Bulletin Daily Paper 10-06-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

MONDAY October 6,2014

ear? Gun ShOW

ime osoccu Oll 0 SPORTS • B1

LOCAL• A7

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

Nwt , NOV.4 — ~

bendbnlletin.com/elections

Old-school racingWith a simple format, local cross-country race series is a throwback.B1

DISTRICT 54

Fleas on theuptick?-

• Eight-phase modernization project will take more than 2years

Arefleasmakingacomeback? Many pet owners think so.A3

By Tara Bannow

Plus: MLBpjayoffsRoyals and Orioles punch their tickets to the ALCS.B3

Buehler, Wilhelm talk UGB, carbon

i

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Bend's two state

The Bulletin

Plus: Expert predators — Cheetahs andpumasare pros at hunting.A3

House candidates are campatgnmg to repre-

I!

St. Charles Health Sys-

tem today kicks off a remodelingproject designed

sent a district where the

Ettt tttt ~ ~~. t

economy is deeply tied to

to carry its Bend hospital

And a Web exclusiveMorton, lllinois — pumpkin capital of the world. bendbnlletin.com/extras

through the next 30 years. The hallmark of the $27.7 million project will be 80 larger patient rooms on the third and fourth

j

The bond thatbrought Ebolavictim to the U.S. By Kevin Sack New York Times News Service

DALLAS — The murderous civil war that terrorized Liberia from

1989 to 2003 left at least 5 percent of the population dead, and

Belated

sent wave after wave of

• Top officials r e f ugees to oppose n e ighboring travel ban, countries. To A2 escape the ethnic and political turmoil, more than 700,000 fled from a nation that had barely 2 million residents when the

conflic tbegan. Among them were Thomas Eric Duncan, the

man who brought the Ebola virus to the United States last week, and Louise Troh,

the environment. While inthe last cen-

tury Bend was fueled by timber, both Democrat Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

floors and more than 60

EDITOR'5CHOICE

ELE CTION

larger bathrooms. It will also involve replacing the hospital's aging electrical, plumbing and ventilation systems, installed when the building opened in 1975. It's a massive, eightphase project that's expect-

As part of the St. Charles Bend remodel project — which will be completed in eight phases over a two-and-a-half-year period — aging electrical, plumbing and ventilation systems will be updated and the new windows will be double-glazed to allow better control of temperatures in

the rooms. The core areas in the middle of the floors will be redesigned to support the work process of caregivers and to improve the overall flow. e

i

e

Craig Wilhelm and Republican Knute Buehler say vitality is now linked to preservation. Both candidates

running for the open District 54 seat agree more needs tobe done in Salem to protect Central

i •

Oregon's natural spaces. Wilhelm, an executive

years.

with Resource Recyding Technologies, said all

Jim Walker, St. Charles' director of construction

of his decisions about the environment will

and real estate,empha-

be made with an eye to

sized that he and the other

the connection between

planners have put a lot of thought into minimizing the project's impact on pa-

the economy and the region's mountains, pines

tient care.

surgeon, also stressed this connection, and said

ed to take two and a half

and rivers. Buehler, a

"I hope people aren't too anxious about coming here while we're under construction, because we're going to keep this behind

he plans to increase the

Submitted photo/ rendering

the scenes so that hopeful-

ly they won't be impacted,"

• • r

he said. "If they are, it will

state's supply of clean energy by helping Oregonians tap into solar, geothermal and similar power sources. See District 54/A5

be very minimal." The project will include redesigning hospital floors so that caregivers will work in central core areas

II IIBI Ikll4

ik

surrounded by patients on

•I

the outside. It's a design that's become increasingly common inhealth care

settings because it makes for quieter, more private

Falsehope, fear fuel

smugglers'

patient areas and allows

for better communication between caregivers.

efforts

Nurses in the hospital

enter and review patient in-

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

thewoman he had come to

formation on mobile work stations on wheels. But,

As part of the $27.7 million St. Charles Bend remodel project, patient rooms on the third and fourth floors of the hospital will be 30 percent larger, the majority of bathrooms will increase in

By Damien Cave and Frances Robles

Dallas to visit. After meet-

they don't have designated

size and manywill meet ADArequirements. Below is a rendering of what the remodeled rooms

New York Times

ing in the early 1990s in a refugeeencampment near the Ivory Coast border

spots to park them, so they tend to end up directly

will look like.

town of Danane, the two

Walker said.

EL PARAISO, Gua-

outside patients' rooms,

,

temala — The smugglers advertised on the radio in the spring: "Do

a relationship and bore a

"One of the benefits of this project is creating a

son, several family members said.

zone on the other side of the corridor where the

Liberian nationals started

See Ebola /A4

TODAY'S WEATHER ~E

4~ Sunny, nice ~ High 82, Low45 Page B10

tfW

INDEX Calendar A7 L ocal/State A7-8 C lassified C1-6 Movies A 9 Comics C3-4 Nation/World A2 Crosswords C4 Sports B1-10 Dear Abby A9 Teeto Green B9 Horoscope A9 Television A9 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

you want to live better?

Come with me." Cecilia, a restless wisp of a girl, heard the pitch and ached to go. Her stepfather

nurses can work without directly being outside of the patient's room," he said. When the project is fin-

had been murdered,

forcing her, her mother and four younger

ished, 80 patient rooms will

be 30 percent larger than they are. The project won't

siblings into her aunt's

tiny home, with just three beds for 10 people. A smuggler offered them a loan of $7,000 for Cecilia's journey

affect another two dozen

patient rooms that were built about 10 years ago, as they're already larger, Walker said.

to a better place, with

SeeSt. Charles/A5

Submitted photo/ rendering

Drones vs.kidneys:Google autofill on the economy

Vol. 112, No. 279,

By Conor Dougherty

what you're looking for by

the brutal group of Sunni

2e pages, 3 sections

New York Times News Service

"autofilling" a few letters of

militants in Iraq and Syria, as

Q l/l/e use recycfed newsprint

If you were looking for a national collective conscience,

a query into a fully formed question.

well as reality TV show "The Bachelor."

Take a recent search for

With the third quarter now

::IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

88267 02329

the property as a guarantee. SeeSmuggling/A5

you could do worse than to

check out Google's autofill feature — when Google's searchengine triesto guess

"Who Is?" The autofill suggests that Americans are very interested in the Islamic State,

behind us, Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx Group, a New

York broker-dealer, used autofill and other "off the grid" indicators, including Google Trends, to see how Americans

a range of alternative data," he wrote in a note to clients.

feel about the economy.

sensus view of the economy square with what real people do in their daily lives?"

"Every quarter we take a break from all the standard economic indicators to look at

"The purpose here is to pose the question: Does the con-

SeeAutofill /A5


A2

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remainin By William Wan and Ishaan Tharoor

complex through a thin path- ing the hand of a police officer way created by the students. as though in agreement. The Washington Post A few dozen protesters were But upon hearing the news, HONG KONG — A showcamped outside the chief ex- other protesters came rushing down between pro-democra- ecutive's office, alongside a in within minutes to take the cy demonstrators and Hong similar number of journalists. places of those retreating and Kong's government appeared They had called authorities' refused to leave even in the headed toward a s t alemate bluff for protesters to disperse face of possible force by the this morning, the deadline by morning. police. Reflecting the mistrust that authorities had given proThe holding pattern, if it rampant at the protest, rumors testers to clear the streets. lasts, caps several days of promptly circulated that the Anxiety and disagreements threats and attempts to es- protester who had made the were evident among protest- calate the situation. And al- friendly gesture earlier was a ers about whether to continue though the protest is likely to member of the city's auxiliary their weeklong occupation of lose its large numbers over police force. multiple sites in Hong Kong time, a core group of protestEarlier, Hong Kong's leador to pull back and consolidate ers has vowed to remain no er, Leung Chun-ying, said he their forces at the main enmatter what happens until would take "all actions neccampment in front of govern- they get some concessions essary" to make sure government headquarters. from the government. ment workers could return to But it appears that the auSuch an occupation could work, which some saw as an thorities might tolerate a re- also turn more public senti- ultimatum for protesters to get duced protest, as long as key ment against the students' off the street or risk facing a buildings are not blocked. cause, and at the same time police sweep. As the sun rose today, hun- it would bring into question Some of those who had takdreds ofprotesters remained how long Beijing would toler- en up position outside the chief on the streets in Admiralty, ate such public defiance of its executive's office said that if most asleep. There was no authority. police try to clear out the prosign that police were planning One group agreed to retreat testers, this would be the first to clear the area. early Sunday night from bar- battle line. They pointed out Civil servants working at ricades blocking the offices of that this was the road Leung Hong Kong's main govern- Hong Kong's chief executive, would likely have to take to get ment building entered the with one protester even shak- to work.

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Flight 370 SearCh —The hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 resumed today in a desolate stretch of the Indian Ocean, more than six months after the jet vanished. The GO Phoenix, the first of three ships that will spend up to a year hunting for the wreckage far off Australia's west coast, is expected to spend 12days hunting for the jet before heading to shore to refuel. Crews will use sonar, video cameras and jet fuel sensors to scour the seabed for the Boeing 777,whichvanishedforreasonsunknown on March8 duringa flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board. The search has been on hold for four months so crews could map the seabed in the search zone, about1,100 miles west of Australia. MiSSOuri adOrtiOn laW —A new Missouri law requiring a 72-hour abortion waiting period is set to take effect this week, and the state's only licensed abortion clinic isn't planning to try to stop it. Although Planned Parenthood officials have denounced the Missouri law as "onerous" and "burdensome" for women, the organization isn't planning to file a lawsuit before the measure takes effect Friday. That's because abortion-rights groups have determined that their chances of success aren't that good. "We've had our national attorneys from all of the leading women's health organizations in the country work with us, and we have a consensus that we do not have a route at this time to go to court and to stop this law from going into effect — as disappointing and as frustrating as that is," said Paula Gianino, president and CEOof Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region and Southwest Missouri. TyphOOn StrikeS Japan —A powerful typhoon made landfall in central Japan today after washing three American airmen in Okinawa out to sea the previous day, killing at least one. Elsewhere in the Pacific, a separate typhoon whipped the Mariana Islands, including Guam, with high winds and heavy rain. In Japan, bullet trainservicewassuspended between Tokyoand Osaka because of heavy rain, and more than 600 flights were canceled at Tokyo's Haneda Airport. Typhoon Phanfone cameashore near the city of Hamamatsu shortly after 8 a.m. Authorities issued evacuation advisories for more than 400,000 people in the storm's path. One of the three airmen was found dead. The other two were missing, according to the Air Force and the Japanesecoast guard.

Edala patient returning tO U.S. —AnAmerican photojournalist who contracted Ebola while working in West Africa began his journey home for treatment Sunday. Ashoka Mukpo, 33, will be the second Ebola patient to be treated at the Nebraska Medical Center's specialized isolation unit. Mukpo was working as a freelance cameraman for NBCNews in Liberia when he became ill last week. NBC reported Sunday evening that Mukpo had started his journey to the U.S. for treatment and that he would arrive this morning. Mukpo's family said Friday he would be treated in Omaha. Hospital officials said they expected an Ebola patient to arrive today, but declined to provide a name. He is the fifth American to return to the United States for treatment since the start of the latest Ebola outbreak, which the World Health Organization estimates has killed more than 3,400 people.

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Brazil eleotiOll —Brazil's unpredictable election took another twist Sunday, with left-leaning President Dilma Rousseff being forced into a runoff race as expected, but against a center-right challenger who only surged in the final week of the campaign. Rousseff will face Aecio Neves in the Oct. 26 runoff vote, required as no single candidate won an outright majority. With over 99 percent of the vote counted, the president had won 41.5 percent against Neves' 33.6 percent. As surprising as Neves' rise was the fall from grace of another candidate, former environment minister Marina Silva, who took just 21 percent of the vote. In late August, she held a double-digit lead over Rousseff in polls after being thrust into the race when her Socialist Party's first candidate died in a plane crash.

— Fromwirereports

Felix Marquez/The Associated Prese

Students and relatives of missing students surround and denyaccess to aconvoy of military vehicles as they block amain highway in the city of Chilpancingo, Mexico, on Sunday. Students and relatives aredemanding answers aday after security forces investigating the role of municipal police in clashes inthis southern city a weekagofound a mass grave, raising fears the pits might hold 43 students missing since last week inviolence that also resulted in six shooting deaths. The chief prosecutor of Mexico's Guerrero state said

authorities found 28bodies in the clandestine grave. State Prosecutor Inaky Blancosaidthe remainsare too damagedfor immediate identification and hecan't say if any of thedeadcould be some of the 43 college students reported missing after the confrontation with police. State police andprosecutors have beeninvestigating the Igualacity police for misconduct during a series of violent incidents last weekendthat resulted in six shooting deathsand morethantwo dozenpeople injured.

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Officials castdoubt on Ebolatravel ban By Mark Scolforo

region to protect Americans.

The Associated Press

Rep. Tim Murphy plans to conduct hearings on the policy this coming week. He leads the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. Asking travelers to report

Top government health officials said Sunday that they are opposed to placing a ban on travelers from Ebola-infected countries, warning that shutting down borders

could impede efforts by aid workersto stop the spread of the deadly virus. The idea of a ban gained currency this past week af-

more w i dely t h r oughout different countries in Afri-

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ca, that will be even more of

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a risk to us," said Frieden, whose agency has cautioned against non-essential travel

to Liberia, Sierra Leone and

Guinea. t heir own a ctivities at a i r Frieden has also noted that ports "has been a d emon- a ban on incoming flights strated failure, and it is nearly could affect Americans try-

impossible to retrace steps to ing to return home from those countries. " There ar e m a n y o t h er ter the nation's first case was who has been in contact with diagnosed in Dallas. Pro- a carrier taking multiple in- people who have the right to ponents have argued that ternational flights across the enter into this country," he it would help ensure public globe," Murphy, a Pennsylva- said during a Saturday briefsafety. nia Republican, said Friday. ing. "And we're not going to Anthony Fauci, director of Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jin- be able to get to zero risk no the National Institute of Aldal said the U.S. should halt matter what we do unless and lergy and Infectious Diseases, flights from Ebola-stricken until we control the outbreak part of the National Institutes countries. in West Africa." "The Obama administraof Health, said a travel embarU.S. officials have emphago on West African countries tion keeps saying they won't sized that the United States that are struggling with Ebola shut down flights. They in- has a modern medical system would make it much harder stead say we should listen that is far better equipped to to 'the experts,'" Jindal said for them to control the virus. contain an outbreak than the "You isolate them, you can Friday. "In fact, they said it African countries where Ebocause unrest in the country," would be counterproductive la is currently spreading. Fauci told "Fox News Sun- to stop these flights. That Airline passengers have day." "It's conceivable that statement defies logic." their temperatures taken as governments could fall if you Tom Frieden, director of the they board planes in the outjust isolate them completely." federal Centersfor Disease break zone, although those British Airways and some Control and Prevention, said infected with Ebola can go other airlines have suspended on ABC's "This Week" that up to 21 days before they exflights from those countries, the administration was open hibit symptoms. Passengers a nd overall t raffic t o a n d to practical suggestions that are also asked about contact from the affected areas has won't backfire. with infected people, but that "We don't want to do some- process would not be useful dropped. S en. Mark K i rk , a n I l l i - thing that inadvertently inif a passenger lies or simply nois Republican, has said the creases our risk by making does not realize the medical federal government should it harder to stop the outbreak condition of people they have gradually halt flights to the there, because if it spreads encountered.

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try and track down everyone

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014•THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Monday, Oct. 6, the 279th

day of 2014.There are86 days left in theyear.

TRENDING

STUDIES

ee a san umas are unin ex e s

HAPPENINGS Hong Kong protestsGovernment deadline for the police to restore access to the government's headquarters takes effect amid pro-democracy protests. A2

Supreme COurt — The Supreme Court opens its new term.

By Amina Khan Los Angeles Times

Whether

HISTORY Highlight On Oct. 6,1939, ina speechtothe Reichstag,German Chancellor Adolf Hitler spoke of his plans toreorder theethnic layout of Europe—a plan which would entail settling the"Jewish problem." In 1N3,13 families fromKrefeld, Germany,arrived in Philadelphia to begin Germantown,oneof America's oldestsettlements. In 1N4, the NavalWarCollege was established inNewport, Rhode Island. In 1889, theMoulin Rougein Paris first openedits doorsto the public. In1927,the eraoftalking pictures arrivedwith theopening of "The JazzSinger" starring Al Jolson, amoviefeaturing both silentand sound-synchronized sequences. In1928,ChiangKai-shek became president ofChina. In 1949, U.S.-born IvaToguri O'Aquino, convicted oftreason for being Japanese wartime broadcaster"TokyoRose,"was sentenced inSanFrancisco to10 years in prison. (Sheendedup serving morethansix.) In 1958, thenuclearsubmarine USS Seawolsurfaced f after spending 60dayssubmerged. In 1973, warerupted inthe Middle EastasEgyptandSyria attacked IsraelduringtheYom Kippur holiday. In 1976, inhis secondpresidential debatewith Democrat Jimmy Carter, PresidentGeraldFord asserted therewas"no Soviet domination ofeastern Europe." (Ford later concededthat was not the case.) In1979,PopeJohn Paul II, on aweeklongU.S.tour, became the first pontiff to visit theWhite House, where he was received by PresidentJimmyCarter. In 1981, EgyptianPresident Anwar Sadatwasshot to death by extremists while reviewinga military parade. In19N, actress BetteDavisdied in Neuilly-sur-Seine,France,at age81. Tenyaarsaga: Thetop U.S. arms inspector in Iraq,Charles Duelfer, reported finding no evidenceSaddamHussein's regime hadproducedweaponsof mass destruction after1991.The Senateapprovedanintelligence reorganization bill endorsedby the September11Commission. Israelis AaronCiechanoverand Avram Hershko andAmerican Irwin Rosewonthe Nobel Prize in chemistry. FiveyearsagL President Barack Obama saidal-Qaida had"lost operationalcapacity" in Afghanistanafter aseries of military setbacksandvowed to continue thebattle to cripple the terror organization.George Papandreouwasswornin as Greece's new Socialist prime minister. AmericansCharlesKao, Willard BoyleandGeorgeSmith won the NobelPrize inphysics. Oneyear ago: International disarmamentexperts begandismantling anddestroying Syria's chemical weaponsarsenaland the equipmentusedto produce it. At least 51peoplewere kiled in Egypt whensecurityforces and Islamist protesters clashed during anational holiday.

BIRTHDAYS Broadcasterandwriter Melvyn Bragg is 75.Thepresident of Sinn Fein,GerryAdams, is66. Rock singerKevinCronin (REO Speedwagon) is63. Rocksinger-musicianDavidHidalgo(Los Lobos) is 60.FormerNFLplayer and coachTony Dungy is59. Actress ElisabethShueis51.Singer Matthew Sweet is50.Actress Amy Jo Johnsonis 44.Actress Emily Mortimer is43. Actor LammanRucker is43.Actor Jeremy Sisto is40. Rhythm-andblues singerMelinda Doolittle (TV: "AmericanIdol") is 37. — From wirereports

a

fl ee t -foot-

ed cheetah or a lie-in-wait puma, a hunting feline's survival balances on the point between how much energy they lose in hunting for a meal and the energy they gain from actually eating it. Stuart Bradford/The New YorkTimes

Now, two new studies in the

Anecdotal reports from dog and cat owners over the past few years suggest that fleas are getting mora difficult to control, but

journal Science follow these big cats to find out how they

veterinarians and flea product makers say the products work when used correctly.

make this lifestyle work.

wners worrie over u ic in num ero eas Professor Michael Dryden, or Dr. Flea, said the real issue is educating consumers on the best way to use the products and what results to expect By Tara Parker-Pope

start treating fleas, our homes

New York Times News Service

are already infested," Dryden A re fl ea s m a k ing a said. "No home is ever under comeback? control in a week, and it can Some pet owners think so. take weeks or months in some Over the past few years, anec-

homes. It can take time for a flea infestation to be gone, and

dotal reports from dog and cat owners around the country that has nothing to do with suggest that the bloodsucking reslstance. parasites are gettingmore diffiChristine L. Cain, an assiscult to control, despite the use of tant professor of dermatology once-revolutionary topical flea treatments. But veterinarians and flea

at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Med-

product makers say the products work when used correctly, and that many pet owners may be making mistakes or have unrealistic expectations about

pets being treated for fleas,

Being a t o p p r edator might seem like an enviable position. After all, generally speaking, no one's trying to eat you. But it comes with some serious

track this energy consump- fast, it's vulnerable to other tion. They created SMART predators (like lions and collars (short for "species hyenas) who muscle in after movement, acceleration and the cheetah's done all the radio tracking") that helped work and steal the meaL them link the animals' enerSo on top of having to gy consumption to a variety work hard to get a meal, the of different behaviors, in- cheetah can easily lose it to cluding resting, eating and another predator. How does running. it deal with these costs? An They captured four wild international team took 19 p umas, o u t f i tte d the m cheetahs and administered w ith th e d evices and r e - doses of doubly labeled waleased them into a roughly ter (water whose hydrogen 65-square-mile study area in and oxygen atoms have the Santa Cruz Mountains. been replaced with heavier The scientists found that isotopes). They used the isothe pumas used a v ariety tope-tagged water to track of different styles, "ranging the cheetahs' energy expen-

d r a wbacks from low-cost sit-and-wait behaviors to constant move-

when nabbing ameal. Think about it: If you're a typical herbivore — a zebra or

a deer — you find a plant, you stand there and eat the

plant. Aside from dealing with a large-scale environmental crisis, like drought, g etting g ru b i s pr e t ty straightforward. For carnivores, what you want to eat i s s ometimes

bigger than you, it can sometimes fight back and it might even be able to outrun you. A carnivore runs the risk of spending a lot of energy for just one meal and ending up empty-clawed. It's pretty difficult to tell how these hunters minimize

prey, however, takes a lot of

these energetic costs in na- time and energy. ture, on often rugged and A second study looked at a unforgiving terrain. So in a hunter with a very different study led by Terrie Williams style — the cheetah, which of the University of Califor- engages in high-speed chasnia, Santa Cruz, research- es to bring down, say, a gaers devised a clever way to zelle. While the cheetah is

Fairfield, Connecticut, noticed his golden retriever Tia scratch-

I•

• 1

outbreakscan occur. Missing a monthly treatment by even a few days can be enough to give fleas a foothold. Sometimes, particularly in pets with long

I The most comprehensive visitors' guide in the tri-county area, this

is distributed through Central

sorbed, she said. A pet that comes into con-

problem, since most monthly

Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including

a dog park or in the wild could also develop a temporary flea

tourist kiosks across the state.

that contains the chemical flea treatments prevent longfipronil, which has been shown term infestation but don't repel to be highly effective against newfleas. "A lot of times what people fleas. Soon, however, he discovered that his dog and home are percei ving as resistance

he switched to another topical solution that includes the active ingredient permethrin. The

I

I INI

Cain said. Topical treatments revolutionized flea control when they

were introduced in the 1990s. Most of the treatments are applied to the skin between an

111 WAYS

animal's shoulder blades. The chemical is absorbed into the

TO DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON

into the bloodstteam. The treat-

were beginning to doubt the ments do not repel fleas, but efficacy of fipronil. When it those crawling on an animal came time to treat Tia again,

It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year round.

I

may not be true resistance,"

and even spraying his yard, sebaceous glands across the but nothing helped. He came animal's skin but does not get across other pet owners who

rather than those encoun-

tered securing prey," the study authors wrote.

beforeithas a chance to be ab-

with a leading flea treatment

ural remediesand flea baths,

costs incurred by traveling drive their energy budgets,

colorful, slick-stock-covered, information-packed magazine

tact with an infested animal at

erable, and the fleas just kept coming back." Because the dog had already been treated for fleas, Conrad tried using a flea comb, nat-

ence of competitors and that

not be applied correctly or may inadvertently be washed off

ing more than usual. Conrad said hesuspected an allergy ratherthan fl eas because the dog had been treated diligently every month for three years

were infested with fleas. "It was a nightmare for two months," he said. "Tia was mis-

"It shows that cheetahs

are well-adapted to the pres-

i

icine, said that even among

how the treatments work. Last s u mmer, f r e elance hair, a topical treatment may

photographer Mark Conrad of

diture over time, collecting

urine samples as the animents with energetic costs mals roamed around parks averaging 2.3 times those in southern Africa. predicted for running mamThe scientists found that mals," they wrote. the cheetahs can offset their But to mitigate those ener- losses from stolen food (a gy costs, they tended to keep phenomenon called klepstill and stay out of sight. toparasitism) by traveling And when they did attack, wider distances. They could they were able to precisely actually deal with a 25 permatch their pouncing force cent kleptoparasitism rate, to the size of their unlucky because it would require prey — leaving very little en- only an additional 1.1 hours ergy wasted. of time and 12 percent extra It makes sense, the au- daily energy expenditure to thors wrote. Killing an anmake up for the loss. As long imal may seem like a lot of as there's enough prey to go work, but actually doing the around, the thievery didn't deed takes up a small slice of affect their energetic bottom their day. Searching for that line too much.

will absorb the chemical and eventually die, usually within

four hours. Several new fl e a

c o ntrol

fleas finally resolved, and he products have been introduced decided to stick with the new recently, including monthly treatment. pills and long-acting collars, Veterinarians said they hear available through veterinaristories similar to Conrad's all ans. The oral pills are easier to the time, but that there was no

use and lessmessy, but some

convincing research to suggest that fipronil or other leading fleatreatments have become less effective in most areas. Michael Dryden, a professor of veterinary parasitology at

pet owners still prefer a topical

Kansas State University, has conducted numerous studies

Michael Murray, a veterinarian and technical marketing

IS ACOMPREHENSIVE GUIDE to places, events and activities taking place throughout Central Oregon during the year. Both locals as well as visitors to the area will discover the services and products your business has tooffer when you advertise in this publication.

giS

y glLAl. OR EGojII

treatment. Cain said that when a pet develops a severe skin al-

lergy to fleas, a pet owner may use a combination of topical

/

and oral treatments.

on the efficacy of flea treat- director for Merial, a unit of Saments. Dryden, who is com- nofi, the company that makes monly called "Dr. Flea," said the Frontline flea treatment, there are some areas, particu- said that a rainy summer can larlyin the southeastern United trigger a "flea bloom," causing States, where flea populations a population explosion among are strong and some treat- wild animah. The fleas can ments may not be working as then get in the grass, exposing well as they did 10 to 15 years

treated pets to more fleas.

ago. However, flea products continue to work well in most

During a fle a boom, even animals treated with a topical

parts of the country, so the real

solution are vulnerable. If treat-

issue is educating consumers ed properly, the fleas will die on the best wayto use the prod- off, but not necessarily before ucts and what results to expect. owners have caught sight of the "Most of us, by the time we fleas on their pets.

I

/,

"I

The Bulletin

®

To Reserve Your Ad Space call

541-38 2-1 81 1 www.bendbulletin.com


A4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014

Ebola

Popular painkillers now harder to obtain

did not elaborate on what those er the possibility of Ebola for charges might be. reasons that remain undear. Duncanwas senthomewithanAreunion tibiotics that were powerless to It was Duncan's first trip to halt the progression ofhis virus. the United States, his brother

Continued from A1 It is not clear what drove the

couple apart — Duncan, 42, who is fighting for his life at a Dallas hospital, has not spoken

Turn for the worse

said, and he was clearly excited to reunite with Troh and his

publicly, and Troh, 54, who will be quarantined for another two

On the morning of Sept. 28, long-lost son, who now attends after a nightlong bout with di-

weeks, dedined to discuss their

Angelo State University, west

arrhea, Duncan did not want

history.

of Dallas.

But starting in 1998, when Troh left for the United States — first settling in Boston, and then in Dallas with another Li-

WR1

w4

berian man — they began a 16year separation. Not only did Duncan not see Troh, he missed the entire

Daniel Berehulak/The New YorkTimes

Theli vingcompound ofThomas EricDuncan,thema nwho

childhood of their son, Karsiah, brought the Ebola virus to the U.S. last week, in a neighborhood who adapted well enough to his called 72nd SKD Boulevard on the eastern outskirts of Monrovia, new home to become the start-

Liberia. Duncan came to the U.S. to reunite with another Liberian

ing quarterback for the Conrad national, Louise Troh, and a son they bore together, according to High Chargers. several family members. Tragedy befell Troh in February when a daughter in Liberia died during childbirth. In the war began. Their mother He rode in a taxi with the March, she split with Peterson came a decade later, followed woman and her relatives. After Wayne, the Liberian refugee by Smaltwood, but Duncan left thehospitalturnedher awayfor she had followed to Texas. It Ghana and returned to Liberia, lack of space in its Ebola ward, was afterthat thatshe and Dun- wherehe stayed. he helped carry Williams, who can apparently revived their reBefore leaving for Dallas, was too weak to walk, from lationship, first at long distance, Duncan had been living in a the taxi back into her house. A and then when Duncan landed neighborhood called 72nd SKD neighbor said she saw Duncan at Dallas/Fort Worth Interna- Boulevard on the eastern out- holding her legs while others tional Airport on Sept. 20. skirts of Monrovia, an hour's supported her back and arms. "They had had a falling out, commute from his job in the The woman died several hours and had patched things up," central city. He had worked later. said the Rev.George Mason, for about a year as a driver for On Sept. 19, as heprepared to Troh's pastor at Wilshire Bap- Safeway Cargo, which acts as board a Brussels Airlines flight tist Church, "and he had come the customs clearance agent to the Belgian capital, where here with the intention to mar-

for FedEx in Liberia, said Hen-

ry and start a new life together. ry Brunson, the company's Obviously, what happened has manager. thrown a wrinkle into that."

Duncan rented one of three

small rooms in a one-story 'Fighting for his life' white building with concrete On Sunday, the director of walls and a roof of corrugated the federal Centers for Dis- zinc. He enjoyed riding his moease Control and Prevention, torcycle, and interacted reguDr. Thomas Frieden, said that larly with his neighbors but did Duncan's medical condition not receive guests at home. was quite critical and that he is Smallwood said Duncan ob"fighting for his life." tained a visa several weeks beDuncan, who goes by Eric, is fore leaving, and on Sept. 4 he the youngest of seven siblings, quit his job without warning or according to his brother, Wil- explanation, Brunson said. gineer for an American mining company, Smallwood said. Afterfiveyearsintherefugee camp in French-speaking Ivory Coast, the family moved to

Ghana, where there was less of a language barrier, Smallwood said. A sister, who now lives in

Charlotte, North Carolina, was the first of the dan to make it to the United States, shortly after

sparsely furnished two-bed-

go to work and called Jallah to

room apartment, Unit 614, on

the second floor of The Ivy, an

come care for him. When she arrived, he complained ofbeing

unremarkable complex in the

cold, and she took a quick trip

By Biythe Bemhard St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS — It's going

Vickery Meadow neighbor- to a nearby Wal-Mart to buy a hood. A king-size bed filled thicker blanket. Troh'sroom, andtwomattresses

She made him tea,and then

covered the blue-carpeted floor of the living room, which was dominated by a large-screen television. The apartment was shared by Troh's 13-year-old

fetcheda blood pressure monitor from her car. The readings were frighteningly low, and his temperature measured close to 103, she said. His eyes had

son, Timothy Wayne, and two

turned red, and he told her he

to be more difficult to refill

prescriptions for the most popular painkillers starting today, when new federal rules move products with hydrocodone into a stricter

drug class reserved for the most dangerous and addictive substances.

men in their 20s — Smallwood's had been to the bathroom sevson, Oliver, and a friend named en times during the night. "OK, Jeffrey Cole. you can have your tea, but then Jet lag sapped Duncan for we are going to the hospital," several days, and he found him- she told him. He resisted, sayself restless at night and sleepy ing he would wait for Troh to during the day, said Josephus return. She circumvented the Weeks, a relative of Duncan's argument by calling 911. in North Carolina. Troh liked Jallah said she was not to prepare an excess of food so thinking s peciTically a bout she could lure others to eat it, Ebola, but she had a warning according to Peterson Wayne, for the arriving emergency and she introduced family and medical workers: "You need to

In approving the change, the Drug Enforcement Ad-

friends to Duncan.

wear masks and be protective

because this man is from a viral country." On Tuesday, tests

he would catch connections to Dulles International Airport and then Dallas, Duncan was

Youngor Jallah, one of Troh's daughters, said she met Duncan when she dropped off her children Sept. 21 before rushing away to her job as a nurse's

contracted Ebola. They have been quarantined ever since,

filled each year. Proponents of the new rulesbelieve manyprescriptions go to younger people forrecreational usebecause they are less likely to suf-

screened for Ebola by health

assistant. He seemed nice, she

the children instructed to stay

fer from arthritis or other

ministration cited the 7 mil-

lion Americans who abuse prescription drugs and the 100,000 overdose deaths

from painkillers in the last decade. Hydrocodone combinations, induding Vicodin, Lortab and Norco, now accountfor more prescriptions than any other drug, with more than 130 million

confirmed that Duncan had

said, and offered condolences home from school. His temperature measured nor- about her sister's death in childTroh and th e o ther resimal — 97.3 degrees, according birth last February. When she dents ofher unit were moved to the Centers for Disease Con- came back to pick up the chil- on Thursday to a comfortable trol and Prevention in Atlanta. dren, her 6-year-old daughter, private residence — with a bas-

chronic pain conditions. But many doctors, phar-

When asked on a form whether

workers at Monrovia's airport.

macists and patients say

the change punishes people suffering from pain condi-

Rose, announced, "Oh, Grand-

ketball court for her son — that

tions because a minority of

he had been exposed to anyone ma has a new boyfriend." with Ebola in the past 21 days, On Sept. 25, Duncan began the virus' maximum incubation complaining to Troh about period, he answered no, said chills and she drove him to TexBinyah Kesselly, chairman of as Health Presbyterian Hospi-

was provided by a local benefactor. She said during a Sat-

the population abuses the drugs. The changes will

urday telephone call that she

be most burdensome for

remained "stressed out" by her concern for her family's health

the Liberia Airport Authority.

tal, not far from her apartment.

and by a week spent in the

He arrived in the emergency degrees and reported having abdominal pain for two days, a sharp headache and decreased urination, according to the hospital. When a nurse took

media glare. "We are peaceful people," she said."We are not criminals. We are here legally. Leave us alone." Jallah and her family remain in their cramped apartment, which lost power for several

his history, the hospital has re-

days this week after a storm.

patients with cancer, disabilities and those who live in rural areas or in nursing homes, advocates say. "For some patients who are legitimately using hydrocodone products for pain, this will be more challenging for them," said Amy Tiemeier, associate professor at St. Louis College of Pharmacy. "For physicians, the hassle will make them

Texas prosecutors said SunA fateful decision day that they are considerBut 11 days later, only four ing whetherto bring charges days before his scheduled de- a~ Du n can. "We are actively having disparture, Duncan made a consequential decision to help his cussions as to whether or not landlords transport their preg- we need to look into this as it nant 19-year-old daughter to a relates to a criminal matter," hospital, according to the land- Craig Watkins, the district atlords and other neighbors. The torney for Dallas County, said woman, Marthalene Williams, Sunday. "We're working with had been stricken with Ebola all the different agencies to get and was convulsing. to the bottom of it." Watkins

fred Smallwood, who lives in Phoenix. His father was an en-

Duncan settled into Troh's

to get out of bed. Troh, who is also a nurse's assistant, had to

room with a mild fever of 100.1

ported, he said he had not been With two weeks of isolation around anyone ill but had re- remaining, the t wice-a-day centlybeen in Africa. The nurse noted this, but doc-

visits from

h ealth w o rkers

think twice about whether

it's really necessary to prescribe this drug ..."

have revealed no symptoms of tors apparently failed to consid- infection.

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014•THE BULLETIN

Smuggling

The coyote got on the phone and made the terms clear: He

Continued fromA1

/

The trip l asted nearly a

month, devolving from a jour-

g r.

rf ~>~ ~. ir

ney of want and fear into an

//,,

outright abduction by smugglers in the United States. Freedom came only after an extra $1,000payment, made ata gas station in Fort Myers, F1orida.

One of 50,000 Now in Miami, Cecilia, 16, is

one of more than 50,000 unacgally from Central America in less than a year. Though the number of new arrivals has been declining, the Obama administration says it is deter-

u

mined to "confront the smugglers of these unaccompanied passage." But breaking up these net-

ton to retrieve the girl.

Marin told the coyote she did not know this girl. A series of calls later, Marin realized that

ur AndreaBruce/TheNew YcrkTimea

Continued fromA1 The project also includes making 61 patient bathrooms larger,30 of which will become large enough to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act, which set strict size requirements

to drive east. But every time he crossed another state line,

w heelchairs. Another 3 1

to ensure bathrooms are accessible to people using bathrooms will be enlarged but not enough to meet ADA requirements, Walker said.

The 1990 federal law requires that 10 percent of

"It was dear that if we did

patient bedrooms and re-

not comply, she would wind up in a brothel," said Ana Reyes, Marin's family friend who fielded most of the phone calls. The more Marin thought

strooms in hospitals meet sizing standards. L i sa

a bout th e

hospital's patient restrooms will meet the ADA stan-

p r oposition, th e

The mother of Cecilia, 16, a Guatemalan seeking a better life in the U.S., who fell prey to smugglers, in the home10 family members share in El Paraiso, Guatemala, in July. More than 50,000 unaccom-

angrier she became. But she agreed to meet in Naples, about

panied minors have come tothe U.S. illegally from Central America in less than a year. The Obama

two hours from Miami. Reyes,

works will be difficult. administration says it is determined to "confront the smugglers of these unaccompanied children." Thousands of migrants are believedto be kidnapped and abused every year while going name or the full names of her After about a week, anoth- lender, hoping to make it to the through Mexico. Others, like relatives used, knew the jour- er coyote took a small group United States to find her daughCecilia, are held for ransom ney was risky. to begin the treacherous walk ter and repay the original loan. in the United States, and offiBut she and her family be- through the desert to avoid the But she lost everything at the cials across the region lament lieved the smuggler's propos- Border Patrol checkpoints on Mexican border when a coyote that the ugly business of hu- al. "I thought when I got to the the roads. robbed her and refused to bring "I sawtwo dead people in the her north because she was man smuggling keeps getting United States they would give uglier. me papers — the coyote said desert," she recalled. pregnant. The result, visible through- that," she said. A car picked them up and Jacinto was now considered out mountain villages like this So early one morning in seven ofthem squeezed in. responsible for the debts, but one, is a relentless cycle with May, Cecilia put five pairs of They drove for an hour toward he said he had no way to pay. departures that ebb and flow pants and five shirts in a back- Houston. The new coyote start- Cecilia said her captor became but never seem to end. In this pack and set off. ed calling her biological father, more aggressive, prompting self-perpetuating system, the Jacinto, who had only recently her to playher final card: a teletrating odyssey seeds of future migration have A frus reappeared in her life. phone number in her pocket. "Where's the money?" the been sown in the debts of the What followed, she said, was Before she had left, her father past and present. Cecilia's in- athree-weekjourney with aro- c oyote asked. Jacinto w a s had givenher the home numability to send money home tating cast of guides. First, she confused. He had gone to the ber of a Miami human rights right away led her pregnant rode a bus to the Mexican bor- United States as a young man, activist whose lawn he had cut mother to try to make the jour- der. Then another setofcoyotes working as a gardener in Mi- as a teenager. He had not seen ney herself in a desperate bid took them through Mexico to ami,but had been back in Gua- the family in years. "I get this call, and it's a girl to save the house, only to fail. Reynosa, just across the border temala with a second family for Now she owes a smuggler, from McAllen, Texas. more than a decade. saying, 'It's Cecilia. Can you "The man said if they don't help me? They won't let me out known as a"coyote," too. For about a week, she said, Other family members will she was kept in a warehouse pay they are not going to let us unless we pay money,'" said follow, her relatives say, repeat- with as many as 100 people un- out," Cecilia said. Marin, who did not want her ing the pattern of debt, extor- til they crossed the Rio Grande Cecilia's mother, frantic after full name published because of tion and additional risk. Cecil- and to a house in or near not hearing from her daughter security concerns."I said, 'Who ia, who did not want her full McAllen. for weeks, took cash from a is Cecilia'?'"

St. Charles

Cecilia was her former employee's daughter. She eventuall y agreed to pay the $500, and the man agreed he called and demanded more, raising the price for Cecilia's release to $1,700 by the time he reached northern Florida.

companied minors who have come to the United States ille-

children," and the "cartels who tax or exploit them in their

wanted $500 immediately, and someone had to come to Hous-

A5

her toddler, Marin and Marin's sister and niece all piled into

Goodman, a spokeswoman

for St. Charles, could not say what proportion of the dards following the project, although she said it's more than 10percent.

a car to rendezvous with the

In order to minimize potential disruption to hospital

smuggler.

operations during the con-

Costly resolution The trip ended on the side of Interstate 75, near a Cirde K, where Marin and her entou-

struction, workers will only remodel 12 patient rooms at a time, Walker said. The project's planners d etermined that was the number

rage met two men. One lifted his shirt to show the firearm

of beds that could be out of

tucked in his waistband.

taining current patient populations — but it wasn't easy.

He wanted $1,500, but Marin had brought only $900. Her

commission while still main"It was a little challeng-

sister scraped together another

ing, but we found ways to do

$100 from her purse. "When he showed the gun,

that," Walker said. A last-resort option i f

I was so mad," Marin said. "I said, 'Look, sir, I don't know

the hospital gets crowded would be doubling up some

her. I did not hire you. Take her!' When he saw my rage, he said, 'You don't know her?'"

patient rooms. No rooms

"'No, I don't,'" she answered.

"'I am goingto lose money on this, but OK,"' he said. He took

are used that way, but Walker said since they were originally built for dual occupancy, they have the necessary hookups to support

the $1,000 and let Cecilia out of the car. She carried nothing.

two beds. Additionally, St.

But, by the smuggler's accounting, Cecilia had been well

sion from the state to reclassify six rooms on the fourth

served. "You have to be thank-

floor from rehabilitation

ful," he said. "We treated her well."

Charles received permis-

rooms to medical rooms that other patients can now

use. A lot of effort has gone into minimizing the impact

the construction has on pa-

Autofill

autofill option — after "car" and "house" — for the query "I want to sell my ..." This could simply be morbid curiosity. In

Continued fromA1 Some conclusions from autofill: Don't be surprised if Dad

an interview, Colas said "hair"

comes home with a new drone

has also ranked high in past

and one kidney. Colas has been tracking

quarters. "The point is not so much

G oogle autofill d ata f o r a

to develop an alternative paradigm of economic analysis as it is to poke and prod at the consensus we all embrace,"

while, and for most of the last three years the top three positions for completing the query, "I want to buy ..." have been won by "a house," "a car" and

spot, but hasn't reached the

top four in a year. Last year, the top spot in the fourth quarter went t o " a d r one"; in the second quarter, it was

"something."

Maybe that shouldn't be

surprising, given the number of drones in the news lately. Google announced a drone delivery effort dubbed Project

Wing in the third quarter. The New York Times also reported

T here's always t h e chance things could get noisy, though, and the hospital will keep ear plugs on hand just in case. "Hopefully, they won't be needed," Walker said. "But they will be available, if

something of a m a instream indicator in the wake of the

Great Recession. Quits are a good thing, since people don't usually leave their jobs unless they have another gig lined up or at least feel confident they

can find something. U.S. economy be doing all that All in all, alternative indicawell if g want to sell a) 'Kid- tors point to an economy that

The fourth spot tends to vary with the news cycle, and in past quarters has included

tients, Walker said.

He also looked at government data of how often people are quitting their jobs. The quits rate has become

needed." — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com

Colas wrote. "After all, can the

"stock."

things like "a gun," "a dog" and "Facebook stock." "Gun" has jumped around and in the past had the top

bacon cheeseburger at home.

Sara Krulwich/The New York Times file photo

Jeremiah Johnson flies a drone inside the Barbarian Group offices in New York in July. If you were looking for a national collective

ney' is a common autofill'?"

continues to mend, but has

Looking beyond autofill to Google Trends data, Co-

mended so slowly that peo-

las found that interest in gold coins, which hit at a post-fi-

ple still have severe anxieties about the future. That's the

same conclusion you would nancial-crisis low, suggests come to by looking at more top autofill word after the phrase "I want to buy" in the fourth quar- people are feeling much better t raditional i n d i cators l i k e ter of 2013 was "drone." about the nation's financial consumer confidence or the system. But many Americans government's monthly jobs are still worried about money report, which in September on NASA's efforts to create an or told a n O k l ahoma City and food, as interest in food showed the unemployment air-traffic control system for audience, "That type of tech- stamps ticked higher from rate falling below 6 percent drone aircraft. nology has to stimulate us to earlier in the year. for the first time since July And the prospect of drones think about what is it that we Colas' analysis included 2008. "But it feels like we got here landing in backyards and cherish in privacy and how far other oddball economic indipeering into bedroom win- we want to protect it and from cators like an inflation mea- by drone, with a different perd ows has freaked a lo t o f whom." sure called the Bacon Cheese- spective of the same picture," people out. Speaking about One thing people do not burger Index (up about 6 per- Colas concluded. "At least we dronesin September, Supreme seem to cherish are their kid- cent), which measures how didn't have to sell our kidney Court Justice Sonia Sotomay- neys; "kidney" was the third much it would cost to make a to see it." conscience, Google's autofill feature is a goodplace to start. The

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pair also said the state's UGB

"iconic" pond is preserved,

policies should differentiate

Continued fromA1 On a global scale, both candidates cited climate change

the Portland area from r e-

but that "if we can make the river flow better and get rid

as a threat to ou r r egion's

natural beauty. Wilhelm said curbing carbon production makes economic sense, but he

would not support immediate action targeting carbon pollution with stringent taxes or limits. Instead, Wilhelm said he would advocate that the stateobserve the carbon tax

employed by British Columbia and California's 2-year-old cap-and-trade program. "We should sit back and see how it works with them

before we jump into something that isn't good policy," Wilhelm said. "We certainly need to make sure we protect

smallbusinesses,number one. But it will be interesting to see

how these different schemes work. I think we should be very pragmatic in the way we approach any sort of policy around this." Buehler said he does not support a tax or limit, but to

reducecarbon thestateshould stimulate the use of new ener-

gy sources. To do this better, Buehler said, the state needs to focus more on promoting the

consumer demand for clean energy as opposed to subsidizing companies developing

gions like Central Oregon. of the unsightly dam, let's try Buehler said the way farm- to think outside the box to do Buehler Wil h e lm land on the eastern side of the that, too." mountains is classified and An issue of importance to such technologies. He cited the protected by UGB policies those living on rangeland just now defunct Business Energy should be different than in east of Bend is the preservaTax Credit, which, among oth- the Willamette Valley, where, tion of sage grouse, a threater things, supported renew- he said, it is much more pro- ened bird that has been conable energy manufacturers, ductive. Buehler also said the sidered for protection under as an example of something process of expanding the UGB the federal Endangered Spe"that's a good idea, but where "has got to speed up." cies Act. Both candidates notthe implementation was a Wilhelm did not specify ed much of the work around struggle." changes he would make to protection of the bird, a chick"There are programs with UGB policies, but said "there en-sized species neither canworthy goals that haven't re- needs to be a way to balance didate has seen, will not fall to ally delivered," Buehler said. stewardship and economic de- the Legislature, though Bue"We need to see ifthere's a velopment" as Bend works to hler did emphasize the sage better way to support clean en- expand its boundary. grouse "absolutely needs to be ergy. With the business credNeither candidate took a preserved." "I think we need to take it, I think they stimulated the strong stance on local enviwrong side of the demand-sup- ronmental debates that will a more holistic approach to ply equation. I think we should fall outside the realm of the preservation," Buehler said. "I help to create demand for L egislature, including t h e think the spotted owl is a great cleanenergy;the otherway is city's $24 million water supply example of why this is needed. just too prone to corporate cro- project that Central Oregon We did a lot to sustain that spenyism. I don't think we should LandWatch has opposed with cies, which is now being outinvest in startup ventures, so litigation. competed by the barred owl. I the state isn't picking winners Regarding whether to pre- think to preserve sage grouse or losers in a new industry." serve Mirror Pond, Wilhelm we need to take in a holistic When discussing what else said he hopes there is signif- view of the environment." can be done to preserve the icant public input in the deciWilhelm said he is "anxious land surrounding Bend, both sion and the interests of those to see" how the bird is protectcandidates touched on the hoping to preserve the site as ed, and that the needs of those state's urban growth bound- an economic assetare bal- who may be economicall y ary rules, saying the policy, anced with the health of the affected by any preservation which limits how far cities can Deschutes River. measures must be considered. spread, has done much to preBuehler said he hopes the — Reporter: 541-633-2160, vent sprawl. Nonetheless, the c urrent water l evel o f t h e tleeds®bendbulletin.com

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014• THE BULLETIN

CIVIC CALENDAR TODAY

Deschutes County Commission — The commissioners are scheduled to hold a regular work session, including a review of discretionary grants, from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. in the Allen Room of the Deschutes Services Building, 1300 NW Wall St. TUESDAY

RedmondCity

Councii —Thecity council is expected to hold a worksession to discuss whether Redmond should craft an ordinance establishing a tax on medical and recreational marijuana at 6:30 p.m. at Council Chambers, 777 SWDeschutes Ave. WEDNESDAY

Deschutes County Commission — The commissioners are expected to consider an agreement between Deschutes County 9-1-1 and theJefferson County Sheriff's Office that allows Jefferson County to use theDeschutes County Citizen Emergency Notification System. Theboard is set to meet at10 a.m. in the Allen Roomof the Deschutes Services Building, 1300 NWWall

PRISON FORECAST

BRIEFING

Projected inmate numbers up slightly By Andrew Clevenger

build a new prison, said Craig

most efficient way possible,"

tend to commit multiple of-

The Bulletin

Prins, executive director of

Prins said. The mainreason theprojections increased slightly is the commission realized its assumptions regarding reduced

fenses, either by collecting many people's secure information from a database or by using a stolen credit card

sentences for identity theft

prosecutors can convict on multiple counts, often offset-

WASHINGTON — Projec-

the Oregon Criminal Justice

tions for Oregon's prison popu- Commission. lation ticked up a bit in the De-

In April 2012, the state's

partment of Corrections' latest forecast, but overall numbers

Office of Economic Analysis predicted that Oregon's prison population would soar past 16,000 by 2020, requiring

are still expected to fall for

several years in the wake of sentencing reforms that went into effect in August 2013.

The decrease in prisoners stemming from those legislative reforms, which eased mandatory minimum sentences on certain drug and property crimes, will likely forestall the need to

A7

convictions were off, he said. Under the reforms, the sen-

multiple times. In these cases, ting the potential reduction,

construction of additional

tencefora repeat offender on

prisons, and would cost an additional $600 million over 10years. "That hopefully will allow (the Department of Corrections) to change their focus from building to using the prison beds we do have in the

identity theft dropped from

he said. "We can now see a year's

two years to 18 months. Based on this, the commission

data" since the sentencing reforms went into effect, said

concluded that those offenders' prison times would be

the projection is "not a crime

reduced by 25 percent, Prins

sard. However, identity thieves

Prins. The upward revision in change, it's a calculation change." SeePrisons/A8

un, nies owcB.se o ers rien a mos

St.

La Pine City Coun-

Cii —The city council is set to discuss a city tax for medical marijuana and anagreement with Deschutes County to enforce solid waste code at 6 p.m. at LaPine

Sex offenders reviewed Crook County's sex offender addressing verification program has yielded a handful of arrests, investigations

and warrants, according to the Crook County Sheriff's Office. In its annual effort to verify all sex offenders residing in Crook County and the city of Prineville, officers from the Prineville Police Department and the sheriff's office reviewed files to confirm that local sex offenders are complying with registration laws. The departments reviewed the 140registered sex offenders and made three arrests for failure to report, while three arrest warrants remain active. Nine investigations are underway by the Crook County District Attorney's Office and two offenders already had cases pending. The remaining sex offenders are in compliance with registration laws or are dead. In Oregon, sexoffenders must register their addresses with local law enforcement and report them annually. Law enforcement notifies the community when there is asex offender moving to or living in the area. Those with questions about sex offenders living in their neighborhood in Prineville may contact their neighborhood officer or the Oregon State Police Sex Offender Registration Unit at 503-378-3720.

STATE NEWS

City Hall, 16345 Sixth

Street, Suite 102. • Salem:Canal-clogging weed that threatens agriculture found in Columbia River,AS

Contact:541-383-0354, newsobendbulletin.com. In emails, please write "Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and number.Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.

Well shot! Readerphotos

EVENT

CALENDAR

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Chris Smith, left, an instructor at R.E.A.C.T. Training Systems, puts on a demonstration for the four-point presentation — a maneuver for

drawing and reholstering a handgun. Smith and 37other vendors participated in the Central Oregon Gunand Custom Knife Maker Show

TODAY

in Redmond on Sunday.

CENTRALOREGON ARTS SUMMIT: "Exploring Connections,"

By Claire Withycombe

featuring speakersand

F Oregon Gunand Custom Knife Makers Show represent-

discussions on the state of arts in Central Oregon; $50, registration required; 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; www. artsandcultureco.org, artsandcultureco@gmail. com or 541-508-8785. PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock

Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. RECEPTIONFOR GRANT SEEKERSANDTHE ART AND NONPROFIT COMMUNITY:Learn about resources for grant-seeking support in Central Oregon; free; 5-6:30 p.m.; Brooks

The Bulletin

or custom knife maker Gary Griffin, the Central

ed a recent "paradigm shift" in gun shows. "Most gun shows are dingy and dark," said Griffin. "This has a well-lit, friendlier atmosphere. There's a lot more

"Mostgun shows are dingy and dark.This has a well-lit, friendlier atmosphere. There'sa lot more women involved."

The show ran from Friday through Sunday and registration for vendors sold out a

month ago, Bridwell said.

Bridwell, who lives in Bend — Gary Griffin, custom knife maker with her husband Terry, said

they came up with the idea together.

"They're all itty bitty pieces of obsession," said Griffin, standing behind his display of 20 or so hand-forged knives of varying sizes. Perhaps the most exciting was

Behind Griffin, a pair of women from Creswell sold fashionableconcealed-carry handbags in a range of sizes, from demure shoulder bags to the everything-but-the-kitch-

"There hasn't been a real good gun show in Central Oregon for some time," she said. The Oregon Trail Gun Show, also held at the Expo Center,

was informative and bright at the show Sunday at the De-

a 3-pound saber called the "Lion's Tail." Its steel blade

en-sink variety.

schutes County Fair & Expo Center. Held indoors at the

is made from old parts of a

"I couldn't find a bag I wanted to carry," said Alicia

Chevrolet.

Brincat, the owner of Twelve-

North Sister Conference Hall,

Griffin's knives have a range of uses, from skinning

Six, a custom holster handbag and purse business. It's

than guns and knives. "They let a lot of other things in," said Bridwell. Everything at this weekend's show had to be gun- or

an animal to "tactical" pur-

the company's first Central

poses, he said.Some feature a wrench and bottle opener.

Oregon show, said her busi-

women involved."

Indeed, theatmosphere

38 vendors sold knives, guns, ammunition and a host of related products, according to

event promoter Sue Bridwell.

Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock Room, Downtown Way, Terrebonne; Bend Public Library, www.ddranch.net or 601 NWWall St.; www. 541-548-1432. deschuteslibrary.org or GREEN TEAM MOVIE 541-617-7050. NIGHT:A screening "BATTLE OFTHE of the documentary STRANDS LIVE": "Last Call at the Oasis" Featuring the World Cup about the global water of Beauty where students crisis; free; 6:30-8:30 showcasehair, makeup p.m.; First Presbyterian and nail art; $12.50; Church, 230 NE Ninth 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill St., Bend; www.bendfp. Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 org or 541-815-6504. SW Powerhouse Drive, "VIKINGSFROM THE Bend; 541-312-2901. BRITISHMUSEUM": Learn about Viking ships and swords, burial and beliefs, language and TUESDAY more with experts from PUMPKIN PATCH: the British Museum; $15;

7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium168 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. THE CERNYBROTHERS: The Los Angeles folkrock band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

WEDNESDAY FREE SENIORDAY: Ages 65 and older can visit for free; museum admission is $15 adults, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org

or 541-382-4754. PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. BEND FARMERS MARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW Franklin and NW Oregon avenues; www. bendfarmersmarket. com. "KNOW FRIGHT: FRIGHTFULFILMS": Showing of the horrorthriller "Psycho"; free; 6 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 NW Tin Pan Alley, Bend; www.

ness partner, Tanelle Azzatto.

tinpantheater.com, tinad©deschuteslibrary. org or 541-312-1034. GREG BROWN:The lowa folk musician

allows many products other

knife-related, she said: no

Tasers, stun guns or archery equipment. SeeGun showIA8

541-706-9091.

THURSDAY

performs; $33-$40 plus PUMPKIN PATCH: fees; 7 p.m., doors open Featuring a pumpkin at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. MATT HOPPERAND THE ROMANCANDLES: The rock band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. GIFTOF GAB: The

underground rapper performs, with Landon Wordswell, Chandler P and Tope; $10; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NW Brooks St., Bend;

patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock

Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. THE LIBRARYBOOK CLUB:Read and discuss "Beautiful Ruins" by Jess Walter; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/ bend or 541-617-7050. THE LIBRARYBOOK

CLUB:Read and discuss "Beautiful Ruins" by Jess Walter; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/redmond or 541-312-1050. BENDFILM FESTIVAL: The 11th year of independentfilm

screenings at venues across town; see

website for full schedule at each venue; $11, $150 full film pass, $250 full festival pass; 5 p.m.; Bend; www.bendfilm. org or 541-388-3378. FALL FAMILY FESTIVAL:Games and activities for families to "earn" money to spend at a farmers market; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; La Pine Elementary School, 51615 Coach Road;

• We want to seeyour foliage photos for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at beadbulletin.com/ foliage —all entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in print. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerpbotoso bendbulletin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submissionrequirements: Include as much detail as

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

www.bend.k12.or.us or 541-355-1005. ASHER FULERO BAND:Rock; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. TIM RICE'S"FROM HERE TOETERNITY": Showing of the musical that was adapted from the1951 novel about love and army life set in1941 Hawaii, prior to the attacks on Pearl Harbor; $18; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 168rIMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. Contact:54t -383-0351, communitylifeobendbullelin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.


AS THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014

q 'JJJ''.IIf'"

Prisons Continued from A7 In November 2013, the num-

ber of inmates in Oregon prisons reached its all-time high of 14,707. Five years earlier, there

were 13,615 prisoners in the state's prisons. Since the end of 2013, the total has gradual-

ly ticked down to 14,606 as of Sept. 1. In the most recent forecast,

the prison population is projected to shrink for the next threeorfouryears,then begin growing again slowly, only approaching 15,000by May 2023, still well below the pre-reform

projection of 16,000 by 2020. The Department of Corrections releases new projections,

I

Oregon's prison population forecast Oregon's latest prison population forecast ticked up slightly compared with six months ago, but still remains well below projections from before the state enacted sentencing reform. Without the reforms, Oregon's prison population would have topped 16,000 in 2021, requiring $600 million in prison construction expenses over the next decade, costs that are not needed with the reductions in the number of prisoners.

I

I

— Actual prison population Ap r il 2013 forecast, — October with sentencing reforms 2014 — April 2013 forecast, forecast, without sentencing — April 2014 forecast, flraft reforms with sentencing reforms

r

I6,500

' /~ ' (

,

i/

16,000 15,500

. /I

15,000

compiled by the state's Office of Economic Analysis, at the

beginning of every April and October. Deer Ridge Correctional Institution in Madras, which

14,500

"Hearing loss is now linked to many other heath problems!"

' 00 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Source: Oregon Office of Economic Analysis

opened in 2007, has a maximum capacity of 779 prison-

New Study B y l o h n s H o pkins UniversitySchool of Medicine and the National Institute on Aging.

Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

ers. Since November 2010, it

has housed more than 700

which parents are facing crimprisoners each month, reachEven so, the savings from inal charges and are at risk of ing a high of 775 in May reducing the number of pris- having their children taken 2013. It has trended gradual- oners by 100 for a year can ex- away. It also funds a mentor ly downward since, reaching ceed $300,000. program, in which recent pa762 in August 2014, according Deschutes County Adult rolees are matched up with a to Department of Corrections Parole and Probation depart- mentor, like a sponsor in Alcofigures. ment received a $ 6 42,000 holics Anonymous. It's too early to tell how According to the Depart- grant from the state's Justice ment of Corrections, the aver- Reinvestment Grant Program much money these programs age cost of housing a prisoner for th e 2 0 13-15 biennium. may save in prison costs, said is $87.08 per day, which trans- Much of that is slated to be Prins. The hope is that the savlates into $31,784 per year. spent on smoothing prison- ings will be reapplied to future (Prins cautioned that the cost ers' re-entry to society after community corrections proper prisoner can vary wildly; their release, with the goal of grams, amplifying the impact the Department of Correc- keeping them from reoffend- of the sentencing reforms and tions may spend more than ing and ending up back in the helping to keep Oregon's pris$100,000 each year treating a criminal justice system. on population from growing prisoner with a serious illness, T he grant a lso w ent t o unchecked, he said. and the cost of supervising the Deschutes County Drug — Reporter: 202-662-7456, prisoners in higher security Court, which handles cases in ctclevenger@bendbulletirt.com

Hearing Loss Linked to Dementia - Even a mild hearing loss doubles the risk A dults w i t h hea r in g lo s s ar e significantly more likely than adults with n ormal h earing t o d e velop dementia,according to a new study out today from researchers at Johns Hopkins and the National Institute on Aging. The study — which finds that the g reater the hearing loss, the higher the r isk — may open a new a venue o f r e search into dementia and Alzheimer's disease. — February 14, 2011

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Griffin.

fill out a form and pass a backR.E.A.C.T. Training SysContinued from A7 ground check as well in order tems, a Prineville outfit that Terry Bridwell is a custom to sell their wares, she said. has offeredtraining courses gunsmith, competitive shootM ore than 800 people so far in gun safety and personal er andgeneralgun enthusiast had come from far and wide defense since 1995, offered who has been interested in to buy, sell, trade or just look quick safety classes to visitors. firearms "from a historical per- around, said Sue Bridwell. A R.E.A.C.T. instructor, Chris "I'm just window shopping," S mith, d e monstrated s a f e spective" since he was 3 years old. said Jason M cPheeters, of handgun handling to an audiHe said that as the U.S. has Bend, who attended the show ence of four in the room adjatransitioned from an agri- with a friend in tow. He too has cent to the expo hall. " What's th e m o s t d a n cultural to a "cosmopolitan," been interested in guns and urban society, the use of and knives since he was a small gerous thing in this room'?" perspectiveon firearms has boy. a sked Smith, pointing to a changed. People are much This weekend was not ide- brick and a fake gun on the more apt to collect items these al timing, as many people are podium. "It's you, the human." days than use them in their ev- out enjoying the first weekend The classcovered safety tips eryday lives, he said. of hunting season, said Sue rangingfrom properstance to A s far asgun safety goes?"It Bridwell. The Bridwells plan to holster technique. "We're going for the antlers," falls to personal responsibili- expand the show and hold two ty," said Terry Bridwell. If you each year — one each in the said Mary Brothers, who atdon't take the proper precau- spring and in the fall. tended the class with her hustions with a car, kitchen knife Door prizes were award- band, Bill Brothers. or drain cleaners, they can be- ed by raffle each day. FriThe couple hunts for shed day's winner scored a brick of antlers but is also concerned come weapons too, he said. Each vendor signed a con- ammo, and two lucky winners about encountering cougars tract before being permitted to on Saturday took home an and other beasts off the trail. "We just want to be safe," sell at the show, Sue Bridwell ammo brickand a LostCreek said. Businesses are required Armory g if t c e rtificate, re- said Bill Brothers. by law to run a state back- spectively. Sunday's door prize — Reporter: 541-383-0376, ground check on the buyer, was a knife custom-made by cwithycombe@bendbulletirt.com

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Clogging weed in Columbia River By Mateusz Perkowski Capital Press

SALEM — An aquatic weed

"It's still sitting there, wait-

ing," said Dan Hilburn, administrator of plant programs at the Oregon Department of Agriculture, noting that state officials have a meeting with thefederalagency on Oct 23. Hilburn hopes the Army Corps of Engineers is able to streamline the permitting process so the weeds can be dug up before they spread farther downriver. "It just takes over," he said. "What used to be open wa-

ter turns into solid flowering rush." The Army Corps of Engineers did not respond to a request from Capital Press to explain what permits may be involved. Flowering rush is a threat to agriculture primarily because it forms thick masses of vegetation that impede the flow of water, Hilburn said. "The

sity of Montana. Montana has several large

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those that can be applied this

way often aren't effective, said established populations of the Hilburn. weed, and flowering rush has Using herbicides in flowing also created problems for irri- water is also challenging begators in Idaho, he said. cause some chemicals require The Aberdeen-Springfield lengthy contact time with the Canal Co. in the eastern part plant but get washed off in of the state spent five years ex- streams andrivers,said Jenifer cavating its irrigation system Parsons, aquatic plant specialwith expensive aquatic vegeta-

fi

whole function of the irrigation cern to farmers and ranchers system is to move water and who may face restrictions on this one would really hamper irrigation and grazing.

capable of clogging irrigation that." In autumn, the stems and It's fortunate that the patches leaves of the perennial plant canals and other waterways has appeared along the shores were discovered before they'd drop to the river bottom but do of the Columbia River in Ore- grown larger, as the weed is not decay, providing a place gon for the first time. difficult to treat with herbicides for the northern pike — an inSix patches of flowering and must often be removed troducedspeciesthatpreyson rush, an i n vasive Eurasian manually, said Tim Butler, native fish — to attach its eggs. species up to 10 feet in diame- supervisor of ODA's noxious The pike's eggs would fall ter, were found growing east weed control program. into the substrate and suffo"We want to find them when cate in open water, but the eggs of McNary Dam near Umatilla they're very small infesta- stick to the flowering rush dethis summer. However, the weeds have tions," he said. bris. When the weed emerges yet to be removed as state ofApart from obstructing irri- in spring, its leaves and stalks ficials must confer with the gation canals, flowering rush shelter the youngpike. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, can get sucked into irrigation Killing the weed with herwhich has jurisdiction over the intakes and block screens and bicides is tough because few river, about federal permits for pumps, said Peter Rice,re- chemicals are labeled to be eliminating the plants. search ecologist at the Univer- sprayed in or near water, and

.

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ist with the Washington State

tion rakes to be rid of the plant, Rice said.

Department of Ecology. Washington has several "Itgets so thick itrestricts populations of flowering rush, the water delivery," he said. including one on the Yakima Because flowering rush col- river that is the likely source of onizespreviously open water the weeds in Oregon and new and dramatically alters the sites on the Columbia river in habitat, it's considered an "eco- Washington, Parsons said. system engineer," said Rice. The weed doesn't produce Its propensity to change many seeds, but it spreads with ecosystems is of particular in- brittle buds that break off from terest in the Pacific Northwest its rhizomatous roots, she said. "Even with hand digging, because it poses a hazard for threatened fish, he said. you have to go back several The fate of threatened salm- times to control the populaon and steelhead are of con- tion," said Parsons.

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Eli Duberow

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W MLB, B3 NHL, B7

Motor sports, B8 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

The week ahea

A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and elsewhere in the world of sports:

Today

Tuesday

Thursday/Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Major league Baseball, HLDivision Series, WashingtonHntionnls at Snn Francisco Giants, 2 p.m. (MLB),L.A. Dodgers at St. LouisCardinals, 6 p.m. (FS1):The Giants, coming off an18-inning win Saturday night, haveMadison Bumgarner on the mound asthey go for the sweep. TheDodgers andCardinals are tied after a pair of one-run gamesto start their series.

High schoolsoccer: Intermountain Conference rivals meet on thesoccer pitch in two intracity boys/girls doubleheaders. In Bend, Mountain Viewentertains the Bend High boys, followed by theCougar and Lava Beargirls. In Redmond, RidgeviewhoststheRedmond Highboys, then the Ravenand Panther girls face off. Boys gamesare set for 3 p.m., girls at 4:30 p.m.

High schoolfootball, 7 p.m.: This week's local action on the prep gridiron starts a day early whenCrookCounty plays at Madras onThursday night. In Friday's gamesaround Central Oregon, Bend plays at Ridgeview, Summit travels to Redmond, Mountain View hosts The Dalles, Sisters entertains Junction City, and Culver is at homeagainst Heppner.

College football, Oregonat UCLA, 12:30 p.m. (Fox):Both of these early-season contenders for the inaugural postseason playoff are coming off upset homelosses,andanyhopeeitherhasof getting back into national conversation hinges on this game atthe RoseBowl in Pasadena. TheDucksfell from No. 2 to No. 12 in the APpoll after losing on Thursday to Arizona.

Running, SuperDnve's Down8 Dirty Half Marathon, Bend, 9n.m.: This popular annual13.1-mile race starts and finishes at Seventh Mountain Resort southwest of Bend. Thecourse is made upof singletrack and dirt roads andincludes some challenging hills. A10-kilometer race is also offered. For more information: www.superfitproductions.com.

COMMUNITY SPORTS

RUNNING

TEE TO GREEN

Oregonwoman

wins marathon PORTLAND — A

Newer

Japanese mananda Portland womanwere the overall winners Sunday in the Portland Marathon. Makoto Ozawa,29,

Sei'IeS

posted the fastest time

By Beau Eastes

over the 26.2-mile course, which started and finished in downtown Portland; his time was 2 hours, 23 minutes, 58 seconds. More than four minutes back was runner-up Matthew Duffy, of SanFrancisco. The women's winner was 21-year-old Susan

The Bulletin

Smith. The Portland

ISO SC 00

Q OQ

State University student finished in 2:53.31 to win by more thanseven minutes over runner-up Johannah Ludington, also of Portland. Bend's Jason Irby was the top local finisher, placing 20th overall in 2:45:15. Bend'sTeri Sheasby was thetop local female, finishing 31st in the women's division in 3:20:56.

The Central Oregon run-

ning scene does not lack for events. Half marathons, 10Ks,

5Ks, beer runs and ultramarathons dottherace calendar year-round. But up until recently there were no old-school cross-country races for run-

ners older than school kids. "We have every other event imaginable," says Bend ultrarunner Max

King, who set up Central Oregon Running Klub's fall

— Bulletin staff report

IRSlde • More community spo r ts, BS

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Ducks fall in poll

cross-country series two

years ago. The second of three races in this year's series takes

Photos by Meg Roussos I The Bulletin

Jackie Kisling, of Redmond, shops with her husband, Gary during the annual sale at Pro Golf in Bend on Saturday.

place Tuesday: the series finale is set for Oct. 21. All Edge Golf Course in Bend. "Originally, it started as

Inside

a fundraiser for CORK's

• Local golf calendar and scoreboard,B9 • Mirim Lee wins 2nd LPGA title. Roundup, B9

youth runners," King adds. "And since we didn't have a cross-country race in Bend,

the CORK cross-country

races are between 3 and 4 miles in length and usually consist of three

loops around a designated King-created course at River's Edge. Race fees are $5 for CORK members and $10 for nonmembers and sign-ups are limited to the

day of the event. "It's a challenging terrain that really varies,"

says Bend's Jane Cleavenger, who last Tuesday

ZACK

30% Ofn! ss shoci

HALL

creasingly complex in recent years. Equipment manufacturers control

how much a new club can sell for using restrictions on retailers such as minimum advertised pricing. In addition, manufacturers will often offer on-course pro shops credit applied to new equipment the following year for any returned unsold merchandise, negating the need for a year-end sale to reduce inventory. (The returned gear often is then sold in secondary markets, including online and overseas.)

ust about every golfer wants the best

he or she can afford. J equipment Conventional wisdom might be

that fall and the end of the golf season is

likely the best time to get the best deals on golf gear. Indeed, most of Central Oregon's golf shops — on-course pro shops and off-course retailers alike — will need to make room for all the new goodies that golf equipment manufacturers will have on the market next spring. But is now really the best time to buy a

More than that, if a piece of equipment

is not being discontinued the following year, there is less incentive for retailers

new driver, considering that after a few

weeks it may have to spend a long winter stashed in the corner of a garage?

and manufacturers to discount that pl'oduct.

The short answer is, well, it can be.

competed in the first race

"For some people, it's a great time to buy," says Erik Nielsen, the head golf pro-

of the series. "A certain lev-

fessional at Bend Golf and Country Club.

Shoes sit on sale at Pro Golf in Bend.

new technology. It depends a lot on the in-

The golf retail game can be awfully tricky to navigate, and it has gotten in-

el of runner in town wants all the bells and whistles with their races. Well, I've been a runner for 40 years

"Others, they would just as soon wait until the spring and get the products with the dividual and what they are looking for."

and I don't need any more bling. I just like to come and run."

King says he usually has between 30 and 50 runners show up each week, adding that the numbers are growing with each race. See Cross-country/B5

CORK CrossCountry Series When:Tuesday, 6 p.m.; Oct. 21, 5:45 p.m. Where:Meet at the River's Edgeclubhouse parking lot Cost:$5 for CORK members and$10for nonmembers Web:www.centraloregonrunningklub.org

NFL

• Golf retailers often discounttheir gear at the endof the season

races are held at River's

I thought it wouldbe a good avenue to pursue." Simple and low-key compared with some of the area's other running events,

Major shakeupafter a week of upsets,BS

O

Every manufacturer operates differently, too. For instance, Titleist releases a

new model driver about every two years. By contrast, TaylorMade launched four new models of drivers during the past 12 months.

Did you miss any installments of ZackHall's Central Oregon Golf Tour? Forreviews of every public and semiprivate golf course in Central Oregon, visit us online atb endbulletin.com/sports/golf ~

See Shopping /B9 ~v Follow Bulletin golf writer ~ Zack Hall on Twitter: OCOGolfGuy

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

By Liz Clarke

Robert Griffin III and a hard-

fire.

The Washington Post

nosed rookie running back, Alfred Morris, who stirred mem-

Seattle, of course, rallied from a 14-0 deficit in that meeting,

ories of John Riggins and the franchise's golden era.

while Washington lost not only the game but also Griffin, whose

Washington last squared off against Seattle in the 2012 NFL

playoffs, it was a showdown between two franchises on the rise that bristled with big-time charisma and big-game promise. The 10-6 Redskins were the NFC East champions, led by the sensational rookie quarterback

The 11-5 Seahawks, who had

finished second in the NFC West, were led by a surprising rookie quarterback of their own

in Russell Wilson and a beastly running back, Marshawn Lynch, who popped Skittles and spewed

2 28

Sain 3 Buccaneers 31(OT) Cowboys Texans

17 (OT)

Panthers Bears

31 24

Eagles Rams

3 28

Giants Falcons

3 20

2

Bil s

Lions Colts Ravens

2 13

Steelers Jaguars Broncos Cardinals

41 20

9ers Chiefs

2 17

hargers Jets

31 0

Patrio s Bengals

17

Inside

'Hawks, 'Skins ondifferent paths since'12 playoffs WASHINGTON — When

rowns Titans

right knee, injured earlier in the

season, buckled beneath him amid catastrophic damage to his anterior cruciate ligament. From then on, the fortunes of the franchises diverged. See Seahawls/B5

• Browns use historic comebackto defeat Titans. Roundup,B4

MLB PLAYOFFS Orio es Tigers

Nextup Seattle at Washington When:5:30 tonight TV:ESPN

Royals Angels

Inside • Royals, Orioles to meet for American League pennant,B3


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY BASEBALL

MLB Playoffs, Washington at SanFrancisco MLB Playoffs, L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis

Time 2 p.m. 6 p.m.

TV/Radio MLB FS1

BASKETBALL

NBA Preseason, Philadelphia at Boston NBA Preseason, Denver at L.A. Lakers

4:30 p.m. 7 p.m.

NBATV NBATV

FOOTBALL

NFL, Seattle at Washington

5 :15 p.m.

E S PN

TUESDAY BASKETBALL

NBA Preseason, Chicago atDetroit 4:30 p.m. NBA TV NBA Preseason, GoldenState at L.A. Clippers 7:30 p.m. NBA TV Listings are themostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations

SPORTS IN BRIEF SWIMMING Phelps saysswimmingonholdafter DUI arrest — Putting his swimming career on hold after his second DUIarrest, Olympic champion Michael Phelps began a six-week program Sunday that he said "will provide the help I need tobetter understand myself." The winningest athlete in Olympic history madethe announcement in a series of posts on hisTwitter account. According to his representatives at Octagon, Phelps entered anin-patient program that will keep him from competing at least through mid-November, though there's no indication he plans to give upswimming. "The past few days have been extremely difficult," Phelps said in astatement. nl recognize that this is not my first lapse in judgment, and I amextremely disappointed with myself. I'm going to take sometime away toattend a program that will provide the help I need tobetter understand myself."

FOOTBALL Starr recovering from strokes, heart attack —Thewife of Hall of Famequarterback Bart Starr said in a statement Sunday that her husband is recovering from two strokes and amild heart attack and is making progress in rehabilitation. Cherry Starr's update on her husband's condition was released onthe Green BayPackers website. Shesaid Starr's doctors confirmed the 80-year-old suffered an ischemic stroke onSept. 2, followed onSept. 7 by ahemorrhagic stroke and amild heart attack. She said his progress was slowed by seizures, which are nowbeing controlled through medication. — From wire reports

TENNIS ROUNDUP I

s•

.l v' I

Vincent Thian/The Associated Press

Maria Sharapova celebrates after beating Petra Kvitova in the

women's singles final of the China Open in Beiling on Sunday.

Djokovic, Sharapova claim victories inChina The Associated Press BEIJING — T op-ranked

Novak Djokovic won his fifth China Open title in what

stepped on court and broke Berdych in the first game. "Everything felt right," he said. "I stepped on the court

he called the most dominant final of his career, routing third-seeded Tomas Berdych 6-0, 6-2 on Sunday in a little

with this positive mindset.

overaythour.

iy routine: 19 winners and nine unforced errors, though

Djokovic was one point away from handing Berdych a "double bagel" — a 6-0, 6-0 defeat — but the Czech player fought off match point, then broke Djokovic to win

his first game. He raised both arms in celebration and smiled with relief as the

Obviously, I felt it from the start." His statistics looked fairmany of those came irt the

two games he lost at the end. The difference was the way he relentlessly pressured Berdych's serve and prevented him from getting close to a break point on his.

"This has been, under the

crowd roared.

circumstances,probably the

The Serb sealed the victory two games later to im-

best performance in all finals in my career I played,"

prove his sparkling record at he said. "It was incredible." Also on Sunday: lvlishikori beats Raonic final who I've never seen to claim Japan Open title: before," Berdych said. "I TOKYO — U.S. Open runwas just swept out from the ner-up Kei N ishikori beat court. the No. 4-seeded Milos RaOn th e w o m en's s ide, onic of Canada 7-6 (5), 4-6, Maria Sharapova outlasted 6-4 iyt the final of the Japan the China Open to 24-0. "I met somebody in the

Petra Kvitova 6-4, 2-6, 6-3

Open to win his fourth ATP

in a hard-hitting, back-and- Tour title of the season. With forth duel to win the title a typhoon bearing down and return to No. 2 in the on the Japanese capital, the rankings. fourth-seeded Nishikori won Djokovic said he woke up his second straight tournaSunday with a good feeling, ment and the seventh of his and that continued when he career.

ON DECK Today Boyssoccer:CrookCountyatMadras,4p.m4Culver at BendJV,4:30 p.m.

Girls soccer:MadrasatCrookCounty, 4p.m. Volleyball:Corbettat Madras,6 p.mcMolala at CrookCounty, 6p.m. Tuesday Boyssoccer:Bend atMountain View,3 p.m.; RedmondatRidgeview,3p.mcSweetHomeat Sisters,4:30p.m4LaPineat East LinnChristian, 4:30p.m. Girls soccer:RedmondatRidgeview,4:30 p.m.; Bendat Mountain View,4:30 p.m4Sisters atSweet Home,4:30 p.mcLa Pineat SantiamChristian, 6:30p.m. Volleyball:Summitat Redmond, 6:30p.m.; Bendat Ridgeview,6:30p.m.; Sisters at Elmira,6:45p.m.; Culverat Weston-McEwen,5 p.m.;Trinity Lutheran at CentralChristian,5p.m. Boys waterpolo: RidgeviewatSummit

NHRA

IN THE BLEACHERS

SundayalMapleGroveRaceway,Mohnton,Pa.

In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomics.com/rnthebreachers

PAI'AFIILITE

DEI vw

Wednesday Boys soccer.CrookCountyat Molala, 4 p.m.; Madras atCorbett, 4:15p.m. Girls soccer: Corbettat Madras, 4 p.m.; Molalaat CrookCounty, 4p.m. Volleyball: Molagaat Madras,6 p.m.; Gladstoneat CrookCounty, 6:30p.m. Cross-country: Bend, Ridgeview, LaPineat LaPine Invitational,TBD;Madrasat EstacadaXCInvitational, 3:45p.m. Boys waterpolo: MadrasatSummit Thursday Football: Crook Countyat Madras,7p.m. Boyssoccer.BendatRedmond,3p.mcMountain View atSummit, 3 p.msCentral Linnat LaPine, 4:30p.m. Girls soccer:BendatRedmond,430pmcMountain View atSummit,7 p.m4Creswegat LaPine,3p.m. Volleyball: La PineatHarrisburg, 6 p.m. Friday Football:Bendat Ridgeview,7 p.mcTheDalles at MountainView, 7p.m.; Summitat Redmond, 7 p.m.; JunctionCity at Sisters, 7 p.mcLa Pineat Glide, 7p.m.;Heppnerat Culver, 7 p.mcGilchrist at NorthLake,2p.m. Boyssoccer: ColumbiaChristian at Central Christian, 4p.m. Volleyball:Ashlandat Summ it, 6 p.mcPaisleyat Central Christian, 5p.mcGilchrist at Trinity Lutheran,5;30p.m. Cross-country:MountainView at Sandelie Golf CourseXCClassic inWilsonvile, 2:30p.m.

TENNIS Professional

"We are extremely sorry about your experience, but if you don't have a receipt, I can't help you."

FOOTBALL College

Polls AP Top26 R ecord Pls P v 1 . Florida State(35) 5 01, 461 1 Saturday 2. Auburn (23) 5 -0 1,459 5 Boyssoccer:ColumbiaChristian at Red mond, 11 3. Mississippi 5 -0 1,320 11 a.m.; Umatilla atCulver, 1p.m.; NorthClackamas 3. Mississippi State(2) 5-0 1 ,320 12 ChristianatCentral Christian,1p.m. 5. Baylor 5 -0 1,258 7 Volleyball:Bend,MountainView, Summ t,i Red- 6. NotreDame 5 -0 1,186 9 mond,Ridgeview,Crook County, Sisters at Clear- 7. Alabam a 4 -1 1,060 3 water Classic, 8 a.m.;Culverat 3-Wayin Pilot 8. MichiganState 4-1 9 8 1 10 Rock, noon;Central Christian at Chiloquin,2:30 9. TCU 4-0 9 7 9 25 p.m.; Triadat Gilchrist, 1 p.m.;Trinity Lutheranat 10.Arizona 5 -0 9 5 1 NR Hosanna Christian, 5:30p.m. 11. Oklahom a 4-1 9 0 4 4 Crosscountry:Bend,Redmond,Ridgeview,Summit, 12. Oregon 4-1 8 8 8 2 CrookCounty,Sistersat GeorgeFoxXCClassic 13. Georgia 4-1 8 5 4 13 in Gervais11:30 , a.m.; LaPineat Bristow Rock n 14. Texas A&M 5-1 731 6 River 5K inPleasantHill, TBD 15. OhioState 4-1 534 20 Boys waterpolo:Redmondat MountainView 16. Oklahoma State 4 1527 21 17. Kansas State 4-1 4 8 6 23 18. UCLA 4-1 4 6 0 8 BASEBALL 19. EastCarolina 4-1 3 4 4 22 20. Arizona State 4-1 325 NR 21. Nebraska 5-1 2 8 3 19 MLB playoffs 5 -0 2 3 5 NR 22. Georgia Tech MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL 23. Mi s souri 4-1 2 1 2 24 All TimesPDT 24. Utah 4-1 206 N R 3-2 1 4 3 14 25. Stanford DIVISIONSERIES Others receiving votes:Clemson92, Marshall (Best-ot-6; x-if necessary) 78, Southern Cal 61, Loui s vi l le 36, LSU 35, BYU26, Sunday'sGames WestVirginia18,Arkansas14, Wisconsin 7,California Baltimore 2, Detroit1, Baltimorewinsseries 3-0 PennState5, Kentucky4, Rutgers 4, NorthDakota Kansas City8, L.A.Angels 3, KansasCity winsseries 6, State 3,Minnesota2, South Carolina1, Virginia1. 3-0 Today'sGames AmwayTop25 Washington(Fister 16-6)at SanFrancisco (BumgarRecord Pts Pvs ner 18-10),2;07p.m., SanFrancisco leadsseries 1. FloridaState(44) 5 015 0 5 2 2-0 5-0 14 77 5 2. Auburn (16) L.A. Dodgers(Ryu14-7) at St. Louis(Lackey3-3), 3. Baylo(1) 5-0 1372 6 r 6:07 p.m., seriestied1-1 5 -0 1308 1 1 4. Mississippi Tuesday'sGames 5-0 1269 8 NotreDame L.A. Dodg ers (Haren 13-11)at St. Louis(Miler 10-9), 5. 6 . Mississippi State 5 012 3 7 1 4 2:07 or5:37p.m. 4-1 1065 1 7. Alabam a x-WashingtonatSanFrancisco, 5:37or6:07p.m. 4 -1 1062 1 0 8. Michigan State Thursday'sGames 4-1 9 2 9 3 9. Oklahom a x-SanFranciscoatWashington, 2:07or5:37p.m. 4-1 8 9 8 12 10. Georgia x-St. Louisat L.A.Dodgers, 5;37or6:07p.m. 4-1 11. Oregon 897 4 4-0 8 6 5 25 12. TCU Sunday'sGames 5 -0 7 4 3 NR 13.Arizona 5-1 706 7 14. Texas A&M 4-1 6 4 5 18 15. OhioState Orioles 2, Tigers1 4-1 16. Kansas State 567 22 4-1 4 8 3 9 17. UCLA Baltimore Detroit 18. Oklahoma State 4 1479 23 ab r hbi ab r hbi 4-1 4 5 1 21 19. EastCarolina Markks rf 4 0 0 0 Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 4-1 3 5 4 24 Arizona State P earce1b 2 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 3 0 0 0 20. 5-1 2 6 1 17 21. Nebraska A.Jonescf 3 1 1 0 Micarr1b 4 0 0 0 3-2 2 4 1 13 22. Stanford N.cruzdh 4 1 2 2 VMrtnzdh 4 1 1 0 5 -0 2 4 0 NR 23. Georgia Tech D yonglf 3 0 0 0 JMrtnzlf 4 0 1 1 4 -1 1 8 2 NR L oughlf 1 0 0 0 Avilac 2 0 1 0 24. Missouri 3 -2 1 3 8 NR 25. Clemson JHardyss 4 0 1 0 Holadyc 2 0 0 0 Others receiving votes: Marshal l 98, Utah 80, Hundlyc 4 0 0 0Cstllns3b 2 0 0 0 LSU75, Louisville36, Wisconsin36, SouthernCa l Flahrly3b 3 0 1 0 AnRmnss 3 0 0 0 28, BYU16, Minnesota13, Duke12,Washington Schoop 2b 3 0 0 0 HPerezph 1 0 0 0 12, Kentucky11,WestVirginia8, Arkansas6, lowa D.Kellycf 2 0 1 0 6, Memphis5,California4, PennState3,Rutgers2. RDavisph 1 0 0 0 Carrercf 0 0 0 0 Late SaturdayGame Totals 31 2 5 2 Totals 3 2 1 4 1 Baltimore 800 8 0 2 BBB — 2 BoiseState51, Nevada46 Detroit BOO BOO BB1 — 1 Thursday'sGame E—J.Hardy (1). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB —Balti,4:30 p.m. more 5,Detroit 7. 2B—V.Martinez (2), J.Martinez(1), BYU atUCF s Games Avila (1). HR —N.cruz(2). SB—Schoop (1), D.Kelly WashingtonStateFriday' atNo.25Stanford, 6p.m. (1) S an Di e go S tat e at Ne w M ex ico, 6:30p.m. IP H R E R BBSO FresnoStateatUNLV, 7p.m. Baltimore Saturday'sGames B.NorrisW,1-0 6 1 - 3 2 0 0 2 6 TOP 25 A.MillerH,2 12- 3 0 0 0 0 0 No.1FloridaStateat Syracuse,9a.m. Z.BrittonS,2-2 1 2 1 1 1 1 No. 2AuburnatNo.3 Mississippi State,12:30p.m. Detroit No. 3Mississippiat No.14TexasAfkM,6pm. D.PriceL,0-1 8 5 2 2 2 6 No. 9TCUat No. 5Baylor, 12:30p.m. Nathan 1 0 0 0 0 1 NorthCarolinaatNo.6 Notre Dame,12:30 p.m. HBP —byD.Price (Pearce). WP—B.Norris. No. 7Alabama at Arkansas, 3p.m. T—3:41.A—43,013 (41,681). No. 8MichiganStateatPurdue,12;30 p.m. SouthernCalat No.10Arizona, 7:30p.m. No.110klahomavs. TexasatDallas,9a.m. Royals 8, Angels 3 No. 12OregonatNo.18UCLA, 12:30p.m. No.13GeorgiaatNo.23Missouri, 9a.m. Los Angeles KansasCity No.16 Oklahoma StateatKansas,1 p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi No. 19EastCarolina atSouthFlorida, 4 p.m. Calhonrf 5 0 1 0 AEscorss 5 1 2 0 T routcf 4 1 1 1 Aokirf 3 2 3 1 DukeatNo.22GeorgiaTech,9:30a.m. Puiols1b 4 1 1 1 JDysonpr-cf 1 0 0 0 Rice atArmy,9a.m. EAST HKndrc2b 4 1 1 0 L.caincf-rf 3 1 1 1 Aybarss 4 0 4 0 Hosmer1b 3 1 1 2 FloridaStateat Syracuse,9a.m. Tulsa atTemple, 9a.m. Freese3b 3 0 0 0 BButlerdh 2 1 0 0 SOUTH JHmltnlf 4 0 0 1 AGordnlf 4 0 1 3 Louisiana-Monroe at Kentucky,9a.m. Crondh 3 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 M iddle Te nn es se e a t M arshall, 9a.m. lannettc 3 0 0 0 Infante2b 3 1 0 0 incinnati atMiami, 9arm. Congerph 1 0 0 0 Mostks3b 4 1 1 1 C StateatGeorgia State,11 am. Totals 3 5 3 8 3 Totals 3 28 9 8 Arkansas atAppalachianState,12:30 p.m. Los Angeles 1 0 0 1 0 0 B1B — 3 Liberty Louisville atClemson,12:30 p.m. Kansas City 30 2 201 Bgx— 8 Collegeat N.c. State,12:30p.m. LOB —LosAngeles8, Kansas City 6.28—H.Ken- Boston orthTexasat UAB,12:30 p.m. drick (1),Aybar(1), A.Gordon(2). HR —Trout (1), Pu- N Chatt anoogaatTennessee,1p.m. lols (1),Hosm er(2), Moustakas (2). SB—Aybar(1), Housto natMemphis,4p.m. B.Butler(1).SF —L.cain. IP H R E R BBSO LSU atFlorida,4:30 p.m. CharlestonSouthern atVanderbilt, 4:30p.m. Los Angeles . C.WilsonL,0-1 2- 3 3 3 3 1 1 UconnatTulane,5p.m MIDWEST Pestano 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 atlowa,9a.m. H.Santiago 11-3 1 2 2 2 0 Indiana at Minnesota, 9a.m. Morin 1 3 2 2 0 1 Northwestern lllinois at Wisconsin,9a.m. Salas 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 B uffalo at Ea st ern Michigan,10a.m. Grilli 1 0 0 0 0 1 Miami(Dhio)atAkron,11a.m. 1-3 2 1 1 1 0 Jepsen 22-3 0 0 0 1 2 UMassatKentState, 11a.m. CorRasmu s BowlingGreenatOhio,11 a.m. KansasCity WesternMichiganat Ball State,noon ShieldsW,1-0 6 6 2 2 2 6 Toledoat lowaState,12:30 p.m. K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 0 1 MichiganStateat Purdue,12:30 p.m. W.Davis 1 2 1 1 0 2 CentralMichiganat Northern llinois, 2p.m. G.Holland 1 0 0 0 0 2 PennStateatMichioan,4 p.m. HBP —byShields(Freese). WP—Morin, Shields. SOUTHWE ST T—3:38.A—40,657(37,903). WestVirginiaatTexasTech,9a.m. FIUatUTSA,4p.m. Old Dominionat UTEP,5p.m. BASKETBALL

NBA preseason NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

All TimesPDT

Sunday'sGame

Toronto99,Sacramento94

Today'sGames

Philadelphia at Boston, 4:30p.m. NewOrleansatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Washingtonat Chicago,5 p.m. Denvervs.L.A.LakersatSanDiego, CA,7p.m.

Finals Top Fuel — Tony Schumacher, 4440 seconds, 291.13 mph def. Brittany Force, 4.652seconds, 269.94mph. FunnyCar—Ma tt Hagan, DodgeCharger, 4.333, 215.00def.TommyJohnsonJr., Charger,5.456,152.31. Pro Stock —RodgerBrogdon, ChevyCamaro,6.516, 21213def.AllenJohnson,DodgeDart,10270,9064. Pro StockMotorcycle—Eddie Krawiec, Harley-Davidson,6.793, 197.13def. Scotty Pollacheck, Buell, 6.853,193.82. Top AlcoholDragster—Chris Demek, 5.262, 272.45def. DuaneShields, 5.392,255.92. Top Alcohol FunnyCar—Steve Harker, Chevy Monte Carlo,5.429,267.69def.JohnLombardoJr., FordMustang,10.494,80.78. Competition Eliminator—ArnieMartel, Chevy Camaro, 7.665,159.44def.JoeCarnasciale,Chevy Cavalier,8.873,139.99. Super Stock —Dan Fletcher, ChevyCama ro, 10.903,98.29def. DougChervanik, Camaro, foul. StockEliminator—Russell Linke,Chevy Camaro,10.499,126.40 def. Michaellacono,Camaro, foul. Super Comp —Steve Martel, Dragster,8.896, 164.69def.AlanKenny, Dragster, 8.869,171.60. Super Gas —Jason Lynch, Chevy Cobalt, 9.869, 16617def.AlanKenny, ChevyCorvete,9852,160 14.

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Sundayat KansasSpeedway, KansasCity, Kan. Lap length: 1.6miles (Starl position inparentheses) 1. (4) JoeyLogano, Ford, 267laps, 48 points,

$364,356. 2. (18)KyleLarson,Chevrolet, 267,42, $257,900. 3. (7)KyleBusch,Toyota, 267,41, $222,096. 4. (15) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 267, 40, $173,163. 5. (12)CarlEdwards,Ford,267,39,$148,705. 6. (17)RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 267, 39,$135,545. 7. (25)DennyHamlin,Toyota, 267,37,S126,470. 8. (16)AustinDilon, Chevrolet, 267,36, S158,306. 9. (13)PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 267,35, $138584. 10. (2)BrianVickers, Toyota, 267,34, $142,220. 11. (20) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 267, 33, $126,543. 12. (1)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 267,33,$155,018. 13. (27)MattKenseth, Toyota, 267,31,$150,421. 14. (5)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,267,31, 8147,546. 15. (11)GregBiffle, Ford,267,29,$146,385. 16. (29) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 267, 28, $111,310. 17. (9)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 267,27, $136,668. 18. (19)Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 267,26,$136,801. 19. (23) Ricky StenhouseJr., Ford, 267, 25, $136,935. 20. (22)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,267, 24,8127,955. 21. (35)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,267,0, $99,710. 22. (10) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 265, 23, $115,110. 23. (39)ColeWhitt, Toyota,264, 21,$98,385. 24. (36) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 264, 20, $113,843. 25. (14) Jamie McMurray,Chevrolet, 263, 20, $131,699. 26. (30) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 263, 18, $110,518. 27. (37)David Ragan, Ford, 262,17,S115,318. 28. (26) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 262, 16, $112,607. 29. (38)J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 262,0,894,360. 30. (31)DavidGililand, Ford,262,14,$101,110. 31. (3)AricAlmirola,Ford,260,13, $128,346. 32. (33)AlexBowman,Toyota,259,12, 891,210. 33. (40)TimmyHil, Chevrolet,259,11, $91,010. 34. (43)MikeWallace,Toyota,259, 0,$98,810. 35. (28)MichaelMcDowell, Ford,258,9, $90,575. 36. (6)BradKeselowski, Ford,222, 9,$135,793. 37. (42)JoeyGase, Ford, 213,0,$90,156. 38. (34)JoshWise,Chevrolet,207,6,$84,465. 39. (8) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 204, 6, $88,465. 40. (32) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 180, 4, $130,401. 41. (21) Justin Allgaier,Chevrolet, accident,84, 3, $80,465. 42. (24) Kurt Busch,Chevrolet, accident, 75, 3, $68,465. 43. (41) Mike Bliss, Chevrolet, vibration, 17, 0, $64,965.

Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 141.951 mph. Time ofRace:2 hours,49minutes,17seconds. Margin of Victory:0.479seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for34laps. Lead Changes:25among9 drivers. Lap Leaders:K.Harvick1-43; J.McMurray4446;J.Gordon47;B.Keselowski48-49;J.McMurray 50-71; K.Harvick72;J.McMurray73-74; K.Harvick 75; D.EarnhardtJr. 76-82;K.Harvick83; D.Earnhardt Jr. 84-89;K.Harvick90; D.Earnhardt Jr. 91-122;J.Logano 123-126;K.Harvick127-134; J.Logano135161; K.Kahne 162-163;J.Logano 164-166; K.Harvick 167;J.Logano 168-192; K.Harvick193-197;J.Logano 198-231;R.Newman232-233; Ku.Busch 234; R.Newman235-238;J.Logano239-267. LeadersSummary (Driver, TimesLed, Laps Led):J.Logano,6 times for 122laps; K.Harvick,8 timesfor 61laps; D.Earnhardt Jr., 3timesfor45 laps; J.McMurray,3 timesfor 27laps; R.Newman, 2times for 6 laps;K.Kahne,1 timefor2 laps; B.Keselowski,1 timefor 2laps;JGordon,1 timefor1lap; KuBusch, 1timefor1 lap. Chasestandings:1.J.Logano,3,048; 2.KyBusch, 3,041;3. C.Edwards,3,039; 4. R.Newman, 3,039; 5.D.Hamlin,3,037;6.K.Harvick,3,033;7.M.Kenseth, 3,031; 8. J.Gordon,3,031; 9. K.Kahne,3,023; 10. B.Keselowski3,009; , 11.D.Earnhardt Jr., 3,006;12. J.Johnson, 3,004.

China Open Sunday atBeiling Men's Championship NovakDlokovic(1), Serbia,def. TomasBerdych (3), Czech Republic, 6-2, 6-2. W omen's Championship MariaSharapova(4), Russia, def.PetraKvitova(3), CzechRepublic, 6-4,2-6, 6-3. ATP WorldTourJapan Open Sunday atTokyo Championship Kei Nishikori (4), Japan,def. MilosRaonic(3), Canada,7-6(5),4-6, 6-4. ATPWorld TourShanghai Masters Sunday atShanghai First Round RobertoBautistaAgut(14), Spain, def.Alexandr Dolgopolov,Ukraine,6-4,6-4. MikhailKukushkin,Kazakhstan,def.TommyRobredo, Spain3-6, , 6-3, 7-6(4). DominicThiem,Austria, def.LukasRosol, Czech Republic,6-4, 7-6(3).

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

EaslernConlerence W L T P l sGF GA

x-D.C.United 1 5 N ew England 1 5

9 7 52 46 34 1 3 3 4 8 46 43 SportingKansascity 13 11 7 46 45 37 NewYork 11 9 11 44 49 46 Columbus 11 10 10 43 44 38 TorontoFC 11 1 2 7 4 0 42 48 P hiladelphia 9 10 1 2 3 9 46 45 Houston 1 0 14 6 3 6 35 51 Chicago 5 8 1 8 3 3 38 46 Montreal 6 18 7 2 5 34 54 WesternConference W L T P l sGF GA x-Seattle 1 9 9 3 6 0 61 47 x-LosAngeles 17 5 9 60 66 31 R ealSaltLake 1 3 8 1 0 4 9 50 39 FC Dallas 1 4 11 6 4 8 52 42 Vancouver 10 8 13 43 40 40 Portland 10 9 12 42 56 52 Colorado 8 15 8 3 2 42 58 SanJose 6 13 11 29 35 44 ChivasUSA 7 18 6 27 26 58 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. x- clinched playoff berth

Sunday'sGames

Seattle FC 4, Colorado1 Chicago0, Montreal 0, tie ChivasUSA1, RealSalt Lake0

Wednesday'sGames

HoustonatToronto FC,4:30 p.m. SanJoseat Portland, 7:30p.m.

Friday's Games ChicagoatSporting KansasCity, 5:30p.m. Vancouverat Seattle Fc, 7p.m. Saturday'sGames NewEnglandat Montreal,1 p.m. TorontoFCat NewYork, 4p.m. Columbus at Philadelphia, 4p.m. SanJoseatRealSaltLake6:30pm Color adoatChivasUSA,7:30p.m.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times POT

Preseason Sunday'sGame Washington 5,Carolina2 Regularseason Wednesday'sGames

MontrealatToronto, 4p.m. PhiladelphiaatBoston, 4:30p.m.

Vancouver at Calgary,7p.m. SanJoseat LosAngeles, 7p.m. Thursday'sGames Columbus at Buffalo, 4p.m. MontrealatWashington, 4 p.m. NewJerseyat Philadelphia,4 p.m. AnaheimatPitsburgh,4 p.m. BostonatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Florida atTampaBay,4:30 p.m. Ottawa at Nashvile, 5 p.m. NewYorkRangersat St.Louis, 5p.m.

ChicagoatDallas, 5:30p.m. ColoradoatMinnesota, 5.30p.m. Calgaryat Edmonton, 6:30p.m. Winnipegat Phoenix, 7 p.m.

DEALS Transactions

HOCKEY National HockeyLeague ARIZONA COYOTES— SignedFLaurentDauphin Formula 1 to a three-year, entry-level contract. CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS — Assigned F Peter JapaneseGrandPrix R egin and G M ichae l Leightonto Rockford (AHL). Sunday atSuzukaInternational RacingCourse EDMONTONOILERS — Reassigned Gs Frans circuit, Suzuka,Japan Tuohimaa to Bakersfield (ECHL) andTy Rimmer from Lap length: 3.61miles City (AHL)to Bakersfield. 1. Lewis Hamilton, England,Mercedes, 44 laps, Oklahoma F LORIDA PANTHERS— ReleasedGClarkeSaun1:51:43.02185.168mph. ders, D Marti nLeeandFAndrewHuf fromamateur 2. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes,44,1:51:52.201. 3. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 44, tryoutcontracts. MONTREAL CANADIENS— TradedGPeterBudai 1;52;12.143. 4. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Red Bull, 44, and FPatrick HollandtoWinnipeg forFEric Tangradi. S T. L O U I S B LUES— ReassignedGNiklasLund1:52:21.839. CZachPochiro,LW RyanTesinkandRWJacob 5.JensonButton,England,McLaren,44,1;52:50.571. strom, Doty from Chicago(AHL)to Alaska(ECHL). 6. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,44,1:53:36.794. WINNIPEG JETS — Reassigned F Nik Ehlersto 7. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Wiliams,44,1:53:38.147. Halifax (QMH L), DJoshMorrisseyto Prince Albert 8. Nico Hulkenberg,Germ any, Force India, 44, (WHL), F Ni c Pe tan to Portland (WHL) andFPatrick 1:53:38.969. andDBen Chiarot andKeaton Ellerbyto St. 9. Jean-Eric Vergne, France,Toro Rosso, 44, Holland John' (AH s L). R elea sedGDannyTaylor. 1:53:50.659. COLLEGE 10. SergioPerez, Mexico, ForceIndia, 43, +1lap, SOUTHEASTERNCONFERENCE— Fined MissisRetired. sippi $50,000 andKentucky 825,000 after theirfans 11. DaniilKvyat,Russia, ToroRosso, 43,+1 lap. stormed thefootball fieldsto celebratevictories. 12. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Ferrari,43, +1lap. TROY — Announ cedthe retirement of football 13. Esteban Gutierrez,Mexico, Sauber,43, +1lap. 14. KevinMagnussen,Denmark, McLaren, 43,+1 coachLarryBlakeneyattheendofthe season. lap. 15. Rom ainGrosiean, France,Lotus,43,+1lap. FISH COUNT 16. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus, 43,+1lap. 17. MarcusEricsson, Sweden, Caterham,43, +1lap. Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,lack 18. MaxChilton, England,Marussia,43, +1lap. chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCo19. KamuiKobayashi, Japan,Caterham,43, +1lap. lumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSaturday. FARWEST 20. Jules BianchiFrance, , Marussia, 41, +3 laps, Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd WashingtonatCalifornia, 3p.m. Retired. B onneville 4,139 1,506 7 4 0 21 0 Air Force at UtahState, 7p.m. 21. AdrianSutil, Germany, Sauber, 40, +4laps, Re- T he Dalles 5,096 1,846 2,135 6 7 7 ColoradoStateat Nevada,7:30 p.m. tired. J ohn Day 4,094 1,389 1,617 6 1 9 WyomingatHawaii, 9 p.m. Not Classilied M cNary 3,166 1,037 1,983 5 09 22. Fernando Alonso,Spain, Ferrari,2, Retired. Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected America's Line Drivers Standings(a1er 15 of 19races): 1, ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Hometeam incaps Hamilton,266points. 2, Rosberg, 256. 3, Ricciardo, Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Favorite Open Current 0/u Underdog 193. 4,Vettel,139.5, Alonso,133. 6, Bottas, 130.7, Bonneville1,120,205176,393 314,786 126,577 NFL Button,82.8, Hulkenberg, 76.9, Massa, 71.10,Perez, The Dalles 737,400 122,470 234,795 92,619 Today 46.11,Raikkonen,45.12, Magnussen,39.13, Vergne, John Day 613,862 106,008 176,761 66,803 7 45' y t R EDSKINS21. 14,Grosiean,8.15, Kvyat, 8.16,Bianchi, 2. Seahawks 7 McNary 565,159 95,880 177,690 63,431


MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014• THE BULLETIN

B3

MLB PLAYOFFS

Orioles sweep Tigers, reach ALCSfor first time since1997

Kansas City Royals center fielder

Lorenzo Cain celebrates

his leaping catch for a ball hit by

Los Angeles Angels' Howie Kendrick during the fifth inning of Game 3 of the AL Division

Series in By Noah Trister

Kansas City, Missouri, on

The Associated Press

Sunday night.

DETROIT — A runaway title in a division of

behemoths, then an unexpected sweep against a trio of Cy Young winners.

The Associated Press/Travis

For Nelson Cruz, Buck Showalter and this

Heying

unheralded bunch from Baltimore, the question now is: What's next'? Cruz sliced a two-run homer for his latest big

postseason hit, and the Orioles held off the Detroit Tigers 2-1 Sunday to reach the AL Championship Series for the first time since 1997.

Bud Norris outpitched David Price in Game 3 of the AL Division Series. The Tigers scored in the ninth inning and put the tying run on sec-

., In

ond with no outs, but Orioles closer Zach Brit-

ton escaped the jam to lift Showalter into his first LCS in 16 seasons as a big league manager. "This is fun to watch. Believe me, I'm happier than you can imagine," Showalter said. "But most of it comes from getting to see the players

get what they've put into it." Baltimore opens the ALCS on Friday at

home against Kansas City. "We've got a lot to go and we're grinding," outfielder Adam Jones said. "If we play as a team, we can do anything." So often an afterthought in the rugged AL East, the Orioles won their first division ti-

tle since 1997 this year, dispatching the second-place New York Yankees by 12 games-

• Kansas City needs jttst nine innings tobeat LosAngeles for a three-game sweep in the ALDS

and last-place Boston by more than double that

margin. That put Baltimore up against another of the game's most star-laden rosters, and MiguelCabrera,Justin Verlander and the Tigers couldn't manage a single win. Cruz's homer Sunday was his 16th in postseason play, including eight against the Tigers.

Kansas City Royals waited nearly three decades to return to the

He was the MVP of the 2011ALCS for Texas in

postseason. Now

a six-game victory over Detroit.

here, they want to stick around for awhile.

out of the playoffs, STATS said. In

Alex Gordon hit a bases-clear-

dealt the same humiliating fate to

ing double in the first inning, Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas

the New York Yankees in the 1980 ALCS.

By Dave Skretta The Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The

Norris pitched two-hit ball for 6 t/a innings, and Andrew Miller got five straight outs to

keep the shutout going.

level." for that going into the playoffs." After Trout staked his team to The Angels, 98-64 in the regAs for the Royals, "they're go- the lead, Angels starter C.J. Wilular season, became the second ing to be a team tough to beat in son quickly got into trouble. The team in the divisional era that began in 1969 to have the best re-

t h a t t h ey're cord in the majors and get swept no small coincidence, the Royals

Stalking around the mound Royals finished off a three-game amid an electric atmosphere, sweep of the mighty Los Angeles James Shields lived up to his "Big Angels with an emphatic 8-3 vic- Game James" billing. The Royals' tory Sunday night in the AL Divi- ace gave up homers to Mike Trout sion Series. and Albert Pujols, but otherwise T he scrappy team w it h t h e held in check a suddenly punchquirkymanager, popgun off ense, less Los Angeles lineup. dynamic defense and lights-out Shields was helped, too, by a bullpen will open the AL Cham- pair of diving grabs by center pionship Series against the Ori- fielder Lorenzo Cain on backoles beginning Friday night in to-back plays. All told, the highBaltimore. Kansas City went 4-3 est-scoring team i n b aseball against the 0's this year. managed six runs in the entire "I've never seen this group series. " Anything happens in t h e of kids so confident on the big stage," Royals manager Ned Yost playoffs," Angels manager Mike said. "It's really fun to see their Scioscia said. "You don't go in development and w a tch t h em with any badge saying you won come into the postseason and just the most games, and you're cerreally take their game to the next tainly not going to get any points each homered and thewild-card

Paul Sancya/The Associated Press

Baltimore Orioles' Nelson Cruz and Ryan Flaherty (3) react after Baltimore defeated the Detroit Tigers, 2-1, in Game 3 of the AL Division Series on Sunday in Detroit. Baltimore won the series 3-0.

this tournament," he said.

left-hander with the $16 million

Kansas City showed off great price tag this season gave up conglovework in every game, espe- secutive singles and a four-pitch cially by its fleet outfielders. In walk in the first inning to load the this one, Cain's catches in the fifth bases for Gordon, whose slicing inning ended an Angels' rally and two-out double gave Kansas City a 3-1lead. preserved a five-run lead. The Royals coasted the rest of Sensing the game already slipthe way to their seventh straight ping away, Scioscia immediatep ostseason victory d a t ing t o ly turned the game over to his Game 5 of the 1985 World Series, bullpen. It didn't fare a whole lot the last time they were in the play- better. offs. George Brett, the star of that The Royals kept the pressure team, watched from an upstairs on, and even plodding designated suite and raised his arms when hitter Billy Butler got in on the act, ace closerGreg Holland fanned stealing second base to the roar of Trout for the final out. the crowd. It was his fifth career This bunch of Royals is certain- steal and first in two years, but it ly making up for all that lost time. typified the way the Royals have Kansas City played a 12-in- been winning this postseason. ning thriller against Oakland in Dazzling p itching, d a ring the wild-card game, and a pair baserunning and some dogged of 11-inning games in Los An- determination. geles before returning home to After swiping seven bases and an adoring crowd at Kauffman playing small-ball against the A's, Stadium. the club that hit the fewest homers This one had none of the dra- in the regular season pounded ma, not that anybody wearing out four long balls against Los blue cared. Angeles.

Giants know there's no guarantee Lackey thriving onbig-gamepitcher talk despite 2-0 lead over Nationals a s Cardinals preparefor Ryu,Dodgers way," closer Kenley Jansen said after striking out two during a perfect ninth inning that comST. LOUIS — John Lackey stepped to the pleted the Dodgers' 3-2 win that evened the sepodium, minus the obvious status symbols: his ries. "Got to go there and steal one." two World Series rings. No reason to brag. The Cardinals did not work out after taking "No, I don't wear them very much," he said an overnight flight that touched down in St. Sunday. "Maybe to a wedding or stuff like that. Louis about 6 a.m. A tarpaulin covered the inThey're a little big and a little flashy, not exactly field later Sunday when about a dozen Dodgmy style." ers players, including Clayton Kershaw, played The St. Louis Cardinals acquired Lack- catch and ran sprints in left field under the ey from World Series champion Boston at l i ghts. the trade deadline for occasions just Shelby Miller (10-9) makes his first like this, knowing NL Division Se- Ne X t uP caree r postseason start in Game 4 on ries game 3 against the Los Ange- N<CS < A Tuesday. DanHaren(13-11) istheprobles Dodgers won't be too big for the p pdgers able starter for the Dodgers, but Har35-year-old right-hander. Lackey at $t Louis en will also prepare as if he's starting wonagameineachserieslastfall,in- +h ' T d Game 3 incase he's needed in long ' cluding the Game 6 clincher over St. 6 0 "' relief. "Yeah, we have flexibility," MattingLouis. "Yeah, definitely take pride in that," T>:FS~ ly said. "We don't know what's going KICE- to h appen tomorrow for us. Anything Lackey said. "I want to pitch well Ra dio: this time of year, but things I've done A M 940 could happen with Hyun-Jin." in the past aren't going to help me The Dodgers could turn to Kershaw tomorrow." on short rest in Game 4 if they are facing elimLackey (14-10) starts after the Cardinals split ination. Kershaw is favored to win his third Cy in California against Clayton Kershaw and Young Award in four years after going 21-3 Zack Greinke. Los Angele left-hander Hyun- with a 1.77 ERA, but he has a 1-4 record and a Jin Ryu (14-7), recovered from shoulder irrita- 5.20 ERA in the postseason and twice straight tion, makes his first start since Sept. 12. has been pummeled by the Cardinals. Through an interpreter, Ryu thought it an Ryu t hrew 43 pitches in a three-inning sim"almost zero percent chance" that the shoulder ulated game on Wednesday at Dodger Stadiwould be a factor. um. He lasted just one inning in his last start of

By Janie McCauley

a night earlier in the nation's capital, cold

By R.B. Fallstrom

The Associated Press

weather shouldn't be an issue during an un-

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — The Giants know

s e a sonably hot summer in San Francisco. It

how realistic it is to rally in the playoffs. w as 81degrees as Washington players took San Francisco leads Washington 2-0 in the the field Sunday. NL Division Series, two years after losing its Ev e n after the cross-country flight, Wilfirst two games at home to the Reds — just

l i a m s wasn't too concerned about his team

as the Nationals did this time. The Giants be- being mentally ready to fight for its season afcame the first team in major league history to ter a pair of one-run defeats. Doug Fister will overcome an 0-2 deficit in a best-of-five series pitch Game 3. "They're fine. They're all here," Williams by winning three straight road games. The Giants went on to win their

second World Series title in three years, and they're still riding a 10game postseason winning streak dating to that run. "Yeah, it can be done," Washington managerMattw l l llamssald Sunday.

said. "We have an optional workout

NS Xt IIP NLCS Washjn tpn at

$an Francisco " "' "

0 'a y

"It can certainly be done. You have to start with the first one."

TV:MLB

The Nationals' next — and, per- Rame: KICEhaps, last — chance comes in Game 3 AM 940

today, but the buses are full and they are itching to get back out there and work today. Last night's flight was a long one, but there was a lot of conversation going. Guys were talking about the prevlous t 0 ga mes and what we must do to get back in this thing and win tomorrow.... "They don't panic, for sure. That's a

good thing." Neither do the Giants, especially cisco can close the series at its picturesque with such an imposing staff. During this 10waterfront home behind 18-game winner gamepostseasonwinningstreak, San FranMadison Bumgarner. Last Wednesday, he cisco pitchers own an 0.90 ERA, having alpitched a four-hit shutout at Pittsburgh to win lowed 58 hits in 100 innings with 99 strikeouts the wild-card game. and 27 walks. "We all know once you get to the postseaT h e Giants are looking for the third-lonson, anything can happen," Bumgarner said. gest postseason winning streak ever and best today at AT&T Park when San Fran-

"But we've got to come in and we can't afford

s i n ce the 1998-99 New York Yankees won 12

to lose any focus because we've been in their straight, according to STATS. spot, and we've come through the other side. Wh i l e San Francisco won the 2012 NLCS

"It's an honor for them to trust me with this tomorrow," Ryu said. "I don't want to let them down.

the season, but Mattingly pointed out he's also t h r own two bullpen sessions.

skies in Northern California. A few players embracethis."

"It's not like we're just throwing him out Ryu pitched seven scoreless innings last t here,"themanagersaid. year to beat the Cardinals in Game 3 of the NL S t i l l, stamina could be a factor, and the DodgChampionship Series. ers have had middle-relief issues. Rookie Pedro Manager Don Mattingly described the pitch- Baez allowed Matt Holliday's three-run homer er as "pretty unflappable." that put the Cardinals ahead 10-6 in the opener, "He seems to be that guy that nothing real- and J.P. Howell gave up Matt Carpenter's tying ly bothers him," Mattingly said. "I'm sure he's two-run homer in the seventh inning in Game

tossed a football around in right field ahead of

a little, like everyone else, excited and anxious

2.

So we have to maintain what we're doing and a t AT8tT Park, it clinched the World Series on

just stay hungry." the road in 2010 and '12 and would welcome Both clubs could be weary following the Gi- a chance to close out this series for the home a nts' 2-l, 18-inning victory that stretched into

f a ns.

"It's going to be a little different tomorrow, Sunday morning. San Francisco's plane landed back in the Bay Area just after 5 a.m. and these guys know it, from 2010 and 2012," The Nationals, who led the NL with 96 m anager Bruce Bochy said. "I wish I knew the wins, held an optional workout under clear

batting practice.

f o r m ula, the secret.... Have some fun with it, Fi s t e r's last start at AT&T Park was memo-

rable for the wrong reasons. Pitching for De-

"We all know what we have to do. We don't t r o it in Game 2 of the 2012 World Series, Fister

need speeches. We can pep talk ourselves," tookalinedriveby Gregor Blanco offtheright Washington center fielder Denard Span said. side of his head but stayed in and carried a After Giants catcher Buster Posey could

s h u toutbidintotheseventhinning. The Tigers

be seen blowing on his hands to keep warm wounduplosing2-0and San Francisco swept.

and all those things." Unlike the Cardinals, who have All-Star setLos Angeles was 0-3 at Busch Stadium in up man Pat Neshek ahead of Trevor Rosenthal, last year's playoffs, shut out twice. The Dodg- the Dodgers have had to mix and match. ersscoredtworunsandtotaled 16hitsin31in-

"You just can't worry about that," Jansen

nings with no homers. said. "What happened yesterday happened. "Five-game series, things can go anybody's That doesn't happen very often."


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014

NFL ROUNDUP

Brownsra y rom25-point e icit, eatTitansinOT The Associated Press

Cleveland

'P .'.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Brian Hoy-

wide receiv-

er threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to

er Travis Benjamin

Travis Benjamin with 1:09 left, and the Browns rallied from a 25-point deficit

touchdown passes to Antonio Gates Eagles 34, Rams 28: PHILADELand rookie running back Branden PHIA — Nick Foles threw two touchO liver's scored his first two N FL down passes, while Chris Maragos touchdowns. returned a blocked punt for a touch-

catches

in beating the Tennessee Titans 29-28 Sunday for the biggest comeback in franchise history. The Browns had never rallied from more than 20 points, and easily topped the comeback on Dec. 4, 1966, when Cleveland trailed the Giants 34-

a17-yard

4 9ers 22, C h iefs 17 : S A N T A down and Cedric Thornton recovCLARA, Calif. — Colin Kaepernick ered a fumble for a score.

pass for a

threw for 201 yards and a touch-

touchdown

d ownk, Frank Gore ra n f o r 1 0 7 RUTHERFORD, N.J. — First-round

against Tennessee on Sunday

yards and the 49ers converted a fake draft pick Odell Beckham Jr. made punt. his NFL debut a memorableone, Panthers 31, Bears 24: CHAR- catching a go-ahead 15-yard touchLOTTE, N.C. — Cam Newton threw down pass from Eli Manning with two touchdown passes to Greg Olsen 10:02 left. and Carolina's defense forced four Steelers 17, Jaguars 9: JACKturnovers to overcome a 14-point SONVILLE, Fla. — Brice McCain deficit. returned an interception 22 yards

in Nashville,

14 and won 49-40. It was the biggest

Tennessee.

road comeback in NFL history.

Mark Zaieski /The Associated Press

The Browns snapped a seven-game road skid scoring 26 unanswered points, including 16 in the fourth quarter. Jake Locker didn't return after hurting his right thumb in the second

Giants 30, Falcons 20: EAST

Bills 17, Lions 14: DETROIT -

for a touchdown, helping the Steel-

Dan Carpenter hit a 58-yard field goal with 4 seconds remaining to

ers overcome a mediocreoffensive performance.

quarter, and backup Charlie White-

lift Buffalo. Lions kicker Alex Hen-

Patriots 43, Bengals 17: FOXBOR-

hurst couldn'tprotect the big lead. Also on Sunday: Saints 37, Buccaneers 31: NEW

ery missed all three of his field-goal OUGH, Mass. — Tom Brady threw attempts. for two touchdowns and became the

Cowboys 20, Texans 17: ARLINGBroncos 41, Cardinals 20: DENTON, Texas) — Dan Bailey kicked a VER Peyton Manning joined Brett 49-yard field goal in overtime after Favre in the NFL's most exclusive of ORLEANS — K h i r y R o b inson's a miss at the end of regulation as clubs with his 500th touchdown pass. tackle-breaking, 18-yard touchdown Dallas won its fourth straight for the Chargers 31, Jets 0: SAN DI-

touchdown pass and ran for another

run in overtime lifted New Orleans.

score and the defense held on late.

Colts 20, Ravens 13: INDIANAPOLIS — Andrew Luck threw one

EGO — Philip Rivers threw tw o

first time since 2011.

sixth quarterback to pass for 50,000

yards. Brady threw for 292 yards and Stevan Ridley gained 117 of the team's 221 yards rushing.

NFL SCOREBOARD American Conference

Summaries

Browns 29, Titans 28 Cleveland Tennessee

Pc t .6 0 0 .6 0 0 .5 0 0 .2 0 0

W Indianapolis 3 Houston 3 Tennesse e 1 Jacksonvile 0

L 2 2 4 5

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .6 0 0 .6 0 0 .2 0 0 .0 0 0

Cincinnati Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland

W 3 3 3 2

L 1 2 2 2

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .7 5 0 .6 0 0 116 80 .6 0 0 114 108 .5 0 0 103 105

Diego T e n San Denver 27 22 Kansas City 4 60 41 0 Oakland 36-175 30-149

W 4 3 2 0

First Quarter Ten —Wright11 passfromLocker (Snccopkick),

4:46.

SecondGuarler Ten—Locker11run(Succopkick), 1441. Cle—FGCnndiff 38,10:05.

Ten —Wright 11 passfromWhitehurst (Succop kick), 3:43. Ten —Hunter 75 passfromWhitehurst (Succop kick), 2:44. Cle — Dray1 passfromHoyer(Cundiff kick),:12. Third Quarter Cle — FGCnndiff 42,12:55. Fourlh Quarler Cle — Carder safety,11:02. Cle — Benjamin17 passfromHoyer (Cnndiff kick), 6:49.

Cle — Benjamin 6 pass fromHoyer (Cundiff kick),

Buffalo NewEngland Miami N.Y.Jets

C le

2 85 26 1 4 -14 3 - 16 4 -79 2 - 31 0-0 1-0 21-37-1 21-32-0 1-7 3-12 3-49.0 5-37.6 0-0 0-0 7-74 76 -8 29:17 30:43

Timeof Possession

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Cleveland: Tate22-123, West 7-31, Croweii 6-19,Hoyer1-2. Tennessee: Wright2-43, Greene 11-36, Locker4-34, Sankey 8-27, McCluster 3-10,Whitehnrst2-(minus1). PASSING —Cleveland: Hoyer21-37-1-292.Tennessee:Whitehurst13-21-0-194,Locker8-11-0-79. RECEIVING-Cleveland:Gabriel4-95, Ben jamin 4-48, Cameron3-33,Hawkins3-27,Dray3-25,Austin 2-54,Agnew1-12,Tate1-(minns2).Tennessee:Wright 6-47, N.Wa shington 4-57, Walker 4-47, Hunter 3-99, Coifman 2-18, L.Washington1-7, McCluster1-(minus2). MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.

L T 1 0 1 0 3 0 4 0

P ct .8 0 0 .7 5 0 .4 0 0 .0 0 0

1 1 —17 0 — 14

First Quarter Det—Tate9 passfromStafford(Henerykick),:05. SecondGuarler Det — Mathis 41 interception return(Henery kick),

13:44.

Bnf — FGCarpenter 45,6:43. Third Quarler Bof — FGCarpenter 25,1:23. Fourlh Quarler Bnf — Gragg2passfromDrton(Jacksonrun),9 23. Bnf — FGCarpenter 58,;04. A—62,775.

B uf Qet 19 13 3 43 263 22-49 20-69

L 1 1 2 3

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .8 0 0 .8 0 0 .6 0 0 .2 5 0

PF PA 156 132 135 103 133 111 95 109

H ome Away 3 -0-0 1 -1-0 2 - 1-0 2 -0-0 2 - 1-0 1 -1-0 1 - 1-0 0 -2-0

NFC 1 -1-0 1 -1-0 0 -1-0 0 -0-0

Qi v 0-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

Carolina Atlanta NewOrleans TampaBay

W 3 2 2 1

L 2 3 3 4

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .6 0 0 .4 0 0 .4 0 0 .2 0 0

PF PA

H ome Away t tFC 2 - 1-0 1 - 1-0 3-0-0 2 - 0-0 0 -3-0 2-2-0 2 -0-0 0 -3-0 2-2-0 0 - 2-0 1 -2-0 0-4-0

104 120 151 143 132 141 103 156

North Detroit GreenBay Minnesota Chicago

W L T P c t PF PA 3 2 0 .6 0 0 99 7 9 3 2 2

2 3 3

0 0 0

W Arizona 3 Seattle 2 S an Francisco 3 2 St. Louis 1

L T Pc t PF PA 1 0 .75 0 86 8 6 1 0 .667 83 6 6 0 . 6 00 110 106 3 0 .25 0 84 119

Thursday'sGame GreenBay42, Minnesota10 Sunday'sGames Cleveland 29, Tennessee28 NewOrleans37,TampaBay31,OT Dallas20,Houston17, OT Carolina31,Chicago24 Philadelphia34,St. Louis28 N.Y.Giants30,Atlanta 20

2 - 0-0 1 - 2-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 2-1-0 1 - 1-0 1 - 2-0 2-2-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0 - 2-0 2 - 1-0 1-2-0 1-1-0 0-1-0

0 0 0 0 — 0 7 14 7 3 — 3 1 First Quarter

SD — Gates8passfromRivers (Novakkick), 7:31. SecondQuarler SD — Gates12passfromRivers(Novakkick),1015 SD — Oliver15 run(Novakkick),:42. Third Quarter SD — Oliver9passfromRivers(Novakkick), 6:44 Fourlh Quarler SD — FGNovak34, 13:28. A—63,471.

NYJ SQ 11 21 1 51 43 9 21-91 40-162 60 27 7 2 -5 2 - 12 5 -104 0-0 1 -0 1 - 27 12-31-1 20-28-1 2 -14 3 - 1 1 8-51.1 5-40.8 1-1 0-0 12-94 5 - 76 21:06 38:54

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —N.Y. Jets: Ivory9-44,Johnson7-24, Vick 2-14, B.Poweii 2-6,Smith1-3. SanDiego: Oliver 19-114,Brown9-26, Dranghn10-19, Rivers2-3. PASSING —h.y. Jets: Vick 8-19-0-47, Smith 4-12-1-27.SanDiego: Rivers20-28-1-288. RECEIVING —N.Y. Jets: Kerley 3-24, Amaro 3-19, Cumberland2-12, Salas2-12, Nelson1-9, Johnson1-(minns2).SanDiego: Oliver4-68,Gates 4-60, Floyd3-72, Royal3-40, Allen 3-25, Ajirotutu 1-11,Green1-8,Brown1-4. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

H ome Away 2- 0 - 0 1 - 1-0 2- 0 - 0 0 - 1-0 2 - 1-0 1 -1-0

N FC AFC 2-0-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 0 - 2- 0 1 - 1-0 1-3-0 0-0-0

Arizona

T ampaBay 0 10 1 4 7 0 — 3 1 Neworleans 6 7 7 1 1 6 — 3 7 Firsl Quarler ND — FGS.Graham30,9:46. ND — FGS.Graham29,:21. SecondQuarter ND — Thomas15 passfromBrees(S.Grahamkick), 10:14. TB — FGMurray55,1:54. TB — MurphyJr. 20passfrom Giennon (Murray kick),:20. Third Quarler TB — Rainey9run(Murraykick), 11:59.

0 — 20

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

A ri

Den

9 24 2 15 56 8 19-37 28-92 1 78 47 6 2 -7 6 - 38 0-0 0-0 2-24 0-0 12-34-0 31-47-2 3-21 1-3 11-44.3 4-49.8 1-0 0-0 3 -15 7 - 67 24:43 35:17

TB — Lansanah 33 interception return (Murray kick), 11:20. ND — Cadet 5passfromBrees(S.Grahamkick),4:57. Fourth Quarter TB — Herron9 passfrom Glennon (Mnrray kick), 13:28.

ND — Thomas27ron(passfailed), 9:28. ND — Galettesafety, 6:44. ND — FGS.Graham44,2:30. Overtime ND — K.Robinson18 rnn,9:24. A—73,004.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards

Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

TB

C hi Car 17 22 3 47 32 1 22-85 27-90

49ers 22, Chiefs17

Eagles 34, Rams28

7 3 7 0 — 17 Kansascity S anFrancisco 3 10 3 6 — 2 2 First Quarter KC — Keice 2 passfromA.Smith (Santoskick),

St. Louis P hiladelphia

8:37.

SF — FGDawson31, 4;36. SecondGuarler KC — FGSantos42,12:18. SF — FGDawson55, 9:44. SF — S.Johnson9 pass fromKaepernick (Dawson kick),:31. Third Quarler KC — Thomas17 passfromA.Smith (Santoskick), 11:56.

SF — FGDawson52, 6:16. Fourlh Guarler SF — FGDawson27, 8:42. SF — FGDawson30, 2:12. KC 14

SF 22

2 65 35 7 19-90 40-171 1 75 18 6 2-38 0-0 5-119 4-108 0-0 1-2 17-31-1 14-27-0 0 -0 3 - 15 4-40.3 2-53.5 1-0 1-0 4 -29 2 - 10 23:56 36:04

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Kansas City: Charles15-80,Davis 2-6, A.Smith1-6, Jenkins1-(minus2). SanFrancisco: Gore18-107,Hyde10-43, Kaepernick10-18, Dahl1-3, Eiiington1-0. PASSING —Kansas City: A.Smith17-31-1-175. San Francisco:Kae pernick 14-26-0-201,Boidin 0-10-0.

RECEIVIN G— KansasCity:Hemingway4-50,Fasano4-32,Bowe3-42,Keice 2-15,Thomas1-17,Sherman1-12,Charles 1-4,Jenkins 1-3.SanFrancisco: Boldin 4-72,Lloyd3-76, Carrier2-16, Crabtree1-16, Miger1-10,S.Johnson1-9,Eilington1-1, Gore1-1. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Steelers17, Jaguars 9 Pitlshurgh Jacksonville

010 0 3 3 3

7 — 17 0 — 9

First Quarter Jax — FGScobee43, 5:17. SecondGuarler Pit — FGSuisham24,12:35. Pit — Palmer1 passfromRoethiisberger(Suisham kick), 1:53. Jax — FGScobee35,:09. Third Quarler Jax — FGScobee36, 3:16. Fourlh Quarler Pit — McCain 22 interception return (Suisham kick), 11:32. A—66,198. First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards

NO

20 34 3 14 51 1 21-66 29-140 2 48 37 1 1-11 1-0 3 -75 4 - 88 3-33 1-0 19-32-1 35-57-3 1-1 0-0 4-40.5 2-48.5 2-0 0-0 15-113 6 - 50 27:04 38:32

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Arizona: Eliington 16-32, Taylor 1-6, Hughes1-0, GinnJr. 1-(minus1). Denver: INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Hillman15-64,Thompson3-15, Sanders 2-8, Ball RUSHING —Tampa Bay: Martin14-45,Rainey 6-7, Manning2-(minus2). 6-21,Glennon1-0. NewOrleans: K.Robinson21-89, PASSING —Arizona: Stanton 11-26-0-118, Thomas 4-35, Cooks2-15,Johnson1-2, Brees 1-(miThomas1-8-0-81. Denver: Manning 31-47-2- nus1). 479. PASSING — Tampa Bay:Glennon 19-32-1-249. RECEIVING —Arizona: Ellington 4-112, Fitz- New Orleans:Brees35-57-3-371. gerald 3-57, Carison2-19, Jo.Brown2-4, Floyd RECEIVIN G— Tampa Bay:Jackson8-144,Mur1-7. Denver: D.Thomas8-226, Sanders7-101, phy Jr.3-35,Martin 3-29,Rainey3-21,Seferian-Jenkins Weiker 7-58, J.Thomas6-66, Bail 2-11, Tamme 1-11,Herron1-9. NewOrleans: Cooks9-56, Thomas 1-17. 8-77,Watson5-43,Colston3-63, Hil 3-53,Cadet 3-19, MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Denver: McManus J.Graham 2-36,Stils1-16, K.Robinson1-8. 53 (WL). MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.

Carey 2-2. Carolina: Reaves11-35, Dgbonn aya 8-24, Brown 2-22, Newton6-9. PASSING —Chicago: Cutler28-36-2-289.Carolina: Newton19-35-1-255. RECEIVING —Chicago: Forte 12-105, Jeffery 6-97, Marshall 3-44, Rosario3-20, Bennett 3-17, Holmes1-6. Carolina: Disen6-72, Cotchery3-46, Benjamin3-38, Avant2-42, Dickson2-16, Bersin 1-21, Rea ves1-16, Brown1-4. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Chicago:Gould35 (WR).

Colts 20, Ravens13 Baltimore Indianapolis

0 3 0 1 0 — 13 3 3 7 7 — 20

First Quarler Ind —FGVinatieri 38,9:44. SecondQuarler Ind —FGVinatieri 34,:35. Bal — FGTucker 52,;00. Third Quarter Ind — Allen 6 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 10:33. Fourlh Guarler Bal — FGTucker 27,13:56. Ind — Luck13 rnn(Vinatieri kick),8:56. Bal — Forsett11 rnn(Tnckerkick), 7:16. A—65,258.

Pit

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards

Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Bal 15

Ind 26

2 87 42 2 15-90 30-117 1 97 305 1-0 3-7 2 -51 1 - 25 2 -21 1 - 29 22-38-1 32-49-2 4-38 1-7 5-48.4 3-47.7 2-2 3-2 5 -36 6 - 83 21:17 38:43

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHltte — Baltimore: Forsett 6-42, Pierce 4-30, Taiiaferro5-18.Indianapolis: Bradshaw1568, Richardson 9-37, Luck6-12. PASSlNG —Baltimore: Flacco 22-38-1-235. Indianapolis: Luck 32-49-2-312. RECEIVING —Baltimore: Forsett 7-55, Daniels 5-70, SmithSr.5-34, TSmith 3-38,Jones1-30,Aiken 1-8. Indianapolis: Hilton9-90,Wayne7-77, Allen 4-59, Bradshaw 4-17, Richardson4-10, Nicks3-29, Fleener1-30. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Phi — Cooper9 passfromFoles(Parkeykick),:30. Third Quarler Phi —Thorntonfumble recovery in endzone (Parkey kick),12:17. Phi — Maciin 24passfromFoles(Parkey kick),

Jax

9:02.

StL — Quick 5 passfrom A.Davis (Zuerlein kick),

4:41. A—69,596.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards

Timeof Possession

Cowdoys 20,Texans17 (OT) 0 0 7 10 0 — 17 0 3 7 7 3 — 20

SecondQuarler Dal — FGBailey 33,:11. Third Guarter Hou —Foster15 run(Buiiock kick), 8:49. Dal — Williams 43passfrom Romo (Bailey kick),

StL Phi 29 22 4 66 352 23-125 33-145 3 41 207 2-7 12 -3 5-126 1 - 15 1-0 0-0 29-49-0 24-37-1 4-34 0-0 5-33.2 4-40.8 3-3 2-2 10-82 4 - 39 32;59 27:01

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —St. Louis: Cunningham7-47, Stacy 11-42,A.Davis3-30, Watts 2-6. Philadelphia: McCoy 24-81Sproles7-51 Foies2-13 PASSING— St. Louis: A.Davis 29-49-0-375. Philadelphia: Foies 24-37-1-207. RECEIVING —St. Louis: Quick5-87,Cook4-44, Stacy4-36, Britt 3-68, Pettis3-29, Cunningham3-24, Austin 2-33,Bailey2-20,Watts 2-12,Kendricks1-22. Philadelphia: Maciin5-76,J.Mathews4-35, Cooper 4-33, McCoy4-5,Erl z3-39,Celek3-15,Huff1-4. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Patriots 43, Bengals17 Cincinnati N ewEngtand

0 3 14 0 — 1 7 14 6 1 4 9 — 4 3 First Quarter NE — Ridley1 run(Gostkowski kick),10:03. NE — Wright17 passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), 3:12.

SecondQuarler

Cin — FGNugent 23,4:33. NE — FGGostkowski 48, 1:12. NE— FGGostkowski19,:09. Third Quarler Cin — Sano 37 passfrom Dalton (Nugent kick), 11:27. NE — Gronkowski 16passfromBrady (Gostkowski kick), 6:06. NE — Arrington9fumble return(Gostkowski kick), 6:00. Cin — Green 17 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 3:43. Fourth Quarter NE—FGGostkowski23,14:54. NE— FGGostkowski47,7:53. NE— FGGostkowski35,2:55. A—68,756.

20 12 3 72 243 28-111 15-56 2 61 187 4 -20 3 - 14 2 -36 3 - 66 2-22 0-0 26-36-0 22-36-2 4-12 1-4 5-45.4 5-45.0 1-1 3-0 7 -50 4 - 34 First downs 35:17 24:43 TotalNetYards

3-(minus2). Jacksonville: Johnson4-27, Borties 4-14, Gerhart 4-9, D.Robinson3-6. PASSING —Pitlshurgh: Roethiisberger 26-360-273.Jacksonville: Borties22-36-2-191. RECEIVING —Pittsburgh: A.Brown 5-84, Bell 5-36, Miller3-46,J.Brown3-26, Blount3-17, Archer 2-8, Moore1-26, Whea ton 1-17, Wi.Johnson1-12, Paimer1-1,Heyward-Bey1-0. Jacksonville: A.Robinson 5-51,Hurns4-26, Harbor 3-22, Brown2-26, Todman 2-23, Sanders2-12, D.Robinson 2-(minus1), Gerhart1-20, Ta'ufo'ou1-12. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Houston Dallas

SecondQuarler

StL — Quick 8 passfrom A.Davis (Zuerlein kick), 3:23.

StL — Cunningham14run(Zueriein kick),:03. Fourth Quarter StL — Britt 30 passfromA.Davis (Zneriein kick),

A—70,799.

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

0 7 7 1 4 — 28 13 7 1 4 0 — 3 4 First Quarter Phi — Maragos 10blocked punt return (Parkey kick), 14:37. Phi — FGParkey26,7:42. Phi — FGParkey27,3:04.

2:15.

2 62 23 1 2 -30 3 - 81 2 -45 1 - 18 1 -2 2 - 36 28-36-2 19-35-1 4 -27 2 - 24 4-52.3 5-48.2 3-2 3-2 10-80 3 - 30 Timeof Possession 32:59 27:01 INDIVIQUALSTATISTICS INQIVIQUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Pitlshurgh: Bell 15-82, Blount RUSHING —Chicago: Forte17-61, Cutler3-22, 8-29r Archer1-2, Wi.Johnson1-0, Roethiisberger

Saints 37, Bnccaneers 31(OT)

6 7 7

14 7 3 0 — 24 7 7 7 1 0 — 31

Firsl Quarler Car—Brown79 punt return(Ganokick),10:56. Chi — Forte10passfromCutler (Gouidkick), 4:31. Chi — Cutler10 run(Gouldkick), 2:13. SecondQuarler Chi — Jeffery 25 passfromCutler (Gouidkick),

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Broncos 41, Cardinals 20 714 3 17 — 41 First Quarter Ari —FGCatanzaro 33, 9:09. Den—J.Thomas 7 pass from Manning (McManns kick),4:43. Ari —FGCatanzaro 48, 1:41. SecondGuarler Den— D.Thomas31passfrom Manning(McManus kick),7:30. Ari —Eilington5 run(Catanzarokick), 4:37. Den— D.Thomas86passfrom Manning(McManus kick),1:37. Third Quarler Den—FGMcManns44, 9:33. Ari —Flfington 81passfromThomas(Catanzaro kick), 3:03. Fourlh Quarler Den—FGMcManns41,13:48. Den—J.Thomas12 passfromManning(McManus kick),7:47. Den—Thompson8rnn (McManuskick), 4:33. A—76,895.

Chicago Carolina

Third Guarter Car—Dgbonnaya1rnn (Ganokick), 7:16. Chi — FG Gould45,2:38. Fourlh Quarler Car — FGGano44,4:29. Car—Disen6passfromNewton(Ganokick), 2:18. A—73,659.

All TimesPQT

Denver

Panthers 31, Bears24

Qiv 1-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 10:51. Car—Disen9passfromNewton(Ganokick),:12. 0-0-0

Thursday,Dct.9 Indianapolisat Houston, 5:25p.m. Sunday,Oct. 12 JacksonvilleatTennessee, 10a.m. Detroitat Minnesota,10a.m. BaltimoreatTampaBay,10 a.m. Denver at N.Y.Jets,10 a.m. NewEnglandatBuffalo,10 a.m. CarolinaatCincinnati,10 a.m. PittsburghatCleveland,10a.m. GreenBayatMiami,10a.m. SanDiegoatOakland,1:05 p.m. Dallas atSeatle,1:25 p.m. Washington atArizona,1:25 p.m. Chicago atAtlanta,1:25 p.m. N.Y.Giantsat Philadelphia,5:30 p.m. Open:KansasCity,NewOrleans Monday,Qct. 13 SanFranciscoatSt. Louis,5:30p.m.

Buffalo17, Detroit14 Indianapolis20,Baitimore13 Pittsbnrgh17rJacksonville9

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

A ll NYG 20 22 3 97 31 7 21-90 34-124 3 07 19 3 2-22 0-0 4 -70 5 - 83 0-0 1-6 29-45-1 19-30-0 1-9 1-7 5-32.6 3-57.7 1-0 2-2 8 -81 3 - 15 28:19 31:41

Qiv INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 1-0-0 RUSHltte — Atlanta: Freeman4-38, S.Jackson 0-0-0 13-37,Rodgers2-10, Hester1-3, Smith1-2. N.Y.Gi1-0-0 0-2-0 ants: A.Wiliiams20-65,Jennings10-55, Hilis 2-7, Manning2-(minus3). PASSING—Atlanta: Ryan29-45-1-316. N.Y. Giants: Manning19-30-0-200. AFC Qiv RECEIVING—Atlanta: Jones11-105, Freeman 0-2-0 1-0-0 5-44, S.Jackson5-37,Smith3-83,White2-26,Hester 0-1-0 2-0-0 2-16, Rodgers 1-5. N.Y. Giants: BeckhamJr. 4-44, 0-1-0 1-1-0 Randle 4 33, Parker361, Cruz322, AWiiams 2-18, 1-0-0 0-3-0 Jennings 2-17, Robinson1-5. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

H ome Away N FC AFC Qiv 2- 1 - 0 1 - 1-0 2-1-0 1-1-0 1-0-0

.6 0 0 134 106 .4 0 0 101 126 .4 0 0 116 131

A—80,307.

N FC AFC 2-1-0 2-0-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 1-1-0

South

8-43.1 7-47.1 3-0 3-1 1 1-74 8 - 62 32:19 27:41

Chargers 31, Jets 0

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

AF C 3 -0-0 2 -0-0 2 -2-0 0 -4-0

East W Philadelphia 4 Dallas 4 N.Y.Giants 3 Washington 1

Denver41,Arizona20 2 94 19 4 SanFrancisco22,KansasCity17 3 -20 2 - 4 8 SanDiego31, N.Y. Jets 0 NewEngland43, Cincinnati17 0-0 0-0 1 -21 1 - 4 1 Open:Miami,Oakland Today'sGame 30-43-1 18-31-1 2 -14 6 - 27 SeattleatWashington,5:30 p.m.

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSH(NG —Buffalo: Jackson10-49,Spiier10-8, Drton1-0,Goodwin1-(minus 8). Detroit: Winn11-48, Bush6-13,Stafford3-8. PASSING —BuNato: Orton 30-43-1-308. Detroih Stafford 18-31-1-221. RECEIVING —Buffalo: Watkins 7-87, Jackson 7-58,Chandler4-21,Woods3-37, Spiler 3-25,Hogan 2-27,Goodwin1-42, Mi.Wiliams1-8, Gragg1-2, Summers1-1.Detroit: Tate7-134, Fuller3-17,Bush2-30, Pettigrew 2-12, Ebron 2-8, Ross1-13, C.Johnson1-7. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Buffalo: Carpenter 50 (WL).Detroit Henery44(WR ),47(SH),50 (WL).

N.Y. Jets SanDiego

H o m e Away 3-0 - 0 1 - 1-0 3-0 - 0 0 - 1-0 1 - 1-0 1 -2-0 0- 2- 0 0 - 2-0

West

0 3 3 7 7 0

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

PF PA 133 6 3 116 8 7 1 1 9 10 1 51 103

National Conference

Bills17, Lions14 Buffalo Qetroit

2- 1 - 0 1 - 1-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 2-1-0 1 - 1-0 2 - 1-0 2-1-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 1 - 1-0 1 - 1-0 1-2-0 1-0-0 0-2-0

West

1:09. A—69,143.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards

7 6 7 0 — 20 Atlanta East N.Y.Giants 7 3 7 1 3 — 30 PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC Qiv Firsl Quarler 96 8 9 1- 1 - 0 2 - 1-0 1-2-0 2-0-0 1-0-0 NYG — R a ndi e 3 pass from Manning (J.Brown 123 107 2 - 0-0 1 -2-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 kick), 6:40. 96 9 7 1- 1 - 0 1 - 1-0 2-2-0 0-0-0 1-1-0 Ati — S.Jackson10run(Bryant kick),1:57. 79 127 1 - 2- 0 0 - 2-0 1-1-0 0-3-0 0-0-0 SecondGuarler Ati —FGBryant20,14:15. South NYG —FGJ.Brown49, 3:40. Ati —FGBryant20,:03. PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC Div 156 108 2 - 1-0 1 - 1-0 3-1-0 0-1-0 2-0-0 Third Guarter 2-0-0 1-2-0 0-0-0 Ati — Smith 74passfromRyan(Bryantkick), 5:37. 104 87 2-0 - 0 1- 2 -0 NYG —A.Wiliams 3rnn(J.Brownkick), 2:05. 88 139 0 - 2-0 1 -2-0 1-3-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 67 169 0 - 2-0 0 -3-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 0-1-0 Fourlh Quarler NYG —Beckham Jr. 15 pass from Manning North (J.Brown kick), 10:02. NYG —FGJ.Brown50,5;01. PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC Qiv NYG — FGJ.Brown26, 2:08. 97 7 6 2- 0 - 0 1 - 1-0 2-1-0 1-0-0 1-0-0

L T 2 0 2 0 2 0 4 0

010 3 1 6 — 29 7 21 0 0 — 2 8

W 3 3 2 1

Giants 30, Falcons 20

Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Cin 17 3 20

NE 30 505

18-79 46-220 2 41 285 2 -53 3 - 12 7 -141 1 - 16 0-0 0-0 18-29-0 23-35-0 1-8 1-7 4-41.5 3-40.3 3-3 1-0 4-37 12-114 21:04 38:56

IttDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Cincinnati: Bernard 13-62, Dalton 2-16, Hill 2-1,Tate1-0. New England: Ridiey27113, Vereen9-90, Brady4-13, Deveiin 2-5, Bolden 1-3, Garoppoio 3-(minns4). PASSING —Cincinnati: Dalton 15-24-0-204, Campbe ll3-5-0-45.NewEngland:Brady23-35-0-292. RECEIVING —Cincinnati: Green 5-81, Sann 5-70, Hill 3-68,Gresham2-15,Bernard 2-10, Sanzenbacher 1-5. New England: Gronkow ski 6-100, Wright5-85,Edelman5-35, Vereen3-18, LaFe01-20, Dobson1-16,Deveiin1-11, Amendola1-7. MISSEQFIELDGOALS—Cincinnati: Nugent

52 (SH).

6:08.

Fourlh Quarler Dal — Bryant 2passfromRomo(Bailey kick), 9:44. Hou —FGBullock 29,2:27. Hou —Foster1 rnn(Bullock kick),:41. Qverlime Dal — FGBailey 49,7:45. A—91,159.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards

Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Pnnts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

H ou

Passing Wilson J. Kearse Seahawk s Q a l Opponents

15 24 3 30 456 31-176 33-140 1 54 316 3 -30 5 - 60 1 -21 2 - 53 1-5 1-2 16-25-1 28-41-1 0-0 1-8 7-46.6 4-46.3 0-0 2-2 5-35 75 -6 31:08 36 :07

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Houston: Foster23-157, Blue5-16, Fitzpatrick3-3. Qallas: Murray31-136, Randle2-4. PASSING —Houston: Fitzpatrick 16-25-1-154. Dallas: Romo 28-41-1-324. RECEIVING — Houslon:Hopkins6-63,A.Johnson 5-58,Foster2-15,Griffin1-8,Martin1-7, Graham 1-3. Dallas: Bryant9-85, Murray6-56, Witten4-59, Beasley 4-23,Harris 3-30,Wiliams2-71. MISSED FIELDGOALS —Dallas: Bailey 53

(WL).

Stats SEAHAWKS STATISTICS

Com Atl Int Yds TD Rat 60 87 1 6 5 1 6 108.9 1 1 0 17 0 11 8 .8 61 88 1 6 6 8 6 109.5 82 119 776 747 2 96.5

Rushing Att Yards Avg Long TQ M.Lynch 52 234 4.5 2 1 3 R. Wilson 18 87 4.8 1 3 0 Harvin 1 6 8 6 14.3 51t Turbin 10 35 3.5 1 0 0 Lockette 1 2 2.0 2 0 Seahawks 87 444 6.1 61 1 4 1 Opponents 78 217 2.8 1 6

Receiving No. Yards Avg Long Td Harvin 15 106 7.1 3 3 0 Baldwin 10 105 10.5 16 0 M.Lynch 8 8 1 10.1 21 2 J. Kearse 7 9 1 13.0 30 0 Z. Miller 6 7 6 12.7 24 0 Waiters 4 3 9 9.8 1 7 0 Lockette 3 7 7 25.7 39t 2 Turbin 3 3 9 13.0 32 1 Der.Colem an 2 2 9 14.5 15t 1 P. Richardson 1 7 7.0 7 0 Wiiison 1 1 1.0 1 0 R. Wilson 1 1 7 17.0 17 0 Seahawks 61 668 11.0 391 6 Opponents 82 776 9.6 4 2 6


MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014• THE BULLETIN

O MMUNITY

P O RT S

B5

E1V D A R

Email events at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.com/comsportscal.

Drive, Bend; 541-408-4949, sparrowglow©gmail. com or www.anabellesangelglow.org BEND BEERCHASE: Oct.11;Team relayof 70 miles from Bend to Redmond to Sisters and back to Bend. With brewery stops. Also a "6Keg" individual run; $35-$45 for individuals, $500-$600 for a team of five or six, registration required; 6:30 a.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 NE Bellevue Drive; 541-633-7174, info©

BASKETBALL BEND HOOPS MID-OCTOBERBASKETBALL CAMP: Oct. 16-17;Basketball camp for kids in grades1-8; $85; 9a.m.-noon and1-4 p.m.; Bend Hoops, 1307 NE1st Sreet„www.bendhoops.com COBOPRESEASONCLINICS: Oct. 12,19,26; Preseason clinic to enhance skills before COBO tryouts; $49 in-district or $59 out-of-district; 4-6p.m.;M ountain View HighSchool,2755 NE 27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or www. bendparksandrec.org RIDGEVIEWYOUTH BASKETBALL WORKOUTS: Free Sunday clinics for boys in the Ridgeview boundary in grades1-8; free;Oct.12, 1-3:30 p m.;Oct.19and16, 911 a m.; Ridgeview High School; nathan.covill©redmond.k12.or.us YOUTH GIRLSBASKETBALL OPEN GYM: Oct. 7-26;Bend High girls COBOwill be holding open gyms Tuesday nights for girls in grades 5-8; free; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.; 541383-6290 or allison.gardner©bend.k12.or.us

Seattle's Marshawn Lynch drags Washington's London Fletcher and Ryan Kerrlgan durlng the team's 2012 playoff garn. Since then, the Seahawks have thrived while the Redskins have struggled. The teams meet tonight for the first time since the 2012 playoffs. a nd ma x i m izing the m through their scheme. More-

Continued from B1 over, Young noted, Seattle's Washington, 1-3 heading offense rarely gets in thirdinto today's reprise, has won a n d -long situations nor does

just four games since that the team kill itself with pen2012 playoff loss. alties. Both have bitten WashIn

the

tumul t u ous i n g ton the last two seasons.

20-month span that followed, E S PN analyst Ron Jaworthe Redskins finished last in ski, however, boils down the N FC East for a sixth time in

e s sential difference in t h e

the last eight years, changed teams' trajectories to one head coaches and have gone unit: Seattle's secondary, without the services of Grif-

c o m posed of Pro Bowl safe-

fin for five games and count- ties Kam Chancellor and ing. Benched the last three Earl Thomas and Pro Bowl games of2013, the franchise cornerback Richard Sher-

quarterback is recovering man, in addition to the fast from the second major leg in- rising Maxwell. "It's pretty simjury (dislocated left e ankle) ofhis young JawOrSki ple, said "If you look NFL career. 15 S Meanwhile, Se- UilfDrtUilgfe back and comattle has posted a TI OS ~U S pare t h e t e ams @~ 15-4 regular-seain 2012 to where sonrecordandfol- gO OA Brfd they a r e now, the lowedits2013NFC I/I/j/7 g SUpey difference is the West title with a secondary of Se~ SUper Bowl chamattle. Itstartsthere pionship. Wilson ju St digreSS and en d s t h ere. asnt t ntsse a B S f 8 1 B S T ey can s"ut you start while

r a is-

~ ~ ing his passer rating each season ba ll gameS. (100.0 as a rookie, Tt1ey'f.e 101.2 In 2013 and 108.9 through the coach Pete Carroll

has kept his staff th e " e b Y largelyintactwhile COrltinually retooling his roster gd d ji lg ~gleilt

ANABELLE'SANGEL GLOW SK:Oct.17;An or angela©footzonebend.com orlisa.nasrO evening 5K glow run and 2K fun glow walk me.com through the Old Mill District; wear bright neon colors and bring flashlights; proceeds benefit MOVE IT MONDAYS: Carpool from FootZone to Anabelle Wilson and Sparrow Clubs USA; $20trailhead when scheduled; all other runs start $25 for adults, $15-$20 for teens, $5-$10 for kids, and finish at FootZone; 3-5 miles; paces 7-12 registration suggested; 5 p.m. festivities begin, minutes per mile; free; 5:30 p.m.; Bend; melanie@ 6:17p.m.racebegins,6:23 p.m .walk begins;Les footzonebend.com Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon NOON TACORUN: Noon taco run onWe dnesdays

Bowling Leagueleadersandhigh scores Lava Lanes,Bend Sept. 15-21 Casino Fttn— TheGang;JosiahOhl de233/633; Teresa McDonald 208/547 GuysandGals—Over TheHill; MikeGarison 235/688;JanetGettling t98/569 Lava Lanes Classic — HobblinAlong;Geo f Higgli n259/662;MoniqueMccleary205/594 Tea Timers —InspirationStrikes; ShariHamel 193/542 Latecomers —NoThreat; TamiSmith190/534

Qff-the-field fact o rs have contributed to the di-

Washington's ro s ter h a s s u ffered for the $36 million salary-cap penal t y t he NFL sa l p ped on t h e team for the way

i n c r ements in 2012 and 2013,

Washington's Pro Bowl line- a " travestyof fairness." backer Brian Orakpo. eWe Washington also p aid would have thought we would d e arly for Griffin, both liter-

have been up there, consider- ally and in terms of opportuing those two teams were on n i t y costs, trading three firstthat rise at that point in time. r o und and one second-round

It's unfortunate. Those guys picks to St. Louis for the right go on and win a Super Bowl, t o move up four spots in the

and we just digress as far as 2012 draft to acquire the 2011 winning ball games." Heisman Trophy winner. In Orakpo's view, Seat-

Gr iff i n dazzled his rookie

ing staff have added talent

t o n to the NFC East title and

tle's front office and coach- season, leading Washing-

Free Breaners — Broad Squad; RickStowell

226/617;Joyce Huey200/527 ulsattd Hers — ICan'tBelieveIt's NotGutter; MichaelSima268//16; BrandiMcClennen241/643 Rejects — GutterDusters;FredVanTassell; 247/705 ;BonnievanTassell189/521 Wednesday Inc— PapeMachinery;TobyCundell26e/772; Ma tt Ayers,268/t27

Runners leave the startlng chute durlng a cross-country race

in Bend last December. The Central Oregon Running Klub is putting on a three-race cross-country series this fall.

Cross-country

way, as a weeknight race, and now it's a big part of the

Continued from B1 At some point, King says, he could see the race growing and being a weekday staple for the area's running crowd, similar to how the Thrilla cyclocross series has taken off and grown to more than 200 participants in the past few years.

community."

"I don't know if that's the

That being said, the nofrills aspect of the CORK race is part of it s charm,

King says. "It's super simple," King continues. "We really want

this to be a small, community race and hit that niche of

being a classic cross-country race.

"It's a blast, it's fun, it's goal, but it'd be awesome to see (the cross-country se- simple," he adds, eand it's ries) turn into something like something this community that," King says. "That'd be needs." phenomenal.... The Thrilla — Reporter: 541-383-0305; kinda started out the same beastes@bendbulletin.com.

IN BRIEF

Sea t t le, by c ontrast, ex-

TuT —DaveGrimes268/723; Shannon Grimes 257/586 Progressive —Hil's Horeshoeing; SteveWilson 244/662 T.G.I.F.— Mark it Zero;Rickcurley 300//29; SherrieWidluttd201/546

RimrockLanes, Prlneville Week3 Grizzly MountainMen'sLeague

Team highs —Scratchseries: Clark Custom Design,2833;Scratchgame: PelicanPlace,t016; Handi capseries:TheUdderGuys,3243;Handicap game:priseville Heating &Cooling, t 15a Men's highs —Scratchseries; DelKelogg, 684; Scratchgame: RoyFuller,257; Handicapseries: Camerott slack,736;Handicapgame: Russpitt, 289.

TuT —Team17;RobertGibson253/627;coleen

Joe Kline /The Bulletin file photo

shrewdly and honed the p l ayoffs. But after underskills of its veterans. going reconstructive knee "They're almost building surgery, he has appeared in a dynasty over there by con- just 15 games since, in which tinually adding talent, con- Washington went 4-11. tinually growing as a team," T h r o ugh subsequent deals BASKETBALL Orakpo said, alluding to S t . L ouis parlayed Washacquisitions such as wide re- ington's four draft picks MOuntain View COBO needS CaaCheS —Mountain View's ceiver Percy Harvin and the into eight acquisitions. Had COBOprogram is in need of coachesfor the upcoming youth basseasoning of starters such as W a shington kept the picks ketball season. Previous playing experience at the high school level Wilson and cornerback By- and used them wisely, the or beyond is required. Prior coaching experience is beneficial but not ron Maxwell. team could have added four required. Contact Mountain View boys basketball coach Craig Reidat 541-318-8014 or at creid@bendcable.com. Fullback Darrel Y o ung, p o t ential starters to beef up who has near-total recall of it s defensive backfield and every play in that 24-14 play- offensive line. off loss, believes that camara-

SKYLINERSWINTER SPORTS SWAP: Oct. 11;A sale of skis, snowboards and other winter recreation gear to benefit the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation; donations accepted Oct. 9-10; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.;The RiverhouseConvention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 541388-0002 or www.mbsef.org

COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD

dOWI1.

CD1101IU~IIY strength. it structured conNo single factor gl 'OWlrlg BScI t r a c ts in the 2010 explains the diverseason, when a gent trajectories salary cap wasn't of W a shington — W ashington in p la c e. T he and Seattle. Neiline backer Brianleague a r g u ed ther coach, underOrakpo th at the Redskins, standably, is eager and Cowboys to to weigh in. a lesser extent, But it's glaring to Redskins tried to gain an unfair adplayers, particularly those vantage. General manager who were on the field for that Bruce Allen called the pen2012 wild-card game. alty, docked in $18 million unbelievable," said

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com

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CLIMBING Matt Slocum/The Associated press

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'Beltone

it," Young said. "And I think

A nd t h o ugh it's difficult to

they just were a little more quantify, Washington's decihungry than us in terms of sion to fire Mike Shanahan whattheywantedtodo." and bring in a fourth new In comments echoed by head coach in the past nine free safety Ryan Clark, y e ars surely put any progYoung went on to credit Seat- r ess on hold, at least tempo-

tle's coaches with identifying r arily, even if the move pays players' individual strengths long-termdividends.

Bend maII eleCted to HOF — Bend's RobMuzzy,atop tuner, engine builder and raceteam owner, hasbeenelected to the American Motorcyclists Association Motorcycle Hall of Fame.Selected in the Road Racing category, Muzzy will be inducted Oct. 17 inOrlando, Florida. Muzzy started his career drag racing andcompeting in dirt track events in Southern California in the1950s. Healways built and tunedhisownraceengines.Bythe1980s,Muzzy began making a name for himself building and tuning engines for Kawasaki and Honda's raceteams.In1988,Muzzyopenedhisownbusiness,which produced enginesandexhaust systems for racers. Muzzy Performance Products andTeamMuzzy is still operating out of Bend. — Bulletin staff report

Beltone

derie among Seattle's players pended one third-round pick has been a major factor in their ascent.

Com p l e m e n t s

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S U r olo S~


B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014• THE BULLETIN

B7

TEAM-BY-TEAM PREVIEWS

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE PREVIEW

EASTERNCONFERENCE

• Already oneof the world's best players,the 24-year-old is ready to take the nextstepinto leadershipfor the TampaBayLightning BYJoeSmith

Tampa Bay Times

TAMPA, Fla.

Steven Stamkos is one of the best hockey

players in the worldand the captain of the Tampa Bay Lightning — but he can still enjoy his off time in Florida's bay area in an anonymous manner. The center loves to golf, his passion since his grandfather Joe Walker got him started at age 7; he is now a6handicap.Stamkos goes paddleboarding and often takes his dog Trigger, a 100-pound Swiss Mountain, to the dog beach or for a walk in the South Tampa waterfront neighborhood where he has lived

for seven years. And Stamkos, 24, said he can go unrec-

ognized, a welcomed respite from his offseasons in his hometown near Toronto.

the Lightning opens a season without Vinny Lecavalier or Marty St. Louis. It is his team. "You relish that chance," he said. "It's pretty cool to honestly be on one team

for so long and be a guy that's been here since I was 18 years old and continue to grow into a

BOSTONBRUINS Last season:54-19-9, lost in second round of playoffs. Outlook:The Bruins return essentially the sameteam, including Selke Trophy winner Patrice Bergeron and Vezina winner TuukkaRask.

CAROLINAHURRICANES Last season:36-35-11, missed the playoffs. Outlook:Noteam in the current alignment of the Eastern Conference has alonger playoff drought than the Hurricanes (2009.)

BUFFALOSABRES Lastsoasou:21-51-10, missed the playoffs. Outlook: TheSabreshavetoo many questions marks — particularly in net, where JhonasEnroth and Michal Neuvirth are competing for the starting job — to consider them playoff contenders.

COLUMBUS BLUEJACKETS

FLORIDA PANTHERS Last season:29-45-8, missed playoffs. Outlook:The Panthers went out and tried during the offseason to revamp just about everything from locker-room mood to on-ice style.

leaderand a better player and person and get involved in the community. It's f un. T ampa

Or

MONTREALCANADIENS Last season:46-28-8, lost in Eastern Conference final. Outlook: TheCanadiensshould find themselves in the playoffs come April.

"It' s a new fresh

start. Hopefully we take advantage of it."

Last year was the toughest of his career. get enough notoriety around town but you Stamkos took a big don't get too much," he said. "You can go to step in his game last fall, the mall, go to dinner, go to the golf course, playing both ends of the go to the beach, and for the most part you i ce, taking shifts on t h e don't get bothered too much. It's nice to penalty kill (he still has to kind of fly under the radar." improve on faceoffs, 49 percent But as the Lightning open the season, all last season). But on Nov. 11 in eyes will be on Stamkos, who is a popular Boston, Stamkos got tangled preseason candidate for the Hart Trophy with Bruins defenseman Dou(Ieague MVP) and Art Ross (top scorer). gie Hamilton, and his right leg That is because Stamkos — who broke crashed into the post. He had the tibia in his right leg in November and surgery the next day. "It was the first time I missed 45 games — is in a much better place, physically and mentally, than he ever missed a game due was the final two months of last season. He to injury going back to juis fitter, and maybe more explosive, than nior. It was tough," Stamever.He hopes for a day he feels like he kos said. "The mi nd t'->.<jgA; never broke his leg; a day he says is "getting is a powerful thing; I closer." The Lightning could see that during But if it was going to fitness testing on the first day of training happen, ithappened at e~:jjt'.,' camp, when Stamkos had team-best marks the iworst) time." in the vertical jump (37.7 inches) and broad jump (10 feet, 4 inches). His vertical was 2.7 inches higher thanbefore his injury. 'Very impressi ve," general manager

MetropolitanDivision

"I think I can enjoy that fact that you

':~',:

Steve Yzerman said.

Teammates can sense it on the ice, watching the power and speed in Stamkos' skating, his fearlessness in battles during preseason games, including Saturday's finale against the Florida Panthers. In the

OTTAWASENATORS Lastseasou:37-31-14, missed the playoffs. Outlook: TheSenatorsmayhave to deal Bobby Ryanand Marc Methot during the season if the players cannot come toterms with the team.

TAMPA BAYLIGHTNING Last season:46-27-9, lost in first round of playoffs. Outlook:Expect the Lightning to prosper in the relatively weak Eastern Conferenceand makea deep run in the playoffs.

TORONTO MAPLELEAFS

i

Canada meant everything to him. It 9'

hurt that he had to the gold medal on television.

first game back, he wore the captain's "C" on his jersey, a role '4 .,'}

out.

ss t

Steven Stamkos, at 24

years old, is the leader

of a Tampa Bay team expected to make a big run this

season. The AssociatedPress file photo

Everything'spretty cool for a changeasseason neais boom, boosted by the ad- as having teams switch ends vance of teams from Chicago, beforethe startofregular-seaL OS ANGELES — N o Boston, New York and Los son overtime and performing lockout to shorten the season. Angeles to the Stanley Cup a "dry scrape" of the ice. UnNo Olympics to condense Final the past few seasons. fortunately, the "Spin-o-Rathe schedule. No major rule For the moment, league exec- ma" was banned in penalty changes or alterations to a utives seem content to leave shot situations or the shootout, playoff format that intro- well enough alone, though robbing players of a chance to duced wild-card races last expansion seems inevitable be creative. "I would characterize all of season. within the next five years. With the NHL enjoying The NHL also learned that the rule changes to be more prosperity on many fronts, less is more, preserving the along the lines of tweaks the season beings Wednes- special-event feel of outdoor as opposed to fundamental day amid a rare sense of games by cutting their num- changes," Daly said. stability. ber from six last season to The goaltender's restricted The NH L h a s b o u nced two. area behind the net was ex"The league is coming off panded by 2 feet on each side, back impressively from the 2012-13 lockout. League rev- what many consider and have giving goalies more room to enues last season hit about characterized as its best sea- help defensemen who come $3.7 billion and the salary son ever, both on the ice and back for the puck. That also cap this season was set at a off," said Bill Daly, the NHL's could allowforecheckers to new high, $69 million. There deputy commissioner. "We steal the puck from goalies are — and always will be — a are in a good place right now. who are not as dever at puck few ownership issues. Should But the really exciting part is handling as they think they scoring be higher? Blame that we all believe it can get are — and there are many. well-trained goaltenders. And even better. The game is growThe use of video reviewwas though Canada's Stanley Cup ing, and it w il l continue to expanded to give NHL hockey famine continues — the 1993 grow. Hockey has never been operations executives more MontrealCanadiens were the more visible, more popular discretion to help referees last Canadian team to bring and more relevant, particular- determine if a goal is a "good the Cup "home" — its sons re- ly in this country." hockey goal." The hockey main the NHL's lifeblood. The newest rule changes operations staff can provide The NHL is enjoying a are mostlyprocedural, such guidance to the referees in sitLos Angeles Times

NEW YORKRANGERS Last season:45-31-6, 96 points, lost in Stanley CupFinals. Outlook:TheRangers will go as far as goalie Henrik Lundqvist will take them. PHILADELPHIA FLYERS Last season:42-30-10, lost in first round of playoffs. OUTLOOK: TheFlyersneedSteve Mason to play again like atrue No. 1 goalie and for ClaudeGirouxto play like anMVPcandidate. PITTSBURGH PENGUINS Last season:51-24-7, lost in Eastern Conference semifinals. OUTLOOK:IfSidneyCrosbyand Evgeni Malkin are healthy, the Penguins will again be threat a to make a deepplayoff run. WASHINGTON CAPITALS Last season:38-30-14, missed the playoffs. Outlook:Newcoach Barry Trotz is Ovechkin's first NHL headcoach with prior head coaching experience elsewhere in the league.

CentralDivision

Pacific Division

CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS

ANAHEIM DUCKS Lastseason:54-20-8,lostinsecond round of playoffs. OUTLOOK: The deep, balanced club should be in position to contend for the Stanley Cupagain.

Last season:46-21-15,107 points, lost in conference final. Outlook:It's Stanley Cupor bust for the loaded Blackhawks.

teammates say he was

"He's the leader of this er. "He's a highly motivated guy. He's improved his fitness every year. Being that team, for sure," Hedman driven, you're naturally going to get better said. "He's vocal when over time." he has to, and when Stamkos is the Lightning's longest-ten- he talks, people ured player and the face of the franchise. listen."

By Helene Elliott

Last season:34-37-11, missed the playoffs. Outlook: JohnTavares,the24-yearold star center andnewly-minuted captain, is backafter missing the final 22 gameslast season dueto a knee injury sustainedwhile playing in the Olympics.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

M arch 5, and in h i s

ey League— two Rocket Richard trophies born to play. (top goal scorer), two All-Star Game apS tamkos said t h a t pearances, a 60-goal season — he and the with three former capLightning believe the best might be yet to tains on the Lightning, come. it is a lead-by-committee "He's just entering the prime years of approach. But he stands his career," said Yzerman, a Hall of Fam-

Lastseason:38-6-8,missedthe playoffs. Outlook:The hirings of Brendan Shanahan asteam president, Kyle Dubas as theassistant general manager andtheadded emphasis of analytics seem to indicate anew day for the Leafs.

NEW YORK ISLANDERS

watch the team win

first period, Stamkos scored a power-play Stamkos was goal, ripping a slap shot from the right cir- cleared to play on cle into the top left corner of the net. "He looks like Stammer," defenseman Victor Hedman said. And for all Stamkos has accomplished in his first six years in the National Hock-

Last season:43-32-7, lost in first round of playoffs. Outlook: TheBlueJacketsmay have to win a lot of1-0 and 2-1 games in which goalie Sergei Bobrovsky stands on his head.

NEW JERSEYDEVILS Last season:35-29-18, missed DETROITRED WINGS the playoffs. Last season:39-28-15, lost in first Outlook:After finishing with round of playoffs. fourth fewest goals in the league, Outlook: TheRedW ingsmayhave the Devils hope free-agent signees to fight to extend their streak of 23 Mike Cammalleri (26 goals) and straight playoff appearances. Martin Havlat (12 goals in 48 games) can boost the scoring.

For the first time since he arrived in 2008,

is pretty much my home. "Hopefully now it's kind of a fresh page

AtlanticDivision

uations in which referees blew the whistle or intended to blow

the whistle after losing sight of the puck. That has always

been contentious; hockey operationsnow can discuss the timing of the puck entering the net and the referee's use (or intent to use) the whistle. Hockey operations also will require stronger video evidence of a distinct kickingmotion to overrule a goal call or

uphold a no-goal call. Tripping will b e c alled when a defending player dives and trips an attacking player even if the defender makes initial contact with the puck.

Also, a scale of punishment for diving/embellishment was established for players and coaches, beginning with a warning to the player on the first offense and rising to a $5,000 fine. Coaches will be fined $2,000 with the fourth incident.

Only minor changes, all that the league needed. It will

be fun to have a "normal" season again, or as normal as things get in the NHL.

COLORADOAVALANCHE Last season:52-22-8, lost in first round of playoffs. Outlook:Colorado boasts two formidable lines that will include some combination of Matt Duchene, RyanO'Reilly, Gabe Landeskog, Jarome Iginla, Alex Tanguay andNathanMacKinnon. DALLAS STARS Last season:40-31-11, lost in first round of playoffs. Outlook:With Jamie BennandTyelr Seguin on thefront line, the Stars will have another linewith former Ottawa teammates JasonSpezza and Alex Hemskylikely together.

MINNESOTAWILD Last season:43-27-12, lost in Western Conferencesemifinals. Outlook:Niklas Backstrom and Darcy Kuemper return as thetop two goalies after an injury-laden season. NASHVILLE PREDATORS Lastsoasou:38-32-12, missed the playoffs. Outlook:Newcoach Peter Laviolette is expected to boost the Predators' offense. ST. LOUIS BLUES Last season:52-23-7, lost in first round of playoffs. Outlook: TheBlueshaveenough firepower to contend for anever-elusive first Stanley Cup. WINNIPEGJETS Lastseasou:37-35-10, missed the playoffs. Outlook:TheJets will likely extend a seven-year playoff drought.

ARIZONACOYOTES Last season:37-30-15, missed the playoffs. Outlook:Stay relatively healthy and get back to their defensive ways, and theCoyotes might be in the playoff mix again this season. CALGARYFLAMES Lastseason:35-40-7,missedthe playoffs. Outlook: JohnnyGaudreau,the reigning HobeyBakerwinner, recorded 80 points (36 goals and44 assists) in 40 gameswith Boston College last season. EDMONTON OILERS Lastseason:29-44-7,missedthe playoffs. Outlook:Six straight years of drafting in the top 10 without im-

proving tends to create skepticism.

LOS ANGELESKINGS Last season:46-28-8, won the Stanley Cup. Outlook:There's no reason to think the Kings can't contend for three crowns in four years.

SAN JOSE SHARKS Last season:51-22-9, lost in first round of playoffs. Outlook:HowJoeThornton, stripped of his captaincy, reacts to his new role will be key.

VANCOUVER CANUCKS Last season:36-35-11, missed the playoffs. Outlook:Thedismissals of coach John Tortorella and Ryan Kesler, tradedtoAnaheim,canbeseenas addition by subtraction.


BS

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014

SOCCER

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

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NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Joey Logano

crosses the finish line for a victory at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas, on Sunday.

• Haiti women's national team makes do with very little in aftermath of 2010earthquake

Victory at

Kansassends Logano to third round The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Kan. — So many drivers

studied NASCAR's new championship Chase format and singled out the second round as the

By Jere LongmaneNew York Times News Service

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Since 2012, the women's national soccer team from Haiti has spent six months a year training near the regional airport here, down a country road and just across the railroad tracks, mostly unnoticed, wholly unlikely as a regional power. Each woman on the team has a story of despair about the 2010 earthquake that devastated Haiti, the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere: A house folded like a wallet. A brother's shattered leg. An aunt crushed by the door of a church. An uncle lost in a building and never found. Each player, too, has a story of resilience and perseverance. No Caribbean nation has ever qualified for the Women's World Cup. Now Haiti, of all countries, is on the cusp of reaching the expanded 2015 tournament, to be played next summer in Canada.

one they feared the most.

The difficult three-race stretch of Kansas, Charlotte and Talladega will knock four drivers onshiphopes to be dependent on agood day at Talladega. It meant they had to be solid in the

It is a quest of great ambition and meager resources. There is no salary for the players. None for the Polish-American coach and his assistants. Players live eight

opener of the second round at Kansas Speed-

or nine to an apartment. Even the

way, a notorious track for whittling the field of championship contenders.

captain sleeps on a thin mattress in the living room.

from the field, and none wanted their champi-

Kansas lived up to its reputation Sunday as

four Chase drivers finished 22nd or worse in a race that was plagued by tire problems for Logano, who earned an automatic berth into the third round of the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship and can breathe easier the next

said. The team tries to make ends

two races.

meet by selling rotisserie chickens and T-shirts, and holding clin-

"This is nice to get this win and get us through to the next round and not have to wor-

ry about Talladega," Logano said. "We came into here thinking we need a solid finish — we can't win the championship (at Kansas) but we can definitely lose it." That was the harsh reality for six-time and

defending NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson, his Hendrick Motorsports teammates, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne, and Logano's Team Penske teammate, Brad Keselowski.

Johnson was wrecked early and finished 40th, Earnhardt had a tire problem while leading that caused him to wreck and finish 39th.

Keselowski was 36th after his tire problem and Kahne thought a tire issue caused him to hit the

wall and finish 22nd. Johnson was level-headed as he spoke from the garage while his crew tried furiously to repair the damage. "It just means we've got to be on our game at Charlotte and Talladega," Johnson said.

"We'll see how the other Chasers fare. If I can get taken out today, somebody else can later in this event or at Charlotte. Certainly need W's, I

would assume, going forward." Earnhardt, who led 45 laps, was encouraged by his best performance so far in this Chase

even if he didn't have the result to show for his effort. "Just the whole surface of the tire unwound

like a string. It just came off the tire and it popped off the corner," Earnhardt said. "Man, that was a great race car. We hadn't been run-

ning very good the last several weeks." Keselowski, one of the most vocal drivers

about how frightening he found this stretch of the Chase, was not as optimistic. Although he visited teammate Logano in Victory Lane, he

was clearly unhappy with his chances taking a hit because of a problem with his Goodyear tire. "It was a game of Russian Roulette and it was our turn at the gun," Keselowski said. "It was

Dale Jr.'s turn at the gun earlier." The tire issues clearly concerned other drivers in the field. Kevin Harvick, who led 61 laps,

pitted from third when he thought his right

ti's coach on March 20, 2012. "But

you start fighting for these girls." Jean-Bart agreed to the plan, saying of the World Cup in a telephone interview: "It is very difficult for girls in Haiti to change their lives. This could be a good challenge for all women to try to get a better life."

,n

Haiti's soccer federation pays

for a round-trip flight home each year and tries to help in emergencies. But even a $200 stipend paid to each player in 2013 was not affordable this year, the federation

several contenders. The victory went to Joey

league title before becoming Hai-

But Haiti r emains a

cha Cajuste, 30, a defender, was

studying in an Internet cafe when the shaking began and said she was the only one who made it

ics for churches and schools.

outside; everyone else died orwas

Benefactors have been generous. A local soccer club provides training fields at no cost. A repair

shop does not charge for work on the team van. Anne Marie Wright, 17, a high school student,

has helped provide cleats and

f r a gile

team. Most players lost their homes in the earthquake. Nata-

injured. Manoucheka Pierre-LouDaniel Acker / New York Times News Service

The Haitian national women'ssoccer teamgathers to pray before an

is, 25, a midfielder, said she lived in a tent city for two years before

afternoon practice in South Bend, Indiana, in September. Living eight to an being called to the national team. apartment here and sustained entirely by donations, the women are on the Haiti's players became itinerant

cusp of becomingthe first Caribbean nation to reachthe Women's World Cup — despite being largely ignored andunappreciated back home.

after the quake, training in the Dominican Republic and in Brazil. At a tournament in Mexico,

socks and sports bras and even water bottles so that players train-

some players grew wary of stayYves Labaze. Elsewhere, one or ing in a high-rise hotel, fearful of two top-level female players were being trapped if it collapsed. "We playedsoccerto try to forkilled, the federation said. The national stadium became a tent city get," said Ketura Woodlyne-Roforthe homeless. Recovery from buste, 22, a midfielder. the quake was complicated by a The Haitian players who archolera epidemic. rived in South Bend in 2012 were "You've got to be crazy," Bor- tactically na'ive and physically kowski said he told himself about weak, Borkowski said. Many team. federation said. becoming Haiti's coach. went to the ground at the slightest "Soccer is all they have," said Kencia Marseille, 33, the team He reconsideredafter watch- contact. Equipment was insufDume, who runs a company in captain, said that her mother ing online as Haiti participated ficient. Even water bottles were Elkhart, Indiana, that delivers spanked her with a belt when she in the qualifying tournament for scarce. recreational vehicles from facto- caught her playing as a girl. To- the 2012 London Olympics. Haiti At times, they have had little ries to dealers. "They have noth- day, some mothers still want their fell short, but Borkowski was in- more to eat than rice and beans ing else." daughters home, to study, to help trigued by the individual skill of and ramen noodles.One player The Women's World Cup will provide for siblings, to restore the its players. left the team to have a baby. Anexpand next year to 24 teams bonds of family. He called Yves Jean-Bart, pres- other quit, Borkowski said, after "The Haitian people don't be- ident of Haiti's soccer federation, her fatherdied and her mother from 16. Canada, as the host, has automatic entry. Three other lieve in us," said goalkeeper Ger- and made a proposal: The wom- had a nervous breakdown. Two teams from the North American, alda Saintilus, 28. "They say we're en's team would largely fund it- playerswere absent for part of Central American and Caribbe- not good enough. We'll try to self, and mostly outside Haiti. It last month, having returned to an region will qualify at a tour- prove them wrong." would train for six months at a Haiti to renew their visas. nament in the United States that Even Haiti's coach, Shek Bor- time in South Bend, play exhibiIn mid-April, Woodlyne-Robegins Oct. 15. A f ourth team k owski, did not believe in t he tions against college teams like buste's father died, and Haiti's will enter a playoff against Ecua- beginning. Notre Dame and Ball State, and soccerfederation offered to fly dor, the third-place qualifier from When he first spoke with Hai- enter the second-tier Women's her home with one caveat, BorSouth America. tian officials, Borkowski did PremierSoccer League, a semi- kowski s a id . T h e f e d eration The Americans, ranked No. 1 not want the job. The country's pro circuit. would not pay for a return flight "Part of it was selfish; I want- until after Haiti hosted a round of in the world, are prohibitive favor- economy was dire. The soccer ites in the regional tournament. federation had little money. The ed to achieve something on the World Cup qualifying in late May. Mexico is also expected to claim 2010 earthquake collapsed the international level," said the Pol- Woodlyne-Robuste decided to rea berth. That would leave Haiti, federation headquarters during ish-born Borkowski, 51, who lives main with her teammates. "I'm still hurting, but when I'm Guatemala, Costa Rica, Jamaica, a meeting, killing more than 30 not far from South Bend in Goshand Trinidad and Tobago to try to people inside, including the wom- en, Indiana,and won two WPSL playing, I don't think of my troureach the World Cup for the first en's national program coach, Jean titles and a R u ssian women's bles," Woodlyne-Robuste said. ing to reach the World Cup will time. not have to drink from spigots. In Haiti, the women's national Marc Dume, 43, a business- team is largely ignored and unman who immigrated from Hai- appreciated. Women's soccer still ti 10 years ago, assists with the carries a social stigma there and rent and money to buy plantains can be viewed as unfeminine. and rice and beans for aromatic Sometimes men and boys prevent legume stews. Last week, he do- women and girls even from trainnated a recreational vehicle to the ing, the president of the soccer

front tire was flat.

Crew chief Rodney Childers reported to Harvick that all the tires were fine, but the damage was done: Harvick had dropped to 23rd, was

out of contention for the victory and had to charge his way back to a 12th-place finish. He apologized to his crew over his radio. "I thought I had a flat tire and pitted because you see all the trouble that is going on," he said after the race, explaining his car simply "didn't

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

After wild weekend, losershavetime to rebound

turn."

With only eight of 12 drivers advancing after Talladega, there's a ton of ground for some very big names to make up in two races. A win over the next two weeks guarantees them a spot in the third round, which begins Oct. 26 at Mar-

tinsville. The field will be cut once more after three races and the four remaining drivers will race for the championship at the finale.

Also on Sunday: Hagan takes NHRA pointslead: MOHNTON, Pa.— Matt Hagan won the NHRA Nationals at

Maple GroveRaceway to take the Funny Car points lead, his engine exploding as he crossed thefinish line.Hagan had a 4.333-second pass at 215.00 mph in a Dodge Charger to beat Tommy Johnson Jr. Hagan raced to his third victory of the season and second in the NHRA Mello Yello Countdown to the Championship. Hamilton beats Rosberg to win Japanese GP: SUZUKA, Japan — Lewis Hamilton won

a rain-shortened Japanese Grand Prix, claiming his third straight Formula One victory and widening his lead over teammate Nico Rosberg in the race for the drivers' championship. With Hamilton leading Rosberg, a red flag came out on the 44th of 53 laps due to a crash involving Marussia driver Jules Bianchi. Race officials

By Ralph D. Russo

losing 31-24 at home to Arizona

been beset by injuries. It has left

The Associated Press

on Thursday night. star quarterback Marcus Mariota After a wild weekend, some • Alabama dropped four spots exposed and the running game advice for the forlorn college foot- to No. 7 a f ter losing 23-17 at sputtering. The defense has been ball fan: Don't panic. There is Mississippi. shaky, too, ranking 79th nationalplenty of time to recover and win • Oklahoma dropped seven ly in yards per play. Oregon might over the hearts and minds of the spots to No. 11 after losing 37-33 not be capable of separating from College Football Playoff selection at TCU. the restof the Pac-12, a confercommittee. Condoleezza Rice and • Texas A8zM dropped eight ence filled with dangerous and the boys don't put out their first spots to No. 14 after losing 48-31 unpredictable teams. rankings until Oct. 28. at Mississippi State. The Associated Press Top 25 • UCLA dropped 10 spots to No. Alabama will have to do for now, and that 18 after losing 30-28 at home to The Crimson Tide are tied for got turned upside down after Utah. 104th in the country in turnover Shake-up Saturday — which acMisery loves company, and the margin at minus-4, a startling tually started on Thursday night. Ducks now have plenty. When so stat for a Saban team. Turnovers It was that kind of week. many heavyweights hit the mat can be fluky. Maybe that corrects Only two teams maintained at once, it takes some of the sting itself. Maybe not. The good news their spots from last week: No. 1 out of those upsets. It is now more for the Tide is that if any SEC Florida State, which must have likely that multiple teams that West team can be said to have been having a pretty good chuck- have lost will reach the four-team an accommodating remaining le as so many teams considered playoff. schedule it's Alabama. The Tide L et's leave A&M out of t h i s get Arkansas, Tennessee and threats to the Seminoles' national championshipcrown went down, for now and take a brief look at LSU (combined seven losses) on and No. 13 Georgia. where those four stand and their the road and Texas A&M, MissisFive of the top eight teams in chances of making a playoff run. sippi State and Auburn at home.

on Trevor Knight, but when the

quarterback plays a wildly inconsistent game on the road against a good team, it is a recipe for an upset. Most of the Sooners' other vi-

tal signs are good, including home games against Kansas State, Baylor and Oklahoma State.

UCLA The Bruins do not block well

and injuries are not to blame, which makes their problems seem

worse than Oregon's. It would also be nice if talented quarterback Brett Hundley would get rid of the ball more quickly or be given more plays on which that is the directive.

The biggest loser of this weekend mighthave been the Pac-12. The conference seems most like-

ly to be a cluttered mess, which couldbe a problem come playoff selection time. And what looked

as if it wouldbe one of the league's games of the year — Oregon at UCLA this coming Saturdaynow has two teams coming off

elected not to re-start the race and Hamilton

the rankings lost, a first since the poll went to 25 spots in 1989. A

was declared the winner. Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel finished third.

rundown of the damage: The biggest problem for the It would not be fair to lay all • Oregon dropped 10 spots after Ducks is an offensive line that has the blame for the Sooners' loss losses.

Oregon

Oklahoma



W EAT H E R

B9.0 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014

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75/51/s 92//3/sh 82/66/s

80/60/s 88/57/s 78/43/s 78/57/s

72/58/pc 66/47/c 77/51/s 71/56/I 82/69/s

92/66/s 81/60/I 74/60/pc

80/54/pc 85/48/s

ggno/o'.oo 98//0/s

Yums

HiRo/W 46/32/sh 74/49/s 62/43/c 91/64/s 69/54/c 75/46/s 85/65/pc 86/64/s 72/54/pc 62/39/c 82/66/pc 87/75/pc 63/43/c 60/38/c 76/61/I 87/71/pc 72/62/c 72/60/c 79/65/pc 94/63/s 72/47/s 86/66/pc 97/69/s 69/47/pc 72/61/c 86/70/s 65/50/sh 65/54/pc 72/59/pc 77/61/pc 67/38/s 84/46/s 78/61/pc 68/51/sh 92/57/s 75/53/pc 76/48/s 94/74/pc 83/67/pc 78/60/s 84/57/s 80/46/s 83/63/s 69/54/s 65/39/s 75/50/s 81/54/s 86/68/pc 86/64/s 90/62/s 74/63/c 87/57/s 82/46/s 92/68/s

r

61/48/0.00 61/52/c Boston i~ , 73/61/0.01 74/66/pc • LW o. 71/4 /55 0 Aucklsnd 61/50/0.05 59/52/pc x ss/ x x x w York Baghdad 100/74/0.00 101/68/s 9/sf Che n oinoo Ch Bangkok 93/79/0.10 85/75/I 64/5 • SO/ »» > ' P I indoi esijing 71/50/0.00 69/50/s col Beirut 81n2/0.00 82/71/s nn nnaoco Sn h Lnkeity xxx '7 O h 5 7/ x x • Don 75/51 Berlin 65/45/0.00 63/50/pc SO/60 2 St io i nohin 79/4 LnoV no i Bogota 68/46/0.02 66/48/c M 74/60 o. 71 / 5 7 92/6 Kansasq Budapest 63/52/0.21 64/48/pc 7 0/53 + ++ + BuenosAires 64/61/1.29 70/56/c Chorlo Loo An leo 91/77/1.25 89/76/I Csbn Ssn ucss I 73/5 5 • S/4 Cairo 84/68/0.00 88/70/s Phoen Albuque ue klnhomo CI o ) 42 Calgary 64/39/0.00 62/42/pc • VS/71 n 0 81/51 8 74/dc Cnncun 88n2/0.04 88/76/s air inehn s es • nolin Sl Pn Dublin 57/45/0.37 56/39/sh 79/ 2 VO/7 e/s Edinburgh 57/44/0.00 54/39/r c v. v. v. v.v. 43/37 Geneva 68/50/0.37 66/54/c X' • .<%v.wv,'e'e'+ Hsrsre • rinndo 73/52/0.00 78/48/s o w Orleans 4/71 8 67 Hong Kong 89/74/0.00 88/76/s Honolulu Chihunhun ssnf Istanbul 70/62/0.00 68/60/pc SS/73 'e h 8 5 / 5 7 Ssinmi e Jerusalem 78/58/0.00 79/60/s Monte y e'e ss~ 'e vo/dn Johannesburg 73/48/0.00 77/52/s 4 v'e'+'+'v'+'+'+Vv v vu Lima 68/60/0.01 68/59/c Lisbon 68/61/0.00 73/64/pc today's noon positions of weather systems and Shown are precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 61/39/0.00 57/47/r T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 79/55/0.00 76/54/pc Manila 86/75/0.29 88/77/I aoio • 79/52

Beautiful with plenty of sunshine

Mostly sunnyandpleasant

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JosePh Grande • 8 42 union 46

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84/48

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Grove Oakridge don

As of 7 s.m. yesterday

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St/St

73' 42'

Yesterday Today Tuesday

Meac am Losti ne s~t/48 Enterprise •

/54 • Mltch 8 8 1 /49

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FRIDAY

73' 41'

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dl te 78/4

• Prineville

• Eugene

lington 84/52

1

• 84/50

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THURSDAY

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70/56

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Baker City

~ 4~ N 2

The highertheAccuWsnihsrxmmuyIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin profscgon.0-2 Lcw,

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• 84 • 87/53 Goven • He PPner n t • u p i Condon 2/51 Cam • 83 75/

82/46

81/51

Floren e

High: 90 at Medford Low: 28' at Lakeview

2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asfuris

10 a.m. Noon

/52

0 rV U8I

OREGON EXTREMES YESTERDAY

l

THE PLANETS T he Planets R i se Mercury 8:56 a.m. Venus 6:43 a.m. Mars 12:41 p.m. Jupiter 2:13 a.m.

43

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Oct 8 Oct 15

45'

/55

81/5

and warm today.Clear Yach 69/57

and mild tonight. Sunny andpleasant tomorrow.

9/55

Sale

71/56

WEST:Partly sunny

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Today Tue. Sunrise 7:09 a.m. 7: 1 0 a.m. Sunset 6:37 p.m. 6: 3 6 p.m. Moonrise 5 :39 p.m. 6:14 p.m. Moonset 4:5 7 a.m. 6:1 1 a.m.

MOONPHASES

/5

CENTRAL: Warm with 73/54 plenty of sunshine today. Clear andmoonlit Lincoln tonight .Sunny much 70/57 of the time tomorrow.

SUN ANDMOON

La s t

78

Clear and moonlit

Portland

Tdlamo •

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" 0.40"in 2009 Record M onth to date (normal) D.o ooo(0.07oo) Year to date (normal ) 5.73 (7.24 ) Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 1 3"

Full

0

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EAST:Mostlysunny and warm today.Clear tonight. Another warm day with sunshine Cannon tomorrow. 67/57

TEMPERATURE 67 35'

WEDNESDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 84 48'

TUESDAY

.

8Sns/r

70/53/s 84/71/s 64/53/sh 64/50/sh 63/50/c 76/61/s 90/73/I 89/69/s 54/39/c 87/76/pc 55/43/sh 54/41/sh 67/56/sh 84/53/pc

S7ns/s

74/61/s 81/60/s 80/56/pc 68/58/c 74/67/pc 59/49/sh 73/55/pc

sgn7/I

Mecca Mexico City

100/84/0.00 102/80/s 75/56/0.37 71/54/I Montreal 57/46/0.02 62/51/pc Moscow 41/37/0.09 45/30/pc Nairobi 77/61/0.03 78/57/pc Nassau 90/78/0.39 87/76/pc New Delhi 100/74/0.00 98n7/s Osaka 73/68/2.07 74/58/sh Oslo 59/48/0.00 52/44/sh Ottawa 57/39/0.00 61/50/sh Paris 57/52/0.12 61/54/r Riu de Janeiro 73/62/0.02 76/64/pc Rome 77/59/0.00 75/58/pc Santiago 73/48/0.00 80/50/s Ssn Paulo 66/54/0.00 73/58/pc Ssppnro 63/50/0.00 59/46/c Seoul 72/49/0.00 71/49/s Shanghai 78/64/0.00 75/62/pc Singapore ssn7/o.og 87n9/I Stockholm 57/54/0.31 50/43/sh Sydney 93/52/0.00 83/68/pc Taipei 81/69/0.01 81/72/pc Tei Aviv 83/61/0.00 84no/s Tokyo 67/61/3.77 76/64/r Toronto 54/37/0.00 61/49/sh Vancouver 66/59/0.00 65/56/c Vienna 63/52/0.00 62/51/pc Warsaw 61/37/0.00 58/44/pc

103/81/s 73/49/I 65/51/sh 44/26/c 78/59/pc 88/76/I

96nsn

73/56/pc 48/45/r 65/48/sh 63/55/sh 79/66/pc 75/63/s 76/49/s 77/58/c 60/45/s 71/49/s 75/62/c 88/80/I 51/49/r

81/57/pc 81/73/pc 86/72/s 71/64/pc 64/49/sh 64/53/c 63/53/c 62/47/pc

BASKETBALL

II '.

I •

I

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co

' I( / The Associated Press

U.S. players, from left in red, Brittney Griner, Diana Tattrasi and Sue Bird, try to block the shot tyf Laura Nicholls of Spain during the Basketball World Championship for Women's final in Istanbul, Turkey, on Sunday. The U.S. won the gold medal with a 77-64 victory.

. c"' Qv

U.S. womenrout Spain

for semndstraight gold By Doug Feinberg

the oldest player on the team. She's seen it all and done it all.

The Associated Press

I STANBUL —

Sue Bird

added another gold medal to her already incredible U.S. basketball resume.

I think when you talk about USA Basketball in the future

on the women's side. There have been a lot of great names

and her name will be menrated player in world champi- tioned very early in the names onship history when the Amer- of players who play for USA." icans won a second straight Maya Moore scored 18 gold with a 77-64 victory over points and earned MVP honSpain on Sunday night. ors for the tournament. Bird has won three gold Lindsay Whalen added 12 medals and a bronze. points for the United States "It was a great win for us," (6-0), which hasn't lost in a Bird said. "We had one goal gold medal game in the world the entire time t his team's championship since 1983, been together and that's win when it was beaten by the a gold medal. A lot of people Soviet Union 84-82. Except see a lot of talent and think it's for a hiccup in 2006 when going to be easy and it's not. the Americans lost to Russia Whenever you can win a gold in the semifinals, they have medal and it's a tough journey, won every Olympic and world everyone's happy. I'm definite- championship game since ly proud of this team." 1996. If not for that upset in While Bird was quick to de- Brazil, the U.S. would have Bird became the most-deco-

flect what winning a fourth medal meant to h er, coach

•/•

five straight world titles. "I know when I hear 2006, it still makes me mad.," Bird said

Geno Auriemma was quick to heap praise on his point guard. of her only bronze medal. "She's very indicative of The Americans quickly what USA Basketball is. She's turned it into a laugher, jumployal, a great leader, every- ing out to a 13-point lead in the one respects her," Auriemma first 4 '/4 minutes. Spain (5-1) said. "She's been the youngest could only get within seven player on the team and now's the rest of the way.

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014 •

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208

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Pets & Supplies

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Huge yard sale Oct. Cralters Wanted King Bed and mat3-5, 8 to 5 to benefit Open Jury tress set, Sleep homeless a n i mals! Sat., Oct. 11, 9:30 a.m. Comfort massager, Highland Baptist Church, Also need dep. cans/ includes linens, Redmond. bottles for cat spay/ and electric blanket, Tina 541-447-1640 or neuter (ongoing). www.snowftakeboutique.org $800 obo 8 950 S . H w y 9 7 , 541-516-8578 202 Redmond, 2 mi. N of HO TRAIN: engines, Tumalo Rd. 419-7885. Want to Buy or Rent cars, track, cork bed, Kittens & cats to adopt Lady Kenmore washer new in b oxes. $50 CASHfor wood at Petsmart (near & dryer, runs perf. -$499. 541-639-6401 dressers & dinette sets. Target) F r i-Sat-Sun $200. 541-213-1363 541-420-5640 12-4. 8 1 5-7278 for Light wood dining table 241 kitten info, 389-8420 with leaf, and 6 chairs, Check out the Bicycles & re: adult cats. excellent c o ndition, classifieds online Accessories $225. 541-548-460'I www.bendbulletlnncom Looking for a H ybrid Breeder in the Prinev- Maytag washer & dryer, Updated daily ille area. please con- both work great!! $125 Wanted: $Cash paid for tact Ken at pair. 541-504-1876 vintage costume jew- 360-589-0806 Ottoman, Broyhill elty. Top dollar paid for leather & wood, 36" Gold/Silver.l buy by the Love cats? Volunteers wide. $260 firm, cash Estate, Honest Artist needed at C RAFT. Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Responsible t e e ns price. 541-382-3340. LA Beach Cruiser welcome! At sanctu- Pedestal for w asher/ Custom made, 205 ary, as foster homes, dryer like new, $125. one of a kindItems for Free with events 8 more! 541-213-1363 no 2 alike! 541-389-8420, 2 8 0Excellent condition. Free queen mattress in 3172 or 598-5488; OR Fun, fun, fun! Plafform Bed good cond, come and infoocraftcats.org. $850. Queen size including get it! 541-693-3079 541-749-8720 POODLE puppies,toy, mattress & bedding Upright 1950's piano, in duvet with cover + lovinq companions. fair cond., needs tuninq, sheets in excellent 541-475-3889 free. 541-729-0317 CRR c ondition. $15 0 . Medium full-suspension Solo Santa Cruz Mtn racQueensland Heelers 541-306 -6832 206 inq bike,qood cond,must Standard & Mini, $150 sell, $2000. 541-480-2652 Pets & Supplies & up. 541-280-1537 Side x side refrigerator; www.rightwayranch.wor light beige hideabed; andpress.com tique china hutch, $100 The Bulletin recommends extra caution Scotty puppies, reserve each, obo. 541-480-4296 when purc has- now! Mom & dad on site, Whirlpool range/stove, ing products or ser- 1st shots. 541-771-0717 white, good c o nd. vices from out of the & ve t erans, $45. 541-749-8288 area. Sending cash, Seniors adopt a great adult checks, or credit inRANS Stratus XP companion cat, fee The Bulletin f ormation may b e 2011 Recumbent waived! Fixed, shots, recommends extra subjected to fraud. LWB; exc. cond. 27 ID chip, tested, more! I centio i s pc For more informagears SRAM X9 Sanctuary at 65480 chasing products or > twist tion about an advershifters; seat 78th St., Bend, Sat/ services from out of I tiser, you may call bag; specialized Sun. 1-5. 389-8420. the area. Sending t I computer/odometer; the O regon State www.craftcats.org. cash, checks, or Attorney General's fairing, kick stand i credit i n f ormation Office C o nsumer Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, and more. may be subjected to Protection hotline at 2 boys, beautiful! Shots, $1400 i FRAUD. For more 1-877-877-9392. 541-504-5224 potty training, health guar. information about an g you may The Bulletin $1100. 541-777-7743 t advertiser, Serving Centrel Oregon sincetgtg call t h e Ore g ont 210 245 ' State Attor ney ' Golf Equipment Adopt a rescued cat or Furniture & Appliances i General's O f fi ce Consumer Protec- • kitten! Altered, vaccition h o t line a t i nated, ID chip, tested, more! CRAFT, 65480 i 1-877-877-9392. 78th St, Bend, Sat/ Callawav X-12 I TheBulletin > graphite, Sun 1-5. 3 8 9-8420 Serrrng Central Oregon sincetses 3-lob, $100. www.craftcats.org. Big Berthagraphite TV cabinet with fairway metals, 3-13, Basset Hound, 3-yr neu- 42" 212 $40 each. late t r i m $ 2 5 0; tered male needs good sEthan Antiques & Allen buffet, Lady Callaway home. Great with kids graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 Collectibles and other dogs. $100 storage, to p folds metals, $100. for serving, $250; obo. Hope, 541-390-9632 out Lady TaylorMade Heavy metal queen Miscelas graphite, bed frame, $30; Pair 7-SW, driver-7 wood, 38 nx84n beige $100. black-out d r a pes, (2) Sun Mountain $15; Folding table Speed Carts, and 4 folding chairs, $75 ea. in the box, $40. SE Antique table $125 & 541-382-6664 Chesapeake AKC pups Bend. 541-508-8784 pedal sewing mashots, good health/hips chine $150. $225 for $600 - $700 b oth. C as h o n l y . CHECK YOURAD 541-259-4739 A1 Washers8 Dryers 541-389-8563 $150 ea. Full warChesapeake AKC pups, ranty. Free Del. Also shots, good health/hips, wanted, used W/D's $600-$700. 541-259-4739 541-280-7355

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Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., Couch, black leather w/ on the first day it runs non-profit rescue, for 2 recliners, like new. to make sure it isn corn feral cat spay/neuter. $400 obo. 541-408-0846 rect. Spellcheck and Argus 300 slide Cans for Cats trailer human errors do ocprojector Model at Jake's Diner, Hwy cur. If this happens to 111 Series. also 20 E; Petco (near your ad, please conslides of Drake Park, W al-Mart) i n R e d tact us ASAP so that local camping/huntmond; or donate M-F Furniture for Sale corrections and any ing/fishing trips and at Smith Sign, 1515 from Log Home: adjustments can be Alaska - in NE 2nd; or CRAFT, Oak roll-top desk. made to your ad. 1950's-1960s. $75 78th S t , Tum a lo. Coffeetable,end 541 -385-5809 obo. 541-419-6408 tables, 2 lamps. Leave msg. for pick The Bulletin Classlfled All beautiful and up of l a rge a mts, reasonably prlced. The Bulletin reserves 541-389-8420. 246 the right to publish all www.craftcats.org ads from The Bulletin Guns, Hunting 541-549-0805 or newspaper onto The 541-588-2301 & Fishing Bulletin Internet website. G ENERATE SOM E EXCITEMENT in your The Bulletin Serefng Central Oregon sincetggt neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't German Short Hair 215 forget to advertise in Pups - AKC classified! • C oins & Stamps 541-306-9957 12 Gauge shotshell 541-385-5809. German Shorthair purePrivate collector buying reloader MEC & acbred puppies, g reat Hide-a-bed by Basset, postagestamp albums & cessories. 2 Boxes of hunting dogs! 3 females while, mattress good collections, world-wide primers, $475. Call left, ready to go 10/10. shape. good shape, and U.S. 573-286-4343 541-389-8563 or $500. 541-728-1004 $75. 541-382-6773 (local, cell phone). yukonwillyomsn.com

Back to School SALE! 25% - 35% OFF all music equipment. Bend Pawn & Trading Co. 61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend 541-317-5099

WHEN BUYING Taurus Raging Bull FIREWOOD... 454 also 45lc great To avoid fraud, condition. Also SavThe Bulletin age 111 cal. .300 recommends paymag, wit h M i llett Qment for Firewood Shopsmith 4-16X 50 scope TauWalther P38 (German) rus, $595. Savage only upon delivery with bandsaw, low s.n. $1500. OBO $495. Contact Jtm and inspection. excellent condition. 541-420-0577 • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Customized extras. Fields 408-309-2408 4' x 4' x 8' Retired shop Bend local pays CASH! I in Bend. • Receipts should teacher; for all firearms & SPINET PIANO don't need anymore! include name, ammo. 541-526-0617 1973 Fayett S Gable Pictures available. phone, price and ThompsonContender made by Everett & kind of wood Blind screen for hunt- pistol w/2 barrels: 44 $400. Sons, excellent conpurchased. Rem Mag/Gen1 with ers, n e w , $25. Call 541-598-6486 dition, recently • Firewood ads Bushnell scope & carry 541-213-1363 tuned. sounds great! MUST include case; & 22 LR match $1000 with Bushnell scope & Sump pump, Do-it, species 8 cost per Caldwell Lead Sled 541-385-8367 carry case, $850. electric, 1/3 HP, $85. cord to better serve DFR rifle rest, $100. 541-213-1363 SavageMod. 116 .300 our customers. Ruger 10/22 with Win Mag, stainless 260 3x9 scope, $175. steel w/scope 8 case, W ater/sump pum p , The Bulletin Misc. Items Remington 11-87 $550. Honda, gas powered, Serrrng Central Oregon sincefgtg Police 12ga with rifle Mossberg300A 12Ga $200. 54'I -213-1363 Buylng Dlamonds sights, $750. Baikal with 2 barrels: one 22" All YearDependable iGold for Cash Bounty Hunter 12 modified; & one 264 Firewood: Seasoned; Saxon's Fine Jewelers ga, 20" double bar181/2", $250. Lodgepole, split, del, Snow Removal Equipment 541-389-6655 rels with screw-in Background check B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 chokes, $350. required. Please call BUYING or 2 for $365. Call for All llke new! 541.389.3694, Iv msg. Lionel/American Flyer multi-cord discounts! 541-550-7189 trains, accessories. 541-420-3484. 541-408-2191. Two twin cots never 269 CASH!! used, $75. BUYING & SE LLING For Guns, Ammo 8 541-213-1363 All gold jewelry, silver Gardening Supplies Reloading Supplies. gold coins, bars, Craftsman 24" Snow & Equipment Wanted: Collector seeks and 541-408-6900. rounds, wedding sets, Thrower $500. Elechigh quality fishing items class rings, sterling sil- tric start. E xcellent 8 upscale bamboo fly coin collect, vin- condition. Cash only. BarkTurfSoil.com rods. Call 541-678-5753, ver, tage watches, dental 541-389-8563 or 503-351-2746 gold. Bill Fl e ming, PROMPT DELIVERY 541-382-9419. 265 DO YOU HAVE 247 541-389-9663 SOMETHING TO CRYPT at Deschutes Building Materials Sporting Goods SELL Memorial G a r den Chipper Troy-Bilt, 10 - Misc. FOR $500 OR Meadow Pond space MADRAS Habitat hp, runs great, $400 LESS? 4D4 - dbl depth lawn RESTORE 2 sgl Mister heater pro- crypt, full grave for 2. Building Supply Resale 541-213-1363 Non-commercial pane heaters, $25 B uyer w il l ne e d advertisers may Quality at For newspaper each. 541-213-1363 place an ad granite & bronze dbl LOW PRICES dekvery, call the with our interment m a r k er 84 SW K St. Cargo box, for skis, Circulation Dept. at "QUICK CASH 541-475-9722 c argo, etc. $1 5 0 . plus interment costs. 541-385-5800 SPECIAL" $1500. For more info Open to the public. 541-213-1363 To place an ad, call 1 week3lines 12 c all K e l lie Al l e n 541-385-5809 ot' 541-382-5592 or or email Natural gas Ruud seller, 207-582-0732 ~te e ke e i n clangified@bendbulletin com Ad must tankless water How to avoid scam heater, brand new! include price of The Bulletin and fraud attempts Serving Centrel Oregon sincetgtg 199 BTU, $1600. n~ le ts oi $5«o HBe aware of internaor less, or multiple tional fraud. Deal loIn Sunriver area. items whosetotal Like new Necky EsGet your cally whenever pos530-938-3003 does not exceed kia 16' kayak with $500. business rudder. B ulkheads Hsible. Watch for buyers water tight. Seat like Call Classifieds at who offer more than Good classified adstell new. Hatches, deck 541-385-5809 your asking price and the essential facts in an e ROW I N G lines and grab loops www.bendbulletin.com who ask to have interesting Manner.Write all in perfect condimoney wired or tion. Orig i nally handed back to them. from the readers view -not with an ad in the seller's. Convert the $1450, asking $700 The Bulletin's Fake cashier checks facts into benefits. Show obo. P lease c a l l and money orders "Call A Service 541-312-2435. the reader howthe item will are common. help them insomeway. Professional" grNever give out perThis Mens' insulated CarDirectory sonal financial inforadvertising tip hartt suit, w/ hood, 42, mation. brought to you by 270 $60. 541-213-1363 HTrust your instincts • New, never fired and be wary of Lost & Found Weatherby VanThe Bulletin P ropane heater 3 Setrrng Cel ttslOleeo nncs teig guardS2, synthetic someone using an burner, xtra Irg cyl. stock, cal 30-06.$550. escrow service or Found a Kindle Fire, $50 541-213-1363 • New, never fired agent to pick up your New Trex Select 2x6's Samsun Galaxy S4 Full 20' Bundle -$1400. Howa,wood stock, cal merchandise. Mini, and a book at 255 541-706-1331 .300 Win Mag.$725 Eagle Crest. Computers The Bulletin Must pass back541-306-8079 Sersing Cernrel Oregon sincefget Prineville Habitat ground check. Please Found something of T HE B U LLETIN r e - Jewelry cabinet wood, call 541.389.3694, ReStore quires computer ad- $40; antique floor lamp Building Supply Resale value at N. Bend Albertleave message. sons 9/29 afternoon. Call vertisers with multiple $65 541-548-5822 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-388-1802 ad schedules or those 541-447-6934 Rolling shopping cart, Police Positive Colt .38 selling multiple sysOpen to the public. LOST 4 saddle blanspecial 6-shooter re- tems/ software, to dis- brand new, a sking kets, 1 hand weave volver, holster, gun belt, close the name of the $45. 541-550-7514 266 very sentimental, lost ammo, great s hape! business or the term Two large oil heaters, off truck Oct. 1, be$550. 541-480-0872 Heating & Stoves "dealer" in their ads. $70 each. tween CRR and CinPop up fold away table Private party advertis- 541-213-1363 der Rock Meats on NOTICE TO w ith s e a ts , $4 0 . ers are defined as Wanted- paying cash Hwy 97. Please helpADVERTISER those who sell one for Hi-fi audio & stu541-213-1363 Rick Since September 29, call computer. 541-617-5760 dio equip. Mclntosh, 1991, advertising for Popnup nscreen house, JBL, Marantz, Dyused woodstoves has Just bought a new boat? 92 x92 x84". $40. 257 been limited to mod- Sell your old one in the naco, Heathkit, San541-213-1363 Musical Instruments sui, Carver, NAD, etc. els which have been classifieds! Ask about our certified by the OrCall 541-261-1808 Super Seller rates! egon Department of 541-385-5809 263 Environmental QualSage Rodw/Tioga Tools ity (DEQ) and the fedreel, $225. Custom eral E n v ironmental TFO rodwith RedAir compressor 6hp, Protection A g e ncy REMEMBER:If you ington reel, $200. 60 gal. lightly used, have lost an animal, (EPA) as having met Stmms waders, don't forget to check $600. 54'I -385-9350 smoke emission stan2009 Beautiful men's Lg, worn once, A cer t ified The Humane Society Lowrey C ommercial Delt a dards. $200; ladies small, oodstove may b e Bend Adventurer II Organ new in box, $175. Unifence table saw, w by its certifi541-382-3537 Absolutely perfect Simms boots,men's e xtended ben c h , identified cation label, which is Redmond condition, not a 13, used once, $100; router, new lift, com- permanently attached 541-923-0882 scratch on it, about ladies 9, new in box, piete grip m a ster. to the stove. The BulMadras 4-feet wide, does $100.Simms wadMany extras. $1500. letin will not know541-475-6889 ing stick,new, $50. everything! Includes 541-923-6427 ingly accept advertisPrineville a nice bench, too. Fishpond chest Generator Gen e rac ing for the sale of 541-447-7178 $750obo. pack,$50. 4000w runs g reat, uncertified or Craft Cats 541-382-6664 541-385-5685 54'I -389-8420. woodstoves. $400. 541-213-1363 1919 BMG 30-06/308 $3200. ALS .50 BMG/ AR-15, $3500. HK 91 .308, $ 2 0 00. HK93 . 223, $2300. HK 9 4 M P5 9mm, $2 3 0 0.


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

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Schools & Training DTR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.IITR.EDU 470

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The Bulletin serv>ng renrraf oregon since rslB

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Hay, Grain & Feed 1st Quality mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters

Premium orchard grass, barn stored no rain, 1st cutting $225, 2nd $250, delivery avail. Call 541-420-9158 or 541-948-7010.

Quality Orchard/Mixed Grass hay, between Bend & Redmond. $230/ton, small bales. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 341

Horses & Equipment

Horseshoeing Tools

JHM 110-Ib certifier

anvil, anvil stand w/vise, all GE hand tools, hoof stand 8 forge tools, all in new condition, $1600 or part trade for generator.

541-430-4449

Horse stalls, pasture 8 arena. Owner care. F amily ranch S W Redmond. $150/mo. 541-207-2693.

• ., • 8 , Silverado 2001 5th wheel 3-horse trailer 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters,lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277

Domestic & In-Home Positions

House work and light yard work, $10/hr. 541-389-0034

Winds Retirement is seeking a f ull t ime activity d ir ector. Must b e enthusiastic and e nergetic. M u s t enjoy working with seniors. Apply in p erson at 2 9 2 0 NE Conners Ave., Bend., P r e -emp loyment dru g test required. Advertise your car! Add A Pfcture!

Reach thousands oi readers!

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200. LOCAL MONEyfWebuy secured trust deeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.

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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 286

528

BANK TURNED YOU

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Sales Northeast Bend

3 bdrm/1/s bath home in country about 3 mi. from Madras on 1 acre. Avail. 11/1. $1000 mo, 1st/last. 541-815-9253

1-877-877-9392.

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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Condo/Townhomes for Rent Desirable modern 3 bd/ 2t/a ba townhome near NWX, w/d. No smoking. Pets neg. $1795 mo . 971-227-3471. 632

HOTEL/RESORT

Houses for Rent Madras

Bsnl] M59w IRP ©xk8

713

Real Estate Wanted • WE BUY HOMES• Any conditionClose in 7 days. Scott L. Williams Real Estate - 800-545-6431 745

Homes for Sale

750

Redmond Homes

Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

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The Bulletin 541-385-5809

Tlhe Bulletin Newsroom Assistant The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful, self-motivated person to work in the newsroom, assisting the features staff in a variety of duties, including with the production of a weekly arts and entertainment section. The right candidate will enjoy a fast-paced work environment, be very detail-oriented, understand the importance of accuracy, meet tight deadlines and exercise excellent grammar, spelling and organization skills. The position is largely clerical in nature with some opportunities for writing, so solid writing skills are a must. College degree and/or previous related experience is preferred for this 30-hour-per-week position. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring. To apply,please emailresume and any relevant writing samples to: featuresassistant©bendbulletin.com No phone inquiries, please.

870

16' Driftboat

2001 Honda Goldwing 1800cc w/2005 California side car trike conversion, 40K actual miles, every option imaginable! CD, AM/FM, cruise, has 5' Hrake, side rails, some riding gear. Well serviced. located in Mt. Vernon, OR. Trailer optional.$22,500. 541-350-5050

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

HD Softtail Deuce 2002, broken back forces sale, only 200 mi. on new motor from Harley, new trans case and p a rts, s p o ke wheels, new brakes, n early all o f b i k e brand new. Has proof of all work done. Removable windshield, T-bags, black and all chromed out with a willy skeleton theme on all caps and covers. Lots o f w o rk, heart and love went into all aspects. All done at professional shops, call for info. Must sell quickly due to m e d ical bi l l s, $8250. Call Jack at 541-279-9538.

Alumaweld Oars, anchor, engine mount, and trailer.$2950. 541-546-7144

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers underwater lights, fish finder 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-81 5-2523

NOTICE

T herapeutic Fos t e r Call 541-385-5809 Parents are urgently The Bulletin Classifieds needed for youth in your community! Work Add your web address from home part-time to your ad and readand get reimbursed ers onThe Buiietin's 503-260-9166 u p t o $ 1 800 p e r web site, www.bend648 month for each youth bulletin.com, will be 771 ~ S U BA R U. in your care (max 2). able to click through Houses for Lots Contact us for more automatically to your Sales Rent General information! website. Sales professional to FSBO - 16178 Hawks 1-888-MSOREGON Join Central PUBLISHER'S Lair Rd., La Pine, OR. WWW.MAPLEAutomotive Oregon's l a r gest NOTICE acre lot w/ grandfaSTAROR.ORG FULL TIME SCHOOL new ca r d e a ler All real estate adver- t1hered septic a p BUS/EQUIPMENT Subaru of B e n d. tising in this newspa- proval. Close to Bend, Where can you find a MECHANIC - Gr ant Offering 401k, profit per is subject to the Sunriver Resort, Mt. S chool D i strict 3 sharing, m e d ical F air H o using A c t Bachelor helping hand? skiing. (John Day). Qualifica- plan, split shifts and which makes it illegal $35,000. Call Sandra From contractors to tions: High s c hool paid vacation. Expe"any to a d vertise 541-895-3515. yard care, it's all here graduate; experience rience or will train. preference, limitation and knowledge in 90 day $1500 guarin The Bulletin's or disc r imination 775 large/small engine re- a ntee. Dress f o r "Call A Service based on race, color, Manufactured/ pair and maintenance. success. P l e ase religion, sex, handiProfessional" Directory Must have or ability to apply at 2060 NE Mobile Homes cap, familial status, obtain: CDL, school Hwy 20, Bend. See marital status or nabus drivers' certificate Bob or Devon. 476 tional origin, or an in- New Dream Special and school bus tech3 bdrm, 2 bath Employment tention to make any nician c e r tification. $50,900 finished such pre f erence, Opportunities $15.08-$16.86/hr. on your site. limitation or discrimiplus benefit package. J andM Homes nation." Familial staFour 10-hour days. 541-548-5511 CAUTION: tus includes children Application form caution when purAds published in chasing products or I under the age of 18 a vailable at 401 N. "Employment OpCity Blvd., services from out of a living with parents or portunities" include Canyon legal cus t odians, :s. Canyon City or the l the area. Sending employee and indec ash, checks, o r pregnant women, and District's website at pendent positions. l credit i n f ormation people securing cusAds for p o sitions http://www.grantesd.k 12.or.us/District-3/hu l may be subjected to tody of children under that require a fee or FRAUD. 18. This newspaper man-resources.htm. upfront investment For more informa- I will not knowingly acSubmit district applimust be stated. With cation form and other tion about an adver- • cept any advertising any independentjob for real estate which is supportive i n forma- l tiser, you may call opportunity, please in violation of the law. tion to: Cyndi Nelson, the Oregon State 805 i nvestigate tho r O ur r e aders a r e Grant School District l Attorney General's oughly. Use extra C o n sumer l hereby informed that Misc.ltems 3, 401 N. Canyon City Office caution when apBlvd., Canyon City, Protection hotline at l all dwellings adverplying for jobs ontised in this newspa- Tow /rock shield with I 1-877-877-9392. OR 97820. line and never proare available on carry case, like new Open until filled. vide personal inforgThe Bulleting per an equal opportunity $150.541-213-1363 mation to any source basis. To complain of Look at: you may not have ~© S U EIARU. d iscrimination ca l l researched and HUD t o l l-free at Bendhomes.com Auto -Sales deemed to be repuWarehouse 1-800-877-0246. The for Complete Listings of Sales professional to table. Use extreme Furniture O u tlet toll f ree t e lephone Area Real Estate for Sale Join Central c aution when r e number for the hearhas opening for Oregon's l a rgest s ponding to A N Y new ca r ing im p aired is warehouse posi860 de a ler online employment 1-800-927-9275. Subaru of B e nd. tion. Req u ires Motorcycles & Accessories ad from out-of-state. Offering 401k, profit h eavy lift i n g, 652 We suggest you call sharing, m e d ical c lean 1985 Harley Davidson the State of Oregon driv i n g Houses for Rent plan, split shifts and 1200C with S portster Consumer H otline record, e x p e riNW Bend paid vacation. Expeframe and '05 Harley at 1-503-378-4320 ence helpful, but rience or will train. crate motor. Rat Rod For Equal Opportu90 day $1500 guarnot required. No Desirable modern 3 bd/ look, Screaming Eagle nity Laws contact 2t/a ba townhome near a ntee. Dress f o r tips, leather saddlebags, c alls plea s e . Oregon Bureau of NWX, w/d. No smok- e xtras. S acrifice a t P l e ase Apply in person Labor & I n dustry, success. ing. Pets neg. $1795 $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, apply at 2060 NE Civil Rights Division, at 1735 NE Hwy 458-206-8446 (in Bend). mo . 971-227-3471. Hwy 20, Bend. See 971-673- 0764. Bob or Devon. 20, Bend.

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860

Motorcycles & Accessories Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e F ederal Fair Housing A c t, which makes it illegal to advertise any prefHarlev Davidson erence, limitation or 2001 FXSTD, twin discrimination based cam 88, fuel injected, on race, color, reliVance & Hines short gion, sex, handicap, shot exhaust, Stage I familial status or nawith Vance 8 Hines tional origin, or intenfuel management tion to make any such system, custom parts, preferences, l imitaextra seat. tions or discrimination. $1 0,500 OBO. We will not knowingly Call Today accept any advertis541-516-8684 ing for real estate which is in violation of What are you this law. All persons are hereby informed looking for? that all dwellings advertised are available You'll find it in on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulle- The Bulletin Classifieds tin Classified

The Riverhouse Apt./Multiplex General Bend's largest Hotel and Convention CenCHECK YOUR AD ter is seeking qualityminded • Asst. Front Desk Manager • Housekeeping Supervisor to join the Riverhouse on the first day it runs make sure it is corTeam. Must be able to to work a varied sched- rect. "Spellcheck" and human errors do ocule. You will have the cur. this happens to use of t h e R i ver- yourIf ad, please conhouse facilities. FREE tact us ASAP so that GOLF. Come work for corrections and any Bend's finest! Bring adjustments can be resume and complete made to your ad. application in person 763 541-385-5809 at The R iverhouse, 3 075 N . H w y 9 7 , The Bulletin Classified Recreational Homes & Property Bend, OR. Or apply Senior Apartmentand submit resume/ Independent Living cover letter online at: Cabin adj. to F.S. Iand ALL-INCLUSIVE 8 mi. from Sisters, mtn www.riverhouse.com with 3 meals daily view, horse corral, PRE EMPLOYMENT Month-to-month lease, 1/7th share $49,500. DRUG SCREENING check it out! 541-928-6549 or IS REQUIRED. Call 541-460-5323

I

860

Home Delivery Advisor

The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking General a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturposition and consists of managing an adult day night shift and other shifts as needed. We carrier force to ensure our customers receive currently have openings all nights of the week. superior service. Must be able to create and Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts perform strategic plans to meet department start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and objectives such as increasing market share end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoand penetration. Ideal candidate will be a sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. self-starter who can work both in the office Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a and in their assigned territory with minimal minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of with company vehicle provided. Strong loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackcustomer service skills and management skills ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup are necessary. Computer experience is and other tasks. For qualifying employees we required. You must pass a drug screening offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, and be able to be insured by company to drive short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we vacation and sick time. Drug test is required b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o prior to employment. advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with Please submit a completed application attenpeople from diverse backgrounds and you are tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available energetic, have great organizational skills and at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chaninterpersonal communication skills, please dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be send your resume to: obtained upon request by contacting Kevin The Bulletin Eldred via email (keldredObendbulletin.com). c/o Kurt Muller No phone calls please. Only completed appliPO Box 6020 cations will be considered for this position. No Bend, OR 97708-6020 resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reor e-mail resume to: quired prior to employment. EOE. kmuller©bendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE serving central oregon since rse Pre-empioymenfdrug screen required.

HONDA SCOOTER 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. cond., $975 obo. (541) 593-9710 or 350-8711 KAWASAKI KLX125, 2003,

good condition. $1100. 541-593-8748

18.5' Sea Ray 2000 4.3L Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/ CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond,$9500. 707-484-3518

(Bend) Yamaha V-Star, 250cc 2011 motorcycle, new custom seat for rider, vinyl coating on tank, People Look for Information 2 helmets included. About Products and Gets 60mpg, and has Services EveryDaythrough 3,278 miles. The Bvlletie Classiheds Asking $4700, firm. Call Dan 541-550-0171 865

ATVs

541-385-5809 REDUCED!

Harley D a vidson 2006, FXDLI Dyna Low Rider, Mustang seat with backrest, new battery, windshield, forward controls,lots of chrome, Screamin' Eagle exhaust, 11K mi. Sen ior owned, w e l l maind! $7950 L a Pine (928)581-9190

H onda Big R e d UTV. Like new with just over 40 hours use. Includes winch, 5-foot snow blade, hard roof, half windshield. L ists over $14,000; will sell for b est o ffe r ov e r $11,000. Call 541-575-4267 870

Boats & Accessories 15' 1995 open floor boat, Sylvan Yukon, 2004 Yamaha 4-stroke, E-Z Loader trailer $4 300 obo. 541-388-4038 Harley Davidson 2008 FXDL Dyna Low Rider-Only 3200mi. Stage 1 & 2 Vance& Hines pipes, detachable windshield, new battery. Includes assorted Harley gear/ clothes. Clear title. $20,000 investedReduced to$10,500. 541-306-0166

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $18,000or best offer. 541-318-6049

Harley Davidson 883 Sportster 1998, 20,200 miles,

exc. cond.,

$3,800.

541-548-2872.

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-3BB-BB09

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

HDFatBo 1996

2007 Bennlngton Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500 503-646-1804

C all 54 /-385-580 9 to r o m ot e o u r service Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Construction Contrac- Landscape Constructors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: active license p lanting, deck s , means the contractor fences, arbors, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of irCCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e contractor.com Landscape Contracor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin recom- number is to be inmends checking with cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to con- tisements which inditracting with anyone. cate the business has Some other t rades a bond, insurance and also req u ire addi- workers c ompensational licenses and tion for their employcertifications. ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: Debris Removal www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status JUNK BE GONE before contracting with the business. Persons I Haul Away FREE doing lan d scape For Salvage. Also maintenance do not Cleanups & Cleanouts r equire an LC B l i Mel, 541-389-8107 cense.

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Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

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19' Pioneer ski boat, 1983, vm tandem trailer, V8.Fun & fast! $5800 obo. 541-815-0936.

Compost Use Less Water

~Landsca in •Landscape Construction ~Water Feature Installation/Maint. •Pavers •Renovations •Irrigations Installation

Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759

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ALL AMERICAN PAINTING Interior and Exterior Family-owned Residential & Commercial 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts 5-year warranties Summer Special! Call 541-337-6149 CCB ¹t 93960

Parking Lot Maintenanc

AB Parking Lot Maintenance For aiiyourparking iot / 2015 Maintenance dnveway Package Available • Commercialneeds. sweeper • Crack fill EXPERIENCED • Seal coat Commercial • Striping & Residential HD FXSBI 2006 new • Dust control cond., low miles, • Snow Removal Senior Discounts Stage I download, ex• De-icing 541-390-1466 tras, bags. $7900 obo. CCB ¹203383 541-447-0887 Same Day Response Call Scott 541-815-2332 Improve Plant Health



C4

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

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCT 6, 2014

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Monday,cO tober 6,2014

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wjll$bprtz

NABC in Las Vegas

ACROSS 1 Pyramid city close to Cairo 5 Mocking remarks 10"Yikesl" 14Achieveda perfect score on 15Obstinatereply 16African country bordering 12-Down 17Socialite who inspired 1950'8 "Call Me Madam" 19Texts,e.g.: Abbr. 20 Fossil fuel 21Suluand Uhura, e.g., on the Enterprise 23 1957 hit covered by Creedence Clearwater Revival in 1968 25 First word in many newspaper names

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency In July, the A merican Contract Bridge League staged its Summer North American Championshipsusually the largest of its three annual 10-day "Nationals" — in Las Vegas. Californians Mark Bartusek and John Jones won a major pairs event at the NABC. In today's deal, Bartusek was declareratfour spades, and West led a heart: king, ace, three. East then led the queen of diamonds. Bartusek took the ace, cashed the A-K of trumps and ace of clubs, and led the jack of trumps. West won and got out with his last trump.

ANSWER: If partner has at least a tolerance for clubs, three clubs might be a better contract, but you can't be s ure that h e h a s an y c l ubs. H e promises six or more cards in spades, t hough, so t w o s p ades w il l b e playable. Pass. To look for a better spot would be dangerous as well as speculative. West dealer Both sides vtdnerable NORTH 49 5

Q KQ6 0843

DIAMOND

4 s K98 7 5 4

D eclarer then led a diamond to dummy's eight, and when East won with the ten, he found himself endplayed. W h atever h e l e d n e x t , Bartusek would take the rest. The tournament "Daily Bulletin" noted that East could have escaped the end play and beaten the contract by leading another heart at Trick Two. In f a ct, anything except a diamond would do.When South had shown a diamond suit as well as a distributionai hand East's diamond shift was silly.

W ES T 45Q 7 4 2 9 J 9 85 0 6

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By Jerome Gunderson ©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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10/06/14


THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 6 2014 C5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880

870

Boats & Accessories

Moto r homes

2006 11'x2' Zodiak, like new, ActiV hull, safe lock canister, 15HP Yamaha w/ t r olling plate, 6 gal Transom tank, less 30 hrs, 2 chest seats, full Bimini Allegro 32' 2007, like top, Transom wheels, new, only 12,600 miles. cover, RV's special. Chev 6.1L with Allison 60 dual ex$5500. 541-923-6427 transmission, haust. Loaded! Auto-levAds published in the eling system, 5kw gen, "Boats" classification power mirrors w/defrost, include: Speed, fish- 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. trailer hitch, driyer door For all other types of w/power window, cruise, watercraft, please go exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking to Class 875. $67,500. 503-781-8812 541-365-5609

The Bulletin cvin Centra( Oca on gnc

875

Watercraft ds published in aWa-

tercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 670. 541-385-5609

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,

880

881

881

882

882

882

908

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

2007 Jayco Jay Flight 29 FBS with slide out & awning - Turn-key ready to use, less than 50 total days used by current owner. Never smoked in, no indoor pets, excellent cond., yery clean. Lots of bonusit ems; many have never been used. Price now reduced to $17,200 which is below Kelly Blue B ook. Call Lis a , 541-420-0794 for more info / more photos.

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 365-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionally winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning seldom used; just add water and it's ready to go! $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

$22,995. 541-383-3503

Garage Sales Garage Sales

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 880

Motorhomes ac~

.

2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $58K. Ph. 541-447-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prineviiie.

p ~

~ ii

Alfa See Ya 2006 36' Excellent condition, 1 owner, 350 Cat diesel, 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, icemaker, gas stove, oven, washer/dryer, non-smokeri 3 shdes, generator, invertor, leather interior, satellite, 7'4n ceiling. Clean!$75,000. 541-233-6520

Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago Fleetwood D i scovery 31J, original owners, non40' 2003, diesel, w/all smokers, garaged, only options - 3 slide outs, 16,800 miles, auto-levelsatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, ing jacks, (2) slides, upetc., 32,000 m iles. graded queen bed, bunk Wintered in h eated beds, micro, (3) TVs, shop. $82,000 O.B.O. sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very 541-447-6664 clean!Only $67,995! ExCall The Bulletin At tended warranty and/or fi541-385-5809 nancing avail to qualified buyers! 541-388-7179 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993 Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

882

Fifth Wheels 1n

g at

•••%

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,

Keystone Raptor, 2007 MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, 37 toy hauler,2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, king bed, Irg LR, satellite system w/auto Arctic insulation, all seek, in/out sound sys- options - reduced by tem,sleeps 6,m any ex$3500 to $31,500. tras.$29,999. In Madras, 541-420-3250 call541-771-9607 or

Ask for Theo,

541-260-4293

CHECK YOURAD

Redmond:

Kit Companion '94 26', 1 slide, new stove/fridge, comes with qen. Reduced to $4000. 541-369-5788

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

$25,500

541-419-3301

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www. N4972M.com

541-546-5254

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

0

Laredo 30'2009

Reduced to $2500. OR For Hire Call for quote

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

541-475-6265

a

5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition,

You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

Open Road 36' with 3 slides!

king bed, hide-a-bed sofa, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $19,995 541-419-0566

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

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

1/5th interest in 1973

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

1/3 interestin

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located © Bend) 541-266-3333

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

Four Winds 2008 18' travel trailer used very little

$8500.

541-403-2465

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheckn and human errors do occur. If this happens to

your ad, please contact us ASAP so that

corrections and any adjustments can be Heartland P rowler made to your ad. = , • me - . 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 541-385-5809 like new, 2 slides-liv- The Bulletin Classified i ng area 8 la r ge closet, 15' power awWinnebago C 22' HOLIDAY RAMBLER ning, power hitch & 2002 - $30,500 VACATIONER 2003 s tabilizers, 16 g a l . 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, Big engine, heavy water heater, full size workhorse, Allison 1000 duty, many extras, queen bed , l a r ge 5 speed trans., 39K, 21,000 miles, like shower, porcelain sink NEyl/ TIRES, 2 slides, new. Please call for & toilet. Prowler Onan 5.5w gen., ABS details $25,000 or make offer. Fleetwood 32' - 2001 brakes, steel cage cock- 541-260-3251 541-999-2571 2 slides, ducted pit, washer/dryer, fireheat & air, great lace, mw/conv. oven, Jayco 1999 10'tent condition, snowbird ree standing dinette, camper, surge brakes, was $121,060 new; now, Winnebago Sightseer bearing buddies, gd ready, Many up27' 2002. workhorse condition, $2500 obo. $35,900. 541-536-1008 grade options, figas motor, Class A, nancing available! 541-280-0570 8' slide living rm/di$14,500 obo. nette, new tires. spare tire carrier, HD trailer RV Call Dick, CONSIGNMENTS hitch, water heater, 541-480-1687. micro/oven, generaWANTED tor, furn/AC, outside We Do The Work ... Providence 2005 shower, carbon diox- You Keep The Cash! Fully loaded, 35,000 ide & smoke detector, On-site credit Need to get an ad miles, 350 Cat, Very fiberglas ext., elect. approval team, clean, non-smoker, step, cruise control, web site presence. in ASAP? 3 slides, side-by-side CB radio, 60k miles, We Take Trade-Ins! refrigerator with ice awning, TV antenna w maker, Washer/Dryer, booster, flat screen Fax It ts 541-322-7253 BIG COUNTRY RV Flat screen TV's, In 23" TV. AM/FM/CD Bend: 541-330-2495 motion satellite. stereo. $2 3,995. The Bulletin Classifieds Redmond: 541-546-2554 $95,000 541-548-5254

Buy 8 Sell Safely In The Bulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every attemPt to enSure that PrOduCtS SOld in our ClaSSifiedS are

from a valid source.

Call 541-385-5809 toplaceyour Id today.

BSSl 1C

541-460-2019

In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds. A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e ! l

I

u,'

I

I

I

I

I

GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck

are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul jt all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwjllneed. Roomtogrowjnyour a t ough V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.

*SPeCial PriVate Party rateS aPPly to

merchandise and automotive categories.

The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com To place your photo ad, visit us online at ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m or c a ll with questions,

5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9


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

C6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014•THE BULLETIN 908

932

933

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

~~u~s Ffry~

940

975

975

975

Vans

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

935

Toyota Sienna

Cadillac Escalad

Ford Fusion SE

2005 fh

I•

1974 Beiianca 1730A

FORD 250 KING RANCH TURBO DIESEL 4X4 2004 Excellent condition with 91,200 miles

Nlercedes 450SL, 1975 97K Miles $8999. 541-504-8399

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

3300 sq.ft. Hangar Prineville Airport 60'wide by 55' deep with 16' bi-fold door. Upgrades include, T-6 lighting, skylights, windows, 14' side RV door, infra-red heating, and bathroom, $155,000, Call Bill 541-460-7930

LINcoLN ~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 10/31/14

(under Blue Book) Call (805)610-6415 in Terrebonne

Jee Libe

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

Good runner 4x4

Only $4,998 Vin¹A10401

ROBBERSON l lllCOLN~

II IBD R I

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 10/31/14

933

Pickups

2 01 2

Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149708

975

Automobiles

Ford Focus2010

Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154827

21.977

$1 1,977

ROBBERSON

ROBBERSON y

LI II C 0 L II ~

II IBK K I

LIIICOLII ~

541-312-3986

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

ally, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer.

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at

Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 10/31/1 4

The Bulletin's Ford F250 1984 4x4 King Chev Trailblazer LS "Call A Service Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift 2004, AWD, 6 cyl, remote kit, 90% tires, good wood entry, clean title, Professional" Directory truck! $2000 or best of12/15 tags,$5995. is all about meeting fer. 541-279-8023 541-610-6150 yourneeds.

2005 Diesel 4X4 Chev Crewcab du-

Che E u inox

Ford F350 2003 4x4 7.3 Diesel Crew Cab, Long Bed, Manual, Leather, $14,500 obo 541-480-9341

541-408-7826

541-447-5184.

Diesel Dodge 2500 1997 regular cab, auto, white, reat work truck, $2100. oug, 541-433-2128

Peterbilt 359 p otable DOWNSIZING water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 2 of 3 pickups for sale pump, 4-3" h oses, want to sell 2 and camlocks, $ 25,000. leave 1 for me! 541-820-3724 1999 Chevy Silverado 1500 3 door, 4WD 5.3 l iter e n gine, a u t o SEMI-DRY VAN trans, PS, PW, PB, 53' long x102" wide, less than 150k miles. good tires, no dings, GREAT TIRES Good $8500. body. $6000 541-403-2465. 1996 GMC 1500 4WD, long bed, good tires, h igh Service bed for single or g ood b o dy , N e ed s a dual wheels, best offer miles. under $200. 541-410-3425 Tune-up. $2500. 1993 Ford F250 long 931 bed with power lift gate, body r o ugh, Automotive Parts, tires, auto trans., Service & Accessories good strong running vehicle. $2500. See at 4 studded tires on rims, 571 NE z ure Dr., 31x10.50R15LT', full tread, Bend. CallAJerry © $175. 541-312-8606 541-8'I 5-4949 '65-'66 Mustang original bucket seats, completely rebuilt, better than new. 1957 DeSoto 341 cu. in. dis. headers, unused. 390 Ford cu. in. dis. headers, just like new. Plus other older Ford & Chevy parts.

Acura MDX 2007 AWD, 3.7 V6, leather, tow pkg, 73,800 mi., exc. cond. $19,950. 541-390-6283.

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, nayigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-915-9170

Call on one of the professionals today! JEEP WRANGLER

BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS 916 Search the area's most comprehensive listing of Trucks & classified advertising... Heavy Equipment real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. CrewMax, 2011 - Only print or on line. 29,700 miles & loaded! Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com 381hp, TRD off road pkg, Bilstein shocks,18" alioys, Freightliner - Toter sunroof, rear s l i ding The Bulletin sleeper cab, rebuilt Serving Central Orepn sincef9IB window, backup camera, engine with 20k miles, 12-spkr JBL sys, running 6.5 generator, 120 cu. brds, hitch/trailer sway ft. storage boxes - one kg, 10-way adj leather kYoMber/ 6' long. Gets 10.9 td seats, dual climate m pg, many m o r e control, sonar, 6-disc CD, features. All in good Chevy Silverado 2004 Bluetooth, more!$38,500. shape. See to appre- LS, 2WD, V8, 57k miles, 541-390-6616 ciate. $2 6 ,500. includes bedliner, hard 935 503-949-4229 tonneau cover. Asking $10,750. 541-588-0131 Sport Utility Vehicles

I

IM RO R

Hyundai Tucson, 2011 l oaded, i m maculate, 39k mi., Leather, Loaded and prem. pkg, bronze, AWD. 76k miles panoramic sunroof, heated seats, Navi¹044698 $18,977 gation, B l uetooth, ROBBERSON AWD. great mileage, LINcoLN ~ I M ROR h andles great i n snow. War r anty, 541.312.3986 One owner, nonDLR¹0205 pricing smokers, clear title. good thru 10/31/14 $19,500

Ford F-150 1991

1 9 78

$8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546

ies. Must see only $18,998 Vin ¹192111 ROBBERSON

with tow package & brake controller, King Ranch leather seats, sun roof. $18,900. 541-923-2953, ask for Mike

In Madras, call 541-475-6302 VW CONV.

2005. All the good-

2011 Loaded and Super Clean 4x4. $23,977

Vin¹463850 ROBBERSON'L «

oi ~

mam a

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 10/31/14 C J5

2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards,

Volvo XC60 2010

ALL THE FUN STUFF! - 4X4 Vin¹019617 $26,977

LINCOIII ~

II IBRD B

ROBBERSON ~

nsa oa

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 10/31/14

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 10/31/14

940

Vans

GMC Suburban 1997, Chrysler Town & fully loaded, daily driver, Country LXI 1997, extra clean, $2650. 1997 beautiful inside 8 Chevy Astro, runs good, out, one owner, non$1300. 541-410-4596 smoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds Find exactly what available. $4 , 950. you are looking for in the Call Mike, (541) 815CLASSIFIEDS 8176 after 3:30 p.m.

541-447-7272

Trax Signet 195/70R14 studded winter tires

(4) mounted on rims. Used b r i efly on Toyota Camry. 95% wear.

Peg ect Pgitt<1,

54'I -923-6989 932

Antique & Classic Autos

Buick Skylark 1972 The experience of a lifetime! 17K certified miles. Photosathemmings.com $18,000. 541-323-1898

Chevelle Malibu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.

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

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

miles. Always garaged. $4,000. 555-9999 CHEVELLE MALIBU 1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $13,500. 541-788-0427

3.SSl 1C S Jeepster Commando 1968 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, completely restored. $12,000 obo. 808-430-5133 or 541-382-6300 Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 1 55 K m i l es, $11,500. 541-549-6407

www.bendbulletin.com

Poadvertise, call 385-5809

541 -385-5809

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory todayi

high miles per gallon $15,977 Vin¹302474 ROBBERSON LlllcoLN ~

II IR W R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 10/31/14

Countryman AWD Loaded - Get there in style! ¹H99552 $24,977 ROBBERSON y LIIICOLN ~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 10/31/14

Toyota Camry 2003. $3500. Runs good, clean. 541-419-9229

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well maint'd, Toyota Corolla 1994 95K miles, very clean. 1 6-cyl, 4-dr, nice paint owner $9200 obo. (light blue), CHRYSLER2000 480-266-7395 (Bend) 160K miles, $1500. 541-312-2721 Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in 1 05K miles., 3 . 5 L Auto. trans. w/all trac- The Bulletin Classifieds tion On/Off feature. Power d o ors, win541 -385-5809 VOLVO XC90 2007 dows, sunroof; AC, AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, cruise, tilt s t eering power everything, whl, air bags. Full Hyundai Tiburon 2003, grey on grey, leather electronic instrumen- V6, 79k miles, fully heated lumbar seats, tation in c l . CD, loaded, 4 spd shift3rd row seat, moonAM/FM, c o m pass, able automatic, $2900 roof, new tires, aloutside temp. F u ll obo. 541-279-5022. ways garaged, all leather interior Tinted maintenance up to glass. Extended trunk date, excellent cond. for interior cargo. New A STEAL AT$13,900. tires and bat t ery. 541-223-2218 $4000. 541-317-9438

Need help fixing stuff? Call A ServiceProfessional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com Chrysler Town & Country Ltd. 2004, 1 owner, nonsmoker, 79K mi, loaded. $7700. 541-382-0421

FIND IT!

Infiniti i30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900 obo. 541-420-3277

BUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds VW Baja, 1965 $4000. 1990 Dodge 4x2 pickup, $2500/ofr. 541-536-1141

541-419-5980

Dod e Nitro 2011

4x4 Looks as good as Its name! Vin ¹ 520014 7.977 ROBBERSON

Find It in

The Bulletin ClassiBeds!

2012. Low miles-

garaged. $22,500.

1 9 7 8 V-8 ,

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

~

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 10/31/14

Chevy Malibu 2012, Lots of options; sunroof, 6 speed trans with manual option, bluetooth, o n Star, Sirius satelite, heated seats, pw, pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech engine, 20 MPG city, 35 MPG hwy, USB port, Ipod r eady, $'I 4,900 OBO. 541-504-6974

1000

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

any further sums ad- formance necessary i nformation: D a i n a vanced by the benefi- to cure the default, by Vitolins, Crook County ciary for the protec- paying all costs and District Attorney Oftion of t h e a b o ve expenses actually in- fice, 300 N E T hird described real prop- curred in enforcing the Street, Prineville, OR c ertain trust d e ed erty and its interest obligation and trust 97754. Notice of reasons for made by Jeanne Lee therein; and prepay- deed, together with and Forfeiture: The propRookstool, as an un- ment penalties/premi- trustee's married woman, as ums, if a p plicable. a ttorney's fees n o t erty described below the was seized for forfeigrantor, to Amerititle, W HEREFORE, n o - exceeding as trustee, in favor of tice hereby is given amounts provided by ture because it: (1) Mortgage Electronic that the undersigned said OR S 6 6 .778. Constitutes the proRegistration Systems trustee will on Janu- Requests from per- ceeds of the violation sons named in ORS of, solicitation to vioInc. as nominee for a ry 8, 2015 at t he Eagle Home M ort- hour of 10:00 o'clock, 86.778 for reinstate- late, attempt to viogage Inc. its succes- A.M. in accord with ment quotes received late, or conspiracy to sors and assigns, as the standard of time less than six d ays violates, the criminal b eneficiary, da t e d established by ORS prior to the date set laws of the State of 08/22/05, r e c orded 187.110, at th e f o l- for the trustee's sale Oregon regarding the 08/29/05, in the mort- lowing place: inside will be honored only at manufacture, distribuage records of DE- the main lobby of the the discretion of the tion, or possession of controlled substances CHUTES C ounty, Deschutes C o unty beneficiary or if r eOregon, as Courthouse, 1164 NW quired by the terms of (ORS C hapter475); the loan documents. and/or (2) Was used 2005-57449 and Bond, in the City of Re-recorded Bend, County of DE- In construing this no- or intended for use in 11/1/2005 as: SCHUTES, State of tice, the singular in- committing or faciliplural, the tating the violation of, 2005-74872 and sub- Oregon, sell at public cludes the solicitation to violate, sequently assigned to auction to the highest word "grantor" inWells Fargo Bank, bidder for cash the cludes any successor attempt to violate, or i n interest t o t h e conspiracy to violate N.A. by Assignment i nterest in th e d e recorded as scribed real property grantor as well as any the criminal laws of 2012-34314, covering which the grantor had other person owing an the State of Oregon t he f o llowing d e - or had power to con- obligation, the perfor- regarding the manuscribed real property vey at the time of the mance of which is se- facture, distribution or situated in said county execution by grantor cured by said trust possession of cons u b stances deed, and the words trolled and state, to wit: Lot of the trust deed, toand "benefi- (ORS Chapter 475). One (1) and Lot Two gether with any inter- "trustee" ciary" include their re(2), Block Eight-three est which the grantor successors IN THE MATTER OF: (83), Deschutes River or grantor's succes- spective in interest, if any. The One 2003 Honda PiRecreation Homes- sors in interest actrustee's rules of auc- lot, Washington Liites, Desc h utes quired after the exCounty, Ore g on. ecution of the trust tion may be accessed cense No. AQG1731, at ww w .northwest- VIN ¹ : 2HKYF18583H523023 PROPERTY AD- deed, to satisfy the ¹2014DRESS: 55135 Prong foregoing obligations trustee.com and are Case sei z e d Horn Drive Bend, OR thereby secured and incorporated by this 0 0236069 reference. You may 8/20/14 from Isabel 97707 Both the ben- the costs and e xalso access sale staCasteneda-Barajas eficiary a n d the penses of sale, inww w .north- and Erica Solis. trustee have elected cluding a reasonable tus a t to sell the real prop- charge by the trustee. westtrustee.com and erty to satisfy the obli- Notice is further given www. USA-ForecloPUBLIC NOTICE gations secured by that for reinstatement sure.com. For further T he Bend Park 8 the trust deed and a or payoff quotes re- information, p lease Recreation D i s trict contact: Kathy Tagnotice of default has quested pursuant to Board of Directors will North w est meet been recorded pursu- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d gart in a work sesTrustee Services, Inc. ant to O regon Re- 86.789 must be timely sion at 5 :30 p .m., P.O. Box 997 Bellevlsed Statutes communicated in a Tuesday, October 7, vue, WA 98009-0997 2014, at the district 86.752(3); the default written request that for which the foreclo- complies with t h at 425-586-1900 office,799 SW CoFRENCH, J EANNE l umbia, Bend, O r s ure i s m a d e i s statute addressed to grantor's failure to pay the trustee's "Urgent L EE AK A R O O K- egon. Agenda topics JEA N N E include an update on when due the follow- Request Desk" either S TOOL, (TS¹ the city UGB remand, ing sums: monthly by personal delivery LEE 7023.110870) payments of $769.02 to the trustee's physian update on the Park 1002.272535-File No. beginning 07/01/12, cal offices (call for adStewardship Program, $1,273.97 beginning d ress) or b y fi r s t and an update on the 12/1/12 and $993.43 class, certified mail, LEGAL NOTICE Galveston to Miller's beginning 1 2 / 1/1 3; r eturn r e ceipt r e - NOTICE OF SEIZURE Landing Park section FOR CIVIL plus prior accrued late quested, addressed to of t h e De s chutes charges of $153.80; the trustee's post of- FORFEITURE TO ALL River Trail. The board POTENTIAL p lus advances o f fice box address set will conduct an ex$1,590.00 that repre- forth in t his n otice. CLAIMANTS AND TO ecutive session at sent paid foreclosure Due to potential conALL UNKNOWN 6:30 pm pursuant to fees and costs and flicts with federal law, PERSONS READ THIS ORS 192.660(2)(e) for CAREFULLY property inspections; persons having no the purpose of distogether with title exrecord legal or equicussing real property If you have any inter- transactions. A regupense, costs, trustee's table interest in the fees and attorney's subject property will est i n t h e s e i zed lar business meeting fees incurred herein only receive informa- property d e scribed will convene at 7:00 by reason of said de- tion concerning the below, you must claim pm for the board to fault; any further sums lender's estimated or that interest or you will consider approval of advanced by the ben- actual bid. Lender bid automatically lose that revisions to the Capieficiary for the protec- i nformation is a l s o interest. If you do not tal Improvements Plan tion of the above de- available a t the file a claim for the (CIP), approval of inscribed real property trustee's web s ite, property, the property tergovernmental and i ts inte r est www.northwestmay be forfeited even Agreement (IGA) for therein; and prepay- trustee.com. Notice is if you are not con- Colorado Safe Pasment penalties/premi- further given that any victed of any crime. s age project a n d ums, if applicable. By person named in ORS To claim an interest, Colorado Avenue Unreason of said default 86.778 has the right, you must file a written dercrossing; and an claim with the forfei- Easement to the City the beneficiary has at any time prior to d eclared al l s u m s five days before the ture counsel named for Sewer Improveowing on the obliga- date last set for the below, The w r itten ments at McKay Park, tion secured by the s ale, to h av e t h is claim must be signed and assignment of the trust deed immedi- foreclosure proceed- by you, sworn to un- B end E lk s L e a se ately due and pay- ing dismissed and the der penalty of perjury Agreement. able, said sums being trust deed reinstated before a notary public, T he a g enda a n d the following, to wit: b y payment to t he and state: (a) Your s upplementary r e $113,049.80 with inbeneficiary of the en- true name; (b) The ports are posted on terest thereon at the tire amount then due address at which you the district's website, rate of 5.875 percent (other than such por- will a c cept f u ture www.bendparksanper annum beginning tion of the principal as m ailings from t h e drec.org. For more 06/01/12; plus prior would not then be due court and forfeiture information call accrued late charges had no default oc- counsel; and (3) A 541-389-7275. of $153.80; plus ad- curred) and by curing s tatement that y o u vances of $1,590.00 any o t he r d e f ault have an interest in the that represent paid complained of herein seized property. Your Need to get an foreclosure fees and that is capable of be- deadline for filing the ad in ASAP~ costs and property in- ing cured by tender- claim document with You can place it spections; t o gether ing the performance forfeiture cou n sel with title e xpense, required under t he online at: named below is 21 costs, trustee's fees o bligation o r tr u s t days from the last day www.bendbulletin.com and attorneys fees in- deed, and in addition of publication of this curred herein by rea- to paying said sums notice. Where to file a 541-385-5809 son of said default; or tendering the per- claim and for more LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7023.110870 Reference is made to that


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