Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $
MONDAY October 7, 2013
Golfej's bigchance SPORTS• B1
TEE TOGREEN• BB
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
Fired Bear Creek
College footdall —A bushel of close calls and their
impact on games ofnational
principal appealing
importance.B1 •
•
The naChOmagiC — A breakdown of all the ingredi-
ents, techniques andscience that go into making
Nacho Cheese Doritos so intoxicating.A3
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Matt Montoya, the former principal of Bear Creek Elementary in Bend, has appealed his termination to the Oregon Department of Education Fair Dismissal Appeals Board. Montoya, 34, was fired Sept. 10 after a lengthy review process that began when he was placed
COnStitutiOn talk —A Harvard Law professor speaks
on paid ad-
in Bend through the magic of the Internet.A7
Colorado kerfuffle —political differences drive talk of secession amongthe state's rural counties.A6
Ih natianal neWS — The U.S. SupremeCourt begins its term today with a deep slate of
wide-reaching cases.A2
AndaWebexclusiveLibertarians, finding influence, aim for a broader reach. bendduffetin.com/extras Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Claude Rickman, of Powell Butte, adjusts a small-scale hydropower generator last week in the irrigation canal in Powell Butte. Panels that catch the current — resembling a revolving door — swing freely, making the passage easier on wildlife, said Rickman, who developed the generator with Jim Crocker, of Terrebonne, and Montana engineer Jim Helfrich.
EDITOR'5CHOICE By Scott Hammers ~The Bulletin
Senate's
chaplain not shy about scolding
POWELL BUTTE — On the edge of a rickety bridge across the Central Oregon Can@ near Powell Butte, Jim Crocker, of Terrebonne, did some calculations in his head, arriving at an ambitious figure. "A megawatt a mile." Along with Claude Rickman, of Powell Butte, and Montana engineer Jim Helfrich, Crocker has developed
a small hydropower generaBy Jeremy W.Peters New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — The disapproval comes from angry constituents, baffled party elders and colleagues on the other side of the Capitol. But nowhere have senators found criticism more personal or immediate than right inside their own chamber every morning when the chaplain delivers the opening
prayer. "Save us from the madness," the chaplain, a • Both sides Seventh-day toughen A d v e ntist, stances, former Navy A5 rear admiral and collector of brightly colored bow ties named Barry Black, said late last week as he warmed up into what became an epic ministerial
tor he believes could someday turn Central Oregon's canals into a source of inexpensive, clean electricity. The scaled-down version they're testing in the canal near Powell Butte is a prototype, and it looks it — secured to the bridge with nylon rope, with two soggy sheets of plywood serving to guide water into a series of eight panels that rotate in the current like an eggbeater. The prototype turns out just enough power to light a single lightbulb, but according to their calculations, harnessing the full flow of the canal would boost the output more than 40-fold. With hundreds of miles of canals crisscrossing Central Oregon from Bend to Madras, a network of generators could — in theory
— supply a large slice of the region's power during the
summer irrigation season. Crocker said the power-hungry data centers recently built in Crook County could be potential customers, particularly Facebook, which has faced criticism from environmental groups for its use of coal-generated electricity. The first Facebook data center built nearby on the outskirts of Prineville consumes 20 megawatts, or enough to power about 14,600 homes, according to estimates from Pacific Power and the Bonneville Power Administration. Steve Johnson, manager of the Central Oregon Irrigation District, said he was dubious when Rickman and Crocker first approached him about testing the device in the canals over the summer. Putting anything in the canals is a risk, Johnson said, and he worried the device could break loose from its moorings and create a flooding hazard. SeeGenerator /A8
Small-scale hydroelectric generator Though similar to a water wheel, the machine developed bythe three men is fully submerged. Becausethe panels at the ends of the arms pivot freely, they swing out when being pulled upstream, exposing only a narrow edge to the current. Once in position, the panel swings in the opposite direction, allowing the full force of the current to push against the panel and rotate the drive shaft. While the prototype drives an electric generator, the menexpect their completed version will use a hydraulic motor to capture the energy and transport it to the bank for power generation.
Top view A
A
I
A
Pane )pivots with current
Pa el
Fish can pass through on either side
Oo
Current forces panel to close A
Current pushes against closed panel causing generatorto rotate A a A Direction of current
AI
A
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
scolding. "We acknowledge our transgressions, our shortcomings, our smugness, our selfishness and our pride," he went on, his baritone voice filling the room. "Deliver us from the hypocrisy of attempting to sound reasonable while being unreasonable." So it has gone every day for the last week when Black, who has been the Senate's official man of the cloth for 10 years, has taken oneofthe more rote rituals on Capitol Hill — the morning invocation — and turned it into a daily conscience check for the 100 men and women of the U.S. Senate. SeeChaplain /A5
ministrative leave June 24. While the Bend-La Pine School Board Montoya reviewed Superintendent Ron Wilkinson's recommendation to terminate based on Montoya's failure to complete requiredstaffobservations, Montoya filed a complaint against the district, citing race and age discrimination. The board suspended its evaluation of Montoya's personnel status until it investigated the discrimination claim, which on Aug. 22 the board ruled was without merit. SeeMontoya/A5
Drug firms helped fund FDA panel By Peter Whoriskey The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — A scientific panel that shaped the federal government's policy for testing the safety and effectiveness of painkillers was funded by major pharmaceutical companies that paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for the chance to affect the thinking of the Food and Drug Administration, according to hundreds of emails obtained by a public records request. The emails show that the companies paid as much as $25,000 to attend any given meeting of the panel, which had been set up by two academics to provide advice to the FDA on how to weigh the evidence from clinical trials. See FDA/A5
Revive their ghost town'? Not onyour life, residents say By John M.Glionna
44th birthday, after all. He's
Los Angeles Times
not getting any younger, and
JEFFREY CITY, Wyo. On a lazy Sunday afternoon in this forgotten high-plains outpost,Byron Seeley decides to kick up a little dust. It's his -
certainly no better looking. The pottery artist sips from a jug of Lord Calvert whiskey, chasing the taste with slugs of Busch beer. Suddenly, he
Increasing clouds Page B10
Tvs.
Who knows what they'll do next? Later, just for laughs, they might wander out onto lonely Highway 287, don their monkey and alien masks again and rattle the nerves of passing motorists. They get
INDEX
TODAY'S WEATHER High 60, Low 33
and a fellow merry prankster clamber on to the roof of his studio and begin throwing kitchen chairs out into the scrub brush, past the shattered hulks of already tossed
Calendar A7 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Puzzles C3-4 Horoscope
C4 Local/State A 7- 8 Sports Monday Bf -f 0 A9 Movies A9 Tee to Green B8-9 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 110,No.280, 26 pages, 3 sections
the urge on slow days just like this one. "We'll be sitting around talking about the universe when we spot headlights at
dusk," Seeley says. SeeGhost town/A6
+ .4 We userecycled newsprint
: IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
88 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
The Bulletin How to reach Lls STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
541-385-5800 Phone hours: 5:30 a.m.- 5 p.m. Moni-pri., 6:30 a.m.-noon Sat.-Sun.
GENERAL INFORMATION
541 -382-1811 ONLINE
www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL
bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
541-383-0367 N EW S R O O M
FAX
541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M
EM A IL
Business ..... business©bendbulletin.com City Desk...........news©bendbulletin.com CommunityLife communitylife©bendbulletin.com Sports..............sports©bendbulletin.com
OUR ADDRESS Street
1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 CaorSd0AVL
smuoo Aw. DsciiurgsRe
NATION 4% ORLD
u reme our ac wi a e oc e
Syria conflict —International disarmament experts Sunday began dismantling and destroying Syria's chemical weaponsarsenal
By Robert Barnes
Biker ChaSe —A motorcyclist who smashed his helmet into a
The Washington Post
WA SHINGTON — The Supreme Court today resumes its role as the uneasy arbiter of America's intractable social conflicts with a new docket that features battles over affirmative action, campaign finance and abortion, among other divisive issues. No single case may thrust the court into th e n ational spotlight as did its cliffhanger ruling on the constitutionality of President Barack Obama's health care law i n 2 012 or June's victories for advocates of same-sex marriage. B ut t aken t o gether, t h e upcoming term "i s actually deeper in i m p ortant c ases than either of th e last two terms," Irv Gornstein, executive director of the Georgetown University Law Center's Supreme Court Institute, said at arecent forum. The workload in the ninth
term of Chief Justice John Roberts's tenure also sounds familiar. "It is the year of the sequel," said Kannon Shanmugam, a Washington lawyer who frequentlyargues before the court. The court will again examine the use of race in university admissions and almost certainly revisit the healthcare law, called the Affordable Care Act, this time to rule on its requirement that insurance plans offered by private employers covercontraceptives. The court majority that decided the landmark Citizens United campaign finance case will also have a new opportunity to further loosen the restrictions on funding political campaigns. And the term will offer a chance for the conservative majority that has moved the c ourt incrementally t o t h e right to pick up the pace. At least a half-dozen court
and the equipment used to produce it, taking the first concrete step in their colossal task of eliminating the country's chemical stockpile
by mid-2014, anofficial said. The inspectors from the Organization
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons have about nine months to
purge President BasharAssad's regime of its chemical program. The mission, endorsed by theU.N.Security Council, faces the tightest deadline in the watchdog group's history and must simultaneously navigate Syria's bloody civil war.
precedents are being challenged, including rulings regarding abortion protesters and the role of religion in public life. The Supreme Court's pivotal role in the nation's political conversation is not particularly welcomed by the justices, even theone whose decision is crucial to almost every important ruling. Justice Anthony Kennedy said last week that it is political gridlock that has thrust the court into such a key role. "Any society that relies on nine unelected judges to resolve the most serious issues of the day is not a functioning democracy," Kennedy s a id at a speech at the University of Pennsylvania. "I just don't think that a democracy is responsible if it doesn't have a political, rational, respectful discourse, so it can solve these problems beforethey come to the court."
sport utility vehicle after a high-speed chase last week was arraigned
Sunday on several charges asthe Police Department moved to determine whether one or more of its officers were present at a subsequent attack on the SUV's driver. The department's top spokesman,
John McCarthy, said Sundaythat an undercover detective had been among the dozens of motorcyclists on the Henry Hudson Parkway
on Sunday, Sept. 29, whenthey becameembroiled in an escalating confrontation with the driver of the SUV that began with a pair of collisions and ended with the beating of the driver.
Iraq school domdiIIg —A suicide bomber detonated a truck filled with explosives on the playground of an elementary school in northern lraq on Sunday morning, killing 13 children and the head-
master, the police said. Shortly after the attack on theschool in the village of Qabak, just outside Tal Afar in Mosul province, another suicide bomber crashed a smaller pickup into the village's police station
and set off explosives, killing three officers and wounding 15. Irall arl'eS'tS —The lranian authorities have arrested four people suspected of planning to sabotage one ofthe country's nuclear sites, the chief of lran's nuclear program told reporters Sunday. The nuclear chief, Ali Akbar Salehi, who was foreign minister for three years under
the previous president, MahmoudAhmadinejad, warned that "some countries" are "not happy" now that lran is trying to reach a settlement with the West in the 10-year-long nuclear standoff.
CapSiZed Ship —Divers searching the underwater wreckageof a migrant ship that capsized last week in the Mediterranean Sea recovered
another 83 bodiesSunday,raising the death toll to194. Rough seasnear the Italian island of Lampedusa had delayed recovery efforts by two days. The shipwreck, which happened Thursday less than a quarter-mile
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
from Lampedusa, isthe latest grim reminder of theextreme risks taken
CLASHES TURN FATAL IN EGYPT C•
by migrants and asylum-seekers who try to slip into Europe.
California fire —Crews built containment lines Sundayaround a
I
wind-driven wildfire that scorched nearly 4 square miles of dry brush and forced people to evacuate part of a Southern California military
DEPARTMENT HEADS
base. The blaze atthe Marine Corps' CampPendleton was 20percent
Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 Circulation and Operations..................541-385-5805 FinanceHolly West...........541-383-0321 HumanResources Traci Oonaca......................54f -383-0327
contained as the fire danger subsided with calmer winds late Sunday. The fire broke out Saturday amid hot, dry and blustery conditions
throughout the region. It quickly prompted the evacuation of 230 residents from a housing unit near Lake O'Neil and caused minor damage to four buildings, base officials said. — From wire reports r
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran..........541-383-0360 City Desk Joseph Oitzler.....541-383-0367 CommunityLife, Health Julie Johnson.....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe......541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson................541-617-7860 News EditorJan Jordan....541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 SporlsBill Bigelow.............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou ............541-410-9207
e
' sytt
k
Chem~r ' n
.cr
'
I
Chem-Dry
I
I
I
I
of Centra lOregon ro' I
•
•,
I
TALK TO A REPORTER BendHilary Borrud ...........54f -617-7829 Business Elon Glucklich ....................541-6f7-7820 Rachael Rees .....................54f -61 7-78f 8 Calendar ............................54f-383-035f CrookCounty.....................541-383-0367
DeschutesCounty Shelby R. King ...................54f -383-0376 EducationTyler Leeds.......541-633-2160 Famtty/Att Ages Mac McLean......................541-617-7816 Fine Arts/Features David Jasper ......................54f -383-0349
General Assignment Megan Kehoe.....................541-383-0354
I
Sabry Khaled / r I-Shorouk Newspaper
A supporter of ousted Egyptian President Moham-
med Morsi raises his handsSunday in Cairo in a
— poured into thestreets andturned oneachother.
gesture that has became a symbol for the Rabaah alAdawiya mosque where hundreds of Muslim Broth-
Several neighborhoods of the capital resembled combat zones after street battles that raged for hours.
erhood supporters were killed by security forces in
Morsi supporters fired birdshot andthrew firebombs
August, in Ramsis Square, Cairo, Egypt.
at police, who responded with gunshots and tear gas. Streets were left strewn with debris, and the air was
Security forcesand Islamist protesters clashed around thecountry Sunday, leaving 51dead, asanational holiday celebrating the military turned to mayhem
-
-~ tL,
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address....P.o.Box788 Redmond, OR97756 .................................541-504-2336 .................................541-548-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0358.
TO SUBSCRIBE Home delivery and E-Edition: One mOnth: $17 <Prinonl t y:$16)
By mail in DeschutesCounty: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:One month: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-385-5809 Advertising fax ..................541-385-5802 Other information.............54f-382-18ff
OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints....................541-383-0358 Obituaries..........................541-61 7-7825 Back issues .......................54f -385-5800 All Bulletin paymentsare acceptedatthe drop box alCityHall. Checkpayments may be converted to an electronic funds transfer. The Bulletin, USPS4552-520, is published daily by Western Communications Inc., l777S.W.ChandlerAve.,Bend,OR 97702. Penodicals postagepaid at Bend, OR. Postmast er:Send addresschangeslo The Bulletin circulationdepartment, Po Box6020, Bend, OR97708. The Bulletin retains ownership andcopyright protection of all staff -preparednewscopy,advertising copy and news or adillustrations. They maynot be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.
,
•
E*t
4IP
— The Associated Press
Chemgr
20olo OFF
Libya condemnsU.S.operation fering terminal inertia." The reaction to the capture New York Times News Service of Abu Anas underscored the TRIPOLI, Libya — Libya's stakes for the United States as fragile i nterim g overnment it gave up on waiting for the condemned the United States Libyan government to grow on Sunday for what it called strong enough to challenge the the "kidnapping of a Libyan militias that wield power, and citizen" from this capital city detain fugitives living with ima day earlier, and Libyan law- punity on Libyan soil. makers threatenedto remove For months, a swelling team the prime minister if the gov- of federal investigators, intelernment was involved. ligence agents and Marines The capture of the Libyan, waited behind the barbed wire who goes by the nom de guerre and gun turrets of the fortified A bu Anas al-Libi and w a s compound around the U.S. indicted on a charge of plan- Embassy here, aware of susning al-Qaida's 1998 bombing pected terrorists at large in the of two U.S. embassies in East streets — including suspects in Africa, was so fast and left so the killing last year of Ambasfew clues behind that Libyans sador J. Christopher Stevens were only slowly coming to and three other Americans in grips with what had occurred. Benghazi — and increasingly The government denied an frustrated at the inability of American assertion that it had the weak Libyan government played a role in the operation to move against them. amid anger that the nation's Now, with the Abu A n as sovereignty had been violated. raid, the Obama administraBut as a measure of just how tion has signaled a limit to tired the public is of the chaos its patience. Two years after that has gripped the country the United States backed the since the overthrow of Moam- NATO intervention that r emar Gadhafi in 2011, some moved Gadhafi, Washington Libyans angry at the raid ex- has demonstrated a new willpressed exasperation at their ingness to pursue its targets government's failures to bring directly, an action that has any measure of security to its now prompted some of those people. suspected in Stevens' death "There is hardly very much to go into hiding, people here that is going on, except that satd. "Of course people are worevery three or four days there is a new assassination," said ried about it i n B e nghazi," Mohammed Mufti, a Western- said Mohammed Abu Sidra, a educated physician and liberal Benghazi Islamist leader and intellectual in Benghazi. "This member of Parliament. government seems to be sufSpeaking on the sidelines of
•
se
the crack of gunfire rang out.
Crowds fromEgypt's two rival camps— supporters
By Carlotta Gall and David D. Kirkpatrick
I I I
thick with tear gasandsmokefrom burning fires, as
Health Tara Bannow......................54f -383-0304 Markian Hawryluk..............541-617-7814
Jefferson County...............541-383-0367 La Pine/Sunriver...............541-383-0367 MusicBenSalm on............54f-383-0377 ProjectsSheila G. Miler....541-617-7831 Public Lands Dylan J. Darling..................541-617-7812 Public Safety Scott Hammers..................541-383-0387 Redmond/Sisters Leslie Pugmire Hole...........541-548-2186 SalemLauren Oake...........541-554-1 f 62 Washington, D.C. Andrew Clevenger..............202-662-7456
a
I
of Morsi and backers of the military that deposed him
an economic conference in Indonesia early today, Secretary of State John Kerry defended the capture of Abu Anas, saying it complied with American law, The Associated Press reported. Kerry said the suspect was a "legal and appropriate target" for the United States.
• Carpet Cleaning • Upholstery Cleaning • Tile, Stone, Grout Cleaning & Resealing Offer valid with coupononly. Not including RVsa stairs. Not valid with other offers. Minimumsapply. Payment due al time ol service. Expiration dale: November 1,2013 •
•
~ ChemDry of Central Oregon • 541-388-7374 Bend I L
Serving Deschures, Crook & Jefferson Coun(ies Independently Owned & Operated
Hearing Screening for adults Semi Annual Event For New Patients
Oct. 8th,9th & 10th A pp o i n t m e n t s
please
I
Qy'FQ jvI
>pgly
•
•
oIy l 4 ) 'rol y t rP4r+~
•
Rain checks available if requested by dates above. We offer these free clinics once each Fall 8< Spring. Take this opportunity to have your hearing assessed by aCertified Clinical Audiologist.
Bend - 541.647.2884
Auoio~
301 NE Franklin Ave.
a HEARING AID CUNIC
Redmond - 541.316.1133 527 NW Fir Ave.
22 years of Successful Hearing Health Care •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013•THE BULLETIN
M ART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Monday, Oct. 7, the 280th day of 2012. There are 85 days left in the year.
SCIENCE HAPPENINGS High court —TheU.s. Supreme Court begins its new term.A2
ShuidoWn —Both Houses of Congress will be back in session after making no
progress toward breaking the deadlock last week.A1
"What these are trying to do is excite every stinking taste bud receptor you have in your mouth," said Steven Witherly, a food scientist who wrote "Why Humans Like Junk Food," an insider's guide to the psychobiology of those cravings. I visited Witherly at his home near Los Angeles, where we raided his lab to do some tasting and experiments in search of what makes Nacho Cheese Doritos so alluring.
The inventor of Doritos, a longtime Madison Avenue executive named Arch West, first envisioned this snack in 1964 as more than a golden-hued chip. He saw it as a marketing powerhouse, a vehicle for delivering endless varieties of new flavors. But none of the formulations would surpass one of the earliest: Nacho Cheese. This is the irresistible taste — with its coppery, finger-staining dust — that sent Doritos into the processed food hall of fame, and more recently into a partnership with Taco Bell.
— Michael Moss, New York Times News Service
HISTORY Highlight:In1929, former Interior Secretary Albert Fall, one of the main figures of the Tea-
Otherfoodsthat exhibit "vanishing caloric density":
pot Dome scandal, went on trial
In1849, author Edgar Allan Poe died in Baltimore at age 40. In1858, the fifth debate between lllinois senatorial candidates Abraham Lincoln and
CHEETOS PUFFS
COTTON CANDY
acres. Some 40people are believed to have died. In1949, the Republic of East
Germany wasformed. In1960, Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy
andRepublicanopponentRichard Nixon held their second televised debate, in Washington, D.C. In 1982, the Andrew Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice musical
o
O Tye ~h' ite d Qeot ona are c no oncentrontan 'ations t arnlno
Sait
Cheese and garlic
It's no accident that salt makes three separate appearances in the list of ingredients. Salt delivers what food companies call "flavor burst." It dissolves in saliva, igniting the salt receptors on thetongue.They send signals that excite the pleasure center of the brain, which encourages us to eat more.
Frito-Lay goes first class here with domestic Romano cheese, an expensive ingredient you won't find in many
other brands. (The companyeven refrains from using preservatives in many of its chips.) Romano is packed with its own taste enhancers. There is also garlic powder, which has the powerful savory flavor known as umami.
AY fia~()
Witherly says that to maximize the pleasure in snacks, the goal is to deliver half the calories through fat, and Nacho Cheese Doritos hit this mark precisely. Scientists say fat is experienced not as a basic taste like sweetness or bitterness, but rather as a sensation, with a mouth feel that has
„ot tlavors rtre t<
Pi
iong ha"
A 1.75-ounce bag contains nearly a quarter of the daily maximum sodium intake recommendedfor most adults by the federal government.
garlic creates
, e ting sln
cont ~i5e, a ntemoi>e~ 0
orrt
o hreath")
MSG and friends By itself, monosodium glutamate has little taste. But when we tried this white powder mixed with salt, we could almost feel our brains start to sizzle. Despite complaints that it has side effects, MSG is still widely used
all the power of sugar or salt. Fat in food is detected by the trigeminal nerve, which conveys the signal straight to the brain's
In1910, a major wildfire devastated the northern Minnesota dette, charring at least 300,000
O
The feel of fat
Stephen Douglas took place in Galesburg. towns of Spoonerand Bau-
0
POPCORN
offering the bribe that Fall was
Saratoga beganduring the American Revolution. (British forces underGen.John Burgoyne surrendered 10days later.)
0
o
too, in what food scientists call "vanishing caloric density." This tends to delay the feeling of fullness.
oil tycoon EdwardDoheny. (Fall was found guilty and sentenced to ayear in prison and fined $100,000; heendedup
convicted of taking.) In 1612, Italian poet Giovanni Battista Guarini died in Venice. In1777, the second Battle of
When fatladen snacks melt in the mouth, the brain thinks that the
calories have disappeared,
in Washington, D.C., charged with accepting a bribe from
serving nine months. Ironically, Doheny was acquitted at trial of
That melting sensation
in processed foods becauseit
pleasure center. .y
Gold dust
powers up other flavors,
S:
especially savory ones. Nacho Cheese chips also havetwo
The blend of ingredients in Nacho Cheese is given one of the finest grinds in food processing: flour grinding, which creates a powder that fills every nook and cranny on the chip. This maximizes the amount that will contact saliva. Intentional or not, one byproduct is the powder left on your fingers. .,oe» 'tntts Pure form, the (r wlthout the chip to
ingredients that crank up the flavor even more: derivatives from the nucleotide family called disodium inosinate and disodium guanylate. When we tasted this pair along with MSG and salt, Witherly tossed back his head and cried,"Wow! Oooh! Water!"
ttte rit
Forgettable flavor
sends
a/t
"Cats" opened onBroadway. (The show closedSept. 10,
Despite the powerful tastes in Nacho Cheese, the Doritos formula balances them so well that no single flavor lingers in the mind after you've eaten a chip. This avoids what food scientists call "sensory specific satiety," or the feeling of fullness caused by a dominant flavor. Would you eat a whole bag of rosemary chips? With Doritos, you go back for more.
e~~ larger
let,or z<~ tothe ~4r~
2000, after a record 7,485 per-
formances.) In1985, Palestinian gunmen hijacked the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro in the Mediterra-
Coca-Cola has a flavor that is similarly ambiguous and forgettable.
nean. (The hijackers, who killed Jewish American tourist Leon Klinghoffer, surrendered two
days after taking over the ship.)
Mouth moisteners
In1991, University of Okla-
/
Two acids, lactic and citric, get the saliva flowing, which triggers the impulse to eat. Another ingredient, buttermilk, delivers even more lactic acid.
homa law professor Anita Hill publicly accusedSupreme Court nomineeClarence Thomas of making sexually
STUDIO
inappropriate comments when she worked for him; Thomas
denied Hill's allegations. In1992, trade representatives of the United States, Canada and Mexico initialed the North
Eye candy Research has shown that consumers are attracted to bright colors. Doritos have three artificial colorings: two different yellows and a red.
American FreeTrade Agreement during a ceremony inSan
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
New York Times News Service
Antonio, Texas. In 2001, the current war in Afghanistan started as the United
States and Britain launchedair attacks against military targets
and Osamabin Laden's training camps in thewake of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Ten yearsago: California voters recalled Gov.Gray Davis and elected Arnold Schwarzenegger their newgovernor. Five yearsago:The misery worsened on Wall Street, as the Dow lost more than 500
points and all the major indexes slid more than 5 percent.
One yearago:Venezuela's National Electoral Council an-
nounced that President Hugo Chavez had won re-election for the third time. (Chavez died in
March 2013 atage58after a two-year battle with cancer.)
BIRTHDAYS Retired South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu is
82. Comedian Joy Behar(TV: ex-"The View") is 71. Former National Security Council aide
Lt. Col. Oliver North (ret.) is 70. Singer John Mellencamp is 62. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma is 58.
Recording executive andTV personality Simon Cowell (TV:
"The X Factor") is 54. Singer Taylor Hicks ("American Idol") is 37. — From wire reports
STUDY
Eye contact actually may fail to persuade The Washington Post "Look at me when I'm talking to you!" If you've ever used that line during a d i sagreement, you might want to t h ink again. Forcing eye contact when trying to change someone's mind may actually cause listeners to become more stubborn, a new study shows. R esearchers f o un d th a t subjects made to hold eye contact with a speaker were less open-minded and held steadfast to their original opinion, more so than those who looked elsewhere. "Eye contact is averyintimate thing," said Julia Minson, study author and a Harvard University social psychologist. "So when you're in a situation that feels confrontational, I think it's more likely to put people off." Locking eyes with another
person can feel bonding or threatening, depending on the context. Between a mother and her infant, eye contact helps
build a stronger connection. Exchanging flirty glances across a crowded bar heightensattraction and activates pleasure centers in the brain. But in other situations, a head-on stare can be the human equivalent of a bull getting ready to charge. Think of those old Westernmovies where two gunslingers have a stare-down amidst the tumbleweeds before a shootout. "When animals make eye contact, it's usually prior to a dominance contest," Minson said. "Dogs aren't going to look each other in the eye unless they're about to fight." When two people disagree, the contextmore so resembles a dominance contest than intimate bonding, she said, and can make a direct gaze seem
aggressive.
"It's already atense situation," said Frances Chen, the other study author and a social psychologist. "That's a very primal way that eye contact is used."
'
Amnrnc
.
,I(
.Ci aW
C r ue m Bevo
e
• I
•
•
JOIN US on Saturday, October 12 Athletic Club of Bend — 61615 Athletic Club Driue, Bend Enjoy a complimentary continental breakfast while you learn! Inspiration, education and guidance to turn your vision into a reality. erao a.m. - Creating the Kitchen You Love 10:15 a.m.- Q&A with a Neil Kelly Customer 10rao a.m.- Making a Splash in the Bath
N
RSVP at neilkelly.com/seminars orcall us to receive a FREE subscription to Dwell Magazine!
190 NE irving Ave., Bend
CL L J W C L Design Center
L
541.3 8 2 .7580 • neilkegy.com 0R Cces001663
A4 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
4 •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
e
F ind Out Why You M a y : • H ear Certain Sounds While Not U n d e r standi ng The Wor d s • Often Ask Oth e rs To Repeat Themselves • Have Difficulty Hearing On The Telephone
ALMOST INVISI BLE! These are NOT your Parent's hearing aids!
•
•
•
•
•
T he Com p l i m e n t a r y E x a m s M a y S h o w : • Excessive Wax Buildup in Your Ear Canal • Damage To Your Eardrum • Conditions Which May M a ke H earing Diff i c ult For You
-'FREE Mini Remote
•
•
with the purchase of ME1 or ME2 set of
— New Study By Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the National Institute on Aging.
hearing aids. Offer ends 10/23/13
Hearing Loss Linked to Dementia - Even a m ild h earing loss doubles the risk Adults with hearing loss are significantly more likely than adults with normal hearing to develop dementia, according to a new study out today from researchers at Johns Hopkins and the National lnstitute on Aging. The study — which finds that the greater the hearing loss, the higher the risk — may open a new avenue of research into dementia and Alzheimer's disease. —February 14, 2011
•
i
•
•
•
•
•
i
' BUY1 GET1
, '50% Off I
I Save on our full line of digital I hearin g s olutions. Don't miss out on this I
amazing offer. Hurry! Offer ends 10/23/13
Good only from participating Miracle-Ear representatives. One coupon per purchase. No other offers or discounts I apply. Discount does not apply to prior sales. Offer valid on ME-I, ME-2, ME-3, ME-4 Solutions. Cannot combine withI I any other offers. Cash value 1/20 cent. Offer expires 10/23/13
L'CALL NOW FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT!
•
•
•
A ND , I T '
•
•
A LL FR E E
For a limited Tim
FREE
Complete Electronic Hearing Test This Audiometric evaluation will precisely show what you've been missing.
FREE Tinnitus Screening
Package of Hearing Aid Batteries If you now wear a hearing aid, you will receive one free package of hearing aid batteries with the purchase of one package of hearing aid batteries at regular retail price.
~ia
Bertd •
You Can Trust Our Caring, Experienced Staff To Find The Best Solution For You!
3 NEW SERVICE CENTERLOCATIONS! "-!
prinevilte o Re o o
This show-all picture of your ear canal is displayed on a color TV monitor, so you'll see exactly what we see.
MiracleEar of Bend o-pens
• Madras
xa
FREE Video Otoscope Ear Inspection
FREE
Which Grand Opening is closest to you?
tr
(N
(
c
MADRAS • PRINEVILLE • BURNS
Burnsy
Oct. 7th & 8th
Oct. 1 4 th & 15th
•
•
Oct. 23rd
Call now for your ap ointment Shanelle Vega, BC-HIS, AAS ;4 CEO/Board Certified Hearing Instrument Specialist
Eli Duberow, Hearing Instrument Specialist
Bend River Promenade 3188 N Hwy. 97, Suite 118, next door to T.J. Maxx
Secure Hearing Health Care
541 389-3381
*ME200 not included** Hearing aidsdonot restorenatural hearing.Individual experiencesvary dependingon severity ofhearing loss,accuracyof evaluation, properfit and ability to adapt to amplification. Ourhearingtest andvideo otoscopic inspectionarealwaysfree. Hearingtest is anaudiometric test to determineproper
amp ification needs ony. Theseare not medical examsor diagnosesnor are theyintendedto replaceaphysician's care.If yoususpect amedical problem,pleaseseektreatment fromyour doctor. ©2011 Miracle-Ear,Inc.
SPECIAL FINANCING AVAI LA BLE • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013•THE BULLETIN AS
Chaplain Continued from A1 Inside the tempestuous Senate chamber, where debate has degenerated into daily namecalling — the tea party as a band of nihilists and extortionists, and Democrats as socialists who want to force their will on the American people — Black's words manage to cut through as powerful and persuasive. During his prayer Friday, the day after officers from the U.S. Capitol Police shot and killed a woman who had used her car as a battering ram, Black noted that the officers were not being paid because of the government shutdown. Then he turned his attention back t o t h e s enators. "Remove from them that stubborn pride which imagines itself to be above and beyond criticism," he said. "Forgive them the blunders they have committed." Sen. Harry Reid, the pugnacious majority leader who has called his Republican adversariesanarchists,rumps and hostage-takers, took note. As Black spoke, Reid, whose head was bowed low in prayer, broke his concentration and looked straight up at the chaplain. "Following the suggestion in the prayer of Admiral Black," the majority leader said after the invocation, seeming genuinely contrite, "I think we've all here in the Senate kind of lost the aura of Robert Byrd," one of the historical giants of the Senate who prized gentility and compromise. In many ways, Black, 65, is like any other employee of the federalgovernment who is fed up with lawmakers' inability to resolve the political crisis that has kept the government closed for almost a week. He is not being paid. His Bible study classes, which he holds forsenators and their staff members four times a week, have been canceled until further notice. His is a nonpartisan position, one of just a few in the Senate,and he prefers to leave his political leanings vague. He was chosen in 2003 by Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., who was the majority leader at the time, from a group of finalists selected by a bipartisan committee. Before that he ministered in the Navy
House SpeakerJohn Boehner onSunday defiantly rejected calls to reopen the government and raise the federal debt limit, warning that the nation is headed for a first-ever default unless
President BarackObama starts negotiating with
Republicans. "That's the path we're on," Boehner, R-Ohio, said on ABC's"This
Week." OfObama,he added: "He knows what
my phonenumberis. All he has to do iscall." "I told the president,
DrewAngerer/New YorkTimes News Service
Barry Black, the Senate chaplain, writes a morning prayer at his office on Capitol Hill in Washington. Black is using his morning invocation to urge Congress to find a way to reopen the government.
"I see usplaying a very dangerous game. It's like the showcfown at the OK Corral. Who's going to blink first?" — Barry Black, chaplain
Continued from A1 A leading FDA official later called the group "an essential collaborative effort." Patient advocacygroups said the electronic communications suggest that the regulators had become too close to the companies trying to crack into the $9 billion painkiller market in the United States. FDA officials who regulate painkillers sat on the steering committee of the panel, which met in private, and co-wrote papers with employees of pharmaceutical companies. The FDA has been criticized for failing to take precautions that might have averted the epidemic of addiction to prescription drugs including Oxycontin and other opioids. "These emails help explain the disastrous decisions the FDA's analgesic division has made over the last 10 years," said Craig Mayton, the Columbus, Ohio, attorney who made the public records request to
for nearly 30 years. "I use a biblical perspective to decide my beliefs about various issues," Black said in an interview in his office suite on the third floor of the CapitoL "Let's just say I'm liberal on some and conservative on others. But it's obvious the Bible condemns some things in a very forceful and overt way, and I would go along with that condemnation." Last year, he participated in the Hoodies on the Hill rally to draw attention to the shooting death of Trayvon Martin. In 2007, after objections from groups that did not like the idea of a Senate chaplain appearing a l ongside p olitical figures, he canceled a speech he was scheduled to give at an evangelical event featuring, among others, Tony Perkins of the conservativeFocus on the Family and the columnist and author Ann Coulter. Black, who is the first black Senate chaplain as well as its first Seventh-day Adventist, grew up in public housing in Baltimore, an experience he
draws on in his sermons and writings, including a 2006 autobiography, "From the Hood to the Hill." In his role as chaplain, a position that has existed since 1789, he acts as a sounding board, spiritual adviser and ethical counselor to members of the Senate. When he prays each day, he said, he recites the names of all 100 senators and their spouses, reading them from a laminated index card. It is not uncommon for him to have 125 people at his Bible study gatherings or 20 to 30 senators at his weekly prayer breakfast. He officiates weddings for Senate staff members. He p erforms hospital visitations. And he has been at the side of senators when they have died, most recently Daniel Inouye of Hawaii in December. He tries to use his proximity to the senators — and the fact that for at least one minute every morning, his is the only voice they hear — to break through on issues that he feels
the University of Washington. "Instead of protecting the public health, the FDA has been allowing the drug companies to pay for a seat at a small table where all the rules were written." Even as the meetings were taking place, the idea of FDA officials meeting with f i rms that had paid big money for an invitation raised eyebrows for some. In an email to organizers, an official from the ¹ tional Institutes of Health worriedwhether the arrangements made it look as if the private
In a statement, the FDA said "we take these concerns very seriously." But, it said, "we are unaware of any improprieties" associated with the group. Douglas Throckmorton, a deputy director of the agency, said in an interview that strict rules of transparency andfunding apply to the public-private partnerships that the agency engages in and that these efforts are important for the government and the industry. But the group in this case was not initiated by the FDA, he said, and so was a private partnership to w h ich t hose rules did not apply. "There are rules in place for us tohave these discussions," T hrockmorton s a id . Th i s group "was set up as a private
meetings were a "pay to play process." FDA officials did not benefit financially from their participation in the meetings, the agency said. But two later went on to work as pharmaceutical consultants and more than this, the critics said, the emails portray an agency that, by allowing itself to get caught up in a panel that seemed to promise influence for money, had blurred the line between the regulators and the regulated.
O •
•
•
•
•
•
there's nowaywe're going to passone.The
l
FDA
•
Montoya
Both sides toughen stances
•
•
•
w
• •
•
are especially urgent. Lately, he said, they seem to be paying attention. "I remember once talking about self-inflicted woundsthat captured the imagination of some of our lawmakers," he said. "Remember, my prayer is the first thing they hear every day. I have the opportunity, really, to frame the day in a special way." H is words lately may b e pointed, but his tone is always steady and calm. "May they remember that all that is necessary for unintended catastrophic conse-
quences is for good people to do nothing," he said the day of the shutdown deadline. "Unless you empower our lawmakers," he prayed another day, "they can comprehend their duty but not perform it." The House, which has its own chaplain, liked what it heard from Black so much that it invited him to give the invocation Friday.
"I see us playing a very dan-
gerous game," Black said as he sat in his office the other day. "It's like the showdown at the OK Corral. Who's going to blink first? So I can't help but have some of this spill over into my prayer. Because you're hoping that something will get through and that cooler heads will prevail."
votes are not in the
House topassaclean debt limit," Boehner said. "And the president is risking default by not having
a conversation with us." As Boehner hardened his stance, the White
House did thesame, dispatching Treasury Secretary Jack Lew to
appear onfour of the six major Sunday talk
shows. Repeatedly, Lew said Obamais willing to enter negotiations to ad-
dress the nation's longtermbudget problems but not until Republicans
drop their campaign against Obama'shealth care initiative, end the
government shutdown and lift the $16.7 trillion debt limit. "We just spent the
last several months with Congress creating this ridiculous choice where
either you repealthe Affordable Care Act or you shut down the govern-
ment or defaulton the United States. That is not the way we should do
business," Lewsaid on "Fox NewsSunday." Republicans "needto open the government. They need to fund our ability to pay our bills,"
Lew said. "Andthen we're open tonegotiation." — The Nlashington Post
Continued from A1 "My main motivation to go before the (dismissal board) is that I really want my job back, and I feel like the process that I was a part of was unfair and unjust," Montoya said. "I feel like the neutral board will be just that — neutral." Montoya declined to comment on what specifically was "unfair and unjust" about his treatment. "We conducted an investigation, we took our t i m e,
and weighed everybody's thoughts and concerns and came up with our decision, and I stand behind our decision," said board Chairwoman Cheri Helt. "I felt very confident that we did everything t hat we could to g ive h i m the best process we could provide." Montoya and hi s l a wyer Katherine T an k s u b mitted their case to FDAB on Sept. 24. The board consists of 20 m embers appointed by t h e governor and includes five administrators, teachers, board members and members with no occupational a f f i liation with a district. The board has the power to overturn a district-level decision. Ron Gallinat, a B end-La P ine b oard m e mber a n d an FDAB member, said he would recuse himself if asked to hear Montoya's case. Former Bend-La Pine Superintendent Douglas Nelson, who left Bend-La Pine Schools before Montoya arrived, is also an FDAB m ember, though he too said he would recuse himself from a case involving Montoya. The school district will have the opportunity t o s u b mit materials to the board when a hearing date is set, according to Julianne Repman, the school district c ommunicationsdirector. "While it is disappointing that Montoya and his legal counsel feel compelled to continue to challenge the district's termination o f M on t o ya's employment, we support the right of all employees to access processesestablished in Oregon statute for a review of the facts," Repman said. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleedsC<bendbulletin.com
7.00 pm Doors open at 6pm
At McMenamins Old St. Francis School Bend, Oregon
group." T he meetings, which i n volved about 30 to 40 people, included academics, FDA and NIH officials, and often as many as 14 r epresentatives from pharmaceutical companies. Only the companies paid fees to attend.
•
• •
•
with Dr. Josh Samuels,John Day FossilBeds.The paleontology of Oregon has been studiedfor about 150 years, but there is stillmuch more to learn. Pale-
ontologists at John Day Fossil Beds National Monument discover new species regularly, both through work in the field and continued study of museum collections. Come learn about these, and other new discoveries.
•
•
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8 New Fossilsfrom Old Fossil Beds
•
TUESDAY, NOV E M B E R 12
Restoring Aspen Ecosystems in Oregon with S.Trent Seager, PhD candidate, Oregon State University. Explore how •
•
• • -
o
•
•
•
prescribed fire and logging can help restore quaking aspen ecosystems. As aspen stands have dwindled, key questions need to be answered about wildlife, fire,and climate. Seager's research includes measuring aspen stands as an indicatorof moisture release in dry forest ecosystems and aspen restoration on
~s+" elr~
working ranches in Colorado. RSVP:
www.highdesertmu seum.org/ r sv p
c orz sa<~
g
ggt gfll l c • •
•
l ol
•
•
•
'
•
« ;I •
i
I i •
A6
THE BULLETIN• M ONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 20'l3
IN FOCUS:ROCKY POLITICS
Liberal tide meetssecession push in Colorado'sconservativecounties
i PHQ N e i i,cs
i
By Jack Healy
pen's million-dollar ski condos. It would be called New ColoraCHEYENNEWELLS, Colo. do, or maybe North Colorado — The Old West has decided it — a prairie bulwark against is fed up with the New West. the demographic changes and At Nan's convenience store urbanization that are reshaphere in eastern Colorado, where ing politics and life across this the front door tells visitors that and other Western states. "Gun Control Is Hitting Your "People think this is a radiTarget,"the farmers, crop cal idea," said Jeffrey Hare, a sprayers, mechanics and retir- leader of the 51st State Initiaees who gather for morning cof- tive, which supports secession. fee say they have had enough "It's really not. What we're of the state and its Democratic attempting to do i s r estore leaders. They bristle at gun con- liberty." trol laws and marijuana shops, Many residents and politigreen energy policies and steps cians, even those frustrated to embrace gay marriage and il- with the direction of Colorado's politics, have criticized the legal immigrants. "I would've never believed secession movement. What the state of Colorado would would happen to state highbecome this liberal," said Lyle ways? State parks'? Water and Miller, who owns the conve- irrigation rights? Is it even posniencestore."I'm afraid form y sible to build a new state govgrandchildren. I want them to ernment from scratch? have the same heritage I had." The push for a 51st state So in November, this rural faces almost i n s urmountcounty and 10 others will hold able hurdles. Even if counties a quixotic vote on whether from Cheyenne to Elbert to to secede from Colorado and Sedgwick do decide to shear work to form their own state, away from Colorado, the state one that would cherish the must then vote to allow them farm towns and conserva- to leave. After that, Congress tive ideals that people here would have to agree to admit say have been lost in Denver's a new state — something it has glassy downtown lofts or As- not done for abreakaway since New York Times News Service
Mel Melcon/ Los Angeles Times
L.C. Bookout stands outside what was once a dance hall in Jeffrey City, Wyo. Once a uranium-mining boom town, Jeffrey City could be staging a comeback amid talk of a new mine. As for Bookout, an artist, "I haven't met any ghosts yet. But in the winter when the wind stops howling, you hear the squeaky signs and wild cats squawking from the old miners' barracks — then it sure feels like a ghost town."
Ghost town Continued from A1 That's when they run down to the road for some mock fisticuffs. Or somebody will shuffle along with an old-folk's walker or run atop a huge rolling wooden wheel kept just for this purpose."We do people a favor," says Seeley, known as the Mad Potter. "Out here, they might otherwise fall asleep." But why the masks'? Seeley pauses. "Why do anything?" he says. Seeleyisamong three dozen hard-coreresidents of a m isnomer. Because Jeffrey City is certainly no city, not anymore. Fortyyears ago, the placewas a uranium-mining boom town (population 5,000) with three bars, two banks, a bowling alley, movie theater, roller-skating rink, three gas stations and an Olympic-size swimming pool at the then new high school. Then the market for uranium tanked in 1980; the Lost Creek and Pathfinder mines folded, and the city faded away. People fled like beetles from under an overturned rock.Jeffrey City became a ghost town. Now a new uranium mine is fueling talk of a Jeffrey City comeback. But guess what'? Few of the iconoclasts still living out here are doing somersaults. Fact is, folks like their little ghost town just like it is. Most want the world to keep passing them by, even if you drive 60 miles for a carton of milk. "I like my towns peaceful," says Dusty Hiatt, who with his wife, Isebel, runs the Split Rock Bar and Cafe. There's a hole in an elbow of his shirt as he sips from a cup reading "If you don't like my attitude, stop talking to me." "People here are reclusive," he says. "It's the nature of a small town." A visitor speaks to a bar patron, who looks away as if hearing a distant voice. Then he walks out, past a row of greasy old cowboy hats hanging on the wall and the life-size color cutout of John Wayne. "Charlie don't talk to strangers," Hiatt
deadpans. Jesse Manley, 43, recalls when the place she calls Jeff City really was a c i ty. Her rancher father raised five girls outside tovm, and she rode here on horseback: "It was an exciting place, before it passed away." Seeley was among those who laterarrived as new pioneers. He bought an old gas station seven years ago for $5,000 and relocated his pottery shop and out-theresense of humor. The sign reads "Monk King Bird Pottery." Of course,there's a story behind it: An old Texan once offered to craft him a wooden sign and asked what kind of birds heliked. Se eley was partial to mockingbirds. But the old man couldn't spell and replaced the "c" with an "n." Seeley kept the name. Seeley actually w o u ldn't mind seeing a few more potential customers around town, but the potter's a realist. "It gets lonely here in the winter," he says, waiting for his mother to drive 60 miles to deliver his birthday present — a carton of Marlboro cigarettes. "More folks might come back, but I won't hold my breath. Anyway, it's fun the way it is." Across the road at St. Brendan MissionChurch, there are so few worshipers the congregation meets just once a month. Stacie Citron grew up h ere and attended Jeffrey City High when the school boasted 600 students. Now her son Colton is one of just two on campus. He's a kindergartner; the other's in fourth grade. Each day, bus driver Phillip Moody travels 20 miles each
way to pickthem up, maneuvering a landscape so isolated it might be called the Big Empty. "You gotta watch for them antelope," he says. "You never know which way those things are going to bolt." Colton's grandfather, 74year-old rancher Jack Corbett, shakes his head over any comeback forthe town. "More people bring more problems," he says. "We once had a certain element; tramp miners who worked a few shifts and then borrowed money to leave town. Who wants them back'?"
Nearby, L.C. Bookout repairs a ramshackle building that was once a dance hall called the Driller's Delight. Behind him,
dangling from an abandoned phone booth, is a crumpled directory from 1989. "We're frozen in time," says Bookout, a ponytailed artist who speaks in a Tennessee accent. "I haven't met any ghosts yet. But in the winter when the wind stops howling, you hear the squeaky signs and wild cats squawking from the old miners' barracks — then it sure feels like a ghost town."
West Virginia in 1863. Some residents say the idea just sounds absurd. "It's supposed to be United States, not split-up states," said George Kemp, who runs a well-water business here. Much of t hi s f r ustration stems from complaints that rural areas, whether in Kew eenaw, Mich., or Y u m a, Colo., have lost their voice in state governments as cities and suburbs grow while rural areas wither. For Colorado, that shift has helped send more Democrats to the Legislature and to Washington, and put the state in President Barack Obama's column in the last two elections. Here in Cheyenne County, w here 82 percent ofpeoplevoted for Mitt Romney last year, residents say they feel like their state changed on them. There have never been more than about 3,700 people here, and the last two decades have brought sharp population declines as children moved away and the descendants of homesteading families died off. The county's population is now 1,870, about one resident per square mile.
Togetherwe're mal<ing a difference. To allour Blue Sky' business partners and customers, we say thank you. It is your support that helps keep the environment healthy, bringseconomic benefitsto the region and preserves resources for future generations. You can join the Central Oregon Blue Sky business partners listed below, as well as thousands of individuals and other businesses across the region and make a difference. To lear n mor e or enroll visit pacificpower.net/bluesky or call toll free l -800-769-37I7.
35 Hawthorne, LLC
CHOW
Jinsei Spa
900 Wall Restaurant
Circle of Health Clinic
Joe A. Lochner lnsurance Agency,
Advanced Energy
City of Bend
Altrec.com
Coca-Cola Bottling Company
American Licorice Company
of Oregon
Inc.— State Farm
Resource Conservation Technologies
Rivals Sports Bar & Grill
Kebaba Ventures, LLC
Robberson Ford-Mazda
ICirby Nagelhaut Construction
Rackin' Daves Bagel Bistro
Company
Amish House
Commercial Powder Coating, Inc.
Ancient Traditions
Contemporary Family Dentistry
l<itchen Compliments
Schoolhouse Produce
Angel Thai Cuisine
Cuppa Yo Frozen Yogurt
KOHD TV
Searing Electric and Plumbing
Angelina Organic Skincare
Denfeld Paints
La Rosa A Modern
Sports Vision
Autowerks Exclusive
Deschutes Brewery, Inc.
Awbrey Dental Group
Deschutes County Fairgrounds
LaPaw Animal Hospital
Staples
BackcountryChiropractic
Dice Construction
Little Pizza Paradise
Steele Associates Architects, LLC
Bank of the Cascades
Digital Services, Inc.
Lone Pine Coffee Roasters
Strictly Organic Coffee Co.
BBC Management
DKA Architecture 8 Design, PC
Longboard Louie's
Sunlight Solar
Bend Brewing Company
Dr. John Holpuch, DDS
Los Jalapenos
Sunnyside Sports
Bend Food-4-Less
E2 Solar, Inc.
Madras Acupuncture
Suterra, LLC
Bend Garbage Bi Recycling
Eberhard's Dairy Products
MiniMachine, Inc.
The Bend Community Center
Bend Heating Si Sheet Metal, Inc.
Edward D. Jones & Company
Mount Bachelor Sports
The Deschutes River Conservancy
Bend Indoor GardeningStation
Fagen Tree 8 Chips
Bend Machine, Inc.
FirstPresbyterian Church
Mt. Bachelor Village
Bend Metro Park 8
FaotZone of Bend
Namaspa
Mexican ICitchen
EducationFoundation
and Catering
Sprouts I<ids Salon
The Environmental Center The Highlands at Broken Top Community Association
Francis Hansen & Martin, LLP
Nature'sGeneral Store
The Oxford Hotel
Bend Naturopathic Clinic
Gary K. Johansen Architect
Neil Kelly
The Sparrow Bakery
Bend Pet Express
Gear Pedd er
North Coast Electric Company
Timberline Construction
Bend Research, Inc.
Gossamerthe ICnitting Place
Old Stone Church
Timberline Mountain Guides
Bend Surgical Partners
Green Plow Coffee Roasters
Olive Branch of Love
Timm Family Dentistry
BendBroadband Vault
Happy Danes Quality Auto
Oregon Hot Springs Spa, Inc.
Totally Polished Nail and
Recreation District
Birkenstock of Bend
Repair, Inc.
Oregon Spirit Distillers
Skin Studio
Bleu Bite Catering
Healing Bridge Physical Therapy
Pacific Crest Affordable Housing
Tozer Design, LLC
Brian's Cabinets
High Country Disposal
Pamir Pi operties, Inc.
Umpqua Village
Broken Top Bottle Shop
High Desert Ranch & Home
Paulina Springs Books
Validation Resources, LLC
Homecare IV
Phat Matt's Brewing Company
Visit Bend
Brother Jon's Ale House
Hooker Creek Companies, LLC
Pine Ridge lnn
VocalBoath.com
Brother Jor's Public House
Hydro Flasl<
Pizza Mondo
Wall Street Family Clinic
Carlson Sign Company
IdaTech, LLC
Primal Cuts Meat Market
Wanderlust Tours
Cascade Publications, Inc.
Ida's Cupcake Cafe
Progressive Screen Printing
WHPacific
Cascades Theatrical Company
Import Performance, Inc.
Rebound Physical Therapy
Wild Birds Unlimited
Center forIntegrated Medicine
Irving Building
Redmond Chamber of
Wild Horse Harley Davidson
Central Oregon Community College
JELD-WEN Windows Si Doors
Central Oregon Dental Center
jem Raw Chocolate, LLC
Si Ale Cafe
Commerce 5 CVB Repeat Performance Sports
Worthy Brewing
Zydeco Kitchen 8 Cocktails
Central Oi egon Pediatrics Associates
BLUES (g
Mj PACIFICPOWER
r ene w a b l e e n e r g y
Let's turn the answers on.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013• THE BULLETIN
A7
LOCAL 4 T A TE CIVIC CALENDAR
LOCAL COUNTIES
eams seenasnec
TODAY
Joint city andcounty meeting —The Deschutes County Board of Commissioners and the BendCity Council will meet together at 10 a.m. today in City Council chambers at Bend City Hall. The board and council will conduct a
work session on several issues that concern both groups. The joint meeting will fea-
ture an updateabout Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, which recently selected a site in southwest Bend
to house its growing campus. The two groups will also
discuss Bend's urban growth boundary. TUESDAY
STATE NEWS
• Funding the programs isn't always easy, but law agenciessaythey are crucial By Branden Andersen The Bulletin
Officer Joe Pacheco works roughly 48 hours a week watching the streets of Bend as a patrol officer for the Bend Police Department. He acknowledges it's a long week — in and out of his patrol car, talking with people and apprehending potential criminals.
Despite the effort and hours put toward his regular duties, Pacheco is willing to give more time so he can assist the public the way he was conditioned to by his time in the U.S. Marines. "I have an affinity for tactical stuff," he said. "I wanted to apply my skills to SWAT because it was very similar to the military. Plus it's just a
lot of fun." Pacheco is one of 31 employeesfrom law enforcement agencies in Jefferson, Crook and Deschutes counties who double their duties as police officers and administrators to be part of the Central Oregon Emergency Response Team, or CERT. At the minimum, those involved with CERT have two training weekends a month and one annual training week with Oregon State Police. Since Central Oregon law
Portland
Albany Springfield
enforcementagencies do not have the budgets to fund a whole team specific to each
region, pooling resources was the best option for a booming location. "We have people from all over," said CERT commander and patrol Lt. Paul Kansky of the Bend Police Department. "Right now with staffing and whatever situation other agencies are in, they can't support a person being on the team. But, they absolutely support our team." SeeSWATIA8
Bend-i.a PineSchools purChaSe —The Bend-La
Pedestrian dies —A pedestrian who was hit while
crossing a Portland street Friday has died of his injuries.
A spokeswoman atOregon Health 8 Science University Hospital says 25-year-old Joseph Randall Stone died late
Saturday. Portland police say he was struck by an SUV Friday morning while crossing at a
marked crosswalk. TheOregonian reported Sunday that the
man's family issued astatement asking the city to place
flashing lights at the intersection where he was hit.
Pine School Board will meet at
6p.m.TuesdayattheLa Pine High School library at 51633
Homeless parking — The
Coach Road. Chief Operations andFinan-
city of Springfield is consider-
cial Officer Brad Henry is expected to present to the board the district's selected site for a new Bend elementary school that will be built using money
overnight parking program for
from a $96 million bond ap-
on whether to allow up tothree
proved by voters this year. Henry will ask the board for ap-
vehicles to parkata church or industrial property that chooses
proval to purchase thesite.
to let campers stay there.Only
ing a proposal to expandits homeless peoplewhosleepin their vehicles. TheRegisterGuard says the city council is scheduled to vote Monday night
one vehicle is currently allowed
WEDNESDAY
per property. Property owners would decide howmanyover-
COCC update —Central Oregon Community College's
night campers they'll take in. A city official says the program
Board of Directors will meet
began in 2009 tohelp families during the economic recession.
at 6 p.m.W ednesdayinthe Christiansen Board Room on the second floor of the Boyle Education Center at COCC.The
/(W
board members will hear updates on construction projects, enrollment and the impact of
Man jailed —Amanwanted in connection with a 2007 shooting in Albany is in Linn
County Jail facing attempted murder and other charges. Heriberto Gonzalez isaccused of shooting his ex-girlfriend
the Legislature's PERS reform
package. COCC iscurrently building a Technology Education Center in Redmond. On the Bend
during a dispute in 2007. He is
campus, the college is working
Linn County Circuit Court. His initial bail was set at $1 million. The Democrat-Herald reports
scheduled toappearMondayin
on a renovation of Grandview Hall. The college has also submitted plans to the city for the construction of a residence hall, which it hopes to have built by summer 2015.
that the 26-year-old also faces charges of second-degreeassault, first-degree burglaryand unlawful use of aweapon. — From wire reports
Contact:541-383-0354, news@bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write"Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include acontact nameandnumber.Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noonThursday.
Well shot! Joe Kline / The Bulletin
EVENT CALENDAR
Scott Robinson asks a question of Harvard Law professor Mark Tushnet, communicating via Skype, during the "Let's Talk About lt: Making Sense of American Constitutionalism" series kickoff Sunday at the Downtown Bend Public Library.
reader photos • We want to seeyour foliage photos for
another special version TODAY
PUMPKIN PATCHANDMARKET: Picka pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E.Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. KNOW CULTURA:ANEW WORLD OFFOOD: Learnhow the Columbian Exchangeaffected food in the Americas; free; 6 p.m.; Brooks Room Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. "THE ROLLINGSTONES: CHARLIEIS MY DARLING IRELAND1965": A screening of the behind-the-scenes film diary of the band before it became a legend; $12 general admission, $48clubpass,plusfees;7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. MEDIA SALON: The Fall fiction competition awards hosted by The Source's editor; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop tl Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W.PenceLane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www.btbsbend.com. TUESDAY
FREE SENIORDAY:Ages 65 and older can visit for free; museum admission is $15 adults, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 andyounger; 9 a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. PUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKET:Picka pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E.Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. KNOW CULTURA:SUGAR SKULLS:Prepare and decorate the traditional Day of the Dead treat; ages 9-12; free; 3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or tinad©deschuteslibrary.org. WEDNESDAY
LUNCH AND LECTURE: Learn
• OSU-Cascades 5-part seriesonconstitutionalism begins with a discussionat downtown library in Bend By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
n Sunday locals had the chance to question a Harvard Law professor about the U.S.~lConstitution and how its interpretation affects life in Central Oregon. Though the Skype feed transmitting Mark Tushnet's image into the Downtown Bend Public Library was somewhat grainy, the Harvard professor's lecture on what he terms the "thick" and "thin" parts of the Constitution came through clear. Tushnet wasthe guest of Oregon State
University-CascadesCampus professor James Foster, who is leading a five-part series, "Let's Talk About It: Making Sense of American Constitutionalism." Over the course of two months, the group will discuss how topics such as
"These are hot-button issues, and people will come with strong opinions. The trick will be facilitating
conversations." — James Foster, professor, OSU-Cascades
guns, religion and gender are seen in light of our nation's supreme law. "These are hot-button issues, and people will come with strong opinions," Foster said. "The trick will be f acilitating conversations. We a r e lucky to have Mark for our keynote; he has a C.V. the size of a small metropolitan area phonebook, if such a
thing still existed." Foster and Tushnet have collaborated and visited each other's classes over the years, though Foster admits he will be sending his friend half a case of pinot from Bethel Heights to thank him for his help. SeeConstitution IA8
of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submityour best workat bendbulletln.com
/follageandwe'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos
ofthe greatoutdoors to readerphotos© denddulletin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for
publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6
inches wide and soo dpi) and cannot be altered.
about ranching in the High Desert; bring a sack lunch; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; noon-1 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. PUMPKIN PATCH ANDMARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. KNOW CULTURA:SUGARSKULLS: Prepare and decorate the traditional Day of the Dead treat; grades 6-12; free; 1 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1034 or tinad@deschuteslibrary.org. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m .;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: EUGENE ONEGIN": Starring Anna Netrebko and Mariusz Kwiecien as the lovestruck Tatiana and the imperious Onegin in Tchaikovsky's fateful romance; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30
p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. ANEVENINGWITH GREG BROWN: The lowa-based American folk musician performs, with Love Over Gold; $32 in advance,plusfees;7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. SUPER WATER SYMPATHY: The Louisiana pop band performs; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. BATH PARTY:The Portland rock band performs, with Silvero; free; 9 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www.astroloungebend.com. THURSDAY PUMPKIN PATCH ANDMARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. BENDFILM FESTIVAL:The 10th year of independent film screenings; venues include Regal Old Mill Stadium16, Tower Theatre, Tin Pan Theater, Oxford Hotel, Greenwood Playhouse and McMenamins Old St.
Francis School; see festival guide for full schedule at each venue; $12, $150 full film pass, $250 full festival pass; 5 p.m.; Bend location; 541388-3378 or www.bendfilm.org. ROB LARKIN& THE WAYWARD ONES:The Los Angeles-based rootsrock, Americana band performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. THE SPITTIN' COBRAS:The Seattle, Wash.-based rock band performs, with High Desert Hooligans and The Confederats; $3; 7 p.m.; Big T's, 413 S.W. Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541504-3864 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/bi gts. "VERMEERANDMUSIC— THE ART OFLOVEANDLEISURE": A screening of a documentary by The National Gallery, London, showcasing Vermeer's art in relation to music and the story of his life; $12.50; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3122901 or www.fathomevents.com.
Oxford Hotel, Greenwood Playhouse and McMenamins Old St. Francis School; see festival guide for full schedule at each venue; $12, $150full film pass, $250 full festival pass; 10 a.m.; Bend location; 541-388-3378 or www.bendfilm.org. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH: An eight-acre corn mazewith pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5 andyounger for corn maze; $2.50 for most other activities; noon-7 p.m., pumpkin patch open until 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. "MURDER ATTHERIDGE": A murder mystery dinner and silent auction fundraiser; proceeds benefit Central Oregon Council on Aging; $30; 5:30 p.m.; Aspen Ridge Retirement Community,1010 N.E. Purcell Blvd., Bend; 541-385-8500 or aspenridgemktg@frontiermgmt.com. "THE PEOPLINGOF THE AMERICAS" SERIES:Retired Oregon State archaeologist Leland Gilsen showcases the tools, weapons and technological achievements of the FRIDAY first Americans; free, $5 day-use BENDFILM FESTIVAL: The10th pass permit; 7-8:30 p.m.; Smith Rock year of independent film screenings; State Park Visitor Center, 10260 N.E. venues include Regal Old Mill Stadium Crooked River Drive, Terrebonne; 541-923-7551 ext. 21 or www. 16, Tower Theatre, Tin PanTheater,
oregonstateparks.org. LIBERTYQUARTET:The gospel group performs; free admission, donations accepted;7 p.m.;Redmond Assembly of God Church, 1865 W. Antler Ave.; 541-548-4555. "A PATCHOFBLUE": A screening of the1965 Sydney Poitier and Shelley Winters film (no MPAA rating); free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.jcld.org. MARC "SKIPPY" PRICE: The Los Angeles comedian performs, with Junior High and guest host Jim Mortenson; $10 in advance, $15 at the door; 8:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Hardtails Bar and Grill,175 N. Larch St., Sisters; 541-549-6114 or www. hardtailsoregon.com. SATURDAY SKYLINERSWINTER SPORTS SWAP:Eventfeatures deals on new and used athletic gear, including ski equipment, winter clothing, ice skates and more; benefits Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation to benefit the junior programs; $5 per person, $10 for immediate family; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; former Monaco Beaver Coach manufacturing plant, 20545 Murray Road, Bend; 541-388-0002 or www.mbsef.org.
SeeCalendarIA8
A8
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
Calendar
PILM rtgTIVAL
oc'r gag
Continued from A7 HEART OF HARVEST:Featuring beer gardens, barbecue, seasonal produce, tractors, pony rides and more; free; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; downtown Tumalo; 541-585-3566. BENOFILMFESTIVAL: The10th year of independent film screenings; venues include RegalOld Mill Stadium16, Tower Theatre, Tin Pan Theater, Oxford Hotel, Greenwood Playhouse andMcMenamins OldSt. Francis School; seefestival guide for full schedule at eachvenue; $12, $150 full film pass, $250 full festival pass; 10 a.m.; Bend location; 541-388-3378 or www.bendfilm.org. BIG RIGCELEBRATION:Children can watch and climb on big rigs and play in the sandwith their own toy rigs; proceeds benefitTogether for Children; $5 per child, first100 children free; parents free;10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Knife River Co., 64500 O.B. Riley Road, Bend; 541-388-0445, linda©together-for-children.org or www.together-for-children.org. CORN MAIZEANO PUMPKIN PATCH: An eight-acre corn maze with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkincannons,zootrain,pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages611, free ages 5andyounger for Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other activities; 10 a.m.7 p.m.,pum pkin patch open until 6 p.m.; Central Oregon PumpkinCo.,1250 N.E.W ilcoxAve., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www. pumpkinco.com. SENSATIONAL SATURDAY:Learn aboutfirearms, ballistic engineering and test how well you aim at the target; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages65 and older, $9 ages5-12, free ages4 and younger;10 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend;541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. SISTERSHARVESTFAIRE: Featuring over150juried artisanvendors, activities, Kids Zone, food and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-549-0251 or www.sistercountry.com. BEND FIRE OEPARTMENTOPEN HOUSE:Celebrate National Fire Prevention Weekwith fire station and engine tours, free ice cream, demonstrations, free blood pressure
SWAT
g~TN AMgug~
~aaa aaai aaai
-IIUUUl
@ggf'lL'tIi g ,,qiaiN
«'""g
1-
'
1
Submitted photo
BendFilm Festival kicks off Thursday for four days of independent film screenings at local venues, including the Tower Theatre in Bend. checks and more; free;11 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; Bend Fire Department North Station, 63377 Jamison St.; 541-3226309 or www.bendoregon.gov/fire. KNOW CULTURA:CARNAVAL: Games, art and activities for the whole family; free; 3 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1056 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. HUMAN DIGNITYCOALITION DRAG SHOW:Portland-based Poison Waters performs in theOxygenRoom; proceeds benefit HDCprograms; $15 per person, $25 percouple; 7-10 p.m.; Liquid Lounge,70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-385-3320 or www. humandignitycoalition.org. MARC PRICE WITH NUTS: The Los Angeles comedian performs, with Rev. Junior High; $10 in advance, $15 at door; 8 p.m., doors at 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. PIGS ONTHE WING: ATRIBUTE TO PINK FLOYD: A tribute to Pink Floyd; $13 in advance, plus fees; $15 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.bendticket.com. KEEGAN SMITH: The Oregon-based funk-rocker performs, with Keez and Tyrone Hendrix; free; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541706-9091 or www.dojobend.com. SUNDAY
CORN MAIZEANO PUMPKIN PATCH:An eight-acre corn maze
Constitution
"Most people think about the thin constitution, but the thick Continued from A7 is more important for our po"When I t h ink about the litical life," Tushnet said. "What Constitution's role i n p u blic the thin Constitution means is life, I divide it into two parts," influenced by our two-party Tushnet told the audience of system, which is a product of two dozen. The "thin" Consti- the thick Constitution." tution, he explained, "contains Jim Stirnaman, 69, came to the things that we are commit- the event because he was puzted to by principle like justice, zled by the "thin" Constitution. "I look at the preamble and liberty and fairness and which motivate a citizen's attachment it looks to me like a mission to the document." statement," he said. "But there The "thick" Constitution de- are all these different goals, so scribes the system by which the question is, how do we pripoliticians govern and t a ke oritize them'? To 'provide for the power, touching on subjects common defense'is on there such as the electoral college fourth,but it's w here we spend and our bicameral legislature. all our money, so what does
with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5 and younger for corn maze; $2.50 for most other activities; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco. com. SISTERS HARVESTFAIRE: Featuring over150juried artisan vendors, activities, Kids Zone, food and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-5490251 or www.sistercountry.com. BENOFILM FESTIVAL:The 10th year of independent film screenings; venues include Regal Old Mill Stadium16, Tower Theatre, Tin Pan Theater, Oxford Hotel, Greenwood Playhouse and McMenamins Old St. Francis School; seefestival guide for full schedule at each venue; $12, $150 full film pass, $250 full festival pass; 1 p.m.; Bend location; 541388-3378 or www.bendfilm.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Tom Hunt talks about his book"Bad Water", stories of the Alaskan Panhandle; free; 2 p.m.; Dudley's BookshopCafe,135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. SECONDSUNDAY:Writer and photographer Ivonne Saed reads from her work and discusses the creative process; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or lizg@deschuteslibrary.org.
that mean'?" Gladys Biglor,61, washooked by one of Foster's intentionally provocative discussion titles, "Guns as Cultural Symbols." "They're not symbols," Biglor said. "They are tools protected by the Constitution. I found it intriguing to term them as symbols." Ron Lattin was less provoked than curious, joking, "I'm 84, so I think it's about time I learned what the Constitution said." While the series is currently full, the library plans to offer the same program again at a later point.
Continued from A7 CERT was founded in 1981 by agencies in the tricounty area as they saw the region grow. CERT was the only Central Oregon SWAT team in operation until 2010, when Deschutes County Sheriff Larry Blanton activated a Special Operations Team specifically for Deschutes County and outlying areas. This year, CERT has 31 people; the Deschutes County Special Operations Team has 21. "As far a s r e sources, all the guys have prima-
ry duties that (take) up
more of their time," Kansky said. "But, (CERT) is also a significant time commitment." Pacheco said he typically spends an extra 15 to 20 hours a week on his CERT duties, not necessarily including training. He is not o nly an operator on t h e team, but alsoresearches and orders new equipment and technology. "They r e ally a l l ocate resources best they can to try and minimize overtime," he said. The agencies that part icipate on th e t eam i n some capacity — B e nd, Redmond and P r ineville p olice; Crook an d D e schutes county s h e r iff's offices; Bend Fire Department and St. Charles Bend pay their r e spective Why two? operators by using overSheriff's Lt. Paul Garrison time funds. In many cases, said his office has come under c ommanders will t r y t o fire in the past for starting a save money by assessing second SWAT team in an area the potential situation and d etermining ho w m a n y resources should be d eployed — from fouroperators to all 31 personnel. "We oftentimes have to give out overtime to the CERT o p erators h e re," said Redmond Police Capt. B rian M c Naughton. H e said three people out of the 30 in Redmond Police Department's office work for CERT. "It's necessary we call upon the CERT team to come and helpin Redmond quite often," he said. "We Serving Oregon since1990 are glad to help out with
C-
when ODFW installs screens er said that with fossil fuels to keep fish out of irrigation assuming a dominant role in Continued from A1 canals. An automated clean- agriculture for the last 100 Eventually, the i r r i gation ing mechanism is t y pically years or so, both as power and district agreed to let the inven- used to keep the screens clear as fertilizer, people have fortors proceed, provided they of debris, he said, but in remote gotten that energy extracted waited until the tail end of ir- areas where electricity is unfrom moving water is one of rigation season when flows in available, the agency resorts to the oldest farming technolothe canalsystem arereduced. paddlewheels, solar power and gies around. "It's time for us to get smartJohnson said COID's em- other similar devices to keep brace of hydropower helped the screens clean. er about the way we're using tip th e i r r i gation d i strict's R ickman a n d Cr o c k er our resources," he said. "We board toward approving the said they're seeing a growing need energy i ndependence, experiment. The canal district number of farmers and ranch- and this is darn sure one way has already built two hydro- ers willing to give renewable to get it." power generators in its canal power and other low-impact — Reporter: 541-383-0387, system and has been consider- technologies a chance. Crockshammers@bendbulleti n.com ing additional investments in hydropower. In the near term, Johnson said, the generator could be useful for running the pumps used to move irrigation water from canal to field. Electricity to run irrigation pumps can be a significant expense, Crocker said, costing some local irrigatorsas much as $1,000 a month. My energy and self-confidence is higher than ever before! I feel The g e nerator o p erates healthier and LOVE the way my something like a water wheel clothes fit my NEW body. The turned on its side, resembling support from the staff makes a revolving door. Rickman it easier and are truly said that because the panels motivating. You will see that catch the current to rotate the results, quickly the generator swing freely, the and be as proud of your danger to wildlife is much less decision as I am. Make the than in a large, turbine-style choice to change, call today! hydropower plant. Client of Metabolic "It's very f i s h -friendly. Research Center There's no way a fish could get * stuck in it; a duck can swim though it, whatever," Rickman 6 WEEK said. :, PROGRAM The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has taken *:: notice, as well. Mike Lambert, RESEARCH CENTER WEIGHT LOSS SPECIAL1STS' lead project manager with the : *ProduCtS not inCluded: 6 Facebook emetagogc.com ODFW fish s creening and p assage division, met w i t h FREE CONSULTATION Rickman and Crocker in SepBend tember to see the generator in action. Lambert said a lack of availCelebrate Success with MRC! Results not lypical. On MetaSlim~, most dienls can expect to lose 1-2 lbs. perweek. able power is a routine problem
jail. Kansky said the two teams occasionally train with each other and help out when needed. For the most part, though, they are separate bodies. "The sheriff had his reasons to start that team," Kansky said. "He's supporting the residents in his community." Garrison said the Special Operations Team stays busy, despite the potential for SWAT over-saturation. As a r o ugh estimate, he said the team is called out at least once a month. "This project started because there was a need," Utter said. "The county is growing, and the issues we are confronted with are growing and changing with it." He also says that considering CERT's tri-county coverage, the Special Operations Team is available in the instance where CERT is out on another call or unable to take a call.
"Largely, people have a
chance to see it in action and understand it m o re," Utter said. "People have come to understand it's a necessary evil." — Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletin.com
• R,ePairs • R,emodelinrf
• Additions • New Construction • Green Builder
John Fiocchi 503-319-4348
I
johnC<wehehomes.com WeEe Construction, lec CCE469084
ruruw. ruebehomes. com
• Beltone ... Serving Central Oregon for over 24 Years. • Beltone ... over 1500 locations
nationwide. I first noticed a hearing loss in my left ear about 2 years ago. I did my due diligence and had my hearing tested by 3 different local vendors. The difference was neither Mike nor Denisepressed me to make a purchase. I needed time to think about this. Beltone kept in touch. When I was ready I returned, and was in and out with my new device in less than an hour. Now I am hearing birds, people and sounds that have escaped me for years.
Thanks Mike and Denise! M ichael H.,Bend, OR
• Beltone ... patient satisfaction in the 90th percentile. • Beltone ... the newest technology at affordableprices.
25 0 /0-400/ ofr
f
MSRP N gerlh@ 'I& L~
1
FREE Video Ear Exam and
Trial Periods
Djgjfg]
Hcaring
1000/0
Hearing Money-Back Screening Guarantee $
Feel the Metabolic Difference! "I lost 30 pounds!"
e
I
I
e
•
e
i
eds
99$00 I
1
I I e
1
e one
LOSEI'30 lbs. in 6weeks!
Helping the World Hear Better.
I
541-389-9690 e
141 SE 3rd St. • Bend (Corner of 3rd A Davis)
mgLagouc .
~
with one already established. But he said the two are around for different reasons. "CERT is a tri-county team," he said. "We are only responsible for one county, and we are specifically trained for things pertaining to that." The Sheriff's Special Operation Team is trained for normal operations, but it also is trained to transport a highvalue prisonerfrom the Deschutes County jail and to subdue an unruly prisoner in the
Experience the Beltone Difference.
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds®bendbulletin.com
Generator
$W9
thatand give our resources to them." Deschutes County Sheriff's Capt. Eric Utter said the county's Special Operations Team budgeted$18,000 last year for the team and spent $10,000. This year, because of growth in population and tourism, the team has budgeted $30,000. "We're in a county that's driven by tourism," he said. "In previous years, when tourism has been down, crime has been down. When tourism is up, crime is up. We would rather over-budget than und er-budget — i f w e d o n ' t spend all the money, it goes into next year." Bend Police alone budgeted $17,000 just for CERT's operating costs, maintenance and technology. Kansky said overtime costs were allocated through the p o lice department's main budget, separate from CERT. CERT also gets money from Central Oregon Law Enforcement Services, which helps to cover ammunition and explosives used in training and on call. "It's not a l w ays e a sy," Kansky said. "We're moving things around to make it work. But it's what we need to do." Redmond Police Lt. Nathan Garibay, who s pent s even years with CERT, said his department makes sure to keep its CERT spending minimal: About $1,000 fo r o n g oing maintenance and $1,500 for training annually.
FIM
541-225-4918
I
I'
I
I'
I
I
'I
'I
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013•THE BULLETIN A9
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
' es ess,' u inano er ace TV SPOTLIGHT
telethon was recorded in advance, and a friend says it was shown live. Who's right'? — Sue Draper, Vero Beach, Fla. • Youare. Executiveproduc• er Richard A. "Rac" Clark — son of the late Dick Clarkexplained to us that it was easier to secure the talent for the ABC program if it was prerecorded, since personalities such as Ryan Seacrest, Paula Abdul and Enrique Iglesias could do their segments at different times as their schedules allowed.
P
By Jay Bobbin © zap2it
-'f': rf
Q
. Why i s "The Young . and the Restless" not on SoapNet anymore? It was for a long time. — Robert Lehner, Milwaukee • Yes, it was ... but after • CBS acquired 50 percent ownership in TV Guide Network, which it co-owns with Lionsgate (and which is now identified as TVGN), the network decided to relocate the weeknight telecast of the same day's CBS episode there, still featuring such longtime cast members as Melody Thomas Scott and Peter Bergman. That change took effect in July, and it wasn't the only program to move off another cable network onto TVGN over the summer; "Big Brother: After Dark," previously seen on Showtime 2, also was transferred there. While it had run uncensored on premium cable in previous years, the TVGN basic-cable showcase meant certainwords and actions were subject to censorship.
A
see that Barbara WalQ •• tIers is s t i ll o n "The
that also are on DVD), "Vegas: The DVD E d ition" became available in mid-September as a five-disc set. While watching promos Q •. for the movie "The But-
ler," I was reminded of a TV program — possibly a miniseries — that aired years ago. It was titled "Backstairs at the I'm sorry that "Vegas" White House," and it was about • isn't on anymore. Is there those who served presidents any way to see the episodes? and their families. Any chance — Jim Sloan, Reading, Pa. it might be dragged out of • Assuming you mean last mothballs and run again? — Jeane Lewis, • season's Dennis QuaidMichael Chiklis CBS drama, Columbus, Ohio and not the late 1970s-early '80s • There's always a chance Robert Urich ABC detective se• for a n y t h ing t o be ries (though several seasons of "dragged out of mothballs" if
Q•
A
A
the interest in seeing it again is high enough. The 1979 miniseries "Backstairs at the White House" — whose cast included Louis Gossett Jr., Leslie Uggams, Lee Grant and Leslie Nielsen — was referenced in quite a few reviews of "Lee Daniels' The Butler," which was a sizable success at the box office. That monetary take would suggest " Backstairs" couldearn a respectable viewership if shown again, but as of this writing, no network had announced plans for that.
Q•
It was so nice to see the • women of " The M ary Tyler Moore Show" reunited on "Hot in Cleveland." Is anything
Dear Abby: My son and his wife, their parents can and cannot do, as "Carole," have been married for two mature adults, you do not have to years. I was recently introduced to blindly accept it. her father, "Ted," who has been alone Dear Abby: I have been friends for 13 years. Caroletold me later in no with "Kurt" for many years. We met uncertain terms that I cannot have a during Little League, and as we got romantic relationship older we stood up in with her father. Then each other's wedding. she repeated the same He was my best man. DEAR Kurt's ma r r i age thing to him. ABBY «~ Do you think it's is in trouble because right for adult chilhe has a gambling dren to dictate to their problem. I feel guilty parents who they can and cannot because I never said anything to see? Ted and I are perplexed. We re- him about it when we were together ally like each other and would like at the casino and he was spending to see where this relationship could more money than he could afford. I go. We laugh easily together, cook still think I should have spoken up. in the kitchen well together, can talk Should I have'? Or wouldn't it have for hours and generally are very mattered if I did? Kurt is going to compatible. We have both discussed Gamblers Anonymous meetings our pasts and have been honest with now, trying to save his marriage. each other. What's your opinion? — Guilty in Wisconsin — Deserves To Be Happy in Florida Dear Guilty: You could have said Dear Deserves: Before the rela- something to your friend, but the tionship goes further, you and Ted question is, would Kurt have listened should step back and ask yourselves and accepted what you were trying what might happen if this romance to convey'? People who have addicdoesn't work out. Would the hurt tions are usually in denial until they feelings disrupt the family dynamic? have no other choice but to face it. If this can be handled thoughtfully, Your feeling guilty won't help this with grace and maturity, I agree that situation. Being supportive of your you deserve to be happy. While adult longtime friend and making sure offspring may try to dictate what that when you're together there is no
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY,
YOUR HOROSCOPE
naturally happier to others; you have a smile By Jacquetine Bigar for nearly everyone. Youalso tend to look at situations more positively than you have in the past. Your upbeat attitude permeates your need for control, you'll allow more every action you creativity. You might want to sit on a Stars show the kind take, which results problem for now. Tonight: Get some of day you'll have i n success! You exercise. ** * * * Dynamicare especially ** * * P ositive fo r tunate after June CANCER (June21-July 22) when ** * A verage 201 4. Emphasize ** * * Your playful side emerges dealing with others. Remember,not ** So-so your work and life everyone feels ascarefree as you do.Though * Difficult directions. If you you might be tuned in toyour feelings, it are single, your is important to examinewhat is going on smile attracts many potential sweeties. with those aroundyou.Tonight: Funnel your Have fun choosing! If you areattached, playfulness into a fun happening. your ease andwillingness to be yourself adds to the dimension of your relationship. LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * Tension seems to build at the SCORPIOcan causeyou a lot of emotional stress. slightest setback. Youeven might decide to stay home andwork from there, if possible. ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You are a very independent sign, You could be off-kilter until you hear from a loved one or achild. Focus on your yetyou demonstrate an ability to keepyour foundations and try to remain centered. eye on the big picture. You interact well Tonight: Plan aget-together with friends. with a partner who clearly has different ideas. The fact that you are looking for the VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) optimum path to success wins over others. ** * * You will want to understand Tonight: Look at the bottom line. what is happening with a close associate, neighbor or relative. Instead of playing the TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Defer to others, and keep in mind guessing game, makethe call. This person simply might not want to talk; however, that you can't force them to think asyou would like them to. Youstill can be involved, should you get a response, besure not to push. Tonight:Stayopen-minded. butyou might not be the dominant player that you typically are. Funopportunities LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) will open up in response to this change. ** * Do not allow your more possessive Tonight: Let the party begin. sidetotakeover.Howyou seea money GEMINI (May21-June20) matter might be a lot different from how ** * You believe that a lot can happen someone else seesthe same situation. and be established if you encourage a Try not to get involved if your views are free exchange of ideasandlet everything too different. You have aunique style of happen as it needs to. By releasing communicating. Tonight: Call a close friend.
A•
similar planned for the men'? — Ellen Tate, Buffalo, N Y. Ed Asner actually has re. united with Betty White on the TV Land series already, but if a regathering of the male "MTM" regulars was pursued — which it hasn't been, as of yet — it probably would be easier, sincethere would be fewer performers to pursue. In addition to Asner, there would be Gavin MacLeod and m aybe John Amos, who recurred as WJMTV weatherman Gordy. Ted Knight, alias anchorman Ted Baxter, died in 1986.
A•
— Send questionsofgeneral interest via email to tvpipeline@ tribune.com. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.
Q•
Please settle a debate. I • say the most recent Muscular Dystrophy Association
In-law's relationshipmaycauseconflict
OCT. 7, 2013: Thisyearyouseem
View" this season, but I heard that she was retiring. Was that accurate? — Gloria Burns, Fayetteville, N.C. It was, but in a way, the • new season of the ABC w eekday show m a rk s t h e beginning of what could be called the veteran journalist's "farewell tour." Her departure from the network is set for next summer, but until then, she'll be participating in various specials — surely including her final "Most Fascinating People" program in December — as well as doing her day job, especially since she's also an e xecutive producer of " T he View."
Photos courtesy Newscom
Michael Chiklis, left, stars as a ruthless gangster in "Vegas," available on DVD. Meanwhile, "The Young and the Restless," starring Melody Thomas Scott, is no longer showing on SoapNet.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
wagering happening (i.e., on sporting events) would be helpful. The rest is up to him. Dear Abby: I recently ended a twoyear relationship with myboyfriend. We are both 20. He was a great boyfriend — always patient, kind, gentle and loving. However, I was often impatient, short-tempered and controlling. These issues were my personal problems. I always tried to work on them, but although it got better, I knew I wasn't treating him the way I should. I ended things with him because I felt guilty. It has been a month now, and I'm having second thoughts about having ended it with an almost-perfect person. I miss him. Would it be unwise to reach out to him again? — Broken Up But Not Over It Dear Not Over It: Not necessarily. But before you do, allow yourself a period of introspection during which you focus less on your missing him and concentrate on why you were abusive to him. A man with his qualities deserves to be treated with more respect than you showed him. The truism, "If you don't value whatyou've got, you will lose it," applies to relationships. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * P ull back and distance yourself from atrying matter. You will see lifefrom a totally different perspective as aresult. You also might feel much more together than youhaveinavery longtime.Youhaveno need to get involved in anargument right now. Tonight: All smiles.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You might want to revisit a personal matter. Discussions need to be caring and not forced too much in someone else's face. Youhavewitnessed this problem build up, andyou might want to makea suggestion. In this case, however, the less said the better. Tonight: Optfor some rest.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * Z ero in on your priorities quickly and efficiently. You knowwhat is reasonable and what needs to occur in order to expand andheadin anew direction.Youseem so much more containedandpleasedthanyou have in the recent past. Tonight: Catch up on a friend's news.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18) ** * A s nice as you might want to bewith someone, you couldfind thatyou havea problem. Understand what is happening within your immediate circle, but also recognize the needfor leadership. Are you ready to step up to the plate?Tonight: Get together with a friend.
I
I
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BAGGAGE CLAIM (PG-13) 3:05, 9:15 • CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)12:25, 2:50, 6, 8:55 • CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF M EATBALLS 23-D (PG) 12:50, 3:10, 7:40, 10:05 • DON JON (R) 12:45, 3, 7:20, 10:10 • THE FAMILY (R) 12:30, 6:20 • GRACE UNPLUGGED (PG)12:35,3:15,6:30,9:05 • GRAVITY (PGI3) 1:30, 6: I5, 9:10 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13) 1,325,355,705,930 • GRAVITY IMAX3-D (PG-13) 'I:40, 4, 7:15, 9:35 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 2(PG-13) I:40, 4: I5, 7:45, 10:15 • INSTRUCTIONS NDTINCLUDED (PG-13) 12:40, 3:50, 6:50, 9:45 • LEE DANIELS' THE BUTLER(PG- I3) 12:55, 3:50, 6:50, 9:50 • METALLICATHROUGH THENEVER 3-D(R)7:55,10:15 • PERCY JACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS (PG)1:15 • PRISONERS (R) 12:50, 4:20, 8 • RUNNER RUNNER (R) I: IO,3:30, 7:30, 9:50 • RUSH (R) 12:30, 3:35, 6:35, 9:25 • WE'RETHE MILLERS(R)4:05,6:55,IO •THE WIZARDDF OZ3-D (PG)j:05,3:40 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I
TV TODAY 5:25 p.m. on ESPN,"NFL Footdall" — If the Atlanta Falcons are to entertain realistic Super Bowl hopes, they'll have to defeat easy prey such as the team they host tonight, the NewYork Jets. The Falcons, the defending NFC South champs, jettisoned stalwart RB Michael Turner for ex-RamStevenJackson to give quarterback Matt Ryan another weapon in his arsenal. The Jets, on the other hand, hope to get rookie QBGeno Smith a year of experience under his belt without incident or injury. 8 p.m. onE3, "HowI Met Your Mother" — After discovering that Ted (Josh Radnor) still has feelings for Robin (Cobie Smulders), Barney (Neil Patrick Harris) tries to work through his anger with Marshall (Jason Segel) Skyping in to play mediator. Tim Gunn ("Project Runway") guest stars as himself in the new episode "The Broken Code"; Alyson Hannigan also stars. 8 p.m. on (CW),"Hart of Dixie" — As Season 3 opens, Zoe (Rachel Bilson) has spent the summer in NewYork and is ready to stay there, but she hassome loose ends to tie up in BlueBell, where only Lavon (Cress Williams) is happyto see her. Hoping for a good reference, sheagrees to help Brick (Tim Matheson) find George (Scott Porter) and try to get the Founders Dayparade reinstated. She asks Lemon (Jaime King) for help and learns a dirly secret in "Who SaysYouCan't Go Home." 8:30 p.m. onE3, "We Are Men" — Stuart's (Jerry O'Connell) ex-wife offers to settle their divorce if he'll let her keep the dog. Not willing to give up his beloved pet, Stuart asks Frank, Gil and Carter (Tony Shalhoub, Kal Penn, Chris Smith) to help him get the animal back. Gil is upset when his daughter cancels their plans to go camping. Carter asks Frank for permission to ask Abby (Rebecca Breeds) out in the new episode "We AreDognappers."
9p.m. on(CW),"Beautyand the Beast" — Vincent and Catherine (Jay Ryan, Kristin Kreuk) are reunited three months after hisabduction,buthe'schanged. His scar and his memory are gone, and he's on amysterious mission. Catherine must figure outwhat' s behind thesechanges if she wants to rekindle their love — which will be easier said than done. Nina Lisandrello also stars in the season premiere, "Who Am I?" ©Zsp2rt
Arsy xytrmg
IPBDs
©2013 by King Features Syndicate
1
3-lllld
Retire with us Today! 541-312-9690
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • Oue to Monday Night Football, no movies will screen today. TheNFLfootball game screens at 5:40 tonight. • After7p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 2f may attend screenings before7p m. ifaccompanied bya legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • DRINKING BUDDIES (R) 8:15 • PRINCE AVALANCHE (R) 6 I
I
Call for yourfree home loan consultation
Brad Haun,.„„„„
541-280-2564 Itt32]'"to"""
~+ EVERGREEN
I 2013 EvergreenHomeLoans is aregistered trade remeoftvergrernMonsysourreMortgage(ompany.
vPure CttztA6 Ca
rd u a~ B~
Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF M EATBALLS 2(PG)6 • GRAVITY (PGI3) 6:30 • PRISONERS (R) 6 • RUNNING WILD— THE STORY DF DAYTON 0.HYDE (no MPAA rating) 6:15 r/
r
rr
Bend Redmond John Day Burns Lakeview La Pine
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I -548-8777 • CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF M EATBALLS 2(PG)5,7 • GRAVITY (PG-13) 5:30, 7:30 • PRISONERS (R) 4:15, 7: I5 • RUNNER RUNNER (R) 5:15, 7:15
541.382.6447 bendurology.com
See us for FREE lifting system upgrades and $100 mail-in rebates on select Hunter Douglas products.
Madras Cinema 5,1101 S.W.U.S. Highway 97, 54'I-475-3505
• CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)4:45,7 • THE FAMILY (R) 5, 7:20 • GRAVITY (PGI3) 4:50 • GRAVITY3-D (PG-13) 7:10 • PRISONERS (R) 3:25, 6:25 • RUNNER RUNNER (R) 5:10, 7: I5 •
a~a g ~S S l p COVERINGS
541-388-4418 www.classic-coverings.com
•
Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014 • CLOUDY WITH ACHANCE OF M EATBALLS 2(Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • PRISONERS (R) 6:15 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
BOSCH Dishwasher Step up to Bosch with this great value!
PISCES (Fed. 19-March 20) ** * * You see and understand some of the miscommunications that are occurring. Your detachment permits this perspective. If you decide to help, you could lose this objectivity. Be caring no matter which way you decideto go.Tonight:Relaxand choose a favorite pastime.
ZI O ,
s t r e e I r festyies
D t cr
O
Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's
Stainless steel Fully integrated
•
0 G O! Magazine
gS599 HNsoN
¹SHx4A775UC
• Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at benddulletin.com/movies
rrm r led quarrtrtres
TV.APPLIANCE •
•
A10
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
)f . '////// / J JJ///// / / J . • •
•
4
TOUGH -. ~, C1 SALES EVENT
•
OO O
2013 FORDFIESTA 4- R SE SEDAN Lime SqueezeMetallic SE AppearancePkg, 15" Aluminum Wheels, Ambient Interior Lighting, Sirius Satellite Radio, Spoiler, Leather Wrapped Steering Wheel, Automatic Transmission
MSRP... . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . WRIGHT FORDDISCOUNT .
.
.
.
.
.
.
2014 FORD,~@ EXPLORER XLT4WD
Sunset Metallic Orange, Leather, Heated Seats, StI<.413019 VIN: 147296 Navigation, . . . . . . . . . . . . $18,005 Loadedi - $1506 Much More! .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
•
.. $36,185 - $2,167 $34,018 - $2,250
MSRP... . . . . . . . . . . . . . WRIGHT FORDDISCOUNT ..
.
Stk.414017 VIN' A55066
.. . . . . .
MSRP... . . . . . . . . . . . . . WRIGHT FORDDISCOUNT .. RETAIL CUSTOMER CASH...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
MONDAY MARK-DOWN •
XLT Trim, Trailer Tow Pkg, LoadedMuch More! Stk 413087 VIN: A92492
Stk.tT3148 VIN: 034346
.
$16,499 RETAIL CUSTOMERCASH..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - $1,000 $15,499 FORD CREDITRETAIL BONUS CUSTOMER CASH......- $500
2 0 13 FORD F150,~@ 2 013 FORD F250 SU PERCAB 4X4 STX CR FX-4 EW CAB4X4 XLT OFF ROAD PACKAGE
.
MSRP... . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $46,260 WRIGHT FORDDISCOUNT - $2,510 $43,742 SPECIALRETAIL CUSTOMER CASH - $1,000 RETAIL CUSTOMER CASH...... - $2,500 $40,242 FORD CREDITRETAIL BONUS CUSTOMER CASH..... - $2000 $38,242
RETAIL CUSTOMERCASH..... . . . ..... . . . . $39,990 ....- $500 -$1,251 5.0LSPECIAL RETAIL CUSTOMER CASH .. F150 STX BONUS CUSTOMERCASH...... - $1,000 $38,739 $30,268 - $2,000 FORD CREDITRETAILBONUS CUSTOMER CASH.... - $1,000 $36,739 $29,260 .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
MONDAY MARK-DOWN
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
•
MONDAY MARK-DOWN
$0 Down
OR
•
MONDAY MARK-DOWN
•
$0 Down
Finance with Ford Credit, 4.24% APR, 72 months, 720+ Bureau Score On Approved Credit.
Finance with Ford
Credit, 4.24% APR,
72 months, 720+ Bureau Score On Approved Credit.
ULRGESELECTION OF FORD FOCIIS
ULRGESELECTION OF FORD ESCAPES
2010, 2012 St 2013
2 011, 2012 Se 2013
S tk.¹ VIN : 13020A 41897 P2081 87862 P2075 11263 P2083 150699
P2064 34370
A]NI
Q@
STARTING AT
' 00e
r•'
STARTING AT
•!
.
I
zr • •
•
•
pp
Stk.¹13020A VIN: 418 I7
2002 Ford
2000 Chevrolet 2500 Silverado
•
•
•
2007 Chevy
Stk.¹P2074 VIN: 1 I609
2011 Dodge Caliber
HHR
2011 Nissan
2011 Ford
Sentra 2.0S
Fusion
Leather, Loaded Ii
I
r
Ii
ri
• •
•
•
Ii
I
Ii
I I
I
Ii
I I
r
r r
Ii
I
i I
•
• •
•
•
•
• •
81I<.irp2065 VIN: 117347
Stk¹13088A VIN: 269513
•
•
Stk ep2007 VIN: 160768
Stk.AP2070A VIN: 572182
2012 Mazda 6 Touring
2013 Toyota Corolla
•
•
' 631816
Stk AP2
•
•
•
Stk.¹P189 :
1 2 2548
2010 Hyundai
2008 Nissan
2008 Mercury
Santa Fe GLS AWD
Rogue SL AWD
Mountaineer 4x4
gg% 50K Miles Ii
I •
I I •
ar4!
Leather, Loaded I
•
•
i
I I •
I i
I
•
•
Ir
I I •
I •
Stkrrp2067VIN M17400
Stk AP1848 VIN 363748
2013 Hyundai
I
•
•
•
i
I i
I
I i •
Ii •
•
•
Stk.¹P2084 VIN: 076399
2 012 Chevrolet
20 13 F o r d Flex S E L AWD
Ir
i I •
•
Stk.¹P2060 VIN: 154009
Taurus "Limited"
i
r •
I r •
Stk.¹08841 VIN: P2046
•
Ii
I I •
i
•
•
Stk¹13129A VIN: A17613
2012 Nissan 4x4 Titan SL Crew Cab
2013 GMC Terrain GLS AWD
p
Crew Cab r
Stk(<T3068A VIN: 799555
Stk.irp2069 VIN: 543440
Colorado LT 4x4
•
2013 Ford
I I
• •
Ii
•
I I
•
ja
•
Stk.ep2004A VIN: J08870
Stk.e1 3070A VIN: 400378
2009 Dodge Ram 2 0 1 0 Ford Ranger 1 500 4x4 Crew Cab X -Ca b 4 x 4
Sonota GLS
i i
•
•
•
Stk AP2099 VIN 128493
2013 Mazda
2013 Ford
CX-9 AWD
Explorer XLT 4x4
Leather, Loaded Ii
•
i •
Ir
i i •
•
Stk¹P2064 VIN: 34370
•
.WRIGHTFORDINC.COM
i
•
•
Ii
i i •
•
Stk.¹P2072 VIN: 320435
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
r
•
•
Ii
i I •
•
Stk.¹P209'I VIN: 411453
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
r r r
•
•
•
•
Stk.¹P2090 VIN: A76577
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Art for illustrationpurposesonly. All pricesshownbefore License,Title 8 Docfees. Onapproval ofcredit. Subjectto Prior Sale.Expires10/13/13
•
•
IN THE BACI4: WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 MLB, B3
Community Sports, B7
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
A rundown of games and events to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:
Today
Tuesday
MLB playoffs, divisionseries: All four series are in action, starting
Prep volleydall, Sweet Home Prep footdall, Summit atMountain at Sisters, 6:45 p.m.:The View,7p.m.:TheStorm and Cougars
with Oakland at Detroit (10 a.m., MLB Network). Pittsburgh leads St. Louis 2-1 and will try to close out
Outlaws put their 6-0 Sky-Em
the Cardinals at home(noon, TBS). BostonlookstosweepTampa Bay in Florida (3 p.m., TBS),while the Los Angeles Dodgers caneliminate Atlanta (6:30 p.m., TBS).
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
College football, Oregon at Washington, 1p.m.(Fox Sports1); Oregon State at WashingtonState, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN2or ESPNU):The
Fall runs, 9 a.m.:Enjoy the beautiful Central Oregon fall with
head into this Class 5A Intermountain League record on the line when Conference battle with matching 4-2 they host the 3-3 Huskies. records, and both teamsare riding twoSisters, in the latest OSAA game winning streaks. But while Summit Ducks and the Beavers head the Sky-Em standings with
a one-gameadvantage over
is 2-0 in IMCplay andwraps up its league scheduleagainst Mountain View, the Cougars openup their conference
figuring to get its first test of the season from the No. 16
Elmira.
slate against the visiting Storm.
Huskies (4-1).
Class 4A rankings, sits atop
TEE TOGREEN:
north, with No. 2 Oregon (5-0)
FootZone's10K HotChocolate Runnear Shevlin Park or the Great Pumpkin Race 5K that starts at C.E. Lovejoy's Market in southeast Bend. The Hot Chocolate Run is not a race, but
designed to showcasethe Skyline Forest northwest of Shevlin Park. Free to participate with hot chocolate awaiting runners at the finish. Email Andy at trailman50©hotmail.com for more
information. TheGreat Pumpkin Racebenefits Elk Meadow Elementary's integrated arts program. Costumesareencouraged. For more information, go to www.greatraceofbend.com.
• The UnitedStatescloses out the Internationalteamto retain thePresidentsCup,BB • Scoreboard,Calendar,B9
elack ButteRanch'~ sleff Fought' SeniorPGAChampionship, B8
NBA
Blazers' top pick breaks foot again Portland Trail Blazers
rookie guard C.J. McCollum broke a bone in his foot during practice on
Saturday, according to the Blazers' website. A timetable has not been set for his return and it's unclear whether
COLLEGE FOOTBALL COMMENTARY
The'game of inches' on
surgery will be required. McCollum took questions fromthe mediaon
Sunday about the injury, which is a break in the fifth metatarsal bone in his left foot. McCollum
used crutches, andhis
display for
left foot was in a boot. In the June draft, the Blazers picked McCollum out of Lehigh with the10th overall pick.
many teams in Week 6
His senior seasonwas cut short because of a broken bone in the same foot in January.
"I was just very
distraught," McCollum said when he found out he had a broken bone. "Coming off an injury it's tough to get hurt again." McCollum said he
By Chris Dufresne Los Angeles Times
he guy who first said "football is a game of inches" is smiling somewhere today in that big replay booth in the
would get second opin-
sky. At least four games of national importance were decided this weekend by less than the size of a five-dollar foot-long at Subway. In college football, though, silly millimeters can cost you millions and cause grown men toscream and young men to weep. Where a ball was spotted, or what Mr. Magoo saw in the monitor upstairs can keep a team in the national title hunt or eliminate one from contention. In Texas,it can preserve a coach's job for 10 more days until the Oklahoma game. In what other sport can a player named "Pig" have a ball slip out his hands diving into a checker• Oregon board end zone'? tightend You c o u l d have woken up ColtLyerla Sunday and thought nothing leaves much h a ppened. The top five team,B3 s c h ools stayed the same in both The Associated Press and USA Today coaches' polls. There were other minor adjustments, like tweaks to a carburetor, from rankings No. 6 through 25. If you only knew how flimsily fragile it all was. It's difficult to know where to start, so let's go in chronological order. • Dateline Ames, Iowa: Texas defeated Iowa State, 31-30, on Thursday night, or at least that's what the scoreboard said. Many who witnessed it live or on television argued Iowa State got the short end of Bevo's tail. The result also exhumed longheld beliefs that oil wells aren't the only things that get rigged in Texas. Remember that second that got put back on the clock in 2009 that allowed Texas to beat Nebraska and advance to the BCS title
game'?
SeeInches /B6
„2II
ions from two doctors. — From wire reports
NFL 4 9ers 34 Texans 3
Saints 26 Ravens 26 Bears 18 D olphins 23 Bengals 13 Eagles 36 P atriots 6 G iants 2 1 Courtesy photos
The BendFilm Festival includes movies such as 'McConkey,' a film about legendary freeskier Shone McConkey (top); 'The Signal Hill Speed Run' about the first downhill skateboard race (bottom right); and 'Medora,' about one of the worst high school basketball programs in the hoop-crazed state of Indiana (bottom left).
Stanford's A.J. Tarpley is hugged by teammates after making an interception against Washington during the second half of Saturday night's game in Stanford, Calif. The Cardinal held on to win only after a late Washington drive was halted by a reception that was overturned on video replay.
Packers 22 Cardinals 22 Lions 9 Pa nthers 6 Chiefs 26 Titans 17
B roncos 51 C owboys 48
Colts 3 4 R aiders 27 Seahawks 28 Chargers 17
COMMUNITY SPORTS
Coverage,B4-B5
GOLF
Redmondnative Out Of Mid-Am BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Tim Sundseth, a
• The BendFilmFeStiVal inCludeSfiVe interesting SPOrts dOC umentarieS e are living in the Golden Age of sports documentaries. Having grown up with "Hoop Dreams" and Ken Burns' "Baseball" series, a new generation of filmmakers has helped usher in an unprecedented era of sports documentaries over the past 15 years. "Murderball," "Senna," "Dogtown and Z Boys," "One Day in September" and ESPN's "30 for 30" series — "The Two Escobars" in particular — have all made their mark as not just great sports films but excellent documentaries that happen to touch onsportsthemes. Thankfully, the proliferation of thought-provoking sports documentaries extends to this year's BendFilm Festival, which kicks off Thursday night. Here is a preview of the festival's sportsrelated flicks:
• "Medora" (82 minutes), di-
George Nikuin/The Associated Press
Rams 3 4 J aguars 20
rected by Andrew Cohn and Davy Rothbart My favorite documentary among those I previewed, "Medora" follows the Medora Hornets, a rural high school boys basketball program in
scholarships. Excellent storytell-
BEAU EASTES
2013 BendFilm Festival When:Thursday through Sunday Where:Regal Cinemas Old Mill
ing and highly recommended. Showtimes: Friday, 6 p.m., at the Tin Pan Theater; Saturday, 10 a.m., at the Tower Theatre • "The Signal Hill Speed Run"
(87 minutes), directed byMike Horelick and JonCarnoy
Old skateboarders make for outstanding interviews. "Signal Hill" is the story of the 1, Regal CinemasOldMill 2, McMenamins, Tin Pan Theater, first downhill skateboard race, Tower Theatre, The Oxford Hotel, and which took place in Signal Hill, the CascadeTheatrical Company Calif., in the early 1970s. As the race grew in popularity, so did Cost:Full festival pass, $250; Full the speeds — boarders bombed film pass, $150 down Hill Street at almost 60 Web:www.bendfilm.org miles per hour. Lots of fun film footage from the original races, hoops-crazed Indiana. One of which includesome epicwrecks. the state's smallest high schools The event eventually was canwith just 70 students, Medora celed after a slew of injuries — the city ran out of ambulances struggles to even be competitive in most games. (The opening to serve the competition one scene, in which the Hornets' year — but not before launching coach laments the fact that his several new sports. Downhill team did not score a single point skateboarding, street luge and in the fourth quarter of a game, even snowboarding can trace is priceless.) Directors Cohn back to early influences if not and Rothbart capture the pride direct linkage to Signal Hill. and pressures placed upon high Fun movie filled with spirited school athletes, even those with personalities. no shot of landing college athletic SeeWatch/B7
30-year-old golfer from Redmond, was eliminated Sunday from the 2013 LI.S. Mid-Amateur Championship. Sundseth shotan 11over-par 81 on the East
Course of the Country Club of Birmingham to finish two rounds of stroke play at18 over par. That put him in a tie for 208th place, out of 264 golfers in the field, and11 shots back of the cut to advance to singleelimination match play Sundseth, a Central Oregon native who now lives in Corvallis, was 23 strokes back of medalist Matthew Mattare, of Jersey City, N.J. — Sulietin staff report
PREP SPORTS
Look for prep slideshowonline
O 0
The Bulletin
ta kes a look back at the week in
Central Oregon sports, in pictures. Visit the Bulletin's website at www.bendbulletin.com/
preppics.
B2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
COREBOARD StephenF.Austin atSELouisiana, 5 p.m. TexasABMat Mississippi, 5:30p.m. MIDWEST Today NebraskaatPurdue,9a.m. Volleyball: Estacada at Madras,6p.m. Indiana atMichiganSt., 9a.m. Campbell atButler,10a.m. Tuesday Missouri St.at N.DakotaSt., 11a.m. Boys soccer: Bend at Ridgeview,4:30 p.msElmira at Ohio,11 a.m. at Sisters, 4:30p.msEstacadaat Madras,4:30 Cent. Michigan p.m.; Sweet Homeat La Pine,4:30p.m.; Redmond MurraySt. atSEMissouri,11 a.m. at SummiJV, t 4:30 p.m.; MountainViewat Crook IndianaSt.atSouth Dakota,11 a.m. Buffalo atWMichigan,11 am. County,430 p.m. Girls soccer: Bend at Ridgeview,3 p.m.; Sistersat KentSt. atBall St., noon Elmira, 4:30 pmJ Madrasat Estacada,4 pmJLa Baylor atKansasSt.,12:30 p.m. at NorthDakota,12:30 p.m. Pine atSweetHome,430 p.mz RedmondJV at E. Washington Summit, 3p.m MountainViewat CrookCounty, NorthwesternatWisconsin, 12:30p.m. S. DakotaSt.atW.Illinois,1 p.m. 3 p.m. Akron atN.Illinois,2 p.m. Volleyball: Ridgeviewat Bend,6:30 p.m.; Swee t Home atSisters, 6:45 p.mJLaPine atElmira, 6:45 S. Illinois atN.Iowa,2p.m. p.m.; CulveratWestern Mennonite, 6 p.m.; Crook lginois St.atYoungstown St 4 p.m. SOUTHWEST County atMountain View,6:30p.mnSummit at Memphisat Houston,9a.m. Redmond,630p.m. Texasvs.Oklahomaat Dalas, 9a.m. Boys water polo: Summiatt Bend,7:30p.m. KansasatTCU,9a.m. Girls water polo: Summiatt Bend,6:30p.m. lowaSt.atTexasTech,9a.m. SouthCarolinaat Arkansas,9:21a.m. Wednesday Lamarat SamHouston St., noon Volleyball: Madrasat Gladstone, 6p.m. Cross-country: Bend,CrookCounty, LaPine at La Rlce atUTSA,1 p.m. TexasSouthernatArk.-Pine Bluff,4 p.m. Pine Invitational, 4p.m. IdahoatArkansasSt., 4 p.m. MiddleTennesseeat North Texas, 4p.m. Thursday atTexasSt., 4p.m. Football: Madrasat LaSale, 7 p.m.; Elmiraat Sis- Louisiana-Monroe Tulsa atUTEP,5p.m. ters, 7 p.m. FAR WEST Volleyball: Burns at Ridgeview,6:30p.m.; Culverat Santiam, 6 p.m.;Central ChristianatDulur 8 lone, SanJoseSt.atColoradoSt., 12:30p.m. NewMexicoat Wyoming,12.30 p.m. 4p.mzSummit atCrookCounty, 6:30 p.m. Boys soccer: Ridgeview at Summit, 4:30 p.m.; OregonatWashington, 1p.m. Port and St.at S.Utah,1:05p.m. Central Christian atCulver, 4 p.mz Redmond at MountainViewJV,4:30 p.mcBendJVat Crook Marist atSanDiego,2 p.m. N. Colorado at IdahoSt., 2:05p.m. County,4:30p.m. Girls soccer: Redmond at Mountain View,3 p.m.; Stanfordat Utah,3 p.m. Bend JV atCrookCounty, 3p.m.; Ridgeviewat GeorgiaTechat BYU,4p.m. MontanaatUCDavis,4 p.m. Summit, 3p.m.; Sweet Homeat LaPine,4p.m. Cross-country: Ridgeview at Gutbuster in Milton- Hawaii atUNLV,5 p.m. BoiseSt.at UtahSt., 5p.m. Freewater,TBA Weber St. atCalPoly,6:05p.m. Boys water polo: Ridgeview at Madras,TBA N. Arizona at SacramentoSt., 6:05p.m. Friday ColoradoatArizonaSt., 7p.m. Football: Redmondat Bend, 7 p.mcSummitat California atUCLA, 7:30p.m. MountainView,7p.mJ Ridgeview atCrookCoun- OregonSt.atWashington St., 7:30p.m. ty, 7 p.m JSweet Homeat LaPine,7p.m., Santiam at Culver, 7 p.m. Polls Cross-country: Ridgeview at Gutbuster in MiltonThe APTop26 Freewater,TBA;Mountain Viewat Sandelie Goff TheTop25teamsinTheAssociatedPresscoff ege CourseSCClassic inWilsonviffe, 2.30 p.m. football poll, withfirst-placevotesin parentheses,reVolleyball: PaisleyatTrinity Lutheran,4:45 p.m. cords throughOct.5, total pointsbasedon 25points Boys water polo: 5ANorthgamesat Sandy,TBA for a first-place votethrough onepoint fora 25th-place Girls water polo: Summiat t Sandy, TBA vote, andpreviousranking. Record Pt s Pv Saturday 1. Alabama (55) 5 01,4 9 5 1 Football: Gilchrist vs Triad at KlamathUnion, 1 2. Oregon (5) 5-0 1,4 2 4 2 3. Clemson 5-0 1 , 359 3 p.m. Boys soccer: Culver atUmatiga, 1p.mzCentral 4. OhioSt. 6-0 1 , 30 5 4 Christian atC.S.Lewis Academy,1 p.m. 5. Stanford 5-0 1 , 278 5 Volleyball: Ridgeview,Madrasat SeasideTourna- 6. FloridaSt. 5-0 1 , 158 8 ment, TBA; Summit, Bend,Mountain View,Crook 7. Georgia 4-1 1 , 13 8 6 County,Redmond at Clearwater Classic Tourna- 8. Louisville 5-0 1 , 05 1 7 ment, 8a.m.;CentralChristianat North Lake,TBA; 9.TexasA8M 4-1 1 , 003 9 Butte Falls atTrinity Lutheran,2 p.mJGilchrist at 10.LSU 51 993 10 Triad, 4 p m 11.UCLA 4-0 844 12 Cross-country: Bend,Summit, Redm ond, Crook 12.Oklahoma 5-0 819 11 County,Sisters at AdidasChallengeat FernHil 13. Miami 5-0 780 14 Park inPortland,noon; LaPineat RocknRiver5K 14. SouthCarolina 4- 1 764 13 at Pleasant Hill, 9 am. 15. Baylor 4-0 681 17 Boys water polo: MountainViewat Summit, TBA; 16. Washington 4-1 556 15 5A NorthgamesatSandy, TBA 4-1 536 18 17. Flonda Girls water polo: Ridgeview at Summit, TBA 5-0 514 19 18. Michigan 19. Northwestern 4 - 1 418 16 5-0 358 20 20. Texas Tech FOOTBALL 5-0 258 23 21. FresnoSt. 22. Oklahoma St. 4 - 1 204 21 5-0 1 3 8 N R College 23. N. Illinois 24. Virginia Tech 5 1 1 15 N R Schedule 25. Missouri 5-0 10 5 NR AR TimesPDT Othersreceivingvotes Aubum61, Notre Dame50, (Subject to change) Nebraska35, Wisconsin 29,Michigan St. 16 UCF7, Thursday'sGames Arizona St.3, Mississippi 3, Rutgers 2. SOUTH RutgersatLouisvile, 4:30p.m. SC State atNCCentral, 430p.m. USATodayTop26 Poll E. Illinois atAustin Peay,5 p.m. The USA TodayTop 25football coachespoll, with UT-Martin atTennesseeTech, 5p.m. l i rst-place votes in parentheses,records through FAR WEST Oct. 5, tota pointsbasedon25 points for first place SanDiegoSt.atAir Force,6p.m. throughonepoint for25th, andprevious ranking: ArizonaatSouthern Ca, 7:30 p.m. R ecord Pts Pvs 1. Alabama (57) 5 01,5 4 4 1 Friday's Game 2. Oregon (4) 5-0 1,4 8 6 2 MIDWEST 6-0 1 , 379 3 3. OhioState TempleatCincinnati, 5:30p.m. 4. Clemson (1) 50 1,3 5 6 4 5. Stanford 5-0 1 , 327 5 Saturday's Games 6. Florida State 5-0 1 , 18 8 8 EAST 4-1 1 , 130 6 7. Georgia SouthFloridaatUConn,9a.m 8. Louisville 5-0 1 , 10 5 7 E. MichiganatArmy, 9a.m. 9.Texas A8 M 4-1 1 , 067 9 Lehigh atColumbia,9a.m. 10. Okl a hom a 5-0 964 10 AlbanyINYj atDelaware, 9a.m. 11. LSU 5-1 953 11 RhodeIslandatNewHampshire, 9a.m. 12. SouthCarolina 4- 1 833 12 Monmouth(NJ)atSt. Francis(Pa.), 9 a.m. 13. UCLA 4-0 807 13 Harvardat Cornell, 9:30a.m. 14. Mi a mi(Fl a .) 5-0 747 14 BrownatBryant,10 a.m. 15. Baylor 4-0 698 I6 Holy Crossat Buckneg, 10a.m. 16. Michigan 5-0 591 17 Fordham atGeorgetown,10 a.m. 17. Florida 4-1 574 19 Lafayetteat Princeton,10a.m. 1 8. Northwestern 4 1 393 15 CCSU atSacred Heart,10 a.m. 19. Washington 4-1 366 18 WagneratDuquesne,1010 am. 20. Oklahoma State 4- 1 350 20 Ya e atDartmouth,10:30a.m. 21.Texas T e ch 5-0 336 22 Miami(Ohio)atUMass, noon 22. Fresno St a te 5 0 325 21 MichiganatPennSt., 2 p.m. 23. Northernlffinois 5- 0 169 23 StonyBrookatColgate, 3p.m. 24. Nebraska 4-1 125 25 Villanova atTowson,4p m 25. Virginia Tech 5 1 97 N R SOUTH O thers recei v ing votes: Mi s souri 86; Notre Da me Missouri atGeorgia, 9a.m. 58; Wisconsin29; MichiganState 16; Auburn11; PittsburghatVirginia Tech, 9am. CentralFlorida11; OregonState8;Rutgers 8; Arizona NC Pembroke at Charlotte, 9a.m. 4; ArizonaState4; Ball State3; BrighamYoung 2. Valparaisoat Mercer,9a.m. Navy at Duke,930a.m. DrakeatDavidson,10 a.m. The CitadelatGeorgia Southern, 10a.m. Betting line Bethune-Cookma nat Howard,10a.m. NFL Daytonat Stetson,10a.m. (Home teams in CAPS) CharlestonSouthernatVMI, 10:30a.m. Favorite Opening Current Underdog Elon atWoford, 10:30a.m. Today PrairieViewatAlabamaSt., 11a.m. FALCON S 9 10 Jets W. Carolina at Auburn,11 a.m. NorfolkSt. atDelawareSt., 11a.m. NC A8Tat Hampton, 11a.m. MOTOR SPORTS JacksonSt.at MVSU,noon Samford at AppalachianSt.,12:30 p.m. NASCAR BostonCollegeatClemson,12:30 p.m. Sprint Cup Troy atGeorgiaSt., 12:30p.m. HollywoodCasino400 Richmond at JamesMadison,12:30 p.m. Sunday Florida atLSU,12:30p.m. At KansasSpeedway Virginia atMaryland,12:30p.m. KansasCity, Kan. Syracuse atNCState,12:30p.m. Lap length: 1.6 miles EastCarolinaatTulane,12:30 p.m. Penn atWiliam8 Mary,12:30 p.m. IStart position in parentheses) Grambling St.vs. AlcornSt.at Indianapolis, I p.m. 1. I1) KevinHarvick,Chevrolet, 267laps,138.4 rating, Tennessee St. atJacksonville St.,1 p.m. 48 points,$364,636. Northwestern St.at NichoffsSt.,1 p.m. 2. (19) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 267, 101.3, 42, Marshall atFAU,2 p.m $229 81 0. FurmanatChattanooga, 3p.m. 3. (14j Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 267, 105.8, 41, Gardner-Webb atCoastal Carolina,3 p.m. $216,776 Florida A8 Mat SavannahSt., 3 p.m. 4. (5) Joey Logano, Ford,267,1187,41, $176473. Alabama atKentucky, 4p.m. 5. (9) CarlEdwards,Ford, 267,102.6, 39,$164,765. Alabama A8Mat SouthernU.,4 p.m. 6. (3) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,267, 116.2,39, IJAB atFIU, 4:30p.m. St64,376. BowlingGreenat Mississippi St.,4.30p.m. 7. (8) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 267, 114.3, 37,
ON DECK
Top Alcohol Dragster Robin Samsel5.568, , 248.25def.BrandonBooher,5.512,25871. Top Alcohol Funny Car—Paul Noakes, Ford Mustang, 5.612,258.12 def. Mickey Ferro, Chevy MonteCarlo, 5.599,258.52. Competition Eliminator—Russell Joly, Chev y Cobalt, 7.407,165.66def. Calvin Hill, PontiacGrand Am, broke. Super Stock—Dan Fletcher, Chevy Cam aro, 10.575,112.20def. TomSheehan,Chrysler Sebring, foul. Stock Eliminator — Sal Biondo, Ford Mustang, 9839,123.94def. DonPiresJr, ChevyNova,11.607, 99.36. Super Comp —Patrick Myers, Dragster,8.908, 169.38def.TomStalba, Dragster,8.935, 167.57. Super Gas —Charlie Kenopic, '27-TFord,9.926, 144.94 del. IggieBoicesco,ChevyCorvette, 9.954,
IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclictt www gocomics.comhnthebleacners
163.26.
Formula One Korean GrandPrix Sunday At Korean International circuit Yeongam,SouthKorea Lap length: 3.49 miles 1. SebastianVettel, Germany, RedBull, 55 laps, 14313701 111465mph 2. Kiml Raikkonen, Finland, Lotus, 55, I:43:17.925. 3. Romain Grosjean, France, Lotus, 55, 1.43:18.628. 4 Nico Hu kenberg, Germany, Sauber, 55,
W L T Pts GFGA 15 1 0 7 5 2 5 5 40 15 9 6 5 1 4 0 34 12 5 14 50 48 33 I4 11 6 4 8 51 37 1 3 9 9 4 8 4 2 32 12 11 8 44 32 41 Vancouver 11 11 9 42 44 41 FC Dallas 10 10 11 41 43 47 ChivasUSA 6 18 8 2 6 29 60 NOTE: Threepoints lor victory, onepoint fortie. x- clinchedplayoffberth R ealSaltLake Seattle Portland Los Angeles Colorado SanJose
Sunday'sGames
Los Angeles5,Chivas USA0 Vancouver 2, Portland2,tie Wednesday'sGames SportingKansasCity atHouston,5.30p.m. VancouveratSeatle FC,7p.m. Coloradoat SanJose, 7:30p.m.
Saturday'sGames
NewEnglandatMontreal,11:30 am. PhiladelphiaatDC United4pm ChicagoatFC Daffas,530p.m. Sunday, Oct. 13 SeattleFCat Portland, 6p.m.
BASKETBALL NBA National Basketball Association PreseasonGlance
1'43:37.815
5. Lewis Hamilton, England, Mercedes, 55, 1:43:38.956.
"Baek in the good ol' days of coaching, the rack was a disciplinary tool. Now it just sits there
because they say it's 'insensitive' ..."
6. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 55, 1:43:39.890. 7. NicoRosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 55, 1:43:40.399. 8. JensonButton, England, McLaren, 55, 1:43:45.963. 9. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari,55,1:43.48091. 10. Sergio Perez, Mexico, McLaren, 55, 1'43;48.856
$146,456. 8. (6) DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet, 267,120.8, 37, $126,140. 9. (25j Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 267, 77.5, 35, $137,154 10.(20) AricAlmirola,Ford,267,82.1,34,$145,60L 11. (7) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 267, 105.2, 34, $144,096. 12. (16) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 267, 78.5, 33, $113,355. 13.(26) GregBiffle,Ford,267,71.4,31,$117,655. 14.(22) ClintBowyer,Toyota,267,81,30,$141,613. 15. (15) KaseyKahne, Chevrolet, 267, 82.6, 29, $116,880. 16. (24) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 267,84.7,28, $128,625. 17. (4j Brad Keselowski, Ford, 267, 89.2, 28, $1 50,871 18. (12) JuanPablo Montoya,Chevrolet, 267,90.8, 26, $127,394. 19. I13) Martin TruexJr., Toyota, 267, 73.1, 25, $131,555. 20.(28) A J Aff mendinger,Toyota,267,62.5,24, $126,138 21.(37) Casey Mears, Ford, 267,58.6, 24,$122,238. 22. (23) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 267, 63.4, 22, $140,905. 23. (10) DennyHamlin, Toyota, 267, 83.7, 21, $113,255 24. (34j David Giffiland, Ford, 267, 502, 20, $110,313. 25. (41j Dave Blaney,Chevrolet, 267, 51.4 19, $107,663. 26. (36) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 267, 52.7, 19,
Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.
IndyCar Grand Prix of Houston2 Sunday AI Reliant Park
Houston,Texas Lap length: 1.683miles (Starting position in parentheses) 1. (9)Wil Power,Dagara-Chevrolet, 90,Running. 2. (2) ScottDixon,Dallara-Honda,90, Running. 3. (8) JamesHinchcliffe, Daffara-Chevrolet, 90,Running. 4 (6) JustinWilson, Dagara-Honda,90, Running. 5 03) SebastienBourdais, Dallara-Chevrolet, 90, Running. 6.(3) SimonPagenaud,Daff ara-Honda,90,Running. 7. (21 I Oriol Servia,Dallara-Chevrolet,90, Running. 8. (10j CharlieKimbaff,Daffara-Honda,90,Running. 9 (16) MikeConway,Daff ara-Honda,90,Running 10. (17)SimonadeSilvestro, Daffara-Chevrolet, 90, Running. 11.(22) Tristan Vautier, Daffara-Honda,90, Running. 12. (24) SebastianSaavedra, Daffara-Chevrolet, 90, Running. 13.(14) JosefNewgarden, Daffara-Honda, 90, Running. 14. (15)TakumaSato, Dagara-Honda,89, Contact. 15. (7j DarioFranchitti, Daffara-Honda,89,Contact. 16. (12)E.J.Viso, Dagara-Chevrolet, 89,Contact. 17.(20jJamesJakes,Daff ara-Honda,89,Running 18. (19)GrahamRahal, Daffara-Honda,88, Running. $112,277 19. (23)LucaFilippi, Daffara-Honda, 88,Running. 27. (33)J.J. Yeley,Chevrolet, 267, 47.1,18, $94,030. 20. (4) MarcoAndretti, Daffara-Chevrolet, 88, Run28. (35)TimmyHil, Ford,267, 43.9,16, $93,430. ning. 29. (42) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, 267, 40.9, 0, 21. (5j RyanHunter-Reay,Daffara-Chevrolet,8(, Run$90,230. ning. 30. I2j Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 266, 70.8, 14, 22. (18) Ed Carpenter,Daffara-Chevrolet, 61, Me $140,316 chanica. 31. (30)ColeWhitt, Toyota,260,32.8,0, $93,280. 23. (I) Helio Castroneves,Dallara-Chevrolet, 53, 32. (11)BrianVickers, Toyota accident,242,76.4, 0, Running. $97,580. 24.(11)TonyKanaan, Dagara-Chevrolet, 32, Contact. 33. (43) LandonCassiff, Chevrolet, 235, 36.6, 0, $89,380. Race Statistics 34 (18) KyleBusch,Toyota, accident, 199,54.6, 11, Winners averagespeed: 78444. $134,588 TimeofRace:I:52:28.9525. 35. (17) RyanNew man, Chevrolet, 188, 57.3, 9, Margin of Victory: UnderCaution. $123,103. Cautions: 9 for26laps. 36. I32) DavidRagan,Ford,accident, 168 48.5, 9, Lead Changes: 2among3 drivers. $96,755. Lap Leaders: Castroneves1-10, Dixon 11-39, 37. (27) David Reutimann,Toyota, 157, 31, 7, Power40-90. $88,525. Points: Dixon 546, Castroneves 521, Pagenaud 38. (31jMichaelMcDoweff, Ford, vibration,144,34.5, 491, J.Wilson 460, Andretti 457, Hunter-Reay 6, $82,860. 446, Power444, Franchitti 418, Hinchcliffe 417, 39. (21)Justin Aggaier,Chevrolet, accident,135,55.1, Kimbaff 406. 0, $86,860. 40. (38) JoshWise, Ford, vibration, 108, 29.4, 0, $74,860. 41. (39)JoeNemechek, Toyota, engine, 107,29.9, 0, $70,860. 42. (40) ReedSorenson,Ford, vibration, 103,32.2, 0, $66,860 2 43. (29j DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,accident, 0, 29.3, 1, $63,360.
NHRA
NATIONALHOT ROD ASSOCIATION
Auto-Plus Nationals Sunday At MapleGroveRaceway Mohnton, Pa. Final Finish Order Top Fuel Race Statistics 1. ShawnLangdon;2. AntronBrown;3. DougKaAverage Speedof RaceWinner:114.884mph. litta; 4 SpencerMassey;5. BrandonBemstein; 6. Bob Time of Race: 3hours,29 minutes, 10seconds. Vandergriff; 7. SidneiFrigo; 8 TonySchumacher; 9 Margin of Victory: 1.140 seconds. Clay Miffican;10.BrittanyForce; 11. Billy Torrence; Caution Flags:15for71 laps 12. KhalidalBalooshi; 13.TerryMcMiffen;14. David Lead Changes: 24 among12drivers. Grubnic;15.MorganLucas;16. LeahPruett. Lap Leaders: K.Harvick 1-44; C.Mears 45; Funny Car K.Harvick 46-79; J.Johnson80, K.Harvick 81, 1. JohnForce;2. ChadHead; 3 DelWorsham;4 J.Johnson82-86; D.EarnhardtJr. 87-88; TKvapil Ron Capps;5. AlexisDeJoria; 6. CourtneyForce;7 89; D.Eamhardt Jr. 90-91; M.Kenseth92-112; CruzPedregon;8. MattHagan;9.BlakeAlexander; 10. D.EarnhardtJr.113;D.Ragan114-115; D.Eamhardt Johnny Gray;11.JackBeckman;I2.BobTascaff l;13. Jr. 116-120; J.Logano121-139; K.Harvick 140- TonyPedregon;14. Robert Hight; 15. JeffArend; 16 144; KyBusch145; KHarvick146-156; J.Logano Tim Wilkerson. 157-170; B.Keselowski171-198, K.Harvick199, Pro Stock B.Keselowski200-223; K.Harvick224-229;J.Yeley 1.JegCoughlin;2.Aff enJohnson;3.Jasonl.ine; 230; JBurton231;KHarvick 232-267 4. GregAnderson; 5. MikeEdwards; 6. EricaEndersLeaders Summary IDriver, Times Led, Stevens; 7. ShaneGray; 8. Vincent Nobile; 9. V. Laps Led): K.Harvick, 8 times for 138 laps; Gaines;10. BuddyPerkinson; 11.RichieStevens; 12. B.Keselowski, 2 timeslor 52 laps; J.Logano, 2 Mark Martino;13.LarryMorgan; 14. GregStanfield; times for 33laps;M.Kenseth,1time for 21 laps, 15. SteveKent;16. KennyDelco. D.EarnhardtJr., 4 timeslor 10 laps; J.Johnson, Pro StockMotorcycle 2 times for 6 laps;D.Ragan, 1 time for 2 laps; 1. Matt Smith; 2.EddieKrawiec; 3. LETonglet; 4. J.Burton,1timefor1lap; C.Mears,1timefor1 lap; MichaelRay;5. AndrewHines;6. JohnHall; 7. HecT.Kvapil, I time for I lap; J.Yeley,I timeIor I lap; tor AranaJr, 8. HectorArana,9. SteveJohnson; 10. Ky Busch,1timefor1 lap. ShawnGann; 11.ChazKennedy; 12.AdamArana; Top12 iu Poiuts:1. MKenseth,2183; 2.JJohnson, 13. JoeDeSantis; 14 WesleyWels; 15.ScottyPol2,180; 3.K.Harvick,2,158;4.J.Gordon, 2,151; 5. lacheck. KyBusch,2,148; 6.G.Biffle, 2,139; 7 Ku.Busch, Final Results 2,136; 8. D.EarnhardtJr., 2,129; 9. C.Bowyer, Top Fuel—ShawnLangdon, 3.779 seconds, 2,128; 10. J.Logano, 2,124; 11.C.Edwards, 2,123; 323.81 mph def. Antron Brown, 3.806 seconds, 12. R.New man,2,110. 322.04mph. Funny Car John Force,FordMustang, 4.106, NASCAR Driver Rating Formula 31337def ChadHead,ToyotaCamry,10.002,6547. A maximumof160 points can beattained Pro Stock—JegCoughlin, DodgeAvenger,6.616, in a race. 208.75def.AllenJohnson,Avenger, 6.588,209.39. The formulacombinesthefollowing categories: Wins, Pro Stock Motorcycle — Matt Smith, Bueff, Finishes,Top-15Finishes, AverageRunning Po- 6.936, 193.32def. EddieKrawiec, Harley-Davidson, sition While onLeadLap, AverageSpeedUnder 6 965, 190.43.
11. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber, 55, I:43:49.691. 12. Valtteri Bottas, Finland, Williams, 55, 1.44:00.750. 13. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Wiliams, 55, 1'44;03.714 14. Charles Pic, France, Caterham, 55, 1:44:17.279. 15. Giedovander Garde, Netherlands, Caterham, 55, 1:44:18.202. 16. Jules Bianchi, France, Marussia, 55, 1'44;21.671 17. Max Chilton, England, Marussia, 55, 1:44:26.599.
18. Jean-EricVergne,France,ToroRosso, 53, +2 laps,Retired. 19 DanielRicciardo,Austraia,ToroRosso, 52,+3 laps, Retired. 20. AdrianSutil, Germany, ForceIndia, 50, +5laps,
All Times PDT
Sunday's Game Denver 97, L.A.Lakers88
Today'sGames
Torontoat Boston,4:30p.m. Atlanta atMiami, 4:30p.m. Memphisvs. ChicagoatSt. Louis, MO,5 p.m. NewOrleansat Dallas, 5:30 p.m. L A Clippers at Portland 7p m SacramentoatGolden State, 7:30p.m.
WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Playoffs
All Times PDT FINALS
(Best-of-5) Minnesota1, Atlanta 0 Sunday,Oct.6: Minnesota84,Atanta59 Tuesday,Oct.8:Atlanta atMinnesota, 5p.m. Thursday,Oct.10: MinnesotaatAtlanta, 5:30 p.m. x-Sunday,Oct.13: MinnesotaatAtlanta, 5p.m. x-Wednesday, Oct.16: Atlantaat Minnesota, 5p.m.
HOCKEY
Retired.
NHL
Not Classified 21 MarkWebber, Australia, RedBull, 36, Retired 22. Pau di Resta,Scotland, ForceIndia, 24, Retired. Drivers Btandings (After 14 of 19races) 1. Sebastian Vetel, Germany,RedBull, 272points 2. Femando Alonso, Spain,Ferrari,195 3. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Lotus,167. 4. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes,161. 5. MarkWebber, Australia, RedBull,130. 6.NicoRosberg,Germany,Mercedes,122. 7. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari,89. 8. Romain Grosjean,France, Lotus, 72. 9.Jenson Button,England,McLaren,58. 10. Paul diResta,Scotland, ForceIndia,36
11. NicoHulkenberg, Germany, Sauber, 31. 12 AdrianSutil, Germany, ForceIndia,26. 13. SergioPerez,Mexico, Mcl.aren,23 14. DanieRi l cclardo,Australia, ToroRosso,18. 15. Jean-EricVergne,France, Toro Rosso,13. 16. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Wiliams,1.
TENNIS Professional China Open Sunday AI The Beijing TennisCentre Beijing Purse: Men,$3.67million (WT600); Women, $6.19 million (Premierj Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Championship NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia, def RafaeNadal(2j Spain,6-3,6-4. Japan Open Sunday At Ariake Colosseum Tokyo Purse: $1.44 million (WT500) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship Juan Martin delPotro(1j, Argentina, del Milos Raonlc(3), Canada,7-6(5), 7-5. Shanghai RolexMasters Sunday At QizhongTennis Center Shanghai, China Purse:$3.86 million(Masters 1000) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Florian Mayer,Germany, def. WuDi, China,6-3, 6-3. LukasRosol,Czech Republic,def.Julien Benneteau, France, 6-3, 1-6,6-3. Carlos Bedocq,Argentina, def. DmitryTursunov, Russia,4-6, 6-4,6-4. Pablo Andular,Spain,def. Mikhail Youzhny,Russia, 5-2,retired.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF GA
x New York 15 9 8 Sporting KansasCity 15 10 6 Houston 13 10 8 Montreal 13 10 7 Philadelphia 12 10 9 Chicago 12 12 7 NewEngland 11 11 9 Columbus 12 15 5 TorontoFC 5 16 11 D.C. 3 22 6
53 50 39 51 44 29 47 39 37 46 48 45 45 39 39 43 41 45 42 44 36 41 40 42 26 29 46 15 20 55
Western Conference
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AR Times PDT
Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 3 3 0 0 6 12 8
Toronto Boston 2 2 0 0 4 7 2 Detroit 3 2 I 0 4 6 7 Dttawa 2 1 0 1 3 5 5 Montreal 2 I 1 0 2 7 5 Florida 2 1 1 0 2 4 9 TampaBay 2 1 1 0 2 4 5 Buffalo 3 0 3 0 0 2 7 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 2 2 0 0 4 7 1 Caroina 2 1 0 1 3 4 4 N.Y. Islanders 2 I 0 I 3 6 6 Columbus 2 1 1 0 2 6 6 Washington 3 I 2 0 2 10 12 NewJersey 2 0 1 1 1 3 7 N.Y.Rangers 1 0 1 0 0 1 4 Philadelphia 3 0 3 0 0 3 9
Western Conference Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA 2 2 0 0 4 11 2 2 2 0 0 4 9 2 3 2 1 0 4 12 10 2 1 0 1 3 8 7 2 1 1 0 2 4 5 2 0 0 2 2 5 7 2 0 2 0 0 3 7 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA San Jose 2 2 0 0 4 8 2 Vancouver 3 2 1 0 4 12 10 Anaheim 3 2 I 0 4 8 11 Calgary 3 1 0 2 4 12 13 Phoenix 2 I I 0 2 5 5 Los Angeles 2 1 1 0 2 6 7 Edmonton 2 0 2 0 0 6 11 NOTE:Twopoints lor a win, onepoint for overtime
St. Louis Colorado Winnipeg Chicago Dallas Minnesota Nashville
loss.
Sunday'sGames
Carolina 2,Philadelphia1
Anaheim 3, Winnipeg2 Vancouver5, Calgary 4, OT Today's Games NewJerseyat Edmonton, 6:30p.m. N.Y.Rangersat LosAngeles, 7:30p.m.
DEALS Transactions FOOTBALL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS—Signed PBrianMoorman. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague WINNIPEG JETS AssignedDAdamPardyto St. John's (AHL).Activated DGrantClitsomefrom the injuredreservelist. COLLEGE DUKE —SuspendedSDeondre Singleton for this Saturday's gameagainst Navy for violating team rules. OREGO N—Announced junior TEColt Lyerlahas withdrawn fromschoo for personal reasons.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd McNary 5 , 227 8 8 6 6 , 395 2,814 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadandwild Fridayatselected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,062166 160,462 225,634 129,188 The Daffes 689,196 129,734 170,025 72,229 John Day 512,836 126045 121,776 50,402 McNary 524,607 84,560 124,447 48,155
NHL ROUNDUP
Canucksneed overtime to overtake Flames The Associated Press CALGARY, Alberta — M ik e S antorelli scored his second goal at 3:17 in overtime to lead the Vancouver Canucks to a 5-4 win over the Calgary Flames on Sunday night. The Canucks scoredthree straight goals in the third period to lead 4-3, but with Flames goaltenderJoey MacDonald on the bench for a sixth attacker, David Jones sent the game into extra time with 19 seconds remaining in regulation. Dale Weise, Jannik Hansen and Santorelli scored in the third after the Canucks fell behind 3-1 early in the period. Canucks backup goaltender Eddie Lack made 32 saves in his first regular-season NHL game, and David Booth scored for Vancouver in the first period.
Mikael Backlund,Sean Monahan and captain Mark Giordano also scored for the Flames and MacDonald stopped 23 shots. It was the second goal in three games for 18-year-old Monahan, who was selected sixth overall by Calgary in this year's draft. Booth earned his 200th career point deflecting Jason Garrison's shot from the blue line low past MacDonald's stick at 4:47 of the first for a 1-0 Vancouver lead. Giordano scored his first goal of the season and team-leading fourth point on a long wrist shot that beat Lack top shelf at 14:32 of the first to tie the game. Also on Sunday: Ducks 3, Jets 2: W I N N IPEG, Manitoba — Corey Perry took advantage of a defensive
mistake to score the winner in Anaheim's victory over the Jets, when Teemu Selanne got a standing ovation in what could be his last visit to Winnipeg. Selanne, who is retiring after this season, began his NHL career with Winnipeg in 1992-93 by setting rookie records of 76 goals and 132 points. The Ducks won't return to Winnipeg unless the teams meet in the playoffs. Hurricanes 2, Flyers 1: RALEIGH, N.C. Radek Dvorak scored the winner in the second period to lift Carolina to its first win of the season, a victory over Philadelphia. Jay Harrison also scored, Jeff Skinner added two assists and Anton Khudobin made 17 saves in his Hurricanes'debut. Luke Schenn had the goal forthe Flyers, who have opened the season 0-3-0 for the second year in a row.
j '-(esj
-
Jeff Mclntosh /The Associated Press
Vancouver Canucks' David Booth, left, celebrates his goal with teammate Chris Higgins during the first period of Sunday night's game against the Calgary Flames in Calgary, Alberta.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013• THE BULLETIN
SPORTS ON THE AIR
MLB PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP
B3
MLB SCOREBOARD
TODAY
Postseason Glance All Times PDT
BASEBALL Time TV/R a dio MLB, Division Series, Oakland at Detroit 1 0a.m. MLB, 940-AM MLB, Division Series, St. Louis at Pittsburgh noon T B S, 940-AM MLB, Divi sion Series,Boston atTampa Bay 3 p.m. TBS, 940-AM MLB, Division Series, Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers6:30 p.m. TBS, 940-AM BASKETBALL NBA, preseason, Atlanta at Miami 4:30 p.m. NBA NBA, preseason, Sacramento at GoldenState7:30 p.m. NBA FOOTBALL NFL, New York Jets at Atlanta Falcons 5:2 5 p.m . ESPN SOCCER W omen's college, Washington at UCLA 7 p . m . Pac-12
DIVISIONSERIES
(Best-of-6; x-if necessary) American League Boston 2,TampaBay0 Friday Oct 4 Boston12TampaBay2 Saturday,Oct.5: Boston7,TampaBay4 Today,Oct. 7: Boston(Buchholz12-1) atTampaBay (Cobb11-3),3:07p.m.(TBS) x-Tue sday,Dct.8:Boston(Peavy12-5)atTampaBay, or 5:37p.m.(TBS) x-ThursdayOct.10:Tampa Bay at Boston, 2:37or 5:07 p.m.(TBS) Detroit1, Oakland1 Friday,Oct. 4:Detroit 3, Oakand2 Saturday,Oct.5: Oakland1, Detroit 0 Today,Oct. 7 Oakland(Parker 12-8) at Detroit (Sanchez14-8), 10:07a.m.(MLB) Tuesday,Oct. 8: Oakland (Straily10-8) atDetroit (Fister 14-9),2:07p.m.(TBS) x-ThursdayOct. 10: Detroit at Oakland,3:07 or 6.07 p.m. (TBS ) National League Pittsburgh 2, St. Louis1
TUESDAY BASKETBALL
Time
TV/Radio
Oklahoma City vs. Philadelphia NBA, preseason, Brooklyn at Washington WNBA, finals, Atlanta at Minnesota
noon
NBA, preseason, Denver at L.A. Lakers
7 p.m.
NBA NBA ESPN2 NBA
NBA, preseason,
4 p.m. 5 p.m.
BASEBALL 2 p.m. TBS, 940-AM MLB, Division Series, Oakland at Detroit MLB, Division Series, Boston at Tampa Bay 5:30 p.m. TBS, 940-AM HOCKEY NHL, Tampa Bay at Buffalo 4 :30 p.m. NBC S N Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF RUNNING Repeat winner at Port-
land Marathon —Jameson
came up short inhis second straight appearance in the Japan Open final. He lost to local favor-
ite Kei Nishikori last year.
Mora won the Portland Marathon for the second year in a row
Sunday, winning the 43rd annual race with a time of 2 hours, 20
BASKETBALL Lynx take down Dream
minutes, 53seconds.Mora,29, is from Arroyo Grande,Calif.
— MayaMoorehad23points,
Rachel Jaten, 38 and of Spokane, Wash., placed first in the
including three 3-pointers in the first quarter to propel Minnesota
women's division; her time was
from the start, and the Lynxde-
not available.
livered a dominant 84-59 victory over the Atlanta Dream in Game
1 of the WNBAFinals on Sunday
FOOTBALL 'Bama continues totop
night in Minneapolis. Moore shot10 for16 from the floor and
pOII — For the fourth straight week, the top five teams in The
Monica Wright pitched in 20 points off the bench. Seimone
Associated Press college football poll are unchanged, led by
Augustus scored her usual
grabbed sevenrebounds, and
No. 1 Alabama. The top-ranked
19 points, and the Lynx overwhelmed the Dream by leading
Crimson Tide received 55of
the entire gameandshooting
60 first-place votes after an
49.4 percent from the field.
easy victory and No. 2Oregon received the other five after its latest blowout. Clemson is No. 3, followed by Ohio State and Stan-
ford. The BuckeyesandCardinal
GYMNASTICS ij.S. sets recordsat
were both tested Saturday night and stayed unbeaten. Ohio State rallied to win at Northwestern, 40-30. The Wildcats slipped three spots to No. 19. Stanford
WOrldS —Simone Biles an-
held off Washington 31-28. The Huskies dropped only onespot
the all-around Friday andthen
to No. 16.
chored the strongest U.S. team
performance in world championship history on Sunday in Antwerp, Belgium. First, she won she added the floor event Sunday. She finished with four med-
als overall. The U.S.teamended
SOCCER Timders tie Whitecaps — Camilo Sanvezzoscored two quick goals, including one off a bicycle kick in the 78th minute that pulled the Vancouver
Whitecaps into a wild 2-2 draw
with12 medals, exceeding its previous high of nine at the 2005
Melbourne championships.The Americans had almost double those of their nearest challenger,
Japan, with seven. Next to Biles, Kyla Ross wasalmost as strong, getting three silvers over the
week.
with the Portland Timbers in a
Cascadia Cuprivalry match on Sunday night in Vancouver, BritishColumbia.Sanvezzoscored his first goal in the 76th minute to give the Whitecaps a1-1 tie with the Timbers, but then Will Johnson scored in the 77th to
pull Portland backahead. The
SKIING Former worldchamp
Thursday,Oct.3: St.Louis 9,Pittsburgh1 Friday,Oct.4: Pittsburgh7, St.Louis1 Sunday,Oct.6: Pittsburgh5, St.Louis 3 Today,Oct. 7: St. Louis (Wachia4-1) at Pittsburgh
/
(Morton7-4),12:07p.m.(TBS)
li
Mark J. Terriii /The Associated Press
The Los Angeles Dodgers' Hanley Ramirez (13) celebrates with teammate Yasiel Puig after Ramirez scored on a single by the Dodgers' Adrian Gonzalez in the third inning in Game 3 of the National League division series against the Atlanta Braves on Sunday night in Los Angeles.
0 ers rou raves, ae- ea in The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Th e big-name bats for the Los Angeles Dodgers did more than enough to overcome some tentative rookie
pitching. Carl Crawford hit a three-run homer, Juan Uribe added a two-run shot and Los Angeles routed the Atlanta Braves 13-6 on Sunday night for a 2-1 lead in their best-of-five NL division series. Hanley Ramirez and Yasiel Puig each had three hits and scored three times on a big night at the plate for the Dodgers, who matched a franchise record for runs in a postseason game. Brooklyn beat the New York Yankees D-8 in Game 2 of the 1956 World Series. "It was a total team effort," Crawford said. "Guys were swinging the bat well. That's what it's going to take: 25 guys to do the job and come together and play well." Los Angeles can advance to the NL championship series with a victory at home in Game 4 tonight. Ricky Nolasco pitches for manager Don Mattingly's Dodgers against veteran Freddy Garcia. Crawford made the play of the game when he tumbled head over heels and onto his head to catch an eighth-inning foul ball at the low retaining wall in left field. The speedy leadoff man also scored three times, including once in the eighth when the Dodgers made it D-4. Chris Capuano won in relief of ineffective rookie Hyun-Jin Ryu in a game that took 4 hours, l minute. The 13 runs allowed by the Braves equaled the most in club history for a postseason game. "I don't think the emotions or the crowd or anything had anything to do with it. I think we just had some mistakes," Atlanta manager Fredi Gonzalez said. Los Angeles rallied in the third to regain the lead for good after Atlanta tied it in the top of the inning. After that, the Braves didn't manage much besides Jason Heyward's two-run homer in the ninth. By then, it was way too late. Atlanta starter Julio Teheran and Ryu both made inauspicious postseason debuts in the first matchup of rookie pitchers in the playoffs since2007.Neither stayed around long. In addition to being shaky on the mound,
Ryu made two major mistakes in the field before giving way to Capuano, who spent most of the season in the rotation before moving to the bullpen. With the Dodgers owning a six-run lead in their first home playoff game since 2009, fans waved their blue souvenir towels with one hand and made chopping motions with the other in mocking Atlanta's trademark tomahawk chop. Teheran took the loss, giving up six runs and eight hits in 2'/s innings. The 22-year-old right-hander struck out five, walked one and threw a wild pitch. "I think he just left some balls out over the plate, you know, and made some mistakes," Gonzalez said. "And with this club, if you do that, you're going to look down at a gas tank with a lighted match." Ryu allowed four runs and six hits in three innings, becoming the first South Koreanborn pitcher to start a postseason game in the
major leagues. Despite his rookie status, the left-hander brought a wealth of experience from his native country in becoming the first player to go from the Korean Baseball Organization to the majors. Besides his seven seasons in the KBO, he had pitched in the 2009 World Baseball Classic at Dodger Stadium as a reliever. Atlanta got to him with two runs in the first during another of Ryu's typically slow starts. Capuano came on to strike out three and walk three in three hitless innings. Also on Sunday: Pirates 5, Cardinals 3: PITTSBURGH — Pedro Alvarez hit a tiebreaking single in the eighth inning and Pittsburgh beat St. Louis to take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five NL division series. Alvarez pulled a grounder into right field that scored pinch-runner Josh Harrison from second base. Russell Martin followed with a sharp RBI single against reliever Kevin Siegrist, who took over after Carlos Martinez
(0-1) faltered. Mark Melancon (1-0) picked up the win despite allowing Carlos Beltran's tying home run in the top of the eighth. Jason Grilli worked the ninth to move the Pirates within one victory of winning a postseason series for the first time since the 1979 World Series.
highlights and a lot of emotion. A big thank you to all who have
By Arnie Stapleton
Western Conference behind Real Salt Lake and the Seattle
supported me on my way!" the 30-year-old Albrecht said on his
The Associated Press
Sounders.
website Sunday. Albrecht was the 2007 world champion in
Ducks are heading into the teeth of their schedule startplay or pressure for sopho- ing next weekend at No. 16 more q u arterback M a r cus Washington (4-1), which lost to Mariota. fifth-ranked Stanford 31-28 on "I think every time you step Saturday. The Ducks visit the on the field is a high-pressure Cardinal (5-0) on Nov. 7. situation. I think first-and-10 H elfrich doesn't buy t h e at the 20 in the first quarter naysayers' notion that Mariota is a high-pressure situation," and the Ducks will wish they said Helfrich, who took over had been in some close games the Ducks' dynasty when Chip when they face the Huskies. Kelly left for the Philadelphia He said the Ducks don't need Eagles. to find themselves in a close Behind Mariota, who ac- game to burnish their abilities counted fo r a ca r e er-best to handle pressure. "I think you can respond to seven touchdowns in Oregon's 57-16 wipeout of Colorado on adversity on Tuesday at pracSaturday night, the second- tice," he said. "Our guys have ranked Ducks (5-0, 2-0 Pac-12) a lot of things going on with have topped 55 points in all class and all the things that five games. go on, and whatever it is guys And it's not a list of cup- have to focus and be dialed in cakes or lower-tier schools, regardless of the conditions. If either. we can arrange for however After routing Nicholls in many games we're going to their opener, the Ducks put play and they're all like this, we'll take this." u p 59 points on b oth V i r ginia and Tennessee, 55 on Mariota is 17-1 as a starter Cal and 57 on Colorado — all and he's thrown at least one with Mariota a sideline spec- TD pass in all 18 games. He tator well before the teams has thrown for and run for a s witched directions for t h e score in seven straight games. "I think as a unit, we've all fourth quarter. They're not all going to be gotten better with M arcus," t his easy, though, and t h e said Bralon A d dison, w ho
"It was a great time, with many
super-combined and four-time a
winner on the World Cup circuit.
TENNIS However, hewas unable to reDjokovic winsChinaOpen turn to top form after spending
was something of a consolation for Djokovic after Nadal wasassured of replacing him atop the rankings by reaching the final in
Beijing. The Serb brokeNadal in the second game of the first set and again in the first game of the
second. He racked upfour aces to the Spaniard's two on the way to winning his fourth title in five
years at the ChinaOpen.
Del Potro takes Japan
Open —Top-seeded Juan Mar-
16 days in an inducedcomato recover from injuries sustained when crashing heavily during downhill training in Kitzbuehel, Austria, in January 2009.
YOUTH SPORTS Organizations team op on CORCuSSiORS —Some of the
nation's largest youth sports organizations such asPopWarner, USA Hockey, USA Basketball
and USAFootball are forming an alliance to address concussions. The National Sports Concus-
sion Coalition will partner with
tin del Potro of Argentina beat
concussion experts and athletic
Milos Raonic of Canada,7-6 (5), 7-5 on Sunday to win theJapan
medicine professionals to establish best practices for diagnos-
Open in Tokyo. Del Potro got the only break of the match to go up
ing and treating young athletes. Coalition members will, among
held serve to claim his third title of the year, adding to wins in
their sport-specific concussion
6-5 in the secondset andthen
Rotterdam andWashington. The third-seeded Raonic, who was coming off a win at the Thailand Open last week, hit17 aces but
Sunday'sGames
Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi H eywrdcf 5 1 1 2 Crwfrdlf 5 3 2 3 J.Uptonrf 4 2 2 0 M.ERis2b 4 1 0 0 FFrmn1b 4 1 2 0 HRmrzss 4 3 3 2 G attislf 5 1 3 1 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Mccnnc 4 0 0 1 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 4 0 I 2AdGnzllb 5 0 2 2 Smmnsss 3 0 00 Puigrf 5 3 3 2 EIJhns2b 3 0 0 0 Uribe3b 5 2 2 2 Tehernp 1 0 0 0 Schmkrcf 4 0 1 1 A .Woodp 0 0 0 0 AERisc 2 1 1 0 B uptonph 1 0 0 0 Ryup 000 1 Ayaiap 0 0 0 0 Myongph 1 0 0 0 Waldenp 0 0 0 0 Capuanp 1 0 0 0 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Howegp 0 0 0 0 H alep 0 0 0 0 Belisarip 0 0 0 0 RJhnsn ph 1 1 1 0 Ethier ph 1 0 0 0 Puntoss 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 6 106 Totals 3 7131413 Atlanta 292 DDD DD2 — 6 Los Angeles D 4 2 4 DD D3x— 13 E EI.Johnson (1), AWood (1). DP Atlanta I, Los Angeles2. LOB —Atlanta 8, LosAngeles5. 28 — J.Upton (1), H.Ramirez(4). 38—H.Ramirez Atlanta
(I). HR —Heyward (1), C.crawford(1), Uribe (1).
S—A.Wood. SF—Ryu. Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO TeheranL,0-1 22 - 38 6 6 1 5 A.Wood 21-3 3 4 0 0 3 Ayaia 1 0 0 0 1 I 12-3 1 3 3 1 2 Walden Avilan 0 2 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Hale Los Angeles Ryu 3 6 4 4 1 1 CapuanoW,1-0 3 0 0 0 3 3 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 Howell Belisario 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 PRodriguez 23 3 2 2 I I Jansen 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Avilan pitchedto2 baters inthe8th. HBP—byWalden(AEllis). WP—Teheran, A.Wood. T—4;01. A—54,646(56,000).
Pirates 5, Cardinals 3 St. Louis
Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi M crpnt2b 3 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 0 0 0 Beltranrf 3 1 2 3 NWalkr2b 4 0 0 0 Holidylf 4 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 2 2 2 0 YMolinc 4 0 1 0 Mornea1b 4 1 1 0 Freese 3b 4 0 0 0 JHrrsn pr 0 1 0 0 C Mrtnzp 0 0 0 0 Grigip 0000 S iegristp 0 0 0 0 Byrdrf 3122 MAdms1b 4 0 1 0 PAlvrz3b 3 0 1 1 Jaycf 4 1 1 0 RMartnc 3 0 1 2 Kozmass 3 I 2 0 Barmesss 2 0 I 0 J.Kegyp 2 0 0 0 Tabataph 1 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 SRonsnph 1 0 0 0 Meincnp 0 0 0 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 GSnchzph-1b1 0 0 0 Descals3b 1 0 0 0 Lirianop 0 0 0 0 Mercerss 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 3 3 7 3 Totals 2 85 8 5 St. Louis DDD D2D D1D — 3 Pittsburgh 2DD DD1 D2x— 6 E—Kozma (1). DP—St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—St Louis 6, Pittsburgh6.28—Kozma(1), Mc-
Cutchen(1), Byrd(2). HR —Beltran(2). SB—Jay(1), Kozma (1). S Liriano. SF R Martin. St. Louis IP H R E R BB SO J.Keliy 5 13 5 3 2 4 5 Maness 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Axford 1 0 0 0 0 Ca.MartinezL,O-I 1-3 1 2 2 I Siegrist 23 2 0 0 0
Pittsburgh Liriano
WatsonH,1 MeianconW,1-0 I GrigiS,1-1
6 1
3 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 2 1 I 0 1 0 0 0
1 HBP—byLiriano (M.carpenter). WP—Liriano. T—2:58. A—40,489(38,362).
0 0 0
5 0 0 0
champion Daniel Albrecht retired almost five years after a horrific crash left the Swiss skier with
matches, but remained in third place in Major LeagueSoccer's
Sunday in Beijing. The victory
Boxscores
retlreS —Former world
serious brain and lung injuries.
China Openfor the fourth time
(TBS)
Dodgers 13, Braves6
Timbers (12-5-14j extended their unbeaten streak to five
— Novak Djokovic defeated Rafael Nadal 6-3, 6-4 to win the
x-Wednesday Oct. 9. Pittsburghat St. Louis,2.07or 5:07 p.m.(TBS) Los Angeles 2, Atlanta1 Thursday,Oct.3: LosAngeles6, Atlanta1 Friday,Oct.4: Atlanta4, LosAngeles3 Sunday,Oct.6: LosAngeles13, Atlanta6 Today,Oct. 7:Atlanta(Garcia4-7) at LosAngeles (Noiasco13-11),637p.m.(TBS) x-Wedne sdayDct9:LosAngelesatAtlanta,5:37p.m.
other things, share findings from research, pool financial resources for studies andcoordinate outreach programs to educate athletes and parents. — From wire reports
No.2Oregon keepsmaking quickworkofopponents BOULDER, Colo.— Oregon coach Mark Helfrichdoesn't fret the lack of fourth-quarter
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Tight endColt Lyerla leavesDucks EUGENE — Tight end Colt Lyerla is leaving No. 2Oregon because of personal reasons. Lyerla did not travel with the Ducks to their game at Colorado on Saturday. Coach Mark Helfrich said after the 57-16 victory that the
junior was suspendedfor a gamefor violating team rules. The nature of the violation wasn't disclosed.
Lyerla told Oregon's athletics website that his withdrawal from the Ducks on Sunday had nothing to do with that suspension.
"I love everyone atOregon;everyone's on good terms, I believe," Lyerla said. "Just for my ownbenefit, it was time to move on." Lyerla also told GoDucks.com that he will pursue an NFL career.
He also missedOregon's 59-14victory over Tennesseeearlier this season because of illness. Oregondoesnot disclose injuries, so after the gameHelfrich described his absence as"circumstances." But Lyerla complained to The Oregonian newspaper the he felt the description could be unfairly interpreted. He later apologized
for airing his frustration publicly and said henever meant to bea distraction. Both he and Helfrich said they had discussed the mat-
ter and movedon. He caught three passesfor 26 yards this season. For his career, he caught 34 passes for 565 yards and11 touchdowns. "We wish Colt nothing but the best in the future, and will sup-
port him in anywaywe can," Helfrich told GoDucks.com, declining further comment on the matter. — The Associated Press
caught TD passes of 75 and 44 yards against the Buffs. "Last year, we saw a lot of times when we would misconnect or disconnect and I think that during the offseason we worked a lot and we continue
to get better each week. "Marcus does some amazing things with his legs and has the arm to complement t hose legs. It's almost li ke he's playing a video game out there."
B4
THE BULLETIN• M ONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 20'I3
0 SOVI
0
OVBF 88 BW S NFL
By Michael Marot
two TDs before throwing an interception on the Seahawks' INDIANAPOLIS — A nSomehow though, Indy re- the middle for the go-ahead final play. He also ran 13 times drew Luck spent most of Sun- bounded with three straight score. for 102 yards. day's game watching Russell wins, including victories over Luck then hooked up with Lynch ran 17 times for 102 Wilson and Marshawn Lynch NFC powers San Francisco his favorite receiver Reggie yards, and the defense limrun around. and Seattle. Now they have Wayne on a 2-point conversion ited Indy to just 317 yards of So when the Colts' quarter- sole possession of the A FC pass and took nearly five more offense, 120 of that coming in back finally got a chance to South lead for the first time in minutes off the clock to set up the fourth quarter. make some plays, he rallied In- the post-Peyton Manning era, Adam Vinatieri for a gameThe Seahawks also blocked dianapolis in the fourth quar- too. sealing 49-yard field goal. a punt that bounced into the ter for yet another victory. A nd all t hi s c ame on a Luck finished 16 of 29 for end zone and was recovered He threw two touchdown wacky day. 229 yards with tw o t ouch- out of bounds for a safety, one passes and led the Colts on B oth teams scored off a downs and picked up his ninth of many missed opportunities two time-consuming scoring blocked kick. The Seahawks fourth-quarter comeback win for the NFC West leader. "We knew we were off to a drives in the fourth quarter, (4-1) ran for 218 yards, aver- in 21 career games. "A win is a win, if it w as good start," Seattle coach Pete taking the lead on D onald aged 6.4 yards per carry, had Brown's 3-yard TD run with better field position and ran ugly, if it w a s great," Luck Carroll said. "We could feel 8:55 to play, to hand Seattle its more than three dozen plays in said. "To come back, you hold that we were ready to go and firstloss ofthe season, 34-28. Colts territory as they played on for dear life, but a chance playing well and all that. But "This is t h e m o s t r e sil- keep-away through the first to beat a good team in front of settling for a field goal and ient team that I've ever been three quarters. our home fans, to get back on not getting any points on the around," coach Chuck Pagano None of it mattered to Luck. track at home, we take a lot of blocked kick — t hat would said. "They've got more grit He still found a way to win. pride in that." have been a much different than anybody, anyteam I've On the decisive drive, he It came at Seattle's expense, margin." "We really struggled on been around." took advantage of a pass inter- snapping a nine-game regular This season has certainly ference call against Richard season winning streak that third down," Carroll added. "That wa s t h e d i f f erence. tested the Colts (4-1). Sherman, then got another dated to Nov. 25. Since a closer-than-expect- break when Pagano won a But Sunday's loss seemed Those turned into field goals." ed Week 1 win over Oakland, challenge on a t h i r d-down almost inexplicable as l ast Seattle started with a field week's win at Houston. the Colts have lost three of- spot that turned fourth down goal and a 10-yard TD pass fensive starters with season- into a first down. Seattle dominated the first from Wilson to Golden Tate. ending injuries and a Week 2 After consuming nearly sev- half, seemed to be in control McAfee's blocked punt made game for their first home loss en minutes, he gave the ball to most of the game, and Wilson it 12-0 barely 10 minutes into in nearly a year. Brown, who squirted through went 15 of 31 for 210 yards with the game. The Associated Press
r>"urduek
llrl Q
uii x
.4-
Michael Conroy/The Associated Press
Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck, right, celebrates with wide receiver Reggie Wayne following Sunday's game in Indianapolis. The Colts defeated the Seahawks 34-28.
NFL SCOREBOARD Summaries
East
Broncos 51, Cowboys48 Denver Dallas
7 21 10 13 — 51 14 6 13 15 — 48
First Quarler Dal — Bryant2passfromRomo(Bailey kick), 8:06. Dal — Murray4 run(Bailey kick), 3:18. Den —J.Thomas 4 pass from Manning(Prater kick), 2:28. SecondQuarter Dal — FGBailey 43,12:14. Den —Decker 2 passfromManning (Praterkick), 9:06. Den J.Thomas 9 pass from Manning(Prater
kick), 5;22. Den —Manning1run (Praterkick),:46 Dal — FGBailey 48,.00. Third Quarter Den —Welker 2 passfromManning (Praterkick), 8:03.
Dal — Wiliams 82pass fromRomo (Bailey kick),
NewEngland Miami N.Y.Jets Buffalo
W 4 3 2 2
L I 2 2 3
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t .80 0 .6 0 0 .5 0 0 .4 0 0
Den —FGPrater 48,3:23. Dal — Bryant2passfromRomo (run failed),:14. Fourth Quarter Dal Witten 10passfrom Romo (Wiliams pass from Rom o), 13:38. Den —FGPrater 50,9:37. Dal — Beasley 4 passfrom Romo(Bailey kick), 7:19. Den —Moreno1 run(Prater kick), 2:39 Den —FGPrater 28,:00.
PF PA 95 7 0
lndianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville
W 4 3 2 0
L 1 2 3 5
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t .80 0 .6 0 0 .4 0 0 .0 0 0
PF PA
First downs TotalNetYards
Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time otPossession
34 24 5 17 52 2 31-103 14-52 414 470 1-9 0-0 4-93 5 -123 1-0 1-0 33-42-1 25-36-1 0 -0 4 - 36 0-0.0 1-51.0 2-1 1-1 5 -55 9 - 81 32:34 27:26
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Denver: Moreno19 93, Hilman717, Baii 1-1,Manning4-(minus8). Dallas: Murray 12-43, Romo1-7,Wiliams1-2. PASSING —Denver: Manning 33-42-1-414. Dallas: Romo 25361 506 RECEIVING — Denver:J.Thomas 9-122,Decker 5-87,Moreno 5-57,D.Thomas 5-57,Welker5-49, Hillman4-42. Dallas: Witten7-121, Bryant6-141, Williams 4-151,Beasley4-47, Escobar1-25, Harris 1-13 Murray1-5,Hanna1-3. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.
H ome Away A FC NFC
139 79 115 95 93 139 51 163
2- 1 - 0 2-1 - 0 1- 1- 0 0 - 2- 0
2 0 -0 1 - 1 -0 1 - 2-0 0 - 3-0
2-1-0 3-2-0 2-1-0 0-3-0
2-0 0 0-0-0 0-2-0 0-2-0
Di u 1-0-0 0-1-0 1-0-0 0-1-0
North PF PA 117 110 101 94 94 87 69 110
Baltimore Cleveland Cincinnati Pittsburgh
W 3 3 3 0
L 2 2 2 4
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t .6 0 0 .6 0 0 .6 0 0 .0 0 0
Denver KansasCity SanDiego Oakland
W 5 5 2 2
L 0 0 3 3
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t PF PA 1. 000 230 139 1. 000 128 58 .4 0 0 125 129 .4 0 0 98 108
H o m e A way 2 - 0-0 1 - 2-0 2- 1 - 0 1 - 1-0 300 02 - 0 0 - 2- 0 0 - 2-0
AFC NF C Di u 3-2-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 1-1-0
H o m e A way 3 - 0-0 2 - 0-0 2- 0 - 0 3 - 0-0 1 - 1-0 1 - 2-0 2 - 1-0 0 -2-0
A FC NFC Di u 2-0-0 3-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0 3-0-0 0-0-0 0-3-0 2-0-0 0-1-0 2-2-0 0-1-0 1-1-0
2-1-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-1-0
West
National Conference East
A—92,758.
Dal
H o m e A way A FC NF C Di u 2-0 - 0 2 - 1-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 1 - 1- 0 2 - 1-0 2-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 2-0 - 0 0 - 2-0 1-2-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 2 - 1-0 0 - 2-0 1-3-0 1-0-0 0-2-0
114 117 68 8 8 112 130
South
7'08.
D en
2:06. A—78,200.
American Conference
Sunday's Games
Philadelphia Dallas Washington N.Y.Giants
W 2 2 1 0
L 3 3 3 5
T 0 0 0 0
Pct .4 0 0 .4 0 0 .2 5 0 .0 0 0
PF PA 1 3 5 15 9 1 5 2 13 6 91 1 1 2 82 1 8 2
Ho m e 0- 2- 0 2- 1- 0 0- 2 - 0 0- 2 - 0
A w ay 2 - 1-0 0 - 2-0 1 - 1-0 0 - 3-0
NFC AFC 2-0-0 0-3-0 2-0-0 0-3-0 0-3-0 1-0-0 0-3-0 0-2-0
Di u 2-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-2-0
South NewOrleans Carolina Atanta TampaBay
W 5 1 1 0
L 0 3 3 4
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t PF PA 1 . 000134 73
W 3 3 2 1
L 2 2 2 3
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t .6 0 0 .6 0 0 .5 0 0 .2 5 0
H o m e A way NFC AFC Di u 3- 0- 0 2 - 0-0 4-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0 1-1 - 0 0 2 - 0 1-2-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 1 - 1- 0 0 - 2-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-1-0 0-2 - 0 0 - 2-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-1-0
.25 0 7 4 5 8 .2 5 0 94 104 .0 0 0 44 7 0
North Detroit
Chicago GreenBay Minnesota
PF PA 131 123 145 140 118 97
H o m e A way 2 - 0-0 1 - 2-0 2 - 1-0 1 - 1-0 2- 0 - 0 0 - 2-0
1 15 123
1 - 1- 0 0 2 -0
NFC AFC Di u 3-2-0 0-0-0 2-1-0 1-2-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 0-1-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-2-0
West W Seattle 4 SanFrancisco 3 A rizona 3 St. Louis 2
L 1 2 2 3
T 0 0 0 0
Pct . 800 . 600 . 60 0 . 400
PF 137 113 91 103
PA 81 98 95 14 1
Hom e Away NFC 2-0 - 0 2-1-0 2-0-0 2-1 - 0 1-1-0 2-1-0 2-0 - 0 1-2-0 3-2-0 2 - 1 -0 0-2-0 1-3-0
AFC 2 -1-0 1 -1-0 0 -0-0 1 -0-0
Diu 1-0-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 1-1-0
Thursday'sGame
Thursday, Dct. 10 N.Y.Giantsat Chicago,5:25p.m Sunday's Games Sunday, Dct. 13 CarolinaatMinnesota,10a.m. 3 3 8 0 — 6 GreenBay22, Detroit 9 Carolina OaklandatKansasCity,10 a.m. Arizona 0 3 9 1 0 — 22 NewOrleans26, Chicago18 KansasCity26, Tennessee17 St. LouisatHouston,10a.m First Quarler St. Loui s 34,Jacksonvi l le 20 GreenBayat Baltimore, 10a.m. Car — FGGano22, 7:27. Cincinnati 13, New E ngland 6 Philadelphia at TampaBay,10a.m. SecondQuarter Indianapolis34, Seattle 28 PittsburghatN.Y.Jets, 10a.m. Ari — FGFeely 42,8:29. Baltimore26,Miami23 Cincinnatiat Buffalo,10a.m. Car — FGGano51,.00. Philadelphia36, N.Y.Giants 21 Detroitat Cleveland,10am. Third Quarter Arizona 22, Caro i n a 6 Tennessee atSeattle,1:05 p.m. Ari — MendenhaI 1run (Feelykick), 5:48. Denver51, Dallas48 Jacksonville atDenver,1:05p.m. Ari — Campbell satety,5:28. San Francisco34,Houston 3 Arizona at SanFrancisco,1:25 p.m. Fourth Quarter Oakland27,SanDiego17 NewOrleansatNewEngland,1:25 p.m. Ari — FGFeely 50,3:38. Open: Mi n nesota, Pi t tsburgh, Ta mp a B a y, W ashi n gton Washi n gton at Dallas,5:30p.m. Ari Dray 7passfromPalmer (Feely kick), 2:23. Today'sGame Open:Atlanta,Miami A—60,426. NY JetsatAtlanta, 8:40p.m. Monday, Dct. 14 IndianapolisatSanDiego,5:40p.m. Car Ari First downs 21 19 AH TimesPDT TotalNetYards 3 53 25 0 Rushes-yards 20-95 28-90 Passing 2 58 16 0 PuntRetums 16 2- 2 0 P hi NYG KickoffReturns 2 -63 1 - 18 28 21 KC Ten InterceptionsRet. 3 -30 3 - 8 7 First downs Total NetYards 439 383 First downs 20 19 Comp-Att-Int 21-39-3 19-28-3 37-140 17-53 Total Net Yards 3 53 33 9 Sacked-Yards Lost 7 -50 2 - 1 5 Rushes-yards Passing 299 33 0 Rushes-yards 26-120 22-105 Punts 4-48.8 4-49 8 1-1 0-0 PuntReturns 3-24 1-8 Passing 2 33 23 4 Fumbles-Lost 0 -0 3 - 5 7 PuntReturns 5 -39 4 - 18 Penalties-Yards 9 -79 3 - 30 KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. 3 18 0-0 KickoffReturns 1 -36 2 - 48 Time otPossession 31:04 28 56 Comp-Att-Int 22-39-0 24-52-3 InterceptionsRet. 2-35 1-4 1-3 1-4 Sacked-YardsLost Comp-Att-Int 20-39-1 21-41-2 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 6-47.8 7-48.3 Sacked-Yards Lost 2 -12 3 - 13 RUSHING —Carolina: D.Williams 12-39, Tol- Punts 0-0 1-1 Punts 6-37.5 6-45.3 bert 4-31, Newton4-25. Arizona: Ellington 7-52, Fumbles-Lost Penal t i e s-Yards 8-88 12-136 Fumbl e s-Lost 1-1 2-1 Mendenhall 17-43,Smith1-(minus2), Pamer3Penalties-Yards 9 -61 6 - 35 (minus3). Time ofPossession 32;07 27:53 PASSING —Carolina: Newton 21-39-3-308. Time ofPossession 31;17 2 8:43 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Arizona: Palmer19-28-3-175. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RECEIVING —Carolina: Dlsen 5-79, Ginn Jr. RUSHING —Philadelphia: Vick 7-79, McCoy 4-78, S.Smith 4-60, LaFell 4-47, D.Williams2-30, 20-46, Brown5-11, Polk 2-3, Foles 3-1. N.Y. GiRUSHING —Kansas City: Charles 22-108, Tolbert 1-9, Barner1-5. Arizona: Fioyd 5-61, El- ants: Jacobs11-37,Wilson6-16. A.Smith3-10, Davis1-2. Tennessee: Fitzpatrick6lington4-31,Fitzgerald3-43, Smith3-20, Dray2-13, PASSING —Philadelphia: Foles 16-25-0-197, 50 Battle6-38, CJohnson10-17.
Cardinals 22, Panthers 6
Mendenhal2-7 l MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.
Eagles 36, Giants 21 P hiladelphia N.Y.Giants
3 16 3 14 — 3 6 7 0 14 0 — 2 1 First Quarter NYG —Wilson5run (J.Brownkick),11:37. Phi FG Henery40,6:49 SecondQuarter Phi — FGHenery27, 10:40. Phi — McCoy1run (Henerykick), 811. Phi FG Henery29,2:38 Phi — FGHenery36,:00. Third Quarter NYG —Randle 26 passfromManning (J.Brown kick), 6:58. NYG —Randle 6 pass from Manning (J.Brown kick), 3:46. Phi—FG Henery41, 1.04. Fourth Quarter Phi — Ceek 25 pass fromFoles (Henerykick), 10:26. Phi — Jackson 5 pass from Foles(Henery kick), 8:24. A—80,738.
Cleveland 37,Buffalo 24
Vick 6-14-0-105. N.Y. Giants: Manning24-52-3334. RECEIVING—Philadelphia: Jackson 7-132, McCoy6-46,Celek 3-47,Avant 3-33, Ertz 2-38, Brown1-6. N.Y. Giants: Nicks9-142,Randle6-96, Cruz5-48,Myers2-35, Jernigan2-13. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.
Chiefs 26, Titans17 KansasCity
Tennessee
7 6 0 1 3 — 26 0 8 10 7 — 1 7
First Quarter KC — Cooper fumblerecoveryin endzone(Succop kick), 11:40. SecondQuarter KC — FGSuccop29,14.55. KC FG Succop24, 09 Third Quarter Ten—C.Johnson49passfromFitzpatrick (Bironas kick), 12:09. Ten—FGBironas22,6:37. Fourlh Quarler Ten Fitzpatrick 9run(Bironaskick), 14:52. KC — Charles I run(Succopkick), 6:23. KC — FGSuccop33, 4:10. KC FG Succop48,2:12. A—69,143.
PASSING —Kansas City: A.Smith20-39-1-245. Tennessee:Fitzpatrick21-41-2-247. RECEIVING —Kansas City: Charles 5-37, McGrath4-54, Bowe4-35, Avery3-91, Sherman213, Hall 1-9,Hemingway1-6.Tennessee: Wright 6-74,C.Johnson 4-63, Walker 4-43 Washington 3-30, Battle 1-24, Britt 1-9, Williams 1-4, Fitzpatrick1-0. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Tennessee: Bironas
32 (WR).
Packers 22, Lions 9 Detroit
GreenBay
0 3 0 6 — 9 3 3 18 6 — 22
First Quarter GB — FGCrosby 26,1.24 SecondQuarter GB—FG Crosby 52,11:19. Det—FG Akers53,:15. Third Quarter GB — FGCrosby 31,5:04.
GB — J.Jones83passfrom Rodgers (Crosbykick) 3:12.
Fourth Quarter GB — FGCrosby 42,10.16. GB FG Crosby45,3:50. Det — Durham13passfromStafford (passfailed)
StL — Pettis 4 passfromBradford (Zuerlein kick), :27.
Third Quarter Det GB Jax — FGScobee34, 3:22. First downs 19 16 Fourth Quarter Total NetYards 2 86 44 9 StL — FGZuerlein 37, 14.47. Rushes-yards 19-64 33-180 Jax Shorts 4 passfromHenne(Scobeekick), Passing 222 269 10:22. 0 -0 4 - 14 PuntRetums StL — Pettis 31passtromBradtord (Zuerlein kick), KickottReturns 2-40 0-0 5:45. 0-0 0-0 InterceptionsRet. A—54,266. Comp-Att-Int 25-40-0 20-30-0 Sacked-YardsLost 5-40 1-5 Jax StL Punts 6-51.8 3-47.0 First downs 16 22 1-0 2-0 Fumbles-Lost TotalNetYards 363 351 Penalties-Yards 7-50 1 0-72 25-96 36-143 Rushes-yards Time ofPossession 27:41 32:19 Passing 2 67 20 8 4 -5 4 - 15 PuntRetums INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 2 -64 2 - 52 KickoffReturns BUSHING —Detroit: Bush 13-44, Bell 5-21, InterceptionsRet. 00 2 82 Stafford1-(minus1).GreenBay: Lacy23-99, Cobb Comp-Att-Int 16-32-2 19-34-0 2-72, Rodgers 5-8, Franklin 3-1. 2 -3 2- 1 4 Sacked-Yards Lost PASSING —Detroit: Stafford 25-40-0 262 Punts 5-48 2 7-40.9 Green Bay:Rodgers20-30-0-274. 3-1 1-0 Fumbles-Lost RECEIVING —Detroit: Pettigrew 4-59, Scheftler Penalties-Yards 4 -45 6 - 53 4-55, Bell4-30,Bush4-25,Durham 3-30,Broyles2- Time otPossession 24:41 35:19 27, Dgletree2-20,Edwards2-16. GreenBay: Finley 6-32, Nelson5-82, J.Jones4-127, Cobb4-35, Lacy INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 1-(minus2) RUSHING —Jacksonville: Jones-Drew 17-70, MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Todman 3-16, Gabbert 3-6, Forsett 1-2, Henne1-2. St. Louis: Stacy14-78,Richardson13-48,Cunningham 4-13,Bradford5-4. Bengals13, Patriots 6 PASSINGWacksonuttle: Gabbert9-19-2-181, Henne 7-13-0-89. St. Louis: Bradford19-34-0-222. New England 8 3 0 3 — 6 RECEIVING —Jacksonville: J.Blackmon5-136, Cincinnati 8 3 3 7 — 13 Shorts5-74, Harbor3-39, Jones-Drew2-16, Ta'ufo'ou SecondQuarter 1-5. St. Louis: Pettis 4-49,Kendricks4-37, Austin Cin — FGNugent 39,3.12. 3-32,Cook 3-26,Quick 2-45,Givens 2-16,Harkey NE —FG Gostkowski42,:08 1-17. Third Quarter MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Cin FG Nugent50,5:43. Fourth Quarter 0in —Green-Ellis I run (Nugentkick), 921. Ravens 26, Dolphins 23 NE— FG Gostkowski19,6.28. A—64,259. Baltimore 3 3 10 10 — 26 Miami 3 18 8 10 — 23 NE Cin First Quarler First downs 15 21 Bal — FGTucker 42,10 24. Total NetYards 2 48 34 1 Mia — FGSturgis 37, 2:16. Rushes-yards 18-82 39-162 SecondQuarter Passing 166 179 Bal — FGTucker 50, 11:52. PuntRetums 4 -43 3 - 17 Mia — FGSturgis 25, 8:07. KickottReturns 4 -93 1 - 29 Mia Clay 9 passfrom Tannehil (Sturgis kick), InterceptionsRet. 1-3 1-0 :46. Comp-Att-Int 18-38-1 20-27-1 Third Quarter Sacked-YardsLost 4 -31 4 - 33 Bal — Rice 2run (Tuckerkick),12:07. Punts 8-44 1 6-45.8 Bal — FGTucker 25, 4.18. Fumbles-Lost 4-1 I-I Fourth Quarter Penalties-Yards 0 -0 7 - 59 Bal — Rice 3run (Tuckerkick), 1206. Time ofPossession 25:44 34:16 Mia — FGSturgis 48, 9.38. Mia — R.Jones 25 interception return (Sturgis INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS kick), 8:03. RUSHING —New England: Blount 12-51, Bal—FG Tucker44, 1:42. Bolden5-24, Edelman1-7. Cincinnati: Green-Ellis A—68,342. 19-67,Bernard13-62,Dalton6-25,M.Jones1-8. PASSING —New England: Brady18-38-1-197. B al Mia Cincinnati: Daton20-27-1-212. First downs 20 10 RECEIVING —New England: Bolden 6-40, TotalNetYards 3 84 29 4 Amendoi a4-55,Thompkins3-16,Dobson2-49,Edel40-133 I 1-22 man 2-35, Hoomnaawanui 1-2. Cincinnati: Green Rushes-yards Passing 251 272 5-61, Eitert5-53, Gresham4-24, M.Jones2-39, Sanu 4 -50 1 - 11 PuntRetums 2-28, Bemard 2-7. 4 -128 2 - 49 Kickoff Returns MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. 0 -0 1 - 25 InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int 19-32-1 21-40-0 2 -18 6 - 35 Saints 26, Bears18 Sacked-Yards Lost 5-34 2 8-52.5 Punts 1-1 1-0 Newnrleans 6 14 3 3 — 2 6 Fumbles-Lost 6 -64 4 - 65 0 7 3 8 — 1 8 Penalties-Yards Chicago Time ofPossession 36;16 23:44 First Quarter ND — FGHart ey47, 7:38. ND — FGHartley19, 6:00. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS SecondQuarter RUSHING —Baltimore: Rice 27-74, Pierce11ND — Thomas 2 pass from Brees(Hartley kick), 46, Flacco2-13. Miami: Miller 7-15,Tannehil 2-6, Dan.Thomas 2-1. 5:57. Chi — Jefery 3 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), PASSING —Baltimore: Flacco 19-32-1-269. Miami: Tannehig21-40-0-307. 2:41. ND — Thomas25 passfrom Brees(Hartley kick), RECEIVING —Baltimore: TSmith 6-121, Rice 6-28, Doss3-58,Dickson2-51,Thompson2-11.Mi:23. Third Quarter ami: Wallace 7-105, Gibson4-74, Hartline4-60, Clay ND — FGHartley 36,8:03. 3-52 DanThomas2-11, Thigpen1-5 Chi — FG Gould 27,4:56. MISSED FIELDGOALS —Miami: Sturgis 57 Fourth tluarter (WL) ND — FGHartley 48,3:01. Chi Marshall 2 pass tromCutler (Forte run), Colts 34, Seahawks28 2:11. A—62,361. Seattle 12 7 9 0 — 28 Indianapolis 7 18 6 11 — 34 ND Chi First Quarter First downs 17 20 Sea—FGHauschka42, 11:40. Total NetYards 3 47 43 4 Sea —Tate 10passfrom Wilson (Hauschkakick), 28-66 18-94 Rushes-yards 6:14. Passing 2 81 34 0 Sea—Kearse safety, 4.53. 1 -2 1- 1 7 PuntRetums Ind — Hilton 73 passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick), 2 -38 2 - 49 KickoffReturns 1:04. 0-0 0-0 Interceptions Ret. SecondQuarter Comp-Att-Int 29-35-0 24-33-0 Ind — Howell 61blockedtield goalreturn(Vinatieri 2 -7 3 - 18 Sacked-YardsLost kick), 13:06. 4-48.8 4-45.3 Punts Sea Kearse 28 pass from Wilson (Hauschka 00 2-1 Fumbles-Lost 2 -10 6 - 4 3 kick), 5:57. Penalties-Yards Ind — FGVinatieri 41,:58. Time ofPossession 36;00 24:00 Third Quarter Sea—FGHauschka36,11:18. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Sea — F G H au schk a41, 8:12. RUSHING —New Orleans: Thomas19-36, ColInd — Hilton 29passfrom Luck(passtailed), 4:16. lins 3-11,Sproes3-10, K.Robinson3-9. Chicago: Sea —FGHauschka46,:35. Forte12-55,Cutler4-27, Bush2-12. PASSING— New Orleans:Brees 29-35-0-288. Chicago: Cutler24-33-0-358. RECEIVING —New Orleans: Graham10135, Thomas9-55, Collins 4-17, Sproles3-31, Coston 2-15, Toon1-35.Chicago: Jeffery10-218,M.Bennet 5-56, Forte4-40, Marshail4-30,E.Bennett1-14. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.
Fourlh Quarler Ind D.Brown 3 run (Waynepass tromLuck),
8:55. Ind —FGVinatieri 49,1:55. A—66,608 First downs Total NetYards
Sea
Ind
2-1
2-2
21 20 423 317 34 218 29-109 2 05 20 8 1-14 0-0 2-39 4 -107 0-0 1-0 15-31-1 16-29-0 2 -5 2 - 21 2-38.5 3-31.0
Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
7 -85 3 - 35 31.22 28.38
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Seattle: Lynch 17-102, Wilson13102, Turbin4-14 Indianapolis: Richardson18-56, D.Brown6-37,Luck4-9, Heyward-Bey1-7. PASSING —Seattle: Wilson 15-31-1-210.Indianapolis: Luck16-29-0-229. RECEIVING —Seattle: Baldwin 5-80,Tate5-61, Wigson2-28, Kearse128,Rice1-8, Lynch1-5 Indianapolis: Wayne 6-65, Hilton 5-140,Fleener2-15, D.Brown2-3,R.Hughes1-6 MISSEDFIELDGOALS— Seattle: Hauschka
48 (BK).
49ers 34, Texans3 0 0 3 0 — 3
Houston SanFrancisco
1 4 7 3 1 0 — 34 First Quarter SF — Brock 18 interception return(Dawsonkick),
13:30.
SF — Gore1run (Dawsonkick),1:37. SecondQuarter SF — Dixon2run (Dawson kick), 5:03. Third Quarter Hou FG Bullock41 12:01. SF — FGDawson38,5:15. Fourlh Quarter
SF — V.Davis 64 passfrom Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 14:16. SF — FGDawson24,10:46. A—69,732. Hou
First downs Total NetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickottReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
SF
17 17 3 13 28 4 30-131 36-177 1 82 10 7 3 -20 2 - 28 6 -140 1 - 29 0 -0 3 - 37 22-40-3 6-15-0 1-6 1-6 3-50.3 4-48.8 2-1 1-0 7 -52 3 - 17 33:52 26:08
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Houston: Foster21-98, Tate7-28, Wood1-5, Yates1-0. San Francisco: Gore17-81, James4-31,Hunter5-29, Kaepernick1-14, KWiliams 1 13, Dixon5 12,McCoy3-(minus 3). PASSING —Houston: Schaub 19-35-3-173, Yates3-5-0-15. San Francisco: Kaepernick6-150-113
RECEIVING —Houston: Daniels 6-60, Foster 4-20, Johnson3-39, Graham3-15, Hopkins2-23, Tate 2-12,Martin 1-14, Posey1-5. San Francisco: V Davis3-88,Boldin 2-21 Miller1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS —Houston: Bullock
45 (WL).
E HIGH DESERT BANK
III
e •
e
I
c.
u
e'
e
lES SCHNIB
SiSTTIRE VAEIi PROMISE •r I
r
I
d• I
'
I
Heartlaqd Paiqtiqg
Rams 34, Jaguars 20 Jacksonville St. Louis
10 0 3 7 — 20 7 17 0 10 — 34 First Quarter Jax — J.Blackmon67passfrom Gabbert(Scobee kick), 10:31. StL — Giordano 82 interception return (Zuerlein kick), 3:08. Jax — FGScobee48,:13. SecondQuarter StL FG Zuerlein32,12:03. StL — Kendricks 16 passfrom Bradford (Zuerlein kick), 11:34.
e
"Quality Painting Inside and Out"
Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years
Insured Bonded and Licensed <156I52 Phone: 541-383-2927 18633 Riverwoods Drive Email; heartlantJllc@msn.com
Bend, OR 97702 Inquire about trading goods for services.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013• THE BULLETIN
BS
NFL ROUNDUP
roncos o o o w o s,sa un eaen The Associated Press A RLINGTON, Texas — Peyton Manning spent all afternoon putting the Broncos in the end zone during a wild shootout with Tony Romo and the Dallas Cowboys. The last time he got the ball, Manning kept Denver out of the end zone — and that was the best way to win the game. The four-time MVP kept up his record pace for touchdown passes, Matt Prater kicked a 28-yard field goal as time expired after an interception by Romo spoiledthe first 500-yard game in Dallas history, and the Broncos stayed unbeaten with a 51-48 victory Sunday. "It was pretty amazing that it came down to the defense making a big play at the end," Denver coach John Fox said. "Thank God our offense kept us in the game all day long." In the waning seconds of one of the highest-scoring thrillers in NFL history, Manning ensured that his kicker — not Romo — had the last chance to score. And with that, the Broncos ran their total to 230 points this season — the most by an NFL team through the f irst f i ve
games. The Broncos had moved the ball to the Dallas 2 after Danny Trevathan's diving interception at the 24 in the final 2 minutes. Needing a first down but not a touchdown so they could run out the clock, Manning and Knowshon Moreno shouted at each other in the backfield just before the snap. "He basically was asking me, 'How am I supposed to do that? How can I get a half a yard but not get a yard and a half?' " said Manning, who threw for 414 yards and four touchdowns to give him a record-setting 20 in the first five
games. "I just said, 'You can't! You can't score! You can't do it! ' " Moreno managed to pull off the first down without scoring, and Manning took three snaps to drain the clock to 2 seconds for Prater, who also had a 50yarder among his three field goals. It was quite a debate over a measly yard in a game with 1,039 yards of total offense combined in the fourth-highest highest scoring game in NFL history and tied for the second-highest in regulation since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970, according to STATS. Romo was 25 of 36 for 506 yards and five touchdowns, breaking Don Meredith's franchise record of 460 yards. He is the fifth quarterback in NFL history to pass for at least 500 yards and five touchdowns in a game. Romo's 79-yard pass to Dez Bryant set up a 4-yard scoring toss to Cole Beasley for a 48-41 lead. Manning, who threw for 414 yards and moved past Dan Marino for second on the career passing list with 61,371 yards, answered by leading a nine-play, 73-yard drive to Moreno's tying I-yard score with 2:44 remaining. Romo's interception came two plays later, when Trevathan dived in front of tight end Gavin Escobar. "I was baiting him," said T revathan, who scared h i s teammates with a k n ee i njury in practice last week that turned out not to be serious. "Romothrewit and Ifelt like, man, hopefully I don't drop the ball when I get in the end zone this time. I fell to the ground and said, 'Forget it!' " The Cowboys were on the verge of getting blown out early in the second half when they finally stopped Manning and forced a field goal. They later ended his streak of 227 passes without an interception when Morris Claiborne picked him off late in the third quarter. D allas, which scored i t s most points ever in a loss, converted the turnover into a 41-38 lead on Romo's 10-yard pass to Witten, but the Broncos pulled even with a drive to Prater's 50-yarder. The b i ggest m o mentum swing came on Romo's 82yard touchdown to rookie Terrance Williams that cut Denver's lead to 35-27 in the third quarter. "So you leave this game and obviously you are crushed and disappointed," said W i t ten, who had 121 yards receiving
Lions minus star receiver Calvin Johnson, out with a knee
nine years, the other forcing a game-clinching fumble. Karinjury. Penalties also bogged los Dansby also had two sacks down Detroit. and an interception. Carolina Eagles 36, Giants 21: EAST (1-3), playing for the first time RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Nick since a 38-0 victory over the Foles threw for tw o t ouch- New York Giants two weeks downs and led four scoring ago, managed only Graham drives after taking over for an Gano's field goals of 22 and 51 injured Michael Vick late in the yards. second quarter, and PhiladelRams 34, Jaguars 20: ST. phia kept the New York Giants LOUIS — Sam Bradford threw winless. Foles threw fourth- three touchdown passes and quarter touchdown passes of Matt Giordano's 82-yard in25 yards to Brent Celek and terception return was one of 5 yards to DeSean Jackson several big plays from the St. as the Eagles (2-3) snapped a Louis defense against winless three-game losing streak by Jacksonville. Austin Pettis' 31forcing t h re e i n t erceptions yard TD catch with 5:45 to go by Eli Manning in the fourth was his second of the day and quarter. Vick left the game put the Rams (2-3) up by two with a hamstring injury late in scores. St. Louis, which had the second quarter. trailed by double digits in ev49ers 34, Texans 3: SAN ery game, established control FRANCISCO — T r a m aine with a 17-point second quarter B rock int e rcepted Mat t after Jacksonville (0-5) had Schaub's first pass of the night a pair of early leads. Jaguars and returned it 18 yards for quarterback Blaine Gabbert a touchdown, Schaub threw injured his left hamstring in three interceptions in all be- the third quarter. Rookie left Tony GUtierrez / The Associated Press fore the embattled quarterback tackleLuke Joeckelwas cartDenver Broncos tight end Julius Thomas (80) gets past Dallas Cowboys outside linebacker Bruce got replaced in the fourth, and ed off with a right ankle injury Carter to score a touchdown during the second quarter ef Sunday's game in Arlington, Texas. San Francisco pounded Hous- in the first. ton. Colin Kaepernick threw Raiders 27, Chargers 17: a 64-yard touchdown pass to OAKLAND, Calif. — Terrelle and a touchdown. "Offensively, perfect start. The Chiefs (5-0) son on fourth down to keep Vernon Davis and Frank Gore Pryor completed 18 of his 23 this needs to be the standard are off to their best start since Miami's hopes alive, but Caleb ran for 81 yards and a score pass attempts for 221 yards by which we play." 2003, when they won their first Sturgis then missed a 57-yard in his second straight impres- and two touchdowns as OakThe Cowboys jumped ahead nine games. This win came de- field goal attempt wide left sive prime-time game. The land (2-3) built a 17-0 half14-0 in the first quarter, but spite blowing a 13-0 halftime with 33 seconds to go. The Ra- 49ers (3-2) are right back in time lead, then held off San Dallas defenders just couldn't lead in this early AFC show- vens (3-2) bounced back from the NFC West race with Se- Diego (2-3) late. The Chargers stay with Denver's receivers. down between these surpris- a loss last week at Buffalo and attle after the Seahawks (4-1) scored two touchdowns in the Then Manning fooled them ing teams bouncing back after won on the road for the first lost at Indianapolis (Story, B4). fourth quarter, but Sebastian and the 92,758 watching his losing seasons. The Titans (3- time this season. The Dolphins Each team has beaten the Tex- Janikowski's late 50-yard field first game at the $1.2 billion 2) couldn't have been more out (3-2) lost their second game in ans (2-3) and lost to the Colts, goal and D.J. Hayden's interhome of the Cowboys with of synch in the first half with a row. and Seattle still must visit San ception helped the R aiders a bootleg for an easy I-yard Ryan Fitzpatrick starting for Packers 22, Lions 9: GREEN Francisco on Dec. 8. hang on. score and a 28-17 lead late in Jake Locker, sidelined with his BAY, Wis. — James Jones Cardinals 22, Panthers 6: the first half. sprained right hip. He missed caught a long touchdown pass GLENDALE, Ariz. — Arizona Denver lined up for what his first five passes and went from A a ron R o dgers, and sacked Cam Newton seven looked like a run onthird down three-and-out on his first five Green Bay'sdefense contained times, once for a safety, and NQRTHWEsT from the 1. But Manning had seriesbefore guiding Tennes- the undermanned Lions. Ma- intercepted him on three ocFeatured Business faked the handoff, and the roar see to 17 straight points in the son Crosby kicked five field casions to overcome a sluggish of the week: from thousands of orange-clad second half. goals. The Packers' offense offensive performance. Daryl Denver fans grew as they realRavens 26,Dolphins 23: MI- struggled to get into the end Washington, back after servized he was jogging toward the AMI GARDENS, Fla. — Justin zone until R o dgers f ound ing a four-game suspension for left corner of the end zone for Tucker kicked a 44-yard field Jones on an 83-yard comple- violating the NFL's substance his first touchdown rushing goal to put Baltimore ahead tion down the left sideline for abuse policy, had two sacks since 2008. with 1:42 left, and they witha 16-3 lead late in the third and an interception for Arizo"The key is you want to do stood a frantic comeback bid. quarter. It provided enough na (3-2). Calais Campbell had 541-647-6911 it about every five years or Ryan Tannehill completed a of acushion for a defense that two sacks, one for Arizona's 2754 NW Crossing Dr. ¹102 westsidebarbershopn>Ux. com so," Manning said. "If you do 46-yard pass to Brandon Gib- had the luxury of facing the first regular-season safety in •
•
~~$
it every game, they're going to be playing it right. Naked bootlegs only work, the ones I've done, is when you don't tell
anybody." Romo got Dallas in position for a 48-yard field goal by Dan Bailey just b efore halftime with a 38-yard completion to Williams, who had 151 yards
receiving. B ryant h a d s i x ca t c h e s for 141 yards and t w o touchdowns. Julius Thomas led the Broncos with 122 yards and two scores, and Moreno had 93 yards rushing for Denver. Also on Sunday: Saints 26, Bears 18:CHICAGO — Drew Brees threw two touchdown passes to Pierre Thomas, Jimmy Graham tied an NFL record with another 100-yard game and New Orleans r e mained u n beaten. Brees was 29 of 35 for 288 yards in his first victory in four career games at Soldier Field. Garrett Hartley matched a career high with four field goals
•
•
•
~
:
•
:
• '
0
Op Pp~ /g
'
•
•
•
•
g
•
•
0 •
«g g'g
/p
zgg ~
lnCAI!IEIAILE!!3 !ILL IE!!ie al!I II II16
r'
• qzc> GGC" Ci'~
as New Orleans (5-0) picked up its first win in Chicago since a 31-10 victory on Oct. 8, 2000. Graham continued his torrid start for the Saints (5-0), catching 10 balls for 135 yards in his fourth consecutive 100-yard game — matching anNFL record for a tight end. Tony Gonzalez was the first to accomplish the streak in 2000, and Graham matched it in 2011. Bengals 13, Patriots 6: CINCINNATI Ben Jarvus Green-Ellis ran 1 yard in the fourth quarter for the game's only touchdown, and Cincinnati ended Tom Brady's long streak of touchdown passes in defeating previously unbeaten
New England. The Bengals (32) sacked Brady four times and
kept New England (4-1) out of the end zone on a first-andgoal from the I-yard line late in the fourth quarter. Adam "Pacman" Jones picked off Brady's desperation pass inside the 5yard line with 16 seconds left to clinch it. Brady had thrown a touchdown pass in 52 straight games, second-longest in NFL history behind Drew Brees. The Patriots were held out of the end zone for the first time since a 16-9 loss to the Jets on Sept. 20, 2009. Chiefs 26, Titans17: NASHVILLE, T enn. Jamaal Charles scored a 1-yard touchdown with 6:23 left, and Kansas City rallied to keep up its
•
I
I J I
~
I
I
B6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
Harvic winswrec - i e NA A R raceatKansas By Dave Skretta The Associated Press
+
KANSAS CI T Y , K an. — Kevin Harvick didn't simply have his hands full with the rest of the Sprint Cup field Sunday. He also was trying to tame a squirrely surface at Kansas Speedway. He handled both better than
sp.
MOHNTON, Pa.— John Force raced to his second straight Funny Car victory to open a 65-point lead with two events left in the NHRA's Countdown to the Championship. The 64year-old Force, a record 15time season champion, won for the third time this year and the record 137th time in his unprecedented career. He beat rookie Chad Head in the final round with a 4.106-second run at 313.37 mph in a Ford Mustang. Shawn Langdon won in Top Fuel to extend his points lead, beating defending series champion Antron Brown in the final with a 3.779 at 323.81. J eg Coughlin wo n i n P r o Stock to take the season lead, and points leader Matt Smith topped the Pro Stock Motorcycle field. Vettel wins Korean Grand Prix: YEONGAM, South Korea — Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel won an eventful Korean Grand Prix to close in on his fourth straight Formula One championship. The German led throughout the race, but two safety-car periods and significant graining on his tires made for a hard-fought win. He finished 4.2 seconds ahead of Lotus' K im i R a i kkonen, who was just ahead of teammate Romain Grosjean. Vettel now leads the drivers' championship by 77 points with only five races remaining and looks increasingly certain to win the title.
Franchitti, who also sustained aconcussion, was transported by ambulance to a hospital. IndyCar said the four-time series champion would be held overnight, and that a series official was treated for minor injuries. The accident in Turn 5 was reminiscent of Dan Wheldon's fatal 2011 crash at Las Vegas in that competitors had to drive through
Ir
gQ
Harvick pulled away from Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon on a late restart to win a wreckfilled race over the recently repaved track, keeping his No. 29 Chevrolet out of t r ouble all afternoon and making a big move in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. "It was an interesting weekend, to say the least," said Harvick, who moved into third in points behind leaders Matt Kenseth and Jimmie Johnson. "Everybody was battling the tires and the track, and I think it was like driving on a razor blade." Harvick sat on the pole for the first time in 254 races, and that should have given him some confidence. He also won the last time he qualified first, at New Hampshire in 2006. "These guys just did a great job all weekend," Harvick said. "To have a car fast enough for me to qualify on the pole says a lot about how fast this thing
John pads Funny Car lead:
HOUSTON — Three-time Indianapolis 500winner Dario Franchitti fractured two vertebrae and broke his right ankle when his car went airborne into a fence Sunday on the last lap of the Grand Prix of Houston. The accident showered debris into the grandstand, injuring 13 fans and an lndyCar Series official.
rr'
anybody else.
worst tires I've ever driven on, and track position is everything. You can't do anything." Also on Sunday:
Franchitti injured dadly,Powertriumphs and Dixon takespoints lead in IndyCar
the wreckage. It was a sobering moment for race winner Will Power, who broke his back in the Las Vegas crash, and for Scott Dixon, who
took control of the IndyCar championship raceSunday but passed by teammate Franchitti's car and waved in an attempt to get an update on his condition. The accident ended a weekend that saw Dixon move into the points lead following mechanical failures for Helio Castroneves on
Colin E. Braley/The Associated Press
Kevin Harvick celebrates after winning the Hollywood Casino 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup race in Kansas City, Kan., on Sunday.
consecutive days. Kenseth held onto his lead in the Chase with an 11th-place finish. Johnson narrowed the gap to three points, while Harvick closed to within 25 points heading to Charlotte. "We just got to keep doing what we did today to be a contender," said his car owner, Richard Childress. "I don't think top 10s will win a championship when you're racing Jimmie Johnson and the group of guys that are up there." K yle Busch was th e b i g loser after crashing out of his third straight Sprint Cup race at Kansas. He dropped from third in points to fifth, 35 out of first place. "All-in-all just a crazy day," said Johnson, who shaved five points off of Kenseth's lead. "Wacky restarts, a lotofchaos there, and caution after cau-
1s.
Harvick was chased across the line by Busch and Gordon. Joey Logano finished fourth, Carl Edwards was fifth, and Johnson finished sixth despite a hiccup with his engine on the final lap that cost him a spot on the track.
Inches
"you can't just put your arm around a guy and say that's Continued from B1 OK when that happens." On Thursday it appeared Retired Texas A8tM athletic Texas running back Johna- director Bill Byrne, now free than Gray fumbled near the to express his feelings withgoal line to seal what should out reprisal, tweeted out about have been a n I o w a S t ate Texas, "When tu needs a call, upset. they get it." We're absolutely convinced Officials ruled, though, that Gray's progress had been the lowercase reference to stopped and Texas should get Texas was intentional. at least one more chance to The Big 12, following up steal victory. C onfirmation with due diligence, issued a came when the Big 12 replay statement Friday a dmitting booth upheld the call on the that the referees got it ... right. field. What mistake? "We do n o t h av e v i deo Texas scored and won. Instead of preparing the exit evidence to prove that one papers for Coach Mack Brown occurred,"said Walt Anderthe Longhorns left Ames at 4- son, the league's director of 2 and also tied for first place in officials. the Big 12. • Dateline Knoxville, Tenn.: Iowa State C oach P a ul One-loss Georgia could not Rhoads gave an award-win- have remained in the national ningpostgamespeechinwhich title race with a second loss he tip-toed around a huge fine against a Tennessee team that and suspension while deliver- Oregon led, 59-0, after three ing a deep-throated condem- quarters. nation. Rhoads, wisely, used Defeatsure looked possible, his playersas cover in saying though, when Tennessee re-
tion for who knows what." There were 15 cautions in the race, breaking the record of 14 set in last year's race. The first came when the race w asn't even a la p ol d a n d Danica Patrick slammed into the wall, and most of them occurred when cars got loose coming out of Turn 2. K enseth both c a lled t h e race "treacherous," pointing to the combination of a repave last year and Goodyear's new "multi-zone" tires that made it seem as if they were skating across a smooth, glasslike surface most of the afternoon. All of it was compounded by temperatures in the 50s at the start,more than 30 degrees cooler than practice earlier in the week. One of the intriguing story lines coming into the race in-
ceiver Alton "Pig" Howard zipped around right and dived toward the pylon for the goahead touchdown in overtime. This Pig must have been g reased because th e b a l l squirted out of Howard's hand through the end zone for a touchback. Georgia took p ossession, kicked a field goal, and won, 34-31. "He tried to make a play and unfortunately it slipped out of his hands," Tennessee coach Butch Jones said of Pig's play. Whew. Georgia's near miss against an average Southeastern Conference team cost it almost nothing in the big picture. The Bulldogs dropped only on spot, to No. 7, in both polls and still don't have to meet Alabama until the SEC title game. • Da teline Evanston, Ill.: This was the year Northwest-
ern (4-0) was finally going to beat Ohio State (5-0) after losing 28 out of the past 29. Victory was nine minutes away
Castroneves arrived in Houston with a 49-point lead over Dixon. But a gearbox problem Saturday when Dixon won allowed Dixon to pull within eight points. Then his gearbox broke on Sunday, and Dixon now hasa 25-pointlead in the standings and needs only to finish fifth or better in the Oct. 19 finale in California to win his third IndyCar title. — The Associated Press
volved Chase contender Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski, who got together in the Nationwide race Saturday. Keselowski said that Busch intentionally dumped him and seemed to indicate he would retaliate in the Sprint Cup race. Keselowski even asked NASCAR President Mike Helton in the prerace driver's meeting about the line between hard racing and intentional wrecks. It turned out that Busch kept going for spins without Keselowski's help.
The first one came down the front stretch when he appeared to squeeze Juan Pablo Montoya, sending Busch sideways across the track. The second spin came after a restart a moment later, and this one sent his No. 18 Toyota head-first into the Turn 1 wall and ended his day. "I have no idea what happened, but it's Kansas. It's what we do here, we just crash," Busch said. "The racetrack is the worstracetrack I'veever driven on. The tires are the
when the W i ldcats took a fourth-quarter lead. But then came two photo-finishes. The first came when Ohio State tailback Carlos Hyde appeared to be stopped short of the end zone. The replay, though, confirmed Hyde had somehow extended the ball to breach the end-zone line for the go-ahead touchdown. N orthwestern's dr e a m s were i r r evocably h i j acked when quarterback Kain Colter was reportedly stopped on fourth and short from the Ohio State 34-yard line. N orthwestern coach P a t Fitzgerald wisely challenged the spot but lost, which cost him a timeout and any chance to manage the clock. "I tried to make a play for our guys," Fitzgerald later explained. Ohio Statewon, 40-30, on a last-ditch Keystone Kops play that involved Northwestern botching an attempt to re-create Cal's 1982 kickoff return against Stanford.
The m eaningless t ouchdown "only" mattered in Las
Vegas.
• Dateline Palo Alto, Calif.: The final was Stanford 31 and Washington 28, but that wasn't the end of it. Stanford never trailed but the game came down to a complicated replay call. Washington quarterback Keith Price, facing fourth down at the Stanford 49, threw what was ruled a completepass to receiver Kevin Smith. Near-the-scene S t a nford losing." coaches and players screamed that Smith trapped the ball, and the play was reviewed by the booth. After a long delay, the pass 541-548-2066 was ruled i n complete and Stanford ran out the final 1:16 of the game. MED- I F T Stanford improved to 5-0 and held preciously onto its No. 5 national ranking. Voters thankfully noted how hard Washington (4-1) competed M XTTR E S S and dropped the Huskies only G allery-Be n d one AP ranking to No. 16. It 541-330-5084
WILSONSof Redmond
•
go (@ 9 ;
•~
wasn't enough t o a p pease Coach Steve Sarkisian, who now must regroup for next week's home game against No. 2 Oregon. "I wish the game would have got won on the field and not in a booth upstairs," Sarkisian said. "I don't get to sit 50 yards up in a booth and play video games and make the call." Yep, it' s a game of inches all right, with this important Sarkisian cliche as addendum: "There are no awards for
,
0
(a,
d
YOU
CAN WIN! A 8100 Gift C ertificat e
-'-
to one of
•s
•
these
businesses: ersNo
PET OEXPllESS Good at both locations and the eastside grooming
service
I
' I
I
I I I
I I
s
i
i
s
e
I
I
s
s~
Qs
We want to see your pup go after The Bulletin. Gef the most votes from adoring readers and your dog could win! Our contest will award $100 gift certificates fo two lucky dogs: the most popular successful retrieval of the paper(Good Dog! j and the most popular attempt tNice l Try!). H ERE'S HOW T O E N T E R :
1. YIDEO YOUR PUP
2. TITLE YOUR YIDEO
3. EMAIL THE LINK
and upload the video to your YouTube or vimeo account.
"Good dog: (your dog's name)" or "Nice try: (your dog's name)"
lo your video lo gooddogobendbulletin.com.
F OR OFFI C IA L RU LES VI SI T b e n d b u l l e t i n .com / g o o d d o g c o n t e st : Deadlinetoenter
OGT6lH Votingcloses
CT13'T
V ie w a n d v o t e a t ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m / g o o d d o g
+'INNpgg ANNOUNCE
0<> 1srH
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013• THE BULLETIN
O M M U N IT Y
Email events at least 10days before publication to sportsCbendbulletin. com or click on "Submit an Event"at www bendbulletin com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.
P OR T S
TRINITY BIKES RIDES: Group road and mountain bike rides starting in Redmond at PRIVATE INSTRUCTION: With former Bend Trinity Bikes; Wednesdays; 5:30 p.m. road ride, Thursdays; 6 p.m. mountain bike ride; Elks and minor league player Dave McKae; casual pace; 541-923-5650. pitching and hitting instruction; video analysis optional; $40 for 40-minute lesson PINE MOUNTAINSPORTS BIKE RIDE: or $55 for1-hour video analysis; 541-480- Twice-monthly guided mountain bike rides hosted by Pine Mountain Sports and open 8786; pitchingperfection©gmail.com. to all riders; 5:30 p.m. on the first and third PRIVATE LESSONS:With former Bend Elk Wednesdays of each month; free; rental Ryan Jordan; specifically for catching and and demo bikes available at no charge (be hitting but also for all positions; available at the shop at 5 p.m.); meet Pine Mountain after3 p.m.weekdays,open scheduling on Sports in Bend; 541-385-8080; www. weekends; at Bend Fieldhouse or agreedpinemountainsports.com. upon location; $30 per half hour or $55 WORKING WOMEN'SROAD RIDE: per hour; discounts for multiple players Casual-paced road bike ride for women, in a single session, referrals or booking 90 minutes-2 hours;5:30 p.m.,M ondays; multiple sessions; cash only; 541-788meet at Sunnyside Sports in Bend; 2722, rjordan©uoregon.edu. 541-382-8018. EUROSPORTSRIDE: Group road bike ride starting in Sisters from Eurosports; CLIMBING Saturdays, Tuesdays, Thursdays; check OUTSIDE YOUTH CLINIC: March 8-9, 8 with the shop for start time; all riders a.m. to 3 p.m.; ages10and over; $100; welcome; 541-549-2471; www.eurosports. www.bendenduranceacademy.org. us. YOUTH SATURDAYS:September through HUTCH'S NOON RIDE: Group road bike Oct.26,8a.m.to 3 p.m.;ages10 and over; ride starting in Bend from Hutch's Bicycles $100; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. east-side location, at noon on Mondays, W ednesdays, Fridays;and from Hutch's DEVELOPMENT TEAM:September through Jan. 30; Mondays and Thursdays, west-side location at noon on Tuesdays, Thursdays; pace varies; 541-382-6248 or 4 to 6 p.m.; ages10-18; at Bend Rock www.hutchsbicycles.com. Gym; $480 plus gym membership; www. bendenduranceacademy.org. HUTCH'S SATURDAYRIDE: Group road bike ride begins at10 a.m. Saturdays in HOME-SCHOOL CLIMBING:Oct.22-Dec. 3; Tuesdays,11 a.m. to1 p.m.; $100; www. Bend from Hutch's Bicycles east-side location in Bend; approximately 40 miles; bendenduranceacademy.org. vigorous pace; 541-382-6248; www. hutchsbicycles.com.
BASEBALL
Wednesday through Sunday; starts at $375; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. YOUTH PROGRAM: MBSEFStevenson Youth Program; ages 7-11; Dec. 26-March; www.mbsef.org. MIDDLE SCHOOLPROGRAM: MBSEF middle school program; ages11-14; Nov. 12-March; www.mbsef.org. HIGH SCHOOLPROGRAM: MBSEFhigh school program; ages14 and older; Nov. 12-March; www.mbsef.org. MASTERS PROGRAM: MBSEFmasters program; ages 21 and older; Nov.12March; www.mbsef.org. HOME-SCHOOL NORDIC: Ages11-18;Jan. 14-Feb. 18 Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m to 2 p.m.; $100; www.bendenduranceacademy.org.
learn to avoid injury, run properly, develop a consistent program and achieve goals; $75; 541-317-3568; footzonebend.com. ANABELLE'SANGEL GLOW 5K/2K:Glowin-the dark run that benefits Anabelle W ilson, a Bendyouth who has been diagnosed with noncurable metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD); all participants receive a glow necklace; bright colors encouraged; Oct.18;6:15 p.m .;Bend'sOld Mill; $25 adults, $15 kids; www.angelglow. Ol'g.
HAPPY DIRTY GIRLS: Nov. 1; 8 a.m.; race begins at FivePine Lodge & Conference Center in Sisters; registration open for half marathon and 5K trail runs; $25-$80; happygirlsrun.com/dirtygirls. LORD'S ACRE10K/5K: Tenth annual church fundraiser; at Powell Butte Christian Church on Highway126 between Redmond and PADDLING Prineville; Nov. 2, 9 a.m.; pickhardt5© yahoo.com. KAYAK ROLLSESSIONS: Sundays; 4:15JINGLEBELL RUN/WALK FOR ARTHRITIS: 6 p.m.; Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, Bend; sessions limited to12 boats, advance Dec. 7; 11 a.m.; Brandis Square, downtown Bend; 5K run/walk, 1-mile walk and kids' registration recommended; boats must be fun run; proceeds benefit the Arthritis clean, and paddles must be padded and Foundation; $20 adults, $10 kids; taped; no instruction provided; $12 per boat registration requested; 888-391-9823; for park district residents, $16 otherwise; www.bendjinglebellrun.org. 541-389-7275; bendparksandrec.org. KAYAKING: For all ages; weekly classes and REDMOND OREGON RUNNINGKLUB (RORK): Weekly run/walk; Saturdays open pool; equipment provided to those at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for who preregister, first come, first served more information and to be added to a otherwise; Sundays,4-6 p.m., Cascade weekly email list, email Dan Edwards Swim Center, Redmond; $3; 541-548-7275; at rundanorun19@yahoo.com; follow raprd.org. Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP: Weekly PICKLEBALL runsonTuesdays at6:30 p.m.;meetat314 CYCLING S.W. Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of BEND PICKLEBALL CLUB: MondaysCOTA MOVIE NIGHT: "Transition 2: Cross DISC GOLF 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; pia@ Fridays, 10 a.m.-noon (approximately), the Pond", cyclocross film Thursday, Oct. runaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. Larkspur Park in Bend; weather permitting; WOMEN'S LEAGUE:Free league at Bend 17, 9 p.m.; Old St. Francis School Theater; rsss@bendbroadband.com; Saturdays, MOMS RUNNING GROUP:Thursdays; Pine Nursery every Thursday at 6 p.m. Belgian 'cross races trough the eyes of 8-10a.m., Mountain View High School 9:30a.m.;meetatFootZone,downtown No registration is needed. For more American racers; $5; 21 and over; raises tennis courts, $3-5 donation requested; Bend; all moms welcome with or without information, call 541-550-8541 or go to money for Central Oregon Trail Alliance; M onday, Wednesday, Friday,9-11 a.m ., strollers; 4.5-mile run (or less) at mile www.codgc.com. www.cotamtb.com Summit High School tennis courts, weather pace of 9-12 minutes; designed for new MOUNTAINBIKING FOR ELEMENTARY permitting; Mondays, 12:45-2:45 p.m., runners, moms just getting backto STUDENTS: Skill progressions for Wednesdays, 8-10 a.m.,and Saturdays, running or experienced runners; runs HIKING 8-11 a.m.; Athletic Club of Bend (indoors), elementary students, ages 6-12; earlyoccur in all weather conditions; lisa.nasrO release Wednesdays; September $15 drop-in fee (includes full club usage), me.com. THE ARTOF TRACKING ANIMALS: Guided 541-385-3062; Mondays, Wednesdays, through Oct. 16;1-5 p.m.; $100; www. MOVE IT MONDAYS: Mondays at5:30 walks and workshops with a professional bendenduranceacademy.org. Thursdays, 9-11 a.m., Valley View tennis p.m.; carpool from FootZone to trailhead tracker; ongoing; 8 a.m.-noon; learn to courts, 3660 S.W. Reservoir Drive, MOUNTAIN BIKING FORJUNIOR HIGH when scheduled (first and third Mondays of identify and interpret tracks, signs and Redmond, weather permitting, jsmckO STUDENTS: Skill progressions for each month); all other runs start and finish scat of animals in the region; two or hotmail. com; Mondays and Wednesdays, elementary students, ages10-18; earlyat FootZone, downtown Bend; 3-5 miles; more walks per month; $35; 541-6334-6 p.m., indoor courts at Sage Springs release Wednesdays; transportation paces 7-12 minutes per mile; melanie@ 7045; dave©wildernesstracking.com; Club 8 Spa, Sunriver, $7.50 drop-in fee provided from school; September footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. wildernesstracking.com. (includes full club usage), call 541-593through Oct. 16;1-5 p.m.; $100; www. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 7890 in advanceto sign up;weekly play bendenduranceacademy.org 5:30 p.m. on Tuesdays; with Max schedules also available at The Racquet HOME -SCHOOLP.E: September through King; locations vary; interval-based; all HORSES Shoppe in Bend; www.bendpickleballclub. Oct. 16; Tuesdays; ages11-18; $100; www. ability levels; max©footzonebend.com; com; bendpickleballclubcehotmail.com. bendenduranceacademy.org ROLLING RANCH INSISTERS: Open for 541-317-3568. trail-course practice and shows; ongoing; YOUTH CYCLOCROSS TEAM:Bend ASKTHE EXPERTS: Tuesdays; 6 p.m.; $10 per horse; 69516 Hinkle Butte Dr., Enduranceacademy youth team;four-dayat FootZone, downtown Bend; informal, ROLLER SPORTS Sisters; Shari, 541-549-6962. and two-day-a-week programs; ages10drop-in Q-and-A session with a physical 18; September through November, $550, therapist; teague©footzonebend.com; ADULT OPENPLAY ROLLER HOCKEY: four-day program; $290, two-day program; 54 I-3 I7-3568. Sundays,6:30-8 p.m.;$5;CascadeIndoor www.bendenduranceacademy.org NORDIC SKI Sports, Bend; www.cascadeindoorsports. NOON TACORUN: Wednesdays atnoon; com; 541-330-1183. FIX-A-FLAT CLINIC: Learn how to repair a meet at FootZone, downtown Bend; order STRENGTH ANDCONDITIONING: punctured mountain- or road-bike tire; 10 a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and OPEN ROLLERSKATING: For all ages and September through Nov. 15; 10-week a.m.Sundays; SunnysideSports in Bend; it will be ready upon return; teague© ability levels; $5 per skater (includes skate preseasonconditioning camp; Wednesdays free; 541-382-8018. rental), children under 5 are free; Tuesdays, footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. 1 to 4:15 p.m. or Fridays 3 to 5:30 p.m.; 12:30-3:30 p.m.; Wednesdays, 1-4 p.m.; BEND BELLACYCLISTS: Weekly womenone-day a week, $150 or two-day a week LEARN TORUNGROUPRUN: Fridays, 2-5 p.m .and 6-9 p.m.;Saturdays, only group road and mountain bike rides; for $280; www.bendenduranceacademy. Wednesdays,5:30 p.m.;meetatFootZone, 1-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.; Sundays, 1-4 p.m.; see website for additional dates and DRYLAND TRAINING: MBSEF's fall training 541-330-1183; callie©cascadeindoorsoccer. downtownBend;conversational-paced meeting times; bendbellacyclists.org. runs of 2-3 miles; beginners and all paces program; September through November; com; www.cascadeindoorsports.com. welcome; 541-317-3568. INDOORCYCLINGCLASSES: At Powered www.mbsef.org. by Bowen, Bend; limited to eight riders per WEEKLY RUNS: Wednesdays at 6 p.m.; NORDIC FALL LADIES: Eight-week class; classes based on each rider's power fall nordic training session for women; Fleet Feet Sports Bend; 3-5 miles; two RUNNING output for an individual workout in a group September through Oct. 29, every groups, different paces; 541-389-1601. setting; all classes 60 minutes except Tuesday from 9 to11:45 a.m; $120; www. YOGA FORRUNNERS: Wednesdays at HALF MARATHON TRAINING PROGRAM: for Saturdays (85 minutes) and Sundays bendenduranceacademy.org. 7 p.m.; at Fleet Feet Sports Bend; $5 per Eight-week program on Saturdays (180 minutes); at noon on Mondays; at session or $50 for12 sessions; focuses which started on Sept. 7; 8 a.m.; with COMPETITIVE NORDIC PROGRAM: 6:30 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 4:45 p.m. and 6 p.m. on strengthening and lengthening September through May1; for athletes14 coaching, clinics, group runs, weekly on Tuesdays; at 6:30 a.m., 9:30 a.m., muscles and preventing running injuries; and over; five or six days a week; $2,200; workout schedules and a mentor for each noon and 5:30 p.m. on Wednesdays; at 541-389-1 601. pace group;$65-$75;541-317-3568; or$1,500from Nov.19- May1; www. 6:30 a.m., noon, 4:45 p.m. and 6 p.m. bendenduranceacademy.org. footzonebend.com. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUN: on Thursdays; at 9:30 a.m. on Fridays; Thursdays; 5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call at8:30a.m. on Saturdays;at8 a.m .on HIGH SCHOOLNORDIC TEAM: Nov.20LEARN TORUN: Four-week program on Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more Sundays; $18 or15 points on Power Pass March19; Additional training for nordic M ondays and Wednesdays starting Oct. information. athletes who are still involved with high per class; www.poweredbybowen.com, 7; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend; 541-585-1500. school skiing; one to three days a week, for beginning runners and fitness walkers; STRENGTH TRAININGFOR RUNNERS:
Bowling
Rimrock Lanes,Prineville
weeks,sept.25-0ct.1 Grizzly Mountain Men'sLeague
Casino Fun — Sparethe Strikes; MikeSima,252/707; EdieRobuck,181/500. His and Hers —StorageCentral; Jerry Collier, 289/740; HeatherDaggert,226/640. Guysand Gals— Team 6;TobyCundell,224/660;Margaret Donohue,181/512. LavaLanesClassic— Team 12,JaymeDalke,300/767; Debbie Smith,208/530. Rejects — FourHopefuls;DougGray, 214/617; Shirley King, 171/487. Wednesday Inc.— Up YourAlley; AmandaAldridge, 299/699,Tobycundell, 279/751. TeaTimers —Inspiration Strikes; JoGordon,207/574. TNT —DaveGrimes, 256/709; Patti sundita222/605. Progressive —G'sUp;SteveWilson, 274/710. Latecomers — We'reRolling Now;BeckyZlmmerman, 180/517. FreeBreathers —Team4,JerryEdwards,257/705; Sandi Davis, 21 0/565 T.G.I.F.—Strikersproshop;BryanMeeker, 257/751; Joy Reeves,226/575. Draft — Team 1; Wilie Sernett, 258/672;SusanWaltosz, 196/543.
Leaguehighscores
Watch
Team highs —ScratchgamePrineville Reservoir Resort, 957; Scratch series KBWEngineering, 3,039;Handicapgame: CougarCuts, 1,149;Handicapseries, Prlnevlle Heatingand Cooling,3,335. Individual highs — Scratchgame:Colby Hawes, 252; Scratch series,MarkHanken,67t; Handicapgame:RoyFuller, 268; Handicap series, DanRohr, ir.,75a
Running Running onFaith 5K DowntownBend
oct. 5
1, RosDe ems, 20:09.2,pat Creedican,23:40. 3, Charlie Hobin, 24:24.4, MicheleWatters, 24:27.5, BobWatters, 24:52. 6, SarahCreedican,2C:40. 7, Jill Wlmer,27:38. 8,AmyHolcomb, 27:44. 9,PeterDavlo, 27:48. 10,WadeFages, 28:48. 11, StellaHyde, 30.44.12, LynnHyde,30:45. 13, Brenden Crouse,31:12.14,LeanneContreras, 31:13. 15, ColeYoung, 32:04. 16,Colin Gallivan,32:05 17,Toddcrouse, 3250. 18, DennisDempsey,35:21.19, Kinley Wigle, 36:00. 20, Mikayla Pohe,36:06. 21, NicoleGallivan, 36:3a 22, GraysonFreellng, 3634. 23, DylanDostal,38:4424,KevinDostal,38:49.25, TamaraDostal, 58:09.26,RosellaKaiser,58:11.27, Kelly Plumkett,59:02. 28, CatherineImwalle,t:01:47.29, Heidi Degraf,t:01:48
tors is more about the event and the spectacle of the 1972 Ali-Alvin Lewis Continued from B1 fight and promoter Butty Sugrue. A Showtimes: Friday, 8p.m., at Regal one-time circus strongman, Sugrue Cinemas Old Mill 1; Saturday, 3 p.m., is worthy of a documentary himself, at the Tower Theatre having lured Ali to Ireland when the "When AII Came to Ireland" (50 island was best known for political minutes), directed by Ross Whitaker unrest. While the film sheds no new and Aldeen O'Sullivan light on Ali, it is a delightful look at Yes, there are probably enough the formerchamp and America durdocumentaries on Muhammad Ali ing the Vietnam era from a foreign to start an Ali-only film festival, but perspective. this picture from a pair of Irish direcShowtimes: Friday, 12:30 p.m., at •
Thursdays; 5:15 p.m.; WillPower Training Studio, 155 S.W. Century Drive, Suite 110, Bend; weekly workouts for runners, triathletes and cyclists; $5; 541-350-3938.
SOCCER SOCCEROPENPLAY(ADULT): Age 14-older; no cleats, but shinguards required; $7; Friday nights; coed 78:30 p.m., men 8:30-10 p.m.; Cascade Indoor Soccer, Bend; 541-330-1183; callie©cascadeindoorsoccer.com; cascadeindoorsports.com.
SKIING/ SNOWBOARDING MBSEF RACEPROGRAMS: Runs from Nov. 30 through March; www.mbsef.org. MBSEF MASTERSPROGRAMS: Runs from Nov. 30 through March; www.mbsef.org. DRYLAND TRAINING: MBSEFfall dryland training for freeskiers and snowboarders; September through November; www. mbsef.org. DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM: MBSEF development for freeskiers and snowboarders; Dec. 7-March; www.mbsef. OI'g.
COMPETITIONPROGRAMS: MBSEF competition programs for freeskiers and snowboarders; Dec. 30-March; www. mbsef.org. FULL-TIME PROGRAM: MBSEFfull-time program for freeskiers and snowboarders; Nov. 20-April; www.mbsef.org.
SWIMMING REDMOND AREAPARK AND RECREATION DISTRICT FAMILY SWIM NIGHT: 7:25-8:25 p.m., Tuesdays, Cascade Swim Center, Redmond;adultm ustaccompany anyone under age18; $10 per family; 541-5487275, raprd.org.
TABLE TENNIS BEND TABLETENNIS CLUB: Evening play M ondays; 6-9 p.m.(setup30 minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost $60; at Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; drop-in fee, $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; club membership available to those who donate $100 or more; Jeff at 541-480-2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean at 267-614-6477; bendtabletennis@yahoo. com; www.bendtabletennis.com.
ULTIMATE ULTIMATE FRISBEE TEAM: The Flaming Chicken, a coed ultimate Frisbee team representing Central Oregon, is seeking additional players; all skill and experience levels welcome; new players will be taught thegame;5:30 p.m .Sundays atHarmon Park in Bend; 541-410-0535, dylandarlingO gmail.com.
VOLLEYBALL REDMONDCLUB PROGRAM: Juniper Volleyball Club in Redmond is looking for players and coaches; ages 8-18; www. junipervolleyballclub.com; Amy Remick, junipervolleyballclub©gmail.com.
WALKING WALK "LIVE" CLASSES: Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays; 4:15-4:45 p.m. on Mondays;10:15-10:45 a.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays; Redmond Grange; indoor 2-mile walks; $5 per class; 541-993-0464; walklivecentraloregon.com.
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF
COMMUNITY SPORTS SCOREBOARD Leagueleaders andhighscores Lava Lanes,Bend Sept. 16-22
B7
BASKETBALL Middle-school sign ups taking PlaCe — Bend Parksand Recand BendLa Pine Schools areagain partnering to sponsor boys andgirls middle school
If interested, contact Mountain View boys coach Craig Reid at 541-318-8014 or at
Professional Rodeo Association championships in Prineville on Sept. 20 and
creid©bendcable.com.
21. Terrebonne's ShaneErickson capped
Storm girls GOBO tryouts scheduled fOrNOVemder — Tryouts for the
basketball. The programs are open to all boys and girls in grades six through eight
Summit High girls Central Oregon Basket-
who live in the Bend-La PineSchools dis-
place next month. The Summit COBO fifthand sixth-grade team will have tryouts Nov. 4 at Cascade Middle School from 7 to
trict boundary. Boys registration closes Oct. 16 and girls registration ends Dec.
ball Organization (COBO) team will take
a stellar season by finishing first in the
NPRA's season-long all-around cowboy standings, in addition to winning the NPRA finals all-around award. Culver's Charlie Barker won the 2013 NPRA saddle
bronc championship after placing in both go-rounds and the average at the NPRA's
27. The fee is$54. Walk-in registration only.
8:30 p.m. TheStorm's sixth- and seventh-
season-ending event. Barker, whoalso won money in cowmilking and steer
Cougar COBO team looking for
grade team will work out players Nov. 6 at Cascade from 7 to 8:30 p.m. There is no
wrestling this year, was the NPRA's 2013 reserve all-around champion. Brian Bain,
cost to tryout. For more information, con-
also of Culver, wasfirst in the average
tact Summit High girls coach Ryan Cruz at
at the NPRAfinals. Stevie Rae Willis, of Terrebonne, won the NPRA's 2013 all-
COBChSS —The Mountain View boys basketball program is in need of volunteer
ryan.cruz@bend.k12.or.us.
coaches for its middle-school Central RODEO Oregon Basketball Organization (COBO) team. Previous playing or coaching experience is required. Practices are held twice LOCalSClaim NPRA titleS — Several a week andgamesare on the weekends. Central Oregonians recorded Northwest
the Tower Theatre; Saturday, 8:30 p.m., at Regal Cinemas Old Mill 2
• "McConkey" (109 minutes), dlrect-
ed by Murray Wais, Steve Winter, Scott Gaffney, David Zieff and Rob Bruce A biography on legendary freeskier Shane McConkey, "McConkey" boasts gorgeous Warren Miller-style ski footage of McConkey tackling and conquering unimaginable runs — the man liked to combine BASE jumping and skiing — but the film is carried by the more personal home
movies of McConkey clowning with pals and family. Heartbreaking and awe-inspiring, the f i lm, made by some of McConkey's closest friends, captures the spirit of an individual who lived and died doing what he loved. Shovvtimes: Thursday, 8:30 p.m., at the Tower Theatre;Friday, 5:30 p.m., at Regal Cinemas Old Mill 1
around cowgirl award, while SammyJo Cardoza wasthis year's reserve champ. For full results from the 2013 NPRA sea-
son, go to www.nprarodeo.com. — Bulletin staffreports
movie, but this documentary about mild-mannered Chris Schoeck and his quest to become an old-time strongman is extremely touching. Schoeck loves the actual physical act of twisting horseshoes and bending nails, but he struggles with the stage persona a strongman needs. S howtimes: Friday, 3 p . m., a t McMenamins; Saturday, 1 p.m., at • "Bending Steel" (93 minutes), dl- Regal Cinemas Old Mill 2 rected by Dave Carroll — Reporter: 541-383-0305, Maybe not technically a sports beastes@bendbulletin.com.
BS
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
T EE TO
R EEN
mericansma eit i n a rowat resi ents u • The United Statesholdsoff a hard-charging International teamin singles play PresidentsCupat aglance
By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press
DUBLIN, Ohio — Abrief look at the Presidents Cup on Sunday
DUBLIN, Ohio — Fred Couples, the coolest guy in golf, never really looked that way until he stood on the edge of the 18th fairway Sunday and saw everything
at Muirfield Village: WINNER:United States 18t/2, International 15t/2. MAN OF THEMATCH: Tiger Woods went 4-1 and delivered the clinching point with a1-up win over Richard Sterne. MATCH OFTHE OAY: Graham DeLaetand Jordan Spiethhalved their opening eight holes and no one had the lead for more than three holes. Canada's DeLaet ended the match by holing a bunker shot for birdie on the18th hole.
going his way. The Americans needed only one more point to win the Presidents Cup. And there was Tiger Woods, who has a history of delivering the winning point, in the middle of the fairway at Muirfield Village, where he has won a record five times. The Presidents Cup ended just the way it always does. Woods foundthe green andtwo-putted for par and a 1-upvictoryoverRichard Sterne,thethirdstraighttime he has won the clinching point in the Presidents Cup. The Americans won for the fifth straight time — and eighth time in 10 tries — against an International side that showed some fight when it was too late to matter. See Presidents/B9
Ct
i
p.com ¹PresCup presidentscup.c
SHOT OF THE OAY:PhilMickelsonhookeda7-ironarounda tree from 190 yards to about 10 feet on the 18th hole, setting up Keegan Bradley for a birdie putt that allowed them to halve
their foursomes match Sundaymorning against DeLaet and Jason Day.
Darron Cummings/The Associated Press
NOTEWORTHY:Fred Couples became the first captain to win United States team captain Fred Couples holds the Presidents Cup trophy as he the Presidents Cup three times. is joined by the American team after defeating the International team during the — The Associated Press matches at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, on Sunday.
LOCAL GOLF
GOLF ROUNDUP
China's Fengwins first LPGA tourney inBeijing t .r
r
I
P*
f(
~ri /,p,p' J
t
Photos by Andy Tulhs/The Bulletin
Jeff Fought putts on the practice green at the Big Meadow course at Black Butte Ranch on Friday morning. Fought, the director of golf at Black Butte Ranch, hopes to earn a spot in the Senior PGA Championship.
• Black Butte Ranch'Jeff s Fought is setto compete this week at the Senior PGA Professional NationalChampionship,which could lead to aberth in a bigger senior event By Zack Hall Ever since he was a child, Jeff Fought has dreamed of
place at 9 over par,three shots short of the 36-hole cut. He admits that two years ago he fell under the spell
playing in one of golf's major
of playing on a larger stage,
championships. Now, at age 53, the director of golf at Black Butte Ranch h as a r ea l o p portunity t o play his way into just such a tournament. F ought will tee it up t h i s week at Creighton Farms in Aldie, Va., for the 2013 Senior PGA Professional National
something he does not want to repeat this time around. "The ultimate goal is to go
The Bulletin
and play in something big-
Q+~A •
i
time like that," Fought says. "They have the big sponsorship signs. And it is just about 10 steps above about anything
J
you play in all year.
Championship. A $285,000 purse is on the line, and the winner will hold the crown as the top club professional in the nation age 50 or older. But it is hard for Fought to not think about being one of the 35 golfers this week who will earn a berth in the 2014 Senior PGA C hampionship, set for next May at Harbor Shores Golf Club in Benton Harbor, Mich. "Who wouldn't want to play in a major?" says Fought, who lives in Sisters. "That would be something that would fulfill
my life. " And whether you m a k e the cut or don't make the cut (at the Senior PGA), just being there and having a chance to compete in it? Oh my gosh. Really neat." The 72-hole Senior PNC begins Thursday at both Creighton Farms and River Creek Club in Leesburg, Va., which will share hosting duties the first two rounds before the field — 264 club professionals from the PGA of America's 41 sections — is cut. Fought qualified by finishing in a tie for fifth place at last month's Pacific Northwest Senior PGA Championship, a cap to what has been a strong season that included a win at
Fought qualified for the Senior PGA Professional National Championship with a solid finish at last month's Pacific Northwest Senior PGA Championship. the Senior Players' Championship in April. "This year I p layed more golf than I have ever played." Fought says. "And I've played very well this year." Fought, who grew up in the Portland area, has long been a strong player. The younger brother of John Fought, a former U.S. Amateur champion andPGA Tour player best known now as a course designer, Jeff Fought was a member of an elite Brigham Young University golf team that won the national championship in 1981. Fought spent his first three years out of college on the m ini-tour circuit, t r y ing t o advance up the ranks to the PGA Tour. When that did not pan out, he moved to the business side of golf and became a PGA member, eventually taking over the golf operations at Black Butte Ranch in 2000. "My passion became being a golf operator," he says. Not that he ever abandoned
playing the game. In fact, he still loves to com-
pete,part ofwhat he considers one of the responsibilities of being a golf pro. "I hope I am a well-rounded golf p r o fessional," F o ught says. "I play, teach, manage a business and manage maintenance. I always wanted to be everything." T his week will m ark t h e second time Fought has played in the Senior PNC. In 2011 at Creighton Farms, he finished in a tie for 125th
"It's easy, like last time, to get so caught up in it," he adds. This time he is traveling to northern Virginia with his 21year-old son, Jeffrey, as his caddie. The only thing that might make the trip better, he says, is to play well enough to accomplish what he has been dreaming about for so many
years. It will not be easy, Fought knows. But this time he will be
ready for the challenge.
"I'm excited," he concludes. "I'm just starting to feel it right
f
I
ing off," Feng said. "I never thought I would shoot the second shot so close that I
could make eagle." H er approach t o t h e green was on line for the pin, causing the gallery to erupt in cheers when the ball hit the flag and bounded several feet away.
mplements Hd.sus '3e1 t'sr i d.a"4 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. l45 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
We're Cutting Prices.
e
back and have some fun with it."
I' 541 -447-71 1 3
!
a
— Reporter:541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletirLcom.
' st!tttft
l
'
Is BAcl<
R R D f Hot Dog 5 Draught Beer f
Q D L F ' play smart
or Fountain Soda 300southwestMead!I%tttes Dr., Prineville, OR
P
18 Holes of Golf
CejeI/ratinct ZO Years
of Go1f For fverirone!
giving me a chance for play-
now.... I'm just going to go
~ssssw .:. tsts"'
MAH~OOM 'i
"Suddenly I heard the noise, the crowd was excited, so I thought it must be good," she said. Despite her first win being a major, Feng said Sunday's win in Beijing was as important. "I would say I'm as happy as when I won last year," she said. "It was our first time in Beijing, the tournament sponsor is also my sponsor. So I really wanted to do well to make them look good. I also broke my lowest score for four rounds, and gave it my best." For most of the tournament, the players couldn't escape the capital's notorious pollutionthere was another smog delay of nearlythree hours before the final round started. Also on Sunday: C ontinental E urope p r e vails: SA INT - N OM-LABRETECHE, France — Franc esco Molinari b eat C h r i s Wood 3 and 2 in the last singles match to give Continental Europe a 15-13 victory over Britain and Ireland in the Seve Trophy. Continental Europe had lost the event the past six times after winning the inaugural contest in 2000. Nicolas Colsaerts, Gregory B ourdy, Matteo Manassero and Miguel Angel Jimenez also won singles matches for Continental Europe, and G o nzalo Fernandez-Castano halved with Jamie D onaldson. T ommy Fleetwood, Marc Warren and Paul Lawrie won matches for Britain and I reland. Britain and Ireland's Simon Khan of England couldn't play because of a back injury, so his match a gainst Thomas Bjorn w a s halved.
The Associated Press BEIJING China's Shanshan Feng eagled the par-5 18th hole after her second shot approach hit the pin for a 68 Sunday and a one-stroke victory in the smog-affected Reignwood Classic, the LPGA's first tournament in Beijing. American Stacy Lewis birdied four of her first six holes to quickly catch overnight leader Feng and led for most of the final round by one stroke before the Chinese golfer thrilled the local gallery with her late eagle after Lewis had putted out with a par. It was Feng's second career victory — she won last year's Wegmans L P GA Championship, a tour major. She's had an outstanding 2013, making 14 cuts in 15 tournaments with six other top 10 finishes and earning $800,000. Feng finished with a 26under total of 266 on the par-73 Pine Valley Golf Club. Lewis also shot a final-round 68. No. I-ranked Inbee Park of South Korea finished third, also after a 68 Sunday, five strokes behind Feng. A ustralian veteran KarrieWebb shot 67 and was fourth, another stroke behind. Feng said that when she was going up the 18th, she thought Lewis would go for the green. "So I thought maybe she's
tit OhlLY
sa'M
I
' I
•
• •
•
•
• •
'tj Good thru November 30, 2013 gt,' IP
rr,~
aa „~, st
•
•
•
B10
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.
'
I
i
'
I
I I 4
iI
•
j SW W W
Today: Increasing clouds,
Tonight: Partly cloudy with a slight chance of showers.
spotty
showers late
LOW
60
B4
Partly sunny with a chance of showers.
33
Partly cloudy.
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
49 3 2
54 35
55 36
Sunsettoday.... 6 35 p.m F irst Ful l La s t Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:12a.m Sunset tomorrow... 6:33 p.m Moonrise today... 10:1 3 a.m Moonsettoday .... 8:17 p.m Oct. 11 Oct. 18 Oct. 26 Nov. 3 •
r-'
Partly cloudy.
49 27
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 7:11 a.m Moon phases
WEST Astu r l a '. x x x x x x xxxxxx 8 x x x x x x x ' Scattered rain and x xx x x x k k x x x HOO*xxxxxx' Umatilla 5easide• xhx 68/45 m /54 .Cannon achi»x x x x x » R I Vetx i»Thhx i mountain snow , Biggs • Hermiston72/41 ) Wallowa ;xs/s~ i i ', i i x x x x i ,xc showers. 9/47>xia+LI 5 65/43 «Adington • Pendleton tt 60/32 • En t erprise xxx x x « x r « W asco .' ' 69/43 K( ixeuds CENTRAL Tigamook•i iig4s'eixx w»i s a n dv xx i i i i h e a s • Meacham esad » XXXX X X WX 60/dj~> Ruggs 62/48 59/37 1 Chance of rain 62/40 Joseph » La Grande i; 60/t~~~~ ~ »Go'Vefnment„ et/36 62/41 Unio~ and high elevation ~'.xxxscamp 49/35 Condon Lincoln Ci ~ N xxsat&x x x x 63/39 HF a»ytggowda/0 61/39 59/53 snow showers Grani e x h h xis/49X X X X X X X X X X X X '
Mostly sunny.
HIGH LOW
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:STATE I
I
B4
• «
•
PLANET WATCH
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....9:34 a.m...... 7:1 6p.m. Venus.....11:22 a.m...... 8:16 p.m. Mars.......2:50 a.m...... 4:49 p.m. Jupiter.....11 40 pm...... 2:53 p.m. Satum......9:20 a.m...... 7;42 p.m. Uranus.....6:1 7 p.m...... 651 a.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 77/27 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........90m1979 Monthtodate.......... 0.05" Record low......... 17 in 1974 Average month todate... 0.07"
Average high.............. 66 Year to date............ 4.06" Averagelow ..............35 A verageyeartodate..... 7.25" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.00 Record24 hours ...0.09 in1963 *Melted liquid equivalent
•
w + » > Albano~ ~ » x »eWpOI,«,i /we,~ i i i ~i i
+.xxx 61/36
OFVaiijg xxxx x'
Q
i» Yachats~ i i i i 3K 9 v x i i x • PrineVille 62/34 6 0/51 xx x x x x x x x s C' « ,xxx Re mon • pa ulina iqy E g q y y y y ' 4F 8 F5 9/33,yyy Redme"d '~t 62/34 Florence«%%Eugeneiii i i i o k - wy: p
uniiver i 61/49 xx vc'63/decxchhhhkkiF 3/o Xhh hh Cottagath i»
•John Day
6/030
69/42
Vale«
69/43
Juntura
• Burns
i i ' 63/ 4 4i ~ i
•
Iallts
x xx
•
• B~ach 63/52
Medford
• 67/46
Q
68/36
Rome
• 81'
72/36
Roseburg
63/35
• 21
Fields•
• Lakeview
FaIIs 62/34
63/43
62/50
Frenchgle
58/34
Ashland
• BFOOkingS
66/35
pais ey
Chiloquin
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
60/32
IF N F 4 F ~ •
Pass
67/43
68/37
61/30
•
• 61/48
•
Nyssa
• Brot h ere 61/32
71/34
• Soi«n xxssvtCalg 'y Saskato 64/43 69939 ~v Seattle 57/48
B'
'rtland ~ +2/48
• 95o Corona, Calif.
d d d d i d d d
Winnipeg 61/46
Bay •
Bis rck 6 /41
s
•
~ m
d d '
'
ddd
'd444 4 4 4 d 83 u ebec d'4 d 4 dd d d d d d d d 0 63/5 ( id / d4ddod 4 dd i • 3 d 4 <. d d d d d d d d d dli dd dd ddd dd d 4 4 <I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 <I 59/57 d dd d d . d d • 3dd 3o3 4 d 4 'd,d ortland
~
~
d d , , (4
Totoot o
6 7/59
• 13 Angel Fire, N.M.
•
• 3.24 w
Sao Francisco
OmahaI
Salt Lake
Los Angeles
g~
Albuquerque 73/47
o C:3
Kansas city
7tv45
PhoenixI
'i» »
71/48 «x- -
I
City
Las Vegas 84/61
Pellston, Mich.
Oklahoma City 77/51 •
•
I
» '
I~q>',
ogtoo, D.C.
• Louisville+
L;ttle Rock Nashville 73/49, ~ i 6 8/ 4 8
96/69
Honolulut«b, 85/76
Tijuana
Li
81/59
HAW Ai i
Houston
Chihuahua
L
tfew Orleans (( 79/60 •
85/57 •
79/48
lando ++2 8/73 «+ «
Miami 89/77 a Paz~ 94/71
Anchorage 46/36
Juneau 50/41
Monterrey Mazatlao ~8 8 /78
FRONTS
O 'ALA S K A
1
MEDIUM HIGH
4m8
IPOLLEN COUNT Updated daily. Source: pollen.com
MEDIUM
g%g
Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 32,779...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 50,097..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 57,622.... . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . . 9,949..... .47,000 Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 83,567..... 153,777 R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 216 Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 250 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 89 Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 191 D eschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . . 8 2 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . . 905 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res.. ... . . . . . 17 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 72.9 Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 2.88 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 191 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......75/44/0 00...83/53/s.. 86/57/s GrandRapids....69/67/0.03..63/46/sh. 63/46/pc RapidCity.....ootavailable...57/42/s.. 60/39/s Savannah.......88/66/0.00...82/66/t. 77/59/pc Akron ..........80/67/000..60/43/sh. 62/43/pc Green Bay.......64/52/0.02..61/42/pc..67/47/s Reno...........79/33/0.00..76/40/pc.. 65/41/s Seattle..........73/46/0.00..57/48/sh. 57/45/sh Albany..........63/52/0.06...74/50/t.. 66/42/s Greensboro......84/63/0.00...75/58/t. 70/49/pc Richmond.......89/67/0.00... 83/61/t. 74/53/pc Sioux Falls.......59/44/0.01... 71/45/s.. 74/49/s Albuquerque.....68/39/0.00...73/47/s.. 76/50/s Harusburg.......86/66/0.00..77/56/sh.. 71/48/s Rochester, NY....83/61/0.49... 73/48/r .. 59/47/s Spokane........67/39/0.00 .. 60/41/sh. 51/37/sh Anchorage ......47/43/0.08..46/36/pc...48/36/r Hartford,CT.....64/57/0.94...76/57/t.. 71/44/s Sacramento......84/45/0.00...84/53/s .. 78/53/s Springfield, MO ..59/43/0.00..66/47/pc.. 72/49/s Atlanta .........84/65/0.00...74/54/t.75/54/pc Helena..........69/30/0.00..66739/pc.53/35/pc St. Louis.........60/50/000..65/50/pc .. 72/51/s Tampa..........88/74/000... 88/73/t.87/72/pc Atlantic City.....80/63/0.00...78/58/t.. 72/57/s Honolulu........83/75/0.00..85776/pc.85/75/pc Salt Lake City....67/38/000...78/52/s. 68/51/pc Tucson..........90/50/000...94/62/I .. 90/61/s Austin..........81/54/076...84/56/s.. 87/57/s Houston ........80/57/019...85/57/s.. 85/61/s Sao Antonio.....83/55/0.17... 85/57/s .. 87/59/s Tulsa...........68/48/0.00... 75/47/s.. 78/54/s Baltimore .......86/65/0.00... 80/58/t .. 71/53/s Huntsville.......82/64/0.02... 68/46/s .. 71/49/s SaoDiego.......88/60/0.00... 76/62/s.69/60/pc Washington,DC.91/69/0.00... 80/60/t .. 71/54/s Billiogs.........64/41/0.00... 72/42/s.62/39/pc Indianapolis.....65/52/0.00.. 59/44/sh.. 69/48/s SaoFrancisco....83/56/0.00... 71/53/s.. 70/54/I Wichita.........70/45/0.00... 75/50/s .. 79/56/s Birmingham .. 81/71/029...74/50/s .. 77/53/s Jackson, MS.... 74/62/0.22. 77/50/s .. 79/53/s SaoJose........83/51/000.. 79/53/s.. 75/53/s Yakima.........71/34/000 67/40/pc.59/38/pc Bismarck........65/28/000...65/41/s .. 65/42/s Jacksonvile......88/70/0 00... 86/66/t. 81/67/pc SantaFe........67/36/0.00... 68/42/s .. 69/43/s Yuma...........94/65/0.00..95/65/pc.. 92/63/s Boise...........77/37/0.00...69/41/s. 57/38/pc Juneau..........48/32/0.00 ..50/41/pc.. 48/44/c INTERNATIONAL Boston..........61/55/031 ... 74/61/t .. 69/48/s Kansas City......59/42/0 00 ..68/49/pc .. 74/54/s Bodgeport,C1....66/63/0.03..77/57/sh.. 67/47/s Lansing.........70/66/0.02 ..63/46/sh. 62/45/pc Amsterdam......64/48/000 .. 63/49/c 62/55/c Mecca.........106/82/000 101/77/s. 102/78/s Buffalo.........83/60/0.12... 69/47/r.. 61/48/s LasVegas.......82/53/0.00...84/61/s .. 85/62/s Athens..........67/56/000... 67/58/c.70/57/pc Mexico City .....79/54/027... 72/54/t...71/51/I BurlingtonV1....61/50/028... 75/53/r.. 65/45/s Lexington.......75/57/1 70..61/45/pc .. 68/48/s Aucklaod........68/54/000..62/48/sh.60/53/sh Montreal........59/46/000...72/50/r. 59/41/pc Caribou,ME.....57/31/000 ..62/57/sh. 66/44/pc Lincoln..........62/43/000..73746/pc.. 79/53/s Baghdad........89/68/0.00... 83/63/s .. 83/63/s Moscow........55/37/0.00... 49/45/c .. 53/48/c Charleston, SC...86/67/019... 82/67/t...76/60/t Little Rock.......73/53/0 00... 73/49/s .. 77/50/s Bangkok........91/79/051... 89/73/r. 89/74/sh Nairobi.........81/61/000 ..76/58/pc. 73/57/sh Charlotte........84/65/000...75/57/t. 73/52/pc LosAngeles......91/62/000...76/59/s. 68/60/pc Beiting..........72/54/000..80/52/pc .. 79/52/s Nassau.........88/77/019..87/78/pc...87/79/t Chattanooga.....84/63/000...72/46/s.. 73/51/s Louisville........73/57/089 ..63/47/pc.. 69/47/s Beirut..........66/64/000... 72/62/s ..76/67/5 New Delhi.......91/75/000 ..95/80/pc. 95/79/pc Cheyenne.......63/39/0.00...72/45/s.. 76/43/s Madison,Wh....58/43/0.00 ..61/43/pc.. 67/46/s Berlin...........59/50/000...57/43/c.. 65/47/s Osaka..........90/73/000...81/73/c.77/69/sh Chicago...... 64/50/009..59/49/sh. 66/52/s Memphis....... 73/55/029 ..72/51/s..75/53/s Bogota .........68/43/000... 66/46/t...61/45/t Oslo............55/34/000 ..59/53/sh. 61/45/sh Cincinnati.......74/57/1.49 ..60/46/sh.. 65/46/s Miami..........88/75/0.00... 89/77/t...89/76/t Budapest........6302/000... 63/40/s ..67/52/c Ottawa.........52/48/016...72/50/r.64/46/sh Cleveland.......80/68/004 ..62/46/sh.. 64/47/s Milwaukee......65/53/016..60/48/sh.. 65/51/s BuenosAires.....73/48/000...73/52/s. 71/56/pc Paris............68/52/000...62/56/c. 66/57/pc ColoradoSpnngs.66/31/000... 77/46/s .. 76/46/s Minneapolis.....55/42/0 04..65/50/pc .. 72/51/s CaboSaoLucas ..91/68/000...92/69/s. 92/70/pc Riode Janeiro....77/63/000..72/61/sh. 71/60/pc Columbia,MO...56/41/000 ..67/48/pc.. 73/50/s Nashville........75/55/0 91 ..68/48/pc .. 72/51/s Cairo...........63/63/000.. 81/61/s.. 82/63/s Rome...........75/63/000. 74/64/sh. 73/61/sh Columbia,SC....88/63/0.00..79/61/sh.. 76/56/c New Orleans.....86/72/0.00...79/60/s .. 79/63/s Calgary.........61/43/000..64/43/pc 54/32/pc Santiago........73/45/0.00 ..66/54/pc.. 63/52/s Columbus GA...89/67/000...78/56/t.. 79/59/s NewYork.......70/65/000..78/56/sh.. 73/55/s Cancuo.........88/75/0.00... 87/76/t...86/76/t Sao Paulo.......66/52/0.00..66/54/pc.. 64/55/c ColumbusOH....79/64/091 ..60/46/sh.64145/pc Newark Nl......70/65/000...7954/r. 73/54/pc Dublin..........66/55/0.00 ..61/55/sh.61/45/pc Sapporo ........71/53/0.00 ..67/55/sh. 67/49/sh Concord, NH.....SB/48/012... 72756/r.. 68/41/s Norfolk, VA......8$68/0 00... 85/65/t. 72/58/pc Edinburgh.......63/55/000... 59/55/c .. 57/43/c Seoul...........79/54/000... 73/56/r. 76/64/sh Corpus Christi....81/59/014...84/60/s .. 83/75/s OklahomaCity...71/47/0 00... 77/51/s .. 80/56/s Geneva.........66/50/000...63/50/c .. 61/50/c Shanghai........77/72/028... 77/69/r .. 75/66/c DallasFtWorth...77/50/000...83/54/s .. 85/58/s Omaha.........50/42/014..71/48/pc .. 77/53/s Harare..........61/61/000 ..79/56/sh. 78/55/sh Singapore.......90/75/015 ..90780/sh.89/79/sh Dayton .........73/57/1 80 ..59/45/sh. 64/45/pc Orlando.........90/72/007...88/73/t. 89/71/pc HongKong......86/77/000..85/71/pc.84/75/sh Stockholm.......57/43/000..64/54/pc.. 60/49/c Denver....... 67/32/0.00... 78/45/s .. 78/44/s PalmSprings.... 93/65/0.00... 94/62/s .. 89/61/s Istanbul.........52/46/000..64/53/pc..67/59/s Sydney..........90/57/000..73753/sh.71/55/pc DesMoines......51/43/013..67/47/pc.. 74/50/s Peoria..........56/46/001..62/44/pc.. 72/47/s Jerusalem.......68/54/0.00...69/55/s ..76/60/s Taipei...........79/75/0.00 ..83/74/pc. 82/75/sh Detroit..........73/68/0.08 ..65/47/sh.. 64/50/s Philadelphia.....86/66/0.00... 81/57/t .. 73/55/s Johannesburg....86/58/000..76/54/sh. 77/57/pc Tel Aviv.........66/64/000... 78/60/s .. 84/64/s Duluth..........53/47/010 ..61/44/pc.. 66/47/s Phoenix.........93/61/000...96/69/s .. 92/67/s Lima...........64/59/000...73/62/s .. 70/61/c Tokyo...........73/66/000 ..78/72/sh .. 79/70/c El Paso..........76/45/0.00...81/55/s .. 84/59/s Pittsburgh.......84/66/0.00... 65/45/t .. 61/41/s Lisbon..........81/61/000.. 79/59/s 81/62/s Toronto.........66/57/005 59/52/r 64/46/pc Fairbaoks....... 44/31/000...41/24/I.. 43/28/c Portland,ME.....55/50/010..67/59/sh .. 68/41/s London.........66/46/000...61/56/c .. 67/48/c Vancouver.......70/48/000 ..57/50/sh. 57/43/pc Fargo...........63/42/021..67/48/pc.. 69/48/s Providence......61/59/018... 76/58/t.. 69/45/s Madrid .........75/52/0.00... 76/51/s.80/54/pc Vienna..........52/46/0.03..62/41/pc.. 65/50/c Flagstaff........65/39/0.00... 72/34/I .. 68/40/s Raleigh.........85/63/0.00... 80/62/t .. 73/52/c Manila..........86/79/000 ..90/76/pc. 88/77/pc Warsaw.........59/37/000... 56/48/c. 64/46/pc
•
52/37
,'«Bois
ox
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is for ar at noon.
a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m (in the 48 contiguous states):
To report a wildfire, call 911
Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-soowflurries, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday's extremes
Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme
O LOWI
Lakeview
McDermitt
70/38
64/37
Redmond/Madras........Low Prineville..........................Low
Astoria ........71/45/0.00....59/49/sh.....59/45/sh Baker City......65/23/0.00....64/34/pc.....53/30/sh Brookings......74/47/0.00.....62/50/c.....62/48/sh Burns..........71/24/0.00....61/30/pc.....52/27/sh Eugene........78/39/0.00....63/45/sh.....62/41/sh Klamath Falls .. 73/28/0 00 .62/34/pc ...52/30/pc Lakeview.......75/21/0.00 ...64/37/pc.....51/33/pc La Pine.........74/23/NA....58/27/pc.....48/26/sh Medford.......79/39/0.00....67/46/pc.....61/43/pc Newport....... 70/50/0.00.... 58/52/sh..... 58/49/sh North Bend......73/48/NA....62/48/sh.....59/47/sh Ontario........69/30/0.00.....69/42/s.....60/38/pc Pendleton......70/39/0.00....69/43/pc.....57/36/pc Portland .......74/43/0.00....62/48/sh.....59/44/sh Prineville....... 77/32/0.00....62/34/pc.....53/32/sh Redmond.......77/27/0.00....62/34/pc.....53/28/pc Roseburg.......81/43/0.01 ....63/47/sh.....58/46/sh Salem ....... 75/41/0 01 .63/46/sh ...63/42/sh Sisters.........74/29/0.00....59/33/pc.....50/29/sh The Dages......73/38/0.00....67/47/pc.....62/39/pc
Ontario
62/32
61/37
m «Hampton ' ,xlmpiness/27 64/33 • xxxx x ~ re s centa 64/47 • .xx xxhx i»x x x Riley x x x x xxpak«m + Cr'escentx • Fort Rock m/30 58/30 57/3 x i « i i i i i i»eoa ok- 4 «Bxi i • Bandod »NXHtotebor/Fxx' • JFCt Christmas Valley 62/47 XX NX 63/4gX8X %%46 m remulx 56 Y 'x8x k 2 • 61/30 5I Port Orfor i
Coos Bay»
Unity
Bend
t3pkrjdge TF • xXX 2
Sunny to partly sunny and mild.
64/34
• Mi tchell 59/35
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
EAST
Baker City
WATER REPORT
Yesterday Monday Tuesday Bend,westoiHwy97.....Low Sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,easto/Hwy.97......Low La Pine...............................Low Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as
55/34
• Sprayeras
armsprings~
FIRE INDEX
OREGON CITIES
.
x x 63/46 «x x x
Cold
81/61 •
CONDITIO O4
+ +« 4 d 4 +++ i I 4 8
ox IF
4
W ar m Stationary o rs T storms Rain
Flurries S now
Ice
Since 1962
g
~ ( •
V il
0
Interest Free Financini,g
ll~
unti(
ili=
IIIIP
or more
with50equalmonthly paymentsonselectpurchases. •
O.A.C.See store for details. •
•
•
Since9962
MATTRESS "-""'I nstant t«redit!
Applyonlineat:
2871 8BW$7Besmoxs • 841 84$20$$
"""-"" — """"'"" 88488NBwt $7, Bend • 8418808084
ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013 •
•
~M ~EJZJJ
•
I
•i•
I
.rk
't. A
0
::haurs:
cantact us: •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
Monday - Friday : 7:30a.m. -5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
. Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371
T h e ~
u I I e t i~ 208
Pets 8 Supplies DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO
:
1 77 ~
202
Want to Buy or Rent
CASH for dressers, dead washers/ dryers 541-420-5640
Wanted: white stacka ble n a t ural ga s washer 8 dryer. Call 541-508-0916.
oui'
"QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 ~ k k 20 ! Ad must include
price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.
W .
210
C h a ng
210
Furniture & Appliances Furniture & Appliances S
•
SELL
FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with
Antique Dining Set 18th century legs, mahogany top95"x46"x29";
6 Chippendale style chairs, $2770. 541-639-3211
I t e ms for Free
Freezer
l~
r
Ave
97 $02
, • Bg n d • O g e g g n
245
246
260
263
267
Golf Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Misc. Items
Tools
Fuel & Wood
10" contractor's table BUYING WHEN BUYING Flyer saw with Dado blades, REM 870 Express. 3.5" Lionel/American trains, accessories. $275. 541-480-1187 FIREWOOD... Magnum. Great cond. 541-408-2191. Wood stock. $ 2 99. To avoid fraud Craftsman floor-standing 406-498-4024/Bend The Bulletin BUYING & SE L LING drill press, 15~/2, 8 spds, 541 -480-7024 recommends payRemington 700 rh Bmm All gold jewelry, silver $150. 541-318-0292 TV entertainment conon the first day it runs ment for Firewood Rem mag rifle scope and gold coins, bars, RV Generator, 3600 LP sole, dark wood finish, 30" to make sure it is coronly upon delivery mount, in box fired 10 rounds, wedding sets, +2, 119 hrs, all actallx 50" wide x19" deep, rect. "Spellcheck" and times, includes ammo class rings, sterling siland inspection. for RV. $800. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. $275. 541-480-1187 human errors do oc$1000 n o tra d es, ver, coin collect, vin- cess. 541-593-1455 4' x 4' x 8' cur. If this happens to 541-279-4363 tage watches, dental Find exactly what your ad, please con• Receipts should gold. Bill Fl e ming, Savage 110 left hand USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! you are looking for in the tact us ASAP so that 541-382-9419. include name, 243,$350. corrections and any phone, price and CLASSIFIEDS 541-647-7479 Door-to-door selling with adjustments can be Deschutes Memorial kind of wood made to your ad. purchased. Savage model 110, 270 Gardens, Catholic fast results! It's the easiest Twin size futon, newly 541-385-5809 • Firewood ads Gardens, lot 41 C, cal., Simons scope. restuffed, with boxspring, way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified MUST include $250. 541-647-7479 space 2. Bargain at $100. 541-382-0673 Call species & cost per The Bulletin Classified 246 Wall T e nt , Ra i nier, $750. cord to better serve 20x24, frame, porch, 541-504-8868 541-385-5809 Guns, Hunting our customers. $4850. 541-480-1353 How to avoid scam & Fishing Wanted: Collector and fraud attempts seeks high quality Bend local pays CASH!! YBe aware of internafishing items. for all firearms & We're selling half a tional fraud. Deal loCall 541-678-5753, or MADRAS Habitat All Year Dependable ammo. 541-526-0617 house full of very nice cally whenever pos503-351-2746 RESTORE Firewood: Seasoned furniture! Teak sidesible. CASH!! Building Supply Resale Lodgepole, Split, Del. 253 board, $400; w/hutch, P Watch for buyers For Guns, Ammo & Quality at Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 $800. Large maple exec. Reloading Supplies. TV, Stereo & Video who offer more than LOW PRICES for $365. Cash, Check corner desk, $1000. Oak 541-408-6900. your asking price and 84 SW K St. or Credit Card OK. armoire, $500. 3 Tiffany 47' Samsung HD TV who ask to have 541-420-3484. 541-475-9722 lamps, $125 ea. Oak C olt S p o rte r 223 , works great, moving sale money wired or Open to the public. computer desk 8 chair, w/scope, 3 extra clips, $100. 541-350-0898 Central Oregon mixed handed back to them. w/400 rounds. $2000. $350. Small antique wood, semi-dry, split, deFake cashier checks Prineville Habitat 255 541-480-9005 - Jerry painted desk, $100. livered in Bend. 2 cords, and money orders ReStore Large beautiful area rug, $260; 1 for $140, cash or Computers are common. Building Supply Resale $700. 541-593-8921 or check. 541-420-3484 DON'TMISS IHIS YNever give out per1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-410-2911 T HE B U LLETIN r e - sonal financial infor541-447-6934 Need to get an quires computer adWhirlpool gold side x side mation. Open to the public. vertisers with multiple v'Trust DO YOU HAVE refrigerator/freezer $175. your instincts ad in ASAP? 541-480-4296 Iv msg. SOMETHING TO ad schedules or those and be wary of You can place it selling multiple sysSELL someone using an Heating & Stoves • online at: FOR $500 OR tems/ software, to disThe Bulletin escrow service or LESS? close the name of the recommends extra www.bendbulletin.com agent to pick up your NOTICE TO Non-commercial business or the term k • p. merchandise. ADVERTISER "dealer" in their ads. advertisers may chasing products or • 541-385-5809 Since September 29, place an ad Private party advertisservices from out of I 1991, advertising for terk>ng Cenlrat 0 egkk knke 1903 ers are defined as with our I the area. Sending I used woodstoves has "QUICK CASH those who sell one • c ash, c h ecks, o r • Moving! Patio furn. set, 7' been limited to mod- Gardening Supplies computer. SPECIAL" i credit i n f o rmation powder coated frame, els which have been 1 week 3 lines 12 8 Equipment may be subjected to 257 c ertified by the O r lass top, 4 c hairs oi' i FRAUD. For more OLD! BBQ B grill, 3+(1 egon Department of Musical Instruments k k 2 0! ~ information about an g side) burners, cover, $40. Environmental QualBarkTurfSoil.com Ad must advertiser, you may I 541-350-0898 ity (DEQ) and the fedinclude price of / call t h e Or e gon / eral En v ironmental k t $50 0 ' State Attor ney ' D E LIVERY Wanted- paying cash Protection A g e ncy PROMPT or less, or multiple 542-389-9663 i General's O f f i c e for Hi-fi audio & stu(EPA) as having met items whose total Consumer P rotec- • dio equip. Mclntosh, smoke emission standoes not exceed t ion ho t l in e at I dards. A cer t ified J BL, Marantz, D y $500. For newspaper i 1-877-877-9392. naco, Heathkit, Sanw oodstove may b e Piano, Baldwin updelivery, call the identified by its certifisui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call Classifieds at right, with b e nch, Circulation Dept. at Call 541-261-1808 cation label, which is 541-385-5809 exc. cond. $ 6 00. 541-385-5800 permanently attached www.bendbulletin.com 541-410-4087 To place an ad, call to the stove. The Bul261 541-385-5809 letin will no t k nowMedical Equipment or email 258 Antiques 8 Kel-tec KSG 12 g a ., ingly accept advertis- clakef>ed@benditulletin com new in box, 15 rds, Collectibles Travel/Tickets ing for the sale of $1300. 541-480-5758 uncertified Seming Central Oregan knre 1903 woodstoves. Antiques wanted: tools, Left-handed 300 R em STEVE MARTIN ticket, furniture, marbles, beer Ultra Mag rifle, like new, Oct. 4, Les Schwab Amcans, early B/W pho- $350, Call 541-610-3324 phitheater, prime center seat 10 rows back, $100. tography, Western items. 541-389-1578 Pistols: Sig Sauer 380 541-923-2238 SS, never fired, $600. Go-Go Elite TravelCollectible Disney art- cal 260 629, 44 mag, Bianler 3-wheel scooter, work "Walt's Music Mak- S8W chi Holster & ammo, fired Misc. Items ers" numbered print with 23 rds, $800. All prices Model SC40E, under warranty, like new certificate of authenticity, include dealer transfer Attention Snowbirds or condition, used 2 excellent cond. $ 425 fee. 4570 ammo Garrett hunters, Honda AD RUNS UNTIL THESOFA SELLS! times. Health forces obo. 541-620-1461 530 qr Hammer Head, EM1600 G e nerator. sale. Purchased from The Bulletin reserves $1.30/rnd. 360-775-7336 Runs good, $100 obo. Advanced Mobility 541-447-4246 the right to publish all local July, 2013 for $1295; ads from The Bulletin REM 700 300WSM. New in Buying Diamonds selling for $895. newspaper onto The box, never been fired. 541-480-2700 /Gold for Cash Bulletin Internet webpattym51OQ.com Black syn stock. $499. Saxon's Fine Jewelers site. 406-498-4024/Bend 541-389-6655 TV, 52' DLP Mitsubishi, new lamp, Yamaha receiver, DVD player, and s t and. W o r ks g reat. $275 O B O .
Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 Free Wooden TV/en- www.bendbulletin.com A rustic, solid oak tertainment ce n t er, coffee tableyou you haul. M a dras, won't worry about 541-325-3005 English Mastiff puppies 9 damaging! For months old. 2 females, domestic harmony, excellent blood l i nes, big enough for both of Pets & Supplies registered, Fawn. $800 you to put your feet up! Large enough for firm. 541-548-1185 or 541-279-1437. family games. ShortThe Bulletin recomened from antique mends extra caution F ree to g o o d h o me kitchen table, 39"x42" when purc h a s- male cat, 6 yrs. old, x16i/2" high. $250 cash neutered, very loving. ing products or ser541-322-0682 Redmond area. Call vices from out of the 541-410-3113. area. Sending cash, Englander, queen box checks, or credit in- German Shepherds AKC springs & m attress, f ormation may b e www.sherman-ranch.us $ 500. L i k e new , subjected to fraud. 541-408-0846 541-281-6829 For more i nformation about an adver- German Shorthair pups, tiser, you may call AKC, parents on site, the O r egon State p roven h u nters & family pets. $500-up. Attorney General's Office Co n s umer 541-330-0277. Protection hotline at Commercial Labradors, AKC, 2 black upright Delfield 1-877-877-9392. male puppies, written 6000 Series guarantee on hips & elfreezer, 20 cubic serving central okegokk nce 1903 bows, exclnt pedigree, feet, stainless, $600 ea. 541-680-0009 $1200. A dog sitter in NE Bend, POMERANIAN MALE 541-325-2691 Loving home w/no cages, AT STUD, Proven. Blue $25 day. Linda at new Tipped. Show quality, number - 541-576-4574 excellent personality. Furnishings: K bed w/ Want to mate with like hdbrd, dresser, ends, Adopt a buddy! A dult quality purebred female 2 tw. beds, 2 Q beds, cats/kittens over 6 mos., (papers not g ame t a bl e w / 4 2 for just $40! October Pomeranian necessary) ASAP. chairs, oak din tbl w/6 only. Fixed, shots, ID 541-410-8078 or chairs, misc kitchen. chip, tested, more! Non541-306-1703 Good cond. $800. profit group at 6 5480 530.388.8272 (Bend) 78th St., Bend, open POODLEpups & young Sat/Sun 1-5; other days adults. Also POMAPOOS by appt. Photos & info: Call 541-475-3889 G ENERATE SOM E www.craftcats.org. EXCITEMENT in your 541-389-8420, or like us Queensland Heelers neighborhood! Plan a on Facebook. Standard & Mini, $150 garage sale and don't & up. 541-280-1537 American Bullies UKC blue www.rightwayranch.wor forget to advertise in classified! nose,1 champagne, 7wks, dpress.com 541-385-5809. $800 & up. 541-704-8000 Rodent issues? F ree Hidebed, full-sized, like A ussies, M in i A K C , adult barn/shop cats, parents on site, 1st f ixed, s h ots , so m e new, rust brown color, shots/wormed, blk/red friendly, some not. Will $500. 541-408-0846 tri, 541-598-5314 deliver. 541-389-8420 Just bought a new boat? O'J 1 Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Leather couch & I' Good condiSt. Bernard Puppies, loveseat. tion. $450 Bird Cage: Almost 1st shots, wormed. 541-389-8563 new Double Bird $400. 541-977-4686 Cage - Dimensions: Lighted china hutch, Yorkie female, born April oak wood, 76" tall x 42" 72" high, by 64" 26, 2013. Silver/ party wide x 16" deep, 3 glass long, by 32" deep. colors. Weighs 7.5lbs Pull-out divider for 1 shelves, $325. Sekktkg Cent kl 0 egkk k nke l909 and will stay under big cage or 2 smaller 541-480-1187 10lbs. Very sweet and cages. 4 feeder playful. Loves people/ People Look for Information doors, breeder box Coins & Stamps • dogs. Was $450; now About Products and door, and lots more! $ 375. P l ease c a l l Services Every Daythrough $500. 541-389-9844 541-678-2628 (serious The Bulletin Classiffeds Private collector buying postagestamp albums & inquires only). C hihuahua-Pomeranian Oak entertainment cen- collections, w orld-wide puppies, 8 wks, 1st shots, Yorkie/Maltese female ter, extends out to 16', and U.S. 573-286-4343 $200. 541-815-3459 puppy, looks Yorkie, great shape, $300 obo. (local, cell phone). $300 cash. 541-408-7267 SILVER FOR S ALE. 541-546-7909 Refrigerator 25 cu. ft., 100 oz. bars, 1 oz. Yorkie pups AKC, sweet, French doors, l o wer rds. $1 o ver s pot adorable, potty training, 2 freezer drawer, exc cond price. 541-408-7888 boys, 2 girls, $450 & up. $500. 541-388-8339 .Iri)'Ilillli';:; Health guar.541-777-7743 Solid oak beveled mirror, Chihuahua puppies, teaBicycles & x 38" tall, $250. cup, shots 8 dewormed, Yorkie pups, f emale, 55" wide Accessories 541-480-1187 $250. 541-420-4403 $650, male, $550, 8 wks, AKC. 541-410-1722 Table - ANTIQUE OAK Electric Bike, Easy Rider Donate deposit bottles/ ROUND TABLE with 350, less than 100 miles, cans to local all volun210 teer, non-profit rescue, Furniture & Appliances 3-10" wide leaves & 6 battery + 2 c h argers, matching chairs; Ba- $500. 541-420-0301 for feral cat spay/ neuter. sic table 30 kH x 54 kW; Cans for Cats trailer at 242 High quality & Perfect Grocery Outlet, 694 S. A1 Washers&Dryers condition; Paid $3500, Exercise Equipment 3rd; or donate Mon-Fri at $150 ea. Full warw illing t o acc e p t Smith Sign, 1515 NE ranty. Free Del. Also Firm. Old Airdyne exercise 2 nd; o r a n y time a t $2500. wanted, used W/D's CRAFT in Tumalo. sewfun4me I hotmail. bike, you haul, $70. 541-280-7355 www.craftcats.org com 541-382-0673
The Bulletin
: Monday- Friday 7:30a.m. -5p.m.
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Place, cancel or extend an ad
I
•
CHECK YOUR AD t
The Bulletin
I
i i
•
•
•
i
I
i The Bulleting
The Bulletin
SELL YOURSOFA o PO'
g.
The Bulletin
n
your web sourcefor STATEWIDE classifieds
Find. View. Get. 30BsIREAL EsTATE IcLAssIFIEDs
fi eds.oregon.com" isa new Supported by Oregon newspapers,"ctassi website dedicated to bringing classified listings from around thestate ofOregon togetheron oneeasy-to-use website. Fromjobsto homes and investment properties,you'llfi nd thefastest growing ctassifieds section is "classifieds.oregon.com"
BROWSE THE ENTIRE STATE OFOREGON
ClBSSlf'iedS.
OregOll .com
Dkrk italian soft leather er o ttemkk ke couch set. Excellent cenaeen no tears, stans. Very comfortable Was $1600 new,
otfenng for only
$700
541-000-0000
Item Priced at:
• • • •
Y o ur Total Ad Cost onl:
Under $500 $500 to $999 $1000 to $2499 $2500 and over
$29 $39 $49 $59
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border,full color photo,bold headline • The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Marketplace
• The Cent ral OregonNickelAds ~ bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809 "Privateparty merchandiseonly - excludespetsI livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles,boats, airplanes,andgarage salecategories.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
C2 MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013•THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
RIMXCQ
g[R tjpo[](ooigJlgggg
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
® UMltlc@@
00
Monday • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri • 476 Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . Noon Mon. Employment Opportunities Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. portunities" in clude employee and indeSaturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. pendent positions. Ads fo r p o s itions require a fee or Saturday • . • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. that upfront i nvestment must be stated. With independentjob Sunday.. • • • • • • • . • • • 5:00 pm Fri • any opportunity, please
00
BmH
Boats & AccessoriesI
©nks
'$Q0 0 o
528
705
Loans & Mortgages
Real Estate Services
0 0 16'9n Larson All American, 1971, V-hull, 120hp
Snowmobiles
I/O, 1 owner, always garaged, w/trlr, exc cond,
$2000. 541-788-5456
Behind on your House • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 WARNING Payments? The Bulletin recomEXT, $1000. 17' Seaswirl 1968, mends you use cauCall (541) 728-0345 • Yamaha 750 1999 tri-hull o pen bow, Today for Help! tion when you proMountain Max, SOLD! I 20 h p o u tboard vide personal • Zieman 4-place 732 drive, 4 hp Evinrude ~ information to compatrailer, SOLD! trolling motor, like nies offering loans or Commercial/Investment All in good condition. new E-Z lift trailer credit, especially Properties for Sale Located in La Pine. with 3 tires, $2,200. those asking for adCall 541-408-6149. vance loan fees or Burns, OR W ar e companies from out of house & warehouse 860 state. If you have property. Prior used Motorcycles & Accessories 18' Bass Tracker Tourconcerns or quesas beer wholesaler. nament Model 1800FS, tions, we suggest you 11,000 s q.ft. t o t al, $8500. 541-389-8786 consult your attorney 5 500 s q . ft . me t a l i nvestigate tho r or call CONSUMER oughly. Use extra warehouse. Misc. free Placea photoin your private party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES HOTLINE, c aution when a p standing coolers infor only$15.00 perweek. Starting at 3 lines 1-877-877-9392. plying for jobs oncluded. $2 39,000. line and never pro541-749-0724 I. *UNDER '500 in total merchandise BANK TURNED YOU OVER'500in total merchandise vide personal infor2013 Harley One of the only DOWN? Private party 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 mation to any source Davidson Dyna counties in 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, will loan on real es14 days................................................ $16.00 you may not have Wide Glide, black, 7 days.................................................. $24.00 Oregon without a inboard motor, g reat tate equity. Credit, no only 200 miles, researched and *Must state prices in sd cond, well maintained, 14 days.................................................$33.50 microbrewery. problem, good equity deemed to be repubrand new, all stock $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 is all you need. Call 28 days.................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special 745 table. Use extreme plus after-market Oregon Land Mort(call for commercial line ad rates) 4 lines for 4 days ................................. c aution when r e exhaust. Has winter Homes for Sale gage 541-388-4200. ftyRCFRNUCNi s ponding to A N Y cover, helmet. online employment LOCAL MONEyrWebuy Selling for what I 20.5' Seaswirl SpyNOTICE ad from out-of-state. secured trustdeeds & owe on it: $15,500. A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: der 1989 H.O. 302, note,some hard money All real estate adverWe suggest you call Call anytime, 285 hrs., exc. cond., tised here in is subBend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. loans. Call Pat Kelley the State of Oregon 541-554-0384 stored indoors for ject to t h e F e deral 541-382-3099 ext.13. Consumer H otline B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (*) l ife $ 8900 O B O . F air H o using A c t , at 1-503-378-4320 541-379-3530 which makes it illegal Buell 1125R, 2008 15k REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well For Equal Opportuto advertise any pref- miles, reg. s ervice, nity Laws c o ntact as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Bxi9nlh erence, limitation or well cared for. factory Oregon Bureau of bcodbulletlmcom reserves the right to reject any ad at discrimination based Buell optional fairing Labor & I n d ustry, on race, color, relikit, Michelin 2cc tires, any time. is located at: Civil Rights Division, gion, sex, handicap, will trade for ie: En971-6730764. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. familial status or naduro DR 650, $5700 20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L tional origin, or inten- obo. 541-536-7924. Bend, Oregon 97702 The Bulletin Sec ng Centel 0 egnn sincelggg tion to make any such V6 w/OMC outdrive, open 541-385-5809 preferences, l i mitabow, Shorelander trlr, nds tions or discrimination. some interior trim work. 632 PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction $4500. 541-639-3209 We will not knowingly is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reserves the right Add your web address Apt./Multiplex General accept any advertisto accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these to your ad and reading for r eal e state 21' Crownline Cuddy newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted o f r any reason. Private Party ers on The Bulletin's CHECK YOUR AD which is in violation of Cabin, 1995, only Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday. web site, www.bendHealth Forces Sale! this law. All persons 2007 Harley Davidson bulletin.com, will be 325 hrs on the boat, are hereby informed 5.7 Merc engine with able to click through FLHX Street Glide270 286 that all dwellings ad- Too many extras to list! automatically to your outdrive. Bimini top Gardening Supplies Lost 8 Found Sales Northeast Bend vertised are available & moorage cover, website. 6-spd, cruise control, steon an equal opportu& Equipment reo, batt. tender, cover. $7500 obo. Driver Needed. Night on the first day it runs nity basis. The Bulle- Set-up for long haul road 541-382-2577 ** FREE ** to make sure it is cors hift, apply a t O w l tin Classified trips. Dealership svc'd. SUPER TOP SOIL rect. nSpellcheckn and www.hersbe soilandbark.com Taxi, 1919 NE 2nd, REMEMBER: Ifyou Garage Sale Kit Only 2,000 miles. Check out the Ads published in the Screened, soil & comhuman errors do ocBend. After 5pm. No PLUS H-D cold weather have lost an animal, Place an ad in The classifieds online "Boats" classification cur. If this happens to post m i x ed , no phone calls please. gear, rain gear, packs, don't forget to check Bulletin for your gainclude: Speed, fishrocks/clods. High huyour ad, please con- tNfNvv.bendbutletin.com helmets, leathers The Humane Society rage sale and reing, drift, canoe, Landscapers tact us ASAP so that mus level, exc. f or Updated daily & much more $15000 Bend ceive a Garage Sale house and sail boats. Seeking individuals to flower beds, lawns, corrections and any 541-382-3135 after 5pm 541-382-3537 Kit FREE! 747 For all other types of yard mainteadjustments can be gardens, straight Redmond Hay, Grain & Feedg perform watercraft, please go nance and/or handys creened to p s o i l . made to your ad. Southwest Bend Homes KIT I NCLUDES: 541-923-0882 to Class 875. man work. For more 541-385-5809 Bark. Clean fill. De• 4 Garage Sale Signs ni 1st Class Grass Hay 541-385-5809 information, p l e aseThe Bulletin Classified In Quail Pines Estates, liver/you haul. • $2.00 Off Coupon To 541-447-7178; Barn-stored, 541-548-3949. call C h r istina at Use Toward Your 3/2.5, 1613 sq.ft., or Craft Cats $230/ ton. 648 714-334-2725. Next Ad 2 story, master on main, 541-389-8420. Patterson Ranch Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 • 10 Tips For "Garage Houses for built in 2006, a/c, 270 Sisters, 541-549-3831 Harley Davidson SportWhere can you find a Sale Success!" sprinklers, fenced, Rent General Lost & Found BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS ster 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0cc, helping hand? 2 car garage, great Search the area's most Find exactly what 9,257 miles, $4995. Call room floor plan, comprehensive listing of PUBLISHER'S Found near Wilson St From contractors to PICK UP YOUR Michael, 541-310-9057 you are looking for in the classified advertising... $289,500. NOTICE overpass, a bike lock real estate to automotive, GARAGE SALE KIT at yard care, it's all here CLASSIFIEDS 541-350-5373 All real estate adverCall to iden t i fy merchandise to sporting 1777 SW Chandler in The Bulletin's HDFatBo 1996 Beautiful h o u seboat, 541-325-2396 tising in this newspa750 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 goods. Bulletin Classifieds Low Sugar Grass Hay. "Call A Service per is subject to the appear every day in the $85,000. 541-390-4693 Redmond Homes $220/ton. Very clean and Professional" Directory Lost: in Bend area; print or on line. F air H o using A c t www.centraloregon palatable. Black D i aMen's Wedding ring, which makes it illegal Call 541-365-5609 houseboat.com. mond Ranch near Sisters www.bendbuiietin.com "any meteorite & gold. Looking for your next Plumber, Journeymen to a d v ertise Rodeo. 541 388-3666 REWARD!! GENERATE SOME expreference, limitation emp/oyee? needed for The Bulletin citement in your neig314-578-9775/Bend or disc r imination Place a Bulletin help new construction. Orchard grass hay mix, Completely borhood. Plan a gabased on race, color, wanted ad today and Start immediately! second cuttinq, 90 lb. rage sale and don't Rebuilt/Customized reach over 60,000 bales, no rain, barn Call Gary, 541-410-1655 religion, sex, handiforget to advertise in cap, familial status, readers each week. 2012/2013 Award stored. $225 / ton. classified! 385-5809. marital status or naWinner Your classified ad Prineville, The Bulletin tional origin, or an inShowroom Condition 541-788-4539 will also appear on I Recommends extra tention to make any Many Extras bendbulletin.com Serving Central Oregon scnce 1903 caution when pursuch pre f e rence, which currently reLow Miles. chasing products or I Looking for your limitation or discrimiceives over Call54I 3855809topromoteyoorservice Advertisefor 28 daysstarting ot'Iffl lllrisspeoolpockogeisnoi osallobleenoereeisitel $17,000 675 services from out of ' next employee? nation." Familial sta1.5 million page 541-548-4807 Watercraft i the area. Sending Place a Bulletin tus includes children views every month c ash, c hecks, o r help wanted ad under the age of 18 at no extra cost. Street Glide 2006 black Ads published in nWai credit i n f o rmation today and living with parents or Bulletin Classifieds Appliance Sales/Repair Heating/Cooling La n dscaping/Yard Care cherry metal f l ake, tercraft include. Kay i may be subjected to legal cus t o dians, reach over Get Results! FRAUD. good extras, 8,100 aks, rafts and motorpregnant women, and 60,000 readers Call 385-5809 or Johnson Brothers Bend Heating 8 Nelson ized personal For more i nformamiles, will take some people securing cuseach week. place your ad on-line TV & Appliance. Sheetmetal, lnc. Landscaping & tion about an advertrade of firearms or watercrafts. Fotl tody of children under at The Builder's Choice. CCB¹08653 Your classified ad " boats" please sed Maintenance l tiser, you may call small ironhead. 18. This newspaper 541-382-6223 541-382-1231 bendbulletin.com will also the Oregon S tate Class 870. Serving Central $14,000. will not knowingly acwww.iohnsonbrotherstv.com www.bendheating.com appear on 541-306-8812 Oregon Since 2003 l Attorney General's 541-385-5809 cept any advertising bendbulletin.com Residental/Commercial Office C o n sumer t IBuilding/Contracting for real estate which is Get your which currently Protection hotline at l in violation of the law. Suzuki DRZ400 SM Serving Central Oregon ssnce 1903 Blowouts business receives over I 1-877-877-9392. NOTICE: Oregon state Landscaping/Yard Care Sprinkler O ur r e aders ar e 2007, 14K mi., Sprinkler Repair 1.5 million page law r equires anyone hereby informed that 4 gal. tank, racks, LTlze BPlletttT views every who contracts for all dwellings adver- e ROW I N G recent tires, Maintenance Motorhomes month at no construction work to tised in this newspa$4200 OBO. • Fall Clean up be licensed with the extra cost. per are available on 541-383-2847. • Weekly Mowing Construction Contrac- ZooN z gaadrtI Looking for your next with an ad in Bulletin an equal opportunity & Edging tors Board (CCB). An employee? Zaurr ga e r',o. Classifieds basis. To complain of •Bi-Monthly & Monthly The Bulletin's active license Place a Bulletin help discrimination cal l Get Results! Maintenance "Call A Service Managing means the contractor wanted ad today and HUD t o l l-free at •Bark, Rock, Etc. Call 541-385-5809 is bonded & insured. Central Oregon reach over 60,000 Professional" 1-800-877-0246. The or place your ad Verify the contractor's Landscapes readers each week. endene in toll f re e t e l ephone L~ Directory on-line at Beaver Monterey CCB li c ense at Since 2006 Your classified ad •Landscape number for the hear36'1998, Ig kitchen bendbulletin.com www.hirealicensedwill also appear on Construction ing im p aired is 763 & sofa slide, perfect contractor.com bendbulletin.com 1-800-927-9275. Fall Clean Up •Water Feature leather. W/D, elec. Recreational Homes or call 503-378-4621. Don't track it in all Winter Installation/Maint. which currently 375 Triumph D aytona awn, dash computer, The Bulletin recom652 & Property •Leaves receives over 1.5 •Pavers 2004, 15K mi l e s , Meat 8 Animal Processing 2 TVs. Always covmends checking with •Cones million page views perfect bike, needs •Renovations Houses for Rent ered. Exterior = 8, the CCB prior to con• Needles every month at PRICED REDUCED nothing. Vin •Irrigations Installation Ground Beef Special interior =9. New NW Bend tracting with anyone. • Debris Hauling no extra cost. cabin on year-round ¹201536. $1.50/Ib hanging wt+ cut paint bottom half 8 Some other t r ades Senior Discounts creek. 637 acres surBulletin Classifieds & wrap. 541-388-4687 $5995 new roof seal 2012. Deschutes River frontalso req u ire addi- Winter Prep rounded federal land, Bonded & Insured Get Results! Dream Car age in Tumalo, remod300 Turbo CAT, 89K t ional licenses a nd 541-815-4458 Fremont Nat'I Forest. FIND IT! Call 385-5809 • Pruning Auto Sales eled 3 bdrm/2 bath+ offc, mi. Engine diagnoscertifications. 541-480-7215 LCB¹8759 or place •Aerating BUY ITS 1801 Division, Bend 1 level, $1795 mo-to- mo, tic =perfect 9/20/13. your ad on-line at •Fertilizing DreamcarsBend.com 775 Debris Removal SELL IT! now thru April. 20076 Good batteries, tires. bendbulletin.com ALLEN REINSCH The Bulletin Classifieds 541-678-0240 Beaver Ln off Cline Falls. All service done at Manufactured/ Yard maintenance 8 Dlr 3665 Virginia, 541-480-7501 Compost Beaver Coach, JUNK BE GONE Mobile Homes clean-up, thatching, Bend. $42,500, I Haul Away FREE Applications 654 plugging & much more! Billing Specialist 541-419-8184 For Salvage. Also Use Less Water Call 541-536-1294 FACTORY SPECIAL Houses for Rent Cleanups & Cleanouts New Home, 3 bdrm, $$$ SAVE $$$ Medical Billing; Bend Urology Associates, LLC SE Bend Mel, 541-389-8107 $46,500 finished Improve Plant Health BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS is looking for a full time candidate to process on your site. pre-authorization requests, confirm insurance Search the area's most 4 Bdrm, 2 t/s bath family Domestic Services J and M Homes e ligibility, patient collections, as w el l a s home, AC Ig fenced back2014 Maintenance comprehensive listing of 541-548-5511 provide backup coverage for reception. Excel- yard, mint cond in great classified advertising... A ssisting Seniors a t Package Available lent communication skills, the ability to pay neighborhood. $ 1350/ LOT MODEL real estate to automotive, Home. Light houseVictory TC 2002, attention to detail and multi-task is a must. mo. 541-617-7003 LIQUIDATION merchandise to sporting keeping & other ser- Weekly, Monthly & runs great, many Fleetwood D i scovery Experience is preferred, but not required. Prices Slashed Huge One Time Service goods. Bulletin Classifieds Hours:8 am -5 pm, Monday through Fri v ices. L i censed & 40' 2003, diesel moday. 667 accessories, new Savings! 10 Year appear every day in the Bonded. BBB Certitorhome w/all We offer medical, dental and vision, 401K and conditional warranty. tires, under 40K EXPERIENCED Commercial for print or on line. fied. 503-756-3544 options-3 slide outs, competitive wages. Come be a part of a great Finished on your site. miles, well kept. Commercial Rent/Lease Call 541-385-5809 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Prestige Housekeeping team environment i n a wel l -established ONLY 2 LEFT! & Residential $5000. www.bendbulletin.com medical office. etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. Housecleaning, Vacation Redmond, Oregon 541-847-4232 Rentals, Move-ins/Outs Fenced storage yard Wintered i n h e ated Email your resume to 541-548-5511 Senior Discounts Licensed & insured. building an d o f f ice shop. $84,900 O.B.O. dperrine I bendurology.com JandMHomes.com 541-390-1466 trailer for rent. In con541-977-2450 541-447-8664 or fax your information to 541-330-7413 $10 oii 1st Cleaning! Same Day Response venient Redmond loRent /Own ATVs • cation, 205 SE Rail- 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Painting/Wall Covering Flooring road Blvd. $800/mo. $2500 down, $750 mo. sl . Avail. 10/1. OAC. J and M Homes NOTICE: Oregon Land- WESTERN PAINTING Prestige Hardwood 541-923-7343. scape Contractors Law CO. Richard Hayman, 541-548-5511 Flooring, lnc. (ORS 671) requires all a semi-retired paintAdvertising Account Executive 541-383-1613 businesses that ading contractor of 45 Clinical Operations Director www prestigehardwoodsite.com Rewardingnew business development G ulfstream S u n vertise t o pe r f orm years. S m a l l J o bs CCB¹154136 Landscape Construc- Welcome. Interior 8 sport 30' Class A The Bulletin is looking for a professional and HUNTERS! 1988 ne w f r idge, tion which includes: Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. driven Sales and Marketing person to help our Handyman Honda Fat Cat 200cc p lanting, deck s , 541-388-6910 TV, solar panel, new w/rear rack & receiver customers grow their businesses with an fences, arbors, refrigerator, wheelhitch carrier, used very I DO THAT! expanding list of broad-reach and targeted water-features, and inc hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W little, exlnt cond, $1875 Home/Rental repairs products. This full-time position requires a stallation, repair of irg enerator, Goo d Call a Pro /n Care Small jobs to remodels obo. 541-546-3330 background in c onsultative sales, territory rigation systems to be condition! $18,000 Honest, guaranteed Whether you need a management and aggressive prospecting skills. Partners In Care is seeking a Clinical Operalicensed w i t h t he obo 541-447-5504 work. CCB¹151573 Two years of media sales experience is tions Director to lead the organization in the Landscape Contracfence fixed, hedges Dennis 541-317-9768 preferable, but we will train the right candidate. management of all aspects of hospice and tors Board. This 4-digit trimmed or a house home health clinical care processes. number is to be inERIC REEVE HANDY built, you'll find cluded in all adverThe p o sition i n c ludes a comp etitive SERVICES. Home & compensation package including benefits, and Qualified candidates must have exceptional tisements which indiprofessional help in Commercial Repairs, cate the business has The Bulletin's "Call a rewards an aggressive, customer focused leadership and management skills, skilled in Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, Carpentry-Painting, salesperson with unlimited earning potential. hospice and home health clinical knowledge MXR Sport quad, dirt & a bond,insurance and Pressure-washing, Service Professional" workers c o mpensaand processes — with successful practical sand tires,runs great, low Honey Do's. On-time tion for their employEmail your resume, cover letter clinical background and experience. Educa- hrs, $3750 541-647-8931 KOUNTRY AIRE Directory promise. Senior and salary history to: tion / p r ofessional licensure should be 1994 37.5' motorDiscount. Work guar- ees. For your protec541-385-5809 tion call 503-378-5909 Jay Brandt, Advertising Director commensurate with the responsibilities of this home, with awning, anteed. 541-389-3361 or use our website: 'brandtIbendbulletin.com type of position. and one slide-out, or 541-771-4463 www.lcb.state.or.us to OI' Only 47k miles Bonded & Insured Tile/Ceramic • check license status drop off your resume in person at If you are interested in being considered for and good condition. CCB¹t 81595 before contracting with 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; this opportunity, please send a cover letter $25,000. Home Repairs, Remod the business. Persons Baptist Tile Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. (including salary expectations) and resume to 541-548-0318 lan d scape & Stone Gallery els, Tile, Carpentry doing No phone inquiries please. Partners In Care / Human Resources via Suzuki powered custom (photo aboveis of a CCB¹19421 Finish work, M ainte maintenance do n ot email at HROpartnersbend.org or via fax at Dune Buggy, twin 650 cc similar model & not the 541-382-9130 nance. CCB¹168910 r equire an L C B motor, 5-spd, with trailer, EOE / Drug Free Workplace 541-389-0813. actual vehicle) cense. www.baptistatile.com $3500. 541-389-3890 Phil, 541-279-0846.
r
L'"'""" J
The Bulletin
. 0 0
C®X
I
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
r
The Bulletin
i
I
i i i i l i
I I
J
The Bulletin
I
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Partners
•
I
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013 C3
TUNDRA
FOR BETTER OR FORWORSE hlOW 305T TAKE YOUIQ
WHY PEhl&LIIN C!QI!V4E55ELDOA/I EhlP IN CONVICTION5
TI!V4EI A/IA'A/t/I/ AND TELL
Af4E WHICH OhlE 5TOLE YOUR HE!QIQlhl&.
5 /1
GECtRf3IRS FI IdONDFR
I CRNT FIGUF4E IT
T HEYPla ~ E Q T FOP, aRQH oTYIE!R!
FUL &IRL .... TI-Ia Y va BEEN GOING TCIGETHER Fcth ct/U<Ta R LLIHILE.
WHY DoaGIA!T PHIL WRNT To Gar MRPRIEP+
OUT,BOHN... tc
E 0
0 L
1
2
3
4
i(
5
d
'iy":"„.'"'..
0
cc'
0
'i';:iil!iili 0
HEART OF THE CITY
SALLY FORTH
HOLPfg!MNALLS! THAT l2AT'S AS BIQ 4ST~
HINPGIIB+4:!
OIOCHE/LW; i3UST
YorJ GCT
Btfttc!CLIPREALSLOU/ AND lt/IAYBLE HE CLLGO
A PLAN
SCRFAM
tlfhrr er
LIKE CRAIQ
WHAT ARE YOU DOING,
PAN!CANP
AWAq „.
NEIGHBORS CALLED. THEY WANT TO KNOW IF DAD'S BEEN STARING AT THEIR HOUSE OR THE MIDDLE DISTANCE FOR THE PAST 'TWO HOURS.
KINDA WAS HOPING FOR MORE EXPOSITION THAN THAT.
THINKING.
TED>
v
«I
0
'7
c 0 E
I/1, c o c
I0-7 .,
"s./f
FRAZZ
10-7
1II I
OSE IS ROSE stNEI.L, APPARENTL Y NOW A 100 WORD ESSA'I lS ON YHE LlST.
NEEP?MOSTPEOPLE TRULY NEED QNL Y FOQD,WATER, CLOTHING AND SHELTER. AND ACCOP DING
HERg.5 WHPT I NEEV FO!L TohhoHV,Y OV:
'YO SO!thE PEOPLE,
4HOMm (SP
TugFoN P'Z
LOVE. AND(QR COFFEE.
Cc
Distribuled by Universal Uclick
i~a~eh 3PP ee •4
'016
'4lE TOO K T146PO OL VOVVN 0F@(
c 0 LL
E E
ef N
es<ehea
0 N
8 BI0 7
TONE SOUP
LUANN THEIRE5 NO &UCHTHIN&
l")
A5 nPIZEW FL.IP PLOP5» ,
)
DQB'5 W/IITIN' FQQ YA, 02!
YQUQ QQQMWll-L BE READY, QUII.I....
0
BIIT THBYI% SLACK!
(
)D Dn
P
YE5, QUII.I., I HAVE Al.l, YQUQ PAPEQ5IN QQDEQ...
QK GQT 5CHQQI.,
WEI I, 0&ICE YQU'QE HERE, QE5IDENCE AND YQU'Ll. QNI.Y 30B NAII.ED. HAVE ONE QNI.Y 94 MQQE FORM YQ FQQM5 TQ FII I CHECK... QUT AhIDCHECK
CDDNEE~E
3-/R/E'IP50R fb-7
MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM
9RlhM C 0
ggR 2Hn'6
DILBERT
<9 yHt/P
WHAT
A
WAS
PICT!0!l(AR44 '.
THATP
1
I'M A HEADHUNTER. AND I KNOW SOMEONE WHO WANTS TO OFFER. YOU A MUCH BETTER. ZOB. YES!
O
t
o111
O .
(0
E
I LIKE TO SOFTEN UP THE R.OOM BEFOR.E IGO FOR. MY PER.FOR.MANCE R.EVIEW.
te 0 E N
I DIDN'T DO SQUAT THIS YEAR, c 0 E
DOESN'T MATTER. TO ME!
D0
Io
3
NS Io m 0
DU
s)
o S
10/7
DOONESBURY
PICKLES 5ONE PEOPLE 5AY I'N JV5T A NOVELTYCANDIDATE, BVT/F THAT'5 TRVE, WHYARE YOV ALL HBR&P//'5
LAP/E5 ANP GBNTLBMBN,
/T'5MY PL&A5URE TO WELCOME YOV TO TH!5EXTRAORP/NARY PRE55 EVENT. /T'5 /NCRED/BLBTHB TVRNOVT! VNPRECEDENTED!
3
ANP I DON7 OKAY, 50 BLAMB YOV! Tff!5 /5 ffU- /F I WERE M/UATING... YOU,I'D BE HER&!THAT'5 0o HOWB/G C7 TH/5/5!
ICAN7 BBL/EVE WffO'5 HBRE! CB5! NBC! ABC! FOX!THE NEW YORK T/ME5! AP! NPR!hfAtTORNEP/A! HUGE!TffE TOPOVTLBT5!
I!NSEUEV- A, A SL E !
'7~
OKAY, kI IELSONi
4 ijIDQ"CRMllkhK
STAR!FI& I /AT ME+
YOu LOOK LIKE EnMEIE.'OQE.OF
wW ARE You
i HEAIR'P &RAPAAA A 5AV YOU'IE'.F A6
UklhAAf AIkIIAAAL5+
Ti4O5E AICI!AAAL5.
PIGLAEAPEP AS A MLILE.
a
10/7
1st
cf58deerA'asn so
f0.7
0
ADAM
IZARD OF ID A JUICER?
LOOKWHAT I CiOT!
'lER I'M SICK ANPTIREP P(P YOU KNOWJUICE COULP!4'T Ec ANUABGUTTHE OF BEING SICKANUTIREP. CA!4SUPE RCHARGE SLGEP STHT(MEI SAUI 'IOVRNUTRITION? LASTt4ICHT, E0c THE COMMGRCI AL SOMETH(NG ( HUH? Cl ICKEP. n
OR SNAPPE R
I /NAY HAV&&Oh!E TOO FAR CUR5IN& TltAT E/UY AT TH8 KPART!%NT OF JV5TICE:
TH FYAIAPF MB
UH, OPIWHY 8' TH-kTP
Ak IsuTI5TBREP
0 HSX" OFF&NPBR
99
PAH&& R 2
LL
0 Z
c
p
107
B.C. OFF YoU Caol I& A W'BAFt-yhh.
rA<a cHAgcps.
e
0
GENIU5
0
0s
HOE I DON'T FEELMY
AlaYER LaAR/LI To PRIVE P@oA/I A Fo!cA4aR sFU/khr DRIVF~.
~PFBP ANCb L.ITTBR I
poNr FOI2&ar foUR VB'-h4lcLE-
e , a
0 3 •
oo 0 N
Co. T
ALI. Rlc/-Ir f so&4... Ra/L4 EAA5E- l2. To pp-Iva pAsT A/ AID
Cf Q
0
WIZARDOFI0 CDM
s
l5 FULLY
HAVEYOUR"GEN!US GIVE ME ACALL, AND I'LL HIREHIIAANDFIREYOU!
OH, YEAH'?...!
X N E 0
APPRECIATED AROUNDHERE.
PAP I
A
.' Pj4y '1
rs
Io 7
©2013 fchn L. Hart FLP Dist byCreatcrs
IO/1
E
GARFIELD
EARLS BEFORE SWINE ANP THERE'S h sNOTHING YOU CAN DO ABOUT IT!
I COULP
CLIMB YOU 0
UNFORTUNATELY 0 Q
Hf Y, MORTY, CAhlT,GEORGE WANT TO GOTTA HAIVG MATCH THIS O UT.o EG G .
POEG hlT NO. LIITHEMPEROR SO Gf E,GEUR GE,I POh lT YOUR Pf NGUI NS,IVS THE :,MHAT KNOM.RVTEVOLVTIGU MIFE GUY MHO IhlCVPOES ARII YSPEAKING,I 0E PO 8A TES THE. EGGTHE ASSUME ITSSOMETHING THAT.o MIFE CRITICAI,JOOUR POo SPECIES'SR UVIVAL. 0.al
COCKTA IL l
0 III
0
0
D 0
0
tEa0 0
iv 0 Z 0
3
1
c
PEANUTS
MARY WORTH
THE TITLEOF ML! THEME15, "EXPERIECE5 N AT 5UMMER CAMP"
C • 01
'A5 I GOTOFFTHECAMP BU5 THATDAY,I 5EN5ED THATTHEWOODS ILIEREFULL OF QU EEN5NAKE5! QUEEN 5NAKE5TO THELEFTOFME„., RUEEN5NAKETO 5 THE R(BHTOFME.„GUEEN5NAK E5 ALL ARO UND ME! I., s
MARY ANP O'EFF 'TAKE A SUNSET CRUISE BEFORE
POORMI55 OTHMAR ... I K'EEPFORGETTING 5HE HA5 ATHIN& ABOVT QUEEN6NAKE5!
DtlNNER.
I HAVE NEWS
I HAVE NEWS FOR VOU,
FOR YOU, YOO'
MARY.
ll
Po YOUs ZEFF?
s32 E
11 0 E
3 0
( • O' 10-7
Ksyyacz-
GET FUZZY OK, THE WA'Y Vhf! GDNNA YESY M'I 6/kT WINGS /S EY JUMMNG N/T OT 1HE W/NDOW -WHICH Is SYUCK, HENCE lHE HA!v!Iv/ER...
NON SEQUITUR .„NoW )DU'/PE
NCt '. I
GDLN/t To YWDW THLS W/\LDD DDLL YDU CALL "RDS"
Ro>!
cST YHE WINDoW To EIVE ME AN AERIAL 'TARGET
Ii
S ob,=
PEAL WITH IT! YDU'RE HELPINEE
DON'T
goB OOT
TH'E WINDshhI
U
AND THAT'E ~ T!
To INTERCETT.
LNF.
4/ I E TH!CMN
T>ERK
fDLloULD GET oUT oF L4E.RE IBF FoRE Il'
tU 9
CI4A¹Fe
ci
E 0
o D
b D
E
Cf
le
c 0
B 4 0 Ef'/3 bktav II/y.,ivc.
(g
ot LEV t FrV-EE/AO/ttL/ tfV-. StE/
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
C4 MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013•THE BULLETIN
D AILY B R I D G E
CLU B
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sh ()rtz
M onday,octobe r 7,2013
ACROSS
a4 Intersects 7o Complement of Disney dwarfs ae Cheese in a red zi Midterm, for wheel one e Poetic black ae Degree of 7a Price to pay importance io Head of an office za Lock of hair 4i Throb i4 Run out, as a 44 10th grader, subscription informally DOWN is Record for later 4s Hogs i Group of viewing preferred party 47 6-3, e.g., in attendees ie Leaf gatherer tennis i7 "Theme z Spaghetti or ziti 4e Cancun coin From Shaft" a ln pieces si Blacksmith's composer, 4 Old Testament block 1971 prophet sa Condiment that ie Comparable s Locale for an can remove (to) Adam's apple crayon marks zo One of three s When a plane se Women's for an out is due, for short magazine with zi "For here 7 Rifle a palindromic go7 attachment name aa " e "Der so Aged Miserables" Rosenkavalier," ei " we forget" 24 "Toodles!" for one ez Goner's as Part of a 9 Crunch maker declaration project just io So-called before the end s4 Ark builder "mansiere," ee Intense look ae Therefore essentially, in a "Seinfeld" ao Feeder school ee New Age singer episode from Ireland for Oxford and Cambridge ii Team in ee Makes a "Moneyball" ai "Blech!" misstep iz "Nothin' but blue ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE ia Have a feeling ) I M M Y F A L L O N P B ) ie Playboy A R EY O U R E A D Y A L A founder Hugh K I NG S R A N S O M R O C az Choose E S S O L B S R E R A C K ze Alternatives to Slurpees S H A D S I C K T I C K S aa Tilling tools O SC A R S S H A T I S S U E P I E K U D U ze Down Under bird O T H E L L O S A G E T E A ai Letters at G A O L M A C M O D E S T the start of A L O E A T O A S T a destroyer's name P I TC H S N L O M E G A A CE T I C S AW A L U M aa Old Pontiac muscle car R I M M A G I N 0 T L I N E T 2 U 0 R I G I N A L S I N aa The Fonz's sitcom Y E P ME A N S T R E E T S as Whirls
Laughing it up
i "What i n the 5-Down!"
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
I was relaxing in the club lounge with Cy the Cynic when Unlucky Louie slouched in from the penny Chicago game. " I'm the l aughingstock of t h e club," Louie groaned. "And laughingstock is not cattle with a sense of humor," Cy observed. Louie had been declarer at today's five diamonds. When West led the queen of hearts, Louie won with the ace and led the nine of trumps. West put up his king, but when dummy played low, East won with the ace!
diamond and he bids one heart. What do you say? ANSWER: To bid 3NT looks easy and obvious, and many players would choose that action. I would be nervous about it since partner's hand is not well defined. He might hold K6, Q J 5 4 , 2 , A K J 8 6 4 . B i d one spade, forcing,and let him make another descriptive bid. You will still h ave plenty o f r o o m t o g e t t o notrump. South dealer N-S vulnerable
NO FINESSE "East then led the nine of spades," Louie told us, "and of course I took the ace. I didn't need to risk the finesse when I could just pick up the trumps and run the clubs for spade discards." But when Louie let the eight of trumps ride next, East produced the jack and cashed the king of spades. Down one! Louie was unlucky to ru n i n to inspired defense, but unless he was c oncerned about o v e rtricks, h e should have finessed in spades in case East was up to trickery. Louie would have anextra chance for his contract.
DAILY QUESTION
NORTH 4Q65 Q7 0 Q 1 05 3 4 AKJ4 2 WEST 483 9 Q J 10984 0 K2 4763
EAST 4K9742 g6532 OAJ ooo85
SOUTH 4oAJ10 9AK 0 9 876 4 AQ 109 South
We s t
North
E ast
10
19
24
39
3 NT P 5 0
ass 4 O All Pa s s
Pass
Youhold: 4 A J 10 9 A K Opening lead —6 (} 0 98 7 6 4 4 Q 1 0 9 . Yourpartner opens one club, you respond one (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
1
2
3
4
5
6
14
9
10
25
28 32
33
39
22
35
40
41
44
45
50
54
36 42
46
59
52 56 62
65
58
47
51
61
64
38
43
55
60
37
27 30
29
49
13
23
26
34
48
12
19 21
24
11
16
18
20
53
8
15
17
31
7
No. 0902
66
57
63
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
PUZZLE BY JIM PEREDO
a7 Had supper ae N.Y.C. presenter of B-Down, with II
49 NBC weekend fixture, for short so "Hang on ..." sa Accountant's book
lI
Ihe
4o "The Cosby Show" son sa Impressionist 4z Reveal Claude 4a Wreath in s4 Solo Waikiki 4e They're good at ss Houston taking orders ballplayer
s7 Depart
se Lolls (around) se Idyllic places
ea Classic computer game set on an island es Sombrero, e.g. ez Ballpark fig.
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
DENNIS THE MENACE
SUDOKU
gIZAI(OCIIIICI,COIA feeebookJoIII/IiMrrocomi84 aiiiIKII rerora.
Vle broke u . t Wag gpending a
HoW 0 lt
going Witb. CatWoman'?
Complete the grid so that
every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
fortune replading furnit ure.
SOLUTION TO SATURDAY'S SUDOKU
~)
57 -'
38 16 62l
D
~a3
89 74 91
"I &AVE THE TOASTER ATUA/E-VP, BLIT IM NOT 5URE WHAT TOPO WIT)4 THE I EFT-OVER5.o
!
4 --.
23l
CO Ct Ol
CANDORVILLE
Qo
Tl/IIIIK ASO(/T/T. kI'E
TI/O SATMAII/ FRAIVC)/IPE/8 MAKING QVEPTIONASLE CAPTING KCle2IONe 2.
MAY 000lv I/Al/C A 'PREP/KAIT CLINTOhl" IN T)/E I4/I/ITC )/0(/PE.
/'8 PORKI', / PTILC DON'T SELIEVE4/E ALCIt/EAIT SACK/N TIME T0 TI/ONINETIEP.
TNNE'0A SOI/ERNffCNT P)/f/TDOVN LAP NIC4T, / )t'ATC)/CP Tf/E ARKNIO MALL ef/OI4/ARPEAIIO. NEED / COONf
D IFFICULTY RATING: * 4
4 ' z 4' 4
LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD •
•
Edited by Rich NOrriSand Joyce Nichols Lewis OK,Si/T /F / 8EE e2INSA(7 ON My T(/ /'M CONNA FA'EAK 7/78//ez,"K' I7VT.
SAFE HAVENS 40Pb.
( A)AI1; FAL/y(TOP! 7EAT, oloi/) lg ftOT 'fdAT LAST &E)IETIC p(AT717ITiotl TO o)ECEG5AILILI/." HUISAhl. T ! 4.'6ATNI&&T 14lEIol& &Tvcg )11) cHAf) &ED k'ovla THI& SoC7Y 1 I'I.L II2I5&.5 fz Ac)4. 'I )IAVE Tco )eEH' !YI< E'(5& Cov&.517! )„
COOL CAT CDI4TAcT LEII5E5t Af'.5 gOU lNTo CI75f' IA<7 1 I.OYg C,O5f'LAII'!
( ® —a
~~ 0 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc World ngoto reserved
64moO bholbrook1@gmae com
hOP 11WWW SatehaVeneoamio COm
SIX CHIX 86 98 O
TIZANSITIONING INTO
AVTUM H
5
98
e
9 8
W IT H THE
LAVEREEa
LooK. r 4aoeli a bannerm40.r o m
'7
ZITS I/jy(P(j/If(P!N&
5OMGOFTHlS hhAI!.lHAT I 607 F@5NCOLlS&E&
C% LL F'R2~
6!'
F~
-Fot p<
ToW tf
HERMAN
R,f)LJ((Q!bX
THAT SCRAMBLEDW ORD GAME by Oavid L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurel
Unscramble these four Jumbles, One letter 10 eaCh Square, to farm faur Ordinary WOrdS.
~T hese are 4Peaal sgice ~i alnayo d elicious, 7 46' M
ZISEE
Kate! '
t620I3 Tnbune Content Agency, LLC Ao Rights Reserved.
,~/ixoycSo.~gi)
. II Yll~i —. ll ell15 'iii J 4X Oo 'r1 8 '-Io ,ie-0 ~~-'I'I',~i. b - ' l l' J' 7 0 5 ' i /9' 7 0 ~ 'i4J' 1X 318i:":. ' 1- 8- 3I-9:".j:1X .=.1ielli/J..-i,;1i' l1zjiI l i / r .-.-t ti/yj'<iji)iP4/I 7i1ji( .,
/
5'
=
Y'um. ~'
DARNB
ACROSS 1 A dromedary has
DOWN 34 Falcoof"The 5 2 Necklace gem 1 L a bor leader who Sopranos" 54 Soft leather vanished in 1975 35 *Jalapeno, for one 55 Plumbel's one 2 Range dividing 5 Smart guy? 37 Listen to concerns 10 Exec's "I need it Euro p e and Asia 4 0 Polar explorer 56 R e e k noW!" 3 Southwestern Richard 57 Football game tabl e lands 14 Black-and-white 41 Menu words dtvlslon 4 Kiln users snack 44 Mostoff -the-wall 58 Hodgepodge 5 Adaptable, 15 Military training 46 Sounded like a 60 R eal estate electrically grDUP chicken measurement 6 Wilderness 16 Actress Hatche 48 Buttocks, 61 Curved home 17 Llke a clock 62 "That makes informally 7 Rim reading 5:05 a 50 Loos, for short sense" 8 Reacts to a 5:00 tearjerker 18"Eat!" ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 9 Pet's home away 19 Tenant's expen from home J AD A C R A P S T A B L E 20 *Space-saving computer monitor 10 Some hotel A R A L O E D I PU S R E X lobbies 22 Fateful Marchday BR E D I C A N R E L A T E 11 *Start-up capital 23 Equipment on S A W O F F S K I O C A S 12 "Rule, Britannia" balance sheet, YO G I T H E T O W EL composer 24 Immunity build 13 Depressing S O U R E R D E R L O B 26 Cuban dance situation, with 30 Defective cars C E L I A A R E N A "the" 33 Devious laughs D I SC O M B O B U L A T E D 21 Early Beatle 36 "That stings!" U N H I P L 0 P E Z Sutcliffe 38 Often : a bou I N I A C C S A X ONY 25 Enjoy King and half the time Koontz O H P L E A S E A ROO 39 Foofaraw 27 Cohort of Curly A C T I S N L I M B R U E 40 Untidy waking-up 28 Future blossoms R A Z Z M A T A Z Z hair condition, A T T A 29 Felt pain and what the f I S U Z U R Q D E 0 cows 31 Director Ephron word of the ED S E S A M E S KNQ 32 Kenton of jazz answers to 33 Difficult 10/07/13 xwordeditorOaol.com starred clues can be 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 12 42 Historical span 14 15 16 43 Posh 45 Freezer bag 17 18 19 feature 46 Bluish hue 20 21 22 47 Go away 49 Southern speech 23 24 feature 51 Turn out to be 27 2 8 29 30 31 32 53 Zodiac transition 33 3 4 35 36 37 points 57 Arizona Indian 41 42 59 *Title racehorse in 39 a 2003 film 44 46 63 Mont Blanc, par
exemple
-
,
)'~ '(I72O'32 ii'6//II7ij;ij i
64 Rabbit relatives
THE I5EACH CAFE WA5 FAMDL75 FOR IT5 —-
NUFSUG
N0W arrange the CirCled letterS 10 form the ourpnoe answer, 86 suggested by the above cartoon.
"Her idea of a balanced diet is four pounds of chocolate with four pounds of cake."
Answer here: ~ Saiurda 8
i
48
65 Foreign Legion cap
FOECEF
% . '(I 6
4 Laughngotock Internsbonel Inc 5 st 5y Un ersal UCI ck for UF8, 205
47
~
-
(AnoWero tOmarrOW) J 0700168: ROYAL EN A C T CHA N G E SCR I P T AnSWer: The POny With the negatiVe attitude W88A "NEIGH-SAYER"
66 Falsehoods 67 "Fame" singer Cara 68 First family's garden site? 69 Oater stronghold 70 Tickle pink 71 Cubicle furnishing
58
50
52
51
57
49
59
53 60 6 1
54
56
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
By Gail Grabowski andBruce Venzke (c)2013 Tribune ContentAgency, LLC
55
10/07/1 3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
•
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 7 2013
Fifth Wheels
•
Aircraft, Parts & Service
932
933
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
C5
935
•
Pickups
Pickups
• S p ort Utility Vehicles )
Almost Perfect Chev S10 long bed, 1988 Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, Buick 1983 a a • ~ St I 4.3 V6, professional based in Madras, alRegal, T-type r ebuilt engine, 4 7 k •a ways hangared since Transmission rebuilt 8 new. New annual, auto 3000 rpm stall converter; since installed, dual 750 Holley double pipes, custom grill, pilot, IFR, one piece Monaco Windsor, 2001, Monte Carlo 2012 Lim- Monaco Lakota 2004 iphoto forillustration only) iphoto forillustration onlyi FORD XLT 1992 windshield. Fastest Ar- pumper w/milled air horn sunroof, full canopy 40-ft, loaded! (was Toyota Tundra Double Dodge Durango 2005, ited Edition, 2 slides, 2 5th Wheel cab h i gh , C l a rion (flows 850 cfms); turbo cher around. 1750 to3/4 ton 4x4 Cab 2009, V8, auto, 4WD, V8 5.7L, Tow $234,000 new) A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps 34 ft.; 3 s lides; imr e m ote matching canopy, t i me . $6 8 ,500. rebuilt. Have receipts for AM/FM/CD Solid-surface counters, 6-8 comfortably, has maculate c o ndition; tal 4WD, tow pkg., cuspkg., running boards. radio. Looks g reat, 541-475-6947, ask for all 3 items. Plus addi30k original miles, convection/micro, 4-dr, w/d, dishwasher, many l arge screen TV w / t om b u mper, V I N third row seat, moontional work done. $3300 runs strong, always possible trade for fridge, washer/dryer, ce- extras, fully l o aded. entertainment center; Rob Berg. ¹015272 roof. obo. Call for addtional garaged. $3,550 firm. classic car, pickup, ramic tile & carpet, TV, $29,600 obo. Located reclining chairs; cen$21,888 Vin¹ 534944 info 541-480-5502 541-504-0663. motorcycle, RV DVD, satellite dish, lev- in Bend. 682-777-8039 ter kitchen; air; queen $11,988 S UB A R U . $13,500. eling, 8-airbags, power BUBARUORBBND COM bed; complete hitch In La Pine, call cord reel, 2 full pass-thru g g S UBUBARUOBBBND B A RCOM U. Ne//Zl' 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. and new fabric cover. 928-581-9190 trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 877-266-3821 $22,900 OBO. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 (541) 548-5886 Diesel gen set. $74,900 Save money. Learn Price Reduced! Dlr ¹0354 503-799-2950 Call a Pro to fly or build hours Chev P/U 1968, custom Chevy 2500 HD 2003 Want to impress the - at with your own air- cab, 350 crate, AT, new 4 WD w o r k t ru c k , Whether you need a Ford Expedition LTD relatives? Remodel Orbit 21'2007, used c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o paint, chrome, orig int, gas 140,000 miles, $7000 fencefixed hedges 2008, black, 50k mi., only 8 times, A/C, your home with the Commander, 4 seat, tank under bed, $10,900 obo. 541-408-4994. trimmed or a house $31,995. ¹A75271 oven, tub s hower, help of a professional 150 HP, low time, obo. 541-788-9648 micro, load leveler built, you'll find full panel. $23,000 from The Bulletin's MONTANA 3585 2008, hitch, awning, dual obo. Contact Paul at Chevy 1955 PROJECT Oregon professional help in "Call A Service exc. cond., 3 slides, car. 2 door wgn, 350 Autogource NATIONAL DOLPHIN batteries, sleeps 4-5, 541 -447-51 84. king bed, Irg LR, The Bulletin's "Call a Professional" Directory small block w/Weiand 37' 1997, loaded! 1 EXCELLENT CON541-598-3750 Arctic insulation, all dual quad tunnel ram slide, Corian surfaces, DITION. All accesService Professional" www.aaaoregonautooptions $35,000 obo. with 450 Holleys. T-10 wood floors (kitchen), sories are included. source.com Directory 935 541-420-3250 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, 2-dr fridge, convection $14,511 OBO. Chevy Colorado ExWeld Prostar wheels, 541-385-5809 Sport Utility Vehicles microwave, Vizio TV 8 541-382-9441 Nuyya 297LK HitchCab LS 2005, extra rolling chassis + tended roof satellite, walk-in Ford Explorer Hiker 2007, All seaextras. $6500 for all. 5 Cyl, 5 speed, 4WD, GMC 3/4 ton 1985, 4x4, Honda CR-V EX 2012, shower, new queen bed. AWD Limited sons, 3 slides, 32' b ed li n e r , all o y auto. trans, dual fuel 541-389-7669. twilight blue, 2,000 mi, White leather hide-a2013, perfect for snow birds, Superhavvkwheels. VIN ¹170983 ¹L072382, $25,995. bed 8 chair, all records, tanks, touring pkg., Vin¹ A47369 left kitchen, rear s Only 1 Share $12,888 no pets or s moking. 6.2 diesel engine, less j~ Now $32,995 lounge, extras, must Available $28,450. t han 9 0 K mil e s , S UBA R U . Oregon Cash or trade $3995 see. Prineville Economical flying CalI 541-771-4800 $4000. 541-389-7964 AutoSource 541-447-5502 days 8 Payments$279/mo. in your own 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. after 5pm. Cash! 541-598-3750 541-447-1641 eves. 84mo. x 3.99% OAC IFR equipped 877-266-3821 Tango 29.6' 2007, www.aaaoregonautoCessna 172/180 HP for Chevy Wagon 1957, Dlr ¹0354 Rear living, walksource.com Get your only $13,500! New around queen bed, 4-dr., complete, Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD Garmin Touchscreen business central air, awning, $7,000 OBO / trades. SLT quad cab, short box, avionics center stack! 1 large slide, Please call auto, AC, high mileage, Exceptionally clean! TIFFINPHAETON QSH 541-389-6998 $15,000 obo (or $13,900. 541-389-7857 Hangared at BDN. a ROW I N G 2007 with 4 slides, CAT trade for camper Call 541-728-0773 OPEN ROAD 36' 350hp diesel engine, that fits 6 t/s' pickup Take care of 2005 - $28,000 $129,900. 30,900 miles, with an ad in dlr¹267515 bed, plus cash). King bed, hide-a-bed BMW X 3 2 0 07, 9 9 K great condition! your investments The Bulletin's 541-475-7204 541-280-2547 or Trucks & sofa, 3 slides, glass miles, premium packExtended warranty, with the help from 541-815-4121 "Call A Service shower, 10 gal. waage, heated lumbar dishwasher, washer/ Heavy Equipment supported seats, pandryer, central vac, roof ter heater, 10 cu.ft. The Bulletin's Professional" Good classified ads tell Corvette Coupe 1964 oramic moonroof, satellite, aluminum fridge, central vac, The Bulletin's "Call A Service Directory s atellite dish, 27 " 530 miles since frame Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- the essential facts in an wheels, 2 full slide-thru "Call A Service off restoration. Runs Professional" Directory non headlights, tan & interesting Manner. Write basement trays 8 3 TV's. TV/stereo syst., front black leather interior, from the readers view - not Falcon-2 towbar and Professional" Directory front power leveling and drives as new. n ew front & rea r Even-Brake included. jacks and s c issor Satin Silver color with the seller's. Convert the is all about meeting brakes @ 76K miles, facts into benefits. Show stabilizer jacks, 16' I--' Call 541-977-4150 black leather interior, yourneeds. I nternational Fla t one owner, all records, the reader how the item will awning. Like new! 1987 Freightliner COE 3- mint dash. PS, P B, Bed Pickup 1963, 1 very clean, $16,900. 541-419-0566 axle truck, Cummins en- AC, 4 speed. Knock Tioga 24' Class C Call on one of the F350 4-dr diesel help them in someway. ton dually, 4 s pd. 541-388-4360 Motorhome gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 offs. New tires. Fresh 2004 pickup, auto, professionals today! This trans., great MPG, obo. 541-419-2713 327 N.O.M. All CorBought new in 2000, King Ranch, 144K, advertising tip could be exc. wood I Chevrolet Suburbanl currently under 20K vette restoration parts excellent, extras, brought to youby «4k. hauler, runs great, miles, excellent in 8 out. Reduced to $16,995 obo. 2004, 1500 4x4 Dark new brakes, $1950. shape, new tires, $59,500. 541-410-2870 541-923-0231 grey, leather, all LT The Bulletin R ~ .<)-r 541-419-5480. professionaly winteroptions perfect conized every year, cutdition, 150K miles, aloff switch to battery, P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h '/ ways parked inside. Ford F150 2004, plus new RV batterwheel, 1 s lide, AC, WEEKEND WARRIOR 2nd row buckets, re4x4, low miles. Backhoe ies. Oven, hot water Toy hauler/travel trailer. TV,full awning, excelmovable 3rd, custom Vin¹ C31496 2007 John Deere heater & air condi24' with 21' interior. lent shape, $23,900. ~ wheels, 3 sets of tires, ~ Now $9995. tioning have never 310SG, cab 4x4, 541-350-8629 Sleeps 6. Self-congreat car! $12,500. Datsun 280ZX 1 9 82, 4-in-1 bucket Payments been used! Ken 541-647-0657 tained. Systems/ white with red interior, $149.70/mo. $24,000 obo. Serious Extendahoe, appearancein good Subaru Baja 2 00 5 , 117,510 miles, T-top, AT, 60mo. x 4.99% OAC Inliniti FX35 2012, inquiries, please. hydraulic thumb, condition. Smoke-free. AWD, leather, power $950. 541-317-1792 Stored in Terrebonne. Tow Platinum silver, loaded, like new, t/s-ton. Strong with seats, bed liner, tow Chevy Suburban 541-548-5174 500 hours. 24,000 miles, with suspension; can haul pkg, alloy wheels. w ~ M 3/4 ton 2005, factory war r anty, New $105,000. ATVs snowmobiles, Vin ¹103619 4x4, leather. f ully l o aded, A l l Sell $75,000. even a small car! Great Recreation by Design $16,588. Vin¹ 100063 541-350-3393 Wheel Drive, GPS, price - $8900. Now $16,495. sunroof, etc. 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. S UBA R U . Call 541-593-6266 Cash or trade $1995 Top living room 5th $37,500. I 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Payments$279/mo. Ford 1965 6-yard dlr¹267515 541-550-7189 I Weight distribution hitch wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 Ford Model A 1930 877-266-3821 A/Cs, entertainment 541-475-7204 60mo. x 4.99% OAC Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' with spring bars and dump truck, good Coupe, good condition, Dlr ¹0354 2004, 35K, loaded, too bracket f o r paint, recent overtr a i ler center, fireplace, W/D, $16,000. 541-588-6084 much to list, ext'd warr. f rame, $ 30 0 o b o . garden tub/shower, in haul, everything Ford F250 2006 Super What are you great condition. $42,500 thru 2014, $49,900 Den- Adco aqua cover for works! $3995. Say Bgoodbuy duty Super cab, 4x4 Ford Ranchero 1965 nis, 541-589-3243 541-815-3636 looking for? 25'x28' travel trailer, or best offer. Call Peter, ¹D25161, $24,988 Rhino bedliner cus307-221-2422, to that unused SOLD. Rubber liner tom wheels, 302V-8 881 You'll find it in ( in La Pine ) for 8' pickup box, $25. item by placing it in a uto. Runs g o od WILL DELIVER Travel Trailers Oregon 541-420-0551 The Bulletin Classifieds $9,995. The Bulletin Classifieds Aulogource 541-771-4778 541-598-3750 dlr¹26/515 Looking for your Canopies & Campers www.aaaoregonauto541-475-7204 541-385-5809 5 41-385-580 9 next employee? source.com Place a Bulletin help Ford F350 2006/ Brush wanted ad today and Q-'. Bandit XL 150 wood reach over 60,000 chipper T ruck h a s readers each week. V-10, 21k miles, HD ti Cougar 33 ft. 2006, Your classified ad Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 winch w/custom HD 14 ft. slide, awning, will also appear on Lance 8ys' camper, 1991 front bumper, air load engine, power everyeasy lift, stability bar, bendbulletin.com bags w/12' dump bed. thing, new paint, 54K Great cond; toilet 8 fullbumper extends for which currently resize bed. Lightly used. ChipperUis 2006 w/250 original m i les, runs great, excellent condiextra cargo, all acceives over 1.5 milRecently serviced, hrs, 12 feed 'drum' cess. incl., like new w/110hp Cat d iesel. tion in & out. Asking lion page views ev$4500. 503-307-8571 condition, stored in ery month at no Set up like new. Cost $8,500. 541-480-3179 RV barn, used less new over $90,000. Sell extra cost. Bulletin $60,000 obo. than 10 t imes loClassifieds Get ReB 541-350-3393 c ally, no p et s o r sults! Call 385-5809 smoking. $20,000 or place your ad obo. 541-536-2709. on-line at GMC 2004 16' bendbulletin.com refrigerated box van, gvw 20,000, 177,800 GMC t/s ton 1971, Only mi, diesel, 6 spd $19,700! Original low 882 manual with on-spot mile, exceptional, 3rd Fifth Wheels owner. 951-699-7171 automatic tire chains. Thermo-King reefer has 1,635 enAlpenlite 2002, 31' gine hours. $19,995. with 2 slides, rear Jayco Eagle 541-419-4172. kitchen, very good 26.6 ft long, 2000 condition. Non-smokers, Just too many Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, no pets. $19,500 GMC Sierra 1977 short awning, Eaz-Lift collectibles? or best offer. bed, e xlnt o r i ginal stabilizer bars, heat 541-382-2577 cond., runs & drives 8 air, queen Sell them in great. V8, new paint walk-around bed, 1/3 interest in Columbia The Bulletin Classifieds and tires. $4950 obo. CHECK YOUR AD very good condition, 541-504-1050 400, $150,000 (located $10,000 obo. O Bend.) Also: Sunri975 541-595-2003 541-385-5809 ver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, @ $400/mo.
©
©
BUBARUORBRND COM
-.
+
+
©~
BUBARUOIMRRD COM
B
TheBulletinreaches 0 of allDeschutesCsuntyadults ssshwssk.'
'I AB
Keystone Laredo31' RV
2 0 06 w i th 1 2 '
slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside shower. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-447-4805
'ts-
on the first day it runs to make sure it isB corU rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to
adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001
2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird
ready, Many up-
Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388
grade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds Mallard22' 1995, ready for hunting season!Sleeps 7, two twin beds, fully equipped, very good cond,$3900 obo. 541-678-5575
- ~
A S uu
JCB 2006 214 E diesel backhoe with Hammer Master 360U rock w e l l- hammer 18 dig
1/3 interest i n equipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510
MGA 1959 - $19,999 Convertible. O r iginal body/motor. No rust. 541-549-3838
OO
~ bucket, quick coupler, backhoe has 380 hrs, M orePixat Bendbulletin,com rock hammer has less t han 100 hrs. L i k e Call The Bulletin At new, $40,000 obo. 541-385-5809 Can purchase Kodiak Place Your Ad Or E-Mail GMC top kick 5 yrd dump and 28' trailer At: www.bendbulletin.com for a d d' I $3 0 ,000 541-350-3393
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and Mustang 1966 2 dr. engine, hangared in coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 Bend. Excellent per- Peterbilt 359 p o table cyl. Over $12,000 inwater t r uck, 1 9 9 0, iormance & affordvested, asking $9000. 3200 gal. tank, 5hp able flying! $6,500. All receipts, runs p ump, 4 - 3 B hoses, 541-410-6007 camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. good. 541-420-5011 541-820-3724
We~n
Automotive Parts, •
Service & Accessories
1974 Bellanca 1730A Keystone Challenger fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & o ut . 27 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5ys y ears.. No p ets, n o smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.
Range Rover,2006, low miles, excellent condition, 6 disc CD, A/C, leather interior, greatSUVfor winter driving.
1/5th interest in 1973
Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
2004 CH34TLB04 34'
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
I
your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any
~l
541-948-2963
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
Hyundai S a nt a Fe P l y mouth Barracuda wheeis and new stud- 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerded tires, 225/70R16 lines, 541-593-2597 $600 541 388 4003 PROJECT CARS: Chevy 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Antique & Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 Classic Autos ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, complete car, $ 1949; Cadillac Series 61 1950, 2 dr. hard top, complete w/spare f r on t cl i p ., 1921 Model T $3950, 541-382-7391 Delivery Truck •
Reachouttoday. as's'i j.e s
•
Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) Restored & Runs 60' wide x 50' d eep, tIINI $9000. w/55' wide x 17' high bi541-389-8963 fold dr. Natural gas heat, eX offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great 1952 Ford Customline visibility for aviation busi- Coupe, project car, flat- VW Bug Sedan, 1969, ness. Financing avail- head V-8, 3 spd extra fully restored, 2 owners, able. 541-948-2126 or parts, 8 materials, $2000 with 73,000 total miles, email 1jetjock@q.com obo. 541-410-7473 $10,000. 541-382-5127
I
I
I
I
I
To place yourad, visit www.benddulletin.com or call 541-385-5809 *American Opinion Research, April 2006
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
C6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013•THE BULLETIN iSport Utility Vehicles
Autom o biles
•
"My little red Corvette" Coupe i
ELK HUNTERS! Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. owner, 87k only 3k on new 258 long block. C lutch p kg , W a r n hubs. Excellent run-
ner, very dependable. Northman 6y2' plow, Warn 6000¹ w i nch. $9500 or best reasonable offer. 541-549-6970 or
Automobiles
•
Porsche 911 Turbo
E
, <n
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700.
1996, 350 auto, 132,000 miles. Non-ethanol fuel 8 synthetic oil only,
garaged, premium Bose stereo,
$'11,000. 541-923-1781
541-815-8105.
2005 Buick LeSabre Custom, 101K, $6500. 30+ mpg hwy, full-size 4-dr sedan, luxury ride 8 handling ... Why not drive a Buick? Call Bob, 541-318-9999
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices •
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE OREGON T RUSTEE'S N O T ICE O F SA L E T.S. No: L 543248 OR U nit Code: L Loan No: 34158192/SCHULZ A P ¹ 1: 182 1 3 4 Title ¹ : 832 6 332 Reference is made to that certain Trust
t hat t h e und e rsigned trustee will, on November 14, 2013, at t h e hour of 10:00 A.M. in accord with the Standard Time, as est ablished by O R S
FORECLOSURE DEPARTMENT 4000 W. Metropolit an Drive Suit e
a bove s t reet o r other common designation. By reason of said default, th e b e n eficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said Trust Deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: Principal $214,492.21, together with interest as provided in the n ote or o t her i n strument s e c ured from 01/ 2 0 / 11, plus subsidy recapture in the sum of $23,014.00 and fees a ssessed i n th e amount of $2,826.51, plus accrued interest due thereon, and such other costs and fees are due under the note or o t her instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given t hat t h e und e rsigned trustee will, on November 12, 2013, at t h e hour of 10:00 A.M. in accord with the Standard Time, as established by O RS
ARNOLD IRRIGATION
DISTRICT MONTHLY BOARD MEETING NOTICE The Board of Directors of Arnold Irrigation District will hold their monthly board meeting on Tuesday, O ctober 8, 2 013 a t 3:00 pm a t 1 9 6 04 Buck Canyon R d., Bend, OR. LEGAL NOTICE
541-322-9647
Porsche Carrera 911
2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory war-
Deed mad e
by
CHAD D. SCHULZ as Grantor, to THE RURAL HOUSING IN T H E CIR C U IT SERVICE OR ITS ranty remaining. COURT O F THE SUCCESSOR $37,500. AGENCY as 541-815-9939 STATE OF OREGON 541-322-6928 Trustee, in favor of FOR THE COUNTY BMW 525 2002 UNITED S T ATES OF CROOK J UVELuxury Sport EdiOF A MERI C A NILE DEPARTMENT. tion, V-6, automatic, ACTING IN THE MATTER OF loaded, 18" new THE COOK, LUCAS, DOB: THROUGH tires, 114k miles. RURAL HOUSING 07-17-2006, A Child. $7,900 obo S ERVICE, S UC (photo for illustrationonly) CASE NO. (541) 419-4152 IN Jeep Patriot 2010, 4 1 3JU00837. SUM - C ESSOR I N fphoto forillustration only) TO cyl., 2.4 L, auto, 4WD, Subaru Outback 2.5i MONS. TO: SHARDI TEREST MHA UNIT E D R oof r a c k , all o y 2006, power s e ats, COOK. IN THE NAME F STATES DEPARTBuick CX Lucerne wheels, privacy glass. leather, dual m o on OF THE STATE OF O F A G R I2006, 82k mi., Vin ¹522540 roof, rear spoiler, roof O REGON, you a r e MENT as cream leather, Black $14,588 directed t o a p p ear CULTURE rack, alloy wheels. Beauty - Stunning Dated Vin ¹356705 before the above en- Beneficiary. May 15, 2006, Re®s U B A R U . eye appeal, $6900. titled court at 300 NE 8UflAltllOPSENDCOM $13,988 No charge for 15 , Third Street, Prinev- c orded Ma y 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. S UBA R U . as Instr. No. looking. Call ille, Oregon on Octo- 2006 susmuovaeNO COV 877-266-3821 2006-33483 in 541-318-9999 Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ber 28, 2013 at 9:00 a.m. i n c o nnection Book - - Page - 877-266-3821 t of Official Records with the above enCadillac El Dor a do Dlr ¹0354 titled matter. A hear- in the office of the 1994, T otal C r e a m of DESPuff! Body, paint, trunk Want to impress the ing will be held upon a Recorder Petition filed on June CHUTES C o unty; as showroom, blue relatives? Remodel O REGON leather, $1700 wheels 5, 2013, concerning ORTIZATIONR E A M w/snow tires although your home with the L ucas C ook. T h i s Jeep Wrangler X 2004, car has not been wet in help of a professional s ummons i s pu b - AGREEMENT 5/ 15 / 1 0 6.0 cyl., hard top, tow 8 years. On t rip t o lished pursuant to the D ATED from The Bulletin's the followp kg., a l loys, 4 9 K Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., order of th e C ircuit covering "Call A Service miles, rear seat. $4800. 541-593-4016. Judge of the Juvenile ing described real Professional" Directory property situated in Vin ¹749542 Court. The order di-
Jeep Grand Cherokee 1996 4x4, auto- AUDI 1990 V8 Quatmatic, 135,000 miles. tro. Perfect Ski Car. Great shape - very LOW MILES. $3,995 nice interior, $3,600. obo. 541-480-9200.
i4
@®
$15,988
©s
UB A R U. 9UBARUOl BRND COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Nissan Pathfinder SE 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd 4x4, loaded, very good tires, very good cond, $4800. 503-334-7345
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.
Subaru Outback 2008 Immaculate! Original owner. 82K miles, 2 new sets of tires, service records, new brakes & struts, leather seats, loaded! $15,900. 541-693-3975
503-358-1164.
What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds
Kia Rio 2011,
541-385-5809
Vin¹ 721194
Now $10,995. Cash or trade $1995 Payments $149/mo. Oldsmobile Br a vada 66mo. x 4.99% OAC 1997, V6, auto, AWD, power seats, leather, roof rack, tow pkg. alloy wheels,
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
Vin¹713716
G T 2200 4
$3,999
©s
UB A R U. 9VBARUOl BKND COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin
Classifieds
541-385-5809
cyl, 5
speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o n vertible around in this price range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc.
dlr¹267515
541-475-7204
111K mi., r emarkable cond. i n side and out. Fun car to d rive, M ust S E E ! $5995. R e dmond.
Mazda MX5 M Iata 2006 Grand Touring, 13,095 easy miles. Copper red w/tan upholstery. Bose d eluxe sound. 6 -spd auto trans w / dual m ode shifting. A l w ays g araged ¹ w ashed b y h a nd. Power brakes, steering, mirrors, d o or locks. Like new car! Selling due to health issues. $14,895
541-504-1993
Toyota Pruis Hybrid 2007,
Vin¹ 560760 Now $11,995. Cash or trade $1995 Payments $166/mo. 72 mo. x 4.99% OAC
503-807-1973
Toyota Highlander 2 003 Limited A W D 99,000 mi., automatic
$12,000 ob o . O n e owner. 816.812.9882
•j
dlr¹267515
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
541-475-7204
'10 - 3 lines, 7 days Toyota High l ander '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Limited 2002, V 6, 3.0L, auto, moon roof, (Private Party ads only) leather, roof rack, tow pkg, alloy wheels. Mercedes Benz VIN ¹028642 E500 4-matic 2004 $9988 86,625 miles, sun©s UBA R U . roof with a shade, silver, 2 sets 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. loaded, of tires and a set of 877-266-3821 chains. $13,500. Dlr ¹0354 fphoto for illustration only)
Toyota Venza 2009 One OwnerGreat condition, under 30,000 miles. Extended service/ warranty plan (75,000 miles). Loaded! Leather, panoramic roof, navigation, JBL Synthesis Sound system. $24,500. Jeff - 541-390-0937
TiCk, TOCk
Looking for your next employee?
Mustang GT 1995 red 133k miles, Boss 302 motor, custom pipes,
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and 5 s p eed m a nual, reach over 60,000 ...don't let time get power windows, cus- readers each week. away. Hire a Your classified ad tom stereo, very fast. $5800. 541-280-7910 will also appear on professional out bendbulletin.com of The Bulletin's which currently reTURN THE PAGE "Call A Service ceives over 1.5 milFor More Ads lion page views Professional" every month at The Bulletin Directory today! no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com Pontiac G6 2007, low miles, $8900. Look at: Toyota RA V4 2 007, 541-548-1422 L imited, V 6 , 3. 5 L , Bendhomes.com auto, 4WD, l eather, for Complete Listings of p rivacy glass, t o w Porsche 911 Area Real Estate for Sale pkg., alloy wheels. Carrera 993 cou e
Tick, Tock...
g+
$19,988 S UBA R U .
I
BUBhRUQPBIINDCQM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Vans
GMC 1995 Safari XT, seats 8, 4.3L V6, studs on rims, $3000 obo. 541-312-6960
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior,
moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647
i i
I
i
I
I i
The Bulletin
s aid county a n d s tate, to wit: L O T 2, BL O C K 12, HAYDEN VILLAGE PHASE IV, CITY OF
REDMOND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. Bot h the beneficiary and t he t r ustee h a v e elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligat ions secured b y said Trust Deed and a Notice of Default h as been re corded pursuant to Oregon Re v i sed Statutes 86.735(3); the d e f ault for which the f oreclos ure i s m a d e i s Grantor's failure to pay when due, the following s u ms: 4 PYMTS FROM 03/15/11 TO 06/15/11 I 7 6 4 .35 $3,057.40 13 PYMTS FROM TO DISTRICT A T T O R- 07/15/11 07/1 5/1 2 I 7 6 6. 1 7 NEY. $9,960.21 11 LEGAL NOTICE PYMTS FROM NOTICE OF SEIZURE 08/15/12 TO FOR CIVIL 06/15/13 @ FORFEITURE TO ALL 1,280.28 POTENTIAL $14,083.08 TOTAL CLAIMANTS AND TO LATE C H A RGES ALL UNKNOWN $69.99 Sub-Total of PERSONS READ THIS Amounts in CAREFULLY Arrears:$27,170.68 Together with any If you have any inter- default in the payest i n t h e s e i zed ment of r e curring property d e s cribed obligations as they below, you must claim become due. that interest or you will ALSO, if you have automatically lose that failed to pay taxes interest. If you do not on t h e pr o perty, file a c laim for t he provide i n surance property, the property on the property or may be forfeited even pay ot h e r senior if you are not conliens o r en c u mvicted of any crime. brances as required To claim an interest, i n th e n o t e a n d you must file a written T rust D e ed , th e claim with the forfei- beneficiary may ture counsel named insist that you do so below, Th e w r itten in order to reinstate claim must be signed y our a c count i n by you, sworn to un- good standing. The der penalty of perjury beneficiary may before a notary public, require as a condiand state: (a) Your tion t o re i n statetrue name; (b) The ment that you proaddress at which you vide reliable written will a c cept f u t u re evidence that you m ailings f ro m th e h ave paid a l l s ecourt and f o rfeiture nior liens or encum-
brances, p roperty taxes, and hazard insurance p r e miums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the u ndersigned Tru s tee. The street or other common designation if any, of t he real property des cribed above i s purported to be :
District Attorney Office, 300 N E T h i rd 2050 S W 34T H Street, Prineville, OR STREET, RED97754. MOND, OR 9 7756 Notice of reasons for The un d ersigned Forfeiture: The prop- Trustee d i s claims
erty described below was seized for forfeiture because it. (1) C onstitutes the p r o ceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances (ORS C h apter475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or f acilitating the violation of, The Bulletin recoml to violate, mends extra caution i solicitation to violate, or when p u r chasing I attempt conspiracy to violate i products or services the criminal laws of from out of the area. the State of Oregon i S ending c ash , regarding the manuchecks, or credit indistribution or formation may be I facture, p ossession of c o ni subject toFRAUD. trolled sub s tances For more i nforma(ORS Chapter 475). i tion about an advertiser, you may call I the Oregon State I IN THE MATTER OF: Attorney General's i (1)US Currency in the Office C o n sumer amount of 3,873.00 In i Protection hotline at US Currency, Case 1-877-877-9392. No 13-59, Seized on F ebruary 14, 2 0 1 3 from Apolanio Olivera.
r----
VIN ¹015960
rects this summons be published once a week for three weeks circulation in Prineville, Oregon. You have a right to be represented by counsel at e very stage of t h e proceeding. If you are financially unable to retain an attorney, the court will appoint one t o r e present y o u. Telephone (541) 447-6541 if you wish assistance in obtaining a court-appointed attorney. If you have questions about these matters, you should contact an a ttorney immediately. Date of first publication: September 30, 2013. Date of second publication: October 7, 2013. Date of third p ublication: O ctober 14 , 2 0 1 3 . DATED this 16th day of September 2013. DAINA A. VITOLINS,
counsel; and (3) A s tatement that y o u have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture cou n s el n amed below is 2 1 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more i nformation: Da i n a Vitolins, Crook County
541-362-5598
1000
1000
Legal Notices
any liability for any incorrectness of the above s t reet or other common designation. By reason of said default, t h e b e n eficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said Trust Deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: Principal $194,981.38, together with interest as provided in the n ote or o t her i n strument s e cured from 02/ 15/11, plus subsidy recapture in the sum of $4,547.57 and fees a ssessed i n th e amount of $3,064.80, plus accrued interest due thereon, and such other costs and fees are due under the note o r o t her instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given
1 87.110, INS I D E THE MAIN LOBBY O F T H E DES CHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW B O N D, BEND , County of DESCHUTES, State of OREGON, (which is the n e w d a t e, time and place set
for said sale) sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in interest acquired a f t er t he e x ecution o f said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obli g ations thereby secured and the c o sts and expenses of sale, including a r e asonable charge by the trustee. N o t ice is further given t h at any person named in O.R.S.86.753 has the right, at any time prior to f i v e days before the date last set for the sale, to have this f oreclosure pr o c eeding dismissed and the Trust Deed r e i nstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would notthen be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other d efault complained herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required un d er the obligation o f th e Trust Deed, and in addition to p aying said sums or tendering the p e rformance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts p rovided by sa i d ORS 86.753. I t w i l l be necessary for you to contact the undersigned prior to the time you tender reinstatement or payoff so that you may be advised of the exact amount, including t r ustee's costs and fees, that y ou will b e r e quired t o pay. Payment must be in the full amount in the form of cashier's or certified c h eck. T he effect o f t h e sale will be to deprive you and a ll those who hold by, through and under you of a l l interest in the property des cribed above. I n construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the f eminine and t h e neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any s uccessor in interest to the grantor as well as a n y other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is s ecured b y s a i d T rust Deed, a n d the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, i f any. The Beneficiary may b e attempting t o collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for th a t purpose. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of m o nies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If a vailable, the e x pected opening bid and/or p o s tponement in f o rmation may be obtained by calling t h e following telephone number(s) on the day b efore th e s a le: (714) 480-5690 or you ma y a c cess sales information at www.tacforeclosures.com/sales DATED: 0 7 / 01/1 3 CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, O SB A ¹ 992526 By CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, ATT O R N EY AT LAW DI RECT I N QUIRIES T O: T.D. S E R VICE C O M PANY
400 O r a nge, CA 92868 (800) 8 43-0260 TAC¹ 966027 PUB: 09/30/13, 10/07/13, 10/14/13, 10/21/13. LEGAL NOTICE OREGON T RUSTEE'S N O T ICE O F SAL E T.S. No: L 543249
OR U nit Code: L Loan No:
34429999/WAIGHT A P ¹ 1: 17 94 7 7 Title ¹ : 832 6 333
Reference is made to that certain Trust
Deed m ad e
SHAWN WAIGHT, MICHELLE WAIGHT
by E. E.
as
Grantor, to RURAL H OUSING SER V ICE OR ITS SUCCESSOR AGENCY as Trustee, in favor of UNITED S T ATES OF AMER I CA ACTING THROUGH THE RURAL H OUSING S ER V ICE OR SUCCESSOR AGENCY, UNITED S T ATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE as Beneficiary. Dated October 20, 2006, Recorded October 20, 2006 as Instr. No. 2006-70089 in
Book -- P a ge of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of D ESCHUTES C o unty; O REGO N RE A M ORTIZATION A GREEMENT E F F ECTIVE JA N U A RY 2 0, 201 1
covering the following described real property situated in s aid c ounty a n d s tate, to wit: L O T FIVE (5), B LOCK SIX (6), HAYDEN VILLAGE PHASE II, DESCHUTES COUNTY, ORE GON. B o t ht h e beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to s a tisfy the obligations secured by said Trust Deed and a Notice of D e f ault has been recorded pursuant t o O r e gon Revised S t a tutes 86.735(3); the default for w h ich the foreclosure is made is Grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: 6 P Y MTS F R O M 02/20/11 TO 07/20/11 @ 987.82 23 $5,926.92 PYMTS FROM 08/20/11 TO 06/20/13 I 1,51 0.27 $34,736.21 TOTAL LATE C H A RGES $130.88 Sub-Total
of Amounts in Arrears:$40,794.01 Together with any default in the payment of r e curring obligations as they become due. ALSO, if you have failed to pay taxes on t h e p r o perty, provide i n surance on the property or pay o t h e r senior liens o r en c u m-
brances as required
i n th e n o t e a n d T rust D e ed , th e
beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to reinstate y our a c count i n good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition t o re i n statement that you provide reliable written evidence that you h ave paid a l l s enior liens or encumbrances, p roperty taxes, and hazard insurance p r e miums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the u ndersigned Tru s tee. The street or other common designation if any, of t he real property des cribed above i s purported to be : 3238 SW PUMICE PLACE, REDMOND, OR 97756
The un d ersigned Trustee d i s claims any liability for any incorrectness of the
1 87.110, INS I D E THE MAIN LOBBY OF T H E DES -
CHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW B O N D, BEND , County of DESCHUTES, State of OREGON, (which is the n e w d a t e, time and place set
for said sale) sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in
the said described real property which the Grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in interest acquired a f t er t he e xecution o f said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obli g ations thereby secured and the c o sts and expenses of sale, including a r e asonable charge by the trustee. N o t ice is further given t h at any person named in O.R.S.86.753 has the right, at any time prior to f i v e days before the date last set for the sale, to have this f oreclosure pro c eeding dismissed and the Trust Deed r e instated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other d efault complained herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required un d er the obligation o f th e Trust Deed, and in addition to
p a y ing
said sums or tendenng the p e rfor
mance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with trustee's and attorneys fees not exceeding the amounts p r ovided by sa i d ORS 86.753.
I t w i ll be
necessary for you to contact the undersigned prior to the time you tender reinstatement or payoff so that you may be advised of the exact amount, including t r ustee's costs and fees, that y ou will b e r e quired t o pay. Payment must be in the full amount in the form of cashier's or certified c h eck. T he effect o f t h e sale will be to deprive you and a ll those who hold by, through and under you of a l l interest in the property de-
Legal Notices s cribed above. I n construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the f eminine and t h e neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as a n y other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is s ecured by s a i d T rust Deed, a n d the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, i f any. The Beneficiary may b e attempting t o collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for th a t purpose. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return o f m o n ies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If a vailable, the e x pected opening bid and/or p o s tponement in f o rmation may be obtained by calling t h e following telephone number(s) on the day b efore th e s a l e : (714) 480-5690 or you ma y a c cess sales information at www.tacforeclosures.com/sales DATED: 0 7 / 01/1 3 CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, OSBA ¹ By 992526 CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, ATT O R N EY AT LAW D I RECT I N QUIRIES TO: T.D. S E RVICE C O M PANY FORECLOSURE DEPARTMENT
4000 W. Metropolit an Drive Suit e 400 Or a nge, CA 92868 (800) 843-0260 TAC¹ 966026 PUB: 09/30/13, 10/07/13, 10/14/13, 10/21/13. PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant t o ORS 271.330, this is notice of Deschutes County's intention to transfer title of r eal
property to C e ntral Oregon Irrigation District. The transfer will be for p u blic p urp oses and w ill b e without consideration. Objections t o t he transfer will be heard Monday, October 21, 2013, at 10:00 am, in
the Barnes Hearing Room, 1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon. The real property to be transferred is: Situate in the County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, described as follows: All that portion of the strip of l and desig-
nated as "Deschutes Irrigation and Power Company's C a n al" shown on the plat entitled "Plat of the T ownsite o f Red mond" lying south of the northerly right of way line of E Street, now known as Evergreen Avenue. (Serial No. 197197; 151316-AD-00099) All that portion of the west half of the Pilot B utte C a na l l y i n g w ithin the SE y4 o f the SE y4, Section 20, T 15S, R13E, W M .,
lying at right angles to and easterly of Lots 1 and 2, Block 2, Windrow Acres, and Lots 1, 2,3, 5 , a n d 6 , Lone Juniper Estates, the northern most boundary being the easterly p rolongation of t h e northern line of Lot 1, Block 2 , Wi n drow Acres and the southern most b oundary being the south quarter section line of said SE y4ofthe SE y4.
195889; (Serial 151320-DD-00199)
Staff
contact:
Teresa.RozicodesOI' chutes.org 541-385-1414.
A RE P U B L I C NOTICES I N P O R TA N T + An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo citizens who want fo know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go fowvvw.bendbulletin.com and click on "Classified Ads"
The Bulletin