Bulletin Daily Paper 11-07-15

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SATURDAY November7,2015 COMING MONDAY

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bendbulletin.corn TODAY' S READERBOARD

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OR-25 —It looks like a lone wolf has attacked livestock in northeast Oregon.B1

By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

Youngsters experimenting with marshmallow

Waking up —Therearea

shooters and toy rockets

few simple things you cando to make it easier.A3

may soon be able to go about their good-natured

mischief without fear of prosecution now that city of

Central OregonSmash

Bend officials aim to pass

— Video gamelovers gather in Bend for tournaments.D1

• Painted Hilsrock , formations, towns,JohnDayRiverwould put the 'scenic' in thisbikeway

2016 election —Findout what's happening.A5

And a Wed exclusive-

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Thedeath of a 24-year-old has cast new light on the potential dangers of cryotherapy. beetibenetie.cern/extras

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more specific regulations on the discharge of weapons within city limits.

Current city code says nobody can fire or discharge "any gun or other weapon, induding springor air-actuated pellet guns, or a weapon which propels a projectile by use of a bow or sling, explosives, or jet or rocket propulsion." That means airsoft guns, paintballs and some science

experiments designed for aspiring astronauts are

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Antelope

'Clarno

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Why juicy

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amendments, first read

JEFFERSON COUNTY -,''

WHEELER COUNTY

tPainted HltlsWir., John ttay Fossil Beds lIiationat Monument .... s...

. . . . . .

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l Kimberly GRANT COUNTY

. . . . . .

Madras

by the City Council on Wednesday, would allow people to use certain non-

lethal weapons in specific circumstances. SeeWeapons/A7

Mitchell I

KEYSTONE REJECTION

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By Michelle Boorstein and Paul Farhi

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By Scott Hammerse The Bulletin

Bulletin file photos

The Washington Post

Gossip and internal politicking are so much

CROOK COUNTY

Prineville

I

Red pond

a part of Vatican life that

an old Rome joke goes: Greg Cross/The Bulletin

something you only tell one person at a time." But this week the defi-

of Fossil, Service Creek, Kimberly and Mitchell. Terrain in the area is hilly, with nearly 13,000 feet

Comments about the proposed bikewaycan besent to Alex Phillips at alex.phillips@oregon.gov or to: Oregon Parks andRec. Dept. attn: Alex Phillips 725 Summer St. NE,Suite C Salem, OR 97301-1266

Two Italian journalistsan economicsreporter for

a prominent newsweek-

ly and a muckraking TV fi g ure —published books that

across much of Wheeler County.

passes by the John Day Fossil Beds and the towns

Have acomment?

nition of secret-spilling got blown up.

T

he Oregon Parks and Recreation Department is considering creating a state scenic bikeway east of Madras, a 120-mile route

The proposed Painted Hills Scenic Bikeway follows the John Day River in various places and

I

"In the Church, a secret is

• More about 'Merchants in the Temple,'F4

ceptions for police and those using those weapons in legally justified self-defense. Recent proposed code

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Spray

Vatican secrets are harder to keep now

Sundey

technically no-nos under the code, which makes ex-

1

Obama's climate

agenda By Coral Davenport

of elevation gain and almost 11,000 vertical feet

New York Times News Service

of downhilL The area has been part of the route during some Cycle Oregon bike tours.

WASHINGTONPresident Barack Obama

The Parks Department has scheduled a public

meeting to take input on the proposal at 5:30 pm. Nov. 19 at the Jean E. Burch Building in Fossil. The state has designated 14 routes as state sce-

nic bikeways, including four in Central Oregon. SeeBikeway/A4

announced on Friday that he had rejected the request from a Canadian company to build the Keystone XL

oil pipeline, ending a seven-year review that had be-

come a symbol of the debate over his dimate policies.

used leaked Vatican data to show in detail the kind of

Obama's denial of the

financial irregularities that

Guinea: The last place onEarth with Ebola

in the past have come out in

dribbles and rumors. And the alleged findings are dramatic, from the top Vat-

proposed 1,179-mile pipeline, which would have carried 800,000 barrels a

day of carbon-heavy petroleum from the Canadian oil sands to the Gulf Coast,

ican official whose swanky Rome penthouse was refurbished by a church charity to the Vatican pension fund's $800 million hole, to

By Dionne Searcey New York Times News Service

TANA, Guinea — Sirens

blared as the convoy of government vehicles made its way down a narrow dirt road

a report that Vatican real

estate is worth about seven times as much as is reported

nearly encased by tall weeds. The prime minister had arrived, and he was there to

on balance sheets.

Even for a place accus-

give this rural community a

serious scolding. "I demand the cooperation

of the population," said the prime minister, Mohamed Said Fofana, nearly hollering from his perch on a makeshift bamboo stage. "Ebola is gone everywhere — except here," Fofana told the nearly 300 people gath-

ered around him. "The eyes

cases in a cluster of villages

of the world are on Tana

in rural Guinea, the country

village." This is the last known

where the outbreak first began.

place on Earth with Ebola.

After nearly 22 months

Liberia, where more than

4,800 people died of the

and more than 11,300 deaths worldwide, the deadliest Eb-

virus, has gone about two months since its last Ebola

ola epidemic in history has come down to a handful of

patient was discharged.

comes as he seeks to build an ambitious legacy on climate change. "America is now a global leader when it comes

to taking serious action to fight climate change," Obama said in remarks from the White House.

SeeObama/A7

See Ebola /A4

tomed to leaks, this week produced a torrent, includ-

ing surreptitiously made recordings of Pope Francis

TODAY'S WEATHER

— a barrier Vatican-watch-

Sun and showers High 56, Low 36 Page B6

ers said had never been crossed before.

See Vatican /A7

b

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C7-8 Comics B2 Comm. Life Ff-8 Crosswords

F3-4 Dear Abby Df-6 Horoscope F4 Local/State

The Bulletin D6 Obituaries D6 Sports Bf-6 TV/Movies

B5 Cf-6 D6

An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 113, No. 311,

3e pages, 5 sections

Q We use recycled newsprint

: IIIIIIIIIII III o 8 8 267 02329

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