own. For years, Rohrback was Prancercising for only five minutes a day. But in July 2012, she decided to give the program another shot. "I thought, 'I'm turning 60 years old. It's time to do this,'" says Rohrback, who self-published the book and began upping her Prancercise workouts. By the end of the year, she'd Prancercised a 5k and filmed that viral YouTube video that went live on Christmas Day. It's been a wild ride since
Rohrback became a Web sensation. She's been deluged with requestsfor appearances and classesand even a reality show. Everything is building up to her vision of a nation of Prancercisers, says Rohrback, who'd like to see a network of studios where people can experiment with moves together. "It takes practice to fully enjoy it," Rohrback says. "When
you're happy with your leg work, work on your arms and head." Although the m oves she shows off in John Mayer's "Paper Doll" lyric video are billed as "Advanced Prancercise," there's no such thing — yet. "I've b een w orking o n something that's a little more springy," Rohrback says. A few million people are waiting for that video.
Obesity
can assertmore control over their choices than younger Continued from D1 childrencan,"said Dr. James A nd th e p r o portion o f Marks, seniorvice president teens in grades six through 10 of the Robert Wood Johnson who were overweight ticked Foundation Health G r oup. downward slightly from 17 That the study finds the trend percent in 2005 to 16.6 per- toward healthier behaviors cent in 2010. n ationally, and not just i n T he report falls i n l i n e subgroups of American kids, with a wide range of indica- "is what is most exciting," tors suggesting that rates of Marks said. obesity among the nation's At the same time, he addchildren may at least have ed, "we do have a long way to go." stabilized and could, with continued efforts,be poised 'Need for improvement' for a reversaL In Mississippi, obese and Indeed, the authors of the overweight c h ildren w e nt study cautioned that "there from 43 percent of the state's is considerable need for impediatric po p u lation in provement." M os t a d o les2005 to 37.3 percent in 2011. cents failed to get the daily 60 Major cities such as Phila- minutes of physical activity delphia and New York r erecommended for theirage ported significant declines group, and w atched more in excess w eight a m ong than the maximum two hours schoolchildren. of television recommendedfor "It may be that current pub- good health. A small minority lic health efforts are succeed- consumed five-plusservings ing," wrote Ronald Iannotti of fruits and vegetables that and Jing Wang, co-authors are considered the standard of the analysis, which gauged for a nutritious diet, and few the health habits and weight could be said to "minimize" statusofcloseto 35,000 Amertheir intake of sweets or sugar ican teens between 2001 and sweetened beverages. 2010. "The trends from 2001 Moreover, the a v eraged to 2009 are encouraging." indicators of better habits hid But, the authors added, some significant h oldouts: "this leveling of t h e o b e- African-American youth consity trend may be somewhat tinued to report the highest unique to the United States, consumption of sweets and and continued improvements sugar-sweetenedsoftdrinks; in physical activity, seden- Latino children were l ess tary behaviors and dietary likely to report increased levbehavior may be necessary els of physical activity than before the trend begins to were non-Latino white adoturn downward." lescents, and they spent more Experts in c h ild obesity time in front of a screen. hailed the report as encourGirls were more likely to aging, but c autioned that eat fruits and vegetables than there was l ittle cause for boys, but they also were less celebration. likely to get an hour of physi"This is a nice finding that cal activity daily. And while suggeststhat what we've seen TV viewing fell overall, chilin children of younger ages dren appear to have compenmight be starting to have an sated by spending more time effect in a dolescents, who in front of video games or on
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social media. The study also comes amid evidence that the number of children with severe obesity is growing at a steady clip. "I don't think we have any evidence of a similar trend — an adoption of healthy behaviors — occurring among severely obese children and adolescents," said Aaron Kelly, professor of pediatrics at the University of Minnesota Medical Schooland author of a recent study on such children. The ideal would be if the trend of healthier behaviors expanded into p opulations that may be difficult to treat, Kelly said. "Perhaps fewer of them will reach the level of severe obesity in the first place," he added. The Pediatrics study suggests the pediatricians, who should already b e u r g i ng children to move more and eat better, might tailor their messages differently so that kids' healthy behaviors improve across the board. For boys, whose gains in physical activity have come with an increase in video gaming, physicians might praise the exercise and caution against screen time. For girls, who are eating more fruits and vegetables but acknowledge they still eat lots of sweets, t hey might f o cus o n t h e health costs of added sugar. But having pediatricians step up their advice to children and their families "is not sufficient," said Rand Corp. analyst Dr. Deborah Cohen, author of th e f o rthcoming book "A Big Fat Crisis: The Hidden Influences Behind the Obesity Epidemic — and How We Can End It." If we want children to get more exercise, school districts and states should "create more opportunities for physical activity," Cohen said.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
MEDICINE Devices
Elderly still hold
Continued from D1 T he increase was m o r e pronounced for knee replacements, rising 213 percent. "This is huge," said Dr. Robert Hauser, a cardiologist at the Minneapolis Heart Institute who has studied the safety and effecti veness of heart devices for years. "I think it's a tremendous step forward, but there are issues that need to be dealt with." Though widely celebrated, some treatments have been shadowed by reports of devicRichard Tsong-Taatarii/Star Tribune es or othermedical products Peter Quimby must waterproof the batteries and control unit that faltering — defective wires in run his left ventricular assist device while he showers. He is on a defibrillators, failing artificial waiting list for a heart transplant.
hips and leaky drug pumps among them. Patients have sufferedcomplications,severe pain and even death. Every year,25 to 40 medical devices a re recalled for high risk meaning a patient's life could
"Designing implants that return this active and highdemand patient population to their lifestyles and everyday activities is a priority," he said. TGS Knee Innovations, a startup device company in Plymouth, Minn., created a partial-knee replacement system that is designed to be a
ing in aging patients.
Now they are expanding those innovations to treat a variety of other ailments, many afflicting patients who haven't be in jeopardy. reached their golden years. D evice companies are facing Brent Peterson, a former thousands of patient lawsuits professional hockey p l ayer challenging the safety of some and coach who lives in Nashdevices, and federal regulators ville, Tenn., relies on a small, are under greater pressure to good option for younger pa- pacemaker-like gadget to calm intensify their oversight. At tients facing a knee replace- his Parkinson's symptoms by the same time, device makers ment, said Wesley Johnson, sending a stream of electricity are spending millions to pro- the company's co-founder. to a spot deep within his brain. mote their products to doctors TGS has a relatively "small The 55-year-old is a special and patients while simultane- footprint" in t h e o r thopedic adviser to the Nashville Predaously pushing to simplify gov- field,butJohnson sees a future tors of the National Hockey ernmental reviews to quicken filled with youthful patients League. He learned that he had their products' path to market. who want new knees to do Parkinson's disease more than Doctors and device mak- more than they did before. a decade ago. At one point, he "For orthopedics, that tidal was taking 25 pills a day. ers areconverting technology to regulate heart rhythms or wave is a broader patient popWhen Peterson's device was treat diabetes into new tools ulation with higher expecta- implanted in 2011, his hands for a wider range of ailments, tions," he said. immediately relaxed, and his including overactive bladders, movements steadied. "The anxiety and migraines. The re- Device oversight day they turned it on, I knew sult is a wider range of devices Most artificial hips have a I didn't want to be without it and other medical products life span of 15 to 20 years, de- ever again," he said. being implanted or connected pending on how much patients Medical device makers to more nonelderly patients. weigh and how hard they push didn't set out to adapt paceB ut this growing use of their bodies. Some companies makers to treat other parts of medical hardware should be developed a hip that used all- the body, but it made sense to tempered by a call for safety, metal components in the belief expand the technology as docpublic disclosure and caution, it would improve durability. It tors explored what else could didn't necessarily turn out that be treated with an electrical consumer advocates say. "We're not t alking about way. pulse,said Martin Gerber, sencomputersor cars or toasters," Many p a t ients r e p orted iorresearch and development said Lisa McGiffert, director of problems that have included director at Medtronic. the Consumers Union's Safe loosening of the hip, dislocaPeterson'sdevice, aMedtronPatient Project, a group that tion and metal particles ciric Activa neurostimulator, can campaigns for better medical culating in the bloodstream. be programmed and adjusted practices. "We're talking about They question whether the to change as his symptoms things that go inside people's U.S. Food and Drug Adminevolve. More than 100,000 pabodies." istration, which has oversight tients worldwide have received of medical devices, adequately Medtronic's deep-brain stimuContradicting forces scrutinized the devices before lation therapy. No area of medicine is see- approval. T he treatment is p art o f ing more nonelderly patients Terri Wagner-Morley, of St. what is called neuromodulaturn to medical devices than Paul, Minn., had what is com- tion. Implanted devices are orthopedics. monly referred to as a metal- used to send medication or In 2000, one-third of the es- on-metal hip — produced by electrical pulses into the brain timated 157,000 Americans DePuy Orthopedics Inc. — im- or to the spine to block pain, rewho had hip or knee replace- planted in 2008. Within two lax overactive bladders by tarments were younger than 65. years, the hip began"popping." geting nerves near the tailbone Ten years later,the number Soon, the pop turned to pain. or ease chronicmigraines at had nearly tripled to 430,000, Wagner-Morley had the hip the base of the skull. Researchmeaning almost half of those removed, but infection preers are exploring electrical procedures were performed on vented doctors from putting stimulation to treat epilepsy, these younger patients. in a new one. Plastic "spac- obsessive-compulsive disorTwo contradicting forces are ers" were implanted instead, der and severe depression for pushing patients toward arti- and she was bedridden. Last those who have not responded ficial joints. The rising rate of summer, she had a metal and to medication. obesityhas led to more cases ceramic hip implanted, but a The emerging innovations of deteriorating hips and knees stress fracture during rehabili- are expanding the products from excess weight. And yet, tation has left the 55-year-old and profits for medical device more Americans are playing woman limping and angry. makers. sports or exercising in their She remains disabled and At F r i dley, M i n n.-based 30s, 40s and 50s, which puts without a job. Medtronic, the world's largest "I have had four surgeries medical-technology company, more wear and tear on their now," Wagner-Morley said. nearly half of its $16 billion in joints. To get active again — and "As I get older, I'm probably go- revenue lastfiscal year came quickly — patients are more ing to be wheelchair bound. I from treating something other willing to consider joint re- might have a positive view, but than the heart, its core marplacement at a younger age really, I'm pissed off." ket. And at St. Jude Medical, than they were a decade ago, In 2010, DePuy recalled the based in Little Canada, Minn., said Dr. Daniel Berry, chair- hip that had been implanted in officials expect sales from the man of orthopedic surgery at Wagner-Morley. company's nonheart rhythm the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, That same year, hospitals, productsto surpass the heart Minn. patients and med-tech compa- rhythm business this year. "We're seeing higher de- nies reported 230,000 adverse Med-tech executives say mand," Berry said of younger events involving medical de- they are not specifically tarpatients who want a new hip. vices. About 30,000 ofthose in- geting young patients with "And they are going to use it a cidents resulted in hospitaliza- these technologies. But they lot harder than somebody who tion, according to an analysis acknowledge thesenew treatis older." by DeviceMatters, a company ments are attracting younger Patients who get a device which interprets data on medi- patients. at a younger age usually must cal devices. Most p atients more "You've got to get this right than 14,000 estimated in 2010 replace it more often. Each replacement means an ex- — or people are going to suf- — who turn to spinal, brain or pensive surgery, p ossible fer," said Hauser, who discov- other stimulation devices are complications and significant eredflaws inthe wires ofsome well below retirement age. Of rehabilitation. defibrillators that led to a ma- those patients who had a spi"You have to find a happy jor recall. nal cord stimulator implanted, medium," Berry said. "Think Alva said he doesn't worry an estimated 69percent were about it like the tires on your about complications or the du- younger than 64,with more car. There's no point in getting rability of his new hips. Being than 21 percent between the new tires if you're not driving, able to pace the sideline of his ages of 18 and 44. but if you speed up, they wear son's games, ride a bike or reDr. Mehul Desai, director of out faster." finish his floors overrides such spine, pain medicine and reconcerns. search at Metro Orthopedics Target market "When I need (new hips) 8. Sports Therapy in Silver Medical device companies again, I'm confident the tech- Spring, Md., believes the numare working to create joints nology will be better," Alva bers will continue to climb. "There has been a push by that are more durable and said. "How can it not be?" feel more like the originaL clinicians to think about these Stryker, an international medi- Expanding the technology therapies earlier on," he said. cal device company based in Minnesota's med-tech giMedical device makers inMichigan, had younger cus- ants — Medtronic, St. Jude vest heavily to promote their tomers in mind when it devel- Medical and Boston Scien- devices to doctors, health oroped hip and knee products tific — have generated billions ganizations and patients. that have more natural range in sales in the past 15 years The average marketing budin motion, said Joe Cooper, through the development of get for companies of various Stryker's director of g l obal devices and technology desizes was $14.4 million in 2013, communications. signed to keep the heart beat- according to a survey of medi-
market power Medtronic CEO Omar Ishrak
was recently askedabout how patients younger than retire-
ment age arebecoming more important to the future of the medical technology industry. Ishrak wasn't ready to draw
such distinctions. "All of our patients are important to our future," he said.
"The vast majority of what we do is for Medicare patients." Most med-tech executives
acknowledge that a rising number of nonelderly patients
are turning to medical devices as treatments expand for a variety of ailments. But the elderly market remains critical
for med-tech firms. Medtronic makes more than half its revenues from heart
nal fusion. "Quite apart f rom s w imming, I wanted to be able to stay active — work in the garden and play catch with the kids," he said. Then a Chicago
only 56 percent were elderly. The Advanced Medical
Technology Association, or AdvaMed, the industry's lead-
ing trade group, expects the elderly market to expand asbaby
physician suggested he try
boomers enter their senior
"this whiz-bang thing from Medtronic." An artificial cervical discthe Prestige — was implanted. Six weeks after surgery, McConnell was back in the water. Eight weeks after that, he finished a 10-kilometer race. A year after surgery, McConnell swam across the English Channel. "It never occurs to us that we have to dial back our activities or interests," he said. "We can anticipate living a lot longer than our parents, and we want to be able to take advantage of that."
years. "The number of people over 65 is going to increase in the next 20 years," said David
Nexon, AdvaMed's senior executive vice president. AdvaMed also predicts "explosive growth" in inter-
national sales as amiddle class capable of purchasing orthopedic, cardiovascular and other products expands in India, China and Brazil. Even the critical issue of device durability is not just
a concern of the young, said Dr. Kenneth Stein, senior vice
president and chief medical officer for Boston Scientific's
Peter Quimby, of Plym-
rhythm and cardiovascular Cardiac Rhythm Management devices. Three-quarters of Division. those receiving pacemakers "Patients who are older and defibrillators are older than are living much longer. Even 65. That is unlikely to change within the Medicare populamuch as heart disease hits ag- tion, defibrillator recipients will ing Americans. live eight, 10, 12 years after But device use among dif-
ferent age groups is shifting. In 2000, for example, anestimated 67 percent of all knee re-
placements wereperformed on patients 65 andolder. By 2010,
cal device executives by Medical Marketing & Media. Most of those funds will not be spent on c onsumer e ducation, according to t h e marketing s u rvey. I n stead, promotional budgets will focus on persuading health care professionals to use a particular brand of device on their patients.
Riskvs.benefit Advocates for more extensive testing say device makers' promotional emphasis remains on sales, not safety. "One thing is obvious: They spend a lot more on advertising and lobbying than they spend on testing," said Diana Zuckerman, president ofthe National Research Center for Women 8 Families. But i t re m a ins u n clear whether corporate marketing is driving the expanded use of medical devices. Certainly, more doctors are willing to considerthem before other options have been exhausted. In many cases, doctors remain hesitant because they simply don't know how long a device will last and under what conditions, said Joseph Galatowitsch, president of Dymedex, a consulting firm that works with medical technol-
they get their implant," he said.
"In the early days. we never
thought patients would outlive their first device." — James YIr alshand Jim Spencer, Star Tribune
are fused together to relieve back pain after a disc has been damaged, might be the way to go. For others who seek greater range of motion, artificial discs may be the best option. "They want to get back on their feet, back to work, back to activity — more quickly," Fredericks said. Doctors say a patient's age — and how the patient intends to spend his or her remainingyears — weighs heavily over the decision to implant a device.
Staying active For Doug McConnell, that meant finding a w a y b a ck into the water. The 55-yearold from Barrington, Ill., is an open water swimmer, swimming hours at a time through tough waves and inclement weather. So, when he suffered two herniated discs in his neck in late 2009, he wanted alternatives to the lengthy downtime and loss of mobility from spi-
outh, likes to say that he's "the healthiest dying person you'll ever know." Q uimby is w a iting for a heart transplant. He received an implanted defibrillator and a left ventricular assist device in 2011 to help his weakened heart pump blood. Doctors told him not to overexert himself — don't run, just shuffle. To hell with that, Quimby says. The former paratrooper and college baseball player who graduated from W e st Point uses the devices to get in a good workout — and prove a point. Six days a week, he sweats through intense workouts. He teaches a spinning class at the Andover, Minn., YMCA. Recently, he finished the Minneapolis Duathlon, which combines a 15-kilometer bike race with two 5k runs — all while wearing acumbersome device with wires that extend from his abdomen and batteries tucked into a shoulder holster. Nobody knows whether the devices will hold up. Quimby said he won't stop. "You didn't give me a life," he tells doctors and device makers. "You gave me my life."
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ogy companies. "The tension is that clinicians want to use these technologies in younger patients," Galatowitsch said. "But they feel frustrated because they feel forced into weighing the risk versus the benefit." In the spine business, where many patients begin experiencing pain in their 40s and 50s, Medtronic is seeing a g rowing demand fo r m o r e options, depending on their activity, said Rob Fredericks, vice president of global marketing, R8.D and strategy for Medtronic Spinal. For some, the stability of spinal fusion, in which vertebrae
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DS
NUTRITION Cancer Continued from 01 Shayna Komar, a r e g i stered dietitian who works at the Cancer Wellness center at Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta, said healthy foods keep the body strong during treatment. Studies show people who are well-nourished have shorter hospital stays after surgery compared to those who arrive at the hospital malnourished, she said. Healthy eating also helps wounds heal faster. On the flip side, patients with poor diets, including those who lose too much weight during chemotherapy sessions, may need to put their treatments on hold. Dr. Omer Kucuk, professor
Healthyeating Here's a look at power foods to fuel your body.
(They are also considered cancer-fighting foods.) Apples:They contain the antioxidant quercetin, which helps fight inflammation and are high in fiber and are lower in sugar than other
popular fruits like grapes and bananas. Cruciferousvegetables: We should be eating
cruciferous veggies every day in some form. This group includes Brussels sprouts, broccoli and cabbage. Theycontain organosulphur compounds
of hematology-oncology and
— cancer can't live in that
urology at the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University, said patients today take more control over their health, researching information online and doing their homework. "They ask me what should I eat?" said Kucuk. "And generally, the first thing I say is 'eat a healthy diet.' Eat 8 to 9 servings of fruits and vegetables a day, or at least five." But knowing the importance of healthy eating is just the first step. Kucuk believes doctors need to help patients turn that knowledge into changes in diet. He said he makes good nutrition a priority, giving the subject just as much attention as discussing chemotherapy,radiation and treatment side effects. Kucuk believes the vast majority of doctors still fall short in giving nutrition enough consideration when discussingcare with patients. Hesaidthe anti-cancerproperties of a diet full of fruits and vegetables can help prevent disease aswell as offer therapeutic benefits while a patient undergoes cancer treatments. He's seen firsthand how soy and tomatoes help minimize side effects from treatment. So when a prostate cancer patient complains of losing muscle or feelingdepressed, he doesn't immediately think of a pill to make them feel better. He encourages the patient to drink more soy milk — a protein and vitamin rich drink. Of course, it's not always easy to eat a well-balanced diet during cancer treatments. It's common for cancer patients to experienceside effects such as nausea or food might taste "off." Sometimes food tastes too salty, and Komar suggests drizzling the food with agave nectar can help offset that. She encourages a plate with lotsof color— reds and greens and yellows, like a rainbow. She also recommends lean protein such as chicken, fish, nuts, seeds and eggs. And she encourages 5 to 6 mini meals throughout the day, which can be easier on the stomach. S atterfield h a s tea m ed up with K omar t o t each a healthy cooking class revolving around fresh produce. The summertime cooking demonstration included a zucchini dish with mint and garlic-chile oil, and a mix of purple and golden heirloom new potatoes with a lemon vinaigrette. Attendance for Satterfield's class quickly filled up, and healthy cooking classes at C a ncer Wellness center at Piedmont Hospital has doubled or even tripled in recent years, Komar sa>d. Now 43, Satterfield has been cancer-free for one year. He is working on a cookbook he calls a "field guide to Southern produce," that will include a guide to shopping at farmer's markets and making the most of community supported agriculture programs, where buyers pre-pay to get boxes of whatever is fresh off local farms. Satterfield's obsession with the freshestseasonal produce continues to be the centerpiece at his restaurant, which has been featured in national magazines such Food 8 Wine. The menu includes a cucumber, tomato and blackberry salad along with a griddled pastured chicken with grilled squash, cherry tomatoes,feta cheese, mint and almonds. These days, he's on the go. He tries to either run before work or bike to work when the weather is nice. He continues to work on his book, and he's at his restaurant at least 10 hours a day. The chef often begins his day with a fruit smoothie made with banana, frozen organic berries
type of environment. Dark berries, suchas blueberries, strawberries and raspberries: These have the highest concentrated amount of
flavonoids (plant-based compounds with powerful antioxidant properties). Dark greens, especially kale:Other dark greens include Swiss chard,
spinach and collards. Greens essentially have no calories and carbs but are rich in vitamins, minerals and fiber. Teas:Green tea and white
tea have food enzymes and chemicals that have the potential ability to fight
cancer and heart disease. Tea contains antioxidants, including EGCG, which is a unique catechin. It helps fight free radicals in our
body that damageour DNA and potentially cause cancer. To add extra health benefits, try cooking with
green tea. Source: Shayna Komar, a hcensed and registered dietitian at Cancer Wellness at Piedmont
and almond milk. From there, he fills up on generous helpings of in-season fruits and vegetables and small amounts of protein, such as organic, humanely raised chicken and fish. He snacks on peaches and almonds. But he still gives into cravings from time to time — whether it's fried food or ice cream. "I think it's all about balance," he said. "I try to make the most of my day by appreciating the amazing ingredients we get to work with ... It's nice to be able to truly enjoy life and be thankful for what you have."
National iet report car shows room or progress By Jane E. Brody
over nearly sevenyears. The scientists looked at 2,157 women ages 65 to 80 who were taking
advocacy group, prepares an updated "report card" on changes in the American diet. The latest, collated by the nutritionist B onnie L i ebman and published in the September issue of the center's Nutrition Action Newsletter, is not one Americans should be es-
part in the Women's Health Initiative trials
studying hormone therapy. Thewomen took annual tests of their
memory and thinking skills in seven areas, including visual memory, fine motor speedand spatial ability. Blood
pecially proud of.
tests measured the levlllustration by Ellen Weinstein / New York Times News Service
An analysis of Americans' diets from 1970 to 2010 reveals we have a way to go in cutting down on harmful fats and starches to ward off obesity, diabetes and heart disease. that if a food is considered a healthier alternative, it's OK to swallow as much of it as one might like. People forget, or never knew, that a tablespoon of olive oil or canola oil has about the same number of calories as a tablespoon of lard (about 115), and even more calories than a tablespoon of butter or margarine. "We never were on a lowfat diet," Liebman said in an interview. "We increased our fat intake from pizzas, burgers, french fries, baked goods and r es t a urant-prepared foods." Likewise, grain products. "There's been a huge increase in grains in the last 30 years — bread, cereal, pasta, rice, burritos, pizza crust, panini, muffins, scones — mostly made from white flour," she said. "We've been b l aming the obesity epidemic on sweets, and we are eating too much sugar, but we need to pay more attention to grains. "It would not be great to simply replace refined grains like white flour and white rice with whole grains," she added. "We need to cut back on grains, period." Whether made from white flour or w hole wheat, one unadorned New York-style
bagel supplies about 500 calories, and a 21st century muffin often contains as many as 800 calories. For the average adult, who should aim for a daily intake
Every year Mary Kittelson and her sister go on an adventure. But in2002she was diagnosed with breast cancer and it looked as if their annual trek would be postponed. After a mastectomy, Mary was told that she could keep her plans to hike South Sister — as long as someone else carried her pack. Through programs at St. Charles Cancer centerlike DEFEAT Cancer, a survivor writing course and other support groups, Mary was connected to other survivors. She created and led a local support group and to this day, continues to help other survivors.
St. Charles Dancer Center, honored to be part of your story in the fight against the Big C.
ar es CANCER CENTER StCharlesHealthCare.org/cancer SB
Omega-3 fatty acids may not benefit thinking skills, say scientists who looked at how the older women declined
From time to time, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a Washington-based
Once, someone carried Mary's burden for her. And now through her ongoing work with cancer patients, Mary bravely carries the load for other women faced with a cancer diagnosis.
Omega-3 benefits lacking in study
cognitive abilities of
New vorlz Times News service
The analysis of changes in food consumption from 1970 to 2010 reveals that we still have a long way to go before we come close to meeting dietary guidelines for warding off obesity and chronic health problems like diabetes and heart disease. T he news isn't al l b a d. Our consumption of added s weeteners, t h o ug h st i l l significantly higher than it was in 1970, has come down from the "sugar high" of 1999 when the average was 89 pounds per person. Nonetheless, an average of 78 pounds per person in 2010, mostly as sugar and high-fructose corn syrup, is still too much, Liebman points out. Even our B-plus for cutting back on fats and oils, the highest grade Liebman awarded, is a mixed bag. Yes, we've dramatically reduced consumption of heart-damaging trans fats and, to a lesser extent, saturated solid fats like margarine and shortening. But there's been a steady, steep climb in total fats added to the diet in the form of salad oils and cooking oils. As a country, we have definitely not been on a "low-fat diet." The average person consumes 20 pounds more in total fat yearly than in 1970, which partly explains why the obesity rate among adults has more than doubled since then, when only 15 percent of Americans were obese. In 2005, the Agriculture D epartmenthas reported,the average American consumed 645 calories a day in added fats and oils, not counting the fats naturally present in foods like meats and dairy products. Americans seem to think
STUDY
V
of 2,000 calories, these grain foods displacefar more nutritious (and relatively low-calorie) fruits and vegetables. Our consumption of those earned a B-minus on Liebman's report card. "We need to replace sandwiches with s alads, swap starchesforveggies and trade cookies, cupcakes and chips for fresh fruit," she wrote. Liebman wa s s u r prised to find that combined consumption of beef and pork is still higher than that of chicken and fish. Although chicken itself is now slightly more popular than beef, our consumption of fish has remained relatively flat. In the July/August edition of the Nutrition Action Newsletter, Barton Seaver, the director of the Healthy and Sustainable Food Program at the Harvard School of Public Health, noted that Americans "eat only about 16 pounds of
seafood per person per year, and about 95 percent of that comes from only 10 species." Seaver, a f o r mer c h ef, encourages diners to stray from the familiar to m ore sustainable — an d w h olesome — species like pollock, sablefish,Spanish mackerel, haddock, an d f a r m-raised barramundi and shrimp. He champions farm-raised mussels,clams and oysters as sources of "fabulous" lean protein that clean the aquatic environment.
els of omega-3s in the women's blood. There was no difference inhowfast their
cognitive skills declined based on whether they had high or low levels of
omega-3s, the scientists reported this week online
in the journal Neurology. Omega-3 fatty acids are found in nuts and
in fish such assalmon. There wasspeculation that omega-3s could help
slow cognitive decline. But the lead researcher said people should not change their diets
based on this study. "Researchers continue to study the relation-
ship between omega-3s and the health of the heart, blood vessels and brain. We know that fish and nuts can be healthy alternatives to red meat
and full-fat dairy products, which are high in saturated fats," Eric Am-
mann of the University of lowa and one of the authors of the study
said in a statement. Scientists know that the rate of cognitive de-
cline as peopleage can vary widely from person to person, and sothere are efforts underway to try to determine what
factors — exercise, diet or social support, for instance — might be modified to slow the
decline. — Mary MacVean, Los Angeles Times
D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
cou in e rin
im u s TV SPOTLIGHT "Muhammad Ali's Greatest Fight" 8 p.m. Saturday, HBO By Lynn Elber The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Christopher Plummer may be frozen in some filmgoers' memories as the noble-browed patriarch who made stern parenting and anti-Nazism sexy in "The Sound of Music." But Plummer and his career aren't mired in the past. Slipping easily from one disparate recent role to another, he's created Leo Tolstoy in "The Last Station," the haunted magnate in "The Girl With t he Dragon Tattoo" and a man experiencing a late-inlife gay awakening in "Beginners," which earned him an Oscar lastyear at age 82. That made him t h e o l dest acting honoree ever, and
HBO viaTheAssociated Press
Frank Langella, left, and Christopher Plummer star in "Muhammad Ali's Greatest Fight," directed by Stephen Frears. The drama about the Supreme Court decision on the boxer's conscientious objector status debuts Saturday on HBO.
something's gone very wrong with your career is my theory. Also, why would you want to retire? It's fun to be in this weird, old, ancient, ancient he's not stopping. He plays a profession." U.S. Supreme Court justice The Canadian-born Plumin HBO's "Muhammad Ali's mer heads the HBO film as Greatest Fight," debuting Sat- J ohn Harlan I I , w h o w a s urday, a history-textured film among the justices who dethat puts the boxer's quest to cided in 1971 whether Ali's be recognized as a conscien- conviction for refusing to be tious objector against Viet- drafted because ofhis Musn am War s ervice and t h e lim-based objections should high court in the ring. be upheld or overturned. "I don't t hink r e tirement The dynamic Ali is repreexists in our profession," said sented by the legend himself Plummer, looking every bit through news clips w oven the star in elegant slacks and effectively into th e d r ama. jacket, his w h ite h air p e r- But the emphasis is on the cafectly groomed. "If you retire, maraderie and give-and-take
among the justices, including Frank Langella as Chief Justice Warren Burger and Danny Glover as Thurgood Marshall, the sole black justice. Stephen Frears, an Oscar nominee for "The Queen," d irected, and th e s cript i s by Shawn Slovo ("A World Apart"). The film is based on the book of the same name by Howard Bingham and Max Wallace, with additional research by Slovo. The B r i tish-born F r ears and Slovo, a native of South Africa, had t o b ecome familiar with details of the Ali case. But the United States' social and p o l itical c h urn of the period certainly was
known to them. "I d on't t h i n k a n y b ody of our generation could not have been engaged by what was happening in America," Slovo said. "It was always something that felt real and immediate to me." The story resonated with P lummer because of A l i ' s "As he anti-war stance says, ' Why should I f i g h t them (the Vietnamese)? No one overthere has called me (the N-word),'" Plummer said, quoting Ali — and Harlan's intellectual metamorphosis. His law clerk, a composite character played by Benjamin W a l ke r ( " A b raham Lincoln: V a mpire H u n ter" and Broadway's "Inherit the W ind"), persuades him t o take a second look at the case after it appears settled. "One man, because he listened to somebody else, was intelligent a n d vu l n erable enough to change his beliefs. T hat's hugely d r amatic t o me," Plummer said. The cast members, mostly stage-trained actors including Fritz Weaver as Justice Hugo Black, were a joy, Plummer said: "We did feel like a club, the old boys' club." He smiles delightedly at the mention of a scene in which the august j ustices gather to watch sex films as part of their determination of what constitutes pornography. "It was great f un . H u ge fun," Plummer said. "Harlan
us an 'sanxie ista in ato
suggestions? — Stressed in Virginia Dear Stressed:Yes, I do have one. Your husband should be seen by a licensed mental health professional
(psychologist) who works with a psychiatrist. He may need more than medication to help him con-
quer his anxiety disorder. He might do better with a combination of talk therapy in addition to his meds. Please urge your husband to do this becausethe aches, pains and anxiety he's e xperiencing may seem like they're all in his head to you, but they're real to him. It could save your
marriage. Dear Abby:My husband and daughters and I enjoy a beach trip every year. With our busy lives, it's the one time in the year we are able to be together and relax. Although we have invited friends and family over the years to join us, I have never invited my sister. She keeps bringing it up and portraysme as the snobby sister. The truth is she has two undisciplined children whom I can't stand to be around. I suspect she just wants to join us so she can pawn her kids off on me while she and her husband relax. My mother is now telling me I'm selfish and not being a good sister. Must I sacrifice my one week a year at the beach to make my sister feel better? Please advise. — lt's My Vacation Dear My Vacation:Consideringthat you have invited friends and family to join you, but not your sister, I
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 2013:Tr is
YOURHOROSCOPE
year you discover that the unexpected is a By Jacqueune Bigar major theme. Theupside to this will be how exciting your life becomes. Youalso will learn to flex more. Youmight wonder why has gotten out of control. Note that a so manysurprises tendency toward excess surrounds you, Stars showthe kind keep heading your and it can affectyou. Know whento of day you'll have wa y. Could the back down andsay "no." Tonight: Think ** * * * D ynamic reason be a close "weekend." ** * * P ositive fr i end or associate? 21-Joly22) ** * A verage If y ou are single, CANCER (June ** * * Test out an idea, but allow only a ** So-so take your time limited number of questions in return. The * Difficult choosing Mr. or questions will point to whom you'll want to Ms. Right. Test out work with. Many people look to you astheir a relationship for ayear before you makea leader. The reason lies in the fact that you commitment. If you areattached, the two know much more than they do.Tonight: of you enjoy each other, eventhough your Paint the town red. sweetie might be transforming right in LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) front of your eyes. Afellow LIBRA might be ** * * Balance your checkbook, and difficult to make andkeepplans with. be sure to stay on top of work and other ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * You could witness some radical, various matters. Return calls, especially to a new friend. Someexcitement could unexpected changes that havethe potential surround these conversations. Tonight: to throw you into a chaotic frenzy. You Catch up on afriend's news. probably will come out of the fog quickly, though, as you instinctively make the right VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * A l lowyourefficiencyto mixwith choices. Tonight: Invite a special friend or some unexpected news. Somehow, this loved one to join you. situation will work out to your advantage. TAURUS (April20-May20) You might not want to have anemotional ** * * * Agreat idea will come up in conversation, butyou will have little choice. conversation. You might be wondering Tonight: Beam in more of whatyou want. whatyou can do in order to make si atuation LjBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) work. Listen to others, brainstorm with ** You could be quite jolted by news that someonewho has unusualsuggestions comes in from out of leftfield. Listen tothe and be willing to break patterns. Tonight: wise words of an older person, and you Get some rest — the weekend is coming! will gain a sense of direction as aresult. GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * * Y ou might feel as if a situation Investigate the possibilities more openly.
can see how she might feel snubbed. Has no one told her your reason for not inviting her and her family to joinyou? If not, someone should, because it might motivate her to assert more control over her children. If she takes offense, however, you will be off the hook because SHE will no longer want to socialize with YOU. Dear Abby:We have a housecleaner once a month. Last month, I offeredher some grapefruitfrom our tree and she took six. This month, she helped herself to all of the fruit that was left on the tree! She didn't ask permission, and she didn't tell me she had done it. I happened to see her put it into her car. I consider this to be stealing, but my husband does not. Do you consider it stealing? — 'Anita" in Florida Dear "Anita": The woman may have assumed you wouldn't mind if she took the fruit because you had offered it to her the month before.
(Did you say she could take only six?) Rather than call this stealing, I would call it a misunderstanding. Clear it up by telling your housecleaner that you want nothing removed from your premises unless you have SPECIFICALLY told her she may have it. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
Tonight: Go find some fun. SCORPIO (Oct.23-itiov. 21) ** * * You might want to express more of what you needfrom a situation. Your ability to get down to basics helps manypeople, especially in a meeting. Clearly, there areno easy answers. Understand what is expected from you before you proceed.Tonight: Go for a good night's sleep.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * * B e thankful for your supporters because, evenwhen asituation is unstable, they come through and offer you good information and workable solutions. You couldbetakenabackbythesuddennessof a change. Tonight: Ever playful.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * You could see situation a far differently given somespace andtime. Look past the obvious and takenote of what is not being said. To beeffective, you need to detach more often. Tonight: Takeaction, but only if you're sure of yourself.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Defer to others, and understand thatyou might be coming from a different position in a situation. You could find it interesting to seewhat is going on from a new perspective. Your sense of humor will help you gain insight. Tonight: Your treat. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
8:31 p.m. on H f3, "Welcome to the Family" —The empty nest is about to get a whole lot fuller. In this new sitcom, parents Dan andCaroline (Mike O'Malley, Mary McCormack) are looking forward to sending their daughter, Molly (Ella Rae Peck), off to college when she dropstwo bombshells: She has a secret boyfnend, Junior (Joseph Haro), and they're expecting a baby. Ricardo Chavira and Justina Machado play Junior's parents. 8:31 p.m. on E3, "The Millers" —Like son, like father . and mother. In this new sitcom, recently divorced TVnewsman Nathan Miller (Will Arnett) is looking forward to enjoying his new freedomwhen hisdad,Tom (Beau Bridges), announces that heand Nathan's mom, Carol (Margo Martindale), are splitting up, too. As if that weren't enough, Nathanand his sister, Debbie (JaymaMays), are about to get new roommates: Mom's moving in with him, and Dad's coming to stay with her. JB Smoove also stars. .
nals" —This much-anticipated spinoff of "The Vampire Diaries" brings the Mikaleson siblings — Klaus, Elijah and Rebekah (Joseph Morgan, Daniel Gillies Claire Holt) home to New Orleans, where Klaus' protege, Marcel (Charles Michael Davis) is in charge, and the local witches are trying to overthrow him. Phoebe Tonkin also stars.
• There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I
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9:31 p.m. on H E3, "The MichaelJ. FoxShow" — Eve's (Juliette Goglia) enthusiasm about a photography class pleases Mike and Annie (Michael J. Fox, Betsy Brandt) until they discover what kind of photos she's taking. Harris and Leigh (Wendell Pierce, Katie Finneran) try to counsel lan and his girlfriend, Reese (Conor Romero, Alice Kremelberg), after a quarrel. Graham (Jack Gore) takes Mike's advice about admitting blame the wrong way in the new episode "Art."
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 2 GUNS(R) 9:30 • BAGGAGE CLAIM (PG-13) I:25, 3:45, 7: IO,9:35 • BATTLE OF THEYEAR 3-0 (PG-13) 12:50, 3:50, 6:40 • BLUE JASMINE (PG-13) 12:45, 3:15 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)12:05, 12:30, 2:30, 3, 4:50, 6, 7:20, 8:45 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 23-D (PG)1, 3:30, 6:30, 9:15 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG)12: I5, 2:45 • DON JON (R) 1:35, 3:55, 7:30, 9:50 • ELYSIUM(R) 9:40 • THE FAMILY (R) 1:05, 4:35, 7:15 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) 10 • GRAVITY3-0(PG-13) 10 • GRAVITYIMAX3-0(PG-13) 'IO • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) I:20, 4:30, 7:40, 10:15 • LEE DANIELS'THEBUTLER(PG-13) 12:25, 3:20, 6:20, 9:20 • METALLICATHROUGHTHE NEVER IMAX3-0 (R)4,7 • PERCYJACKSON: SEA OF MONSTERS (PG) I:30,4:20, 6:55 • PRISONERS (R) 12:20, 4:10, 7:45 • RIDDICK(R) 9:45 • RUNNER RUNNER(R) 10 • RUSH(R)12:40, 3:35, 6:05, 6:45, 9, 9:40 • UNSTOPPABLE: LIVEEVENT WITHKIRK CAMERON (no MPAA rating) 7 • WE'RE THE MILLERS (R) 1:15, 4:40, 7:25 • THEWIZARD OF OZ IMAX3-0 (PG)Noon • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • MAN OF STEEL(PG-13) 6 • THIS IS THE END(R) 9:15 • After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7 p m. ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. t
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • AIN'T THEMBODIESSAINTS (R) 6 • DRINKINGBUDDIES(R) 8:15 • PRINCE AVALANCHE(R) 3:45 I
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Bend Redmond John Day Burns Lakeview La Pine 541.382.6447 bendurology.com I W2
WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066 MED- I I T
M XTTR E S S G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084
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Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)6:15 • THE HEAT (Upstairs — R) 6:30 • Theupstairs screening room haslimited accessibi/ity.
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Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's
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Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)4:45,7 • THE CONJURING (R) 7: IO • THE FAMILY (R) 4:50, 7: IO • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) 5, 7:20 • PLANES (PG)5:05 • PRISONERS (R) 3:25, 6:25
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I -548-8777 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)3,5, 7,9 • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) 4: I5, 6:30, 8:45 • PRISONERS (R) 3:15, 6:15,9:15 • RIDDICK(R) 4:30, 7, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF ME ATBALLS 2(PG)6 • IN A WORLD (R) 6:30 • LEE DANIELS'THEBUTLER(PG- I3) 6:15 • PRISONERS (R) 6
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9 p.m. on(CW), "The Origi-
MOVIE TIMESTODAY
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * * You could be taken aback by certain events that are going on around you. You might see apersonal matter differently from how the other party sees it. Think before you takeaction. Tonight: A must appearance.
8p.m. onH f3, "Parksand Recreation" —In this new episode, Leslie, Ben andChris (Amy Poehler, AdamScott, Rob Lowe) discuss financial matters with Ingrid de Forest (Kristen Bell), a member of the Eagleton city council. Ann (Rashida Jones) accompanies April (Aubrey Plaza) to orientation at vet school. Ron (Nick Offerman) tries to go "off the grid." Aziz Ansari also stars in "The Pawnee-Eagleton Tip Off Classic."
is so naive: He keeps saying of t h e t h r eesome (onscreen), 'How's it done'? How incredible!' That was a sweet scene." Also a boon was the chance to work with Frears. He compared him to another famed filmmaker, John Huston, who directed Plummer, Sean Connery and Michael Caine in 1975's "The Man Who Would Be King." "Both those directors are so great because they give you such confidence. They're with you, they're a pal. That's what a really fine director is," Plummer said. "Not somebody who gets busy and says, 'Maybe we should try it this way, or this way.' They're trying to justify their existence." No need for that with Plummer, Frears said. "When actors act as good as Christopher, there's nothing to say," the director said. Although Plummer is part of avery exclusive club whose members each have won Oscar, Emmy and Tony awards, h e declines to pick out h i s most satisfying performance. " None of t h em," h e r e sponds quickly. "I always feel I can be a hundred times better." Even in the case of an Oscar-winning role? "Yes, of course, God, yes," Plummer said. "I can go on forever talking about other people's films. But not necessarily mine."
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Dear Abby: I have been married to my best friend, "Blake," for two years. A year ago he started having panic attacks, so I made an appointment for him with his doctor. After checking him for everything, including heart failure, the doctor diagnosed him with anxiety. DEAR Since his diagnoABBY sis, Blake is scared to leave the house. I have been working two jobs to make ends meet because he says he "can't work." This has taken a toll on our marriage. We have three kids and a lot of bills. Blake is on medication and has tried many different ones, but they aren't working. All he talks about is his anxiety and every little ache or pain. He thinks he's going to have a heart attack. I am fed up with it, while he says I just "don't understand anxiety." Sometimes I t hink h e's making his anxiety worse. I don't know what to believe or what to do. Any
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ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 •
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Place an ad: 541-385-5809
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Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.I buy by the Estate, Honest Artist
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Antiques & Collectibles
Golf Equipment
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09 CASH for dressers, dead washers/ dryers
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: Monday- Friday 7:30a.m. -5p.m.
Bird Cage: Almost new Double Bird Cage - Dimensions: 72" high, by 64" long, by 32" deep. Pull-out divider for 1 big cage or 2 smaller cages. 4 feeder doors, breeder box door, and lots more! $500. 541-389-9844
Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Cats - 2 Gorgeous CFA
Yorkie female, born April Table - ANTIQUE OAK 26, 2013. Silver/ party ROUND TABLE with Antiques wanted: tools, colors. Weighs 7.5lbs 3-10 n wide leaves 8 6 furniture, marbles, beer and will stay under matching chairs; Bacans, early B/W pho10lbs. Very sweet and sic table 30"H x 54nW; tography, Western playful. Loves people/ High quality & Perfect items. 541-389-1578 dogs. Was $450; now condition; Paid $3500, $ 375. P l ease c a l l w illing t o acc e p t 541-678-2628 (serious $2500. Firm. inquires only). sewfun4me@hotmail. Dgtlge com Yorkie pups AKC, sweet, Visit our HUGE adorable, potty training, 2 TV, 52' DLP Mitsubishi, home decor boys, 2 girls, $450 8 up. new lamp, Yamaha consignment store. Health guar.541-777-7743 receiver, DVD player, New items arrive daily! Yorkie pups, f e male, and stand. W o rks 930 SE Textron, $650, male, $550, 8 wks, g reat. $ 47 5 O B O . 541-480-7024 Bend 541-318-1501 AKC. 541-410-1722
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
30-06's, 30-30, 50 cal. L.H. Weatherby MKV Remington 270, model m uzzleloader, 20 g a .240 WM NIB $1,150 710, 3x 9 B u s hnell Browning pump. Fair also, L.H. Weatherby scope, 2.5 boxes of prices! 5 4 1 -633-7124; M KV .340 WM N I B shells. $350. Dave, 714-963-8848 (Bend) $1,150. Each w/one 541-788-8791 Bend local pays CASH!! box factory a m mo Remington 700 rh Bmm 541-251-0089 ( Redfor all firearms & Rem mag rifle scope mond) ammo. 541-526-0617 mount, in box fired 10 times, includes ammo CASH!! $1000 no t ra d e s, For Guns, Ammo & REM 700 300WSM. New in 541-279-4363 Reloading Supplies. box, never been fired. 541-408-6900. Ruger 10/22 rifle, Black syn stock. $499. $180. 406-498-4024/Bend Gamo Hunter 220 .177 541-647-7479 cal. pellet rifle, scope. Savage 110 left hand $150. 541-647-7479 REM 870 Express. 3.5n 243,$350. Magnum. Great cond. 541-647-7479 TURN THE PAGE Wood stock. $ 299. For More Ads Savage model 110, 270 406-498-4024/Bend
Call The Bull e t in At Find exactly what registered: Black PerCola C o llect 541 -385-5809 Wanted: white stack- sian kitten, very nice. Furniture & Appliances you are iooking for in the PePsi ables, 100+ i t e ms Place Your Ad Or E-Mail cal., Simons scope. The Bulletin a ble n a t ural ga s $250; Flame point male CLASSIFIEDS $3QQ 541 38926QQ At: www.bendbulletin.com $250. 541-647-7479 washer & dryer. Call H imalayan, $150. A s A1 Washers&Dryers 541-508-0916. Bulletin reserves $150 ea. Full warpets only. Leave mesWasher & Dryer, May- The the right to publish all ranty. Free Del. Also sage, 541-788 1649 tag Atlantis, $200/set. ads from The Bulletin wanted, used W/D's 541-382-6806. Chihuahua/Yorkie 541-280-7355 newspaper onto The Holiday Bazaar mix puppies, beautiful! Bulletin Internet web& Craft Shows $250. 541-977-0035 site. Patchwork Antiques Donate deposit bottles/ gernng Central Qregnn enre l903 & Fall Faire cans to local all volunFri. & Sat., Oct. 4-5, teer, non-profit rescue, 215 9-6 Fri. • 9-4 Sat. for feral cat spay/ neuter. 280 282 286 We're selling half a 797 C Ave., Terrebonne. Cans for Cats trailer at Coins & Stamps Antiques, fall wreaths & Grocery Outlet, 694 S. house full of very nice Estate Sales Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Antique furniture! Teak sidedecor, home spun crafts, 3rd; or donate Mon-Fri at Private collector buying Dining Set board, $400; w/hutch, postagestamp albums & baked goods & lots more! S mith Sign, 1515 NE Estate/Moving Sale F a mily G a rage S a le,Two Family Sale, 1630 MULTI-FAMILY SALEMore info: 541-419-8637 2 nd; o r 18th century legs, $800. Large maple exec. collections, w orld-wide Complete household, in- Skyliner Summit, Fri. 9-4, NW 11th. Fri. 8 Sat., Huge Christmas vila n y time a t 541-480-8469 corner desk, $1000. Oak and U.S. 573-286-4343 cludes furniture & every- Sat. 9-4, Sun 10-2; 565 8-3. Antiques, clothes lage, jeans, T-shirts, CRAFT in Tumalo. mahogany top95"x46"x29"; armoire, $500. 3 Tiffany (local, cell phone). thing. 65211 97th St., in NW F lagline Dr. Nice www.craftcats.org furniture, linens, etc. very nice cookbooks, lamps, $125 ea. Oak 205 6 Chippendale style Bend(takeBend-Red- items including outdoor, chairs, hou s ehold YARD SALE Sat. only, computer desk & chair, Check out the mond Hwy, turn on 94th home, clothing (M/W) 8 chairs, $2770. decorations, woman's Items for Free DO YOU HAVE 9-3. 65362 Saddle Dr. $350. Small antique St, follow signs). Thurs. much more! Cash only. 541-639-3211 classifieds online blankets. 12th SOMETHING TO Livestock pan e l s, shoes, painted desk, $100. Fri. 9-4; Sat.9-2. 1169 NE Revere in www.bendbulletin.com 4-7pm;Cash Free Hot Tub - come SELL bikes, clothes, furni- & Large beautiful area rug, only Garage Sale Sat. Oct. 5 carport. Fri.-Sun., 8-3. and get it! Redmond, FOR $500 OR Updated daily $700. 541-593-8921 or only, 10-3, no early sales ture, and misc. 541-410-3393 LESS? 282 541-410-2911 please! Furniture, holi241 Non-commercial Sales NorthwestBend day decor,VHS movles, Free Wooden TV/enadvertisers may Bicycles & tertainment c e n ter, place an ad with tires & rims, clothing, lots Sales Southwest Bend Sales Redmond Areai The Bulletin Accessories you haul. M a dras, IT g$$ Tii)$ more! 1238 NW Trenton. OUI' recommends extra QQN Garaqe 8 Shop Sale! DRW Estate Sale 541-325-3005 "QUICK CASH lna te na p A rustic, solid oak 19016 Pumice Butte Rd Sat. only, 9-4 9421 18th Electric Bike, Easy Rider chasing products or • SPECIAL" School Yard Garage Sale, Sun. only, Bam-4pm St., (Angus Acres) Terrecoffee table you less than 100 miles, Annual services from out of I 350, 1 week 3 lines 12 won't worry about Sale: Fri. & Sun Oct. 7am-3pm, 2521 NW Coe bonne. Shop items, Fri 10/4 & Sat 10/5 battery + 2 c h argers, Pets & Supplies the area. Sending l 4 & 6; 8-4, (no Sa t C t . Women's alpine skis,Household items, furni- queen bed set, many n g~ eeka gat damaging! For $500. 541-420-0301 road bike 8 trainer, piccash, checks, or hsehld items, clothing, Ad must include domestic harmony, sales). Fur n i ture, ture, many kitchen items, price of single item big enough for both of l credit i n f o rmation books, kids items, iots nic benches, outdoor fur- small appliances, books, Christmas lights, anThe Bulletin recommay be subjected to Call a Pro of nice quaiity trea niture, loveseat, Trail- crystal, painted woods, tiques, furniture, & more! of $500 or less, or you to put your feet up! mends extra caution multiple items Large enough for l FRAUD. For more sures. Take Hwy 97 a-Bike,' books, outdoor &housetravel needlepoint, sewing, emWhether you need a when purc h a sfamily games. Shortinformation about an I broidery, cross stitch, knit whosetotal does N, to Tumalo Rd, exit gear, ing products or serfence fixed, hedges w ares h o liday k i d s8 crochet items, craft ened from antique not exceed $500. advertiser, you may a t o v erpass, t u r n Sales Other Areas vices from out of the kitchen table, 39nx42n trimmed or a house l call t h e Ore g onl west, school i s a t p h onics learning.Free books, office supplies, area. Sending cash, t/gn high. $250 cash ' State DVD/CDs, 2 sewing max16 Attor ney ' Call Classifieds at bottom of hill. 21155 co rner for adults & kids! built, you'll find Fundraiser for The checks, or credit inchines, lawn furniture, 541-322-0682 541-385-5809 l General's O f f i ce American Cancer No early birds, please. f ormation may b e professional help in xmas, cut woods to paint. www.bendbulletin.com Consumer P rotec- • Society. Sat. 9-5; subjected to fraud. Precious Moments, Print ion ho t l in e at I The Bulletin's "Call a Custom made loveseat, 591 E nD", Culver. Just bought a new boat? For more i nformaMoving Sale - Awbrey cess House, Pug collecl 1-877-877-9392. Service Professional" Sell your old one in the Butte, Fri., 9-3; Sat., 9-2. tion 8 much more! tion about an adver- English Mastiff puppies 9 paid $2500, sell $200 classifieds! Ask about our 2937 NW Fitzgerald Ct. Baker Road, right at fork Long Hollow Ranch Hartiser, you may call months old. 2 females, obo. 541-379-3530 Directory Super Seller rates! the O r egon State excellent blood l i nes, Englander, queen box No early sales! to continue on Baker; vest Festival & Flea Mar541-385-5809 541-385-5809 turn right on Shoshone, ket, 9am-4pm, Sat. Oct. Attorney General's registered, Fawn. $800 springs & m attress, 5, Long Hollow Ranch, left on Pumice Butte. Office Co n s umer firm. 541-548-1185 or Moving Sale - Laura Townsend $ 500. L i k e new , 71105 Holmes Rd., Protection hotline at 541-279-1437. 541-408-0846 Estate Sale - Grace Williamson 286 between Terrebonne 8 1-877-877-9392. Free to g ood h o me Sisters — watch for signs. ESTATE & MOVING SALE Sales Northeast Bend male cat, 6 yrs. old, Free admission! 1860 Autumnwood Ct. neutered, very loving. Sentng Central Oregont nre tggg Redmond area. Call (Tanglewood Area) ** FREE ** USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 541-410-3113. Friday, Oct. 4 • Saturday, Oct. 5 A dog sitter in NE Bend, Garage Sale Kit 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Crowd control admittance Docr-to-dcor selling with Loving home w/no cages, German Shepherds AKC Commercial Place an ad in The AD RUNS UNTIL THESOFA SELLS! numbers issuedat 8:00 a.m. $25 day. Linda at new www.sherman-ranch.us Bulletin for your ga- fast results! It's the easiest upright Delfield (Take Reed Market to Teakwood, turn north and number - 541-576-4574 541-281-6829 rage sale and rego 1 block, turn right and go to Shadow Wood, way in the world tc sell. 6000 Series turn left and go to Autumnwood Cf.) ceive a Garage Sale freezer, 20 cubic Adopt a rescued kitten or Kitten, female Oriental CONGESTED PARKINGKit FREE! The Bulletin Classified feet, stainless, cat! F i xed, shots, ID kitten $300; Exotic PLEASE BE CONSIDERATE !!!!! 541-385-5809 chip, tested, more! Non$1200. Shorthair adult, $50 KIT INCLUDES: I7Vz-ft fishing boat with Bimini cover & 60 hp profit sanctuary at 65480 541-279-3018 541-325-2691 • 4 Garage Sale Signs motor, downriggers 8 electronic fish finder; 78th St., Bend, open WONDERFUL ROCK COLLECTION, includes • $2.00 Off Coupon To NOTICE Sat/Sun 1-5; kitten foster Maltese/Yorkie puppies, an approx. 500-lb. Nephrite Jade Boulder - YOU Use Toward Your Remember to remove home by a p pt. ( call females$300;males,$250 People Look for Information Next Ad HAUL! Hundreds of other small rocks, including your Garage Sale signs 541-815-7278). Photos, CASH. 541-546-7909 About Products and 10 Tips For "Garage small meteorite pieces; Side by side refrigerator; •Sale (nails, staples, etc.) map 8 more: www.craft Services Every Daythrough Success!" POMERANIAN MALE Washer & Dryer; 3 nice china cabinets; 3 bookafter your Sale event cats.org. 541-389-8420, The Bulletin Classifieds AT STUD, Proven. Blue Dark Italian ggtt leather case display units; 1 leather recliner 8 2 fabric is over! THANKS! or like us on Facebook. chair, ottoman and Tipped. Show quality, recliners; Oak queen size bookcase bridge From The Bulletin PICK UP YOUR ExcellenI G ENERATE SOM E couch set. A ussies, M in i A K C , excellent personality. headboard; Set of Bunk beds; Glass 8 metal GARAGE SALE K!T at and your local utility condtItgn nO tearS EXCITEMENT in your Want to mate with like parents on site, 1st round coffee 8 end table; Large glass fish companies. gIgtttg Vety cgmtgtI 1777 SW Chandler neighborhood! Plan a shots/wormed, blk/red quality purebred female abIe Wag $1600 new, sculpture; Set of china; Great dining room set Ave., Bend, QR 97702 Pomeranian (papers not garage sale and don't tri, 541-598-5314 grtettng Ior ottIY with 8 chairs & 2 leaves; new Beaver State forget to advertise in gererng Central Oregontrnee 1903 necessary) ASAP. $700 Pendleton blanket; Glass fish sculpture; Lots of 541-410-8078 or Australian Shepherd classified! s4hooo-ooeo oil paintings; sets of china; glassware & colwww.bendbulletin.com AKC Reg'd puppies, 541-306-1703 541-385-5809. lectibles; costume jewelry; Over 60 topographiblack tri & blue merle, cal maps of this area; Nice TV cabinet for flat Item Priced at: Y o ur Total AdCostonl: POODLEpups & older Hidebed, full-sized, like ESTATE SALE * ready to go! $600/up. screens; Area rug; LOTS of ladies clothing; Full house -* Quality pups. Also POMAPOOS new, rust brown color, 541-420-1580 or items include leather sofa & re• Under $500 $29 Folding clothesline; 4 d rawer file cabinet; www.highdesertaussteg.com Call 541-475-3889 $5 0 0 . 541-408-0846 oak bookcases, near new, top-quality king • $500 to $999 "Green Egg" cooker; coffee table; LOTS of lin- cliner, $39 & iron frame, iron full bed, 4 dressers, futon, ens; CD's, VCR's 8 Books; Small Greenhouse; bed QueensfandHeelers • $1000 to $2499 $49 hall tree & desk, enamelware & antique jar Have an item to 2 small desks; Sewing machine; Records; antique Standard 8 Mini, $150 collection, Cherry Blossom depression glass & • $2500 and over $59 sell quick? & up. 541-280-1537 Shovels & snow shovels; Tools 8 more tools; other collectibles, full kitchen, bedding & linens, Tire chains; Studded tires 205/55R-16; Regular www.rightwayranch.wor If it's under quality ladies clothing, jewelry, old guns 8 lots of Includes up fo 40 words of text, 2" in length, dpress.com tires 205/75/R-15; Small stereo unit; Poulan ammo, reloading equipment & supplies, lots of '500you can place it in with border,fuii color photo,bold headline chainsaw; Small transit; 8 mm Projector; Draft- hunting & fishing gear, men's XL & XXL clothing & Leather couch & Rodent issues? Free ing tools; Pilot misc. records & plot books; An- hunting gear, tools of all kinds, crocks, BBQ's, yard The Bulletin • The Bulletin, • The central oregonNickelAdg adult barn/shop cats, loveseat. Good conditique cut glass lamp; lots of other table lamps; & outdoor items, sporting goods, office items, lugtion. $450 f ixed, s h ots , so m e Classifieds for: • Central Oregon Marketplace n bendbullelin.com Older bedroom set-double dresser & mirror, gage, much more!! 541-389-8563 friendly, some not. Will -chest & 2 nightstands-no bed; Lots and lots of 20758 Amber Way - NE Bend deliver. 541-389-8420 541-385-5809 '10 - 3 lines, 7 days other items. Han d l edby 18th fo Morningstar to Majestic Lp lo Amber Way Refrigerator 25 cu. ft., Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC Fri-Sat 9-4 —numbers Fri., Bam '16 - 3 lines, 14 days St. Bernard Puppies, French d oors, l o wer Privateparty merchandiseonly - excludespetsI livestock, autos, RVI, 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves 1st shots, wormed. freezer drawer, exc cond Attic Estates & Appraisals 541-350-6822 (Private Party ads only) $400. 541-977-4686 $ 5 0 0.541-388-8339 molorcycleg,boats,airplanes, andgarage salecategories. vtrvtrw.deeedysestatesales.com www.atticestatesandappraisals.com
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E2 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletinscom
Homes for Sale
Redmond Homes
Great Family Home Great open floor plan with spacious kitchen & lots of windows. Huge backyard. Cascade Mountain & Smith Rock views. Move in ready. 3 bedrooms 8 2 baths. RV parking too! Barbara Jackson, Broker 541-306-8186 John L. Scott Real
Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad 470 632 will also appear on Domestic & Snowmobiles Apt./Multiplex General bendbulletin.com In-Home Positions which currently re• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 CHECK YOUR AD ceives over EXT, $1000. Helper for ElderlyParents 1.5 million page • Yamaha 750 1999 (Bend) - At $12 per hour views every month Estate 541-548-1712 Mountain Max, SOLD! in the Drake Park area to at no extra cost. • Zieman 4-place drive my car to help in Bulletin Classifieds rIdays • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • NOTICE trailer, SOLD! overseeing & directing my Get Results! All real estate adverAll in good condition. loving parents on their on the first day it runs Call 385-5809 or tised here in is subLocated in La Pine. shopping, errands & exer- to make sure it is corcise club trips. Patience & rect. "Spellcheck" and ject to t h e F e deral place youratad on-line Call 541-408-6149. sense of h a ppiness/ F air H o using A c t , bendbulletin.com Yamaha Inviter, 1986, human errors do ochumor needed for 12-20 cur. If this happens to which makes it illegal kids sled, 35 m p h, hours/wk. Send resume to to advertise any prefyour ad, please con440 NW Congress St., erence, limitation or BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS $200. 541-379-3530 tact us ASAP so that Bend, OR 97701. discrimination based Search the area's most corrections and any on race, color, reli- comprehensive listing of Motorcycles & Accessoriesl 476 adjustments can be gion, sex, handicap, classified advertising... Placea photoin your private party ad made to your ad. Employment PRIVATE PARTY RATES familial status or na- real estate to automotive, 541-385-5809 for only$15.00 perweek. Starting at 3 lines tional origin, or intenOpportunities The Bulletin Classified tion to make any such merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds *UNDER '500 in total merchandise OVER '500in total merchandise preferences, l i mitaAdd your web address 652 every day in the tions or discrimination. appear 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 to your ad and readprint or on line. Houses for Rent We will not knowingly ers on The Bulletin's 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 Call 541-385-5809 NW Bend accept any advertis2013 Harley web site, www.bend*Must state prices in ad 14 days.................................................$33.50 ing for r eal e state www.bendbulletin.com Davidson Dyna bulletin.com, will be 28 days.................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special which is in violation of Deschutes River frontWide Glide, black, able to click through (call for commercial line ad rates) this law. All persons smmg ceniral oregon ~mcef9le only 200 miles, 4 lines for 4 days ................................. automatically to your age in Tumalo, remodeled 3 bdrm/2 bath+ offc are hereby informed brand new, all stock, website. 1 level, $1795 mo-to- mo that all dwellings ad762 plus after-market Driver Needed. Night now thru April. 20076 vertised are available Homes with Acreage exhaust. Has winter A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: s hift, apply a t O w l Beaver Ln off Cline Falls on an equal opportucover, helmet. Taxi, 1919 NE 2nd, Virginia, 541-480-7501 Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. nity basis. The Bulle- 151628 Ha c k amore. Selling for what I Bend. After 5pm. No * tin Classified owe on it: $15,500. Custom 1325 sq. ft. B ELOW MARKED WITH A N ( ) 687 phone calls please. Call anytime, home, with s h ops. Commercial for Stunning Sunriver REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well 541-554-0384 Housekeeper - Private $244,900. High Lakes Executive Home Rent/Lease homes cleaning team Realty & Pr o p erty as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Stunning Home in the Management member needed, week Buell 1125R, 2008 15k bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at of Sunriver. This 541-536-0117 days only. No week- Fenced storage yard, heart miles, reg. service, NW contemporary any time. is located at: ends, eves or holidays. building an d o f f ice home has been prowell cared for. factory 763 541-815-0015 trailer for rent. In conBuell optional fairing 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. fessionally remodeled Recreational Homes venient Redmond lokit, Michelin 2cc tires, Plumber, Journeymen and comes "turn key". Bend, Oregon 97702 cation, 205 SE Railwill trade for ie: Enneeded for & Property Unobstructed Meadroad Blvd. $800/mo. duro DR 650, $5700 new construction. ows Course/fairway Avail. 10/1. obo. 541-536-7924. Start immediately! PRICED REDUCED views. PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction 541-923-7343. ' vwsPa~ ~ " . Call Gary, 541-410-1655 cabin on year-round Korina Chinchen, is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right creek. 637 acres surBroker 541-788-6154 aj to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these Need help fixing stuff? rounded federal land, John L. Scott Real newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Call A Service Professional V@imRs Fremont Nat'I Forest. Estate 541-548-1712 Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. find the help you need. 541-480-721 5 ~o
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
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Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Health Forces Sale! 2007 Harley Davidson FLHX Street GlideToo many extras to list! 6-spd, cruise control, stereo, batt. tender, cover. Set-up for long haul road trips. Dealership svc'd. Only 2,000 miles. PLUS H-D cold weather
Eagle Crest, 257 Highl and M e adow L p . 2321 sq.ft. 3 b drm, FACTORY SPECIAL 2.5 bath, + o f f ice, New Home, 3 bdrm, 705 $46,500 finished great room plan, all Real Estate Services on your site. premium fin i shes. J and M Homes Behind on your House $433,388 541-548-5511 Lynn Johns, Principal gear, rain gear, packs, may be subjected to Payments? FRAUD. Broker, 541-408-2944 helmets, leathers Call (541) 728-0345 LOT MODEL For more i nforma& much more. $15,000. Central Oregon Today for Help! LIQUIDATION 541-382-3135 after 5pm tion about an adverResort Realty Prices Slashed Huge tiser, you may call 732 Savings! 10 Year the Oregon S tate Commercial/Investment FIND IT! conditional warranty. Attorney General's BUY IT! Finished on your site. Properties for Sale Office C o n sumer t SELL IT! ONLY 2 LEFT! Protection hotline at l Redmond, Oregon Burns, OR W ar e - The Bulletin Classifieds 1-877-877-9392. 541-548-5511 house & warehouse Eagle Crest, 942 Trail Harley Davidson Sportie Ij't.tlletin g 255 JandMHomes.com property. Prior used ster 2 0 01 , 12 0 0 cc, Creek Dr.. 2321 sq.ft. BarkTurfSoil.com Hay, Grain & Feed Computers as beer wholesaler. 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, + On a classified ad 9,257 miles, $4995. Call Rent /Own 11,000 s q.ft. t o t al, o ffice, g reat r o o m 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Michael, 541-310-9057 go to PROMPT D E LIVERY 1st Class Grass Hay T HE B U LLETIN r e - www.bendbulletin.com 5 500 s q . ft . me t a l plan, all premium fin- $2500 down, $750 mo. 541-389-9663 Barn-stored, P Rl j tejES8 quires computer adwarehouse. Misc. free ishes. $413,277 to view additional OAC. J and M Homes HDFat Bo 1996 $230/ ton. vertisers with multiple standing coolers in- Lynn Johns, Principal photos of the item. 541-548-5511 Patterson Ranch ad schedules or those cluded. $2 39,000. Broker, 541-408-2944 Sisters, 541-549-3831 selling multiple sysFor newspaper 541-749-0724 Central Oregon Have an item to tems/ software, to disTools delivery, call the One of the only Resort Realty Low Sugar Grass Hay. close the name of the Circulation Dept. at sell quick? count!es in $220/ton. Very clean and business or the term Craftsman floor-standing 541-385-5800 Oregon without a Eagle Crest C ustom If it's under palatable. Black D i a"dealer" in their ads. drill press, 15ya, 8 spds, To place an ad, call built beauty. 5 Bdrm, microbrewery. mond Ranch near Sisters Completely '500 you can place it in Private party advertis- $150. 541-318-0292 541-385-5809 3 .5 bath, + b o n u s Rodeo. 541 388-3666 528 Rebuilt/Customized C ommercial lot n e a r room with office, 4895 ers are defined as RV Generator, 3600 LP or email The Bulletin 2012/2013 Award classifiedObendbulletio.com those who sell one Loans & Mortgages Sunriver. Half acre lot sq.ft., tons of custom +2, 119 hrs, all ac341 Winner on Spring River Dr. work. $795,000. MLS Classifieds for: computer. cess. for RV. $800. Showroom Condition Horses & Equipment WARNING Big price reductions to ¹201301391 sen s cent al 0 ego s ce rste 541-593-1455 Many Extras The Bulletin recom$45,000. Near store, Lynn Johns, Principal '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Low Miles. I Musical Instruments W ood splitter, 10 t o n mends you use caurestaurant and other Broker, 541-408-2944 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days SUPER TOP SOIL electric/hydraulic, used www.bershe businesses. Call to$1 7,000 tion when you proCentral Oregon soilaodbark.com once, $500. (Private Party ads only) 541-548-4807 vide personal day. Resort Realty Screened, soil & com541-221-8226 information to compaScott McLean, post m i x ed , no nies offering loans or Principal Broker 265 rocks/clods. High hu541-408-6908 credit, especially m us level, exc. f o r ASPC registered ShetBuilding Materials Realty Executives flower beds, lawns, l and pony colt. V e r y those asking for adgardens, straight fancy, show q u ality. vance loan fees or Bend Habitat 745 Piano, Baldwin ups creened to p s o i l .Priced to s el l b efore companies from out of RESTORE right, with b e nch, state. If you have Homes for Sale winter. $ 4 9 5 . L eave Clean fill. Deexc. cond. $ 6 00. Building Supply Resale Bark. concerns or quesliver/you haul. message, 541-788-1649. Call54I 385-5809tc tramoteyourservice Advertisefor 28dcysstarting at ' I4/ Irsir rpecal psugerr mrsatabteonar we brrtei Quality at LOW 541-410-4087 tions, we suggest you 3149 NE Nathan. Cus 541-548-3949. PRICES consult your attorney tom 4 bdrm, 3 bath. At Riding in Style we 740 NE 1st or call CONSUMER Mountain views, are closing our doors, 541-312-6709 HOTLINE, reduced $50 , 000. Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care LandscapingNard Care( as of Oct. 31st, I Tr a vel/Tickets Open to the public. 1-877-877-9392. $374,900 EVERYTHING MUST TEAM Birtola Garmyn NOTICE: Oregon state Lumber: 1x10's, 20' long, GO!! Located in BANK TURNED YOU Nelson STEVE MARTIN ticket, Found bicycle helmet at High Desert Realty 30 for $175. Three Pines; call to iden- Tumalo on Cook Ave. law r equires anyone Oct. 4, Les Schwab Am- primered, DOWN? Private party Landscaping & 541-388-3833 541-312-9449 541-617-9243. who con t racts for phitheater, prime center will loan on real estify, 541-280-5754. Maintenance Zorff',tz gaadriI www. BendOregon construction work to seat 10 rows back, $100. Sisters Habitat ReStore tate equity. Credit, no Serving Central RealEstate.com be licensed with the 541-923-2238 Zacug gas.e, ~,. Found near Wilson St. problem, good equity Building Supply Resale Oregon Since 2003 Construction ContracQuality items. overpass, a bike lock. Produce & Food • is all you need. Call The Bulletin Residental/Commercial tors Board (CCB). An Managing Call to iden t ify. Oregon Land MortLOW PRICES! To Subscribe call active license Central Oregon Misc. Items S prinkler Bfowouts 150 N. Fir. 541-325-2396 THOMAS DRCHARDS gage 541-388-4200. 541-385-5800 or go to means the contractor Landscapes 541-549-1621 Kimberly, Oregon Sprinkler Repair LOCAL MONEY:We buy is bonded & insured. Attention Snowbirds or www.bendbulletin.com Since 2006 Lost: in Bend area; 541-934-2870 Open to the public. secured trustdeeds 8 Verify the contractor's Maintenance hunters, Honda Men's Wedding ring, Starting Tues, Oct. 1st note,some hard money 1050 NE Butler Market CCB li c ense at 266 Fall Clean up EM1600 G enerator. meteorite & gold. NEW FALL HOURS! Fall Clean Up ••Weekly loans. Call Pat Kelley Rd., ¹18. S pacious www.hirealicensedMowing Runs good, $100 obo. Don't track it in all Winter Heating & Stoves REWARD!! Closed Tues. & Wed. 541-382-3099 ext.13. 1810 sq ft., 3 bdrm, contractor.com & Edging 541-447-4246 •Leaves 314-578-9775/Bend open Thurs. thru Mon. 2.5 bath, w/large loft, or call 503-378-4621. • Bi-Monthly & Monthly •Cones NOTICE TO 10 a.m.-4 p.m. only. Good classified ads tell Bend Indoor Swap corner unit. $139,900 The Bulletin recomMaintenance • Needles LOST WEDDING BAND ADVERTISER the essential facts in an Meet - A Mini-Mall full U-pick & TEAM Birtola Garmyn mends checking with • Debris Hauling •Bark, Rock, Etc. Since September 29, On Saturday night Sept. interesting Manner. Write of Unique Treasures! R ~ ead Picked High Desert Realty the CCB prior to con1991, advertising for 21 at Mavericks Bar and 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. from the readers view not • Golden Delicious 541-312-9449 tracting with anyone. Landsca in ~ used woodstoves has Grill in Bend, I lost my Winter Prep 10-5 Thurs-Fr!-Sat. the seller's. Convert the Some other t r ades apples, Ambrosia www. BendOregon •Landscape •Pruning been limited to mod- grandmother's wedding also req u ire addifacts into benefits. Show RealEstate.com apples, Jonagold Construction Buying Diamonds •Aerating els which have been ring. It s l ipped while apples, Pinata apples. the reader how the item will tional licenses and •Water Feature and was never /Go/d for Cash •Fertilizing c ertified by the O r - dancing 3 bdrm, 3 bath, 3880 certifications. • Prunes help them in some way. Installation/Maint. able to locate it again. It's Saxon's Fine Jewelers egon Department of sq. ft. $694,000 •Pavers ot worth much b u t BRING CONTAINERS This 541-389-6655 Environmental Qual- n MLS¹201300784. Compost •Renovations the world to me!!! for U-P/CK//l advertising tip Debris Removal ity (DEQ) and the fed- means Call Linda Lou BUYING •Irrigations Installation It is silver and gold with See us on Facebook Applications brought to youby eral E n v ironmental Day-Wright Lionel/American Flyer diamonds and an en- 8 Bend Farmers MarUse Less Water JUNK BE GONE Protection Ag e n cyno 541-771-2585 trains, accessories. Senior Discounts graving on the inside. I ket on Wed., 3-7p.m. The Bulletin $$$ SAVE $$$ (EPA) as having met am offering a reward to Crooked River Realty I Haul Away FREE 541-408-2191. Bonded & Insured smoke emission stan- get it back. Any info For Salvage. Also Improve Plant Health 541-815-4458 BUYING & SE L LING A cer t ifiedplease call 541-576-2158 Cleanups & Cleanouts LCB¹8759 All gold jewelry, silver dards. w oodstove may b e Mel, 541-389-8107 2014 Maintenance regoII and gold coins, bars, identified by its certifiALLEN REINSCH YOUR ADWILLRECEIVE CLOSE TO 2,000,000 Package Available rounds, wedding sets, cation label, which is Yard maintenance & Classified EXPOSURES FORONLY$250! class rings, sterling sil- permanently attached • Domestic Services clean-up, thatching, Weekly, Monthly & ver, coin collect, vin- to the stove. The BulAdvertising oegonclasspduversrsÃerworrsaserrce%heoegoaNe spope palsherssssuaaeon plugging 8 much more! One Time Service tage watches, dental A ssisting Seniors a t Call 541-536-1 294 H'ee/r of September 30, 2013 will no t k n owNetwork gold. Bill Fl e ming, letin Home. Light houseingly accept advertisEXPERIENCED 541-382-9419. keeping & other sering for the sale of MISSING: Ta n / White Painting/Wall Covering Commercial v ices. L icensed & Look at: uncertified Chihuahua since 8/2 & Residential Bonded. BBB CertiBendhomes.com woodstoves. i n C r ooked R i v e r WESTERN PAINTING Serving Central Oregon since 1903 fied. 503-756-3544 Ranch. Male, 8 years CO. Richard Hayman, for Complete Listings of Senior Discounts 541-385-5809 267 o ld, about 6 lbs . a semi-retired paintArea Real Estate for Sale 541-390-1466 Fuel & Wood Prestige Housekeeping Same Day Response ing contractor of 45 $4,500 cash reward. Housecleaning, Vacation Deschutes Memorial No questions asked! years. S m al l J obs Rentals, Move-ins/Outs Gardens, C atholic Call 503-805-3833 or Welcome. Interior & NOTICE: Oregon LandLicensed & Insured. WHEN BUYING DIVORCE$155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, 541-325-6629 Gardens, lot 41 C, scape Contractors Law Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. 541-977-2450 space 2. Bargain at FIREWOOD... property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced in 1-5 weeks $10 off 1st Cleaning! (ORS 671) requires all 541-388-6910 $750. Call businesses that adTo avoid fraud, possible. 503-772-5295. www.paral e gal a l t eritatives.com di v orce©ttsa.com 541-504-8868 vertise t o pe r f orm The Bulletin Handyman Landscape ConstrucREMEMBER: If you recommends payHow to avoid scam have lost an animal, tion which includes: ment for Firewood and fraud attempts don't forget to check I DO THATi p lanting, deck s , only upon delivery Drivers — Whether you haveexperience or needtraining, We offer unbeatable •r'Be aware of internafences, arbors, The Humane Society Home/Rental repairs and inspection. career opportunities. Trainee, Company Dri v er, LEASE OPE R A TOR, LEASE tional fraud. Deal lowater-features, and in- Every daythousands Small jobs to remodels • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Bend cally whenever posTRAINERS (877)369-7104 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com stallation, repair of irof buyers and sellers 4' x 4' x 8' 541-382-3537 Honest, guaranteed sible. rigation systems to be of goods and services work. CCB¹151573 • Receipts should Redmond Gordon Trucking, litc. CDL-A Dri v ers Needed! Dedi c ated & OTR A be tter Carrier. •r' Watch for buyers licensed w i t h t he 541-923-0882 Dennis 541-317-9768 include name, do business in these A better career.$1500Sign OnBonus Consistent Miles & TimeOff! Benefits, who offer more than Landscape ContracPi phone, price and pages. They know tors Board. This 4-digit your asking price and 541n447-7178; kind of wood 401k, EOE.Call7days/week866-435-8590 ERIC REEVE HANDY number is to be i nyou can't beat The who ask to have c aft cats purchased. SERVICES. Home 8 DRIVERS -Get on the ROADFAST! IMMEDIATEOPENINGS!! TOPPAY,FULL cluded in all advermoney wired or Bulletin Classified 541r389-8420. • Firewood ads Commercial Repairs, tisements which indihanded back to them. BENEFITS,CDL-A,Hazmat, Doublesrequired! Haney TruckLine, CALLNOW Section for selection MUST include Carpentry-Painting, cate the business has Fake cashier checks species & cost per 1-888-414-4467. www.GOHANEY com Pressure-washing, and convenience a bond, insurance and and money orders Tick, Tock cord to better serve Honey Do's. On-time - every item is just a workers c o mpensaare common. our customers. promise. Senior tion for their employphone call away. YNever give out perTICk, TOCk... Discount. Work guar- ees. For your protecsonal financial inforanteed. 541-389-3361 DEVELOPME N TAL SP E C I A LIST needed for South Coast Head Start, a program ...don't let time get tion call 503-378-5909 Serving Central Oregonance 1903 mation. or 541-771-4463 or use our website: of Oregon Coast Community Action. Provide support for special needs YTrust your instincts away. Hire a Bonded & Insured www.lcb.state.or.us to and be wary of children and their families. FT/FY Rel a ted BA/BS requi r ed. Cal l 541-888-3717 CCB¹181595 All YearDependable professional out check license status someone using an Thousands ofadsdaily Firewood: Seasoned or visit www.orcca.us for more info. EOE Cl o si n g: 10/7/13 or until filled. before contracting with of The Bulletin's escrow service or Lodgepole, Split, Del. Home Repairs, Remod the business. Persons in print and online. E ARN $500 A DAY: I n su r an ce Ag e nt s Nee d ed; L e ad s, No Col d Ca l l s ; agent to pick up your "Call A Service Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 lan d scape els, Tile, Carpentry doing merchandise. Commissions Paid Daily: Lifetime Renewals; Complete Training; Health/ Finish work, M ainte maintenance do n ot for $365. Cash, Check Professional" or Credit Card OK. nance. CCB¹168910 r equire an L C B Dental Insurance;Life LicenseRequired. Call 1-888-713-6020 ' Directory today! a al » 541-420-3484. cense. Phil, 541-279-0846. Moving! Patio furn. set, 7' Firewood, mixed pine, Wall T e nt , R a i nier,powder coated frame, split & deliv'd: Sunriver, top, 4 c hairs $170/cord, $250/1ya cord; 20x24, frame, porch, lass OLD! BBQ grill, 3+(1 Bend, $180/cord; $270/ $4850. 541-480-1353 i side) burners, cover, $40. 1ys cord. 541-390-8188 Wanted: Collector 541-350-0898 i seeks high quality Wanted- paying cash Pine & Juniper Split i fishing items. for Hi-fi audio 8 stuCall 541-678-5753, or dio equip. Mclntosh, PROMPT D E LIVERY 503-351-2746 Farm Equipment • J BL, Marantz, D y 541-389-9663 8 Machinery naco, Heathkit, Sanl sui, Carver, NAD, etc. I TV, Stereo & Video 2 Holstein steers, about i Call 541-261-1808 269 6 00 Ibs, $ 50 0 e a . 47" Samsung HD TV, WHEN YOU SEE THIS Gardening SuPPUesI Bu t c h er h ogs $ 2 7 5 works great, moving sale, • & E q u ipment • ea. 54 1 -420-2116 $195. 541-350-0898 I ~ OO
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THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 E3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
TUNDRA
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE IX)NT3)/CU"LRTEFB'" IO IE, ')/ouNGMRNII YOOSET
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E4 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DAILY B R I D G E
CLU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEw YORK TIMES CROSSwORD w'll shor zt
T h ursday,octob r3, 2013 e
Wishing well
Note: A certain three-letter word, appropriate to this puzzle' theme, goes in the unnumbered center square. ACROSS 1 Fig. mentioned in Miranda warnings 4 Feudal V.I.P. 8 Made ends meet? 14 Your substitute? 15 Arabian Peninsula land 16Leaddancer in a ballet company 17 Exonerated boxer who is the subject of a Bob Dylan song 20 Exceedingly 21 Tennis's Agassi 22 Capt.: Navy:: : Army 23 Grazeland? 24 Young 'uns 25 Drops 27 Transition 29 and t he Waves ("Walking on Sunshine"
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
It's admirable to have goals, but a goal without a plan is no more than a wish. A t 3NT, South wo n t h e f i r st diamond with the king and started to look for eight more tricks by leading a club to dummy's jack. East won and returned a diamond, and South p layed low a n d w o n t h e t h i r d diamond. He led another club — and was dismayed when West discarded a high spade. Declarer took dummy's ace and escaped for down one by forcingout the ace of spades; he lost a club, three diamonds and a spade.
spade. What do you say? ANSWER: Any second bid will tell at least a white lie, but a bid of two hearts would be a whopper; as a "reverse" it w o uld p romise great strength. A rebid of two clubs would suggest a six-card suit but would be the choice of some players. Bid 1NT, which has the advantage of getting you to hearts if partner has K 6 5 4 2, J 84 2 , A 4 3 , 3 . North dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 4I Q 7 (v) A K 6 3
FOUR CLUBS South was wishing for four club tricks — which he would get most of the time — plus three hearts and two diamonds, but he had no plan if the clubs lay badly. After South wins the first trick, he should take the ace, king and queen of hearts. When hearts break 3-3, South forces out the ace of spades, winning four hearts, two spades, two diamonds and a club. If the hearts broke 4-2, South would start the clubs, intending to Me two f i nesses and hoping for reasonable luck.
DAILY QUESTION
0 75 AA J 1086 WEST 4A952 9 J74 0 QJ1094 47
EAST 48643 Q 1095 0 83 2 4KQ9
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE B A B E
E M I T 5
I CE S N A S T H E S U L T A SE R E N I T Y
Eas t South Pass 2 NT II Pa s s
West Pass
H O P E S
Youhold: 4 Q 7 9 A K 6 3 Opening lead — 0 Q 07 5 A A J 10 8 6. Y o u openone club, and your partner responds one (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
H I T S
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
34 Piercing gaze 35 Ingredient in a witch's potion 39 Address for a G.l. 40 Weighted fishing nets 41 Walt Disney World's Lagoon 45 Name dropper, often? 46 Get extra value from 46" a Spell on You" (1956 hit) 50 Nevada birthplace of Pat Nixon 51 Resident of an elaborate underground "city"
52 Hidden valleys band) 31 Superman's dog 53 Farm females
SOUTH 4KJ10 9 Q82 0 AK6 45432 North 1 4 3 NT A
33 2008 recipient of govt. largesse
S I S A T S T A H U E RE S I D GR E T H E A R A L E O R R ID HA D A B I TO A O A R T
A T E A M S
T O N G A
M ET R G E E
I T A L S O N 0 F SW WO U N P AR E U T E H N G R A T HOO V E E D R D A S E R UB A K E U P T E RY E O N E R MS R U
C L A D
H O T S
S T E I N
T E R P S
T A I T
O R C H
7
2
3
4
17
18
24
25
37
38
26
36
35
39
40
41
42
47
43
44
45
49
48
51
the same as cheating, according to these authorities 3 Where to work
13
33
34
50
52 56
12
30
29
32
55
11
22
28
31
46
10
19
23
DOWN 1 Tenderfoot 2 Hustling is
9
21
27
arms
8
7
16
20
61 l ane 62 Measure of a man? 63 Falls into decay 64 Revolutionary icon
6
15
14
55 Minor-leaguer whose team is named after a Coney Island roller coaster 59 Orangutan locale 60 Land with a harp on its coat of
5
No. 0829
53
57
54
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
out
4 Its code uses just G, T,AandC 5 Four of a decathlon's 10 events 6 Enforced silence 7Giant Ferris wheel on the Thames 8 Easily passed 9Terre in the eau zone? 10 Border 11Namein old graffiti 12 Be sassy, with "off' 13Autumnal hue 18 Uses sock puppets to talk to a therapist, say 19Voting against 25 Is suitable for 260gling wolfishly
PUZZLE BY TIMOTHY POLIN
27 Med. readout 26 Vast treeless area 30Go up, up, up 32 "That being said," in textspeak 36 Mess hall queue 37 Green, juicy fruit 38 Ending for a record-breaker 41Certainteachers 42 Unctuous
43 Enlightening experience 44 Ambassador from the Holy See 46 Certain teacher 470netime sponsor of what is now Minute Maid Park 49 Part of an affair to remember? 52 Latch (onto)
54 Portentous nights
56Air Force 57 It means "white" in Hawaiian 58 Instant
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
DENNIS THE MENACE
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IF MDI GAVE.RIIIlTH
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every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
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SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY'S SUDOKU
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Dear Lemont Brown, you'vebeen preguslfffed for adebt consolidation loan from Lendingstoueji
You're guaranteed a loan of up to the entire amount of your debtl::
But since you've run up enough debt to need something like this, you're a poor credit risk;
Sign here to get just enough to free up one of your cards, which you'll then use to run up even more debt.
so we'n only loan you a tiny fraction of what
you need.
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SAFE HAVENS 5IIE'LL ILEAI IZG 1 HAV6 0o PFAN(, 1 lii(7g)EE 4('6AH,I )IAVE oAMAPITI(A, IT'5 Wt&)4"( PReT (26II'Oftp (5)HAT 'PU Fo )(f(VE Iy(S ROOM114& Ie)TH Ho(5) C,ftQEF()L Rtt t)16TIPICT CFEATED (0)HFII (oI) TI/IakIE17 yOu'VEeEEtI F(7IZ. P, coMPVfe(L &EEIe! 5 FEALÃH " (YIG tt1TO 4 'HVMAH' (51IIAT A(20UT' )IDT Ix)ILL 42HE 5/LY I EAVIYI& A'H 'rHgu7 ,7 04I.I44 74A~<'
© 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc
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E-mail: bholbrook1@9mail.com
8Xp://www safehavenscomic com
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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hovt and Jeff Knurek
3(t)J5LXjt X Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter Io each square, Io form four ordinary words.
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NACFY 020I3 Tnbune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
GURYB /
It'4 tOO bi9 tO , fitintheshOt, i
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THE TOWER IN PAIZI5 YYA5 AN —-
Now arrange the circled letters Io form the surprise answer, 88 suggeSted bythe abOVe CartOOn. 10-3
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"This ls my rent check. Make sure lt circles the globe a few times."
legend
11 "Kubla Khan" poet winner 12 Pop radio fodder 23 Scripture section 1 3 "Grand" ice cream 2 5"I am just bo y, bran d 18 Hindu mystics though my story's seldom 19 Operatic prince told": "The 24 Mont. neighbor Boxer" 25 Elderly 27 See 49-Down 26 Claw holder 31 '60s-'70s 28 Massage "Fearsome 29 Plaintiff Foursome" NFL 3 0 Bierce defines it as "His" team 34 Reported for the 3 1 WWII carriers first time 32 Gaseous: Pref. 35 Payable now 33 Go over more 36 Is after carefully 37 Oyster's spot 37 Deck department 38 Peak in a supervisor, briefly Trevanian title I 2 3 4 5 40 Capri crowd? 14 41 "The Birdcage" 42 Emerges from the wings 43 See 49-Down 47 Cosmetician Elizabeth 48 Governor who opened the Erie Canal 52 Jazz pianist Ahmad 54 Moscow news
Prlnt your answer here (Answer8 tomorrow) J umbles: MUDDY MI N U S ROT AT E BA N D I T Answer: When theU.S.government decided Io expand coin production Io Denver, they — MADE A MINT
55 Court 56 See 49-Down 60 1-Down holder 61 Exxon forerunner 62 Hosiery thread 63 BOttOm Of the
sea? 64 Hardly a sophisticate 65 Really worry
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: W E P AU R G R O S OW
T V I S A I C A C E R Y L I N G E TR I 0 AR F O N U S QU I Z N I G H I S S O A H E T H U G T E I N I T T H A N D L E S E GG S H T S M I R F R E E E LO D A N N NE D A N O D xwordeditor@aol.com 6
7
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G O T T I
A N A T S E K
G U N A M E L P S E S T 10/03/13 I2
13
22
25
26
29 30
28
33
34
36
35 38
37
41
39
42
45
46
48
47
52
A G O R A
19
27
44
S E C U R E L I N E
16
24
31 3 2
10 1 1
15
21
23
AG E RU S I ST A T B S A M U VOT T N A A D N N E M E I N O A I T S Z I P Z E F R 0 N A ES T
9
18
17
acronym
TELTES
LEBTAL
DOWN 38 Surround 49 Diving rotation, 1 I c e cream serving39 Santa Monica-toand the clue for 2 Conductor Zubin Jacksonville four puzzle 3 Spreads on the hwy. answers table 41 Scripps 50 Alley Oop's girl 4 Flesh and blood competition 51 Large jazz combo 5 Sailsupports 42 Zhou 52 Prom king, often 6 G e t together 44 Retirees often do 53 Sunburn soother 7 Rapper F i asco it 54 in that case 8 Gator chaser? 45 Between jobs 57 L e e follower 9 Paparazzo's 46 Represent 58 Granada bear prize, briefly officially 59 M a ria: liqueur 10 Land of Arthurian
22 "Cagney 8 Lacey" Emmy
wrap
HERMAN
* 4
LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD
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DIFFICULTY RATING: ** *
53
49 5 0
54
55
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By Pancho Harrison (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
51
10/03/1 3
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 908
Motorcycles & Accessories Bo ats & Accessories • T rav e l Trailers • Street Glide 2006 black GENERATE SOME excherry metal f l ake, citement in your neiggood extras, 8 ,100 borhood. Plan a gamiles, will take some rage sale and don't trade of firearms or forget to advertise in small ironhead. classified! 385-5809. $14,000.
The Bulletin
541-306-8812
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
875
Suzuki DRZ400 SM 2007, 14K mi., 4 gal. tank, racks,
Watercraft
recent tires, $4200 OBO.
Ads published in nWa-
tercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870.
541-383-2847.
Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition.
Cougar 33 ft. 2006, 14 ft. slide, awning, easy lift, stability bar, bumper extends for extra cargo, all access. incl., like new condition, stored in RV barn, used less t han 10 t i mes l o c ally, no p ets o r smoking. $20,000 obo. 541-536-2709.
The Bulletin
541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
880
Motorhomes
Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000
Beaver Monterey 36' 1998, Ig kitchen & sofa slide, perfect leather. W/D, elec. awn, dash computer, 2 TVs. Always covered. Exterior = 8 ,
Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat 8 air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003
interior =9. New paint bottom half & new roof seal 2012. 300 Turbo CAT, 89K
mi. Engine diagnos-
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-647-4232 I
Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer. 541-382-2577
CHECKYOUR AD
A m a.
•
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, MXR Sport quad, dirt &
sand tires,runs great, low hrs, $3750 541-647-8931
G ulfstream S u n sport 30' Class A 1988 ne w f r i dge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelc hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, Goo d condition! $18,000 obo 541-447-5504
season!Sleeps 7, two twin beds, fully
Suzuki powered custom Dune Buggy, twin 650 cc motor, 5-spd, with trailer,
equipped, very good cond,$3900 obo. 541-678-5575
$3500. 541-389-3890
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
Boats & Accessories
$25,000.
14' LAZER 1993 s ailboat with trailer, exc.
cond., $2000 o b o. Call 503-312-4168
Mallard 22' 1995, ready for hunting
541-548-0318 (photo above isof a similar model 8 not the actual vehicle)
sj sa 00 ~.l l
-P
•4
Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb, loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell $75,000. 541-350-3393
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541 -41 0-6007
can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp
I/O, 1 owner, always garaged, w/trlr, exc cond, $2000. 541-788-5456
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17' Seaswirl 1968,
tri-hull o pen bow,
[
20 h p ou t board drive, 4 hp Evinrude ~ trolling motor, like new E-Z lift trailer
L'""'"" J
Monaco Windsor, 2001, 40-ft, loaded! (was $234,000 new) Solid-surface counters, convection/micro, 4-dr, fridge, washer/dryer, ceramic tile & carpet, TV, DVD, satellite dish, leveling, 8-airbags, power cord reel, 2 full pass-thru trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Diesel gen set. $74,900 503-799-2950
Ford 1965 6-yard dump truck, good
DITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN)
Buick 1983 Regal, T-type Transmission rebuilt 8 3000 rpm stall converter; 750 Holley double pumper w/milled air horn (flows 850 cfms); turbo rebuilt. Have receipts for all 3 items. Plus additional work done. $3300 obo. Call for addtional info 541-480-5502
.nk Pnce Reduced! Chev P/Li 1968, custom cab, 350 crate, AT, new paint, chrome, orig int, gas tank under bed, $10,900 obo. 541-788-9648
Ford F350 2006/ Brush Bandit XL 150 wood chipper T ruck h a s V-10, 21k miles, HD winch w/custom HD front bumper, air load Chevy 1955 PROJECT bags w/12' dump bed. car. 2 door wgn, 350 Chipper is 2006 w/250 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram hrs, 12 n feed 'drum' w/110hp Cat diesel. with 450 Holleys. T-10 Set up like new. Cost 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, new over $90,000. Sell Weld Prostar wheels, $60,000 obo. extra rolling chassis + 541-350-3393 extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669.
GMC 2004 16' refrigerated box van, gvw 20,000, 177,800 mi, diesel, 6 spd manual with on-spot automatic tire chains. Thermo-King reefer has 1,635 engine hours. $19,995. 541-419-4172.
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Please call 541-389-6998
sons, 3 slides, 32' perfect for snow birds, left kitchen, rear lounge, extras, must see. Prineville 541-447-5502 days 8 541-447-1641 eves.
.
a
FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy,
GMC Sierra 1977 short bed, e xlnt o r i ginal
30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call
cond., runs & drives great. V8, new paint and tires. $4950 obo. 541-504-1050
928-581-9190
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.
~ OO
541-419-5480.
More PixatBendbulletij.com
Sport Utility Vehicles j
Mustang 1966 2 dr. coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 cyl. Over $12,000 in- BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K vested, asking $9000. miles, premium packAll receipts, runs age, heated lumbar good. 541-420-5011 supported seats, panoramic moonroof, Bluetooth, ski bag, XeFind It in non headlights, tan & The Bulletin Ctassifiedsl black leather interior, n ew front & rea r 541-385-5809 brakes @ 76K miles, one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. 541-388-4360
Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifleds •
541-923-0231
GMC Vgfon 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171
MGA 1959 - $19,999 Convertible. O r iginal body/motor. No rust. 541-549-3838
Reach thousands oi readers!
Nuyya 297LK HitchHiker 2007, All sea-
EXCELLENT CON-
ln Madras, call 541-475-6302
1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, 8 materials, $2000 obo. 541-410-7473
I
your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to 60' wide x 50' d eep, w/55' wide x 17' high bisee. 541-330-5527. fold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock©q.com Monaco Lakota 2004 Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, 5th Wheel based in Madras, al34 ftn 3 s lides; imhangared since maculate c o ndition; ways new. New annual, auto l arge screen TV w / pilot, IFR, piece entertainment center; windshield. one Fastest Arreclining chairs; cen- cher around. toter kitchen; air; queen tal t i me . 1750 $6 8 ,500. bed; complete hitch 541-475-6947, ask for and new fabric cover. Rob Berg. $22,900 OBO. (541) 548-5886 Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps 6-8 comfortably, has w/d, dishwasher, many extras, fully l o aded. MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, $29,600 obo. Located king bed, Irg LR, in Bend. 682-777-8039 Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.
micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5,
541-815-3636
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
i ng hitch that fits i n
Monte Carlo 2012 Limited Edition, 2 slides, 2
Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower,
paint, recent overhaul, everything works! $3995.
1974 Bellanca 1730A
years.. No pets, no smoking. High r etail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including slid-
541-420-3250
16'9 n Larson All Ameri-
I
•
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
'/ 1/5th interest in 1973
times total in last 5s/0
Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388
933
Pickups
I
f%,~
Layton 27-ft, 2001
Antique & Classic Autos
r.
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
IWI,
541-447-8664
I
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
00
Keystone Laredo31' Call Dick, Good batteries, tires. RV 20 06 w i th 1 2' 541-480-1687. All service done at slide-out. Sleeps 6, Beaver Coach, queen walk-around Bend. $42,500, bed w/storage under541-419-8184 neath. Tub 8 shower. -Wa. 2 swivel rockers. TV. I' Air cond. Gas stove & I~ ~ refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w e r. Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Slide through storI a ge, E a s y Lif t . fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awnew; Fleetwood D i scovery $29,000 ning, 4 new tires, new Asking$18,600 40' 2003, diesel moKubota 7000w marine 541-447-4805 torhome w/all diesel generator, 3 options-3 slide outs, slides, exc. cond. insatellite, 2 TV's,W/D, s ide 8 o ut . 27 " T V etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. dvd/cd/am/fm entertain Wintered i n h e a ted center. Call for more shop. $84,900 O.B.O. details. Only used 4
HUNTERS! Honda Fat Cat 200cc w/rear rack & receiver hitch carrier, used very little, exlnt cond, $1875 obo. 541-546-3330
r-
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
0
Almost Perfect Chev S10 long bed, 1988 4.3 V6, professional r ebuilt engine, 4 7 k since installed, dual pipes, custom grill, sunroof, full canopy I Peterbilt 359 p o table 908 cab h i gh , C l a rion Superhavvkwater t ruck, 1 9 90, Ford Model A 1930 r e m ote Aircraft, Parts Only 1 Share Coupe, good condition, AM/FM/CD 3200 gal. tank, 5hp radio. Looks g reat, p ump, 4 - 3 n hoses, $16,000. 541-588-6084 8 Service Available runs strong, always camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Economical flying garaged. $3,550 firm. 541-820-3724 in your own Ford Ranchero 1965 IFR equipped Rhino bedliner cusCessna 172/180 HP for tom wheels, 302V-8 only $13,500! New • Automotive Parts, a uto. Runs g o o d Garmin Touchscreen Service & Accessories l800~ $9,995. avionics center stack! 541-771-4778 1/3 interest in Columbia Exceptionally clean! Must sell like new Toyo 400, $150,000 (located Hangared at BDN. tubeless snow tires, O Bend.) Also: SunriChevy 2500 HD 2003 Call 541-728-0773 235/55Rx19, $149 ea. ver hangar available for 541-382-9295 4 WD w o r k t ru c k , sale at $155K, or lease, 916 140,000 miles, $7000 @ $400/mo. Studded M&S tires, Trucks & obo. 541-408-4994. 541-948-2963 1-195x60x14, Heavy Equipment Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD 3-185x70x13, engine, power every- SLT quad cab, short box, 1-175x55x13, thing, new paint, 54K auto, AC, high mileage, 1-165xSRx13. original m i les, runs $13,900. 541-389-7857 All six for $150. great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179 Antique 8 1 /3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bo- 1987 Freightliner COE 3Classic Autos F350 4-dr diesel nanza A36, new 10-550/ axle truck, Cummins en2004 pickup, auto, prop, located KBDN. gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 King Ranch, 144K, $65,000. 541-419-9510 obo. 541-419-2713 excellent, extras, $16,995 obo.
tic =perfect 9/20/13.
ATVs
-
I 0 0
541-385-5809
Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K mi l e s , perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536. $5995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend DreamCarsBend.com
Fifth Wheels •
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I ~
:Sg~
PROJECT CARS: Chevv 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 I ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, complete car, $ 1949; Cadillac Series 61 1950, 2 dr. hard top, complete w/spare f r on t cl i p ., $3950, 541-382-7391
BMW X3 3.0 si 2008 silver, 79,885 mi., $19,995. ¹J16101 Oregon ANtnSnurce
541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com
JCB 2006 214 E diesel Corvette Coupe 1964 backhoe with Hammer Master 360n rock 530 miles since frame Chevrolet Suburbanl hammer 18 dig off restoration. Runs 2004, 1500 4x4 Dai'k and drives as new. bucket, quick coupler, Save money. Learn grey, leather, all LT backhoe has 380 hrs, Satin Silver color with to fly or build hours options, perfect conrock hammer has less black leather interior, with your own airdition, 150K miles, almint dash. PS, P B, c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o t han 100 hrs. L i k e ways parked inside. AC, 4 speed. Knock new, $40,000 o bo. 2nd row buckets, reCommander, 4 seat, Can purchase Kodiak offs. New tires. Fresh movable 3rd, custom 150 HP, low time, 327 N.O.M. All Cor- VW Bug Sedan, 1969, GMC top kick 5 yrd full panel. $23,000 3 sets of tires, vette restoration parts fully restored, 2 owners, [ wheels, dump and 28' trailer great car! $12,500. obo. Contact Paul at with 73,000 total miles, for a d d' I $3 0 ,000 in & out. Reduced to Ken 541-647-0657 541-447-5184. 541-350-3393 $59,500. 541-410-2870 $10,000. 541-382-5127 Nar//Zl'
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Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809
18' Bass Tracker Tournament Model 1800FS, $8500. 541-389-8786 NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces,
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkqueen bed, wood floors (kitchen), around 2-dr fridge, convection central air, awning, 1 large slide, microwave, Vizio TV 8 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, roof satellite, walk-in $15,000 obo (or inboard motor, g reat shower, new queen bed. trade for camper cond, well maintained, White leather hide-a- that fits 6s/2' pickup $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 bed & chair, all records, bed, plus cash). no pets or s moking. 541-280-2547 or $28,450. 541-815-4121 PRICERNUdN/ Call 541-771-4800
20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for l ife $ 8900 O B O .
I a ~ 's'
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $28,000 King bed, hide-a-bed
sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 27 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
541-379-3530
20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L V6 w/OMC outdrive, open bow, Shorelander trlr, nds some interior trim work. $4500. 541-639-3209 21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with outdrive. Bimini top & moorage cover, $7500 obo. 541-382-2577
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $129,900. 30,900 miles, great condition! Extended warranty, dishwasher, washer/ dryer, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays 8 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater 8 air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174
Winnebago Suncruiser34' h o u seboat 2004, 35K, loaded, too $85,000. 541-390-4693 much to list, ext'd warr. www.centraloregon thru 2014, $49,900 Denhouseboat.com. nis, 541-589-3243
Beautiful
WEEKEND WARRIOR
Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th Tow with 0/0-ton. Strong wheel, 1 s lide, AC, suspension; can haul TV,full awning, excelATVs snowmobiles, lent shape, $23,900. even a small car! Great 541-350-8629 price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266 Weight distribution hitch with spring bars and bracket f o r tr a i ler f rame, $ 30 0 ob o . Adco aqua cover for Recreation by Design 25'x28' travel trailer, 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. SOLD. Rubber liner Top living room 5th for 8' pickup box, $25. wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 541-420-0551 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, Looking for your garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 next employee? or best offer. Call Peter, Place a Bulletin help 307-221-2422, wanted ad today and ( in La Pine ) reach over 60,000 WILL DELIVER readers each week. Your classified ad 885 will also appear on bendbulletin.com Canopies & Campers which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get ReLance 80/0'camper, 1991 sults! Call 385-5809 Great cond; toilet 8 fullor place your ad size bed. Lightly used. on-line at Recently serviced, bendbulletin.com $4500. 503-307-8571
HEY CENTRAL OREGON, SHOW US YOUR CREATIVITY. Write a headline for this picture and you could Win CI825 Fred Meyer Gift Card! Its easy to enter and easy to win. Write a creative headline for the photo in this ad and email it to jbaisinger©bendbulletin.com. Enties must be received by October 15th.
The winner will be notified by email before October 30th.
The Bulletin bendbulletin.com
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E6 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
975
~Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Honda CRV EXL
2 009, 33 k mi l e s , original owner, auto transmission, leather interior, sun r oof, exc. tires, optional sport package, with r oof c a rgo b o x , dealer serviced s ince n ew , F l a t , towable. $20,995.
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super
Sports, G.S. floor
mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.
541-385-0753
•
Leg a l Notices •
Get your business
Infiniti FX35 2012, Platinum silver, 24,000 miles, with factory war r anty, f ully l o aded, A l l Wheel Drive, GPS, sunroof, etc. $37,500. 541-550-7189
•
Successor T r u stee have elected to foreclose the trust deed by advertisement and sale pursuant to ORS 86.705 to ORS 86.795
aie
Mazda MX5 M i ata 2006 Grand Touring, 13,095 easy miles. Copper red w/tan upholstery. Bose d eluxe sound. 6 -spd auto trans w / dual m ode shifting. A l -
Legal Notices
RROW ING With an ad in The Bulletin's
and to sell the real property ide n tified above to satisfy the obligation that is secured by th e T r ust D eed. N OTICE I S HEREBY GIVEN that
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
•
Leg a l Notices
Legal Notices
•
Legal Notices
Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation UNITED STATES M~ I ' O STALSERt(/ICEe All Periodicals Publications Exce t Re u e ster Publications 1. Publication Title
2. Publication Number
The Bulletin
'5 5 2
4. Issue Frequency
3. Filing Oate
5 2 0
5. Number of Issues Published Annually
Daily
365
7. Complete Mailing Address of Known Office of Publication (Nol prrnter/ (Street, city, county, state, and ZIP+4e/
Sept 30, 2013 6. Annual Subscription Price
$192.00 delivered Contact Person
the undersigned SucKaren Douglas 1777 SW Chandler Ave, Bend OR 97702 c essor T r ustee o r Telephone (inciude area code/ w ays g araged 8 Successor Trustee's 541-383-0332 w ashed b y h a n d . "Call A Service agent will, on October Power brakes, steer8. Complete Maibng Address of Headquarters or General Business Office of Publisher (Nof printerl 15, 2013, a t on e Professional" ing, mirrors, d oor o'clock (1:00) p.m., locks. Like new car! 1777 SW Chandler Ave, Bend OR 97702 based on the stanSelling due to health Directory dard of time estabissues. $14,895 lished by ORS 503-807-1973 9. Full Names and Complete Mailing Addresses of Publisher, Editor, and Managing Editor (Do not leave b(ank/ 187.110, just outside Pubhsher (Name and complete mailing address) the main entrance of LEGAL NOTICE 1 164 N . W . Bo n d , Mercedes Benz Gordon Black, 61909 Broken Top Dr, Bend OR 97702-1085 TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Bend, Oregon, sell for E500 4-matic 2004 ELK HUNTERS! OF SALE R e f ercash at public auction 86,625 miles, sunJeep CJ5 1979, orig. ence is made to that to the highest bidder roof with a shade, Editor (Name and complete mailing address) owner, 87k only 3k on certain deed of trust the interest in s a id loaded, silver, 2 sets new 258 long block. "Trust Deed") (the real property, which tires and a set of C lutch p kg , W a r n ofchains. John Costa, 1611 NW Promontory Dr, Bend OR 97701-5622 dated November 7, Grantor has or h ad $13,500. hubs. Excellent run2 005, executed b y power to convey at 541-362-5598 ner, very dependable. John T. Cranston Sr. Managing Editor (Name and complete mailing address) the time of the execuNorthman 6 i/s' plow, and Patricia R. Cran- tion by Grantor of the Warn 6000¹ w i nch. Mustang GT 1995 red ston (the "Grantor") to Trust Deed, together $9500 or best rea- 133k miles, Boss 302 U .S. B a n k Tru s t with any interest that sonable offer. motor, custom pipes, Company, N a t ional Grantor or the suc541-549-6970 or 5 s p ee d m a n ual, Association 10. Owner (Do not leave blank. If the publicationis owned by a corporation, give the name and address of the corporalion immedialeiy foiiowed by the (the cessors in interest to 541-815-8105. power windows, cus- "Trustee"), to secure names and addresses of aii stockholders owning or holding 1 percent or more of the total amount of stock. if not ownedOy a corporation, give the acquired aftom stereo, very fast. payment and perfor- Grantor names and addresses of the individual owners. (f owned by a partnership or other unincorporated firm, giveifs name and address as we/i as those of ter the execution of $5800. 541-280-7910 each individual owner. If the publication is published by a nonprofit organization, give its name and address0 mance of certain obli- the Trust Deed, to Full Name Complete Malllng Address gations of Grantor to satisfy the foregoing U.S. Bank N ational obligations t h e reby The Bulletin is wholly owned by 1777 SW Chandlef Ave, PO Box 6020 Association (the secured and the costs "Beneficiary"), includ- and expenses of sale. ing repayment of a N OTICE I S FUR Bend OR 97708 Western Communications, lnc. Jeep Grand CheroPontiac G6 2007, low promissory note dated THER GIVEN that any kee 1996 4x4, automiles, $8900. November 7, 2005, in person named in ORS stockholder list attached matic, 135,000 miles. 541-548-1422 the principal amount 86.753 has the right, Great shape - very of $ 3 1 8,800 (the at any time prior to nice interior, $3,600. "Note"). T h e T rust five days before the Porsche 911 541-815-9939 Deed was recorded date last set for the Carrera 993 cou e o n N o vember 1 4 , s ale, t o h a v e t h i s Jeep Wrangler 2007 2005, as I nstrument foreclosure proceedUnlimited X, red, 30k No. 2005-77965 in the ing dismissed and the 11, Known Bondholders, Mortgagees, and Olher Security Holders Owning or Holding I Percent or More of Total Amount of Bonds, Morlgages, or mi, ¹166774. $25,995 official real property Trust Deed reinstated Other Securities. If none, check box None records of Deschutes by payment to BenefiCounty, Oregon. The ciary of t h e e n t ire AuroSource Trust Deed was modi- a mount t h e n du e 13. Publication Title 14. Issue Date for Circulation Oata Below 1996, 73k miles, 541-598-3750 fied by t hat i nstru- (other than such porTiptronic auto. The Bulletin www.aaaoregonautoSeptember 14, 2013 ment recorded on De- tion of the principal as transmission. Silver, source.com cember 23, 2010, as would not then be due blue leather interior, 15. Extent and Nature of Circulation Instrument No. had no d efault ocAverage No. Coples No. Copies of Single moon/sunroof, new 2010-51056 in the ofEach Issue During Is s u e Published curred) and by curing quality tires and ficial r ea l p r o perty any o t he r Preceding 12 Months Nearest to Filing Date d e f ault battery, car and seat records of Deschutes complained of herein covers, many extras. County, Oregon. The that is capable of bea. Total Number of Copies (Net press run) 30986 Recently fully ser29888 legal description of ing cured by tenderviced, garaged, Nissan Pathfinder SE the real property cov- ing the performance looks and runs like Mailed Outside-County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 iindude paid ered by t h e T r u st r equired under t h e 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd new. Excellent condistribution above nominal rate, advertiser's proof copies, and exchange copies) 167 163 4x4, loaded, very good Deed is as f ollows: o bligation o r T r u st dition $29,700 tires, very good cond, Real property in the Deed and, in addition b. Paid 541-322-9647 $4800. 503-334-7345 County of Deschutes, to paying said sums Circulation (2) Mailed In-County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3641(inciude paid dis12 tribution above nominal rate, advert/ser's proof copies, and exchange copiesi State of Oregon, deor tendering the per(By Mail and scribed as follows: AN formance necessary Porsche 911 Turbo Outside UNDIVIDED 3/12 INPaid Distribution Oulside the Mails Induding Sales Through Dealers and Camers, to cure the default, by (3) Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Paid Oistribubon Outside USPSe the Mail) T EREST I N UNI T paying all costs and 28377 27352 101, RES I DENCE expenses actually inCLUB AT P RONG- curred in enforcing the Paid Distribution by Other Classes of Mail Through the USPS ie.g., First(4) Class Maile) HORN VILLAS CON- obligation and Trust Toyota Highlander DOMINIUMS, DESDeed, together with 2 003 Limited A W D CHUTES C O UNTY, Trustee and attorney 2003 6 speed, X50 99,000 mi., automatic c. Total Paid Distribution(Sum of 15b (1), (2J, (3J, and (4)) OREGON, DE- fees not e x ceeding 28548 27531 $ 12,000 o b o . O n e added power pkg., SCRIBED I N AND the amounts provided 530 HP! Under 10k owner. 816.812.9882 SUBJECT TO THAT by ORS 86.753. In d. Freeor miles, Arctic silver, Free or Nominal Rate Outside-County Copies induded on PS Form3641 12 12 CERTAIN C O NDOconstruing this notice, Nominal gray leather interior, Rate MINIUM DECLARAthe singular includes new quality t i res, Vans Distribution (2) Free or Nominal Rate ln-County Copies Induded on PS Form 3641 T ION F O R RE S I - t he plural, and t h e and battery, Bose (Sy Mail D ENCE CLUB A T word "grantor" i npremium sound steand P RONGHOR N V I L- cludes any successor Free or Nominal Rate Copies Mailed at Other Classes Through the USPS reo, moon/sunroof, Outside (3) ie.g., First-Class Mail) LAS C O N DOMINI- in interest of grantor, car and seat covers. the Mai() UMS RE C O RDED as well as any other Many extras. G aAUGUST 23, 2005 IN person owing an obli(4) Free or Nominal Rate Distribution Outside the Mail (Cam'ers or other means/ raged, perfect con13 11 1253 VOLUME 2005, gation, th e p e r fordition $ 5 9,700. PAGE 56019, DESmance of which is se541-322-9647 GMC 1995 Safari XT, CHUTES C O U NTY cured by th e T r ust e. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribution(Sum of 15d (1J, (2$ (3) and (4/) 1266 1324 seats 8, 4.3L V6, OFFICIAL Deed, and the words studs on rims, $3000 RECORDS, TO- "trustee" and "benefiPorsche Carrera 911 obo. 541-312-6960 GETHER WITH THE ciary" include their ref. T otal Distribution (Sum of 15c end 15e) 2003 convertible with 28855 29814 LIMITED AND GENhardtop. 50K miles, spective successors new factory Porsche ERAL COMMON EL- in interest, if any. In I Auto m o biles motor 6 mos ago with E MENTS A S S E T accordance with the g. Copies not Distributed (See instructions to Publishers ¹4 (page ¹3)/ 1033 1172 18 mo factory warFORTH T H E R EIN, Fair Debt Collection ranty remaining. APPERTAINING TO Practices Act, this is nMy little red $37,500. SAID UNIT. (COM- an attempt to collect a h. Total (Sumof 15fand g) 541-322-6928 30986 29888 Corvette" Coupe MONLY KNOWN AS debt, and any inforINTERESTS G, H 8 mation obtained will i, P e rcent Paid Just bought a new boat? I). No action has been be used for that pur(16c diwdedby 15f times 100) 95% 95% Sell your old one in the instituted to r ecover pose. This communiclassifieds! Ask about our the obligation, or any cation is from a debt Super Seller rates! part thereof, now recollector. For further 541-385-5809 maining secured by information, p l ease 16.[Xj Total circulatlon includes electronic copies. Report circulation on PS Fonn 3526-X worksheet. 1996, 350 auto, the Trust Deed or, if contact Jesus Miguel Subaru Outback 2008 132,000 miles. such action has been Palomares a t his Immaculate! Non-ethanol fuel 8 17.Publication of Statement of Ownership instituted, such action m ailing address o f Original owner. 82K synthetic oil only, has been dismissed Miller Nash LLP, 111 miles, 2 new sets of If the publication is a general publication, publication of this slatement is required. VVill be printed P Publication not required. garaged, premium tires, service records, except as p ermitted S.W. Fifth A v enue, Bose stereo, by ORS 86.735(4). 5. Suite 3400, Portland, new brakes & struts, in the 10/3/13 issue of this publication. $11,000. leather seats, loaded! The default for which O regon 9 7 2 0 4 o r t he f o reclosure i s telephone h i m at 541-923-1781 18. Signature and Title of Editor, Publisher, Business Manager, or Owner Date $15,900. made i s Gr a ntor's (503) 224- 5 858. 541-693-3975 failure to pay the Note DATED this 11th day 2005 Buick LeSabre in full upon maturity. of June, 2013. /s/ Toyota Celica Custom, 101K, $6500. By reason of said de- Jesus Miguel PaloConvertible 1993 30+ mpg hwy, full-size fault, Beneficiary has mares, Successor 4-dr sedan, luxury ride d eclared al l su m s Trustee. F i l e No. 8 handling ... I certifythat all information furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who fumishes false or misleading information on thls owing on the obliga- 080090-0799. Why not drive a Buick? form or who omits material or information requested on the form may be subject to criminal sanctions iinduding fines and imprisonment) and/or civil tion secured by the Grantor: Jo h n T . Call Bob, 541-318-9999 Trust Deed immedi- C ranston, Sr., a n d sanctions (induding civil penalties). ately due and payPatricia R. Cranston. ACURA TLSH 2010 PS Form 3526, August 2012(Page 2 of 3) able which sums are Beneficiary: U.S. AWD, black, 53k G T 2200 4 c yl, 5 as follows: (a) the Bank National Asso¹005747 $27,995 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, principal amount of ciation. Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation UNI TED STATES nicest c o n vertible $241,488.89 a s of around in this price M~ PO S TAL SERt((ICEe ( Only for Requester and General Category Periodicals Publications) March 21, 2013, (b) Oregon range, ne w t i r es, accrued interest of Autnsource wheels, clutch, tim541-598-3750 $32,214.95 a s of FIND YOURFUTURE ing belt, plugs, etc. PS FORM 3526 WORKSHEET March 21, 2013, and www.oregonauto111K mi., r emarkIt you are using PS Form 3526 and clalmlng electronlc copies complete below: source.com interest accr u ing HOME IN THE BULLETIN able cond. i n side thereafter on the prina. Paid Electronic Copies and out. Fun car to 1040 AUDI 1990 V8 Quat973 cipal amount at the Yourfutureisjust apage d rive, Must S E E ! tro. Perfect Ski Car. rate set forth in the away.Whetheryou're looking b. Total Paid Print Copies (Line I5C) + Paid Electronic Copies $5995. R e dmond. Note until fully paid, LOW MILES. $3,995 28377 27352 541-504-1993 obo. 541-480-9200. (c) late charges in the for a hat of aplaceto hangit, c. Total Print Distribution (Line 15F) + Paid Electronic Copies 28855 The BulletinClassifiedis 29814 amount of $400.00 as of March 21, 2013, your best source. BMW 525 2002 d. Percent Paid (Both Print & Electronic Copies) 95% 95% plus any late charges Luxury Sport Ediaccruing t h e reafter Every daythousandsof tion, V-6, automatic IXI Certify that 50% of all my distributed copies (Electronic & Print) are paid above a nominal price. a nd any o t her e x - buyersandsellers ofgoods loaded, 18" new penses or fees owed and servicesdo businessin tires, 114k miles. u nder the N ote o r $7,900 obo pages.Theyknow T rust D e e d , (d) these Stockholders owning more then one percent of the stock of Western Communications, Inc. are: (541) 419-4152 Toyota Venza 2009 amounts that Benefi- you can'tbeatTheBulletin One OwnerJanet C. Stevens Joseph C.Jordan Jeffrey Cushman Alex McCool ciary has paid on or Classified Section for Great condition, may hereinafter pay to selectionandconvenience 1852 Hollow Tree Lane 301 2James Ave., ¹2 20574 Scarlet Sage Way 60 3 59 Arnold Market Rd. under 30,000 miles. Buick CX Lucerne protect the lien, in- - every item Extended service/ Minneapolis, MN 55408 B e n d, OR 97702 i s j u st a phone Bend, OR 97701 Bend, OR 97702 2006, 82k mi., cluding by way of ilwarranty plan (75,000 cream leather, Black call away. lustration, b u t not Margaret C. Cushman Mary G race Stevens Mary Frances Cushman Kat h leen Rose McCool miles). Loaded! Beauty - Stunning limitation, taxes, asLeather, panoramic 61307 Tam McArthur Loop 1852 NE Hollow Tree Ln 65 0 9 SW 19'"Ave. 60359 Arnold Market Rd. The ClassifiedSectionis eye appeal, $6900. sessments, i n terest roof, navigation, JBL Bend, OR 97702 Bend, OR 97701 Portland, OR 97239 Bend, OR 97702 No charge for easy touse.Everyitem on prior liens, and inSynthesis Sound looking. Call surance p r emiums, is categorizedandevery system. $24,500. Mary Jean Chandler Robert W. Chandler, Jr. Mic h ael C. Jordan Mallory McCool 541-318-9999 Jeff - 541-390-0937 and (e) e xpenses, caftegofy isindexedonthe 759 SW Otter Way 69205 Hawksflight Dr. 6606 S E 21st Ave. 60359 Arnold Market Rd. costs and a t torney section's frontpage. Bend, OR 97702 Sisters, OR 97759 Portland, OR 97202 Bend, OR 97702 and trustee fees inCadillac EI Dor a do WHEN YOU SEE THIS curred by Beneficiary Whetheryouarelooking for 1 994, Total C r eam Patricia C. Moss Laura Renne Moss Andrew D.C. Jordan Anna Stevens in foreclosure, includPuff! Body, paint, trunk ~ OO 538 NW State St. 60255Windsong Lane 75 9 S W Ot1357Edgecli ffe Dr.¹4 3334 Payne Rd. i ng the cost o f a ahomeof needaservice, as s howroom, b l ue trustee's sale g uar- your future is inthepagesof Los Angeles,CA 90026 M e d ford, OR 97504 leather, $1700 wheels Bend, OR 97701 Bend, OR 97702 On a classified ad antee and any other w/snow tires although The BulletinClassified, Elizabeth C. McCool Annie Louise Moss Greg Cushman car has not been wet in go to environmental or ap8 years. On t rip t o www.bendbulletin.com praisal report. By rea60359 Arnold Market Rd. 3 8 2 0 N. Gantenbein Ave. 6 1 3 70 Tam McArthur Lp Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., to view additional son of said default, Bend, OR 97702 Portland, OR 97227 Bend, OR 97702 Serving Cenfrai Oregonsince itia $4800. 541-593-4016. B eneficiary and t h e photos of the item.
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