Serving Central Oregon since1903 75
THURSDAY November 6,2014
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TODAY'S READERBOARD
ELECTIOM AFTERMATH
Marijuana:HowOregon will go aboutlegalizingit
CravingS — Researchersat UO are trying to develop away to help people resist cravings for bad-for-you foods.D1 ISrael — A pair of what Israel called "terrorist attacks" by Palestinians are making tensions rise evenmore.A2
By Taylor W. Anderson The Bulletin
Oregon joined Alaska and the nation's capital in voting Tuesday to legalize recreational marijuana in the face
Physical therapy —Are there really more physical therapists in Bend, or does it just seem that way?D1
of federal law that says
• DETAILS OFTHESALE<WHATTHEY'RESAYING • WHAT OTHER BREWERSARESAYING• PAGEC6
Christmas trees —An Oregon grower is taking preventative measures to ensure a slug-free holiday.B3
Adventurers club —An exclusive L.A. club for men is tackling its next challenge: whether to let in women.A6
CONSTRUCTION ATTHE COLORADO SPILLWAY
it's still a banned and dangerous substance. The state will have a textbook of sorts to follow when the Oregon ,
Some medical
for them.
precedentedmarijuana industries, Oregon
allowsforthe posses-
boundaries for new
businesses to operate in. That should help when the statefirststarts
taking applications for businesses Jan. 4, 2016. See Marijuana/A4
NOTICE TO READERS
The Bulletin
the trail to create un-
ier time creatingthe
How theRepublicansmanaged a GOPtakeover in the midterm elections. bendbelletin.cem/extras
By Dylan J. Darling
I :marijuana dispen,:' sary owners in Bend ::'' e x pressed excitement Liquor Control ComWednesday about the mission starts drafting : : p a ssing of Measure 91, rules for the newly ,: : ' al t hough, like many created industry. Oregonians, they still After Washington have a lot to learn and Colorado blazed about what it means
should have an eas-
And a Webexclusive-
• For pot shops, more questions than answers
Measure 91, which sion, manufacture and sale of marijuana by and to people over age 21, passed with nearly 56 percent of votes Tuesday. The new law makes pot legal on July 1, 2015.
See Pot shops/A4
Local election updates • Who won close Bendcouncil races, how Merkley survived, and how the Legislature is shaping up. Plus: aone-vote margin in Jefferson County, and anupdated scorecard, B1
Bulletin says
bewareof
GOP:Wishlist isforming;
subscription invoices
what maymakethecut? By Todd Shields Bloomberg News
By Tim Doran
widespread Internet use.
Success on these and
WASHINGTON — Republican control of Con-
other items backed by U.S. business will come
company that has generat-
gress may boost nuclear power and give banks
between President
ed hundreds of consumer
eased enforcementof
complaints in California, Oregon and the Northwest
consumer laws, though it's unlikely to yield a
has started soliciting sub-
rollbackof Obamacare
The Bulletin
A Southern Oregon
scriptions for The Bulletin. But a newspaper repre-
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Workers from Hamilton Construction place a wooden
sentative said Wednesday The Bulletin has no affil-
beam on a temporary work bridge on the Deschutes River
iation with the company, Publishers Payment Ser-
vice. The invoices sent to some Bend residents are
as part of the Colorado Dam Safe Passage Project on
not from The Bulletin, or
Wednesdayafternoon inBend.
its parent company, Western Communications, said Karen Douglas, corporate circulation manager for
ColoradoAve. I hlldgl oa e
co
The work bridge will allow construction equipment access into the river for building the channels planned in
Western Communications.
Douglas said. See Scam /A4
Greg Cross /The Bulletin
Passage Project is fall 2015, with the waterway expected to open around June 2015.
Inmate ree un ernewGitmorues By Charlie Savage
keep holding prisoners.
New York Times News Service
The Kuwaiti, Fawzi al Odah, was also only the second
WASHINGTON — A Kuwaiti man held by the United States without trial for nearly 13 years in Guantanamo Bay,
may soon be transferred.
low-level prisoner to be released from Guantanamo this year. Last year, President Barack
Cuba, was released early Wednesday, the military said.
Obamapledged to revive his efforts to close the prison. Admin-
His repatriation was the first
istration officials said an end-of-
transfer to result from a new system of parole-boardlike hearings to periodically review whether it is still necessary to
The Pentagon has notified Congress that nine other detainees,
02329
Still, there are signs that
disagreements remain within the administration over how
cording to officials. The officials, who discussed deliberations on the condition
of anonymity, said the adminis-
much risk to accept as it tries to
tration decided at a "principals'
winnow down the population of low-level inmates and close the
committee" meeting on Oct. 3 in the White House Situation Room
to proceed with notifying Conbeenpoised to repatriate four gress that it intended to repatrithe-year flurry might be coming: Afghans who have long been ap- ate the four Afghans. Obama's prison. The administration had
proved for transfer, but Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel recently including six bound for Uruguay, pulled back from that plan, ac-
Th e Bulletin
< s se c tions
national security adviser, Susan
Rice, chaired the meeting. See Gitmo /A5
INDEX
AnIndependent
Vol. 112, No. STO,
O 88267
Senate, who in January
will be Republican. "Legislative impact on business will depend on the willingness of Senate Republican lead-
find a way to advance
ers to negotiate with the
the Keystone XL pipeline and communications companies such as AT&T could see progress toward updating a legal framework that predates
president," said William Galston, a senior fellow of governance studies at the Brookings Institution
in Washington. See Issues/A4
• Obama andMcConnell: Are they D.C.'s newdeal-makers? A3 •Updatedmaps:BalanceofpowerinCongress,B1
Estimated completion for the Colorado Dam Safe
to invoice on our behalf,"
Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt
Barack Obama and top leaders of the House and
More from D.C.
the project.
"This is not a company we have contracted with
over objections of a veto-wielding president. Oil pipeline builder TransCanada Corp. may
only from negotiations
Business Calendar Classified
C 5 - 6Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Obituaries B5 Df -6 Sports Cf-4 B2 Health E 1 - 6L ocal/State B f -6 TV/Movies D5
TODAY'S WEATHER gL 4g
Afternoon showers High 58, Low34 Page B6
GMos: Measure fails by narrowest ofmargins By GosiaWozniacka
netically modified foods,
The Associated Press
known as GMOs.
Oregon voters have narrowly rejected the labeling of genetically modified foods following the most expensive ballot measure campaign in state history. Residents voted 49.7 to 50.3 against the mea-
sure, which would have required manufacturers, retailers and suppliers to label raw or packaged foods produced entirely or partially by genetic engineering. As of Wednesday, the difference was about 10,000 votes.
Colorado voters on Tuesday also rejected mandatory labels on ge-
Opponents of the measures in both states
included some of the world's largest food producers and biotech
companies, including Monsanto, which lauded the defeat of Oregon's Measure 92.
"We're pleased that Oregon's farmers, food producers, retailers and especially consumers will not be subject to this
costly measure and will not be unnecessarily economically impacted by the burden these labels would create," spokeswoman Charla Lord said. See GMOs /A5
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
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NATION Ee ORLD
ensions rise in srae a er'erroris a ac '
Canadian Ebula zOne — TheWorld Health Organization is
By Isabel Kershner
NeW gOVernar iII MeXiCO —Fewdispute that the newly installed governor of Mexico's Guerrero state has a radical past. The question is, just how radical? Supporters of Gov. Rogelio Ortega Martinez, who took office last week amid adeepening crisis over the disappearance of 43 students from a rural teachers college six weeks ago, say the 59-year-old sociologist's roots in the radical left might be just what's needed to quell insurgent fervor in a state that's been the cradle of numerous revolutionary movements. But a criminal complaint lodged against Ortega charges that his radicalism went beyond politics to include kidnapping and extortion.
custodian there while I srael handles security. Friction
New York Times News Service
JERUSALEM
-
Amid
heightened tensions over an important holy site, two driv-
ers, in separate incidents, plowed their cars into Israelis on Wednesday, and Jordan recalledits ambassador from Israel. Israeli police said at least
one of the crashes, in which a Palestinian drove into pedestrians in Jerusalem, kill-
ing one and injuring a dozen, was "a terrorist attack." In t he second incident, in t h e
has been increasing in recent Israel closed it for one day for months as some Israelis have the first time in years, saying been pushing to be allowed it feared violence. to pray at the site, which is reThe temporary c l osing vered by Muslims and Jews. came after an Israeli counterIn the vehicle attack in Je- terrorism unit killed a Palesrusalem on Wednesday, an tinian suspected in the assasIsraeli police spokesman said, sination attempt of a promithe driver was shot dead by nent U.S.-born Israeli activist. police officers at the scene The activist, Yehuda Glick, after he got out of his vehicle has been at the forefront of the and tried to attack officers growing movement of nationand bystanders with an iron alist Jews who are challengbar. ing the ban on Jewish prayer Micky Rosenfeld, a police at the sacred compound. spokesman, identified the IsThe Jordanian news agenraeli man who was killed as cy, Petra, said the ambassador Jidaan Asad, 38, a border po- was being recalled in protest
West Bank, a driver who has yet to be identified ran over three soldiers, injuring them in what the military suspected lice officer from the Druse vilwas another deliberate attack. If it was, the crash would
lims as the Noble Sanctuary — boiled over last week when
asking Canada to justify its decision to restrict travel from the West African nations hardest hit by Ebola. TheCanadian government announced Friday that it would no longer issue travel visas or process permanent residency applications for people from the countries with "widespread and persistent-intense transmission." The move puts Canada at odds with the World Health Organization, which has repeatedly urged countries not to prohibit travel to and from Ebola-affected countries, including Liberia, Sierra Leoneand Guinea.
Mother guilty of manslaughter —Gigi Jordanadmitted
against what it called "the un-
she poisoned her autistic son, giving the 8-year-old a lethal dose of medications. But she said she did so only because shefeared she would be murdered by her first husband, and her son would end up in the custody of his father, a manshesuspected of committing child abuse. OnWednesday, during its fifth day of deliberations, a Manhattan jury accepted Jordan's claims and found her guilty of manslaughter, rejecting the prosecution's call for a murder conviction. Jordan, 53, sighed deeply but showed little other emotion as the verdict was read Wednesday morning. Despite the outcome, her lawyers said she still intended to appeal the verdict. Jordan faces five to 25 years in prison when sentenced; had she been convicted of murder, she would have faced asentence of 25 years to life.
lage of Beit Jann in northern
precedentedand escalated IsIsrael. Police said the attacker raeli aggressions" at the holy be the third such assault on had connections with Hamas. site and "repeated violations pedestrians in recent weeks, In the similar attack late in the holy city." raising fears of a possible last month, a Palestinian man, Jordan's foreign minister, new Palestinian intifada, or a residentof East Jerusalem, Nasser Judeh, was to meet in uprising. drove into pedestrians, kill- Paris on Wednesday with U.S. Israel has been struggling ing a3-month-old baby and a Secretaryof State John Kerry to manage a volatile situation young woman from Ecuador. to discuss the crisis over the both at home and with JorThe driver of the car that hit holy site, according to Jordadan, a crucial ally, driven in the soldiers escaped. nian foreign ministry offigood part by disagreements Simmering tensions over cials. Jordan said it would also over the holy site in Jerusa- the holy site — known to Jews file a complaint to the U.N. Selem; Jordan i s t h e o f f icial as Temple Mount and to Mus- curity Council.
RUSSIAN NATIONALISM
Korean business mogul who controlled the company that ran the Sewol ferry, which sank in April leaving more than 300 people dead, was convi cted ofembezzlement Wednesday andsentencedtothree yearsinprison.Theson,YooDae-kyoon,43,wasconvictedoftaking nearly $6.8 million since 2002 from seven companies controlled by his family, including Chonghaejin Marine Co., which operated the Sewol ferry. Yoo's father, Yoo Byung-eun, was afugitive facing similar embezzlement charges when hewas found dead in July. The sinking of the Sewol on April16, in waters off southwest South Korea, was the country's worst disaster in decades. Most of those killed were high school students on a field trip.
Spuih Ebulu putiuht —ASpanish nurse's aidewho wasthe first person known to have contracted the Ebola virus outside Africa was released from a Madrid hospital Wednesday, almost a month after she tested positive for the disease. The nurse's aide, Maria Teresa Romero Ramos, read a statement in which she thanked God aswell as the medical team that treated her for "giving her back life." She then left the Carlos III hospital where she was treated after testing positive for Ebola on Oct. 6. "We have shown that we have the best health care service in the world," Romero said before leaving the hospital. She added that the service was made of "selfless professionals who, despite often working under terrible political management, are capable of making miracles — and I'm one of them."
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A boy holds an icon as he and Russian nationalists prepare to march onUnity Day,which celebrates a 1612 victory over the Polish Army, in Moscow on Tuesday.
President Vladimir Putin's inconsistent embraceof nationalist tenets mayhavehampered turnout at the traditional march.
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Ju ge rulesgaymarriage an in Missouri isunconstitutiona By Doug Moore St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Denying Missouri's gay couples the opportunity to marry is unconstitutional, a judge ruled Wednesday afternoon. As a result, St. Louis Circuit
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
ments for marriage under Mis-
the state constitution. Koster
souri law, other than being of different sexes, is legally enti-
supports same-sex marriage but said he has a legal responsibility to defend Missouri law.
tled to a marriage license," BurConstitution violates the Equal cess Clause of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
10Q 20 Q 31Q 35Q 40 Q6Q The estimated jackpot is now $1.8 million.
for moreinfovisit www.eclerodermalnlel.orl
Burlison's ruling
tered into in other states.
"Missouri's future will be c omes one of inclusion, not exclusion,"
more than four months after
Koster said. It was not immedi-
ron Carpenter, led Attorney
The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
Raising Awarenesswith Strength R Courage
Protection Clause and Due Pro- obligated to honor contracts en-
MEGABUCKS
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now can enjoy the dignity, stability, and security of a legal marriage."
sas City case, Koster dedined to appeal, saying the state is
The estimated jackpot is now $203 million.
The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
out the State of Missouri who
However, after losing the Kan-
fourcouples were married at ately clear, however, whether St. Louis City Hall, even though Koster would appeal today's there is a 10-year-old consti- ruling. Gay rights advocates tutional amendment defining expect Koster will ask the Mismarriage as between one man souri Supreme Court to make a and one woman. final ruling. "This is a positive move forThe act of defiance, choreographed with the support ward for loving same-sex couof Mayor Francis Slay and ples in the City of St. Louis,"
POWERBALL
the four marriage licenses in June "pushed the envelope on behalf of families through-
If you areexperiencing any one ormoreof thesesymptoms, it may be anautoimmune diseasecalled Scleroderma.Call your doctor for an appointmentwith documentedsymptoms as soon aspossible to either rule out or confirm Sclerodermadiagnosis.
Judge Rex Burlison said in his decision, marriage licenses could be issued beginning Missouri. That ruling affectWednesday. ed more than 5,400 Missouri "The Court finds and decouples. dares that any same sex couple In both cases, an attorney that satisfies all the require- from Koster's office defended
lison wrote. He said that the Missouri
Oregon Lottery results
City judge ruled that marriages of Missouri gay couples wed in states or countries where such relationships are legally recognized must be honored by their home state. The decision by Circuit Judge J. Dale Youngs was the first by any judge affirming same-sex marriage in
Do your hands turn white, blue, purple or transparent when cold? Are the back of your hands shiny with no lines on your knuckles? Do you have unexplained weight loss? Do you experience shortness of breath? Do you have swallowing difficulties or heartburn?
then-Recorder of Deeds ShaGeneral Chris Koster to file
said Jeffrey Mittman, executive director of the American Civil
Liberties Union of Missouri. "It is also a win for families
an injunction preventing more marriage licenses from being throughout Missouri as anothissued to same-sex couples. er discriminatory obstacle is It's the second major victory lowered." in the state for same-sex marSt. Louis City C ounselor riage. Last month, a Kansas Winston Calvert said issuing
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 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 Thursday, Nov. 6, the 310th
day of 2014. Thereare 55days left in the year.
Nnt= =
MIDTERM ANALYSIS
HAPPENINGS Perry in COurt — Texas Gov. Rick Perry is due in court to face abuse-of-power charges.
HISTORY Highlight:In1984, President Ronald Reaganwon re-election by a landslide over former Vice President Walter Mondale, the Democratic challenger. In1814,Adolphe Sax, the inventor of the saxophone, was born in Dinant, Belgium. In1854, America's "March King," John Philip Sousa, was born in Washington, D.C. In1860,former lllinois congressman AbrahamLincoln defeated three other candidates for the presidency: John Breckinridge, John Bell and Stephen Douglas. In1861,Confederate President Jefferson Davis waselected to a six-year term of office. In1928,in a first, the results of Republican Herbert Hoover's presidential election victory over Democrat Alfred Smith were flashed onto anelectric wraparound sign on theNew York Times building. In 1934, Nebraska voters approved dissolving their two-chamber legislature in favor of a nonpartisan, single (or "unicameral") legislative body, which was implemented in1937.
In1944, British official Lord Moynewas assassinatedin Cairo, Egypt, by members of the Zionist Stern gang. In1956, President Dwight Eisenhower won re-election, defeating Democrat Adlai Stevenson. In1962, Democrat Edward Kennedy waselected Senator from Massachusetts. In1977, 39 people werekilled when the Kelly BarnesDam burst, sending awall of water through ToccoaFalls College in Georgia. In1990,about one-fifth of the Universal Studios backlot in Southern California wasdestroyed in anarson fire. In2012,President Barack Obamawas electedtoasecond term of office, defeating Republican challenger Mitt Romney. Tenyears ago: An Ivory Coast airstrike killed nine French peacekeepers and anAmerican aid worker, prompting France to wipe out the country's modest air force. Thedesigners of SpaceShipOne,the first privately manned rocket to burst into space, werehanded a$10 million check andtheAnsari X Prize trophy. Five yearsago:President Barack Obamasigned a $24 billion economic stimulus bill, hours after the government reported that the unemployment rate had hit10.2 percent in Oct. 2009 for the second time since World War II. Oneyear ago:Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, testifying before the Senate FinanceCommittee on the nation's health care law, was blistered by Republicans who bluntly challenged her honesty, pushed for her resigna tionand demandedunsuccessfully that she concede President Barack Obamahad deliberately misled the public about his signature domestic program. At the Country Music Association Awards, Miranda Lambert won her fourth straight female vocalist of the year award while her husband, Blake Shelton, won albumof the year andmalevocalist — a category he also wonfor the fourth year in a row.
BIRTHDAYS Country singer Stonewall Jackson is 82. Country singer Guy Clark is 73. Actress Sally Field is 68. Newscorrespondent and former California first lady Maria Shriver is 59. Education Secretary Arne Duncan is50. Rock singer CoreyGlover is 50. Actor EthanHawkeis 44. Actress ThandieNewton is 42. Model-actress RebeccaRomijn is 42. Actress Taryn Manning is 36. Actress Emma Stone is 26. — From wire reports
newo
o w e rcou ein •
•
After six years of sparse communication and social interaction but frequent open hostility, the relationship between a taciturn Kentuckian (and likely incoming Senate majority leader) and a so-called aloof president of the United States could determine Barack Obama's legislative legacy and Republican presidential fortunes in 2016. In other words, there is a lot riding on very little rapport. By Jason Horowitz New York Times News Service
After Oval Office meetings
with the four congressional leaders, President Barack Obama has often turned to his
staff and asked of the Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, "What angle do you think he's playlngD" The Republican takeover of the Senate on 'Ihesday is ex-
pected to elevate McConnell, the inscrutable mastermind of the party's strategy against Obama, to the position of majority leader. "I don't think you are going Jacquelyn Martin/TheAssociated Press to see these guys going to hap- President Barack Obama took some responsibility for the pyhourtogether," said Sen. Bob Democrats' weak showing on Election Day at a news conference Corker of Tennessee, a close Wednesday, saying, "As president, they rightly hold me accountallyof McConnell's. able to make it work better." Obama has alreadymade that dear. At the White House
J. Scott ApplewhIte/TheAssociated Press
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, of Kentucky, held a news conference on the day after the GOP gained enough seats to
control the Senate in next year's Congress and make McConnell the majority leader.
"What I'm not going to do ts just wait.... the
"Just because we have a two-partysystem doesn't mean we have to be in perpetual
Correspondents' Association American people sent a message — one that dinner in 2013, he jokingly ad- they've sent for several elections now. They dressed the critique that he failed to reach out and charm expect the people they elect to work as hard Congress by saying, "Why as they do." don't you get a drink with — President Barack Obama Mitch McConnell!" McConnell later replied by posting on Twitter aphotograph ofhimself sitting in a Kentucky bar with Wednesday morning, Obama Bob Bennett of Utah, who was a beer, gesturing toward the left a message for McConnell, McConnell's "campaign manempty seat, and a glass of red and the two were expected to ager" in his leadership effort. wine, beside him. speak Wednesday afternoon. During the "fiscal cliff' fiasco, And this year, McConnell The relationship may not "be which involved the possibility told New York Times reporter catapulted ahead based on a of tax increases and automatJonathan Martin that he had reservoir oftrust,butan oppor- ic spending cuts taking effect, met alone in the Oval Office tunity exists for a highly pro- McConnell famously called with Obama only "once that I fessional relationship to occur," Biden and said, "Does anyone can recall." And when the Uni- Corker said. down there know how to make versity of Louisville, McCon-
gives me the chance to showit again." — Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.
adeal?" twice in Senate leadership racIn at least three highly dra- es ("I don't want to ever do it matic times — during the ex- again"), said the new majority piration of the Bush tax cuts in leader was unlikely to hold a 2010, the debt-ceiling standoff grudge against Obama. "He in 2011 and the 2013"fiscal cliff' knows you can't be thinking deal — McConnell and Biden about the last pitch and last were able to resolve a crisis. swing," he said. "You have to be Former Sen. Phil Gramm of
Texas, who beat McConnell
thinking about the next pitch
and the next swing."
He added: "Mitch is not real-
nell's almamater and one ofhis few nonpolitical passions, won
ly a jovial guy. He's not a backslapping guy. He's all business.
the NCAA men's basketball tournament in 2013, the Repub-
It's 100 percent business." The two dearly have their
lican said he felt he had to brief ideological, generational and the president, himself a college temperamental d i ff e rences. basketball fan, on the Politics McConnell is an entirely po101 fact that he had attended litical animal, while Obama is the school and intended to be at
as comfortablein Congress as
the White House ceremony.
Garbo in the Grand Hotel. (Severalmembers ofCongresshave
"I made sure he knew that, because the team was gonna
conflict. t think I have shown that to be true at critical times in the past. I hope the president
•
•
•
•
•
50
0
A
said that the president's phone
•
•
be there and I was gonna be manner has all the charm of a there," he said. robocall.) And then there is the At his victory party 'Ities-
day night, McConnell struck a more conciliatory tone.
matter of McConnell's knack
for silence. According to one person with knowledge of their
"Just because we have a interactions, McConnell has intwo-party system doesn't mean furiated the president by sitting we have to be in perpetual con- in leadership meetings and sayflict," he said. "I think I have ing almost nothing. shown that to be true at critiBut administration officials cal times in the past. I hope the and intimates of McConnell's president gives me the chance also described a constructive to show it again." relati onship— when necessary But that's a far cry from the
'
•
•
•
•
— between the Obama White
disdain he expressed during House and McConnell's leadhis bumpy run to re-election ership team. And McConnell this fall, which was in large has repeatedly reminded his part driven by antipathy to- boisterous — and potentially ward Obama. In his closing rebellious — caucus that they stump speech, McConnell set
needed the president's cooper-
off the most applause when he ationto do anythingbig. expressed his fervent hope that Ed Pagano, a former liaison the president would"have a bad
to the Senate for the White
McConnell already seemed to
McConnell was to work with
night" Tuesday. As he stepped House, said the administration offstage at one stop, though, strategy when dealing with be looking ahead and seemed those dosest to him in the hope reluctant to incite the president. ofbringing him along. When asked whether Demo-
"The idea being: Go to the
crats would rue the day they body and soften up the head," tried to oust him, he stopped said Pagano, who added that chuckling and said, "You know it was really the chief of staff, I'mnot gonna do that." Denis McDonough, a creature "It's fine, we don't have any of the Hill who was willing to personal problems," McCon- crack open a beer with consernell, 72, added of his relation- vatives, who more often dealt ship with the president, 53, in another interview at the ¹ tional Corvette Museum in
with McConnell's team. As far
as a personal relationship between Obama and McConnell, Bowling Green, Kentucky, last he said, "I don't think it does week. "We have some big dif- exist, and I think they are going ferencesabout what the coun- tohave to start that relationship try ought to be doing, but I don't anew." have any problem with him Administration of fi c i als, personally." McConnell aides and other Asked when they last broke
breadtogether,hesaid:"W e've had opportunities to discuss whenever things have brought us together. I hope there will be more opportunities to talk
,
,L& Q~ ~r
senators have noted that there is a f u n ctional relationship '
between McConnell and Vice
•
ests might align, and that they might be able to strike deals on
taxes or trade or maybe, just maybe, immigration. Early
•
President Joe Biden, who have
a rapport rooted in their decades inthe Senate. "When everything was falla bout that in th e next t w o ing apart andthe teaparty peoyears." Administration officials and ple were screaming, 'Don't do McConnell partisans have ar- anything, don't do anything,' gued that the two men's inter-
•
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I do know that Obama turned to Biden and said: 'I can't deal with this. You take a run out of
it. They know you, they don't know me,'" said former Sen.
•
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
Scam Continued from A1 One invoice sent to a Bend resident f r o m Pu b l i shers
Payment Service listed an annual price for a daily subscription, 365 issues, to The Bulletin at $389.95, nearly double the price the newspa-
PUBLISHERS PAYMENT SERVICE 0914W-I 26071
$194.98
December 5, 2014
$389.95
THE BULLETIN 365 ISSUES I YR(S)
Your subecrhalea to THE BULLHIIN ie autmmdc wiar receipt of your payment whenycmchoose to renew or ordera mw subscrlptka. Iwnunetely, . by amina now,yoa caulock la ai one cf cur lowea mtesl You' Ivin o nsof s w eslavab l r I e mn o ttb or
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Continued from A1 It requires the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to
come up with state licensing rules and regulations for growers and distributors bythe start of 2016.
'IIIE BULLETIN
Email: customerservice@publisherspayment.com L Z 0
MAKE CHECK ORMONEY ORDER PAYABLE To: III
tc Iu z
PPS
Potshops
NOTICE OF RENEWAU NEW ORDER
1-7II7-266-6673
3/r5 ISSUES I YR(S)
Inatallment p"ayment - 1/2 now snd 1/2 next month QCheck Here If Renowal Q Blll Me Latn Q NO THANK YOU
uI think it i s going to be
per would charge to receive a PO Bok 2489 • White City, OR 97503 For Credit Card Payment GoTo: daily paper for a year, Dougwww.publisherspayment.com o las said. IZ Makecheckormoneyorderspayableto: The back of the invoice ino PPS lu cludes text that says the company offers over 600 magPHONE (/or pnocssslngpur/rosss) azines as an independent Pfrmssmokssnp nsms or arfrfrass conocf/'ons lm/owr subscription agent between tre the magazine publishers and organizations that market Lpanonocnta RENEWAL OFFER - NOTA BILL subscriptions. And the company may not have a direct Submitted photo relationship with the pub- The invoice from a scam subscription to The Bulletin. Publishers Payment Service, the company that sold the scam subscription, has lishers or publications. received 862 complaints to the Better Business Bureau of Alaska, Oregon and Western Washington.
good," said Kevin Fehrs, owner of The Good Leaf Organic Collective on Empire Avenue. "It
will keep a lot of people out of jail for a plant." The state started issuing li-
censes for marijuana storefronts in March,and sincethen oneof the largest medical marijuana scenesin Oregon has bloomed in Bend. As of Wednesday, the
nI
state listed 12 approved dispen-
saries inthe city. While the passing of Mea-
A call to 707-266-6673, the
sure 91 could change the mar-
telephone number listed on
ijuana landscape, Fehrs, who
Oregon Secretary of State also the location of an outcorporation records show let of The UPS Store, which City, according to a reprePublishers Payment Service offers mailing, printing and sentative who answered. She Justice between November complaints related to Pubis owned by Liberty Publish- packaging, according to its said questions would have to 2011 and Friday, according to lishers Payment Service. ers Service Inc., which is the website. be answered by the human the department's database. A bout 89 percent of t h e company listed in 10 sepaThe Better Business Buresources department a n d Those complaints involve c omplaints i n v olve t h r e e rate consumer complaints, reau of Alaska, Oregon and transferred the call, which companies with 42 different categories: failed to deliver according to the Justice De- W estern W a shington r a t went to voice mail. names, and Publishers Pay- any goods or services; failed partment's database. ed the company an F on an after receiving 862 A call was not r eturned ment Service was the com- to deliver goods, services or Corporation records for A-F scale Wednesday. pany listed in 64 complaints. refund despite demand by b oth companies list t h e complaints in t h ree years, The address where the All but two are listed as complainant; and f a lse or same address, 1750 Delta according to its website. invoice directs payments to magazine subscription ser- misleading invoice, accord- Waters Road, No. 102-204, — Reporter: 541-383-0360, be sent, PO Box 2489, White vice complaints. However, ing to the database. in Medford. The address is tdoran@bendbulletin.com the bill, went to a customer service center in New York
City, Oregon, shows up in 978 newspapers in Arizona and consumer complaints made California published stories to the Oregon Department of within the last month about
runs the shop with his wife,
said for now he plans to keep the shop focused on medical marijuana. "We got into it to help people,n he said, saying the dispensary has about 1,000 medical
marijuana card-holding regular customers. As the OLCC crafts recre-
ational marijuana rules over thenextyear plus,the owners of medical marijuana dispensaries in Bend will have time to
consider whether to also enter the recreational market.
Jeremy Kwit, owner of
Marijuana
drinks and lotions will also
be allowed. The overall posContinued from A1 session limit is higher than in nI am in th e best mood Colorado and Washington. that I've been in in months," Because of the delay for said Jason Levin, the Pacific creating the new rules, adGreen Party candidate who ministering licenses and finished third in the Oregon opening retail shops, the governor's race and who only place to get pot legally owns a marijuana-infused starting July 1 is from plants products business for medi- at home or as gifts from cal cardholders. "It's going to friends who grow. be huge." The new law does not allow The liquor commission for interstate commerce or will work with attorneys at trafficking of legal marijuana. the state Department of Jus- It will remain illegal to transtice to create the rules in the port pot across state lines, new recreational industry even over the Columbia River, approved by 55.7 percent where Washington sells taxed of voters on Tuesday. The marijuana products in dispenrules will allow for a bigger saries across the state. market for owners such as Employers can also decide Levin, whose Portland busi- to continue enforcing drugness, Bald Brothers, sells tri- free policies under the new ple-filtered marijuana butter law. for cooking, along with other Pot at the federal level reproducts. mains an illegal drug in the Starting July 1, 2015, any class with heroin, opium and adult 21 and older in Oregon psychedelic mushrooms. can possess an ounce, or In the face of two states about 56 half-gram joints, of h aving legalized pot b y pot in public and 8 ounces in 2013, the U.S. Department their homes, where they can of Justicereleased a memo also grow up to four plants. aimed at clearing the air of Possession of up to 72 ounces questions about whether the of infused products such as Drug Enforcement Adminis-
The new law does not allow for interstate commerce or trafficking of legal marijuana. It will remain illegal to transport pot across state lines, even over the Columbia River, where Washington sells taxed marjiuana products in dispensaries across the state. Employers can also decide to continue enforcing drug-free policies under the newlaw. tration would interfere with new marijuana businesses.
there.
Washington initially had The memo, drafted Aug. trouble with legal supply and 29 last year by Deputy U.S. demand, which was a proA ttorney G e n eral J a m e s cess Smith said leveled out Cole, laid out guidelines the and was inevitable. states needed to follow when He said the Washington drafting rules for the new liquor board director has ofmarketplace. fered to help Oregon's board If those rules are followed, as it creates the new road the f e d era l go v e r nment map here. Oregon officials would stay out of the way, have made it clear there are and that's likely to be the still outstanding questions, case in Oregon and Alaska. and they're not ready to talk wWe had to look at how we about specifics. were going to create a sysThe new law already faces tem that was going to meet some potential roadblocks, the market need without cre- as it will likely make its way
Bloom Well on Division Street, said he's already sure he wants
Campaign organizers said
to expand and is enthusiastic about eventually adding recre-
they didn't believe the sales
taxes would be upheld if challenged in court.
ational pot users as customers.
"Cannabis is a very special plant," he said.
uI don't think the local tax
measures will survive, and Measure 91 does not create a sales tax,n Peter Zuckerman,
Like Good L eaf s
spokesman of the Yes on 91 campaign, said last month. The Oregon Department of Justice, which is acting legal counsel for the OLCC, i sn't c ommenting o n
questions i t ' s
said he plans to stick with ca-
tering to medical marijuana users. He saidtheproducts soldto medical marijuana users will
the
re c eiving
from the agencies that may
likely be different than what
be affected by marijuana legalization.
will eventually be available for
"Implementation of recre-
ical marijuana often having less tetrahydrocannabinol, or (THC), the chemical that produces a high. He said he's bracing for a boom of people looking to sell
recreational users, with med-
ational marijuana in Oregon will have an emphasis on bringing Oregon's marijuana industry into a regulated and licensed marketplace," Liquor Commission director Steven Marks said in a statement.
recreational marijuana, think-
ing it's a way to make money.
uYou will see an influx be-
Oregon's legislative reve nue o f f ice
e s t imates i t
causepeoplebelievethehype," he said. Nick Harsell, owner of High Grade Organics on Southeast
may collect as much as $20 million in annual revenue from marijuana sales,
which will be given to police, out Oregon moved to create schools and substance abuse an Smith, spokesman for the pre-emptive sales taxes on treatment. Washington liquor board, recreational a n d me d i cal — Reporter: 406-589-4347, which regulates marijuana marijuana. tandersonibendbulletin.com ating too much that it would be" sold out of state, said Bri-
o w ner
Fehrs, Ron Koch, the co-owner of Cannabend on N. U.S. Highway 97, said he got into the business to help people. He
to court after cities through-
Davis, said he also plans to stay
focused on medical marijuana and not expand into recreational pot.
"It is just a different environment," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbuiletin.com
Issues Continued from A1 The end of a divided Con-
gress won't open the gate for every Republican-backed bill to become law. Senate Demo-
lawyer at Miller 8 Chevalier in Washington. Resolving where the nation
ers such as Boston Scientific
Corp. and St. Jude Medical Inc. of a 2.3 percent tax on
sends nuclear waste maybe an their products that is part of issue that brings Democrats the Patient Protection and and Republicans together after
Obama and Harry Reid, the
Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp. said he would look for opporsaid further changes could un- tunities to sidestep Congress in dermine innovation needed to pursuing his agenda. boost the economy. Democrats have the option Congress could move to to thwart the Republicans.
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"The filibuster will still be Affordable Care Act, known rewrite a two-decade old teleas Obamacare. Some device c ommunications law t h a t used by the minority to slow
crats retain the power to slow Nevada senator and until Jan- companies say they have cut bills and Obama keeps the uary majority leader, blocked jobs or research spending to veto pen he's used twice. funding for t h e p r oposed offset the cost of the tax. HosRepublicans also c ould nuclear waste site at Yucca pitals meanwhile are seeking wield powers from the Con- Mountain in Nevada. elimination of a new Medicare gressional Review Act, which Solutions such as promoting cost-controlboard created by lets lawmakers vote to dis- on-site storage or establishing the law. approve major rules before regional waste sites may now Obama could veto either implementation. A simple ma- be possible, said Colin Hayes, item. Repeal of the law r ejority is required, though Dem- a lobbyist at McBee Strate- mains impossible as long as ocratObama could veto any gic and former Senate energy Obama is in office. resolution. committee Republican aide. Here is a review ofsome topThat would be a boon for nu- Internet security ics that couldbe takenupbythe clear producers such as ChicaCompanies could win legal Republican-controlled 1 1 4th go-based Exelon Corp. protections for sharing inforCongress that convenes Jan. 6: Obama could also find com- mation about hacking threats mon ground with Republicans in a bill awaiting final approvFinancial from the Midwest who support al. Privacy advocates say the The Consumer Financial extending wind energy tax plan could help the National Protection Bureau, created credits, said Michael Webber, Security Agency sweep up over the protest of Republicans deputy director of Energy In- information about i n nocent and banks in 2010, might be- stitute at the University of Tex- Americans. come atargetasSen.Richard as at Austin. Supporters of the bill say Shelby takes over the Banking Republicans probably will barriers to sharing informaCommittee. The Alabama Re- fall short of far-reaching goals tion need to be eliminated so publican is likely to join House such as blocking emissions companies can prevent data Financial Services Committee limits on power plants pro- breaches such as those that hit Chairman Jeb Hensarling in posed by the Environmental JPMorgan, Home Depot Inc. seeking to limit the agency's Protection Agency. While and Target Corp. power to act independently of Congress may also approve The bill has support in both Congress, industry lobbyists legislation to approve Key- parties and may be offered sald. stone XL pipeline, Republicans again in the new Congress if it JPMorgan Chase, Bank of probably won't have the votes fails in coming weeks. America and Wall Street firms to overcome a p r esidential Legislators are split on the will find the new Congress veto. need for new patent laws. Sen. less likely to pursue penalties S ome lobbyists say a n Orrin Hatch, a Utah Republitied to the financial crisis that agreement on Keystone could can and prominent voice on peaked in 2008. Democratic be part of a broader legislative patent issues, has said legislaSen. Carl Levin of Michigan, a compromise. tion would be a top priority. In bankers' scourge as chairman Ending limits on U.S. crude the House, Judiciary Commitof an investigations subcom- oil exports in place since the tee Chairman Robert Goodmittee, is retiring. It isn't clear 1970s, a step sought by Exx- latte of Virginia also has promwho will take over. on Mobil a n d C o n tinental ised to move on legislation. Republicans and Democrats Resources, may get an airing Congress passed a sweepdisagree on fundamental ques- as Alaska Republican Lisa ing patent law in 2011 and tions such as whether a new Murkowski, who b acks ex- courts have ruled against comtax code should raise more ports, takes over the Senate panies whose sole business money for the federal govern- Energy and Natural Resources is to buy up patents and try to ment. They also must resolve Committee. collect royalties on them. which tax breaks should surGoogle has been pushing for Obamacare vive. It's difficult to see a tax changes it contends will curb revamp becominglaw before R epublicans may try t o abusive litigation practices. A 2017,said Marc Gerson, a tax relieve medical-device mak- group whose members include
takes little account of the
things down. The president
Internet.
will threaten vetoes," James
Verizon Communications Inc. and AT&T have said they welcome congressional efforts
to amend communications law that had its last overhaul
your new denture
Thurber, aprofessoratAmerican University in Washington, said in an interview. oIt will
be continued deadlock, agony and angst."
uI drink a lot of gin when I in 1996. Updating the law is a priority of Rep. Greg Walden, write about it,n Thurber said. the Oregon Republicanwho — With assistance from Chris leads the communications subStrohm, Larry Liebert, Jim committee. The panel is ready Snyder, Mark Dral'em, Richard to begin drafting legislation, Rubin, Cheyenne Hopkins, Alex Walden said in an emailed Wayne,Jesse Hamilton and statement.
Free pipeinstallation estimates
Susan Decker in Washington.
Congress Changes in committee lead-
ership also might change the congressional agenda. Sen. James Inhofe, an Okla-
homa Republican who has questioned the science behind climate change, probably will become chairman of the Environment and Public Works panel. He'd replace Sen. Barbara Boxer, a California Democratwith a90percentapproval rating from the League of Conservation Voters. The EPA's scientific support for sweeping greenhouse gas emissions rules has been challenged by Inhofe in the past.
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uWe do have an obligation
to work together on issues where we can agree," Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell
of Kentucky, in line to become majority leader, said after winning re-election. "Just because we have a two-party system
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311 SW CENTURYDR.,BEND • 541489-6234 • Open Daily 9-6
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Women isappointe y e ection gains By Sheryi Gay Stolberg
more than 100 women will
New Yorh Times News Service
serve in Congress for the first
WASHINGTON — When
time in history. But women in
Senator Jeanne Shaheen, both parties say the growth is a New H a mpshire Demo- incremental and the numbers crat, beat Scott Brown to win are disappointing. re-election on Tuesday, her A rundown: Of 15 women supporters saw history be- running for the Senate, just ing made — although not by four won. There are now 20 feShaheen. male senators. Nextyear, there "Scott Brown made femi- will still be 20, unless Sen. nist history,"crowed an email Mary Landrieu, D-La., surfrom Emily's List, the political vives a difficult runoff, which action committee, noting that would bring the number to 21. Brown also lost to Elizabeth In the House, there are Warren in 2012. As Stepha- currently 79 female voting nie Schriock, the committee's members. Depending on the president,said Wednesday: outcome ofseveral races that "He lost two Senate races in were still too close to call, that two states against two Dem- number will range from 81 to ocratic women. That's pretty 85 next year, according to a awesome." The Shaheen victory was a
tally by the Center for Amer-
ican Women and Politics at rare bright spot for Democrat- Rutgers University. ic women in a mostly gloomy As for femalegovernors, year. While Republican wom- there are currently five. The en fared somewhat bettere lection Tuesday di d n o t in Iowa, Joni Ernst rode her change that. One Republican biography as a pig-castrating woman, Gov. Jan Brewer of "farm girl" into the Senate, and Arizona, is retiring. Her deMia Love of Utah became the parture will be offset by the first black female Republican victory of a Democratic womelected to the House — 2014 an, Gina Raimondo, who won was hardly the year of the the governorship in Rhode woman. Island. "Women are not making True, the election did set a record of sorts: Next year, dramatic gains in elective of-
fice, certainly at the highest gender-neutral." level," said Olympia Snowe, Democrats have historically the Republican former senator outpacedRepublicans in nomfrom Maine, where another fe- inating women for high office, male Republican, Sen. Susan and this yeartwice as many feCollins, easily won re-election male Democrats as female ReTuesday. "We are making publicans ran in House, Sensome strides, but obviously not ate and governors' races. So giant ones." when Democrats have a bad Democratic women had an year,female candidates have a especially difficult night, with bad year, too. the defeat of Sen. Kay Hagan One Democratic strategist, of North Carolina, as well as Mary Anne Marsh, said fetwo of the party's brightest male candidates often had a Senate prospects, Alison Lun- harder time raisingmoney bedergan Grimes of Kentucky cause their networks were not and Michelle Nunn of Georgia. as extensive as those of men. Grimes'loss had been exAnother Democratic stratepected, but Nunn had been gist, Celinda Lake, said being running a tight race with Da- a woman couldgive a candivid Perdue, a Republican. Yet date an edge in Democratic she lost by 8 points — an out- primaries, which are typically come that Sen. Kirsten Gilli- dominated by female voters, brand, D-NY., who raised $2.6 because "women candidates million to elect Democratic get the attention of women votwomen this year, attributed ers." But Republican women, to a Republican wave that she said, often have a tough washed away Democratic men time surviving their primary and women with equal fury. races because they tend to be "Of course, I was disap- more moderate than the conpointed that some of my col- servative Republican primary leagues didn't win," said Gil- electorate. librand, whose recent book, Ernst, who on Tuesday be"Off the Sidelines," encourages came the first woman in Iowa women to get more involved to win election to Congress, is in politics. "But I think we see one exception. Love of Utah is that wave elections really are another.
Gitmo
Hagel's apparent decision to not only greatly valued by the secretary but heavily relied pull back from swiftly repatriupon." Continued from A1 ating the Afghans came amid The notice was supposed It is unusual for a Cabinet turbulence prompted by an to be given within a week af- secretary t o in d ependently inaccurate Fox News report ter the State Department ob- reconsider a decision reached about former Guantanamo detained an unspecified security at a principals' committee tainees fighting in Syria. assurance from the Afghan meeting. Bu t G u a ntanamo Specifically, Fox News regovernment. That was com- transfers are an unusual type ported last Thursday that pleted three weeks ago, the of- of policydecision because of "as many as 20 to 30 former ficials said, but Hagel has still a law requiring that the sec- Guantanamo Bay detainees not sent the notice. retaryof defense notify law- released within the last two Although th e P entagon m akers at least30daysbefore to three years are suspected signed off on the Afghans' any transfer that he has deter- by intelligence and Defense repatriation as part of a 2009 mined that it would be in the officials of having joined forcinteragency task force, offi- national interest. es with the Islamic State and cials familiar with the delibIn an agreement with the other militant groups inside erations said Hagel had de- Kuwaiti government, Odah, Syria." cided to reassess the timing whose name i s s o metimes In fact, since January 2011, after Gen. John Campbell, spelled Fouzi al Awda, will a total of 22 detainees had left the top military leader in Aflive in custody there as part of the prison, of whom no more ghanistan, and Gen. Martin a yearlong rehabilitation pro- than two — perhaps noneDempsey, the chairman of gram, officials said. aresuspected or confirmed of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, exHe was the first detainee "re-engagement" worldwide, pressed concerns that they of anytype to be transferred according toreports issued might attack U.S. troops. since May, when the Obama by the Office of the Director The officials also said Ha- administration s e n t five of National Intelligence. The gel was still considering the high-level Taliban prisoners most recent such report was proposed Afghan transfers. — who were not recommend- disclosed in September; an A spokesman for Hagel, Rear ed for release — to Qatar in a official said there had been Adm. John Kirby, declined prisoner swap for Sgt. Bowe no Syria-related change to its to s pecifically c o mment Bergdahl, the only U.S. pris- numbers since. about the Afghans. But he oner of war from the Afghan Fox News later altered its described the department's War. Angering lawmakers, report, without noting that it deliberations about w h eth- Hagel did not provide 30 days' was changed, so that it instead er the security risk has been notice to Congress for that reads "some of whom were mitigated as including "in- swap; the administration said released within the last three puts from commanders in the any delay could have endan- years." But its original version field, whose perspectives are gered Bergdahl's life. had already set off anger in
• g
•
g
GMOs
ers and food producers with costly new compliance regu-
Continued from A1
lations and red tape," said Pat a b out McCormick, spokesman for $20 million in Oregon, while the No on 92 Coalition. The the campaign to pass Mea- coalition put out several TV Opponents r aised
sure 92 surpassed $7.5 million in donations. Over the past two years,
ads claiming farmers would be negatively affected if the measure passed.
The measure would have Washington state t u rned required packaging that indown similar measures. In cluded the words "Produced both cases, th e m e asures With G e netic E n gineerwere defeated by a slim ing" or "Partially Produced margin,about 2 percentage With Genetic Engineering." points. Though the labels were not a Advocates of GMO labeling warning, opponents said they said they felt like they made feared the words would spook some progress. consumers. "This is a social movement A majority of voters in eight that's gaining power as peo- of Oregon's 36 counties faple become more aware of vored the mandate. how their food is produced," Oregon votersalso defeated said George Kimbrell, a se- a labeling measure in 2002, nior attorney at the Center for when GMO labeling was less Food Safety. "So there's great on the public r adar. Back v oters i n
Ca l i f ornia a n d
success there regardless of the outcome of the measure."
then, the measure lost by a
landslide, 70 to 30 percent.
The measure was popu-
The Vermont Legislature
lar in the cities: 62 percent of voters in Portland's Mult-
approved a labeling bill that's set to take effect in 2016.
nomah County supported it, More than 60 other counalong with 57 percent in Lane, tries have GMO labeling laws, which includes Eugene, and including the entire European 55 percent in Jackson, home Union. to Medford. Earlier this year, voters in But the measure was over- two rural Oregon counties whelmingly opposed in much approved bans on genetically of rural Oregon. engineered crops, providing "Voters ... understood that evidence that the issue has Measure 92 would have bur- gained traction outside liberal dened our state's family farm-
Congress.
Portland.
a year on a facility that harms training and lack of a leader-
Rep. H o w ar d Mc K e on, our standing in t h e w o rld, ship position in al-Qaida" as R-Calif., the chairman of the damages our r elationships well as his family support and House Armed Services Com- with key allies and emboldens Kuwaiti security measures. "The board found the demittee, and Sen. Kelly Ayotte, violent extremists." R-N.H., released letters to the Since 2009, the executive tainee's statements to be credadministration last Thursday branch has used a more strin- ible regarding his commitcalling for a moratorium on gent process of individual- ment not to support extremist
transfers, citing "public reports" and "a public report to-
ized review before releasing
day" about former Guantana-
of formerdetainees released during the Bush administra-
mo detainees joining the Islamic State. "The U.S. government must not release terrorist detainees at the same time we have committed U.S. service members to fight ISIL," McKeon wrote,
using an alternate acronym for the Islamic State. "To continue to do so just as we have
groups or other groups that promote violence, and noted the positive changes in the de-
detainees. About 19 percent
tainee's behavior while in detention," it said.
tion have been deemed con-
firmed recidivists, compared His departure leaves 148 with 6.8 percent of those prisoners, of whom 79 are recommended fortransfer.
released under the Obama administration.
Odah, the Kuwaiti released Wednesday, was a plaintiff in a case that helped establish that courts have jurisdic-
TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980
had to open a new front in the tion to hear habeas corpus war on terror is unthinkable." lawsuits filed by GuantanaThe Islamic State has used mo detainees. But in 2009, a Guantanamo forpropaganda judge upheld Odah's wartime purposes, including forcing detention. captured journalists to wear In July, the Periodic Review orange prison garb, similar Board, which began operating to that of detainees, as it beheaded them. Patrick Ventrell,
last fall, determined that his
detention was no longer necessary, citing his "low level of
a National Security Council spokesman, said keeping the prison open was itself a risk. "Guantanamo poses pro-
•3
•
found risks to our national se-
curity and should be closed," Ventrell said. "The American people should not be spending hundreds of millions of dollars
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
TODAY'S READ: ADVENTURERSCLUB OF LOSANGELES
a ea venturers'tou newe a en e: women • Members ofan L.A.-basedgroup must decidewhether to allow in women By John Rogers The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Some of them have hiked across a hundred or more countries.
s
s
o
Others have dived deep into the oceans off every continent.
One member of the Adventurers Club of Los Angeles has
ABOVE: AdventurersClub ofLos Angeles member Jay Foonberg
tells a story about a past experience in LosAngeles. BELOW:
walked on the moon, while an-
other rode a crashed airplane to the ground and walked away from the wreckage. Still, for some members of
I
The president of the club, Martin Bloom, walks around the main meeting room, which features, among other stuffed animals, a
o s'
polar bear.
this venerable institution that has been meeting once a week
since 1921, their biggest challenge may lie ahead: Deciding whether to admit women to
Photos by Chris Carlson 1The Associated Press
Adventurers Club of LosAngeles members listen as attendees tell stories about past achievements
what has always been a "gen- in Los Angeles. For members of this venerable institution that has been meeting once a week since tleman-only" club. 1921, their biggest challenge may be deciding whether to admit women to what has always been a One member angrily re- "gentleman-only" club. signed after past president Marc Weitz suggested the idea. Initially, the club's board who did so recently was NanOnly men who can prove off every continent, including of directors unanimously sup- cy Miller, a registered nurse theiradventures have "taken Antarctica, where the water ported him, Weitz says, but as who has walked on all seven them off the beaten path" are temperature was 29 degrees things grew more acrimoni- continents, climbed Africa's considered by the club, whose and the only thing that kept ous, three board members had highest peak and stood on members vote on who gets in. it from freezing was the salt second thoughts. both the North an d S outh Members past and present content. "It's a fun hobby," he says T he c o ntroversy h a s Poles. have climbed the world's tall"Some of our women guests est mountains, walked across modestly. brought a rare moment of discord to a group of ah-shucks have come in with credentials entire countries, circumnavAlthough most of the guys kind of guys who quietly go so good that they've made our igated the globe, even won a are regular folk, the club has out and do amazing things, members cringe," past pres- Medal of Honor for bravery in counted its share of celebrithen meet just as quietly on ident Bob Silver says with a combat. ties. Buzz Aldrin, the second "Everybody in this room person to walk on the moon, Thursday nights to shoot the smile. Still, this 50-year membreeze over a meat-and-po- ber is leaning toward voting has done something fantastic," recently joined. "Titanic" ditatoes dinner in a clubhouse no. The group's full voting says member Jay Foonberg. rector James Cameron, who hidden above a drugstore in a membership, 113 men, will "They just don't think it's fan- piloted a small submarine to modest LA neighborhood. have the final say when bal- tastic. They just think it's fun." the deepest point on Earth, is "It's been quite divisive," lots are counted tonight. Foonberg has run mara- also a member. acknowledges board memFor one thing, Silver and thons on every continent, alThe club is a museum to ber Kevin Lee, choosing his other members say, women though now in his 70s he ad- a dventure, with d o zens of words carefully. "Some of the already can join the Explorers mits he's slowing down some. m ounted an d s t uffed a n i folks opposed think it would Club, an international group. These days, he's running mals from all over the world. half-marathons in every state. There's an autographed flight hurt the club's camaraderie. The Adventurers Club of LA Others say if we let women in has always been just for men, Silver, another world trav- helmet from Gen. Jimmy Doothey should be as qualified as ever since its founder, Capt. eler, was a pioneer in the de- little, the club member whose men." Jack Roulac, took seriously velopment of early surfboards Doolittle's R a iders a t t a ck Not that m ost m e mbers a toast to "gentlemen adven- and has been to scores of on Japan helped change the don't think women are as turers" that was raised at a countries. He was tossed in jail courseofWorl dWar II. qualified. They sometimes 1912 gathering in New York once in India for sneaking in In the dining room is the attend as guests and discuss hosted by President Theodore disguised as a soccer player. kayak another member, John their own adventures. One Roosevelt. Lee has dived in the oceans Goddard, took 4,258 miles
I
"It's been quite divisive. Some of the folks opposed think it would hurt the club's
camaraderie. Others say if we let women in they should be as qualified as men." — Kevin Lee, member of the Adventurers Club of Los Angeles
her adventures, and says she'd he became the first person to join in a minute. "I get them and I think they complete such a journey in 1951. get me," she says, adding adWeitz says he has a list of venturers, male o r f e m ale, women he'd like to bring in, make up a special breed. and one of them is Andrea But if today's vote is no, she Donnellan, a NASA geophys- will harbor no ill will. "It is kind of surprising icist whose study of earthquakes has taken her to Mon- in this day and age, but I'm down the Nile River when
golia, Bolivia and the Antarc-
$ j • J
' ' i
OK with it," she says of the
tic. She's been a frequent guest no-women rule. "I like the peoand is often asked to speak of ple, regardless."
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OPENEVERVDAY, I —I
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
Gustafson case gets heated at the finish
BEND CITY COUNCIL
as orce o c evaca ionren s By Tyler Leeds
testimony this summer and
The Bulletin
fall characterized a number of west side residential neighborhoods as overrun by loud vacationers. Rental owners have also gotten involved, suggesting the problem has been blown out of proportion and can be traced to a
Forty-four Bendites applied to be on a task force that will steer the city's initial
approach to the regulation of By Clnire Withycombe
vacation rentals, according
The Bulletin
to a presentation to the City Council on Wednesday night.
In closing arguments on Wednesday, defense attor-
ney John Kolego described the allegations of sexual
The issue of how to regulate
small number of delinquent
rentals hasbecome afocus for properties. the city since a wave of public According to Assistant City
Manager Jon Skidmore's presentation, the applicants for
vacation home rental owners,
the task force represent both
average citizens who are
sides of the argument. "We're going to take a got a really good variety of folks," Skidmore said. "We
interested. It's a robust group of folks who can help us talk through this." The Bend Planning Commission will review the
final say on who is appointed to the task force. The panel will also include one representative each from the Planning Commission, Old Bend Neighborhood Association, River West Neighborhood Association, Bend Chamber of
have vacation home rental
applicantsand present a rec-
Commerce, Bend Economic
owners, concerned neighbors, somebody from a national
ommendation for eight to 10 of them to the City Council on
Development Advisory Board
organization that represents
Nov. 19, which will have the
deep dive into this, and we
folks from lodging and just
and Visit Bend.
SeeRentals/B2
abuse against a former Bend
gymnastics coach as part of a witch hunt" fomentedby "social contagion." Kolego requested dispassionate scrutiny of the evidence presented on the
~~ MIDTERM ELECTIONS
final day of the five-day bench trial
in Deschutes County Circuit Court
Gustafson of Richard Gustafson. However, the arguments by both sides were delivered with intensity. Gustafson, 49, the former
co-owner of Acrovision Sports Center in Bend. was
arrested Jan. 8 on suspicion of abusingtwo girls at a New Year's Eve sleepover at
Acrovision. He was released from custodythat month after postingbail, according
BENDCITY COUNCIL: Position 6
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
• Ron Boozell
8Thomas (Tom) Brown 2 , 994 49.8%
2,072 7.9%
CtfCasey Roats
months from children who
had attended earlier holiday sleepovers at the gym. In total, five alleged victims, each of whomwas female
• Richard Robertson
session of cocaine.
Three positions:
10,921 41.9%
BEND CITY COUNCIL:Position 7 gBarb Campbell
12,955 51.5%
• Scott Ramsay
2,993 49.8%
MADRAS CITYCOUNCIL
1,346 5.2%
• Lisa Seales
12,097 48.1%
gRichard Ladeby
535 21.6%
gJim Leach
749 30.3%
gBill Montgomery
621 25.1%
• Clifford Rhodes
5 19
21%
By Scott Hammers
er Barb Campbell, trailing by 858 votes. Two members of the Bend In the closest of the City Council lost their seats council races, the gap bein Tuesday's election, while tween Casey Roats and newcomer Casey Roats eked second-place candidate Lisa out a victory in a four-way Seales narrowed slightly race, according to updated overnight, to 717 votes as of 2 returns Wednesday. p.m. Wednesday, but too few The Bulletin
Nathan Boddie widened
alter the outcome, according
and Councilor Scott Ramsay
Clerk's Office.
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®Mensnre 92:Requires food manufacturers, retailers to label genetically engineered foods assuch. Yes:712,508 (49.7%)• No: 722,278 (50.3%)
While Republicans across the country did well in Tuesday's election, it was Democrats who increased their influence in the OregonLegislature. Republican incumbent Sen.Betsy Close, R-Albany, lost her seat to Democratic challenger SaraGelser in SenateDistrict 8. House District 20, an openseat that previously belonged to Republicans, waswon by Democrat Paul Evans. Senate District15, which includes Hillsboro and Forest Grove, wasstill too close to call between Republican incumbent Sen. BruceStarr and Democratic challenger Chuck Riley. wON GAIN
OREGON HOUSE60SEATS
~
Democrats: 35,Republicans:25
OREGON SENATE30 SEATS
• p 1li
~
Un decided
District 20
By Ted Shorack
Oemocrats:17,Republicans:12, t undecided District 8 District 15
happened in New York,
The Bulletin
which saw its Senate go to
Democrats bucked the
in Washington state, where
and added to their lead in the
officials were still counting ballots but early results
Oregon House and Senate, sending a loud message is a solid blue state. In an election in which
thisweek
Deschutes County commissioners have approved the company's application torezone theland forsurface mining three times
since 2004. Each of the decisions were appealedby nearby landowners to the
Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals and remanded back to the county.
See Mining /B6
In the second midterm elections of the Obamapresidency, Republicans were assured of a gain of sevenSenate seats. They bid for another in Alaska, wherechallenger Dan Sullivan led incumbent Mark Begich. Also uncalled was a race in Virginia, where Democratic Sen. MarkWarner faced EdGilespie. In Louisiana, Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu heads into aDec. 6 runoff as a clear underdog, struggling for another six-year term against a wave of conservatism. In the House ofRepresentatives, Republicans werewithin hailing distance of their largest majority since World War II — 246seats in1946, when Harry Trumansat in theWhite House. Republicans also appear on their way to significant gains in state legislatures. On these maps, adarker color indicates a Senate or Houseseat that switched parties. KEY:Whowon races
%%
RH
RU H
H
%
O
that were on the ballot Democrat Republican Independent sent to runoff Too close tocall Not up for election
U.S. HOUSE
U.S. SENATE OK S.C.
MA
Rl
DE
4i
Nti Speneer Wel)e'Rd.
Proposeti 4-R Epnipment basalt mine Greg Cross /The Bulletin
focus of innovative campaign strategies on a couple big issues" in 2016, said Len Bergstein, a longtime political insider in Oregon. See Salem /B5
majority's lead. That's what
D.C.: HowMerkleysurvived a Republicanwaveelection By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — Even
as a string of victories on Election Day gave Republicans enough seats to regain control of the Senate, Jeff Merkley's double-digit win in Oregonwas ararebright spot for Democrats. As one of eight first-term
The Associated Press photos
U.S.Sen. JeffM erkley,above,
celebrates his re-election, while Monica Wehby, below, concedes tn Portland on
Tuesday. Merkley won by18 percentage points.
of victory was the largest of
Dry River Canyon
Horse ,, Ridge
country, but it will be the
by Republican challengers, Oregon actually tilted more
Democrats defendingtheir seats Tuesday, Merkley was seen by many as vulnerable during the midterm election cycle. But his 18-point margin
Badlands Wilderness To Are a Bear Creek Bend Buttes
ocrats went the other way.
governors were unseated
Midterms generally shed seats from the incumbent
lnmaps:Balanceof power inCongress
would likely stay with Republicans. But Oregon Dem"Not only did Oregon differentiate itself from what's going on in the rest of the
to the left.
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
showed the state Senate
jority in the U.S. Senate and several Democratic
Democrats lost their ma-
Source: Oregon Secretary of State
Republicans. It happened
national Republican trend
ABend-based construction company will try for a fourth time to establish abasaltrockmine on 385
kmoSa
Campbell
By Taylor W.Anderson
across the country that this
acres near Millican.
Roats
Salem:Racesbuckthetrend as the Legislaturegets bluer
The Bulletin
4-R Equipment LLC has sought final approval for mining operations on its land since 2004, buthas run into opposition from neighboringlandowners. Now, the Deschutes County Commission will take up the company's application again and hold a public hearing Wednesday. The board discussedthe hearing and past applications during a work session
SeeLocal/B5
Based on uncertified election results
Boddie
Oregon getsa little more IIlue
Company making 4th effort
to the Deschutes County
Bend'snew city councilors
SeeGustafson/B2
MINING
votes remain uncounted to
his lead over Councilor Mark Capell to 2,556 votes, fell further behind challeng-
and age 8-10 at the time, re-
portedbeing abusedby Gustafson. He faces 11counts of first -degree sexualabuse, 22 charges of encouraging child sexual abuse andpos-
C)Mae Huston
11,638 44.6%
to Bulletin archives.
More allegations of abuse emerged in subsequent
Local: Closeracesin Bend, and the closest inJefferson
the five who won re-election, w hile three— Sens.M ark Begich of Alaska, Mark Udall of Colorado and Kay Hagan of North Carolina — were ousted.
BALANCE OFPOWER HOUSE (out of 435)
Two independents caucus with Democrats
SENATE (out of 100)
SeeMerkley/B6 13
Majority
"OregOn iSa State Where the natiOnal RePubliCan COnVerSatian SOundS alien."
Majority
The Associated Press
— Jim Moore, Pacific University
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
E VENT
ENDA R I
TODAY BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. KNOW EXPLORING:MOUNT HOOD, EXPLORING OREGON'SPERILOUSPEAK: Learn about the millions drawn to climb it every year; free; noon; La PinePublic Library, 16425 First St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/lapine or 541-312-1090. "NATIONALTHEATRE LIVE:OF MICEAND MEN": Featuring James Franco, Chris O'Dowd, Leighton Meester and Jim Norton in the Broadway production of the classic novella; $18; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. AN EVENING OFEMPOWERMENT: A fundraiser featuring empowering speakers and live music to benefit Kids in the Game; $25, $15 for students age16 and younger; 7-9:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. eveningofempowerment.com, kenstreater@gmail.com or 541-325-2027. HANZARAKI:The Celtic-inspired singer and flute player performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "REEFERMADNESS, THE MUSICAL":A m usicalcomedy based on the1936 film of the samenamethat takes a look at kids and drug use; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626.
BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. FIRST FRIDAYGALLERYWALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and theOld Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. "PROJECTWILD THING": Screening of the film about one man's determination to get kids out into nature, launch of Children's Forest of Central Oregon; $5; 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. com, katie@childrensforestco.org or 541-383-5592. "THESEGROUNDS":Learn aboutcoffee farms and coffee beans' journey to the shop; free; 6-9 p.m.; Backporch Coffee Roasters, 70 SWCentury Drive, Suite 130, Bend; www.backporchcoffeeroasters.com, backporchcoffeeroasters©gmail.com or 541-323-3224. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: R.GregoryNokesdiscusses "Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the OregonTerritory," Jane Kirkpatrick discusses "A Light in the Wilderness" and Rick Steber discusses"Red White Black: ATrue Story of Race and Rodeo"; free admission; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jon Abernathy will speak
I I ,
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Tuesday November, 11th
All Yeterans receive an ADDITIONAL $200 OFF
about his book"Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon"; 6:30 p.m.; DesChutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.deschuteshistory.org or 541-389-1813. "A TOMB WITH AVIEW": A dark comedic play about a family that inherits a large fortune; $5; 7 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; www.bend. k12.or.us or 541-355-4401. SLEDFILM 2014:A screening of snowmobile films, different each night; SOLDOUT;7p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "REEFERMADNESS, THEMUSICAL": A musical comedy based on the1936 film of the samenamethat takes a look at kids and drug use; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "THE ROCKET":Ascreening of the 2013 film about a boy who enters the dangerous Rocket Festival; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. WHR MOTORSPORTS — MONSTERTRUCK FALL NATIONALS: Featuring monster truck competitions and FMX Stunt Riders; $10-$15 plusfees inadvance, $12-$17at thedoor;7:30p.m.,doorsopenat6 p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair & ExpoCenter,3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.j.mp/MonsterTruck2014 or541-548-2711.
One DayOnly
.Ik ejI
Submitted photo
Jon Abernathy will talk about his book, "Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon," at 6:30 p.m. Friday at Des Chutes Historical
Museum.
FRIDAY
I I
November 11th, 2014
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rentals, a limit on their densi- During that same time, the ty in certain neighborhoods city also received ll code enContinued from B1 and possible exclusion from forcement complaints related W hen S k i dmore a s k ed certain zone classifications. to rentals. C ity Council members i f S kidmore said t h e t a s k In other business, the City they wanted the task force force's first meeting will be Council also approved a list to approach its job as an ex- Nov. 20 and earlier stated the of projects to be funded from ercise in weighing livability city is scheduled to act on a the affordable housing fee. Inand tourism, Councilor Vic- policy recommendation by cluded on the list is a $90,000 tor Chudowsky offered a dif- March. This time frame, he rehab of the Bethlehem Inn ferent perspective, saying, acknowledged at the meeting, and $1.1 million that will be "The issue is protecting liv- has given residents the chance used by Housing Works, Cenability from tourism," which to apply for a vacation rental tral Oregon's housing authorearned nods from the other permit before any changes ity, to develop 28 affordable councilors. are made. units at a property on Daggett The task force will look at Since Sept. 17, Skidmore Lane. a range of issues, Skidmore said, the city has received 52 — Reporter: 541-633-2160, said, including inspections of applications for new rentals. tleeds@bendbulfetin.com
Gustafson
All of the children also took the stand in the trial. The Bulletin
earlier. "(The victims are) not just agreeing to everything,"
Continued from B1 does not identify victims of alRelatives of Gustafson and leged sexual abuse. of the children who accused Kolego said there was a lack him congregated Wednesday of DNA evidence to prove the for the close of the trial of the sexual abuse and cocaine posman who coached thousands session charges, statingnotracof students inthe 20years since es of Gustafson's DNA were Acrovision's founding. found on items worn by or beChief Deputy District Attor- longing to the alleged victims. ney Mary Anderson, in a clos- Kolego also took issue with the ing argument that lasted just number and degree of counts over two hours, alleged Gus- brought against Gustafson for tafson crafted a trusted "public the charges of sexual abuse persona" that stood in stark and encouraging sexual abuse. contrast to a d e m onstrated Prosecutor Anderson urged sexual interest in prepubescent the court to review the allegagirls. tions in a broader context, inA nderson r e viewed t h e duding three children's socks amount and content of lewd found in a safe in Gustafson's and sexually explicit photo- office at Acrovision that tested graphs and videos of young positive for semen. girls found on computers beAnderson argued that the longing to Gustafson, which led girls alleging abuse recalled to the 22 charges of encourag- specific details about the inciing child sexual abuse. dents when interviewed, which She also replayed video clips she said d emonstrated the of interviews with the five al- abuse had not been "suggestleged victims and one witness. ed" to them, as Kolego alleged
s he said, when t hey w e re interviewed. "
... The (children's) allega-
tions donot corroborate each
other," said Kolego, asking the court to reviewthose details. At the condusion of Wednes-
'According to a new study by Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the National Institute on Aging, men and women with hearing loss are much more likely to develop Dementia and Alzheimer's disease. People with severe hearing loss, the study reports, were 5 times more likely to develop dementia than those with normal hearing."
HAVE YOU NOTICED A CHANGE IN Y OUR ABILITY TO REMEMBE R ? "The more hearing loss you have the greater the likelihood of developing Alzheimer's disease. Hearing aids could delay or prevent Dementia dy improving the patient's hearing." -2011study by Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine & the National institute on Aging.
ARE YOU... • Hearing but not understanding certain words? • Having difficulty understanding conversation in noisy environments like restaurants? • Frequently asking people to repeat themselves? • HaVing to turn the TV UP lOud in Order
to understand what is being said?
"Hearing loss, left untreated, can lead to serious problems such as loneliness and isolation. -AARPBulletin, May1, 2011
day's proceedings, Deputy
District Attorney Sarah Foreman rebutted doubts raised by
Kolego about the timing of the alleged victims' disclosures, saying that children often delay disclosingabuse because they are scared of notbeingbelieved and may fear getting their abuser in trouble. Rather than targeting an innocent man, the prosecution was targeting "evil," Foreman said. "If this is a witch hunt, this is a poor witch hunt," she said.
Deschutes County Circuit Judge Wells Ashby is sched-
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uled to release a decision at 9 — Reporter.541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com
Shanelle Vega CEO/Board Certified Hearing Instrument Specialist
POLICE LOG
Theft — A theft was reported at12:55 p.m. Nov. 4, in the area of SEFifth Street.
The Bulletin will update items in thePolice Log whensuch a request is received. Anynew information, such as the dismissal of charges oracquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at1:22 p.m. Nov.4,intheareaofU.S.Highway 97andReed Road.
BEND FIRE RUMS Monday 22 —Medical aid calls.
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oIKS
a.m. Friday.
NEWS OF RECORD
Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported and anarrest madeat12:09 p.m. Nov. 4, in the area of NW Second Street.
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
rou e sam u eesco e By Mark Baker Eugene Register-Guard
SPRINGFIELD — Her low-
er left leg has been gone for more than three years now,
l
AROUND THE STATE Attempted abdnotinn —Police in thesouthern city of Rogue River are looking for a manaccused of choking awoman, trying to drag her into a car, then chasing her asshefled screaming in the early morning darkness. TheMedford Mail Tribune reports that Rogue River police Chief KenLewis said 32-year-old Jarrod Garwood is sought for investigation of kidnapping, assault and strangulation allegations. Lewis said Garwood wasjust released from jail when he received word that his 21-year-old girlfriend was with another man.
3 juVenileS arreSted fOr arSOn — Police in Eugenesaid three
but sometimes Paula Free can still feel it.
teenage boys havebeenarrested in an arson fire that damaged a boys' restroom at North EugeneHighSchool. Police spokeswoman Melinda McLaughlin said the fire discoveredWednesdayafternoon at a restroom near thecafeteria damaged the bathroom but no onewas hurt. She said the areaaround the fire was evacuated asfirefighters responded. Policedeterminedthecasewasarson.Thespokeswoman said two15-year-old boys and a14-year-old boy werearrested and taken to juvenile detention for investigation of arson, disorderly conduct and reckless endangering.
It usually happens at night, when she first crawls into
%f
bed. The foot that is no longer there might feel like it's falling asleep; or she might feel a sharp, stabbing pain in the toes or the arch.
s•
"I couldn't even begin to
explain it," the 61-year-old Springfield w oman s a i d. "Your brain is telling you your foot is still there." It's a phenomenon known
Council memberscriticize bridge design —Aproposal for a new bridge across the Willamette River hasdrawn criticism from Salem City Council members. TheStatesmanJournal reports that a team of state transportation officials and local government representatives has chosen adesign based on concrete sections cast off-site and trucked to the construction area for installation. It would be the third bridge across the Willamette in Oregon's capital city. The entire project could cost $350 million to $400 million. But two council members Mondaysaid the design calls for a double structure, not a single, and it appears to lay the groundwork for a freewaycutting through neighborhoods. Theyalso said it's aesthetically unappealing. City officials said the bridge could be reduced to asingle structure, with improved design features.
as phantom pain, acommon
symptom for those who have lost a limb to amputation.
After years of surgeries to try to save it, she made the gut-wrenching decision to have her leg amputated below the knee, seven years after her left foot was crushed in a
May 16, 2004, motorcycle acci-
ESCaped inmate Captured in POrtland — Authorities said an
dent on Territorial Road near Veneta.
For Free, the presence of pain in an absent limb is something she can live with. What she cannot live with,
though, is inaction.
Brian Davies/The Register-Guard via The AssociatedPress
" Here I am, and I a m so
Paula Free shows the new, colorful fabric on her prosthetic leg to fellow amputee Michelle Torkelson charged up," Free said. "I need at Alton Baker Park in Eugene on Oct. 27. Free, 61, crushed her foot in a 2004 motorcycle accident and to keep moving. I try to do a had to have lower left leg amputated ln 2011. Now, she's trying to rally other amputees by becoming a couple hundred situps a day." certified peer advisor for the national Amputee Empowerment Partners.
She is also — along with other amputees she has bonded with including Michelle limbs. They couldn't believe Torkelson, of Springfield, and how much theyhad in comGreg Dauntless, of Eugene,mon: Besides their below-thedoing what was once unthink- knee amputations, both are able: running and walking in hairdressers; their husbands — Rod Free and Lance Hay local 5-kilometer events. Free also is offering help to — work for B lue Star Gas others who have experienced and Northwest Natural Gas, limb loss. She recently be- respectively; and both were came a certif ied peer adviser married on July 4 in Nevada. through a national support (The Frees in Reno in 2003 program called Amputee Em- and Torkelson and Hay in Las powerment Partners. Vegas in 2004). And she is trying to build a Amputee E m p owerment team, along with Torkelson, Partners is an offshoot of the 47, and Dauntless, 64, and a Hanger Clinic, an Austin, few others, in the hopes of Texas-based provider of orreaching out to new amputees thotic and prosthetic solutions and to organize events that
could raise awareness and provide support for those who have lost limbs.
cans have experienced amputations or were born with missing or deformed limbs, and another 28 million are at risk of amputation, according to the Amputee Coalition, a
national advocacy group. The majority of amputa-
land battle of the Civil War at age 18. He was one of the
war's first amputees. He returned to his hometown in Virginia and made an artificial leg from whittled barrel staves, according to the company's history. He then went on to make
what became known as the from vasculardisease caused "Hanger Limb," which he latby diabetes and peripheral ar- er patented, for other amputerial disease, according to the tees of the Confederate States coalition. Army. Most of the rest, about 45 Between 30,000 and 60,000 percent, are the result of in- Civil War soldiers had limbs juries such as the ones Free, amputated, according to variTorkelson and Dauntless sus- ous online reports. The recent tained. Like Free, Torkelson wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and Dauntless were injured in have resulted in more than motorcycle crashes. 1,500 soldiers receiving ampuFree and T orkelson met
covered by his health insurance through his former employer, SierraPine in Springfield, where he was a longtime putated in a B o ise hospital machine operator in the partifollowing his collision with cle-board industry. a truck on state Highway 7 But the injury left him unwest of Baker City on June able to work. 13, 2010. He was riding back Today, Dauntless is a volunfrom the Hells Canyon Motor- teer for the Lane Blood Center cycle Rally in Baker City with and at the intensive-care unit a group of five people on four at RiverBend, where he acts motorcycles when he became as a liaison between medical worried about his wife, Susan, staff and patients. who was following in a car. Dauntless had lost sight of
tations, according to The New York Times.
Ex-West Salemcoach pleads guilty to sex abuse —A man who worked as anassistant girls basketball coach at West Salem High School pleadedguilty to sexual abuse. EmranceBerger entered the pleaTuesdayjust before his trial was scheduled to begin in Polk County Circuit Court. In return for his guilty plea, a sodomy charge and other chargeswere dismissed. TheStatesman Journal reports Berger will be sentencedFriday. The30-year-old was arrested in February after a girl told her parents about him. Berger hadbeen employed by theSalem-Keizer School District as a coachsince 2012 and worked several years before then as a volunteer. Inmate eSCapeS With dOg —A Yamhill County Jail inmate on work release at ananimal control facility escaped andtook adog with him. TheOregonian reports the dogwas found by a McMinnville resident a few hours later Sunday,along with the inmate's orange coat. The sheriff's office said 23-year-old Austyn Lance Ingramwas among a group of inmates assigned to theanimal control facility at the fairgrounds when he walked away. Ingram hadbeen serving a time for violating probation from a sentencefor heroin possession. — From wire reports
her in his rearview mirror, so
he circle d back and waited on the right side of the highway Carrie Davis, a Hanger em- until he saw her approaching. ployee who was born without When he did, he pulled out to a lower left arm, started the lead the way and didn't see program to provide support, the eastbound truck coming information and resources for the other direction. people preparing for life afThe crash left him severely ter limb loss, according to the injured and clinging to life. "The last thing I remember company's website. The Hanger Clinic was is seeing her, and then I woke founded in 1861 by J.E. Hang- up three days later," Dauntless er, who lost a leg when shot recalled.
tions, about 54 percent, stem
two years ago through their
D a u n tless: $40,000, most of which was
prosthetics made of titanium and aluminum pylons and lightweight carbon-fiber feet. Dauntless' left leg was am-
with more than 700 clinics nationwide.
"Everybody, whether they realize it or not, goes through a huge challenge," Free said of amputees. "You go through d epression and . . . w h en you become an amputee, it's almost like your life just stopped. I'm trying to keep myself inspired and trying to help other people." with a cannonball in the first Almost 2 m i l l ion A m eri-
Torkelson a n d
inmate who escapedfrom a jail in Goldendale, Washington, has been captured in Portland. A Klickitat County sheriff's office's spokesman saidWednesday thatCharlesLoyd,alsoknownasCharlesFoley,was taken into custody after a car chase. LoydescapedMonday morning. He had beenjailed on robbery, burglary, kidnapping and assault charges.
LEARN ABOUT TODAY'S SOLUTIONS
FOR YOUR HIPllCNEE PAIN
In addition to the mangled
left leg, he broke both his arms, hands and several ribs, and his internal organs required extensive surgery. It took 45 minutes for medics to arrive from John Day, and then he was airlifted to
Boise, where he was put into an induced coma. When he
awoke, the leg was gone. After a week, he was transferred toPeaceHealth Sacred Heart Medical Center at Riv-
erBend in Springfield, then did weeks of rehab at Oregon Rehabilitation Center on Sa-
cred Heart's Eugene campus. He had to use a wheelchair
for months and learn how to get around on one leg until receiving his prosthetic leg from B arnhart Prosthetic 8
Or-
thotic Services in Springfield
t h e H a n ger Those recent soldiers have in November 2010. Clinic in Springfield, where received the same sort of Dauntless estimates that both received their prosthetic modern prosthetics as Free, his prosthesis cost more than connection t o
FREE Seminar TueSday, NOVember11, 2014 ~ 6:00 P.m. -7:00 P.rn.
Grower givesChristmastrees hot bath The Associated Press OREGON
C ITY —
An
Oregon grower is giving its Christmas trees a hot bath before shipping to make sure buyers don't get slugs and yellow jackets as unexpected presents.
The Kirk Co. of Oregon City sends harvested trees on
conveyor belts through an enclosed washer to kill or knock off pests, the agricultural publication Capital Press reported Tuesday. "What you're trying to do
ized and stay fresh and green more than $100 million a year. longer, he said. Agriculture officials from It's the second year the com- the Philippines and Malaysia pany has tried the experiment observed the washing process that's drawing attention from on Monday. foreign agricultural officials Kirk co-owner Gary Snyder and other Oregon growers said the Hawaiian market is who are less likely than Kirk his biggest concern. Inspecto have the water or electrical tors in the state are leery of capacity to bathe trees. invasive species and require "Growers in general hope fumigation if bugs are discovit doesn't come to this," said ered in a load of trees. "I'm shipping 75 to 80 conChal Landgren, a Christmas tree specialist with Oregon tainers to Hawaii," Snyder State University E x tension Service.
Oregon leads the nation in ers," said Bob Bishop, a trade Christmas t re e p r o duction
with that is control hitchhik-
specialist with the federal Animal and Plant Health Inspec-
with about 7 million trees sold
tion Service.
U.S. total, according to federal statistics. The crop is worth
The trees also get moistur-
in 2013, or 17 percent of the
said. "If less than five of them
get held up for slugs, I'll feel successful." K irk
C o . sh i p s ab o u t
500,000 trees a year and has operations in Oregon, Washington, North Carolina and
Nova Scotia.
Speaker: Michael Caravelli, MD Riverhouse Convention Center US 97 5 NW Mount Washington Dr. Cascade Ballroom Bend, OR 97701
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O DePuy Synthes Joint Remnstruction, a division of DOI 2014.
B4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
EDj To
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oday, the Oregon Department of Environmental
Quality holds a public hearing on its low carbon fuel
I((I M
standards,a scheme topush Oregonians to use cleaner fuel. It will do so because back in February the governor asked it to, although the law requiring the standards sunsets
c 20l4-
(/ ~
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next year. The standards themselves cannot be met, says Paul Romain, a lawyer and lobbyist for the Oregon Fuels Association, which, he notes, sells ethanol and other alternatives right alongside gasoline and diesel. He argues alternatives are not wellenough developedto meet demand. The DEQdisputesthatdaim. Cory Wind of the agency notes that there's commeidally available diesel from tallow, soybeans and canola aheady, as well as ethanol fmm both sugar cane and sorghum. Too, such things as natural gas, hydrogen and electricityave alreadyfuelingvehicles. Meanwhile, the lawallowsforthat with what's essentially a cap-and-tax system on standaid fuels. Fuel producers would purchase ciefits that would let them to continue selling conventional fuels, then pass the cost of those cnxhts ontocustomers. There's disagreement about how much that tax-by-another-name would cost, to be sure. DEQ estimates it would add something be-
tween 6 cents and 19 cents to each gallon of fuel purchased; the fuels association pegs the cost at between 33 cents and more than $1. Either way, Oregonians could not vote to repeal the tax, because it's been disguisedin acap-and- tax costume. The low carbon fuels law at the root of all this was billed as something good for both the economy and the environment.Supporters promised a29,000-job boost from the ethanol plants that would be built here, though that hasn't happened yet. The environment would benefit from all that clean fuel. If this reminds you of the state's Business Energy Tax Creditpmgram at its worst, it should. You are likelyto driveatsomedisputedadditionalcost, and that money will, inturn, be given to alternate fuel producers. The cost will fall directly on every car, truck andlawnmowerownerin Oregon. If the DEQ is unwillingto end the exercise now, the Legislature should do it come 2015.
Opting out of tests is tbe wrong answer riticism of standardized educational testing is nothing new, but growing parental resistance could have lasting, damaging results. Teachers, many of whom have longobjectedto"teachingto the test," are fighting efforts to judge their effectiveness based on their students' scores. But newer problems are arising because of the growing number of parents who are deciding their kids won't take the tests. Oregon allows parents to exempt their children based on disability or religious beliefs, which are widely interpreted, at least in some places, to indude any belief that testing is objectionable. As the Willamette Week newspaper recently reported, such opt-out numbers are growing, with 250 students out of 567,000 statewide opting out last year, an increase from 161 the previous year. Locally, Bend-La Pine Schools reports opt-outs are almost nonexistent, but at Vernon K-8 School in Portland, the number dimbed from five to 18in one year. That's far more critical than it might seem, because schools where not enough students take the tests can lose funding and see their school ratings reduced. Adding to the worry is y o wing resistance to the new Common Core-related Smarter Balanced tests
C
that are replacing Oregon's old standardized tests this schoolyear. The Common Core has been criticized from the political left and right ever since the public became awan. of the standards, which were launched by the nation's governors, encouraged by federal educators, and adoptedbymost of the states. More recently, the tests aligned with those standards have been described as too complicated and too difficult. A recent Willamette Week story, for example, offered a sample third-grade pradice test in whichthe instructions for one question went on for multiple repetitive paragraphs that seemed far beyond the capacity of suchyoungstudents. Several readersposted comments dedaring their intention to opt their children out from taking the tests. They said it would send a message to the state that it should dump them. We support the Common Core standards because they will increase the rigor of our schools and establish a minimum of what students should learn at each grade. No doubt the standaids and the tests will need adjusting, like any new system, but theycan help thenationbettermatch international competilion. If too many indignant parents remove their children fiom the testing, though, they can damage their schools and retard progress. It's the wronganswer.
M 1Vickel's Worth Suggestions for futureelections
Contact councilors about Roats
tobeunharnessed, unmonitored city permitting. The community is turning into a resort town with an almost
Casey Roats' family company ers were faced with a painful choice: stands to purchase part of the city's the liberal Jeff Merkley, the flawed water utility in Bend. This enough Monica Wehby, a nonvote or a write- should be cause for concerns reinvote. garding conflicts of interest. These I have some suggestions for the concerns will not go away; they will future. only get worse. I'm not sure it makes Next time, voters need to insist on sense to have a city councilor on the a thorough vetting of all candidates High Desert who will have to recuse at national, state and local levels. himself every time the issue of water No candidate running for national comes up. In this 2014 election, Oregon vot-
office should be exempt from the
This only compounds the unease I feel with the recent revelations that
litmus test of a strong legislative record, election experience, legislative knowledge and exemplary personal and professional conduct. Jason Conger was the only primary can-
circuslike atmosphere, destroying the very reasons we and thousands of others live in Bend.
In addition, OSU has decided to build a major university campus with 5,000 to 10,000 students, cram-
ming it into an established residential area with no master plan and n o clarity of d i rection with t h i s
campus. You have only to visit Corvallis to see what the west side of Bend might
become: a u n iversity-dominated he usedincorrect addresses on this environment with all its assorted year's elections and voting forms. I issues. The vacation rental problem don't like the idea of someone with will pale compared to those created financial incentives to serve on the by OSU's lack of a cohesive plan. council, bending (or breaking) the I and many other Bend residents rules to get elected. There is just too maintain that Juniper Ridge is the
didate that would have passed this
scrutiny. Next time, voters need to discern
image over substance. Wehby's police record, lack of positions, scant knowledge ofgovernment, reluctance to debate or face tough interviews and a penchant for plagiarism make her a poor candidate for public office. Voters need to recognizethe
much wrong with that picture! If you share my worries, contact
premier spot for this campus. ODOT
thatyou think Roats is unqualified to serve on the City Council. They will
ect, and when completed it will pave
and the feds are making significant your city councilors and tell them progress with the Cooley Road projthe way for a landmark university be the ones who approve or deny his campus. residency claims, and it's important that they understand how disgusted
I urge all c oncerned residents
to voice their opinions and get
people are with his actions. involved. Josh Gatling
difference between rhetoric and
substance.When a radio personality continues to support a defective candidate, against logic and reason, neither the host nor the candidate
should be taken seriously. When a
Wrong site for OSU-Cascades I have lived in Bend for 15 years
candidate frequently shifts positions
Charlene Moe:kel
Bend
or is adept at diversion and nonan- and enjoy both the environment and swers, that candidate should not be sense of community. What a wonconsidered. derful place to live, whether you are Voters should insist on exercising retired or raising a family. Having their First Amendment right to ask watchedBend grow, Iknow the imhard questions from the floor at fo- portance of proper city planning and rums. They should avoid candidates planned growth to the city's health. with a pattern of avoiding open de- Two major issues now threaten the city's bright future: unchecked vacabates and tough interviews. With an experienced, effective tion home rentals and OSU's unfincandidate, the 2016 decision would ished plans. be clear. Residents of the west side of Bend Janet Dorgan are now plagued with the vacation Redmond rental mess created by what appears
Bend
Thanksforheadlights I would like to express my appreciation and gratitude to those private, commercial and government
drivers who have their headlights on during the day. As a frequent bicyclist on the Cascade Lakes Highway, my small rearview mirror picks up those headlights coming up behind me much sooner than those vehicles
who do not use them. I can get my hands on the brakes and get closer to the outside shoulder when I see
them coming. It's a win/win.
Michael Hudson Bend
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Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Columnist Hanson is one of the original neocons By George Burns
T
tally revealing, somehow managing to squeeze nearly all of the neocon garbage into one column, his entire ings of Victor Davis Hanson, his philosophy laid bare. he Bulletin's readers are subjected weekly to the opinion writ-
column being consistently at the top of
Sunday's Commentary page. Readers should be aware that Hanson is one of the original neocons, the group that took us into Iraq in 2003 for no sensible reason whatsoever. The group was led by Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz and many others. It's been quite obvious during re-
On Clinton's cruise missile attacks
on al-Qaida in the late '90s, he states that led to 9/ll, not mentioning our poor intelligence or that the Clinton
and Bush administrations ignored the intelligence that we did have.
On Iraq, he claims that everything was "largely quiet" when Obama took office, stating that a "constitutional
system was working under careful jectives were to justify Bush's 2003 American supervision." Really? Does Iraq invasion and to criticize all of anyone remember that? Then, of the Obama administration's Middle course,heblames Obama forremovEast policy. Occasionally, there have ing all U.S. troops, carefully omitting been some worthless space fillers, the fact that the (Nouri al-) Maliki but he rarely strays from his primary government insistedthat we leave and objectives. steadfastly refused to sign a status of cent months that Hanson's dual ob-
In the Oct. 5 edition, Hanson is to-
forces agreement. In fact, he never
IN MY VIEW
forgot to update this old column.
On Libya, he complains that we mentions Maliki, who came into pow- didn't follow the NATO air attacks er duringthe Bush administration and with American ground troops. He who most experts feel is the primary thinks that error led to the Benghazi cause of the Iraq disaster that we see attacks on our consulate there. Mentoday. Recently, the Obama adminis- tioning Benghazi is a requirement tration strongly encouraged Maliki of the far right, so evidently Hanson to resign, which he did, and now Iraq needed to renew his credentials with has a new prime minister who will that group. hopefully govern in a nonsectarian It gets worse! Instead of limiting manner, including Sunnis and Kurds himself to his usual time period — the in the new Iraqi government. Clinton, Bush and Obama adminisOn Afghanistan, he complains trations — he elects to apply his neoabout the U.S. pulling out troops con arguments to all wars going back when in fact we have just signed a to WWII. His theory is that unless we status of forces agreement with the leave a permanent occupying force Afghan government which will keep in the warfare area, the countries 10,000 to 15,000 U.S. advisers in Af- that we fought in would basically fall ghanistan for at least 10 years. This apart. Perhaps he would like to exhas been in the planning stage for plain to Germany, Japan, Italy and several months. Perhaps Hanson just Korea that they would not be strong
countries were it not for our continued presence there! And, of course, Vietnam ended
terribly because we didn't stay there, overlooking the fact that Vietnam
is doing well and is a strong trading partner for the U.S. I suppose if we wanted to extend his policy all the way to its natural
conclusion, the whole world would be better off if we invaded and then kept
some troops in each country permanently. Prime Minister David Cameron should be on high alert! I don't
think this is what George Orwell had in mind when he talked about "Big Brother" in hi s novel "1984."
We couldn't imagine anything more frightening than that. With Hanson's help, maybe now we can! — George Burns livesln Bend.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Salem
BITUARIES FEATURED 0BITUARY
Oct. 15, 1952 - Nov. 1, 2014
James Russell Paulson, of Bend Oct. 3, 1951 - Nov. 1, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Memorial Service at New Hope Church 20080 Pinrbrook Blvd., Bend, OR., Nov. 16, 2014 at 3 PM. Additional service on Nov. 23,2014at2 PM at Maupin Grade School, Maupin, OR.
George G. Mock, Jr., of La Pine Sept. 13, 1948 - Nov. 4, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: As per the family's request, there will be no services. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org
Darcie Lynn
Rodriguez, of Bend Oct. 4, 1963 - Nov. 3, 2014
Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life Friday, November 7, 2014 at 6:OOP.M. at The Christian Life Center 21720 Highway 20, Bend, Oregon 97701. Contributionsmay be made to:
Saving Grace, 1004 N.W. Milwaukie, suite ff100, Bend, Oregon 97701.
Ronald "Ron" Patrick Brown, of La Pine May 28, 1958 - Nov. 1, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A viewing was held at Baird Memorial Chapel. Contributionsmay be made to:
American Heart Association, Donations Processing Ctr., 1710 Gilbreth Road, Burlingame, CA 94010, www.heart.org
Jacqueline Pearson, of Bend
Feb. 14, 1946 - Oct. 31, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Jacqueline will be laid to rest in a private ceremony in Pennsylvania at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
St. Charles Hospice 541-706-6700 www.stcharleshealthcare.
org/Our-Services/Hospice -Care
Donald "Don" Adair Heinz, of Springfield
(Formeriy of Bend) Jan. 1, 1931 - Oct. 24, 2014
Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will be held November 22, 2014, at 11:00 AM at Pleasant Hill Baptist Church, located at 84520 N Enterprise Road in Pleasant Hill, Oregon. Contributionsmay be made to:
Gideon's International PO Box 7672 Bend, OR 97708
www.gideons.org
Republicans comes in the fact that Democrats didn't
the highest turnouts in the
DEATH NoTIGEs pouglas R. Gregan Douglas Raymond Gregan, a resident o f T e r r ebonne, OR, passed away Saturday, November 1, 2014. Douglas met and married Jean Patik Gregan i n 1 9 78. They h ad f ou r w o n d erful c h i I dren. Whether s itting o n h is J o h n r '~ Deer e t ractor o r the ~ I on -
.
Outspoken pilot was critic of U.S. leadership
g balcony of their c ondo o n
Douglas Greganegon coast, Douglas en]oyed life to the fullest. He is survived by his wife, Jean; their f o u r c h i l d ren, Thomas ( w i f e , K i mberly),
Katie (husband, K . C.), Rebecca (husband, Tyler),
and Jacob; and six g r andchildren. C ome join h i s f a m ily t o celebrate Douglas' life 1:00 p.m. Saturday, November 8, 2014 at the Redmond VFW Hall, 1 836 S W V e t e r ans Way Redmond, OR, with a potluck reception to follow. Contributions in Douglas' n ame ma y b e ma d e t o : Sparrow Clubs USA Bend, 9 06 N E G r e enwood A v e Suite 2 B e nd , O R 9 7 701; (541) 312-8630. Redmond Memorial Chapel i s h onored t o s e r v e t h e Gregan family. Please sign our online Guest Registry at www.redmondmemorial.com
Darcie Lynn
Rodriguez
Oct. 4, 1963 - Nov. 3, 2014
By Tony Perry Los Angeles Times
SAN DIEGO — As a combat pilot, Air Force Col. Jack
Broughton was celebrated for bravery and tactical brilliance during the Korean and Vietnam wars. He received promotions and important assignments and seemed headed to become a general. But a high- p rofile court-martial during the Viet-
nam War for allegedly violating the rules of engagement that ruled certain targets off
limits ended his career. After leaving the Air Force, Broughton was free to speak
out about what he saw as the incompetence of President
Pilots couldn't bomb an en-
emy outhouse without their approval, Broughton once complained. Although grousing about restrictive rules of engagement and r ailing against politicians, bureaucrats and office-bound military brass is
p e acefully passionately or persuasively M onday a t St . Ch a r l e s as Broughton. In the process M edical C enter o f B e n d , he became a legend among Oregon. fighter p i lots, c onsidered She was born in Chinon, among the most individualisFrance, the daughter of Al tic of military personnel. Broughton, who lived in the
Orange County community of Lake Forest, California, died Oct. 24at Saddleback Memo-
rial Medical Center in Laguna Hills. He was 89 and had entered the hospital two days
earlier with a variety of oldage ailments, according to his family. In his 1988 book, "Going
The lost seats stunned GOP leadership in Oregon.
that Democrats don't walk in
"lockstep." The hollow victory for Re-
to increase taxes without needing a single Republican
H ouse M i n ority L e a d er Mike McLane, R-Powell
Butte, won his re-election by a 3-to-1 ratio. In the run-up to the election, McLane thought
publicans comes in the fact
that Democrats didn't pick up outright supermajorities
vote.
in both houses, which would
his party could win a ma-
allow them to increase taxes without needing a single Re-
jority in the House. Instead,
Democrats widened their lead by one, to 35-25, having picked up outgoing Republican Rep. Vicki Berger's Sa-
are still being counted in the publican vote. That threshold racebetween incumbent Sen. is 36 votes in the House and Bruce Starr, R-Hillsboro, and 18 in the Senate, underscorDemocrat Chuck Riley also ing the importance of the filem district. of Hillsboro, which was sep- nal Starr-Riley count. " Oregonians want o n e arated by just 123 votes as of The other races that were party in charge of govern- 3:30 p.m. Wednesday. considered close included, "We're definitely buck- including the victory of Demment," McLane said Tuesday night, "so we're going to live ing the national trend, and I ocraticRep. Sara Gelser over by the consequences by what think we're a model for the Sen. Betsy Close, an Albany they choose to do and what country in how we engage Republican and the lone inthey choose not to do." voters," House Speaker Tina cumbent to lose. Voters chose to keep Dem- Kotek said Wednesday, addSen. Alan Bates, D-Medocrat John Kitzhaber for a ing she will ask to remain ford, had a decisive win over fourth term despite weeks of in her leadership role when challenger Dave Dotterrer in questions about the consult- House Democrats c aucus what was projected to be one ing work of his fiancee from next Wednesday. of three tight Senate races. the governor's office. Kotek said D emocrats House Republicans will Merkley declared victo- would push proposals related hold caucus meetings tory within an hour of ballots to affordable housing, early day in Salem to elect new being counted. He ended up education and theeconomy. leadership. taking a decisive 55-39 perDemocrats reached an imBoth sides will start to ficent lead over Wehby. portant threshold in the Sen- nalize agendas during cauSenate Democrats picked ate, having made it tougher cus meetings. up another seat and now con- for party members to vote — Reporter: 406-589-4347, trol at least 17 of 30. Ballots with Republicans to lock up tanderson®bendbulletin.com
Local
"That's the hard part," Mart h e b allots ston said. "The easy part's
morning the current totals represent all of
Continued from 61 receivedby the clerk's office, Clerk Nancy Blanken- but there are still more votes ship said there are 700 to to be counted. 1,000 ballots that must still Marston said she has 29 be verified and counted, challenged ballots — ballots primarily because of dis- that were unsigned, or where
counting them, the part's waiting."
c repancies between t h e
der Oregon law, any election
One-vote race in Jefferson County In Jefferson County, the
outcome in one race has to wait. With two candidates separated by a sin-
ferson County — for instance,
wait it out, take it from here,
a Culver resident working in Redmond might drop off
and kinda move on with life
a ballot at the drop site in
Huston did not return a call seeking comment.
from hitting anti-aircraft emtuary" sites in North Vietnam. The U.S. "Iost a bunch of
ber of the Madras City Council, was holding on at the clerk's office by 8 p.m. to a one-vote lead, 2,994 to Tuesday are not counted. 2,993, over Mae Huston in Marston said she generally
good people and good ma-
the race for the commis-
chinery al l o ver S outheast Asia with their outhouse mentality on war," he wrote.
sion seat currently held by
m em-
in the meantime."
Redmond. Marston said the clerk's offices put such bal-
for her office by Monday.
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers®bendbulletin.com
lots in the mail to send them
Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDoullas
Ballots that were mailed by the voter but did not arrive
See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
waits until close to the 14th day after the election to begin
counting challenged or balCounty Clerk C athy lots that arrived from other Marston said Wednesday counties. John Hatfield.
Find It All Online
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2 007 memoir,
"Rupert Red Two: A Fighter Pilot's Life From Thunderbolts
— From wire reports
past.
"This is about as close as you can get, isn't it'?" Brown ballot drop site outside of Jef- said. "Now you just kinda
Commissioners. T om Brown, a
ducing Diet Coke. Died Friday
could have campaigned harder, he's not dwelling on the
lots that were submitted at a
pilots and other aviators died because they were prohibited
to Thunderchiefs."
automatic recount. Brown said while the rahim to wonder whether he
to receive any ballots destined
wrote in h i s
separated by one-fifth of one percent or less is subject to an zor-thin margin does lead
ferson County Board of
creasedasheblamed them for losing the Vietnam War. "We were poorly utilized, we were hopelessly misdirected and restricted, and we were woefully misused by a chain of stagnant high-level civilian and military leadership that didn't have the (courage) to fight the war that they ineptly micromanaged," Broughton
in which the candidates are
mail. The voter has 14 days
ton weenies" and asserted that
and various others only in-
one candidate over the other, a recount will follow. Un-
voters eligible to vote in after the election to correct a the City C ouncil r ace challenged ballot. made up just less than half Marston said beyond the of all voters who cast a challenged ballots, there are ballot Tuesday. an unknown number of bal-
the county, she said, while
to the correct office starting Wednesday, and she expects
As years passed, Broughton refused to mellow. His anger against Johnson, McNamara
Unless the still-uncounted
the signature doesn't match
at least two weeks to sort out who will become the next member of the Jef-
placementsand other "sanc-
h a rd
ballots overwhelmingly favor
signature on the security the signature on file at the envelope and the signature clerk's office. on file at the clerk's office. Upon receiving a c halHowever, the uncounted lenged ballot, the clerk's ofballots are from all across fice will contact the voter by
gle vote, it's likely to take
taste of it" ad campaign intro-
known for his "just for the
both houses, which would allow them
tions, Bergstein said.
Hanoi an d W a shington," Broughton labeled Johnson and McNamara as "Washing-
in New York from complications of cancer. MacDougall created advertising slogans for a host of top brands, includingRevlon,Heineken and Burger King.
Madison Avenue veteran best
"My colleagues have every opportunity to exercise independent judgment over the bills," Johnson said days before the election, adding
pick up outright supermajorities in
Downtown: The War Against
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
Malcolm MacDougall, 86:
them.
Secretary Robert McNamara in micromanaging the war.
passed away
Deaths of note from around theworld:
nation at 69.5 percent, had a groundswell of Democratic support that campaigns will look to tap in upcoming elec-
Lyndon Johnson and Defense
Darcie L yn n R o d r i guez, nothing new for front-line war 51, of R e d m ond, O r egon fighters, few have done it as
and Juanita Greig who w ere serving i n t h e m i l i tary in France. T he family moved to th e Peoria, Oregon area where she remained until g r aduation from Santiam Christian H i g h S c h o ol . A s a youth, Darcie was very involved in music and was a gifted soloist. She married Tim H oover i n 1 9 82. T h e y h a d tw o c hildren, B r o ok e C h e r i e, a nd G r egory H a n s . F o l l owing h e r di v o r c e s h e lived in C o r vallis, Oregon a nd later i n C e n t ra l O r egon, Bend and Redmond, Oregon. She met and marr ied J o s e R o d r i g uez i n 1999. They had one daught er, Bethany. D a r ci e h a s attended various churches in the Bend and Redmond area. Darcie is survived by her t hree c h i l d r en , Br o o k e , Greg and Bethany; and her husband, J o se. A l t h o ugh s he suffered with a m u l t i tude of h ealth i ssues, she k ept her s ense o f h u m o r a nd wa s c o n c erned a n d caring about others. A C e l ebration o f L i fe S ervice wil l b e h e l d 6 : 00 p.m. Friday, N ovember 7, 2 014 at the Christian L i f e Center of Bend, 21720 U.S. H ighway 2 0 , B e n d , O r egon. Memorial c o n tributions m a y b e m a d e to S aving Grace, 1004 N .W . Milwaukie Ave. Suite ¹100, Bend, Oregon 97701. Autumn Funerals of Bend i s honored t o s e r v e t h e family. (541)318-0842; www.autumnfunerals.net
votes. Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, voted against a few Democrat-led measures last session and stalled
The hollow victory for
Continued from 61 Oregon, which had one of
65
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'' I' c I N-LINE BIDING ENDS NOVEMBER 11 AT 8P.M. I
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Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must befollowed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone,mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 C o l lege football, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C3 NHL, C2 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
BASEBALL
PREP BOYS SOCCER
Report: A-Rod admits to doping In a reversal from his public statements, Alex Rodriguez told federal agents in January that he had usedperformance-enhancing drugs supplied by aSouth Florida clinic, according to a report in TheMiami Herald. Rodriguez, aNew York Yankeesthird baseman whowas recently reinstated after serving a seasonlong doping suspension, offered his admission after federal prosecutors granted him immunity in a wide-ranging investigation of Anthony Bosch and his clinic, Biogenesis of America, TheHerald said. TheHerald's report was based ona 15-page synopsis of the meeting between Rodriguez and federal agents on Jan. 29. Rodriguez, who has repeatedly denied the use of performance-enhancing drugs in connection with Bosch, told investigators that he paid Boschabout $12,000 a month for his services and substances, including prefilled syringes with hormone injections into his stomach, The Herald said. Bosch also gave Rodriguez "tips on how to beat MLB's drug testing," the report said, referring to Major League Baseball. The details of Rodriguez's acknowledgment come asheisemerging from the longest suspension Major League Baseball has ever levied for doping violations. At age 39, he is due to return to the Yankeesnext season, with three years and $60 million remaining on his contract. Rodriguez's spokesman did not return a message seeking comment. The U.S. attorney's office in Miami, which prosecuted Bosch andothers connected to his clinic, declined to comment. Bosch pleadedguilty to a distribution charge last month. In addition to Rodriguez, TheHerald reported that the prosecutors have granted immunity to eight other current and former professional players: Ryan Braun, Melky Cabrera, Nelson Cruz, Francisco Cervelli, Yosmani Grandal, Cesar David Puello, Jordany Valdespin and Manny Ramirez.
ummit, isters ea e to uarte inas • Alex Bowlin scores five goals enroute to the Storm's first-roundshutout
Summit's Alex Bowlin heads the ball past the hands of Colton Carter, of Lebanon, to
• The No. 3-seeded Outlaws beat the WhiteBuffaloes;set to battle McLoughlin onSaturday
By Grant Lucas
score during
The Bulletin
the first half
Alex Bowlin deflected any selfpraise. In his mind, he simply came out to play, to get into form as Summit prepared for a run at a second
of Wednesday night's game
Bulletin staff report SISTERS — Rob Jensen was not about to be fooled by any seeding or ranking.
in Bend.
"we knew we had a game on our hands."
straight state championship.
Ryan Brennecke/
Instead, Bowlin lauded his teammates for the Storm's 10-0 boys
The Bulletin
Jensen's No. 3-seeded Outlaws all they could handle Wednesday afternoon before falling 2-0
And the No. 14-seeded White Buffaloes gave in the first round of the Class 4A boys soccer
state playoffs. Jadon Bachtold scored on a penalty kick in
soccer win over visiting Lebanon
on Wednesday night. Summit coach Ron Kidder, however, would do all the Bowlin-praising himself, especially after the senior erupted for five goals — four in the first half — and
the seventh minute, and Andreas Pedersen
scored on a breakaway in the second half as Sisters (12-4) began defense of its 2013 state championship with a home-field win.
an assist to advance the Storm to the
SeeOutlaws/C4
quarterfinals of the Class 5A state playoffs. "Alex Bowlin is a special player," Kidder said after the first-round win. SeeStorm/C4
Inside • Mountain View boys take 3-2 a victory over Putnam in the Class 5Aplayoffs, C4 • Prep scoreboard,C4
By Antonio Gonzalez
' \ tjejw,' /f / //+$ss'<
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Par-
ity is giving way to clarity in the Pac-12 race. After two months of mud-
1'
t
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Summit's Sean Kent, John Bledsoe and Kyle Cornett hope to lead their team deep into the Class 5A football state playoffs.
in the College Football Playoff rankings — just ahead of Alabama and TCU — and
fifth in The Associated Press poll. In the Pac-12 South, No. 11
• At 7-2 headingto the playoffs, Summitlooks to showit is also afootball school
Oakland, California.
J
years. That Summit is too soft, that the Storm cannot play with the rest of the Intermountain Conference — much less with the rest of the state.
being irrelevant, being "good at all the country-club sports but not foot-
GRANT LUCAS
ball," as the third-year head coach recalls hearing, has only fueled their fire in 2014.
football team has gone overlooked by opponents. In its first 114 games,
gram's first state playoff appearance since 2004. But, Padilla has emphasized, this is
"That's been said multiple times by multiple people," Padilla says. "I think our kids, specifically this group, kind of took it to heart and said,'You know what? We can play
Summit posted just 36 wins until a
not "the same-old Summit." And that
football too.' "
5-6 mark last season led to the pro-
chatter about the Storm being soft,
Golden State takes its record to 4-0 with a win over the Clippers,C3
NHL
Rangers win New York beats Detroit in overtime,C2
CFP) is alone at the top after outlasting Utah in overtime
SeeSummit/C4
beat Arizona. SeePac-12/C3
Nextup Oregon at Utah When:7 p.m., Saturday Radio:KBND
TV:ESPN 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
BOXING COMMENTARY
Bernard Hop-
Aging fightershavenothing on Hopkins
media workout in Philadelphia last
kins jumps rope during a
week. Sergey t is usually not a pretty sight when aging athletes still
tthey once did in their youth.
think they can do the things
Warriors stay perfect, deat LA.
Arizona State (7-1, 5-1, No. 9 and getting help when UCLA
oe Padilla has heard this kind of talk plenty over the past eight
years ago, for the most part, the
against the Los Angeles Clippers during Wsdnesday's game in
nearly insurmountable lead in the North Division after urday. The Ducks are fourth
Since Summit High opened 13
brates after scoring
dled standings, the road to the conference championship game — and a possible spot in the four-team College Football Playoff — is paved now for a pair of Pac-12 teams. Oregon (8-1, 5-1) has a rolling past Stanford last Sat-
NBA
Draymond Green cele-
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
PREP FOOTBALLTHIS WEEK
— The Associated Press
Golden State's
With Madras in town, the Sisters coach said,
For some of a certain age Willie
be trying to mitigate the brutal
TIM DAHLBERG
Mays comes to mind, stumbling around in the 1973 World Series
seriously hurt him. Those are Two months shy of his 50th
being on the field. Bernard Hopkins is of a cer-
birthday, Hopkins enters the ring once again Saturday night
tain age too, and sometimes
in Atlantic City, New Jersey, determined to both retain his title and show he still has the reflexes to compete at a top level. But
champion is a master defensive
fighter who does not always thrill but usually finds a way to win.
Kovalev will not only finally
end Hopkins' career but could
when he had no business even
what he does is not always pretty either. The light heavyweight
punching power of a Russian young enough to be his son. Some in boxing think Sergey
this is boxing, not baseball, and instead of trying to get away from an inside fastball, he will
legitimate fears, because boxing is not a game and older fighters are more often to be pitied than
they are to be celebrated. Relax, says the former Executioner who now goes by the nickname Alien. He's got this one not only for himself, but everyone who is growing gray in America. SeeHopkins/C3
Kovalev will fight Hopkins for his WBA
Super WorldIBF-WBO light heavyweight titles on
Saturday in Atlantic City, New Jersey. MattRourke/The
Associated Press
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY SOCCER Europa League,Asteras Tripoli (Greece) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (England) Europa League, Saint-Etienne (France) vs. Inter Milan (Italy) Europa League, Everton (England) vs. Lille (France) Europa League, Sevilla (Span) vs. Standard Liege (Belgium) Women's college, Stanford at California Goi.F PGATour, SandersonFarms Championship WGC, HSBCChampions
Time
TV/Radio
10a.m.
FS1
10a.m.
FS2
noon
FS1
noon 2 p.m. 11 a.m. 7 p.m.
FS2
Pac-12 Golf Golf
VOLLEYBALL
Women's college,LSU atTexasA8M 4 p.m. SEC Women's college,UCLAatColorado 5:30 p.m. P a c-12 Women's college,OregonSt. at Washington St. 5:30 p.m. Pac-12(Ore.) FOOTBALL
College, Clemson atWakeForest College, Bethune-Cookman atNorfolk State NFL, Cleveland atCincinnati
4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 5 p.m.
ESPN ESPNU NFL
BASKETBALL
NBA, SanAntonio at Houston Men's college, Pacific at Utah Men's college, St. Martin's at Washington NBA, Dallas at Portland
5 p.m. TNT 7:30 p.m. P a c-12 7:30 p.m. Pac-12(Ore.) 7 :30 p.m. TNT ,
KBND-AM 1110, FM-100.1;KROC-AM 690, FM-96.9
FRIDAY
ON DECK Today Boys water polo: 5A/4Astateplayoffs at Osborn AquaticCenterin Corvagis:Bendvs. Ashland,5;10 p.m. Summivs. t Parkrose,6:20 p.m.Mountain Viewvs.HoodRiver Valey, 7:30p.m. Madrasvs.
Marist, 8:40p.m. Girls water polo: 5A/4Astateplayoffs at Osborn Aquatic Center in Corvagis:Bendvs. Ashland, 12;30p.m.Madrasvs.Sandy,1;40p.m.Ridgeview vs. Parkrose,2:50p.m.Summit vs.North Eugene, 4p.m.
8 a.m. NBC S N 9 a.m. FS1 10:30 a.m. FS1 noon FS1 1:30 p.m. FS1 3:30 p.m. E SPN2 5:30 p.m. FS1 8 a.m. 11 a.m.
Big Ten Pac - 12
1 p.m. Pac - 12 1 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) 1:30 p.m. SEC 3 p.m. Pac - 12 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. Pac - 12 7:30 p.m. P a c-12 1:30 a.m. FS2 4:45 a.m. N BCSN 10 a.m. Big Ten 12:45 p.m. Big Ten 11 a.m. 7 p.m.
Golf Golf
4:30 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
ESPNU ESPN2
NBA, Memphis at OklahomaCity NBA, Cleveland at Denver
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPST CONFERENCESEMIFINALS
(Two-legaggregatesemes) Saturday'sGames NewYorkat D.c. United, 11:30a.m., NewYorkleads 2-0 FC DallasatSeatle, 7:30p.m.,series tied1-1
"... 'Not symmetrical.' Okaaaaaay. Any other differences?"
College
AMERICAN CONFERENCE Easl
AN TimesPST
Indianapolis Houston
Tennesse e Jacksonvile
Denver Kansas City SanDiego Oakland
5 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
ESPN ESPN
T 0 0 0 0
South W L T 6 3 0 4 5 0 2 6 0
P ctPF PA . 7 78 281 198 . 625 178 165 . 6 25 211 151 . 1 11 154 252
PctPF PA . 667 290 211 . 444 206 197 . 250 137 202 1 8 0 . 1 11 141 251 North W L T P ctPF PA 5 2 1 . 688 194 187 248 219 6 3 0 . 667 5 3 0 . 6 25 185 169 5 4 0 . 556 240 174
West W L T 6 2 0 5 3 0 5 4 0
PctPF PA . 750 245 185 . 625 200 138 . 556 205 186 0 8 0 . 0 00 129 211 NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Philadelphia Dallas N.Y.Giants Washington
NewOrleans Carolina Atlanta TampaBay
Easl W L T 6 2 0 6 3 0 3 5 0
PctPF PA . 750 234 177 . 667 230 195 . 375 178 209 3 6 0 . 3 33 197 229
South W L T 4 4 3 5 2 6 1 7 North
0 1 0 0
PctPF PA . 5 00 227 198 . 389 177 236 . 250 192 221 . 125 150 245
W L T PctPF PA 6 2 0 . 750 162 126 5 4 3
3 0 . 6 25 222 191 5 0 . 444 168 199 5 0 . 375 180 222
W 7 5 4 3
L 1 3 4 5
Wesl Arizona Seattle SanFrancisco St. Louis
T 0 0 0 0
P ctPF PA . 8 75 192 156 . 625 202 174 . 500 168 178 . 3 75 149 220
Today'sGame
College, Boston University at Boston College 5 p.m. College, Notre Dameat Minnesota 5 p.m.
NBCSN
Big Ten
VOLLEYBAi.L
7:30 p.m. Pac-12(Ore.)
Listingsarethemostaccurate available. The Bulletinis notresponsible forlate changesmade/Jj/ TVor radio stations.
Cleveland atCincinnati, 5:25p.m.
Sunday'sGames SanFranciscoat NewOrleans,10a.m. Kansas CityatBuffalo,10 a.m. Miami atDetroit,10 a.m. Tennessee at Baltimore,10 a.m.
PittsburghatN.Y.Jets,10 a.m. AtlantaatTampaBay,10 a.m. Dallasvs.Jacksonville atLondon,10a.m. Denver at Oakland,1:05 p.m. N.Y.GiantsatSeatle, 1:25p.m. St. LouisatArizona,1:25p.m. Chicag oatGreenBay,5:30p.m. Open: Houston,Indianapolis, Minnesota, New England,SanDiego,Washington
Monday'sGame CarolinaatPhiladelphia, 5:30p.m.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
NFL Injury Reporl NEW YORK—TheNational Football Leagueinjury report, as providedbythe league(OUT- Definitely wil not play;DNP—Did not practice; LIMITED—Limited participation inpractice; FULL- Fuffparticipation in
BASKETBALL ReCruit will notCOmP ete again at OreganState — Doctor Douglas Aukerman, director of sports medicine at OregonState University, said that he metWednesday with basketball student-athlete Chai Bakerand his family members andshared that following a medical review, Bakerwill not be cleared to competeathletically for the Beavers' men's basketball team. Bakersuffered a cardiac arrest Aug. 19 in OSU'sbasketball practice facility and was promptly administered first aid by asports medicine staff member before being transported to the hospital. Baker, a freshman from Malone, Florida, is a scholarship student-athlete at OSU.Hisscholarship will be honored by the University throughout his academic career.
FOOTBALL 49erS Lattimore to retire —RunningbackMarcus Lattimore informed the SanFrancisco 49ers heplans to retire two years after a devastating knee injury. Theteammadethe announcement Wednesday, two days after coach Jim Harbaughsaid Lattimore vvasweighing his football future. The23-year-old Lattimore, San Francisco's 2013 fourth-round draft pick, practiced last WednesdayandThursday but not Friday. Hewas eligible to return after Week 6, but Harbaugh says Lattimore had doubts his kneeswould allow him to play at the NFL level long term after serious injuries to both.
TENNIS Tennis proOudinneeds heart,eye proceduresAmerican tennis pro Melanie Oudinsays shewill have a procedure Thursday for a heart condition, and surgery later this month for an eye problem. The2009 U.S. Openquarterfinalist told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Wednesdaythat for more than ayear, she has beenexperiencing occasional "episodes" of an accelerated heartbeat, usually during or right after matches.
MOTOR SPORTS Hendrick to Pay$185,000 in fineSfOrCreWmemberSHendrick Motorsports will pay the $185,000 in fines levied against six crew members for their role in a post-race fight at Texasbetween Jeff Gordon andBrad Keselowski. NASCARfined and suspended four Hendrick team members, while the crewchiefs for Gordon and Kasey Kahne werealso fined. — From wire reports
practice):
CLEVEEANDBROWNS atCINCINNATIBENGALS —BROWNS:NoDataReportedBENGALS: OUT:LBVontazeBurfict(knee), CBLeonHall jconcussion). DOU BTFUL:RBGiovani Bernard (hip, clavicle),
I.).
LB Rey Maualuga(hamstring), TAndreSmith (ankle QUESIO TNABLE: DE Robert Geathers (shoulde PROB ABLE: CB DarquezeDenn ard (hamstringj, TE Je rmaine Gresham (knee),CB Terence Newman (chest), G Kevin Zeitler (calf).
DEALS Transactions
All TimesPST
W L 7 2 5 3 5 3 1 8
Sunday'sGames Columbus atNewEngland,2p.m.,NewEnglandleads 4-2 RealSaltLakeat L.A.Galaxy,4:30p.m.,series tied0-0
y„z yg(j/Ill —:
NFL
HOCKEY
Women's college, Arizona atStanford
MLS playoffs
NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGU
COTV
BASKETBAi.L
Today'sGames Cal PolyPomonaat Stanford, 7 p.m. Cal StateSanMarcosat California, 7:30p.m. Pacific(Ore.jat Utah,7:30p.m. SaintMartin'satWashington, 7:30p.m. Friday's Games AzusaPacific atWashingtonState, 7p.m. WesternOregonat OregonState, 7p.m. Sunday'sGames Cal PolyPomonaat Arizona,3 p.m. WesternOregonatOregon,6p.m.
SOCCER
Saturday Boys soccer: Class5Aquarterfinals, LaSalle at Summit, TBD;Class5A quarterfinals, Mountain View atHoodRiverValley, 2 p,mcClass 4Aquarterfinals,McLoughlin atSisters, TBD Girls soccer:Class5A quarterfinals, Ashlandat Bend, 1p.m.;Class5A quarterfinals, La Salle at Summit,noon;Class4Aquarterfinals, Gladstone at Sisters,TBD Volleyball:Class5Achampionship at Liberty High School,Hilsboro;Class4Achampionship at Lane CommunityCollege,Eugene;Class2Achampionship atRidgeviewHighSchool; Class1AchampionshipatRidgeviewHighSchool
FOOTBALL
College, Memphis atTemple College, Utah State atWyoming High School, Play-In Game
Pac-12 All TimesPST
— ~ttnj/I„ „
FOOTBALL
FIELD HOCKEY
College, Big Tensemifinals, teams TBD College, Big Tensemifinals, teams TBD GOLF PGA Tour, SandersonFarms Championship Golf, HSBCChampions
Men's college In the Bleachers © 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.nocomics.com/inthebleachers
Friday Football: Class 5Aplayoffs: Corvaffisat Mountain View, 7p.m.; Summit at Marist, 7 p.m.Class4A playoffs:CrookCounty at JunctionCity, 7 p.m.; Sisters at Gladstone, 7p.m. Class2A playoffs: Culverat Knappa, 7p.m. Volleyball: Class 5Aquarterfinals at Liberty High School, Hillsboro:Summit vs.St. Helens, 8a.m.; Bendvs. Marist, 10 a.m.;Class4A quarterfinals atLaneCommunityCollege,Eugene:Madrasvs. Banks,1:15p.mcCrookCounty vs. HiddenValley, 3:15 p.m.;Sistersvs. Cascade,3:15 p.m.Class2A quarterfinalat s RidgeviewHighSchool, Culvervs. Faith Bible, 3:15p.mcClass 1Aquarterfinals at Ridgeview HighSchool: Trinity Lutheranvs. Dufur, 10a.m.
AUTO RACIiiG
Formula One,Brasil Grand Prix, practice NASCAR,Nationwide, Phoenix, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Phoenix, practice NASCAR,Nationwide, Phoenix, practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Phoenix, qualifying NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Phoenix, qualifying NASCAR,Truck Series, Phoenix SOCCER Women's college,BigTensemis,teamsTBD Women's college, Utah atColorado Women's college, Washington at Washington State Men's college, OregonState atCalifornia Women's college, SEC semifinal, teams TBD Women's college, OregonState at Oregon Women's college, SEC semifinal, teams TBD Men's college, Washington at Stanford Women's college, UCLA at Southern Cal Australia, Brisbane Roarvs. Melbourne City England, Liverpool vs Chelsea
BASKETBALL
IN THE BLEACHERS
Pac-12 North Division C onf O v e rag W L W L PF PA Oregon 5 1 8 1 409 223 Stanford 3 3 5 4 222 145 California 3 4 5 4 377 359 Washington 2 3 6 3 277 220 OregonState 1 4 4 4 209 229 WashingtonState 1 5 2 7 299 348 South Division W L W L PF PA Arizona State 5 1 7 1 275 193 SouthernCal 5 2 6 3 314 203 UCLA 4 2 7 2 303 249 Arizona 3 2 6 2 291 215 utah 3 2 6 2 267 170 0 6 2 7 278 348 Colorado
BASEBAL L
Major LeagueBaseball
MLB —SuspendedfreeagentLHPTroyPatton80 gamesfollowing apositive test for anamphetamine
under MajorLeagueBasebaff 'sdrugprogram. AmericanLeague HOUSTONASTROS— AcquiredCHankConger from the LosAngeles Angels for RHPNickTropeano and CCarlosPerez. LOSANGELESANGELS— AcquiredLHPCesar Ucla 5 4Vt 54'/t WASHING TON fromTampaBayfor RHPMarkSappington. TULSA 1 1 '/~ 12'/z 55'/z Smu Ramos TEXASRANGERS— NamedMichaelYoungspey-Uconn 3Vv 4'/v 47r/t Arm y tothegeneral manager. AUBURN 21 21 67r/t Texas A&M aal assistant National League Alabama 6 IP/t 45'/~ LSU PITTSBU R GHPIRATES—NamedBrad Fischerto OKLAHOMA 4 5 7 3t/t Bay l or the coachi n staff. g FLORIDA ST 20 19 55'/~ Vi r ginia BASKETB ALL 7 7 0t/t Utep W KENTU CKY 7'/t National Basketball Association OREGO NST 7 i/t 8 6 t2yt WashSt NBA — Sus p e n d e d N e w YorkGJ.R.Smith one 6'/v 56'/t UNL V Air Force 6 Idah o gameforhittingWashington's GlenRiceJr.inthegroin SANDIEGOST 20t/t 2 1 54t/t Marshall SO MISS during aNov.4game. PHIA 76ERS— NamedSachin Gupta Fla Atlantic 3r/t 4 5 6t/t NT EXAS PHILADEL presidentof basketball operationsandBen Falk Ga Southern 10at 12'/~ 61'/~ TEXAS ST vice vice presi d ent of basketball strategy.PromotedVince ARIZONA 16 16t/t 69t/t C o lorado to director of basketball operations8 scoutB oise St 1 7 18 63'yt NEWMEXICO Rozman COLOR ADOST17 5 6 Haw aii ing innovation.Named Phil Jabourdirectorofscouting 3 57r/ Ohi o St development,DannyMils international scout, Sean MICHIGAN ST 3 UL-Lafayette 15at 16 64'/~N MEXICO ST RooksplayerdevelopmentcoachandEugeneBurshootingcoach. 2 5 9t/t Notre Dameroughs ARIZONA ST 1 9 ~/t 9
TCU 5'/t FRESNO ST 2
6 0'/~
FOOTBALL
UTA H National Football League 5rV~ Kansas St GREENBA Y PACKERS— Signed GJordanMcf~/t 59tyt San JoseSt Cray tothepracticesquad.ReleasedRBMichael Hil Saturday'sGames from the practicesquad. NotreDam eat ArizonaState,12:30 p.m. KANSASCI TY CHIEFS — Signed FB Anthony HOCKEY Washington StateatOregonState,1 p.m. Sherman to acontractextension. UCLAatWashington,4p.m. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— Re-signedWRJonNHL ColoradoatArizona,5 p.m. athanKrauseto thepractice squad. Released DL Kona OregonatUtah,7p.m. NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Schwenke fromthepractice squad. Thursday,Nov.13 All TimesPST NEWYORKGIANTS— ClaimedCBChykieBrown CaliforniaatSouthern Cal,6 p.m. off waiversfromBaltimore. PlacedCBPrinceAmukaEasternConference Saturday,Nov.15 maraoninjuredreserve. AtlanticDivision Washington atArizona,12:30p.m. SANFR ANCISCO49ERS—AnnouncedtheretireGP W L OT PtsGF GA ment ofRBMarcusLattimore. Utah atStanford,3p.m. Montreal 14 9 4 1 19 33 41 Arizona Stateat OregonState, 7:45p.m. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS— Placed DEGregScruggs Tampa Bay 12 8 3 1 17 42 32 on injuredreserve. ClaimedDEDemarcus Dobbsoff Detroit 13 6 3 4 16 33 31 Wednesday'sGames waiversfromSanFrancisco. Boston 14 8 6 0 16 38 33 N. Illinois35,Ball St.21 TENNE SSEETITANS— Signed TEBrett Brackett 11 6 3 2 14 31 27 Ottawa Ohio37,Buffalo14 from theSeattle practicesquad.PlacedTETaylor Toronto 12 6 5 1 13 34 31 Thompson oninjuredreserve. Florida 10 4 2 4 12 15 20 HOCKEY Buffalo 14 3 9 2 8 17 45 America's Line National HockeyLeague Metropolitan Di v ision NHL —Suspe nded ColumbusDJackJohnson NFL GP W L OT Pts GF GA threegamesfor anilegal checkto theheadof Carolina (Hometeamsin bold) Pittsburgh 1 1 8 2 1 17 45 23 FJiri TlustyduringaNov.4 game. Favorite Open Current 0/U Ungerdog N.Y.Islanders 12 7 5 0 14 39 41 NEWYORKRANGERS— AssignedDDylanMcff Today NewJersey 12 6 4 2 14 33 37 rath toHartford(AHL). BENGALS 6 6 44r / t Bro w ns N.Y.Rangers 12 6 4 2 14 34 38 PllTSBURGHPENGUINS— SignedG Marc-AnSunday Philadelphia 12 5 5 2 12 37 39 dre Fleury toafour-yearcontract extensionthroughthe Cowboys NL NL Ja guarsWashington 12 4 5 3 11 38 37 2018-19season. LIONS 3 3 43~ / t Dol phins Carolina 1 1 3 6 2 8 25 37 SOCCER C hiefs 2 2 41Vv BILL S Columbus 12 4 8 0 8 30 41 Major LeagueSoccer SAINTS 3 tyt 4 tyt 49r/t 49er s WesternConference MLS — F i n e d N e w EnglandMFJermaineJonesan R AVENS 9at 9 a t 44 Tita n s Central Division osed amount for simulation inthe70th minute Steelers 4 ty 5 4 5r/t JETS GP W L OT PlsGF GA undiscl of theNov.1gameagainstColumbus. Falcons PK 1t/t 46 B UCCANEERS St. Louis 12 8 3 1 17 30 23 SEATTLESOUNDERS Fc — Signed F Victor Broncos 1 2 1f r/ t 4 9 RAIDERS Nashville 12 7 3 2 16 30 25 Mansaray. C ARDINALS 7 7 4 3~/t Ra m s Winnipeg 13 7 5 1 15 25 27 USL PRO SEAHAWKS 9 9 44 V t Gi antsChicago 13 7 5 1 15 34 23 USLPRO—AnnouncedReal Monarchs SLCasa P ACKERS 7 7 53r / t Bear s Minnesota 11 7 4 0 14 36 22 newfranchiseforthe2015season. Monday Dallas 12 4 4 4 12 35 42 WILMING TON HAMMERHEADS FC— Named EAGLES 5 t/ 6 48 Pan thers Colorado 14 3 6 5 11 33 43 Carson Porter coachand technical director. Pacific Division COLLEGE College GP W L OT PtsGF GA BUCKNELL — NamedRyanAyersmen' sassistant Today Anaheim 1 4 1 0 3 1 21 38 27 basketbal l coach. Clemson 2fr/t 21'Iz 42'Iz WAKE FOREST Vancouver 13 9 4 0 18 43 36 CHEST NU T H I L L — N am e d M i k e P ea rson sprint Friday Calgary 14 8 4 2 18 41 32 footballcoach. Memphis 7 Plt 52'/t T EMPLELos Angeles 13 7 4 2 16 31 27 DELAW ARE— Named Caitlin Papili club sports Utah St 6t/t 7 44i/t WYOMING SanJose 1 3 7 4 2 16 41 35 nator,CortneyRanckassistantdirectorof recreSaturday Arizona 12 5 6 1 11 31 44 coordi ation for marke ting andKevin Rosefacility operations I N DIANAEdmonton 12 Penn St 4 tyt 7 44'/z 4 7 1 9 30 43 nator. Georgia 1 1 Vt 10 58'/t KENTUCKY NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime coordi LSU —Suspendedwomens' junior basketball G 3t/t 58'Iz UAB loss. LouisianaTech 4 t/ DanielleBallardmdefinitely fromgamecompetitionfor TA lowa 1st 1I/2 43'A MINNESO Wednesday'sGames violating teamrules. -2 Michigan 1 40'/t N'WESTER N Montreal2,Buffalo1, SO MICHIGAN —Announced DBJabril Pepperswil Ga Tech 5 31/2 60i/t Nc STATE N.Y.Rangers4, Detroit 3,OT redshirtthis seasonbecauseof a leginjury. Wisconsin 16 17 55'/v P URDUE N.Y.Islanders3, Anaheim2, OT RHODEISLAND COLLEGE— Named Christina APP'CHIAN ST 3 3tyt 54r/t UL-Monroe Today'sGames Tavanawomens' soccercoach. Duke 3t/t 31/2 51'/t SYRACUSE Edmonto natBoston,4p.m. SAM HOUSTONSTATE— Named OmarLowery Florida 14 14'Iz 45'Iz VANDERBT IL Florida at Philadelphia,4 p.m. men'sassistantbasketball coach. BOSTON COLL Minnesotaat Ottawa,4:30p.m. Louisville 3 3 46'/t TENNESSEE — Suspendedwomen' sbasketballF K ANSASCalgar lowa St 5 t/t 4 54'/t yatTampaBay,4:30p.m. CierraBurdickandGJannah Tucker twogameseach ARKAN SASSTSAlabama NewJerseyatSt. Louis, 5p.m. and Gs Ariel MassengaleandAndrayaCarter onegame HOUSTON 17'/v 18 44Vv T u lanePittsburghatWinnipeg, 5p.m. apieceforacademirea c sons. TROY 7 7 63r/t Georgia St Nashville atDallas,5:30p.m. UALR— Named Marques Townsend director of RICE 11 10 48Vt Tx-S Antonio TorontoatColorado,6p.m. men'sbasketball operations. OLDDOMINI ON 3 4tyt 6fr/t Florida Int'I N.Y.Islandersat LosAngeles, 7:30p.m. UTAHSTATE—SuspendedWRGregoryWeichers West Virginia 4 31/2 52 TE X AS Vancouver atSanJose, 7;30p.m. indefinitely. O regon
6
NHL ROUNDUP
OT goal lifts Rangersover RedWings The Associated Press NEW YORK — The New York Rangers
"When they scored the tying goal, we just stayed positive," Brassard said. aWe
are still having trouble closing out games. talkedto each otheron the bench and we They took solace, however, in shaking got it done." off a late tying goal and getting a win in Stempniak was in line for the winner overtime. when he finished a 2-on-1 rush by scoring No shootout misery this time. off a pass from Dominic Moore. Derick Brassard scored a power-play St. Louis added a goal for the Rangers, goal 1:50 into overtime, after Detroit tied who dropped their previous two games it in the closing seconds, to give the Rang- in shootouts. Henrik Lundqvist stopped ers their fifth straight victory over the Red 25 shots after getting a rare game off on Wings, 4-3 on Wednesday night. Monday night. "I felt like we had a little more energy. Lee Stempniak gave the Rangers a 3-2 lead with 7:50 left in the third period, but They played last night and we tried to Detroit got even for the second time when take advantage of that," Lundqvist said. Tomas Tatar scored on a power play with Also on Wednesday: 7.7 seconds left and goalie Jonas GustavsCanadiens 2, Sabres 1:BUFFALO, NY. son off for an extra skater. — P.A. Parenteau scored in regulation "You never want it to happen that late and added the shootout winner in Monin the game," said Rangers forward Rick treal's victory over Buffalo. Dustin TokarNash, who scored the opening goal. "But ski made 31 saves to help Montreal end a you have to give credit to our guys. We three-game losing streak. regrouped and came out pretty good in Islanders 3, Ducks 2:ANAHEIM, Calif. Frank Franklin II/The Associated Press overtime." — John Tavares scored his second goal on New York's Derick Brassard (16) celebrates Pavel Datsyuk tripped Martin St. Louis a power play 2:18 into overtime, and the with Rick Nash (61) after scoring a goal to 46 seconds into overtime, and Brassard New York Islanders snapped their three- win the game during the overtime period of took advantage when he slammed in the game skid with a victory over injury-de- Wednesday night's game against Detroit in rebound of Dan Girardi's shot. pleted Anaheim. New York. The Rangers won the game 4-3.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
NBA ROUNDUP
C3
Hopkins Continued from C1 " What 4 0-plus
QB competition in Utah
guy
doesn't want to see anoth-
er 40-plus guy beat a guy 20 years younger than him?" Hopkins asks. "If I was this age hitting home
ahead forNo. 5Oregon
runs on the Yankees they
By Anne M. Peterson
game," Whittingham said. The Associated Press "If you had to determine one After continued struggles thing that's really held us with their passing game, the back this year, it's the lack No. 20 Utah Utes are turn- of production throwing the ing again to a quarterback football. That's been an oncompetition in preparation going problem, and we've for fifth-ranked Oregon this got to get that solved." weekend.
Kendal Thompson and TravisWilson are separated by an "or" on the Utes' depth chart.
"The quarterback position
is a competition this week-
would all be talking about me." The fearsome Kovalev
— who has never lost in knocking out 23 of his 26 opponents — looks to be
an almost insurmountable test even for a fighter who
Wilson started the f i rst
so far has defied most of
five games of the season before Thompson, a transfer from Oklahoma, started against Oregon State. Wilson won back the job and tossed a 1-yard touchdown
the normal laws of aging. Oddsmakers make Hopkins a 3-1 underdog in the HBO fight, and Kovalev says he will be the fighter who finally shuts up the loquacious Hopkins.
Ij 3:;.::.ORfo+ 1
it's opened back up," coach pass to Kaelin Clay with 8 Kyle Whittingham said. seconds left to give Utah a
"I
"We'll have them compete
24-21 victory over USC. in practice this week and see Overall, W il s o n has
what transpires and go with thrown for 1,084 yards and the guy that we feel is going nine touchdowns, while to give us the best chance to Thompson has thrown for wm. 301 yards and two TDs. The r enewed
c o mpeti- Both quarterbacks have also tion between the two quar- rushed for a score. terbacks means the Ducks The Utes' passing game won't k no w w h o t h e y're has been hurt by the loss of
going to face until game time on Saturday night at
Ig
what Ben Margot/TheAssociated Press
Golden State's Andrew Bogut, left, passes the ball away from Los Angeles' Blake Griffin (32) during the first half of Wednesday's game in Oakland, California.
in overtime to Arizona State. victory over the Trojans afW ilson, wh o s t arted t h e ter pulling down a pass that
OAKLAND, Calif. — Stephen Curry had 28 points and seven assists, Draymond Green
game, threw for just 57 yards gave the Utes a first down but hi t D e vontae Booker on their way to the winning with a 4-yard scoring pass touchdown.
scoreda career-high 24 points and the Golden
The Utes have just one
"He was their man b ut
passing touchdown in each they've got other guys that I'm sure aregoing to be of the past two games. "As an offense we need to ready to jump to the opporhelp our defense out more," tunity. You can't take it easy Wilson said. "Our defense just because their star receivhas been playing great ev- er is out," Oregon defensive ery single week. We need to back Erick Dargan said. put some more points on the The Utes are looking to junior Kenneth Scott, who has Utah ranks last in the Pac- 26 catches for 258 yards and
board andhelp them out."
12 with an average of 175.2 three scores, to help in Anyards passing per game, derson's absence. ranking the U tes 109th No matter who emerges among FBS programs na- as Utah's starting QB — or tionally. The team has 11
passing touchdowns this season, second to last in the
conference. "We'd like to throw the
I'll go into the ring and do my job." Boxing history is l i ttered with fighters who
BFFIOFS CFUS The Associated Press
Anderson led Utah with
Grizzlies 102, Suns 91: PHOENIX — Mike Conley had 24 points and 11 assists, and Mem-
consequences. The great Joe Louis fought far too long as he sought to pay
Pistons 98, Knicks 95: AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Greg Monroe had 23 points and 18 re-
the tax man, and Archie Moore was in the 208th
bounds, and Detroit held off New York for its
the closing minute to lead Toronto over Boston. Hornets 96, Heat 89: CHARLOTTE, N.C.
fight of his professional career and about to celebrate his 46th birthday when a rising young heavyweight n amed C assius C l a y knocked him out in the
Al Jeff erson scored a season-high 28pointsand
fourth round of their 1962
added 10 rebounds, and Charlotte snapped a
bout.
16-game, regular-season losing streak against
Jamal Crawford scored 24 points, and De- Nikola Pekovic converted a tiebreaking threeAndre Jordan had 17 points and 13 rebounds point play with 48 seconds left, and Minnesota
How Hopkins has — at least so fa r — e s caped with both his wits and his marbles intact has a lot to do with how he trains and
for a Clippers team that is off to a shaky start.
scored the final nine points of the game to beat
how he fights. He does not
Los Angeles (3-2) opened with a string of close Brooklyn. games before getting whipped by the Warriors. Wizards 96, Pacers 94: WASHINGTONAlso on Wednesday: John Wall had seven of his 31 points in over-
fight all that often, always
State Warriors remained unbeaten with their
most impressive performance yet, crushing the Los Angeles Clippers 121-104 on Wednesday night. Green added eight rebounds and five assists as the Warriors (4-0) showed off the swagger of a confident and complete contender. They built
a 25-point lead in the second quarter and held off the Clippers the rest of the way, getting a small slice of revenge after losing a heated firstround playoff series to Los Angeles last season. Houston and Memphis are the only other undefeated teams left.
first win of the season.
Raptors 110, Celtics 107: BOSTON — Kyle Lowry scored 35 points and had a key steal in -
Miami. Timberwoives 98, Nets 91: NEW YORK-
Jazz102, Cavaliers100: SALT LAKE CITY-
time, and Washington won its fourth straight
Gordon Hayward made a step-back jumper at
and gained a tiny measure of revenge from last season's playoffs by beating Indiana.
a considerable challenge in the Ducks (8-1, 5-1) who
ing Utah to a victory over struggling Cleveland.
the buzzer, one-upping LeBron James and boost-
Magic 91, 76ers 89: PHILADELPHIA — To-
bias Harris made a jumper at the buzzer to give
the College Football Playoff rankings. not literally the quarterback Oregon'sdefense stymied
Spurs 94, Hawks 92: SAN ANTONIO — Tim Duncan had 17 points and 13 rebounds, and San Antonio held on for its 17th straight win at home over Atlanta. Bulls 95, Bucks 86: MILWAUKEE — Derrick
throwing the ball but more production in the throwing
Stanford in a 45-16 win last weekend at Autzen Stadium.
Rose returned from his latest injury and helped mento beat Denver to extend its best start in Chicago to another victory at Milwaukee. more than a decade.
Pac-12
form of a loss that wakes ev-
this week rose to No. 4 in
Continued from C1 The schedule sets up for the Sun Devils to continue to rise in the rankings if they win out.
While nothing is guaranteed, the best-case scenar-
erybody up," Helfrich said. "You don't want to lose, but how our guys responded to
Standings
that and how they came to-
EasternConference
Arizona State has
j u st
one blemish on its resume, though it is a big one — a
io for the Pac-12's playoff 62-27 home loss to UCLA on chances is clear: Oregon and Sept. 25. Since then, the Sun Arizona State meeting in the
Devils have leaned on their
conference championship defense and two di fferent game as one-loss teams. quarterbacks to beat South"I do think there's a lot of ern California, Stanford, anticipation about the play- Washington and Utah. off," Arizona State coach Arizona State is five spots Todd Graham said. "I think behind Oregon in the playthere's a lot of excitement. I off rankings in large part can sense that from the play- because of that lopsided loss ers. I can't imagine winning and the selection committhe conference champion- tee's emphasis on strength ship, the Pac-12 champion of schedule. The Sun Devils not being in the four-team
have a chance to improve
playoff. But you got to win. the latter and make voters Our focus and anyone who further forget about the forplays in the Pac-12 is to win
mer when they host No. 8
the Pac-12 championship.
Notre Dame (No. 10 in CFP) in a nonconference game
We got a shot to do that." Surviving the rest of the
schedule is still no sure thing foreither Oregon or Arizona State. Marcus Mariota and the Ducks dominated Stanford in a 45-16 victory in Eugene
Saturday. Arizona State finishes the
season against Oregon State, Washington State and No. 21 Arizona. Add a potential vic-
tory in the Pac-12 title game over a one-loss Oregon team,
last week, ending Stanford's and Arizona State's resume two-year reign as conference would give voters a lot to champion. Oregon has won think about. Pac-12 C o m missioner four straight since losing to Arizona at home on Oct. 2, Larry Scott said at halfand the most difficult game time of t h e O r egon-Stanleft on its regular-season ford game that he believes schedule is the next one. the conference is in "great The Ducks play at No. 20 shape" to make the playoff. Utah (6-2, 3-2, No. 17 CFP) on He has maintained all seaSaturday night before host- son that he has confidence ing Colorado (2-7, 0-6) and in the committee and the sevisiting rival Oregon State lection process, which is ex(4-4, 1-4). Oregon can lose a pected to value conference game and probably two and champions. still win the Pac-12 North, but with even one more loss
Even with the strength of
the Pac-12, though, two loss-
the Ducks know their playoff chances will be dashed. Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said he is not focusing on the rankings, however,
es will likely be too much to
the loss to Arizona seemed
from here on out. You can't
overcome this season. "Once we lose a game, we said, 'Look, guys, it's a single-elimination tournament
to refocus his team's prepa- lose another game and exration knowing another de- pect to reach our goals,' feat would end their playoff Graham said. "And our goal dreams. is to be national champions, " Unfortunately, som e - to be in the final four and "
t imes it's adversity in t h e
Orlando its first win of the season.
Kings 131, Nuggets 109: SACRAMENTO, Calif.— DeMarcus Cousins had 30 points and 11 rebounds, Rudy Gay scored 29 and Sacra-
NBA SCOREBOARD
gether is very encouraging."
compete for that."
never knew when to r etire, sometimes with tragic
phis used a strong defensive effort in the third quarter to beat Phoenix and remain unbeaten.
his go-to receiver — on Saturday, the Utes will still face
ball a lot better than we have been. And when I say that,
understood, Ho p kins I wou l d n 't "I don't worry about him.
dynamic wide receiver Dres Anderson to a season-ending knee injury. The senior
Utah's only touchdown of the 355 yards receiving and four game. touchdowns this season.
Ber -
nard is saying. Even if I care," the 31-year-old says.
Rice-Eccles Stadium. The Utes (6-2, 3-2 Pac-12) t eam captain was hurt i n are coming off a 19-16 loss the fourth quarter of the
early in the third quarter for
don't
really und er st a n d
Kings131, Nuggets109
All TimesPST W 4 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 I 1 i
L 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 3 2 3 3 3 4 4 5
Pct GB .800 .800 .800 .600 .500 I'A
d-Chicago d-Torosto d-Washington Miami Brooklyn Charlotte .400 2 Milwaukee .400 2 NewYork .400 2 Atlanta .333 2 Boston ,250 2'A Cleveland .250 2'A Detroit ,250 2iA Indiana I .200 3 Orlando 1 .200 3 Philadelphia 0 .000 4 WesternConteresce W L Pct GB d-Memphis 5 0 1.000 Houston 5 0 1.000 d-Golden State 4 0 1.000 ~A d-Portland 2 2 .500 2'A Sacrame nto 4 I .800 Dallas 3 1 .750 I'A SanAntonio 2 1 .667 2 Phoenix 3 2 .600 2 LA. Clippers 3 2 .600 2 Minnesota 2 2 .500 2'A NewOrleans 2 2 .500 2'A Uiah 2 3 .400 3 Denver I 3 .250 3'A Oklahoma City I 4 .200 4 LA. Lakers 0 5 .000 5 d-divisionleader
Wednesday'sGames
Orlando91, Philadelphia89 Charlotte96, Miami89 Detroit98, NewYork95 Toronto110,Boston107 Minnesota 98, Brooklyn91 Chicag o95,Milwaukee86 Washington96,1ndiana94, OT SanAntonio94,Atlanta 92 Memphis102,Phoenix91 Utah102,Cleveland100
Sacrame nto131, DenverI09 Golden State12I, LA. Clippers104 Today'sGames SanAntonioat Houston, 5p.m. DallasatPortland,7:30p.m.
Summaries
Hornets 96, Heat 89 MIAMI (89)
Deng3-93-59,s.williams3-50-09,Bosh7-18 8-823,Cole1-60-02, Wa de9-187-825, Ham ilton 2-3 2-26, Chalmers2-82-46,Ennis0-20-00,Napier2-7 3-47, McRo berls 1-I 0-02.Totals30-7725-31 89. CHARLOTTE (96) Stephenson 3-12 2-4 8, M.Wiliams 3-6 0-0 6, Jefferson13-252-5 28,Walker 5-6 6-618, Henderson 2-40-04, Hairston2-91-2 7,Zeller 4-65-613, Neal I-71-2 4,Maxiel 25 004, Roberts02 44 4. Totals 35-8221-2996. Miami 17 27 18 27 — 89 Charlotte 24 22 26 24 — 96
Jazz102, Cavaliers100 CLEVELAND (100) James 8-1812-12 31, Love2-109-0 14, Vareies 4-10 0-0 8,Irving12-238-1034, Marion0-3 0-00, Waiters 1-43-5 5, Thompson 3-32-2 8, Miler O-I 0-00. Totals 30-7234-40100. UTAH (102) Hayward7-127-721, Favors9-133-421, Kan ter 8-131-218,Burke2 60 06,Burks38 441I, Hood 2-60-06, Booker4-80-1 9, Exum1-51-23, Ingles 0-1 0-0 0,Gobert3-51-2 7. Totals 39-7717-22 102.
Cleveland Uish
23 25 27 25 — 100 32 27 17 26 — 102
Bulls 95, Bucks86
Pistons 98, Knicks 95 NEWYORK(95)
MEMPHIS (102) Allen 4-6 1-1 9, Z.Randolph4-9 2-3 10, Gasol 6-12 6-618,Conley9-143-5 24, Lee9-140-0 22, Carter2-50-0 4, Pondexter2-81-2 7, Leuer1-40-0 2,Udrih3-60-06,Koufts0-20-00.Totals40-80 13-17 102. PHOENIX (91) Marc.Morris2-5 0-04, Mark.Morris 8-132-3 20, Plumlee1-30-02,Bledsoe9-123-423,G.Dragic3-9 0-0 6, Len0-32-2 2, Tucker2-30-0 5,Thomas4-10 6-615, Tolliver1-3 0-03, Green2-8 6-611, S.Randolph 0-00-00.Totals32-6919-21 91. Memphis 26 20 30 26 — 102 Phoenix 27 25 19 20 — 9'I
C.Anthony5-21 3-4 13, Ja.Smith7-0 3-3 17, Dalembert1-3 0-0 2, Larkin 2-4 0-0 4, Shumpert 5-131-215, Stoudemire7-131-1 15,Acy0-10-0 0, Hardaway Jt 8-150-020, Prigioni0-20-00, Wear 1-3 0-0 2,Aldrich2-3 0-04, Early1-I 0-03. Totals 39-90 8-1 0 95. DETROIT (98) Jo Smith2-17468, Monroe8177823, Drummond 3-101-47, Jennings2-97-812, Caldwell-Pope 8-14 0-220,Butler2-7 0-05, Augustin3-6 4-512, Jerebko 4-60-011, Singler 0-10-00, J.Anthony0-0 0-00.Totals32-8723-33 98. New York 20 17 22 36 — 95 Detroit 25 24 26 23 — 98
76ers 89, Magic 91
Raptors110, Celtics107
ORLANDO (91) Harris8-18 2-2 18, Frye5-12 1-1 13, Vucevic 8-161-117,Paytos4-8 0-1 8, Foursier 4-101-1 IO, A.Gordon1-20-02, Ridnour1-60-02, B.Gordon 5-11 5-615,Dedmon0-1 0-00, Harkless3-40-06. Totals 39-8810-1291. PHILADEL PHIA(89) MbahMo a ute2-7 0-2 4, Davies9-111-420, Noel 2-4 0-04,Wroten9-165-727, Thompson1-5 3-36, Sims1-51-23, McDaniels5-101-1 12,Johnson0-5 0-0 0,Thoma s 1-20-02, Shved 2-94-49, Sampson 1-30-02. Totals 33-7715-23 89. Orlando 26 26 23 16 — 91 Philadelphia 28 2 4 23 14 — 89
TORONTO (110)
Patterson5-80-014, DeRozan9-255-6 23,Hansbrough1-2 2-4 4,Lowry12-179-10 35, Ross1-5 0-0 2, Williams5-101-I 11, J.Johnson3-9 0-0 6, Stiemsma2-2 2-2 6,Vasquez3-8 0-0 7,Hayes 1-1 0-0 2.Totals42-87 19-23110.
BOSTON (107) Green 9-160-0 20,Sullinger 7-135-519, Olynyk 7-0 2-218, Rondo 5-83-413, Bradley5-133-316, Smart4-91-112, Bass1-31-1 3,Turner1-20-02, Zeller 0-00-0 0, Thornton1-32-2 4. Totals 40-78 17-18107. Toronto 23 31 34 22 — 110 Boslon 35 22 29 21 — 107
Spurs 94, Hawks92
Timberwolves 98, Nets91
ATLAIITA (92) Carroll 7-130-017, Milsap8-181-1 17,Horford 5-14 0-0 10,Teague2-8 1-2 5, Korver3-10 0-07, Anti c3-70-07,Mack0-32-22,Bazemore1-50-22, Sefolosha0-14-4 4, Scott 5-70-0 12,Schroder4-6 0-0 9.Totals 38-928-1192. SANANTO NIO(94) Leonard5-10 0-0 11, Duncan5-12 7-12 17, Splitter2-2 1-2 5, Parker7-12 3-5 17,Green3-7 2-2 10, Diaw4-103-5 11, Ginobili 2-7 7-7 12,Belinelli 0-1 1-21,Joseph3-63-310, Baynes0 00 0 0,Ayres0-1 0-0 0, Daye0-1 0-00. Totals 31-69 27-38 94. Atlanta 15 24 23 30 — 92 Sas Antosio 27 2 219 26 — 94
MINNESOT A(98) Wiggins7-122-417, Young5-130-010, Pekovic 5-12 6-716,Rubio6-111-214, Martin8-206-6 26, Dieng1-4 0-02, Brewer0-3 0-0 0, M.Wiliams2-8 0-05,Bennett1-42-34,Muhammad2-30-04.Totals 37-9017-22 98. BROOK LYN(91) Johnson 9-173-422,GarnettI-7 0-0 2,Lopez 5-140-1 10,DWiliams 8-160-1 19,Bogdanovic3 8 2-2 9,Teletovic3-80-0 9,Jack5-84-414, Anderson 1-1 2-3 4, Plumlee 1-2 0-2 2, KirilenkoO-I 0-0 0, Jordan 0-00-00. Totals 36-8211-1791. Minnesota 24 23 25 26 — 98 Brooklyn 21 27 18 25 — 91
Wizards96, Pacers94(OT)
Warriors121, Clippers104
LA. CLIPPERS I104) M.Barnes1-4 0-02, Griffin 7-150-1 14,Jordan 7-10 3-4 17,Paul6-15 2-2 15,Redick3-6 5-5 12, Crawford8-I3 5-7 24, HawesI-7 3-4 5, Bullock 1-1 0-0 3, Farmar1-6 0-0 3, Cunningham2-3 1-2 5, Douglas-Roberts1-2 2-2 4,Turkoglu0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-8221-27104. GOLDEN STATE(121) H.Bar nes2-44-4IO,Green8-134-424,Bogut en 1-7 0-0 3, Porter1-5 0-0 3, RiceJt 1-3 0-0 2, 3-50-06, Curry9-186-628,Thompson 7-132-219, Seraphin3-50-06, Miler 1-20-02, Humphries 0-2 Barbosa 5-7 2-213, Lee3-40-0 6, Iguodala3-32-2 0-00. Totals 34-9121-2396. 9, Livingston3-50-06, Ezeli0-10-00, RushO-I 0-0 Indiana 24 17 20 23 10 — 94 0. Totals 43-7420-20121. Washington 24 2 2 20 18 12 — 96 LA. Clippers 20 2 2 33 29 — 104 GoldenState 30 35 37 19 — 121
INDIANA (94) SHill 5-93-414,Scola3-60-06, Hibbert0-72-2 2, Sloan1021 71031,Miles213 22 6, Copeland 8-210-0 19,Mahinmi3-5 0-0 6,Rudez 2-3 2-26, Allen 2-50-04.Totals 35-9016-2094. WASHINGTO N(96) Pierce3-155-511, Nene3-72-28, Gortat 4-10 6-714,Wall0-21 8931, Temple6-140-016, Good-
tends to make it difficult for the man in front of him
to land a punch. "I haven't seen Hopkins
get hit flush in years," says Oscar De La Hoya, who was stopped by Hopkins with a body punch in their 2004 fight. "He's very crafty and knows how to
move with punches. He can offsetyour punching power, take away your strength." T hat may no t b e t h e most marketable style, but
DENVER (109) CHICAGO (95) chandler5-120-013, Fariedi-s 2-2 4, Mozgov Dunle avy4-73-412,Gibson9-175-923,Gasol 2-3 3-3 7, Lawson3-7 7-913, Afflalo1-4 0-0 2, 8-I4 6-7 22,Rose4-10 3-413, Butler5-8 4-414, McGee 3-5 3-4 9, Arthur4-71-2 II, Gallinari 1-7 Mirotic1-600 2, Hinrich 261-2 7, Brooks1-5 00 4-4 7, Foye7-11 2-2 19, Robinson5-10 0-0 10, 2, McDermott0-00-00, Snel0-00-00. l Totals 3473 22-30 95. Nurkic 2-4 2-3 6, Gee3-7 2-2 8. Totals 37-82 26-31 109. MILWAUKEE (86) SACRAM ENTO(131) Parker4-120-2 8, Ilyasova3-4 0-0 7, Sanders Gay9-128-1029,Thompson0-50-2 0, Cousins 3-9 0-0 6, Knight3-154-4 10,Dudley1-4 2-2 5, 10-1410-0 30, Collison4-91-310, McLem ore 3-7 Mayo 3-12 2-2 9, Pachulia 1-51-1 3, Middleton 2-210, Evans2-42-5 6, Casspi 4-73-311, Landry 3-75-5 11,Bayless 3-6 2-2 8,Antetokounmpo 4-6 10-1018,Stauskas2-50-0 5, Se ssions 0-22-2 6-u 1-2 13, Henson3-4 0-0 6. Totals 33-89 2, McCallum 3-41-2 8, Wiliams0-00-0 0, Hollins 17-20 86. 1-1 0-02. Totals42-7639-50131. Chicago Oenver 19 35 18 37 — 109 Milwaukee Sacramento 40 2 8 37 26 — 131
Grizzlies102, SIIns 91
stays in shape in between fights, and once in the ring
it is a highly effective one. In thedecade of his 40s, Hopkins is 10-4 with one
no contest and one draw, and he is the proud owner of two of the three light
heavyweight belts that will be at stake in Satur-
day's scheduled 12-round fight. Besides, Hopkins does most of his promotinghe is a minority partner with De La Hoya in Golden Boy Promotions — with
his mouth rather than his fists.
" Fighting is fu n a n d that's the scary p art," Hopkins said. "I'm having more fun in the last 10 years than I had in the first
15 or 20 years of my career. It's completely backward from the way I'm supposed to be thinking this stage of my life." Indeed, the best part of Hopkins fighting at such an advanced age is that he wants to fight, not that
he has to fight. The former con from Philadelphia reinvented himself long ago as a businessman-fighter who has money stashed away in long-term conservative
i nve s t ments
and likes to talk about his fondness for shopping at Costco.
He will pick up another nice payday against K ovalev, but that i s n o t
his main goal. Hopkins is determined to show what
he can do before he turns 50 in January to whet the
appetites of boxing fans for what he can do after he
hits the mid-century mark. " I will
s t an d i n th e
pocket against this guy who beats people up and they will see me take him
apart," Hopkins said. "I've got to be conscious about fighting in my 50s. But 2015 is going to be a hell of a year for me." If he can somehow find
a way to beat Kovalev, it could be a pretty good year for boxing, too.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
Summit Continued from C1 That motivation took root
long before the season began, back in January, when Storm players would attend
early-morning workouts five days a week. That changed everything, says sophomore wideout Kyle Cornett, and it
instilled a mindset that perhaps had been missing in previous years. The mentality, according to Padilla: You can't quit when it gets tough.
"Three years ago, when I took over (as head coach), it would have been tough to
get those kids to buy into the time these kids are spending," Padilla says. "It's something that's gradual, and to be honest, we're not exactly where we need to be yet in terms of
some of that. But we're lightyears ahead than we w ere
before." And, as Cornett points out, Summit's record reflects its
players' work ethic and determination to prove they should no longer be overlooked. After all, the Storm are 7-2 this
season — only the second time in program history that Summit has won more than
five games in a season — and locked up the No. 9 seed in the
Class 5A state playoffs to set up a first-round matchup on Friday against No. 8 Marist at Eugene's Willamette High School. " It feels good not t o
be
looked down on, not to be the team that, 'This is the joke of Central Oregon football,' says junior running back Sean Kent. "It's nice to be a threat and be a team that other teams
are scared to play." T his i s n o t s ame o l d Summit.
Padilla, an assistant coach at Summit for five years be-
fore taking the head-coaching reins, has waited eight years to say that. He has had
an eye on this group, one highlighted by sophomore quarterback John B l edsoe, Cornett an d K e nt . P adilla
knew this crew would be talented, but, he admits, "I didn't
realize they were going to be this good." Kent believed differently. "I never had any doubt that our class ... I didn't think that our team would be that same
team that would lose," he says. "I knew that these were my guys, and I thought we can begood no matter what happened in the past." It is
t h e l e adership that
has carried Summit to these heights, Padilla notes, a fourth-ever trip to th e state
playoffs. Leadership from a young signal-caller, Bledsoe, who has passed for 22 touch-
downs and nearly 1,700 yards this season, from a speedy wideout, Cornett, who has 629
receiving yards (more than 16 yards per catch) and 11 scores this year, and from a diminutive tailback, Kent, who at 5 feet 6 has exploded for 254
rushing yards and five touchdowns in the past two games alone.
"It was definitely a struggle, hoping to be a really good athlete, working really hard and then knowing you were going into a program that has not been great in the past," Bledsoe says. "It's
kind of hard to expect them to be great. But we knew that
this class WAS great, and I thought we could turn it around." Behind that Bledsoe-Cornett-Kent t hreesome, Summit has created a buzz on the west side of Bend, within the
Intermountain C o nference and throughout the state.
"You're not going to go out there and just tell people to respect you," Padilla says. "You have to earn it. And hopefully what our kids have done on the field so far this year, we've
earned that respect." Still, as much as Padilla
enjoys seeing his squad earn IMC and statewide admiration, he is slightly hesitant to
accept it — yet. "I don't think we're a hundred percent there," Padilla
says. "I still think we can do a lot of things to put our program where it could be." The 2014 Storm have com-
piled their best regular-season record in 10 years as they
take aim at a goal never accomplished by a Summit football team — a victory in the
state playoffs. "But with one playoff victory, I don't think we'll be satis-
fied by any means," Cornett says. "We're looking at the top, and we're trying to get there." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucasibendbuiletin.com.
Prep footdall playoffs FRIDAY Cervallis(4-5) at Mountain View(8-1), 7 p.m.: Last Friday's 23-12win at Bend High clinched aneighth Intermountain Conference championship in the last nine years for theCougars. Now, Mountain Viewlooks to extend another impressive run, asthe Cougshave reached thequarterfinais in seven of the last eight seasons. WIth the topseedin the Class 5Astate piayoffs, and with QBMike Irwin, who rushed for153 yards and passedfor 47 yards and a score last week,Mountain View is in goodposition to make adeeprun. TheCougars entertain No.16 Corvaliis, which finished third In the Mid-Wiiiamette Conference after defeating South Albany on theroad49-45 last Friday. TheSpartans boast a fairly well-rounded attack with QBLance Peterson's1,580 yards and13 TDs through theair andrunning back Hunter Mattson's 1,363 yards and13 scores on the ground. Summit P-2) vs. Marist (6-3) at Willamette High School, 7 p.m.: For the second straight season, the Storm are inthe Class 5A state playoffs andopen postseason play on the road. Behind QB John Bledsoe, who haspassedfor 1,668 yards and 22 TDs this season, ninth-seededSummit travels to Eugene to take on No. 8 Marist. Theathieticism of Storm tailback Sean Kent, who rushedfor 122 yards andthree scores on just six carries in last Friday's 41-14homewin over North Salem,andwideout Kyle Cornett, who has11 receIving TDsandaverages more than16 yards per catch this season,will be on display asSummit takes on the Spartans. Pacedby QB QuinnCota, whohas 1,264 passing yardsand13 touchdowns this season, Marist finished secondin the Midwestern Leaguebut is coming off a 27-24loss at Springfield last Friday. Sisters(5-4) at Gladstone (8-0), 7 p.m.: Behind370 rushing yards last Friday,the Outlaws defeatedHenley3412 in KiamathFalls in aClass 4A play-in gameto reach the state playoffs for the first time sInce2007. Now, Connor Geiiings, whoran for 143 yards lastweek,and Mitch Gibney,whoaccounted for110 rushingyards, lead No.16 Sisters against top-seededGladstone, the second-highest-scoring team in 4A.TheGladiators, who in their most recent game defeatedMoiaiia 7021 athomeonOct.24,have outscored opponents by36 points per game this season and haveeclipsed 50 points in four games. Crook County P-2) at Junction City(5-3), 7 p.m.: After17 iong years, and following a 41-14Class 4A play-in victory over visiting Kiamath Union last Friday, the Cowboys havereturned to the state playoffs. Crook County, the No. 9seed, rides BlakeBarteis into the first round at Junction City after the junior QBpassed for five touchdowns andfinished14-of-19 for169 yards last week. Theeighth-seeded Tigers, champions of the Sky-Em League,havewon four of their last five, inciuding a13-6 homewinover Sutheriin on Oct. 24. Culver tl-2) at Knappa (81) at Celumdia Memorial Hospital Fielti in Asteria, 7p.m.: TheBuiidogsmake their first state playoff appearance in four years as 15th-seeded Culverfaces off against No. 2 Knappa. Levi Vincent, who rushed for153 yards and two TDs in last Friday's 45-14 win over visiting Stanfield, leads the Buiidogs into this Class 2A first-round matchup as Culver takes on a Knappa squadthat has allowed the fewest points in 2A so far thIs season. Behind Vincent, along with Fern Badiiio and Jaiden Jones, who eachhadtwo rushing scores last week, Cuiver looks to break through against the Loggers, who comeoff a 54-0 home win versus NeahKah-Nie andhavegiven up less than five points per game this season.
PREP BOYS SOCCER
Outlaws Continued from C1
ou soverta e utnam Bulletin staff report
the 16-team 5A field. The coach'smood changed some in the
MILWAUKIE — An upset victory in the
first round of the Class 5A playoffs earned second half, when Putnam (9-5-2), the No. Mountain View a prize few teams would covet — a quarterfinal date with the only
7 seed out of the Northwest Oregon Con-
unbeaten and untied boys soccer team in the state. But as far as the Cougars are concerned,
65th and 68th minutes to get within 3-2. "That," said Jimenez of the Kingsmen's PK-fueled comeback, "made the last 10
unstoppable," said Mountain View coach
minutes sort of stressful." But the Cougars (9-4-2), helped by the strong midfield play of Fionn Joerdens,
ference, scored on penalty kicks in the
bring 'em on. "With my big guns ... they're relatively Jerry Jimenez. "They give us a chance againstanybody." Those big guns — juniors Taylor Willman and Zach Emerson — provided all the scoring punch the Cougars needed
held on for the win. Now they await another road game Saturday, at Hood River Valley, the No. 2 seed with a perfect 15-0
record after beating Central 2-0 in another first-round game Wednesday. "Hats off totheboys, thewholeteam," said Jimenez.'Theycame through once again."
Wednesday in a 3-2 win over Putnam.
Willman scored twice on penalty kicks, sandwiching a goal on a free kick by Em-
The Cougars no doubt will need another
big performance from Willman and Emerson on Saturday if they are to pull off a
erson in the 30th minute, as Mountain
View took a 3-0 halftime lead. "I felt pretty good about that," said Jimenez, whose Intermountain Confer-
shocker in Hood River.
"We count on those guys," said Jimenez. ence runner-up team is the No. 10 seed in "And they keep delivering."
The Outlaws advance to host McLoughlin of Milton-Freewater
in a quarterfinal contest Saturday. The No. 6-seeded Pioneers beat North Valley 4-2 in another
first-round match Wednesday. "I feel confident, and I think the
guys feel confident," said Jensen. But once the playoffs begin, he added, "no one is easy." Madras (10-6) brought a modest No. 18 OSAA ranking into the playoffs but was no mere firstround fodder. After a 3-3 start to
the season, the White Buffaloes won seven of nine games to se-
cure second place in the Tri-Valley Conference.On Wednesday, though, they could not match up with the Outlaws, champions of the Sky-Em League. "Sisters is a really good team," said Madras coach Clark Jones. "They're tall, physical and athletic — really, one of the few teams this year that was able to keep up withus." The Outlaws took a 1-0 lead when Colton Mannhalter was
tripped inside the penalty box and Bachtoldpunched in the PK.
Storm
"It was a legitimate call," Jones said of the penalty. "Their player was fouled from behind."
had a great second half." Abbott finished with two goals and an
Continued from C1 assist for Summit, while Diego Santamaria, "He's proved it throughout the whole sea- Ragnar Schmidt and Mack Van Der Velde son. It's incredibly important for us to get each scored once. C.J. Fritz, Eli Warmenthe first goal of the game, and obviously hoven, Casey Weaver, Cameron Ficher and game-winning goals — those are two im- Scott Bundy each dished out an assist for portant things for us. Alex Bowlin excels the Intermountain Conference champion at both of those, and you can't ask for more Storm, who have advanced to the semifias a coach and from a team. He has got an nal round each of the past three years. To
After that, said Jensen, "it was
a goodback-and-forth game. Madras played well." The score remained 1-0until the 54th minute, when Pedersen took
a feed fromthe right side from Ben Larson, broke away against the Madras defense and got off a shot
engine that is not matched very often by an
extend that streak, Summit will have to
opponent," Kidder added. That high-powered engine was on full display Wednesday, especially in the first half.
get through No. 9 La Salle, which visits the
from 15 yards out that found the upper right corner of the net for a
Storm on Saturday.
2-0 Sisters lead.
Bowlin's goals in the 10th and 13th minutes provided Summit, the No. 1 seed in the
of the win over Lebanon, a Mid-Willamette
"It makes a statement to everybody who's still in it, that we're here to play," Bowlin said
Conference member making its first play16-team bracket, with a 2-0 lead over No. 16 off appearance in three years. "It's big for Lebanon, which fell to 6-10 on the season. everybody else. For our team, it's huge. But Then he added scores in the 22nd and 30th for everybody else, it just says that Summit minutes to give the Storm (14-1-1 overall) a is the No. 1 seed, and we proved it tonight." four-goal halftime advantage. With a fresh crop of young talent, one After assisting on Cole Abbott's goal ear- with a solid helping of freshmen and sophly in the second half, Bowlin finished his omores, mixed with a veteran class of senight with a 48th-minute score, allowing niors who have reached at least the semis Summit to run away with a 10th straight every season of their high school careers, win and its largestplayoff victorymargin in the Storm have their eyes set on a second program history. straight 5A state title. "Great way to get started," Kidder said. But, Bowlin noted, last year's champion"The first-round game, you never know ship is in the past. "Last year was last year," he said. "We're what to expect from the boys. A lot of these guys, this is their first time playing a playoff a whole new squad.... We're just trying to game. And sometimes with these games, go out with a bang as seniors and showing nerves come into play. I thought they were a the younger kids how to do it." little nervous earlyon, but oncewegot a few — Reporter: 541-383-0307, goals under our belt, we settled down and glucas@bendbulletin.corn.
That proved plenty for the Outlaws, as Bachtold and Mannhalter
controlled play at midfield and Tristan Kaczmarek and the Sisters defensive line kept the Buffs atbay. "We ha d
s e veral d i f ferent
chances," said Jones. "We just didn't get anything in." Jones praised the play of his senior captains, Mario Urieta and Oved Felix, and another senior,
Gustavo Alonso, who helped anchor thedefense.Among Monday's top performers for Madras were several players who are expected to return next season, including juniors Manny Diaz and Jose Romero, sophomore Omar Dominguez,and freshman Jonathan Reynoso.
"We played well today," Jones concluded. "Just not well enough to win."
PREP SCOREBOARD Girls soccer Class 6A Quarlerfinals Saturday'sgames WestviewatTualatin, 5p.m. LincolnatSunset,6p.m. SouthSalemat West Salem, 6p.m. ForestGroveat North Medford, noon Class 5A Quarlerlinals Saturday'sgames HoodRiverValley atPutnam,7p.m. La Salleat Summit, noon Churchill atHilsboro,2p.m. AshlandatBend,1 p.m. Class4A Quarlesfinals Saturday'sgames GladstoneatSisters, TBD Philomath atValley Catholic,4 p.m. HenleyatScappoose,TBD Banksat Cascade,TBD Class 3A/2A/IA Quarlerfinals Saturday'sgames WesternMennoniteatOregonEpiscopal, TBD CatlinGabelatSantiamChristian, 3p.m. Creswelat l Westside Christian,11 a.m. Cascade ChristianatSt. Mary's,Medford,6:45p.m.
Boys soccer Class 6A Secondround Wednesday'sresults CentralCatholic 3,SouthSalem1(OTj WestSalem2,SouthMedford1 Jesuit 2,Sunset0 Clackama s4,Westview3(OT) WestLinn3,Lincoln1 Grant 3,LakeOswego2(PK8-7) DavidDouglas4, McMinnvile1 GrantsPass1, SouthEugene0
At Liberly HighSchool, Hillsboro
Class 6A Firsl round Friday's games Thurston at Central Catholic, 7 p.m. Grant atWestAlbany, 7p.m. Lincolnat Clackamas,7 p.m. Roosevelat t West Linn,7 p.m. RoseburgatSherwood,7p.m. Lakeridgeat Westview, 7p.m. McNaryat OregonCity,7 p.m. CanbyatSheldon, 7 p.m. BarlowatGrantsPass,7 p.m. LakeOswegoatSouthMedford,5p.m. BeavertonatWest Salem,7p.m. Southridge at SouthSalem,7 p.m. Gresham atJesuit, 7p.m. Wilson atNorthMedford, 7:30p.m. SunsetatSprague,7 p.m. DavidDouglasattigard, 7 p.m.
Class 4A At LaneCommunity College, Eugene Frlday'sGames Guarlerlinals Madrasvs.Banks,1:15 p.m. ValleyCatholic vs.Marshfield,1:15 p.m. CrookCountyvs. HiddenValley,3:15p.m. Cascade vs. Sisters, 3:15p.m.
Class 3A At LaneCommunity College, Eugene Friday'sGames Guarlerlinals Coquillevs.Creswell,8a.m. Rainiervs.Vale, 8a.m. OregonEpiscopalvs. SantiamChristian,10 a.m. SalemAcad emyvs.CascadeChristian,10am.
Friday's Games Quarterflnals Bonanza vs. Kennedy,1:15p.m. GrantUnionvs.Myrtle Point,1:15p.m. Unionys.Burns,3;15p.m. Faith Biblevs.Culver,3:15 p.m.
Y
Class 4A First round Wednesday's results Henley5,Newport1 Phoenix3,Scappoose1
•
W I
Class 2A First round Friday's games Toled oatOakland,7p.m. CulveratKnappa,7 p.m.
Saturday'sgames Kennedyat Burns, 1p.m. Nestucca at Umon/Cove,1 p.m. Lost River at Regis,1 p.m. Oakridgeat Gold Beach,2 p.m. MyrtlePointat Heppner, 2p.m. Weston-McE wen at Central Linn, 3p.m. Class1A Firsl round Frlday's games CondoNWh eeler atLowell, 7p.m. HosannaChristian atSherman,6p.m. NorthDouglasat Dufur, 6p.m. Yoncallaat DaysCreek,1 p.m. Saturday'sgames TriangleLakeat Crane,1 p.m. PineEagleatCamasValley,1 p.m. PowersatWallowa, 1p.m. lone atAdrian,1 p.m.
Class 4A Firsl round Friday's games SistersatGladstone,7p.m. CrookCountyat Junction City, 7 p.m. Molalla atScappoose,7p.m. Banksat Cascade, 7p.m. Siuslawat Mazama,7 p.m. SweetHomeat Phoenix, 7 p.m.
Class1A At RidgeviewHighSchool, Redmond Frlday's Games Quarterfinals Hosanna Christian vs.Country Christian, 8a.m. Camas Valey vs. Lowell,8 a.m. Trinity Lutheran vs. Dufur,10 a.m. Crane vs.NorthDouglas,10 a.m.
•
Class 3A First round Friday's games SalemAcademyat SantiamChristian, 7p.m. Taft atScio,7p.m. lllinois Valleat y Dayton, 7p.m. Rainier atHarrisburg, 7p.m. BlanchetCatholic at HorizonChristian(Tualatinj, 7 p.m. PleasantHil at CascadeChristian, 7p.m. Saturday'sgames NyssaatClatskanie,1 p.m. Coquille atVale, noon
Class SA First round Frlday's games Corvallis atMountainView,7 p.m. Summivs t Marist atWilamette HighSchool, 7p.m. SandyatHermiston, 7p.m. Crescent Valey atLiberly, 1pm. Parkrose atSpringfield, 7:15p.m. Wilsonville atCentral, 7 p.m. AshlandatHilsboro, 7 p.m. Pendleton atSilverton, 7p.m.
Class 2A At RidgeviewHighSchool, Redmond
Class 5A First round Wednesday's results Summit10,Lebanon0 La Salle 2, Crescent Valley1(PK5-4j Ashland1,Liberty0(PK4-2) Woodburn 4,Marist 0 Wilsonville 3,Corvallis1 Hillsboro4, SouthAlbany0 MountainView3,Putnam0 HoodRiverValley 2,Central 0
SouthUm pquaat Philomath, 7p.m. LaGrandeatNort hBend,7p.m.
Football
Friday'sGames Quarlerlinals Corvallisvs.Lebanon,8a.m. StHelensvs.Summit,8a.m. Cratervs.LaSalle,10am. Maristvs.Bend,10a.m.
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ON-LINE BIDING ENDS NOVEMBER 11 AT 8 P.M.
www.BulletinBidnBuy.com
NorthBenI1, Ontari0 o
NorthMarion3, LaGrande0 Sisters2, Madras0 McLoughlin4, NorthValley2 Molalla 4,Philomath1 Stayton 4, Gladstone1
Class 3A/2A/1A First round Wednesday's results Oregon Episcopal9, Glide 0 Delphian2,Umatila 0 St Mary'sMedford 6, East LinnChristian 0 Creswel5, l CascadeChristian4(PK4-2) CatlinGabel5,Pleasant Hil 0 BlanchetCatholic 3, Lakeview1 Riverside3, Faith Bible2(PK10-9) Portland Adventist 3, Taft1
Volleyball Class 6A At Liberly HighSchool, Hlllsboro Friday's Games Quanerfinals McNaryvs.Jesuit,1:15 p.m. Sunsetvs.West Albany,1;15 p.m. Clackamas vs. Wilamette, 3:15p.m. Southridge vs.Central Catholic, 3:15p.m. Class SA
.I 'I'
I
,i
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VOU CAIII BID OIII Lot9inthe Yarrow Community Located in Madras Retsil Valueg4,NN *60% Reserve
541-385-8522
*
The wrong lot was unintentionally listed in The Bulletin Bid-n-Buy catalog that published Sunday, November 2.Thecorrect lot number is ¹9. I
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C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
D0W
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17,484.53
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
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Financial analysts anticipate that 1,920 ' " " " ' 10 DAYS Disney's latest quarterly earnings 2,050 " improved versus a year ago. The media giant, due to report its fiscal fourth-quarter financial results 2,000 " today, has been riding a string of box-office hits, including "Frozen" 1,950 " and "Guardians of the Galaxy." The Marvel superhero epic has racked 1,900 " up more than $765 million worldwide since its Aug. 1 release. ' j '
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$1,145.40 ~ -22.00
Close: 17,484.53 Change: 100.69 (0.6%)
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StocksRecap NYSE NASD
Vcl. (in mil.) 3,683 1,944 Pvs. Volume 3,807 1,887 Advanced 1841 1402 Declined 1288 1271 New Highs 2 50 1 3 7 New Lcws 70 59
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17486.59 17385.76 17484.53 +100.69 DOW Trans. 8846.10 8773.57 8839.91 +41.00 DOW Util. 609.31 597.65 608.74 +1 2.10 NYSE Comp. 10824.89 10777.52 10824.07 +65.99 NASDAQ 4650.39 4607.73 4620.72 -2.91 S&P 500 2023.77 2014.43 2023.57 +11.47 S&P 400 1422.13 1414.68 1419.88 +5.01 Wilshire 5000 21291.81 21176.35 21269.72 +93.37 Russell 2000 1172.03 1163.68 1167.07 +1.65
DOW
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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD 40.58% L L +5.48% 40.47% L L +1 9.45% 42.03% L L L +24.09% 40.61% L L +4.07% -0.06% L L L +10.63% 40.57% L L +9.48% 40.35% L L +5.76% 40.44% L L +7.94% 40.14% L L +0.29%
NorthwestStocks Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Baacorp ColumbiaBokg ColumbiaSportswear CostcoWholesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics MicrosoftCorp Nike Ioc B Nordstrom Inc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarInc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Ioc Schoitzer Steel Sherwin Wms StancorpFncl StarbucksCp Triquiot Semi umppua Holdi ngs US Bancorp
Molson Coors Brewing. Molson Coors' latest quarterly earnings should provide insight into whether the trend continued in the July-September quarter. Wall Street expects the beer maker, whose brands also include Blue Moon, Miller High Life and Cobra, is expected to report today that earnings and revenue increased in the third quarter.
55.92 53. 9 7 - 1 .42 - 2.6 L L 35.98 35 .72 + . 3 6 + 1 .0 L L 18.03 17. 3 4 +. 1 3 +0.8 L L 10 2 .20 2 3.05 -.71 -3.0 T T T 144. 5 7 12 4.22 -.89 -0.7 5.82 5.84 +.0 9 + 1.8 T T 0.3 6 28.15 +.09+0.3 L L L 44. 9 8 40.81 +.88 +2.2 LL 13 6.72136.50 -.05 . . . L L 18.30 14. 6 0 +. 1 4 +1.0 L T 37.42 34.8 4 +. 2 2 40 .6 L L 8.2 5 36.18 +.28+0.8 L L 35.56 3 3. 7 6 -.55 -1.6 T T 14.70 13.3 2 +. 0 7 +0 .5 L T 57.12 57. 5 1 +. 4 3 +0.8 L L 9.19 6.70 +. 2 0 + 3.1 T T 18.96 1 3. 3 9 -.84 -5.9 T L 36.05 26. 4 9 +. 4 9 +1.9 T T 24.31 21. 5 0 + . 1 8 +0.8 L L 47.73 47 .86 + . 2 9 +0.6 L L 94.14 94. 6 8 +. 7 3 +0.8 L L 73.74 72 .26 + . 23 + 0.3 T L 47.50 4 6. 8 4 -.13 -0.3 T L 68.81 65.9 5 +. 5 6 +0 .9 L L 5.30 3.70 +. 0 9 4 2.5 L L 46.99 41.4 7 +. 2 0 +0 .5 L L 275. 0 9 22 3.11 -.95 -0.4 L T 36.03 34.9 7 +. 1 8 + 0 .5 L L 33.32 23. 8 3 +. 3 3 +1.4 L L 23 0.89230.39 +2.12 + 0.9 L L 69.99 6 9. 4 0 -.28 -0.4 T L 82.50 7 6. 6 6 -.05 -0.1 L L 22.61 22 .83 + . 67 +3.0 L L 9.6 5 17.48 +.32+1.9 T L 43.92 43. 5 2 +. 3 6 +0.8 L L 24. 53 21 . 72 + . 2 1 +1 .0 T L 53.80 53 .53 + . 61 +1.2 L L L 34.60 34.38 - .08 -0.2 L
+ 'i . 4 0 '" " '/ 1.2478
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StoryStocks A batch of economic reports helped give stocks a lift Wednesday, driving stock indexes up, with both the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index closing at all-time highs. A survey showed hiring picked up last month, while a reading of activity in the service sector increased. Profit reports from a range of big companies also gave the market a boost. Devon Energy and Chesapeake Energy jumped after they reported results. Nine of the 10 sectors in the S&P 500 ended the day higher, led by utilities and energy companies. Health care stocks were the only group that lost ground. DVN
Close:$61.62L5.60 or 10.0% The oil and gas exploration company reported a jump in quarterly profit and the financial results beat Wall Street expectations. $80
C hesapeake Energy
70
25
60
20
A
S O 52-week range $63.34 ~ $80.63
CH K
Close:$22.76 L1.47 or 6.9% The natural gas company reported a jump in quarterly profit on higher production and the results beat Wall Street expectations. $30
A
S 0 52-week range $16.69~ $31.49
Vol.:8.7m (2.4x avg.) P E: 15.3 Vol.:15.6m (1.5x avg.) PE: 3 2 .1 Mkt. Cap:$25.21b Yie l d: 1.6% Mkt. Cap:$15.15b Yie l d: 1.5%
NUS
Close:$43.76T-6.66 or -13.2% The skin care and nutritional products company's quarterly results beat expectations, but its outlook fell short of forecasts. $55
Coupons.com
COUP Close: $16.57L4.13 or 33.2% The digital coupons company reported a narrower third-quarter loss on a boost in revenue, beating Wall Street expectations. $40
L +47.1 +5 3 .9 1 874 14 0 . 5 0 L +26.7 +30 .0 35 0 1 1 1. 2 7 L + 11. 4 +2 3 .1 57006 16 0 .20f T -75.1 -72.7 485 d d 0 .88f 50 30 T -9.0 -3.2 3241 18 2 . 92 45 20 T -3.6 -2.2 30 +2. 4 + 12.0 195 18 0.64f 40 A S O M A M J J A S 0 L + 1. 6 + 18.3 238 24 0.60f 52-week range 52-week range L +14.7 +1 4 .6 2 039 29 1 . 4 2 $39.46~ $140.50 $11.61 ~ $3 2.67 L -11.1 - 5.3 11 7 6 3 Vol.:9.3m ( 5.5x avg.) P E:8. 4 Vol.:6.9m (13.0x avg.) P E: . . . L +13.1 420 .2 45 3 2 4 0. 4 0 Mkt. Cap:$2.59 b Yie l d : 3.2% Mkt. Cap: $1.29 b Yield: ... L + 2 9.3 +41.7 7374 14 0.64 T +30. 1 +4 6 .1 31 382 16 0 .90 Activision Blizzard ATVI FireEye FEYE T -0.7 + 7 . 9 8 065 1 3 0 . 26 Close: $20.83L0.88 or 4.4% Close: $29.12 T-5.13 or -15.0% L + 45. 5 +3 5 .8 2 878 19 0 .74f The video game maker reported a The cyber security company reportT +22.0 +22 .0 87 6 30 boost in quarterly profit and reveed better-than-expected quarterly AOL $43.87 T -27.7 -15.5 13694 cc nue, beating Wall Street expectaprofit, but its revenue fell short of $55 T -13.3 13.1 1400 1 7 0 . 71 tions, and boosted its outlook. Wall Street forecasts. '14 L -10.7 - 2.2 30 7 1 8 0 . 20 $25 $40 50 L +27.9 +35 .5 22136 19 1 .24f 35 45 L +20.4 +2 4 .3 3 053 32 0 . 9 6 20 30 L +16.9 +21 .3 9 1 8 1 9 1 3 . 2 40 L +9.4 +12 . 2 16 1 2 2 1 . 86f A S A S 0 0 4 .0 L + 11.5 +18 .7 2 0 46 1 8 0. 8 8 52-week range 52-week range 35 T +45.7 +76 .1 15 5 62 $76.36~ $24.1$ $24.61 ~ $97.35 L -10.8 - 6.4 86 7 4 0 1 . 7 6 Operating Vol.:29.6m (3.6x avg.) PE: 21.5 Vol.:2 4.9m (2.9x avg.) P E: . . . 0.55 T -17.2 - 11.3 829 1 7 0 . 12 EPS Mkt. Cap:$14.95 b Y i e ld: 1.0% Mkt. Cap: $4.34 b Yield: ... L +20.0 +13 .4 1 2 79 3 0.92 T -27.1 - 19.3 219 8 2 0 . 75 Mondelez Int'I MDLZ Chuy's Holdings Cl-IUY 3Q '13 3 Q '14 L +25. 6 +2 3 .9 75 0 2 6 2. 2 0 Close:$37.15%2.12 or 6.1% Close:$20.68T-9.49 or -31.5% L + 4.8 +17 . 3 23 5 1 3 1 . 10f The maker of Oreo cookies and Tri- The regional restaurant operator rePrice-to-earnings ratio: 49 L -2.2 -3.3 3603 28 1.28f dent gum reported better-than-exported worse-than-expected quarbased on past 12 months' results pected quarterly profit and raised its terly profit results and provided a L +173 .7 + 188.4 4252 c c weak full-year outlook. Source: Factaet L -8.7 +7. 5 3 6 32 24 0 . 6 0 full-year outlook. $38 $35 L +7.7 +17 . 5 8 0 06 1 4 0 . 9 8 Washington Fedl L -6.7 -3.5 24 2 1 4 0 . 59f 36 30 Wells Fargo & Co L +17.9 +2 7 .8 14204 13 1 . 40 34 25 L +8.9 +16 . 8 2 993 2 6 1 . 16 Weyerhaeuser A S 0 A S 0 52-week range 52-week range Better quarter? $31.76~ $3 9.64 $29.66~ $4 3.46 Higher prices have helped offset DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, iiut are not included. ii - Annualrate plus stock. 3 -Liquidating dividend. 9 -Amount declaredor paidin last12 months. f - Current Vol.:17.8m (2.4x avg.) PE: 34.1 Vol.:7.0m (20.1x avg.) PE: 3 0.4 a decline in global beer sales for annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$62.63 b Yie l d: 1.6% Mkt. Cap:$339.9 m Yield: ...
AOL reports third-quarter financial results today. The internet pioneer has been trying to bring in more revenue from a digital advertising market led by Googleand Facebook. In September, AOL inked a deal to provide Microsoft's MSN with more video and additional news stories from popular sites such as The Huffington Post and TechCrunch in a bid to sell more digital ads.
A LK 34.81 ~ AVA 26.78 — 0 B AC 13. 80 ~ BB S I 1 8.25 o — BA 116.32 ~ C A C B 4 . 11 ~ COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 COLM 32.96 ~ COST 109.50— o BR EW 10.07 ~ F LIR 28.03 ~ HPQ 2 4 .77 ~ 3 I NTC 23.40 ~ K EY 11.55 ~ K R 3 5 .13 ~ LSCC 5.27 ~ L PX 12.46 ~ M DU 24 . 99 ~ MEN T 18.25 ~ MSFT 3 4.63 — o N KE 69.85 ~ JWN 54.90 — o NWN 40.05 ~ P CAR 53.59 ~ PLNR 1.91 ~ P CL 38.70 ~ PCP 215.09 ~ S WY 26.69 ~ S CHN 2 1 .41 ~ SHW 170.63 — o S FG 57.77 ~ SBUX 67.93 ~ TQNT 7.22 — o UM P Q 14.94 ~ 1 U SB 37.29 ~ WAF D 1 9.52 $y — WF C 4 1 .71 — o WY 2 7 .48 — o
$78.68
Nu Skin Enterprises
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
NAME
You've got earnings
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Devon Energy
16,000
6
-.Si
$15.42
Dow jones mdustnals "
16,440 ' ""' 10 DAYS "
"
1 850
10 YRTNOTE ~ 2.34% ~
................. Close: 2,023.57 Change: 11.47 (0.6%)
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Mouse house
11.47
2,023.57
dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distriiiution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
::::" Mondelez raises outlook Shares of Mondelez International shot up 6 percent Wednesday after the snack company raised its full-year earnings outlook. The maker of Oreo cookies, Cadbury chocolate and Trident gum expects full-year adjusted earnings in the range of $1.67 to $1.72 per share. When adjusted for currency
exchange rates, that's a pr,:.I', range of $1.82 to $1.87. $<J'. The company also Mondelez (MDLZ)
Wednesday's close:$37.15 40
*annualized
AmdFocus
Fidelity SmCpyal d VALUE
FCPVX
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME
LAST 17.29 7.68 Astealntl h 2.16 Coupons n 16.57 WrldEnScl 5.46 YcuOnDm 3.12 SiiioCoking 3.31 Criteo SA 35.99 PaycomSn 21.15 AdeptTech 8.27
Elecsys EKodk wtA
CHG +7.72 +2.42 +.54 +4.13 +1.31 +.67 +.66 +6.44 +3.42 +1.27
%CHG + 80.7 + 4 6.0 o4$ + 3 3.3 $3 Qo + 3 3.2 + 3 1.6 673 + 2 7.3 MomingstarOwnershipZone™ + 2 4.9 e Fund target represents weighted + 2 1.8 Q + 19.3 average of stock holdings + 1 8.1 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings
Losers NAME LAST ChuysHldg 20.68 AlbnyMlc 1 6 .59 Zagg 5.07 Enphase 1 2 . 05 Z ulily n 28. 1 6
CHG %CHG -9.49 -31.5 -6.08 -26.8 -1.72 -25.3 -3.55 -22.8 -7.80 -21.7
Foreign Markets NAME
LAST Paris 4,208.42 London 6,539.14 Frankfurt 9,315.48 Hong Kong23,695.62 Mexico 45,071.98 Milan 19,427.85 Tokyo 16,937.32 Stockholm 1,41 4.09 Sydney 5,492.80 Zurich 8,843.17
CATEGORY Small Value MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * ** * f t ASSETS $1,941 million EXP RATIO 1.09%
MANAGER Derek Janssen SINCE 201 3-01-15 RETURNS3-MO +4.3
YTD +1.8 CHG %CHG 1-YR +6.0 +78.23 +1.89 3-YR ANNL +19.5 +85.17 +1.32 5-YR-ANNL +16.8 +1 49.01 +1.63 -1 50.04 -.63 TOP 5HOLDINGS +1 87.55 +A 2 Tech DataCorp +493.22 +2.60 PacWest Bancorp + 74.85 + . 44
Federated Investors, Inc. Class 8 -5.40 -.10 TCF Financial Corp +1 25.15 +1.44 World Fuel Services Corp +14.22 +1.02
Source: FactSet
SelectedMutualpunds
Fidelity Small Cap Value is in the midst of a leadership transition; Marhetsummary comanager Derek Janssen will Most Active become the lead manager of the NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG fund effective January 1. 202.34 +1.27 16.59 -.62 17.34 +.13 108.67 +2.60 41.47 -.37 4.92 -.26 3.49 +.01 74.83 -.93 108.86 +.26 33.76 -.55
5-yr*
(Ba sed on past 12 month results) plv . yleld. 1 6% D ivl d end. .$0 60
Pri c e change through Nov. 5
AP
S&P500ETF 825119 MktVGold 795354 BkofAm 570064 Alibaba n 457961 iShEMkts 447900 Sprint 417702 SiriusXM 396924 Facebook 348211 Apple Inc s 341254 Intel 313816
Price change Y TD 3 - y *r
Price-earnings ratio: 19
52-WEEK RANGE
$32 AP
reported third-quarter earnings of 53 cents per share. Earnings, adjusted for one-time gains and costs, were 50 cents per share. The results were far ahead of Wall Street expectations. The average estimate of analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research was for earnings of 39 cents per share. Mondelez shares are up 5 percent this year, compared with the 10 percent rise of the Standard & Poor's 500 index.
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 86 +.12+7.2 +11.2 +14.3+12.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.79 +.31 +7.2 +8.9 +11.8 +9.6 A A A CpWldGrlA m 47.81 +.14 +5.4 +9.6 +15.5 +9.9 A A D EurPacGrA m 48.64 +.BB -0.9 +3.9 +10.6 +6.6 A 8 8 FnlnvA m 54. 7 0 +.32+7.1 +12.8 +18.0+14.2 D C C GrthAmA m 46.31 +.84 +7.7 +13.5 +19.3+14.2 C 8 D IncAmerA m 21.81 +.12 +8.1 +10.8 +13.5+12.0 8 A A InvCoAmA m 40.62 +.25 +11.9 +17.7 +19.8+14.3 A 8 C NewPerspA m38.38 +.12 +2.2 +7.4 +14.8+11.2 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m42.62 +.23 +9.5 +14.9 +18.4+15.7 8 C A Dodge &Cox Income 13.89 .. . + 5.2 + 5 . 7 + 4.6 +5.4 A A 8 Intlstk 44.14 +.19 +2.6 + 6.8 +14.5 +8.9 A A A Stock 179.82+1.50 +8.0 +14.8 +22.9+16.1 8 A A Fidelity Contra 102. 3 5 +.16+7.6 +13.1 +17.8+15.5 D C 8 ContraK 102 . 37 +.17+7.7 +13.2 +17.9+15.7 D C 8 LcwPriStk d 49.86 +.20 +5.6 + 9 .6 +18.2+16.3 D D C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 71.89 +.44+11.3 +17.1 +19.8+16.0 A 8 A FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.48+.82 +5.3 +7.5 +10.9+10.5 A A A InccmeA m 2.4 5 +.81 +5.8 + 8 .1 +11.4+10.9 A A A Oakmark Intl I 24.59 +.17 -6.6 -3.8 +15.0+10.2 E A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 21 . 89 +.20+7.6 +12.6 +15.5+13.3 D E D RisDivB m 18 . 83 +.17+6.8 +11.7 +14.5+12.3 D E E RisDivC m 18 . 72 +.18+6.9 +11.8 +14.7+12.4 D E E SmMidValA m46.92 +.25 +6.3 +11.1 +16.4+13.6 D E E SmMidValBm 39.46 +.22 +5.7 +10.2+15.4+12.7 D E E T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.23 + .28 +5.8 + 9 .9 +17.7+14.0 E D C GrcwStk 56.3 0 - . 21 +7.1 +13.6 +19.6+16.9 C A A HealthSci 72.4 2 - . 45+25.3 +33.9 +37.5+28.2 8 A A Newlncome 9. 5 7 . .. +5 .2 + 4 .9 + 3.1 +4.5 8 C D Vanguard 500Adml 187.80+1.13 +11.3 +17.1 +19.8+16.0 A 8 A 500lnv 186.98+1.13 +11.2 +17.0 +19.7+15.9 A 8 A CapOp 53.14 +.12 +15.1 +20.8 +24.0+17.6 A A A Eqlnc 32.82 +.23 +9.7 +14.5 +19.0+16.6 C 8 A IntlstkldxAdm 26.94 +.85 -1.5 +0.8 +8.5 NA 8 D StratgcEq 33.12 +.13 +10.4 +16.9 +21.9+19.7 A A A TgtRe2020 28.78 +.87 +6.2 +8.8 +11.2+10.2 A A A Tgtet2025 16.73 +.85 +6.2 +9.3 +12.2+10.8 A 8 8 TctBdAdml 10.85 +5.0 +4.4 +2.5 +4.2 C D D Tctlntl 16.11 +.83 -1.6 +0.7 +8.4 +5.4 8 D D TctStlAdm 50.72 +.26 +10.1 +15.8 +19.7+16.4 8 8 A TctStldx 50.70 +.26 +10.0 +15.7 +19.6+16.3 C 8 A USGrc 31.60 +.13 +10.1 +17.7 +19.6+15.3 A A C Welltn 40.40 +.20 +8.4 +12.1 +14.0+11.6 A A A FAMILY
PCT 2.96 2.95 2.94 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.81 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 2.76 redemption fee.Source: Mominestar.
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.34 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3-mcnth T-bill 6 -mcnth T-bill 52-wk T-bill
. 0 2 .01 + 0 .01 L L . 0 5 .0 6 -0.01 L L .09 .09 ... ~ L
2-year T-note . 5 3 .52 + 0 .01 L L 5 -year T-note 1.63 1.63 ... L L 10-year T-note 2.34 2.33 +0.01 L L 30-year T-bond 3.06 3.05 +0.01 L
BONDS
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.89 2.88 +0.01 L L T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.39 4.38 +0.01 L L T
3.53 5.06
Barclays USAggregate 2.28 2.28 ...
2.30 5.66 4.5 4 1.60 3.18
L L
YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.89 3.90 -0.01 T T Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.93 1.93 ... L L Barclays US Corp 3.07 3.06 +0.01 L L
Commodities
FUELS
The price of crude oil rose for the first time in five days bouncing back after hitting a three-year low. The price of natural gas rose for the seventh straight day.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
The dollar rose against the euro, British pound and
Japanese yen. It's close to its highest level against the yen since 2007, before the start of the Great Recession.
h5Q HS
L .30 T 1.38 T 2.67 T 3.77
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.88 5.82 +0.06 L T L RATE FUNDS
Foreign Exchange
~
.04 .08 .10
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 78.68 77.19 1.92 1.87 2.44 2.44 4.19 4.13 2.09 2.08
CLOSE PVS. 1145.40 1167.40 15.42 15.93 1210.60 1224.70 3.02 3.03 757.50 790.30
T T L L
%CH. %YTD +1.93 -20.1 +0.2 -0.16 -20.8 -0.9 +1.57 +0.42 -25.1 %CH. %YTD -1.88 -4.7 -3.20 -20.3 -1.15 -11.7 -0.36 -12.2 - 4.15 + 5 . 6
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.65 1.67 -0.87 +22.8 Coffee (Ib) 1.86 1.88 -1.04 +68.3 Corn (bu) 3.70 3.65 +1.58 -1 2.3 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 0.63 -0.14 -25.9 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 327.10 324.40 +0.83 -9.2 -4.5 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.30 1.32 -1.03 Soybeans (bu) 10.21 10.10 +1.04 -22.3 Wheat(bu) 5.25 5.31 -1.08 -13.3 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5977 -.0027 -.17% 1.6049 Canadian Dollar 1.1 400 +.0008 +.07% 1.0462 USD per Euro 1.2478 -.0078 -.63% 1.3476 JapaneseYen 114.71 +1.14 +.99% 9 8 .60 Mexican Peso 13. 5 711 +.0168 +.12% 13.1573 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.7991 +.0124 +.33% 3.5356 Norwegian Krone 6 . 8340 -.0108 -.16% 5.9885 South African Rand 11.1430 +.1147 +1.03% 10.2371 Swedish Krona 7.3 7 8 6 + .0012 +.02% 6.5264 Swiss Franc .9650 +.0055 +.57% . 9 128 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1652 +.0216 +1.85% 1.0535 Chinese Yuan 6.1140 -.0015 -.02% 6.1009 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7522 -.0002 -.00% 7.7518 Indian Rupee 61.415 +.005 +.01% 61.630 Singapore Dollar 1.2938 +.0052 +.40% 1.2434 South KoreanWon 1091.03 +13.45 +1.23% 1063.66 Taiwan Dollar 30.64 + . 0 9 + .29% 2 9 .44
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
BRIEFING
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR
Spoof video adout Bend unveiled Bend filmmakerScott Elnes unveiledhis humorous hip-hop spoofvideo Wednesdaythat hehopes will spotlight the city and region's craft beer, recreation andtech scenes. Elnes would also like to see"Beer, Rec& Tech" go viral. The music video starts with a big-city tech worker stuck in freeway traffic, and segues into sceneshighlighting Bend's breweries, its array of winter and summer recreation and its growing hightech sector. Elnes hit a waveof skepticism from city and tourism officials whenhe began seekingsupport for the projectabouta year ago. ButMt. Bachelor ski areasigned on as a sponsor, andseveral breweries andother businesses contributed to the video, which can be seen athttp://youtu. be/KxhA2jopebQ. — Bulletin staffreport
PERMITS Cityef Bend • Triad HomesInc., 21170 SE KaylaCourt, $202,630 • Triad HomesInc.,61925 SE Lorrin Place,$204,022 • West BendProperty CompanyLLC,2825 NW Lolo Drive, $2,700,000 • Greg WelchConstruction Inc.,1118 NW18th St., $281,727 • David Finnigan, 60920 Bachelor ViewRoad, $825,946 • Linda Thorgeirsson, 62708 NW Mt. ThielsenDrive, $360,995 • Copper LeafLLC,808 NE Ross Road,$318,731 • Copper LeafLLC,800 NE Copperleaf Loop,$318,731 • George Perrault, 61412 Cultus LakeCourt, $423,910 • ML BendU.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20686NE Comet Court, $227,694 • Copper LeafLLC,800 NE Ross Road,$316,095 • PCB ARC Inc., 20495 Murray Road,$1,000,000 • Hidden Hils BendLLC, 20628 SECougar Peak Drive, $395,768 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61061 SE Manhae Loop, $213,417 • Hayden B.Evans,61223S. U.S. Highway97,$100,000 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61074SEAmbassador Drive, $253,155 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61071SEAmbassador Drive, $253,155 • Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeWay,$139,600 • Chris Dorton,1124 NW 18tll St., $294,426 • RPP BendI LLC,3188 N. U.S. Highway97,$975,000 • William M. Westhusing, 1448 NWPortland Ave., $268,943 • Haspard R. Murphy,136 NW ChampanelleWay, $425,828 • Deschco Ltd., 2742 NE GreatHorned Place, $238,764 • COA Sisters1 LLC,636 NW PortlandAve., $229,704 • Chris Dorton,1130 NW 18th St., $287,860 • Long TermBendInvestors LLC, 21364 NE Evelyn Place, $231,907 • Long TermBendInvestors LLC, 21360 NE Evelyn Place, $231,907 • Robert Bills, 61676 CedarwoodRoad,$424,072 • Ahulani von Hamm, trustee,1001 SWEmkay Drive, $225,000 • L & D ofOregonInc., 63075 PlateauCourt, $615,645 • Brookswood Bend LLC, 19698 SWAspenRidge Drive, $324,746 • Brookswood Bend LLC, 19680 SWAspen Ridge Drive, $337,858 • Brookswood Bend LLC, 19674 SWAspenRidge Drive, $291,659 • GW Land Acquisitions LLC, 2955 NEDogwood Drive, $223,467 • GW Land Acquisitions LLC, 2951 NE Dogwood Drive, $214,803 • Bend Area Habitatfor Humanity, 2872 NE Spring
• Some areupsetthat10 Barrel Brewinghasbeensold to beveragegiant Anheuser-Busch By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
Nothing will change at Bend-based 10Barrel Brewing Co.onceitbecomes theproperty of Anheuser-Busch and part
of amultinationalbeverage company, the brewery's partners said Wednesday. Anheuser-Busch, the beverage giantbased in St.
Ius, 5
Louis, announced Wednesday
morningthat it would acquire 10 Barrel in a deal expected to dose by year's end. "The most important thing is this is business as usual,"
l'
said 10 Barrel co-founder Jer-
I
emy Cox. Chris Cox, Jeremy's brother, will continue to oversee the brewery. Garrett Wales will still run the restaurant,
Itl
~ggQcii )oggdl
Jeremy Cox said. "The only thing that changes is that we
will havebosses in Chicago," he said. The sale price forthe local brewery, which expects to sell 40,000barrelsofitsproducts
this year, was not disdosed. The agreement covers the Bend production brewery and brewpubs in Bend, Boise and one in Portland, expectedto open early next year. Not everyone cheered the sale. On social media, as many decriedthe sale as congratu-
lated the 10Barrel partners for their good fortune. Larry Sidor, a partner at Crux Fermentation Project and
former Deschutes Brewery brewmaster, said Wednesday
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file photo
10 Barrel Brewing co-founder Jeremy Cox says it will be business as usual at the brewpub on Galveston in Bend. "The only thing that changes is that we will have bosses in Chicago."
Did you know?
tance," he said.
Anheuser-Busch Companies operates13 breweries in the United States, with the first opening in St. Louis in1852. ThealcoholicbeveragesproducedbythecompanyincludeBudweiser, Stella Artois, Beck's, Boddingtons, BassPaleAle, Bud Light, Busch Beer,Landshark Lager, Michelob, Natural Light, Shock Top,GooseIsland, Johnny Appleseed Hard Cider, Kirin and Rollin g Rock.Thecompanyalsoproducesnonalcoholicbeverages such as O'Douls, malt liquors such asKing Cobraand Hurricane, and flavored malt beveragessuch as Bacardi Silver and Tequiza.
he was still processing news of the 10 Barrel sale. "It hasn't really sunk in yet,"
he said. "We're all family, and we kind of support each other. It feels like one of our family members has died." Gary Fish, founder of Deschutes Brewery, said: "It's an
interestingtime; it really is. I wish those guys the best." Anheuser-Busch owns two
other craftbreweries in the U.S.: Goose Island Beer Co.,
of Chicago, and Blue Point Brewing Co., of Patchogue, New York, said Andy Goeler, CEO of Anheuser-Busch's craft division. "Anheuser-Busch has been more active in the world of
Both men said they would
not sell if given the choice. Fish said he has never entertained an offer to sell, but he could
not saywhat the future holds. The business has been locally owned for more than 26 years,
hesaid. Sidorsaid acraftbrewery ultimately cedes something to
accountants when it's soldto a multinational company like such as brewing efficiencies and distribution, Jeremy Cox
the bottom line is the operation
sald.
people. "Thebrewery is staying
The approximatel y200 employees of 10Barrel, about 150 of them in Bend, received
the news this morning, with an "overall verypositive" response, Wales said. "They're really excited," he said."Nobody loses a job. If anything, we'll add more jobs." 10 Barrel will not be adding Anheuser-Busch beverages at its pubs in Boise and Bend or the one soon to open in
stays in Bend, run by the same
Anheuser-Busch.
"When makingbeerforme is all about money, I'll retire,"
right here," Wales said. "It's a
hesaid. Some localbeer drinkers
bigcompany,butwe'redealing with it on a local level just like
declared on social media Wednesdaythat they'd drunk
we have been."
their last Apocalypse; Fish said
The founders of three other breweries in Bend said news
time will tell whether loyalty for the brand falters.
of the 10 Barrel sale surprised
Portland, the partners said. Jimmy Seifrit will remain head
them, but onlybarely. Offers to buy a successful brewery are nothing new. Selling, as the owners of 10Barrel did, is the exception, they said. "There havebeenplentyof approaches. I probably get 10
"Some peoplewanttobuy from what they perceive is a
small, local company, and if theyperceivethathaschanged, they may act on that desire," he said. "But this is Oregon, this
is Central Oregon, and a lot of people are going to say a lot of
ofbrewing operations at 10
or 15 a week, mostly cold calls
stuff. I don't know that it will
craftbeers because ofthe way consumers are enjoying those kinds ofbeers," Goeler said. "From Anheuser-Busch's
Barrel.
or spam," said Fish. "It's a popular segment of the industry to
change their behavior."
be in, and, as such, it's attract-
of Budweiser, is the U.S. arm of Anheuser-Busch InBev, a
perspective, the first thing
Oregon, Washington and Idaho.
that drewus to these guys (10 Barrel) is the portfolio ofbeers. Their beers are amazing." 10Barrelbenefits from the
sale by tapping into Anheuser-Busch expertise in areas
Water Place,$143,763 • GW LandAcquisitions LLC, 2959 NEDogwood Drive, $209,145 • Long TermBendInvestors LLC, 20019Sorrento Place, $207325 • Copper LeafLLC,812 NE Ross Road,$317196 • Jeffrey L. Payne,61752 Bridgecliff Drive, $227,558 • JS Contracting Inc., 2334 NW BensCourt, $322,162 • Thomas V.Queen,3477 NW Bryce CanyonLane,$410,466 • Jason A. Mendell, 20292 Poe SholesDrive,$112,089 • Kristina Finch, 2889NE Marea Drive,$243,754 • Long TermBendInvestors LLC, 21320 NE Evelyn Court, $234,002 • Deschutes RidgeBusiness Park, 985 SW Disk Drive, $150,000 • Bret Dales, 61601 Tam McArthur Loop,$323,915 • West BendProperty CompanyLLC,1579NW Mt. Washington Drive,$201,682 • West BendProperty CompanyLLC,2835 NW Shields Drive,$430,930 • Copper LeafLLC,804 NE Copperleaf Loop,$328,666
The breweryhas no immediate plans to expand or widen its product distribution beyond News of the sale dominated
the local conversation on social media. Among Twitter users, reaction was mixed.
The Coxes and Wales said
• Triad HomesInc., 61939 SE Janalee Place,$239,924 • RF Wilson Trust, 61613 Woodriver Drive,$304,585 • RF Wilson Trust, 61609 Woodriver Drive,$304,585 • Creative RealEstate Soluti onsLLC,2254 NW Lakeside Place,$215,398 • American LaneInvestors LLC, 20760CarmenLoop, $550,000 • Hayden Homes LLC,21237 SE Gol denMarketLane, $374,647 • Hidden Hils BendLLC, 61090 SERubyPeakLane, $264,288 • Manuel L. Milby, 3105NE Purcell Blvd., $100,000 • Triad HomesInc., 21178SE Kayla Court, $212,194 • West BendProperty CompanyLLC,2813NW Shields Drive,$277,409 • Pacific HomeBuilders LLC, 20478 SEDel CocoCourt, $257,746 • Hayden Homes LLC,21245 SE Gol denMarketLane, $263,696 • Kevin H. McKenny, 2538 NW Hosmer LakeDrive, $430,914 • Norwyn R. Newby RevocableTrust,1500 NE
ing capital." Ty Barnett, co-owner of
Good Life Brewing Co., said the fear of losing control over the quality ofbeer the company produces would prevent him from selling."That for me would be the biggest resis-
Cushing Drive,$153,000 • Jason A. Mendell,1400 NW Fresno Ave.,$295,894 • Triad HomesInc., 61931SE Janalee Place,$208,263 •StonebridgeHomesNW LLC, 2397 NWDrouillard Ave., $260,972 • DKS LLC, 3831 NEPurcell Blvd., $206,100 • DKS LLC, 3827 NEPurcell Blvd., $259,041 • Krech DevelopmentInc., 2647 NWBrickyard St., $353,862 • ML BendU.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20794 NE Comet Lane, $174,270 • ML BendU.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20786 NE Comet Lane, $180,132 • ML Bend U.S.A.Limited Partnership, 20790 NE Comet Lane, $174,270 • ML BendU.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20798 NE Comet Lane, $180,132 • Lucas A. Nelson,19761 HollygrapeSt., $236,375 • Triad HomesInc., 21360 Bartlett Lane,$218,909 • Peter A. Barry andPamela M. HendersonRevocable Trust, 62632Sparrow Hawk Circle, $380,059
•HeriatgeHomesNW LLC, 2385 NWDrouillard Ave., $231,522 • Hayden Homes LLC,21242 SE Gol denMarketLane, $373,986 • Lands BendLLC,60956 SE Miles Court, $228,195 • Westerly II BendLLC,20220 NW BrumbyLane,$314,425 • Res-Or TwoLLC,20370 Travelers Place,$192,981 • Hayden Homes LLC,21230 SE Gol denMarketLane, $154,398 • FC FundLLC,624SE GlenedenPlace,$214,175 • WD Enterprises Inc.,104 NW FloridaAve.,166,491 • Jim St. John Construction LLC, 61049 SE Ruby Peak Lane, $188,801 • Jim St. John Construction LLC, 2801 NW Shields Drive, $232,336 • Hayden Homes LLC,21241 SE Gol denMarketLane, $278,709 • FC FundLLC,620 SE GlenedenPlace,$236,013 • Hayden Homes LLC,21217 SE Gol denMarketLane, $270,975 • Nancy C.Anderson, 20364 Shetland Loop,$100,000
Anheuser-Busch, maker multinational company with
headquarters in Belgium, according to its website. It controls 42 percent of the U.S.
beer market. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
••
f •
TODAY • Problem Solving & Decision Making: Learn to handle your emotions and reactions to others; part of the COCC Leadership series; $95, registration required; 8 a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend;541-383-7270. • Getting Traffic to Your Website the EasyWay: Learn to useGoogle AdWords; must have existing website, today, Nov. 13 and20; $89, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • AdBite: Happy hour with AdFed Central Oregon; hear about the history of the Deschutes Brewery brand andmore; $15 members and students; $20 nonmembers, register online ;5-7 p.m.;Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 NW BondSt., Bend; 541-382-9242 or www. adfedco.org. • Successful Customer Service Strategies: Learn to implement a customer service program that ensures apositive experience foryour customers; todayand Nov. 13; $69, call to register; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus,2030 SE CollegeLoop, Redmond; 541-383-7290. FRIDAY • Refine Your Website with HTML andCSS:Learn coding languagesthat work on all sites; Friday and 14; $149; registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. SATURDAY • Beginners OuickBeoks Pro 2014: Learn to do your own bookkeeping; $85, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmondcampus, 2030 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270. • Scrapie Workshop: Learn about diagnosis and treatment within sheep; free registration required. 9-11:30 a.m.; COCC-Crook County OpenCampus, 510 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-480-1340 or tcf© cbbmail.com. • Ag Business Workshop: Learn about social media and brand development for ranches andfarms; $10 per farm; registration requested; 9-11:30a.m.; Technology Education Center, Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541-447-6228 or541-504-3307 or j.mpl agbizworkshops. MONDAY • Build Your Business Website with WordPress II: Learn to modify themes, customize content, use advancedplug-ins, search-engine optimization and more; must have existing WordPress site and intro class or equival ent;Mondaysand Wednesdays Nov.10-19; $129, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270.
• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
•
S S Lcre s X o n e d H eav y I n d u st r i a l A ' EP V S 3200 sq.ft. office building (old Pine Products site). Plenty of power, irrigation, Co-gen plant structure still in place and 2 industrial volume wells.
M an y
Oy y or t u n i t i e s
. Sjjf1,1SO,O O O
I I
I
••/•
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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Fitness, D2 Money, D3
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
Spinal cord stimulator frees veteran of pain By James A. Fussell The Kansas City Star
KANSAS CITY — Good
news: Craig Hoffman separated his shoulder.
stc .
Wait. Why is that good news'? Let's back up. Three months ago, the
49-year-old Lansing, Kansas, man couldn't do much of anything without wincing in pain.
MEDICINE Hislower backhurt
too much. He tried massages, chiropractic and steroid injections. He popped pain pills like Tic Tacs. Nothing worked. Then, in August, surgeons implanted a spinal cord stim-
• t
ulator near his left hip. The pocket-watch-sized device
interrupts pain signals on
Keith Myers / Kansas City Star
A spinal cord stimulator
implanted in Craig Hoffman's back is adjusted through a controller, left, and its round
antenna, which Hoffman places against his body.
their way to the brain. Barrett Ford, owner of Step & Spine Physical Therapy in Redmond, performs a lateral flexion stretch during physical therapy on Kasey
It did the job. So much so that Hoffman decided to play indoor kickball
mer Army sergeant is again able to do something physical
Lohman, of Redmond. Ford also has aphysical therapy clinic in Sisters, where the rate of physical therapists to residents is very high.
with his church's youth
enough that could separate his
group, for which he serves as a mentor. Everything
shoulder is enough to make him smile. "I felt good enough to play kickball with a bunch of high schoolers," he said. "That should tell you something." And, by the way, his team
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
went great, until a thrown
ball tripped him up and sent him sprawling to the
ground and into a wall. "Craig!" a friend said, rushing up to him. "How's your back?" "Oh, my back's fine," he
won. Neurostimulators have
said. "But I think I separat-
been around for decades. Early models were bulky and
ed my shoulder."
difficult to maintain. But the
OK, so Hoffman's not ex-
actly glad he separated his shoulder. But just the fact that the 6-foot-4-inch for-
latest technology has given them new life in the world of chronic pain relief. SeeStimulator/D4
FITNESS
Pool exerciseshelpjoint recovery, overall fitness
• An active andaging population maybethe reasonbehind the trend By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin
Bend leadsin physical therapists Bend has more physical therapists per capita than anyother Oregon town andmorethan double the overall state rate.
hen Chuck Brockman first moved
to Bend 12 years ago, a surgeon
PHYSICALTHERAPISTS PER 10,000 POPULATION Bend Ashland 14.5 Medford 14A Corvallis 13.2 Grants Pass 13.1 Eugene 12.7 Astoria 12.6 Portland 11.6
joked that back when he practiced in the Midwest, his knee replacement patients just wanted to be able to get to the corner pub or from their office to their car. "Here in Bend, they want
to ski, they want to play tennis and they want to horse-
back ride," said Brockman, director of physical therapy for Therapeutic Associates
in Bend. "There is a differroadblocks — aches, pains, ent expectation tears, breaks. That's one theory that MONEY on how we live our lives here could explain the high numin Bend." ber of physical therapists Aside from being mildly practicing here. A Bulletin offensive to Midwesternanalysis of physical therers, the remark serves to apist licenses in Oregon illustrate an important revealed that Bend has point about the people here among the highest rates
might want to stay near
Rest and recovery are critical to any workout regimen. 18.5
bunch. Since Central Oregonians expect to be doing more, longer, it stands to reason that we might need more help when we run into
likely to get winded, so you
Los Ange(es Times
Any athlete will tell you:
8.9
in Bend:We're an active
By Rene Lynch
Source: Oregon Physical Therapist Licensing Board, LLS. Census Bureau Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
separation is all you need before you bump into a physical therapist somewhere," said Burke Selbst, the co-owner wide average of 7.3 per 10,000 of Focus Physical Therapy in residents. Bend. "Probably one degree of SeePhysical therapy/D3
John Platero, director of
education for the National Council for Certified Per-
"As we get older, we tend
cuit sends your heart soar-
to move less and less," Platero says, and that's why "the pool is magic. It acts as a compressionsleeve,protecting the joints." When you're
ing with very little impact.
doing these moves, Platero
said, "don't think 'workout' ... think 'controlled movement' with the resistance
coming from the water." scarecrow, the Michael Jackson and the bear hug
Ideally, this circuit — the — is done in water that's
roughly chest-deep. Please keep safety in mind. You're
researc see s 00S 0 OC 0 0 By Tara Bannow
around unhealthy behaviors
The Bulletin
The common wisdom used
such as smoking and drinking, as well as eating junk
to be that while brains morph
food that can lead to obesity
and develop throughout childhood, they were locked in once people reached adulthood. While there is some truth
and some cancers.
to that, these days scientists understand that adult brains
can change a person's brain chemistry. They're not only
can still change quite a bit. In
correlated with poor health outcomes later in life, they've
fact, Elliot Berkman, assis-
A wealth of research has
shown that adverse experiences during childhood — such as abuse or neglect-
tant professor of psychology at the University of Oregon,
been shown to reduce some
is optimistic about the degree
ings for high-fat, high-sugar foods, Berkman said. "If you don't get the right kind of nurturing, supportive,
to which adults can alter their brain chemistry to reverse deeply ingrained habits
peoples' abilities to tame crav-
can u se to help them cut out
With the help of two re-
search grants, one from the National Institute on Aging
for m o f Internet-based tools.
What to do • The scarecrow: Gently squat in the water until it's shoulder depth. Position
yourupper arms straight out at your side and your hands up, palms facing forward, like a scarecrow. Hold your core tight as you lower and raise your forearms,
slicing through the water. Let your comfort level dictate your range of motion.
SeePools/D2
Cravin S
responsive upbringing, the use what they learn to devel- you come to expect a reward brain systems that engage in o p inexpensive tools people from these foods. It's very inhibitory control and other
What it does
These exercises give you a recovery workout on days three-move pool circuit to when your body needs a provide a recovery workbreak but you still want a out that will get your heart calorie burn. If you wear a pumping even as it helps heart-rate monitor, you'll be care for hard-working joints. surprised to see how this cir-
capita in the state: about 18.5 per 10,000 residents. That's almost three times the state-
things don't develop in a nor- s uch unhealthy behaviors, mal way," he said. which likely will take the
breath.
sonal Trainers, created this
of physical therapists per
• Adverse experiences in early childhood can contribute to a lack ofself-control
the edge of the pool, where you can rest and catch your
low-level."
Through previous research, Berkman identified four self-regulation tech-
Many people's bodies have niques previous subjects ev o l ved to be very sensitive found effective in helping and another from the Nationt ot he quick and easy reward them resist food cravings. They're basically messages al Cancer Institute, of unhealthy food, Berkman will study NUTR I TION Be r kman said. That people tell themselves to help ways to help people makes it so they them resist the cravings, such retrain their brains to resist don' t have to think about the as imagining they're very full a number of unhealthy bedec i sion much before they act or focusing on the negative haviors. One study will look o nt heir impulse to consume consequences of eating the at things such as smoking, the f ood, even if they're not food. drinking and gambling. The a c t ually hungry, he said. In one of the upcoming "Psychologically speaking, studies, subjects will choose other will attempt to help people resist the powerful a lot of it boils down to hab- a technique and use it when draw of foods such as pizza, i t , " Berkman said. "A pretty faced with images of junk ice cream, candy and french sta b l e model of this is that foods they've admitted weakfries. In the end, Berkman peo p le have learned ... 'It nesses for. While this is hapand his colleagues hope to tas t es good, it feels good,' so pening, Berkman will mon-
itor their brains using magnetic resonance imaging to determine what regions of the brain are involved in working to resist food cravings.
In another study, Berkman and Philip Fisher, a UO psychology professor, will test self-control techniques on adults who have had adverse childhood experiences. Fisher's previous research has focused on how the experiences of kids in foster care end up
affecting later on, even tying specifi c experiences to specific deficits later on. For ex-
ample, neglect affects young children's stress hormone levels, which are involved in the
development of immune function and anxiety disorders.
SeeFood cravings/D4
D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
FmVESS HEALTH EVENTS
TODAY LIVING WITH ALZHEIMER'S, FOR CAREGIVERS:Learn about available resources, plans to be made, how to cope with diagnosis and more in this three-part course; free, registration required; 5-6:30 p.m.; Partners in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend; www.alz.org/ oregon or 541-382-5882.
FRIDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110; www.
redcrossblood.org. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; State Farm Insurance, 1288 SW Simpson Ave., B1, Bend; 541-3889204; www.redcrossblood.org. GETTINGSTARTED: WHATTO DO WITH ANALZHEIMER'S DIAGNOSIS:Learn about diagnosis, current treatments and more; free, registration required; noon-1 p.m.; Bend Memorial Clinic, 1501 NE Medical Center Drive; www.alz.org/oregon or 800-272-3900.
MONDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School, 1314 SW Kalama Ave., Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 541-923-4876. FOOT ANDNAILCLINIC FOR SENIORS:Featuring inspection of feet, trimming of nails, massage,
proper careeducation and more; donations accepted, registration suggested; noon-1:30 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.; www.bendseniors.org or 541-323-3344. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1-6:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110; www.
redcrossblood.org. NO PAIN — LIFE GAIN:Discuss "Managing Stress" and learn
to manage pain with stress reduction techniques; free, registration suggested; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, 404 NE Penn St., Bend; www.healingbridge.com or 541-318-7041. BASICS OFALZHEIMER'S: Learn
about signs andsymptoms of Alzheimer's and how to deal with the disorder; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church 8 School, 2450 NE 27th St., Bend; www.stfrancisbend.org, healthministry©stfrancisbend.org or 541-382-3631.
TUESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment;11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Church of Jesus Christ of LatterdaySaints,450 SW Rimrock Way, Redmond; 541-548-3684.; www.
redcrossblood.org. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30-5:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110; www. redcrossblood.org.
WEDMESDAY FREE MASSAGE:Free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.; www. councilonaging.org, sharreed50@ yahoo.com or 541-948-5943. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110; www. redcrossblood.org. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu or 541-3837700; www.redcrossblood.org. UNDERSTANDINGTHEABCS AND DS OFMEDICARE: Learn about who is eligible for Medicare, what is covered and not covered, enrollment timelines and more; free, registration requested; 6-7:30 p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/lapine or 541-382-1795.
How to submit Events:Email eventinformation to healthevents©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before thedesired date ofpublication. Ongoing class listings must beupdatedmonthly and will appear online at bendbulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements:Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
re ou oosic or e By Gabriella Boston Special to The Washington Post
You finally got into a good fitness routine and
then bam — a head cold hits, you're sidelined and now you feel all your good work is in vain right before the calorie-laden holiday season.
Not so fast.
Above-the-neck colds If the cold is just a head cold, you probably can continue working out, says Theo Hodge Jr., an internist and specialist in infectious diseases with Capital
Medical Associates in the District. "Always listen to y our
body, but generally speaking, if you don't have any Thinkstock underlying issues, it's usu- While it may be tempting to stick to your fitness program, exercising restraint when youare sick can ally safe to exercise with a benefit you and those around you. cold," says Hodge, adding that a quick check with a
doctor is always a goodidea. downthe line. "Give your body a break," he (Underlying issues such as asthma orcardiac condi- suggests. It's undear exactly how tions require special considerations, Hodge says. With much fitness you lose, says asthma, there is a lready
shortness of breath that will be exacerbated by congestion, and in cardiac patients, medications such as
ogy at the University of Maryland. But a long-distance run-
ner is probably more aff ected than, say, a sprinter. Aside from giving your own levels.) body a break by keeping it out But even with the above- of the gym, remember that you the-neck head cold, other- are also giving other people a wise healthy people will break from your germs, Hodge want to modify their exer- points out. "As long as you are sneezing cise by lowering the intensity and duration, says Greg and coughing, you are conMcMillan, online running tagious," he says, and those says. "Four, five days in and coach and owner of McMil- symptoms can easily go on for you are way short of breath lanRunning.com. seven to 11 days — the typical and you're coughing up green "There is this i nterest- duration of a cold. stuff. Next thing, you have "The kind thing to do would pneumonia." ing dichotomy. On the one hand, exercise helps boost be to stayhome." And now you are looking at the immune system, but if being sick and sidelined for sevyou are trying to take your Below-the-neck colds eral weeks. training to the next fitness A nd then t here ar e t h e If that happens, remember level, that effort can actually big-kahuna colds, the ones that to take it easy as you get back suppress it." knock you out with extreme into exercise, Hodge says. "If In other words, when a fatigue, body aches, chest you're out two weeks, I think head cold hits is not the time congestion and/or fever. With you could expect to work back to do high-intensity drills those, it's better to stay home, up for at least two weeks." (not that you would want in bed, allowing the immune For example, if you are a runto) but rather to keep your system to focus on getting well, ner trainingfor amarathon,you exercise in the light-to-mod- Miller says. would not want to start with a "Any time you exercise with longrun as your first run. erate range, says Alyssa Morrison, a local endurance a fever, you risk delaying the resports coach. covery," he says. "The a thletes I w o r k Or worse, you could get real~+ccoolsculpting' with — especially if they ly, really sick. "You've got a low-grade feare training for an Ironman LE F F E L Danvs ettlefaranyone competition — don't want to ver and you're short of breath, GE N T E R but ap l asticsurgean for miss a single day of train- but you feel pretty good so you Coolsculp6ng' ing," Morrison says. "So keep running hard," Hodge decongestants can elevate the heart rate to dangerous
Sometimes,
Way, will celebrate its opening with an open house from 3-7 p.m. today. Dr. Jade Cherrington has worked as a dentist in Redmond for seven years, and will be accepting patients at the
too hard will make it worse."
new clinic.
McMillan says in his experience, taking it easy on "the front end" of a cold can
• Rimrock Dental of Redmond, located at 646 SW Rimrock
FITNESS EVENTS
Nov. 13 RUNNING PERFORMANCE BIOMECHANICSCLASS: Designed by Jay Dicharry and taught by Jen Luebke; for runners15 to 105, beginners and elites; Level1,
••
<
8
"They might do better than they expected because they kind of got out of their own
way," he says."They adjusted their expectations and started enjoying it again."
ESCHUTES E UMATOLO G Y Rheumatology Consults Dexa Scans Infusion Therapy D an Fohr m a n , M D 2200 NE Neff Road, Ste+ 02
541.388.8978 ~
www.deschutesrheumatology.com
HOSPiCe. TheWOrdtriggerS many reSPO nSeSbut Onething you ShOuld not feel iS alOne.St. CharleSHOSPiCeCan helP, in mOreWaySthan you
save you two or three weeks
may realize.Hospice ismuchmorethan medical care inyour home
6:30 p.m.; Level 2, 5:30 p.m; $72 for six weeks; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab, 1160 SW Simpson Ave., Ste. 200, Bend; info©REPoregon.com or 541-322-9045.
Pools • The Michael Jackson:
NDWaVailable ifI DeSChuteSCOunty, St. CharleSHOSPiCe haS
Nov. 14
This mimics a move you likely saw from the per-
been providingcomfort anddignity for patients - andsupport
LIVINGA PEACEFUL AND JOYFUL
former. Raise the knee to
LIFE: Increase innerawareness through proper breathing, positive focus exercise and silencing mind chatter; $20 per class or $75 for series; 6:45-8:15 p.m.; Namaspa, 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www.namaspa.com, angelheartofmotivations©gmail. com or 971-217-6576.
- our dediCated teamCanalSOPrOVide aSSiStanCe With PraCtiCal and
side to side for an inner
and outer leg workout. Alternate legs. You can bend
YOu're not alOne.Let UShelP.
the knee so your foot is
reaching out behind you, or simply allow it to dan-
St, CharlesHospice Apromise of comfort.
gle as the foot and ankle
YOGA INTHE PINES: A YOGA RETREAT IN THEHEART OF CENTRAL OREGON:A four-day yoga retreat with instructor Kate Holly for beginners to experienced; $499-$774, registration required; FivePine Lodge 8 Conference Center, 1021 Desperado Trail, Sisters; www.fivepinelodge.com/ yogaretreat, kn@fivepinelodge. com or 541-549-5900.
squat in the water until it's
TheBul l e tin
fOr Central OregOnfamilieS - fOr 25 yearS.ASPart of St. CharleS Health SyStem,our Well-trained, COmPaSSiOnate CaregiVerSCan eaSily PrOVidea SeamleSSCOntinuum of Care to PatientS.
hip height, and then gently sway the foot and ankle
sway. • The bear hug: Gently
•
financial concerns,householdchores,spiritual support andmore.
Continued from 01
Nov. 16
Get ATaste For Food. Home 5 Garden -
«
ular race.
Mo r r i son
says, the athlete will feel good during the light spin and start pushingharder. "There is always that fine line," she says. "Exercising and getting the blood flowing in your body can feel great. You might even feel less congested. But working
INTRODUCTION TOIYENGAR YOGA:Learn about correct alignment and more with a certified instructor; free; noon-1:15 p.m.; lyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St.; www.yogaofbend. com, nadine©yogaofbend.comor 541-318-1186.
W S
www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006
McMillan says the time off can be good for the body and the mind — especiallythe mind of a runner focusedon apartic-
is to go for a recovery run or a light spin instead of intervals or surges."
• Bend Memorial Clinic and The Center are partnering to expand walk-in orthopedic care on weekends and holidays. NOWcare will be available at BMC's Eastside Urgent Care clinic on weekends and holidays starting Saturday. The Center will close NOWcare on weekends, but continue to operate weekdays.
SATURDAY
• Wash hands often, especially if you're the one with a cold. • Use hand sanitizers when hand-washing isn't available. • Wipe down equipment at the gym before andafter use. • Stay away from the gym if you're sneezing and coughing. • If you have anabove-the-neck cold, work out at light-to-moderate intensity and duration. • If you have a below-the-neck cold, stay home andrest. • Hydrate more than usual, particularly if you have fever. a • Stay away from people with colds. • Eat more fruits and vegetables. • Consider taking zinc at early signs of a cold. • If you are unsure aboutwhether you should exercise, ask adoctor.
R
DISPATCHES
RUNNING PERFORMANCE BIOMECHANICSCLASS: Designed by Jay Dicharry and taught by Jen Luebke; for runners 15 to 105, beginners and elites; Level 1, 6:30 p.m.;Level2,5:30 p.m;$72for six weeks;; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab, 1160 SW Simpson Ave., Ste. 200, Bend; info©REPoregon.com or 541-322-9045.
Keeping yourself andothersIt andhealthy:
Ross Miller, associate professor in the Department of Kinesiol-
what I might tell them to do
TODAY
m?
shoulder depth. Bring your arms forward and around
like you're hugging a barrel. Then reverse the movement so you squeeze the shoulder blades and
stretch the chest muscles. "The faster you go, the harder it will be. This is
going to really help your posture," Platero said. P erform t h es e t h r e e moves in a circuit, with 10 to 20 repetitions for each move. Repeat the circuit three to five times. Over time, add more repetitions.
~
S tCharles .
Hospice 541-70$-$7M StCharlesHealthCare.org/Hospice 08
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
MoNEY
Insurers' i t o r IStOmerS health law premi
eepS Reducing healcosts th by instilling personalpurpose
By Karen Kaplan
The study authors then compared the scores of 7,168 people
Los Angeles Times
By Alex Wayne
ductible. Next year, the same
Bloomberg News
2016 to backstop insurers' po- by lowering its costs, includtential financial losses. ing through improved invenWASHINGTON — AffordCareSource isn't alone in tory management and greater able Care Act premiums, once its assessment of the law's efficiency at its hospitals. predicted to skyrocket in the opportunities fo r i n s u rers, P eter B e i lenson, E v e r second year under the gov- said Ceci Connolly, managing green's president and CEO, ernment's marketplace, have directorof Pricewaterhouse- said that many of his comrisenabout 6 percent for2015, Cooper's Health Research In- pany's plans will be cheaper according to an analysis of stitute in Washington. than CareFirst's next year. "We're seeing competition "It was very clear to us that preliminary state filings. While foes of the Afford- flourish," she said. "Even C areFirst Blue C r oss h a d a ble Care Ac t w a r ned o f though it's a hassle, shopping purposely underpriced the double-digit rate increases, is going to be worth it for con- individual marketplace to try the costs of premiums seen sumers this fall." to take the m arket share," It's a theme promoted by Beilenson said in a phone inso far is more modest for the new year. One reason may the Obama a d ministration terview. "They took a bath be that insurers who came in heading into the new sign-up on it. They underpriced, they high in 2014 found themselves period, which runs until Feb. knew it, and they had to raise beaten out for enrollments. 15. This year, about 7.3 mil- their prices." And 77 new insurance plans lion people are enrolled in Evergreen, he said, will will be competing for custom- Obamacare plans. The Con- be "very, very competitive" ers in 2015, according to U.S. gressional Budget Office pre- in 2015. Spokesmen for Carofficials. dicts enrollment will jump to eFirst didn't respond to an "We made a decision sev- about 13 million in 2015. email seeking comment. eral years ago that health reKevin Counihan, the chief Not all low-priced insur-
plan will cost $207 a month, according to data compiled by ValuePenguin. That's before any subsidies to reduce the price. The cheapest plan offered in Cleveland for 2015 comes from a Centene Corp. subsidiary,
form is not as much a law, as it
executive officer for the fed-
is an opportunity," said Scott Streator, a vice president at Dayton, Ohio-based CareSource who manages plans sold under the health law also
eral health exchange, HealthCare.gov, is urging those who
known as Obamacare.
signed up last year to at least
review what may be available to them in the year ahead. " What we d on't w ant t o
CareSource, a n o nprof- h appen is people not b e it insurer, gained almost 20 aware of their options and percent of Ohio's Obamacare
enrollees in 2014 by offering some of the lowest premiums in the state. Now, with enroll-
ment set to reopen Nov. 15, the company is extending its health plans into neighboring Kentucky and Indiana.
Openforcompetition The Affordable Care Act
was designed to let insurers aggressively compete for customers within a new system of
government-run marketplaces. Early results from companies such as CareSource suggest it is succeeding. Insurers and the Obama administration have long cautioned that the new markets
created by the law would take time to settle, as health plans
assess their new customers and work through hiccups in their relationship with the
ers have substantially raised their rates for 2015. In Ohio, CareSource will increase its premiums by about 2 percent
a month on average. C areSource has t r ied t o
price its plans "the lowest we can get it to meet our mem-
Ambetter, and starts at $198.
The most expensive, from Akron, Ohio-based SummaCare,
can cost as much as $349, according to ValuePenguin.
Rateswithheld may have cost consumers The national increase in
premiums might have been even lower if the federal government had revealedinsur-
ers' rate requests to the public, said Jay Angoff, a former administration health official.
The U.S. won't reveal final rates agreed to by insurers and the government until just
before the enrollment period opens. Angoff is suing the Obama administration on be-
half of the Consumers Council of Missouri, where he was once the insurance commis-
sioner, to release rate filings quate solvency," Streator said. from that state. "Rates have been m u ch Counihan said in an Oct. 1 The company's actuaries interview. credited CareSource's bene- lower than either side, profit design as helping to keep ponents or opponents, preLower premiums premiums low, he said. Its dicted," Angoff said by teleIn some cases, consumers plans offer features including phone. "There are a f ew will find that insurers offer- low co-payments for routine states,though, where they are ing the lowest-cost premiums care and free generic drugs not. Consumer groups could a yearago raised theirprices that may help prevent pricier have gone in and demonstratin 2015 to make up for it. In claims, he said. CareSource ed that the assumptions on Maryland, for instance, Car- also benefited from an influx which these rates are based eFirst Blue Cross Blue Shield, of younger customers toward are unreasonable." which has the state's lowest the end of the 2014 enrollment In th e m eantime, Pricepremiums, proposed raising period, in March and April. waterhouseCoopers and the its rates as much as 30percent That reduced the risk of its consulting firm McKinsey & on average in 2015. customers getting sick and Company have tracked 2015 Kaiser Permanente and a needing expensive care, Stre- rates by examining filings to startup, Evergreen Health, ator said. state insurance commission"From our early analysis, ers, determining the 6 percent were among the priciest in Maryland's exchange in 2014. we look tobe very compet- figure. The filings are still This year they have both re- itive in ou r p r emiums," he preliminary in most states. " Our priority i s t o m a k e duced their rates — by 14 per- said. cent and 10 percent, respecIn Cleveland, CareSource sure consumers have the tively — in an effort to gain sells the second-cheapest sil- right information to choose ver-level Obamacare plan. more customers. the health-care plan that best bers'needs and stillhave ade-
default to auto-reenrollment,"
John Nelson, a spokesman
government. The Affordable for Kaiser, said in an email Care Act explicitly recogniz- that the company was able to es a transition period, with reduceratesfor2015 in m any temporary programs through of the states where it operates
An
u n m a rried 2 7 -year- meets their
old paid as little as $203 per month this year for CareSource's silver-level coverage, which carries a $3,500 de-
n eeds," Kevin
Griffis, a spokesman for the D epartment of
H e alth a n d
Human Services, said in an email.
Researchers have an with their use of various preunconventional idea for re- ventive health services. After ducing medical costs in the controlling for demographic U.S.: Give more Americans factors such as wealth, educaa sense of purpose. tion and marital status (which You see, people who be- might skew the results), they lieve their lives have pur- found that having a purpose in pose are motivated to op- life was indeed correlated with timize their health. That
greater use of preventive care.
means they're more likely For instance, for each onethan other folks to take ad- point increase in the "sense of vantage of preventive health purpose" score, the likelihood services, like cancer screen- of getting one's cholesterol ings. And people who take checked rose by about 18 peradvantage of preventive cent and the odds of having a health care save the medical colonoscopy rose by about 6 systembigbucks. percent, the researchers found. Americans spent about
Among women, those who be-
$2.8 trillion on health care lieved their lives had a sense of in 2012, according to the purpose were 27 percent more most recent tally by the fed- likely to have had a screening eral Centerfor Medicare mammogram (to check for & Medicaid Services. The breast cancer) and 16 percent U.S. Census Bureau projects more li kelytohaveapap smear that the number of senior (to check for cervical cancer). citizens will double by the Among men, having a senseof year 2050, and that means purpose increased the odds of the nation's medical bills are getting a prostate exam by 31 bound to grow. percent. In a new study, researchIf these screening tests were ers from the University of helping, then the people who Michigan and the Universi- were getting them should be ty of Wisconsin suggest that spending less time in the hos"these troublesome realities pital. And indeed, that's what could be offset by greater the researchers found. Over use of preventive health a six-year period, the average care services, which are number of nights each study known to enhance health
volunteer spent in a hospital was 7.21. But it wasn't the same for all of the 7,168 volunteers. For each one-point increase in
and reduce health care costs." Americans certainly have room for improvement
on that score. The study authors wondered whether it would be
possible to boost those figures by increasing the number of Americans who think
they have a purpose in life, defined as "having meaning, a sense of direction and The researchers weren't sure goals to live for." why flu shots didn't fit the patTo find out whether preventive care had any role in
tern, but they speculated that flu shots could have been un-
this,the researchers turned
der-reported if study volunteers
to the Health and Retirement Study, which tracks
only counted the ones received at their doctors' offices. Even with this uncertainty,
a representative sample of
the idea of boosting preventive age 50. Some of the study health care by boosting peoparticipants answered sev- ple's sense of purpose is worth en questions designed to pursuing, according to the measure the extent to which researchers. they felt they had a purpose American adults older than
in life. The volunteers were asked to use a s i x-point
scale to indicate how strongly they agreed or disagreed
Physical therapy Continued from 01
tor for clinical practice and re-
with per-capita rates of physical therapists higher than
search for the American Physical Therapy Association, said private health insurance has
long provided extensive covpopulations between 2,174 and erage for physical therapy, but 26,879, where a modest num- now that it's seen as a less exber of the providers skews the pensive option, more insurers rates disproportionately high. are encouraging their clients Sisters, for example, has only to seek physical therapy beeight physical therapists, but fore resorting to more expenin a town of only 2,174 people, sive options. that's 36.8 physical therapists Joint replacements, such as per 10,000 residents, the third hips and knees, are among the highest rate in the state. conditions for which physical While Bend's active popula- therapy can be an effective alBend are smaller cities with
tion ensures its physical thera-
Beltone
with statements like, "I have
removing parts of it. Nancy White, senior direc-
The seven Oregon cities
"sense of purpose," the number of nights spent in a hospital fell by 17percent. There was one exception to the overall narrative: people with a greater sense of purpose were no more likely than their counterparts to get flu shots.
ternative, White said.
pists don't go hungry, the proLower back pain is another viders tend to be active people example, she said. The U.S. themselves, which could also has seena dramatic increase explain why so many choose in lumbar spine surgeries, to live and work in Central particularly lumbar spinal fuOregon. The Oregon Physical sions, in which vertebrae are Therapist Licensing Board fused to reduce movement provided the number of li- between them. Between 1996 censed physical therapists in and 2001, the number of lumOregon listed by the cities bar fusions performed in the they work in, although Rick U.S. grew 113 percent, accordSullivan, the board's licensing ing to a 2005 study in the jourcoordinator, added the cave- nal Spine. at that some may live in other Physical therapy can, in states and simply hold licenses some cases, prevent the need in Oregon. for such surgeries, White said. "Its value is being recogAvoiding surgery nized in so many different Physical therapy also is be- aspects of our population," coming an increasingly attrac- White said. "It's seen as an tive, less expensive alternative alternative to prolonged use to surgery for some, and a of medication and surgery. growing body of research is I think it's a really great cashowing that physical therapy reer, but it's also an importcan delay or even prevent the ant aspect of health care that need for surgery later on. I think people are starting to Last year, surgeons with recognize." Harvard University-affiliated A study performed by TherBrigham and Women's Hos- apeutic Associates, a company pital and six other hospitals with 76 practices in the Pacifpublished a study in the New ic Northwest, including Bend, England Journal of Medicine found that seeing a physical that found physical therapy to therapist within 14 days of be just as effective as surgery experiencing lower back pain in healing torn knee cartilage. resulted in an average total In fact, the researchers point- savings of more than $4,000 ed out that a torn meniscus per patient over the course of can work as a shock absorber,
treatment.
which emphasizes the importance of repairing it with physical therapy over surgically
Increasing demand The U.S. Bureau of Labor
But the top reason Ford said for physical therapists will he thinks physical therapy is grow 36 percent in the U.S. growing is cost. Any form of between 2012 and 2022, more medical treatment is expenthan three times the average sive, but physical therapy is a growth rate for all occupa- conservative intervention that tions during that time. could save people money, he White said she thinks that's said. One example could be partially because it's no lon- hip replacements, an expenger just athletes and active sive surgery. Often, hips have people who need the care. It's become osteoarthritic, and if a broader population of aging patientscan regain backward individuals and the increasing motion or extension and interrecognition of physical activ- nal rotation, sometimes that ity as a preventive measure can spare them from needing against h e alth c o n ditions. surgery, Ford said. "Gaining motion oftentimes Physical therapists also comprise a large proportion of reduces the pain and increasstaff members who work in es function," he said, "and they skilled nursing facilities, nurs- can be fine that way." ing homes and home health — Reporter: 541-383-0304, Statistics predicts the demand
services, she said.
Step & Spine Physical Therapy, which opened its first lo-
tbannow@bendbulletin.com
a sense of direction and purpose in my life," and "My daily activities often seem trivial and unimportant to me." The responses to the
seven questions were averaged into a single score, which was between 1 and 6.
EVERGREEN In-Home Care Services Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
TRIAL of our newest most advanced hearing aids Call Today
'Beltone 541-389-9690
cation in Sisters in 2010 and
expandedintoRedmond two years later, announced this
month it's opening a new clinic in Bend's NorthWest Crossing neighborhood in June 2015. Barrett Ford, who owns the
practice with his wife, Jodi, said in addition to the eight to 12 staff members he'll hire for
the Bend clinic, he's actively hiring more physical therapists in Sisters and Redmond. "Honestly, I'm having a heck of a time keeping up with staffing," he said. Ford agrees there are a number of reasons behind the
high number of physical therapists in Bend. Not only are the residents active, but physi-
cal therapists tend to be active, too. More importantly, though, Central Oregonians are active
while they age. "As they come up against these barriers of, 'I can't run
like I used to, I can't play like I used to,' they're looking for ways to do those," he said.
Physical therapy can help with age-related issues like stiffness, a lack of balance and back pain, he said. "They don't want to stop. They want
to keep going."
COM M U N I T Y ED U CA T ION SERIES Autism — An Integrative Medical Approach Learn about the link between common digestive disorders, bacterial dysymbiosis and neuro-chemical changes, and undiagnosed inflammatory bowel disease and how they can contribute or cause behavioral problemsfor individuals on the autism-spectrum. FRIDAY> NO V E M B E R 7> 2014 — N O O N
T O I : oo p
Q UESTION AN D A N S W E R S E SSION T O F O L L O W PARTNERS IN C A R E • 20 7 5 N E WY AT T C O U R T > BEND Dr. Kurt N. Woeller, DO, is an autism biomedical specialist and integrative medicine physician who offers specialized testing for individuals with complex medical conditionslike autism. He servesas a clinical consultant for Great Plains and BioHealth Laboratories - two companies offering specialized testing for individuals with complex medical conditions. Dr.Woelleds practice is based in Temecula, California. He and his wife nowlive in Central Oregon and he speaks on biomedical autism intervention, internationally.
Mark L. Mintz, is a Senior Financial Advisor with 25 years of industry experience helping retireesand families with special-needs members protect their financial futures. Goals-based planning and education are at the heart of his advisory practice. Markwill cap off Dr.Woellers presentation with cvrrent information on special needstrvsts and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) as itapplies to autism.
Pleasecall I541) 382-5882 by the prior Wednesday to RSVP. The presentationis free of charge. Light lunch will be provided courtesy of Partners In Care
Partners In Care ' •
•I
www.partnersbend.org
-
D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014
7- ear-o wit immune isor er Isc asln is racin reams
gtjmujptpr
ters element, end gnrs would
come by my desk and ask Continued from 01 about me," he said. "They'd Hoffman's stimulator, go, 'Hey, Sarge, are you OK'?' which comes with a
10 - A nd I ' d b e l i ke,'No.As a mat-
year rechargeable battery, ter of fact I'm not. Thank you is the first that can receive
f o r asking.'
software updates wirel essly without having to
"It just felt like somebody w a s s q ueezing, and I ' m
By Sammy Caioia
be removed, said Mindy
n o t t a l k ing about just a l it-
The Sacramento Bee
Ladatto, s p okeswoman tle squeeze. I'm talking like for manufacturer St. Jude you're trying to get the last bit
AUBURN, Calif. — It's just a few minutes until the races
Medical of Plano, Texas.
begin, and Colton Nelson still isn't dressed. The 7-year-old has been romping around the Gold Country Fairgrounds, in Auburn, in partial gear for nearly an hour, skirting among tents to peek at the growling mo-
Hoffman'swife, Kimber-
torcycles in the dusty Auburn
night. With him are Enzo "The Rabbit" Sorani and Sammy "The Bullet" Waddill, pint-
sized racers with whom he's been competing at "Fast Fri-
days" all summer. The three make their way around the stadium's pit, greeting fans and waving at pros until their swigs a Mountain Dew before strapping on more padding than an NFL player. Atop his
Photos by Jose Luis Villegas / Sacramento Bee
visor helmet sits a plush mon- Colton Nelson, center, waits to race Oct. 4 at Big Time Speedway inPrairie City, California. key with a banana — a Vel-
PeoPle at his
cro-ed charm that separates "Colt 45," as Colton has been fections are, the shorter the dubbed, from the pack. lifespan. ... If we can keep Colton has a rare immuno- him infection-free and growdeficiency condition called ing, I think we're going to give Job's syndrome, which causes him the best chance at a norhim to suffer rampant ecze- mal lifespan." ma, among other symptoms. For Dave Nelson and his The Anti-Monkey Butt Pow- wife, Danielle, the goal is just der that his parents bought getting Colton to age 10. After to ease the itching inspired that, Miller expects the boy's the mascot for hi s p eewee lungs will be mature enough dirt-bike campaign. The syn- to fight simple infections. drome leaves him vulnerable Miller, an allergist and im-
bloodstream. He doesn't seem for a stye, likely caused by the to notice and goes about other track's dust. activities. Speedway racing, a solo During one recent treat- sport, is actually preferable ment, his blue eyes, separat-
to Little League for someone
ing what he's doing, but we don't know how long he's go-
ed by a broad nasal bridge with Colton's condition, betypical of children with Job's, cause it limits his exposure to are glued to the motocross kid germs. What might be a videos playing on loop on a routine cold for a schoolmate flat screen. He turns to his could be a hard hit for t he dad only to ask for a snack. compromised second-grader. Later, Colton leaves his dad in The Nelsons have made a the kitchen with the visiting point of keeping their son in munologist who has treated nurse because it's a parent's school despite doctors' pushes about 15 cases of Job's, first job to talk about any changes for him to be taught at home. spotted the elusive disease in treatment or to deal with He keeps a few masks in his when 3-year-old Colton came the insurance company. It's a backpack, which he can put in with severe allergies. But it 7-year-old's job to play. Unde- on between treatments when wasn't until his fourth birth- terred, Colton wheels the IV the serum starts to wear off. day, after being rushed to pole outside. He lies down in the nurse's Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital Once the serum is adminis- office if he's feeling less than with a collapsed lung, that tis- tered, Colton will have nearly 100 percent. "He's actually a go-go-gosue samples from the Auburn three full weeks to do almost boy were sent to the National anything other kids can do. go kind of kid," said Danielle Institutes of Health. Doctors He chooses to blaze through Nelson. "He resists being sent there diagnosed him with Hy- the dust on a 50cc dirt bike. home. And he's really in tune per IgE, caused by a "statl" His latest model was donated with his body, so he's not gomutation in his DNA. this summer by KTM Racing, ing to tell you that something's Since then, it has been a making him one of the young- wrong unless it really is.... bumpy ride for Colton's par- est factory-sponsored riders He's like a little adult in that ents, owners of A uburn's in the country. respect."
ing to be able to do this with
Dingus McGee's restaurant,
cluding recurrent bacterial and fungal infections, bone density i ssues an d
s evere
allergies. Though fragile in daily life, the boy in the orange jumpsuit is a force to be reckoned with on the track, cutting stealthily among racers before emerging the front-runner of the 11bikebrawL He ended thenight in first place, an unsurprising addition to his winning season record. "He really shouldn't be do-
his condition," said his father, who walked their son through A love for bikes Dave Nelson. "We're just let-
round after round of antibi-
ting him enjoy himself and be- otics before finally finding a ing there to support him." temporary solution, if not a
Anuncommon ailment
cure.
Job's syndrome has been Treatment reported in about 250 people Colton's current treatment, worldwide since it was discov- called i n travenous g amered in 1966. Colton's variant, ma-globulin therapy, involves called Hyper IgE syndrome, regular injections of a powercauses his lymph nodes to ful serum comprising antibodoverproduce IgE, one of the ies from donors around the five antibodies necessary to country, which basically acts protect the human body, but as his immune system. A simiunderproduce the other four,
lar treatment has been used in
Colton showed an interest
A philanthropic endeavor Colton is so adult, in fact,
in bikes as a toddler, said Dan- that he's branching into philanielle Nelson, and continued thropy with a newly launched popping wheelies after facing fundraising campaign, "Monsix bouts of pneumonia in as key Butt Racing." The foundamany months and developing tion, conceived by Colton, Enzo an expansive list of allergies, and Sammy, aims to raise including dairy, gluten, straw- money for Job's syndrome reberries and sunscreen.
search, said Dave Nelson.
The Nelsons decided motorColton also has a dream of cycle racing wasn't the worst visiting children's hospitals thing that could happen to the
with his gear in order to cheer
younger of their two sons. So up patients. "Kids in the hospital, they they made the call in spring 2013 to Gary Davis, a motor-
said Dr. Travis Miller of The the military since the 1950s to cycle stuntman with a resume Allergy Station at Sacramen- protect soldiers exposed to for- including "The A mazing to Ear, Nose and Throat. eign disease, said Miller. Spider-Man," "Independence "His immune system is esOnce every 21 days, Colton Day" and "Terminator 2." Dasentially wasting time mak- goes home from school and vis, who lives and trains in ing IgE when it should be for 2'/2 hours undergoes in- Auburn, agreed to take Colton fighting other things," he said. t ravenous treatment as t h e under his wing pro bono, and "The more aggressive the in- serum is pumped into his the tenacious tyke was on the tracks by summer. Aaron Sorani, father of Enzo and longtime fan of J Colton's, called the b oy's ability to overcome his challenges and stay in the game '
•
"amazing," but noted that for
can't get out of bed, and they
can't go watch what bikes look like," he said. "If we start bringing bikes to the hospitals and schools, kids that can't get out of the bed, they can see the bikes so they know what they
look like and what they do." Until then, the young racer will keep on revving the engine throughout the Sacramento region. On a recent Friday, he tried his hand at the
u
Colton Nelson waits with other riders for racing instructions before
a race.
any parent, having a kid on
As Colton ages, his doctor says, he may become more
the track comes with a sharp
prone to b r ittle bone syn-
pang of anxiety. "In a lot of sports, especially
drome,osteoporosisand scoli-
motor sports," he said, "when
osis. But that's for later. "I see no reason why he
spills on the track, his moth-
torcycle, I think it's fantastic.
Food cravjngs
works, then, sure, for other
bling behaviors.
Continued from 01
people we can make it into a
"We see this as an augmentative treatment, that, if it's found
to be effective — and we think
in Bend who counsels clients
in some of those situations
s pinal cord. H e taped the stimulator to Hoffman's back.
"The same fibers t hat carry p a i n signals also carry touc h a n d v i b ration," Johnson said. "They can't carry both at the same
man, pastor of ha yjrlgtO ge Wallula Christ ian Church i n
Lansing. "And Said Mlrl Up' sometimes I felt L adattO bad because he was s t anding / / ~ there in obvious fOI' ... St. pain. And with J Ude Med/ca/ the surgery, he +. '
time." The stimula-
to r b locks the pain by sending vibrations up the spine. N eu rost i m u l a tion w o rks well on lower-back pain but is less effective on neck pain, he said.
is now able to do
those things he TexaS. MOSt likes to do with- /rISUrdrICB out pain." He can now ™ / ~ work in his yard COVBI' It. a nd gar d en again. And he
And it doesn't work
for everyone. Some dislike the vibratodogs, Doug and Dallas, r y sensation. without pain. Hoffman loves it. "This is fantastic," he said. Hoffman, who retired in can walk his two
2 010, hurt his back during
A not h e r
on issues such as weight loss because it's so targeted at spe- and wellness, cautions against cific mechanisms of inhibitory too much focus on self-concontrol — that it has the poten- trol when it comes to issues of tial to really increase the extent weight, as it's a very nuanced to which our existing approach- issue complicated by an influes are effective for people with ential advertising industry. whom they traditionally have Especially among younger not been," Fisher said. people who are "really living Any tools Berkman devel- off of their phones," Johnson ops would be available — and agreed iPhone apps or games hopefully useful — to people could be an effective tool to regardlessof which factors controlling food cravings. "This might be a great way contribute to their self-control
su r g eo n the n
his 26 years in the Army. permanently implanted the Since he was one of the s timulator. bigger soldiers, he carried He u s es a small magnet the heaviest loads. He fur-
t o t urn it on first thing in the
ther damaged his back by morning, and he leaves it on regularly driving armored all day. A black remote with vehicles over ru g ged a n antenna lets him wirelessterrain. ly adjust the intensity of the "No shocks for the driv-
s t i m ulation. Every 'Ibesday,
er's seat," he said. for an hour, he recharges his As the years built up, b attery. "This thing is just rocking so did the pain in his lower back. Doctors called it t h e free world inside of me," lumbago. he said. "I mean, I am totally In college, he had been diggin'thisthing." athletic, playing intramuNo w h e w ants others to ral football and softball. k now that a spinal cord stimuHe played volleyball in the lator might help them, too. "If I can get one person to Army. But, by the late '80s, he had to stop. An MRI showed a line
try this, and it changes their l i f e the way that it has mine,
on some vertebrae.
then I'm happy. I can go meet
"That's a break that has fixed itself," the technician said. e You broke your back at one point."
m y m aker with a smile on my f a c e."
While serving in Germany about 10 years ago,
Pa.re. &md.6 CO.
the pain became constant
and almost unbearable. "We were in a headquar-
aj.s~
dU t
Bend Redmond
John Day -
•
•
Burns Lakeview
•
La Pine 541.382.6447 •
•
•
bendurology.com
•
OSPICE
of Redmond 5 4 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3
er said, but has been blessed He's living his life and his with minimal injuries except dreams, as he should be."
childhood experiences and individuals with typical brain development. Vicki Johnson, a life coach
specifictasks withinthegames. lieve a simple computer-based With his research, Berkman training tool will be the "maghopes to develop tools that can ic bullet" for complex individbe applied more broadly to help uals whose unhealthy behavpeople exert self-control in a iors arethe result of adverse number of situations. childhood experiences, but Berkman eventually will di- he thinks it could be helpful if rect his attention toward cre- worked into programs already ating games or applications, in place for foster children and but he said there's no rush to theircaregivers. He said he's get into that and he's not in it to already had success working make money. with high-risk kids in foster "Certainly down the road, care,but he's noticed parents
ter onto Hoffman's
tocross for the first time.
tend to exhibit the same trou-
r e - gamified, broader-scale intersearch studied brain-training vention," he said. "But I think games such as Lumosity, which this more basic science needs are touted as tools to help peo- to happen first that will make ple improve their memory and the work down the road a lot attention, but he found the ben- easier." efits did not extend beyond the Fisher said he doesn't be-
eight contact points — through a cathe-
more trick-heavy sport of mo-
works and we know how it
B erkman's p r evious
leads — each with
church can tell Cag peCBIVB he is better. S Oft Wa r e He plays bass UpdateS in our worship ~ band," said the Rev. Lance Coff- WI07OUt
you support your child, you can't do anything he wants have to let go of that fear and to," Miller said. "Any kid can fall off their know that it's when, not if, he's going to get hurt." bike. Any kid can get a scrape Colton has taken a few or a cut. For riding the mo-
if we can find something that
I t w a s like a vise; I couldn't
ly,knowshowmuchithas b r eathe. I was taking Trameant to her husband. madol, Flexeril and hydroco"He has always been done. I was taking all these the strong guy, the big guy things that were not getting able to pitch in and help i t done. And I was doing my anybody," she said. "And bestnottocry." overtheyearsthepainhas In Ma y , hi s doctor sent prevented him from doing hi m t o a p a i n s pecialist, that. who suggested a spinal cord "We've also got two sons. stimulator. "He was at the end of his Craig still wants to prove that he's the big coping ability," said dog around the Vincent Johnson, a house, and you HOffmarl' S board -certified pain can't do t h at St j m U/atOr docto r i n Ka n sas ' w hen yo u ' re City. The first step: hurting. I d on't WhlCh COmBS a five-day trial. know if any of y y/th a gP yea r Joh n son i nsertus know the ex- ~h aypfeag/e ed a needle in the spine's e p i dural tent of the pain +. that he has been tJatte9', IS space a n d p assed in." the first that .
dads rein them in. Back at th e t ent, Colton
to a variety of symptoms, in-
o f j uice out of that lemon, and
Mostinsurance companies you are squeezing that suckcover it. er for everything it's worth.
You Have A Choice. Ask For Us BLI Name. I I I I
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there is a good chance of that
issues. But he said it remains to be seen whether the same
to do it," she said. "It'd be a
interventions could work for individuals with d eficits in
way to do it." — Reporter: 541-383-0304,
brain activity from adverse
tbannow@bendbulIetin.com
different modality but a great
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Buy new . • • Buy local ... BUV BELOW RETAIL!
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FROM:
YOU CAN BID ON: Lot 9 at Yarrow in Madras RETAILVALUE:$24,000" ( *60%Reserve)
Hoodoo'sCrescentlake Resort
FROM: Ken's SportingGoods
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FROM:
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YOU CAN BID ON:
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Quality Bench Master StressFree Chair
18 Holes of Golf with CartFor 4 People
RETAIL VALUE:$447.60
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FROM:
FROM:
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MeadowLakesGolfCourse
A tremendous value, lot 9 at Yarrow in Madras has unobstructed views to the Northwest, West toward the mountains and city lights as well as to the South. Yarrow is a beautiful planned community created by Brooks Resources Corporation. Visit www.yarrowliving.com to learn more about the community, the neighborhood association, CC8Rs, HOAs etc. This home site would be a great "hold as an investment", or build right away to take advantage of current building costs. Call Jeff Jernstedt at Sun Forest Construction at 541-385-8522 for details.
Preschool Tuition DevelpoingGodlyleadersthroughChrist.centerededucation
YOU CAN BID ON:
One Year Preschool Tuition
AIR12 Air Purifier
RETAIL VALUE:$5,050
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FROM: MorningStar Christian School
dePharmacy ~j>yhIestsi nhrorc ogI vre Ir~k
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FROM: Oreck Vacuums
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RETAILVALUE: $540 FROM:
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FROM:
Overleaf Lodge
EOSOrganics Salon
PureHealthNatural Medicine
RedmondWindow Treats
Westside Pharmacy
The OxfordHotel
Three Night Stay in a Nhale Watcher Room
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$25 Gift One N ight Stay Certif icate in Terrace Suite RETAIL VALLIE: $25
RE T AIL VALLIE: $349
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
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ITEMS FOR SALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212- Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles andAccessories 242 -Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Epuipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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264- Snow Removal Epuipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Norlhwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Epuipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Epuipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horsashoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood
202
Want to Buy or Rent CASH PAIDfor wood dressers & dinette sets. 541-420-5640
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.I buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 203
Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows St. Thomas Alter Society Homespun Holiday Bazaar Set. Nov. 8th, 9-3pm • Handmade Treasures • Religious Items • Baked Goods • Lunch, 11am-1pm St. Thomas Parish Hall 1720 NW 19th, Redmond Central Oregon Saturday Market 2014 Holiday Shows: • Bend Factory Stores Sat. Nov. 8th, 10-4
• Bend High School
(benefits BSHS Music Dept/
Sat 11/1 5, 10-4, Sun 11-5
280
281
286
Estate Sales
Fundraiser Sales
Sales Northeast Bend
Estate Sale Fri. & Sat., 8 a.m. in OWWII, 55819 Osprey Rd., Sunriver area. Vandevert, left on Century Dr. to Swan, L on Wood Duck. Household items, furn.
Moving Sale '77 Chevy GOOD STUFF SALE HD e/4 ton p/up, util. trlr, to benefit Full Access household & business Sat & Sun 9-4. No goods. Sun. & Mon. early birds! Items from 11/9-10, 9-4. 1994 NE 100 families fill 6,000 Zachary Ct. ¹3. sq. ft. in 2 bldgs! 2680 Twin K n ous: Multi-Family Garage Estate Sale! Nov. 7-8th, clothing Preemie Sale, corner of NE PurFri. 9-6; Sat. 10-4. 6-pc to Plus, from cell & Wells Acres Rd. ueen bdrm set, $500. b edding,housewares, & s i l k Fri. 8-4; Sat., 8-5. Baby/ egular bed, $50. Viking plants, art,live toys, books, kids things, kitchen sewingmachine w/desk, holiday, shoes from table, tools, big variety! $120. China hutch, $150. Roll-top desk, $100. newborn to 16. Kitchen items, yard tools, 2525 Twin Knous: fur- Robotic Team Sale: dollar items 8 free stuff! niture, hunting gear, MVHS Nov 8th, 9-3. Cash only. Take Hwy 26 sporting goods, bldg 2755 NE 27th. DoE t hru P r ineville to materials, lawn & gar- nations accepted. Fri Combs Flat Rd, turn Rt; den, bikes. 1 b l o ck Rt on Juniper Canyon; so. of Greenwood & 1 6pm 541-350-7170. 1st Rt SE Davis Lp; Rt at block west of 27th. PL Acres 2(Cayuse Rd), Look for signs! 288 Rt on Umatdla Lp (turns Don't Miss! into Klamath Rd) L on Sales Southeast Bend Yurok to Choctaw to 282 3797 Choctaw Rd. Sales Northwest Bend ESTATE SALE 541-447-4237 or 75 yrs in same house 541-728-7647 Antique 8 vintage everything! Iron beds, HUGE Estate/ Awbrey Butte Estate Sale furniture, vintage Moving Sale! Tons of furniture, tools, Everything must go! kitchen, coats. 1641 NW clothing, hats, linens, 2+ sets of living room Promontory Dr. Sat. 11/8, jewelry, glassware & furniture, 8-person din- 8am-1pm. No early birds! china, pottery, Pyrex, flatware sets, photos & ing table, side tables, memorabilia, books, John D e ere tr a ctor 286 sewing, quilting, picw/brush hog 8 blade, 2 Troy-Bilt riding mowers, Sales Northeast Bend tures & more! Fri. & Sat., 9-4,numcraft desk w / storage shelves,hunting, campbers 8 a.m. Friday! ing, shop & yard tools, ** FREE ** 141 SW Roosevelt between Wilson 8 lots of home decor. Too much to list! 26100 NE Garage Sale Kit Reed Market. Place an ad in The www.atticestatesanHorsell Rd., Bend, Fri & Bulletin for your gaSat. Nov. 7-8, 9am-4pm. dappraisals.com rage sale and re541-350-6822 ceive a Garage Sale Moving/ Kit FREE! Estate Sale 292 by Farmhouse KIT INCLUDES: • Sales Other Areas Estate Sales Garage Sale Signs 1877 SE Dussault Rd. •• 4 $2.00 Off Coupon To (Madras Ranchos, NOTICE Use Toward Your in Madras, OR) Remember to remove Next Ad your Garage Sale signs Nov. 7-8, Fri.-Sat., 9-4 • 10 Tips For "Garage
$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
00
NewVendors Welcome! Call 541-420-9015 Artisan Showcase & Bazaar -Newcomers Club of Bend Sat. Nov. 8, 9:00-3:30 Hand-crafted quality gift items and more! Bend Elk's Lodge 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. Come & Enjoy! Gift & Festive Items by Creative Seniors!
Bags, purses, cards, quilts, wreaths, stockmgs, aprons, knits & more!Vintege of Bend, 611 NE Bellevue Dr. Call Kris, 541-550-7554 Sat., Nov. 8, 11am-4pm. 205
Items for Free
208
Pets & Supplies
arecommends extra '
g < ~
9 7a •
212
241
Antiques & Collectibles
Bicycles & Accessories
Great-Grandma's Trunk!
LA Beach Cruiser
The Bulletin
i caution when pur- i
products or s I chasing services from out of I l the area. Sending l ' cash, checks, o r '
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Pups, AKC Champion Pedigree, health guarantee, Tri, Blenheims. $1000-
i credit i n f ormationi may be subjected to
Custom made, About 150 yrs old, one of a kind$1800. 541-848-7605 information about an s this piece came from no 2 alike! Prussia and is in advertiser, you may I Excellent condition. Chihuahua puppies (2) very good condition! f call t h e Ore g on f Oval Table Fun, fun, funi 1st shots, dewormed. Beautiful Also comes with ' State Atto r ney ' Solid walnut, hand$850. $250. 541-977-0035 some written history crafted by an Amish i General's O f fi ce 541-749-8720 from that era. Consumer Protec- • artisan for Schanz Donate deposit bottles/ $350 cash. t ion ho t l in e at l cans to local all vol., Furniture Co. Excellent 541-383-9308 non-profit rescue, for condition w/lovely patina. i 1-877-877-9392. Mondia Special - 1970s, feral cat spay/neuter. 27" H, top 30" L and 20" 25" frame, 34" stepover, wide. Graceful curved l The Bulletin l T railer a t Jak e 's Mahogany GlassChina Reynolds, Brooks, Camserving cernrai oregon sincesggs legs with 2-1/2n D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; nH x 39 nW x Closet, 68 paqnolo, project bike, hand-turned center Petco (near Wal-Mart) 16 nD, 3 d r awers, $1200. 541-526-5164 support. Orig. $649; in Redmond; or doGood classified adstell glass front d o ors, seli $275. the essential facts in an nate M-F a t S mith good shape. $425. Just bought a new boat? 541-385-4790 interesting Manner.Write Sign, 1515 NE 2nd 541-382-6773 Sell your old one in the Bend; or CRAFT in from the readers view- not classifieds! Ask about our Tumalo. Can pick up Super Seller rates! the seller's. Convert the Bid Nou/! 541-385-5809 large amts, 389-8420. www.sulletinBidnsuy.com facts into benefits. Show www.craftcats.org the reader howthe item will help them in someway. Elite wire dog crate, ~-s Santa Cruz Solo ~gq C~ This folds flat, locking sys. mtn. racing bike, advertising up $75. 541-420-2220. med. full-suspenPump Organ, brought toyouby ¹11948 built tn 1870 sion good cond Labrador puppy, pure- Buy NetN...Buy Local by New England must sell, $2000. The Bulletin b red m a le , b l a c k You Can Bid On: Organ Co. 541-480-2652 Snn g Cneal 0 ego s ce fete $300. 541-416-1175 ITIv t/ORKS! $2,000 Gift Beautiful carved Norwich Terriers AKC, Certificate 212 cabinet. In 1878i it rare! House raised, good Retail Value $2,000 242 Antiques & took 2nd place in family dogs. Females, Ni.Jacobs Fine Exercise Equipment Collectibles Sydney, Australia. $2500; males, $2000. Furniture Was presented to a 541-487-4511 or email (Bidding closes Treadmill - Weslo minister after his serAntiques wanted: tools, sharonm © peak.org Tues., Nov. 11, Cadence 5.9, exc. vice in the Civil War. furniture, pre-'80s John at 8:00 p.m.) cond., lonq stride. Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W $350. 541-385-4790 New $685. $400 obo. hotography, advertising, 541-647-1444 Chest of drawers all eer cans. 541-389-1578 The Bulletin reserves wood, $69. the right to publish all 541-420-2220. 243 Anti uetable Top: ads from The Bulletin Ski Equipment newspaper onto The Poodle AKC mini male, G ENERATE SOM E Bulletin Internet webblue, $600 cash. EXCITEMENT in your 541-912-4414 site. neighborhood! Plan a Bid Nou/! mysticalmerlepoodles.com garage sale and don't www.sulletinsidnsuy.com The Bulletin forget to advertise in Serving Central Oregon since igiu POODLE or POMAPOO 35t/~n diameter, has classified! puppies, toy. Adorable! image of sailing ship 541-385-5809. 240 541-475-3889 on the Crafts 8 Hobbies top. Base Gray leather couch, good POODLES, Standard condition, $300 or best is oak purebred puppies, capstan. offer. 541-389-1339 Btty Hew...stry Local ready 11/7. $750. Very You Can Bid On: (541) 310-0077 unique Quilting Family Season Pass Bed and matpiece, could sell MachinePoodle Toy puppy, black King Retail Value tress set,Sleep separately. $400 & white male, cute, soI H u sqvarna/ $1,650.00 Comfort massager, 541-419-6408. ciable, shots, wormed, Viking, 10-ft bed, Hoodoo Ski Area includes linens, $350. 503-779-3844 computerized, (Bidding closes and electric blanket, Tues., Nov. 11, CAST IRON Lots of $8500. $800 obo Queensland Heelers at 8:00 p.m.) 541-516-8578 good pieces.... good i5 41-416-0538 Standard & Mini, $150 prices! 541-548-2797 & up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor
i FRAUD. For morei
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Bookcase 70"h x 48nw; 2 Scotty AKC pups, ready drawer met. file cab, you now! Mom/Dad on site, haul. Free! 541-410-0750 1st shots. 541-771-0717
Storm door, white, 79" x 35.5", good cond. 541-647-1247
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Furniture 8 Appliances Furniture & Appliances
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youR/to WILL RECBVE CLOSETo z,oos000 EXPOSURESFOR ONLYS2SO ! 0 s CI Wnad r
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i nsl h
FVeekof November 3, 2014 CA King Henredon Sleigh Bedwith Organic Mattress and Bedding. It's magnificient.$4500 Cash only. 541-390-7109
The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or serQueen-sizesleigh bed vices from out of the S ponsor needed f o r cherry, $275. area. Sending cash, Wlnky, about 2 mo. 541-351-5133 checks, or credit inold who was just resf ormation may be cued with 2 siblings subjected to fraud. after b eing a b an- SOFA - dark brown l eather, Hita c h i For more informadoned. He was born tion about an adverw ithout e yelids & brand, l i k e n ew, needs surgery. One $400; and matching tiser, you may call eye is already dam- chair and ottoman the O regon State aged & he could end like n ew, $250. Attorney General's Office C o n sumer up totally blind. He is 541-280-0892 very sweet & adoptProtection hotline at able to the right home 1-877-877-9392. at some point. He will have surgery, but this The Bulletin Serving Central Oregonsince sgse is a big cost for a small rescue. Donations are Adopt a rescued cat or needed & are tax dekitten! Altered, vacci- ductible. CRAFT, PO Tempur-Pedic® nated, ID chip, tested, Box 6441, Bend 97708 more! CRAFT, 65480 or at www.craftcats.org Contour Elite King 8 PayPal. for more size mattress & foundaSale Success!" (nails, staples, etc.) 78th, Bend, Saf/Sun, tion, BRAND NEW. after your Sale event 1-5. 54 1 -389-8420 info, 541-389-8420 Entire household! is over! THANKS! New cool model. www.craftcats.org Beds, table & chairs, Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, Purchased; PICK UP YOUR then spent From The Bulletin sectional, food storage, 2 boys, baby dolls! Shots, GARAGE SALE KIT at and your local utility summer in Alaska, and fridge, freezer, lawn potty training, health guar. 1777 SW Chandler it was past time to mower, washer/dryer, companies. $700 8 up. 541-777-7743 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Aussie pups mini/toy, return to store. fiber & material, guns. The Bulletin all colors, 1st shots, Yorkie Terrier adorable Paid $3600; For moreinfo, pix Serving Central Oregonsince Sgea The Bulletin and descriptions, visit $340 cash. 7-week male, $650. sell for $2600. Serving Central Oregon since 190S farmhouscestatesales.com www.bendbuuetln.com 541-678-7599 503-317-4590 541-548-3810
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
541-385-5809
DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances.Divorced jn 1-5 weeks possible.503-7725295. Www.paralegalalternatjves.com legalalt©msn.com I ROCKY MOUNTAIN SUPPLY of Belgrade MT js seeking a qualified CEO/General Manager. This is a very successful bulk & retail energy, C Stores, agronomy, and lifestyle retail, cooperative with sales of $100 million with multiple retail locations. Financial and personal management experience is required. Email: larry.fuller© chsjnc.com or fax 888-653-5527 resume to Larry Fuller, 5213 Shoal Drive, Bismarck ND 58503. Antique Sale, 26th Anniversary, Nov 7-9, 100 dealers - Lafayette Schoolhouse Mall, entire block facing Hwy99West between Newberg & McMjnnvjlle in historic Lafayette. Www.myantjquemall.com 503-864-2720
E4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 6, 2014
D AILY B R I D G E
CLUB
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz
T h ursday, November 6,2O14
Lack of understanding By FRANK STEWART
ACROSS 1 Nasty stuff 5 Symbol of authority
Tribune Content Agency
9TV'5 "
Cy the Cynic defines confidence as the feeling you have before you fully comprehend the situation. As today's West, you lead the king of spades against 3NT, and when you see dummy's J-5, you feel confident of beating the contract. South plays low, also ducks your queen and wins the third spade with the ace. He leads the jack of clubs: three, deuce, ten. Then comes thequeen of clubs, you take your ace, and East follows. Maybe you should have won the first club. But what do you do now?
"Superbad" 33 He's asked to "please shine down on me," in sorig 34 It can be cast in a tragedy 37 Stash seeker 39 " it ironic?" (1996 song lyric) 40 Near the hip 42Woodstock producer a famous 44 "Parallel Lives" 56-Across writer represented literally six times 46 Promiscuous gUys in this puzzle SOWord after back 21 NBC parent or break beginning in 2011 51 b oo k 22"Te 52 mai (Asian dumplings) 230ne of the grains in Nutri-Grain 53Art store buy Bridges" 13 Lush 14Member of an old empire 15" bene" ("Very well": It.) 16Finalizes, as a contract 17Hilo do 182003 summit participant with Sharon Bnd Bush 1920th-century figure with
and he cue-bids two hearts. What do
you say? ANSWER: Your partner doesn't have hearts. He has a huge hand with spade support and perhaps a control in hearts. Bid two spades — your m ost discouraging action an d t r y not to betray unhappiness. A good partner will let you out below game
unless he has a hand such as A K Q 2, A 3, K 6, A K 7 4 3. South dealer Neither side vulnerable
NORTH 4J5 9 J4 3 OA97
HIGH SPADE The actual West confidently cashed his high spade, and South even more
A 975 4 2
confidently pitched his king of clubs, WEST 4KQ109 Q9752 OKJ 4A83
unblocking. Whatever West led next, South could run the clubs for nine tricks. West was overconfident and forgot to analyze. After he takes the ace of clubs, he must lead the king of diamonds, killing dummy's entry. I f South takes the ace, he wins only one spade, three hearts, two diamonds and two clubs. If South ducks, West cashes his high spade for down one.
EAST 48743 9 1086 0 10854 4106
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE A N B E L I C
SOUTH 4A62 9 AKQ 0 Q 63 2 4KQJ
DAILY QUESTION
South 2 NT P
We s t ass
Nor th 3 NT
East A l Pa s s
Youhold: 4 8 7 4 3 9 10 8 6 <> 10 8 5 4 4 10 6. The dealer, at Op ening lead — 45K your left, opens one heart. Your partner doubles, you respond one spade,
O W L I S H
(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
BO W EV A RA N NT E I I NO R I NE P I PS SA AL D IM E DO L N I T OL A
P R O M L I N U D OP E R R B R A V O C A B I T Y C OO R I E D O O D N B A T U OP E P P T R E E I N S I L E T M R O P
S T U S T ON A R I M U C E L E D I
P A N E
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PUZZLE BY DAVIDWOOLF
30 Cable channel that revived "Dallas" in 2012 32 E xplorer d a Gama 340ne of hearts? 35 Comprehensively 36Actress whose last name is a New York school'8 inits.
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she blows!"
59 Like
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
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(c)2814 Trlbune ContentAgency, LLC
65
11/06/14
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 750
)
s
I •
•
•
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
•
•
Redmond Homes
•
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
476
Employment Opportunities 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 365-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
f e
s
.00 630
Rooms for Rent
¹201407794
Dennis Clark, Principal Broker, 541-771-6730 Century 21 Gold Country Realty
Harlev Davidson
2001 FXSTD, twin cam 68, fuel injected, Vance 8 Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today 541-516-6664
Harjey Davidson 883 Sportster
1996, 20,200 miles,
exc. cond.,
$3,800.
541-548-2672.
17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, like new, 135hp I/O, low time, Bimini top, many extras, Karavan trailer with swing neck, current registrations. $7000. 541-350-2336 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541485-5809
881
882
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels yk+r
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., very clean. Lots of bonus features; many have never been used. A sking $18,000. C a l l Lisa, 541-420-0794 for more info /more photos.
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $22,995.
Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 kitchen ware, linens Wakeboard Boat etc. Hitch, sway I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, bars, water 8 sewer tons of extras, low hrs. Fleetwood D i scovery hoses. List price 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Full wakeboard tower, $34,500 - asking options - 3 slide outs, light bars, Polk audio $26,800 Loaded. speakers throughout, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Must see to apprecicompletely wired for etc., 32,000 miles. ate. Redmond, OR. amps/subwoofers, unWintered in h e ated 541-604-5993 derwater lights, fish shop. $62,000 O.B.O. finder, 2 batteries cus541-447-6664 tom black paint job. Four Winds 2008 $12,500 541-81 5-2523
$11,590. 541-546-0345.
Lots
Bld Now!
L
541-475-6265
$8500.
Kit Companion 26', '94 1 slide, new stove/fridge, Gd for hunting/camping! $2500 541-369-5766
.
Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 6.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd o wner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
Laredo 30'2009
2007 Bennington Harley Fat Boy 2002 Pontoon Boat 14k orig. miles.. Ex2275 GL, 150hp cellent cond. Vance 8 Honda VTEC, less Hines exhaust, 5 than 110 hours, spoke HD rims, wind original owner, lots vest, 12" rise handle of extras; TennesBuy New...auy Local HOLIDAY RAMBLER 632 bars, detachable lugBsnjj see tandem axle VACATIONER 2003 You Can Bid On: gage rack w/back Apt JMultiplex General trailer. Excellent 6.1L V6 Gas, 340 hp, Lot 29 at Yarrow rest, hwy pegs 8 many IRe ©alh condition, $23,500 workhorse, Allison 1000 Community, Madras chrome accents. Must CHECK YOURAD 503%46-1804 5 speed trans., 39K, see to appreciate! Retail Value $24,000 NEW TIRES, 2 slides, Sun Forest $10,500. /n CRR area Onan 5.5w gen., ABS call 530-957-1865 Construction 2006 11'x2' Zodiak, like brakes, steel cage cock(Bidding closes 466 new, ActiV hull, safe pit, washer/dryer, fireTues., Nov. 11, lock canister, 15HP lace, mw/conv. oven, Independent Positions at 6:00 p.m.) HOFatBo 19 96 Yamaha w/ t r olling ree standing dinette, on the first day it runs • Ho m es for Sale plate, 6 gal Transom was $121,060 new; now, Sales Help Wanted: to make sure it is cortank, less 30 hrs, 2 $35,900. 541-536-1008 773 E nergetic kios k rect. "Spellcheck" and - Dream chest seats, full Bimini sales person needed human errors do oc- 162 Acres Acreages top, Transom wheels, True Property! immediately for the cur. If this happens to Come cover, RV's special. O n the J oh n D a y G randfathered-in R V Bend-Redmond your ad, please con$5500. 541-923-6427 River, irrigation, borarea. Secured loca- tact us ASAP so that ders BLM, LOP tags, lot, 3.16 acres, septic Completely corrections and any a nd water o n t h e Ads published in the tions, high commisRebuilt/Customized springs, custom de- property located in a "Boats" classification adjustments can be sions paid weekly! 2012/2013 Award signed manufactured reat neighborhood. include: Speed, fishmade to your ad. Providence 2005 For more informaWinner home, guest home, ing, drift, canoe, 541-385-5809 79,000. MLS Showroom Condition Fully loaded, 35,000 t ion, p lease c a l l shop, orchard, bunk201206969 house and sail boats. The Bulletin Classified miles, 350 Cat, Very Many Extras Howard at house and RV park- Linda Lou Day-Wright, For all other types of clean, non-smoker, Low Miles. 541-279-0962. You ing. $625,000. Broker 541-771-2565 watercraft, please go 3 slides, side-by-side c an a l s o em a i l Senior ApartmentMLS201407546 $15,000 to Class 875. Crooked River Realty refrigerator with ice Independent Living Call Duke Warner 541-546-4607 tcoles©yourneigh541-365-5609 maker, Washer/Dryer, ALL-INCLUSIVE Realty, Dayville, borhoodpublications. H ARD T O F I N D 5 Flat screen TV's, In with 3 meals daily 541-967-2363 com for more inforACRE, flat buildable motion satellite. Month-to-month lease, 2667 SW 41 St., Red Serv>n Cenfral Ore on since 1903 mation. corner lot located in $95,000 check it out! Lake Park E statesHD Softtail Deuce 2002, mond. $65 9 ,000. 675 541-460-2019 Call 655-435-1264 Spectacular v i ews! with m ature l a nd- broken back forces Watercraft MLS¹ 4152 sq.ft., 4 bdrm, 3 scape. sale, only 200 mi. on Rm jjLfKI Rv 648 bath, huge master up 201406959 $135,500 new motor from Har- Ads published in "Wa CONSIGNMENTS stairs with deck, for Pam Lester, Principal ley, new trans case tercraft" include: Kay Houses for WANTED mal living and dining Broker, Century 21 and p arts, s p o ke rafts and motor Rent General We Do The Work ... room. Great room and Gold Country Realty, wheels, new brakes, aks, Ized personal Inc. 541-504-1336 You Keep The Cash! basement. n early all o f bi k e watercrafts. Fo PUBLISHER'S On-site credit Beau Leach, Broker brand new. Has proof "boats" please se NOTICE 776 541-766-2274 approval team, of all work done. Re- Class 670. All real estate adverweb site presence. Windermere Manufactured/ movable windshield, 541-365-5609 tising in this newspaWe Take Trade-Ins! Central Oregon T-bags, black and all Iylobile Homes 528 per is subject to the Real Estate chromed out with a F air H ousing A c t Loans & Mortgages BIG COUNTRY RV willy skeleton theme Servmg Cenfral Oregon since 1903 New Dream Special which makes it illegal NOTICE: Bend: 541-330-2495 on all caps and cov3 bdrm, 2 bath "any to a d vertise All real estate adverRedmond: WARNING 880 ers. Lots o f w o r k, $50,900 finished preference, limitation tised here in is sub541-546-5254 The Bulletin recomheart and love went Motorhomes on your site. or disc r imination ject to th e F ederal mends you use cauJ and M Homes into all aspects. All based on race, color, F air Housing A c t , tion when you pro541-546-5511 done at professional religion, sex, handi- which makes it illegal vide personal shops, call for info. information to compa- cap, familial status, to advertise any prefMust sell quickly due nies offering loans or marital status or na- erence, limitation or to m e d ical bi l l s, >vv~~ tional origin, or an in- discrimination based credit, especially : I. $6250. Call Jack at tention to make any on race, color, relithose asking for ad541-279-9536. such pre f erence, gion, sex, handicap, vance loan fees or Winnebago 22' companies from out of limitation or discrimi- familial status or na2007 Winnebago 2002 - $28,500 nation." Familial sta- tional origin, or intenKAWASAKI state. If you have Outlook Class "C" Chevy 454, heavy tus includes children tion to make any such KLX125, 2003, concerns or ques31', solar panel, duty chassis, new good condition. catalytic heater, tions, we suggest you under the age of 16 preferences, l i mitabatteries & tires, cab $1100. consult your attorney living with parents or tions or discrimination. excellent condition, & roof A/C, tow hitch legal cus t odians, We will not knowingly 541-593-6746 or call CONSUMER more extras. w /brake, 21k m i ., pregnant women, and accept any advertis850 HOTLINE, Asking $55K. more! 541-260-3251 people securing cus- ing for r eal e state 1-677-677-9392. Snowmobiles Ph. 541-447-9268 tody of children under which is in violation of Yamaha V-Star, 250cc 2011 motorcycle, new BANK TURNED YOU 16. This newspaper this law. All persons custom seat for rider, DOWN? Private party will not knowingly ac- are hereby informed vinyl coating on tank, will loan on real es- cept any advertising that all dwellings ad- 4-place enclosed Inter2 helmets included. tate equity. Credit, no for real estate which is vertised are available state snowmobile trailer Gets 60mpg, and has problem, good equity in violation of the law. on an equal opportu- w/ Rocky Mountainpkg, O ur r e aders a r e 3,276 miles. nity basis. The Bulle- $8500. 541-379-3530 is all you need. Call Asking $4700, firm. Oregon Land Mort- hereby informed that tin Classified 32' 2007, like Ready to make memories! all dwellings adverCall Dan 541-550-0171 Allegro gage 541-366-4200. new, only 12,600 miles. Top-selling Winnebago 746 860 tised in this newspaChev 6.1L with Allison 60 31J, original owners, non870 LOCAL MONEY:Webuy per are available on Northwest Bend Homes Motorcycles & Accessories transmission, dual ex- smokers, garaged, only secured trust deeds & an equal opportunity Boats & Accessories haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- 18,800 miles, auto-levelnote,some hard money basis. To complain of FSBO. 2nd Price Re- 1985 Harley Davidson eling system, 5kw gen, ing jacks, (2) slides, uploans. Call Pat Kellev d iscrimination cal l duction $5 2 5,000.1200C with S portster 14' Deep V Lake Tracker power mirrors w/defrost, graded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) Tvs, 541-382-3099 ext.18. HUD t o l l-free a t 2403 Brickyard Ave., frame and '05 Harley with trailer and 9.9 hp 2 slide-outs with aw1-600-677-0246. The B end. Beautiful 4 crate motor. Rat Rod Johnson outboard. nings, rear c amera, sleeps 10! Lots of stortoll free t e lephone bdrm, 2.5 bath home. look, Screaming Eagle $3300. 541-362-6462 People Lookfor Information trailer hitch, driyer door age, maintained, very number for the hear- Granite, knotty Alder, tips, leather saddlebags, w/power window, cruise, clean! Only $67,995! ExAbout Products and e xtras. Sacrifice a t 16' Valco aluminum Drift ing i m p aired is master bdrm on main, exhaust brake, central tended warranty and/or fiServices Every Daythrough $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, Boat & trailer, $3200. 1-600-927-9275. vac, satellite sys. Asking nancing avail to qualified 3 car tand e m . The Bulletiu Classinerfs 458-206-6446 (in Bend). buyers! 541-388-7179 Call 541-480-1633 541-419-7076 $67,500. 503-781-8812
4', 4'
The Bulletin
® D~zm
The Bulletin
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®
Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $18,900.More pics available. 541-923-6408
Keystone Raptor, 2007 37 toy hauler, 2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system,sleeps 6,manyextras. $29,999. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or
541-403-2465
Hksr -
www.eulletineidneuy.com
Furn. room quiet home, Faxit to 541-322-7253 no drugs, alcohol or smoking. $450/mo. 1st & The Bulletin Classifieds last . 541-408-0846
i
: 0 CI
Heartland P r o wler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & l a r ge closet, 15' power awning, power hitch 8 stabilizers, full s ize queen bed, l a r ge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $25,000 or make offer. 541-999-2571
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
$22,500
541-419-3301
Keystone Laredo 31' R V 2006 with
12' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage under- MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, neath. Tub 8 shower. king bed, Irg LR, 2 swivel rockers. TV. Arctic insulation, all Air cond. Gas stove & options - reduced by refrigerator/freezer. $3500 to $31,500. Microwave. Awning. 541-420-3250 Outside sho w er. Slide-through stora ge. E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking $13,600 541-447-4605
Open Road 36'
Rv
with 3 slides!
CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
king bed, hide-a-bed sofa, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $17,500 541-419-0566
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-546-5254
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 365-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
882
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
541 -385-5809 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
Fifth Wheels
Redmond:
541-546-5254 665
Canopies & Campers Freightliner custom 5th wheel puller, sleeper cab, rebuilt engine with 20k miles, 6.5 generator, 120 cu. ft. storage boxes - one 6' long. Gets 10.9 mpg, many more features. All in good shape. See to appreciate (in Terrebonne area). $24,000. 503-949-4229
A RE 6' c a nopy f o r standard size pickup, $400. 541-771-6791 Skamper 1990 8-ft popup cabover camper, immaculate, many extras, 3-burner stove, heater w/thermostat, hot water heater, oversized pressure water s y stem„ Fantastic Fan, (ots of storage, sleeps 4, $3750. 541-617-0211
•
•
*Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)
InCludeS UP
Item Priced af:
Your Total Ad Cost onl:
to 40 words of text, 2" in length,
• Under $500 ----.
-------------- $29 ............................$39
with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
• $1000 to $2499 • $2500 and over
• $soo to $eee ....
The Bulletin 541-
.I lt
18' travel trailer used very little
2006 Bayliner 185 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell.
e E
P
541-383-3503
771
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
880
Motorhomes
870
II!otorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
Large .25+/- acre lot located in s o uthwest Redmond. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2016 sq ft home built in 2001. Giant backyard! Lots of room for a shop. 2001 Honda Goldwing 1600cc w/2005 CaliSpacious home with fornia side car trike lots of extras for the conversion, 40K acprice, and close to tual miles, every opneighborhood park. tion imaginable! CD, Possible room for RV AM/FM, cruise, has 5' on east side of driveHrake, side rails, some way. Convenient loriding gear. Well sercation with easy acviced. located in Mt. cess to hoping and Vernon, OR. Trailer schools. Lava is not a optional. $22,500. major thoroughfare. 541-350-5050 Priced to sell! $192,500
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! RV Parking • Call 365-5609 or Full hookup RV s ite place your ad on-line at avail. through April 30th, $425 + e l ec. bendbulletin.com Central Oregon KOA 541-546-3046
860
........................... $49
........................... $59
5- 5
9
• The Bulletin, • ce n t i'al or e g on Marketplace • The central oregon Nickel Ads ® bendbulletin.com 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycjes, boats, airplanes, ond garage sale categories. Some restrictions apply.
wreckedS!e&Aner m rketmotorupcrde . Veq Fast anuFUo. e allService recome rilovingiorces s I t $2000080 541-000 OOO
E6 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 6 2014 • THE BULLETIN • 8 j
I
I •
•
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
• •
935
940
975
975
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Vans
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
The Bulletin is your
Mercedes300E
I The Bulletin recoml
Employment
I
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiies 869 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 879 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 899- RVs for Rent
AUTOS8tTRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
l products or servicesf from out of the area.
Chevy ExpressCargo Van 201 1,
Ford Escape Limited 2010, (exp. 11/9/14) Vin ¹B21115 Stock ¹83028A
(exp. 1 t/9/14) Vin ¹535474
(exp. 11/9/1 4) Vin ¹126159
Stock ¹44535A
oavment.
©
$ 3000 down, 84 i n . , 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in
payment.
©
S UBA R U
$13,979or $195/mo.,
$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
©
S UBA R U
and title i ncluded in
payment.
© 1974 Beiianca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302 HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T
hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8
A ero Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at
Mercedes 450SL, 1975
DURSRUUUDUUD.UUU
~
$22,500.
S
t.
payment.
®
S UBA R U .
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
ToyotaCorolla 2013, (exp. 11/9/1 4) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072
$15,979 or $199 mo., $2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title included in payment.
©
S UBA R U .
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond.
A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
VW Passat, 1999, 182K
miles, runs & looks ood, needs work.
127k miles.
1200. 541-977-5112
Have an item to sell quick? Find exactly what If it's under Chrysler 200 LX 2012, you are looking for in the '500 you can place it in (exp. 11/9/1 4) CLASSIFIEDS VIN ¹292213 The Bulletin Stock ¹83014 Classifieds for: L x E 2 $13,979 or $195/mo., $ 2000 down, 72 i n . , '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License '16 -3 lines, 14 days and title i ncluded in Re (Private Party ads only) payment. VRIU S UBA R U Nearly perfect! Must WHEN YOU SEE THIS 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. see! vin¹ 142671 877-266-3821 $11,977
S -
2005 Diesel 4x4
SEMI-DRY VAN
good tires, no dings, $8500.
Chevy S i l verado 1500 2 0 1 4, L T , 4 WD, crew c a b , 931 short box, 5.3L, new Automotive Parts, Feb. 28, 2014. Not Service & Accessories driven since June 2014. Gar a ged. (4) 185/55/R-15 Dunlop Loaded, brown tan Winter Maxx tires, off cloth interior, 4900 $34,9 9 0 . Fiat 500. Bought Nov. m i., 2013, less than 500 541-480-5634 m iles, $ 35 0 o b o . gythrpOgmail.com 707-206-7770,Bend 4 studded Les Schwab Nokia tires 225/55-17 on pretty alloy wheels, off S ubaru. $ 250. 541-382-6409 '65-'66 Mustang original Chevy Silverado bucket seats, completely 2012 4x4 Crew Cab rebuilt, better than new. 39K miles, Price lowered, must sell. White Diamond paint, 541-447-7272 Tonneau cover, leather heated seats, running Shop automotive 6hp boards, tow-ready, 60-gallon special vernew tires (only 200 tical air compressor miles on them), like tank, $600 new inside and out! 541-385-9350 $31,500 541-350-0775 932 Antique & Classic Autos Ford F-150 1991 541-403-2465.
Good runner 4x4
Only $4,998 Vin¹A10401
ROBBERSON~ 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 11/30/14
©
BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very
clean; loaded - coid weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170
~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
Cadillac Escalade
2011 Has everything, seriously!! Vin¹301832 $49,977 ROBBERSON U NCCL N ~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 11/30/1 4
(exp. 11/9/1 4) Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A
2012, (exp. 1 1/9/t4) Vin ¹004148. Stock ¹83142
or $169/mo., $31,999 or $395/mo., $12,979 $ 2500 down, 72 i n . , $3900 down, 64 mo. at 4 .49% APR o n a p -
proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
S UBA R U
4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
®
Certified preowned with warranty. ¹401047 Onl $16,947 ROBBERSON LINCCL N ~
S UBA R U
SUSCRUOSDDUD.COU
On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
Looking for your next employee?
Chrysler Pacifica 2005,
Vyy Touareg Diesel
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
LINCCL N ~
MorePixat Bendbtjlletij.com
~~
MAZDA 38 2011
©
2011 Has everything, seriously!! Vin¹301832 $49,977 ROBBERSON
U NCCL » ~
~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 price good thru 11/30/14
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
S ell you r s t u f f f ast . In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds Sell your stuff f aster w i t h c o l o r . i I I
I
~~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14 AFTER
SEFORE
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 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the iob done on the ranch!
BSSl 1C S 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 call with questions,
5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9
1-877-877-9392.
~Th.Bu~~ The Bulletin
proved credit. License
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,
ROBBERSON y
www.bendbulletin.com
> Office C onsumerI f Protection hotline at/
and title i ncluded in
$5,900 obo.
U
t Attorney General's v
$ 2000 down 8 4 m o 4 .49% APR o n a p -
U
541-419-5980
to advertise.
$15,979 or $199/mo.,
~
Infiniti I30 2001 great condition/ well maintained,
tiser, you may call
I the Oregon StateI
Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹83065
ssesme ~
Buick LeSabres, 2002 132k $3999; 2005 179k $4999. 541-419-5060
f tion about an adver-f
(exp. 11/9/t4)
S UBA R U
DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
I
Scion XB 2013,
541-312-3988
Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. I CrewMax, 2011 - Only 29,700 miles & loaded! Vr ( '. 381hp, TRD off road pkg, i Bilstein shocks,18" alloys, 1999 runs good! sunroof, rear s l i ding Vin ¹715926 VW CONV. 1 9 78 window, backup camera, Bargain Corral $8999 -1600cc, fuel 12-spkr JBL sys, running price $3,977 injected, classic 1978 brds, hitch/trailer sway ROBBERSON ~ Volkswagen Convert- pkg, 10-way adj leather ible. Cobalt blue with htd seats, dual climate a black convertible control, sonar, 6-disc CD, top, cream colored Bluetooth, more! $37,900. 541-312-3986 interior 8 black dash. 541-390-6616 Dlr ¹0205. Price This little beauty runs good thru 11/30/14 Dlr ¹0354 and looks great and 935 turns heads wherever Sport Utility Vehicles Suzuki Grand Vitara, The Bulletin it goes. Mi: 131,902. 2004, 106K mi, 4WD, To Subscribe call Phone 541-504-8399 ood tires, well cared 541-385-5800 or go to f or, , great tow vehicle, asking $4300 o b o. www.bendbulletin.com 933 541-549-8737, Iv msg. Pickups
53' long x102N wide,
(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)
ROBBERSON
2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.
Call
checks, or credit in- q formation may be I 541 U385-5809 [ subiect toFRAUD. For more informa-
Seiving Central Oregonsince tgte
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
: ; .
Subaru Forester
Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, Peterbilt 359 p otable $34,000 water truck, 1 990, or best offer. 3200 gal. tank, 5hp N 541-408-7826 p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, camiocks, $ 25,000. 541-820-3724
Complete restoration, $32,900.
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
©
ash ,f
Marketplace
serving central oregon sincesgnr
541-420-3277
916
Chevelle Maljbu 1966
SUDSRUOSSSUD.OOLI
97K Miles $8999. 541-504-8399
541-447-5184.
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
S UBA R U
tnnm n
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
payment.
Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154827 $11,977
L •
I I N CLII ~
4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
JEEP WRANGLER
Nissan Frontier 2013, (exp. 11/9/1 4) Mercedes 380SL 1982 Vin ¹717729 Roadster, black on black, Stock ¹83155 soft 8 hard top, excellent condition, always ga- $26,977or $339/mo., raged. 1 55 K m i l es, $3900 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p $11,500. 541-549-6407 proved credit. License
ROBBERSON
S UBA R U
LINCCL N ~
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent per/ormance &affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
1993 sharp, well maint. Vin¹857877 Bargain Corral Price $3,977
Stock ¹83015
$17,979 or $199/mo., $22,979 or $279/mo., $3500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in
f S ending c
Dodge Avenger2013,
CUDCRUUCRUUD.UUU 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 932 933 877-266-382'I 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr¹0354 D Antique & Pickups Classic Autos Jeep Cherokee 1995 Ford Fusion SE Ford F250 1984 4x4 King green with tan leather Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift interior. Good shape, kit, 90% tires, good wood no damage history. truck! $2000 or best of- $2200 or best offer. fer. 541-279-8023 541-410-1135. Chrysler Town & CHEVELLE MALIBU Country LXI 1997, Jee Liberty2012 2012. Low miles908 beautiful inside & 1969 350-4spd, 3" high miles per galAircraft, Parts exhaust. $12,000. out, one owner, nonlon$15,977 541-788-0427 smoker, loaded with & Service Vin¹302474 options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds ROBBERSON GMC Sonoma 1991 4x4 available. $4 , 950. Ext. Cab, 6-cyl, AT, runs Limited Edition. Call Mike, (541) 815great, new radiator, AC, 541-312-3986 PRAYING FOR 8176 after 3:30 p.m. power, tow pkg, bedliner, Dlr ¹0205. Pricing 155K, n o da m age. SNOW! Vin¹149708 good thru 11/30/14 21.977 Dodge T&C Ltd 2000, $4500. 541-385-4790 loaded, 48K orig. mi., 1965 Mustang 1/3interestin ROBBERSON $9995. 541-416-0382 Hard top, Columbia400, L lvccLN ~ snngn n 6-cylinder, auto trans, Financing available. power brakes, power Garage Sales 541-312-3986 $150,000 steering, garaged, es Dlr ¹0205.Price good P (located O Bend) Garage Sales well maintained, thru 11/30/1 4 541-288-3333 engine runs strong. Accord SE 2006, Honda Ri d g eline Garage Sales Honda 74K mi., qreat condi4-cyl, great mpg, nonRTL 2006. 2nd owner tion. I12,500. Jee~Patriot 2014 smoker, well maint'd, 112,000 mi.. Records Find them Must see! 95K mi., clean. 1 owner. since owning car for 5 541-598-7940 in Reduced $8250 firm. years. Truck crew cab 480-266-7396 (Bend) The Bulletin w ith 3.5 V 6 , a u t o trans, very clean Nwith Classifieds 1/3 interest in wellmost options, 17 alequipped IFR Beech Boloy wheels with Toyo only Tk miles a lot of 541-385-5809 nanza A36, new 10-550/ Tires at 80%. Custom vehicle for $16,977 prop, located KBDN. t onneau cover f o r 975 Vin¹619102 $65,000. 541-419-9510 bed, and tow hitch. Automobiles www. N4972M.com Jeepster Commando 1968 Price to sell $15,499 Honda Fit2013, ROBBERSON 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, comCall (610) 909-1701 (exp. 11/9/14) LINcoLN ~ Snnt s nn pletely restored. $12,000 for walk around Vin ¹002246 Ford Focus 2010 obo. 808-430-5133 or Stock ¹83064 541-312-3986 541-382-6300 Dlr ¹0205. Price $15,979 or $199 mo., $2000 down, 84 mo., good thru 11/30/14
1/5th interest in 1973
I mends extra cautionI g when p u r chasing •
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE COMPETITIVE PROCUREMENT REQUEST
A public hearing will be held by the City Council at 7:00 pm W ednesday, D e cember 17, 2014 in F-Lateral Project the City o f B e nd Sealed Competitive Council Chambers Bids to provide Pipe a t 710 N W W a l l Material, Pipe Deliv- Street. T h e p u rery and Pipe Welding pose of this hearing Equipment R e n t al is to receive input Services for the Cen- on theamendments tral Oregon Irrigation to the Annual AcDistrict F-Lateral shall tion Plan. Citizens, be received at the of- social service agenfice of the Central Or- cies, economic deegon Irrigation Dis- velopment organitrict, 1055 SE Lake zations, homeless Ave, Redmond, OR and housing provid97756 until 2:00 p.m. ers, health professionals, and other o n November 1 8 , 2014. Any Bids re- interested p a rties ceived after the speci- are encouraged to participate. fied time will not be considered. Written c omments Competitive Bids will are also welcome be awarded based a nd must b e r e upon the competitive ceived by 7:00 pm bid price provided on W ednesday, D e the Bid Form, and cember 17, 2014 at subject to the provi- City Hall, PO Box OR s ions o f t h e Bi d 431, B e nd , 97709. B oth oral Documents. and written comThe Bid must be sub- ments will be conm itted on t h e a t - sidered in the det ached Bi d F o r m . v elopment of t h e Generally, the Bid will Council's decision. be to furnish, deliver and provide welding This meeting locaequipment for 63-IN tion is physically acHDPE pipe and ap- cessible to persons dis a b ilities. purtenances (COI with F-Lateral Pro j ect, Communication or other accommodaRedmond, Oregon). tions for people with Initial delivery of pipe d isabilities will b e material s hall b e m ade upon a d request. January 12, 2015 with vance the last stick of pipe Such requests can and materials being be made by comdelivered not l a ter pleting the Request t han J a nuary 3 0 , for Accommodation 2015. Welder rental or Barrier Removal shall c o m mence Form (available in January 19, 2015 for City offices, or at a duration as sched- www.bend.or.us, or cont a cting uled with the COI fol- by lowing delivery of the 541-693-2141. Providing at least 48 pipe material. For bid p urposes, wel d e r h ours notice w i l l help ensure availr ental shall be a s sumed to be one cal- ability. endar month. More i n f ormation C i t y's For information con- about th e cerning the proposed CDBG Program and the funding p r oWork, contact Larry Roofener, A ssistant posal process is a vailable a t C i t y District Manager of the Central Oregon Ir- Hall, 7 1 0 Wall r igation District a t Street, during regu(541) 548-6047 or re- lar office hours. Adgarding tec h nical vance notice is requestions, contact the quested. E ngineer, Kevin L . Crew, P.E., (541) For more informat ion contact J i m 480-6257. Long, A ff o rdable Owner reserves the Housing Manager, right to reject all Bids 541- 312-4915. or any Bid not conforming to the intent and purpose of these LEGAL NOTICE documents or due to TO INTERESTED lack of or changes in PERSONS anticipated f u nding. Elouise A. Mattox has Award is subject to fi- been appointed Pernal agreement by and sonal Representative between the Owner, of the estate of BerCentral Oregon Irriga- tha E. F o iles, detion District. ceased, by the Circuit C ourt, State of O rCraig Horrell, Manager egon, Des c hutes Central Oregon C ounty, Case N o . Irrigation District 14PB0110. All persons having claims LEGAL NOTICE against the estate are required to p resent Public Auction Public Auction to be them, with vouchers attached, to the Perheld on Saturday, N ovember 15t h , sonal Representative at 250 NW Franklin 2014 at 11:ooam at Aeries Mini Storage Avenue, Suite 402, Bend, Oregon 97701, 1300 NE 2nd Street, within four m o nths B end, Oreg o n after the date of No97701. (Unit 7 Paula vember 6, 2014, the Hopper). first publication of this notice, or the claims LEGAL NOTICE may be barred. AddiPublic Notice and tional information may Notice of Public be obtained from the Hearing records of the court, the Personal RepreThe City of B end sentative, or the lawproposes to amend yer for the Personal the City's Annual Representative, PatriAction Plan for the cia Heatherman. allocation of fundi ng t hrough t h e Community Development Block Grant PUBLIC NOTICE (CDBG) Program. The Mirror Pond Ad The Af fo r dable Hoc Committee will Housing A dvisory m eet from 1:00 t o Committee has ap3:00 p.m. on Friday, proved a mending November 7, 2014, in the 2014 — 2015 the community room annual CDBG Acat the Bend Park & tion Plan (for period Recreation D i s trict o f July 1 , 2 0 0 8 Office, 799 SW Cothrough June 30, l umbia, Bend, O r 2009). egon. The agenda will include a p resentaCopies of the tion on t h e M i rror amendments to the Pond Vision Proposal A ction P la n a r e and discussion on the available for review next steps. The comat Bend City Hall mittee will meet in executive session pur(710 NW Wall St) in the City Administrasuant to ORS tion Office, and on 192.660(2)(e) for the the City's web page purpose of discussing real property transac(www.ci.bend.or.us). Interested p a rties tions. The agenda is may also request posted on the district's copies to be sent website: www.bendthrough the mail by parksandrec.org. For calling more information call 541-706-6100. (541)312-4915.