Serving Central Oregon since1903 75
WEDNESDAY September10,2014
I (e wI VlewS Bll
mgfe PrePCOV erage SPORTS • C1
OUTDOORS • D1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
es scoMSLl
High-tech divingsuit — The Exosuit turns archaeologists into something like an underwater Iron Man.A3
NOV.4
• Other localdistricts sawlittle change
Plus: Smart trout — Re-
By Tyler Leeds
searchers say these fish know how to pick their friends.A3
The Bulletin
ing minor changes in scores. Smaller districts had larger
ized tests held steady across
swings, which is typical from year to year when a small num-
the state during the 2013-14
ber of students are being tested.
school year, according to information released this morning by the Oregon Department of
The Jeff erson County School District, however, made significant gains at the high school level, seeing increases ranging from 18 percent to 40 percent in
Student scores on standard-
Education.
In Central Oregon, the region's largest district, Bend-La Pine Schools, reflected the statewide stability, experienc-
EL ECTION
and see where we had gains and some areas we need to im-
we're doing." Melinda Boyle, the district's
prove on," said Jefferson County Superintendent Rick Molitor.
curriculum director, said lit-
Wilhelm, Buehler face off again
eracy skills are essential to math and science, as they allow
By Tyler Leeds
students to better understand
The Bulletin
learning materials and test questions. See Scores /A4
Differences between the candidates
science. Administrators credit the gains with earlier advances
Charts inside
the district; we're
in reading, reflected in more than 79 percent of high school students meeting or exceeding standards in 2013-14.
• Data for all local districts,
about that. But this is just one
"We like to look at the data
ing or exceeding the state's
"We had some significant gains at (Madras High), and I think that goes to the work we've done on reading. Reading will
standards in writing, math and
continue to be a focus across
the number of students meet-
~ ~
pretty excited data point we look at to adjust and improve what
AS
for Oregon House District 54 emerged
during their second debate
Wrist computer — Apple is set to enter the smartwatch market; it also announcesnew, larger iPhones.CS
Tues-
day, as the two
began offering
Whitewater paddle-
W ilhelm
doarding — Thesport's
growing on theRogueRiver. D1
deta i l s on their
plans to im-
Plus: Puget Sound —Find
prove education
a quiet spot.D3 B uehler
And a Wed exclusive-
and e x -
pressed
Arizona needs$65,000 to ship Barry Goldwater to Washington, D.C.— and bring back the statue he's replacing. bendbulletin.cam/extras
divergent stances on the environment.
The debate between Democrat
Mulch
Craig Wilhelm, a businessman and Army veteran, and Republican Knute
Buehler, a surgeon,
EDITOR'SCHOICE
was hosted by the
Rotary Club of Greater Bend at the Riverhouse Hotel. The two
Celebrity gossip site extends its reach
are competing to replace Jason Conger, who lost his primary bid in May to run against U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. In their first meet-
ing, last month, both representative candi-
dates called improving education a top priority.
By Jonathan Mahler
See Election /A4
New York Times News Service
Last November, TMZ broke the news that the
Heisman Trophy can-
Police diversity a struggle
didate Jameis Winston
was being
ln SPOrtS investigated
• NFL under by the Tallafire,C1 has see Police Department over an allegation that
Brad Bailey, president of Deschutes Recycling, stands in the garden at Knott Landfill, where about1,200 pounds of vegetables are pro-
he had sexually abused a
duced each year for food assistance programs. See a video of the operation at 8bendbulletin.com/landfillgarden.
Photos by Andy Tullis i The Bulletin
fellow student at Florida State University.
In April, it posted an audio recording of Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling making racist remarks.
And on Monday, it published a video showing Ray Rice knocking out his fiancee in an elevator in Atlantic City.
This remarkable string of scoops has highlighted the unexpected power and reachofa gossipw ebsite that is not 10 years old. But
maybe most surprising of all has been the nature of the stories. TMZ, which
built a following by exposing the foibles of Hollywood celebrities — often by paying for tips — is now taking aim at an entirely new category of prominent people and powerful institutions, including the
country's richest, most popular sports league. TMZ's revelations
prompted Sterling's lifetime ban from the NBA and forced him to sell the
By Shaila Dewan By Scott Hammers
Brad Bailey
New York Times
The Bulletin
grabs a hand-
Hidden well beyond the tall fence ringing Knott Landfill on Bend's east side, there's an unlikely oasis of green.
ful of finished
MAPLE HEIGHTS, Ohio-
compost.
The population of this working-class Cleveland suburb has gone from nearly all-
The landfill
garden is "a great way, I
Not far from piles of
nail-studded 2x4s, old cans of paint and obsolete or broken televisions, stand rows of
corn, tomatoes and onions. Carrots and cauliflower pop from the earth, and a jum-
ble of pumpkin vines snake across a gentle hillside. The garden is a project of Deschutes Recycling, the company that processes nearly all of the recyclables that come through the landfill, including the grass clippings,
think, to one, be involved with our
white to two-thirds
product,
35 years ago that he
and two, be involved with the larger community," Bailey said.
did not know"what a minority is." But its
black since its mayor declared more than
police and fire departments have not kept pace: The police force today has twoblack officers out of 35; the fire department is 100
percent white. Maple Heights is far from unique. Across the country, police departments still struggle to hire
fallen leaves and other yard
debris that last year was processed into nearly 18,000
cubic yards of compost. Growing crops in the compost the company produces on site, the garden produces roughly 1,200 pounds of fresh vegetables in a typical year, all of which
is donated to local food assistance programs through NeighborImpact. Brad Bailey, president of Deschutes Recycling, said the company's employees tend the garden, wandering over to plant seeds or pull weeds whenever they've got a few
minutes of downtime. Having a garden just feet from where locals drop off the yard debris the company transforms into rich soil is the best adver-
product, and two, be involved with the larger community." Bailey said NeighborImpacthauled offaround 200 pounds of potatoes last week,
and retain minority candidates — in some
tisement the company could
though he's expecting this year's total harvest to be
cases despite great efforts, in others
down a bit from past seasons.
because of a lack of initiative.
have, Bailey said. "It's a great way, I think,
See Garden /A4
to one, be involved with our
See Diversity/A5
team. Its video of Rice has not only cost him his NFL
contract — and perhaps career — but also raised
TODAY'S WEATHER
questions about why the
league hadn't obtained the footage itself. See Gossip /A5
r ~r r
Mostly sunny High 76, Low38 page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1 6 $ E1-8 Dear Abby 06 Ob i tuaries B5 TV/Movies
AnIndependent
G1 4 D6
Q l/i/e use recycled newsprint
vol. 112, No. 253,
s sections
0
88 267 0 23 29
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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
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W ASHINGTON —
P r e s-
ident Barack Obama is prepared to authorize airstrikes
against the S unni
m i l itant
group, the I slamic State, into new and unpredictable
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By Mark Landler and JonathanWeisman
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But Obama is still wrestling with a series of challenges, including how to train and equip a viable ground force to fight the Islamic State inside Syria, how to intervene without aid-
ing President Bashar Assad, and how to enlist potentially
complex than the targeted gress that would aid the overstrikes the United States has all effort," the White House used against al-Qaida in Ye- statement said. men, Pakistan and elsewhere. But Congress is divided on Obama has resisted mili- the need for a vote on military tary engagement in Syria for action before the midterm more than threeyears, out elections, and both sides apof fear early on that arming peared to be searching for a the rebels who oppose Assad way to enlist congressional would fail to alter the balance support without an explicit in the civil war while more authorization of f orce. One direct military i n tervention way under discussion would could have spillover effects in be for lawmakers to approve the volatile region. $500 million in funding to When he threatened Syr- train and arm Syrian rebels ia with a missile strike last who would fight the Islamic year after Assad's forces used State — legislation that has chemical weapons, implaca- been languishing on Capitol ble opposition in Congress led Hill. him to shelve the plan. Now, Obama's speech to the nahowever, the threat from the
tion, on the eve of the 13th an-
reluctant partners like Turkey
Islamic State has changed niversary of the Sept. 11, 2001,
and Saudi Arabia.
both the U.S. political climate and his calculations.
In a prime-time address on
Wednesday evening,Obama On Tuesday, the president is to explain to Americans briefed Republican and Demhis strategy for "degrading ocraticleaders of the House and ultimately destroying the and the Senate about his terrorist group," according to plans. Obama told them he
terrorist attacks, is the culmii nternal
d e liberations, f o l -
lowed by days of intense lobbying of allies by the president — at a NATO meeting
in Wales, with Congress, and even over a dinner Monday
believed he had the authority
House. People briefed on the president' s plans described a long-term campaign far more
needed to order an expanded night with members of t he operation, though he would Democratic and Republican "welcome action by the Con- foreign-policy establishment.
DEATH TOLL RISING IN INDIA, PAKISTAN FLOODS
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:
Q 25Q 34Q ssQ 70Q n
oo
The estimated jackpot is now $52 million.
Afghan eleCtian —Afghan President Hamid Karzai pleadedTuesday for national unity and a speedy settlement to Afghanistan's political crisis, but the event at which hespoke was marred by hooting and catcalls. During a commemoration ceremony for Afghanistan's most revered resistance fighter, Karzai encouraged thetwo candidatesAbdullah Abdullah andAshraf Ghani Ahmadzai — to quickly makea deal and form agovernment in the interest of national unity. Shortly after Karzai spoke, however, heand Ahmadzai left the forum, and an event meant to serve as asymbol of national unity ended by sending theoppositemessage. Iran and RuSSia —Iran sent newsignals Tuesdaythat it is seeking to subvert the Westernsanctions on its contentious nuclear energy program, adding uncertainties in advance ofanother round of negotiations next week.TheIranians saidthey havebeenengaged in talks with Russia, a member ofthegroup of big powers negotiating with Tehran, about economic cooperation in energy.Suchtalks could undercut the sanctions. OnMonday, Iran's negotiator at the nucleartalks said his country would not stand for anyneweconomic penalties imposedby the United States. Gay marriage —Both sides in the gaymarriage debateagree on one thing: It's time for theSupremeCourt to settle the matter. Evena justice recently said she thinks so, too. Theemerging consensus makes it likely that the justices soonwill agree to take upthe question of whether the Constitution forbids states from defining marriage as the union of a manandawoman. Afinal ruling isn't likely before June 2015, but a decision to get involved could comeas soon asthe end of this month. "I don't see alot of reasons for them to wait," says DaleCarpenter, a gay rights expert at theUniversity of Minnesota lawschool. "You have almost nooneat this point opposed to certiorari," the legal term for high court review. 5 dead Children —A South Carolina manledauthorities Tuesday to the bodies of his five children in rural Alabama,ending asix-day search, lawenforcement officials said. Sheriff Earnest Evansof Wilcox County, Alabama,said that investigators had recoveredthe bodies of the children, 1 to 8 years old, in arural area nearCamden.Thesheriff's department in Lexington County, SouthCarolina, wherethechildren were reported missing bytheir mother Sept. 3, identified the father as Timothy RayJonesJr., 32, who would becharged initially with unlawful neglect of a child by alegal custodian.
TALK TO AN EDITOR
CORRECTIONS
Yemen PfntnStS —Pro-government forces in the capital of Yemen opened fire Tuesdayat thousands of demonstrators from the Shiite religious minority, killing six andinjuring dozens, officials andwitnesses said. Thekillings marked thefirst outbreak of violence inside the capital, Sanaa,after three weeksof escalating pressure bythousands of Shiite protesters whohaveheld daily rallies on theoutskirts of the city demanding that thegovernment roll back cuts to price subsidies and then stepdown. Security forces seeking to dismantle aroadblock that protesters erected nearthecity's main airport killed two people in clashes Sunday.
nation of weeks of anguished
a statement from the White
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Lidya umest —After threeyears of chaos since MoammarGadhafi's fall, Libya is further crumbling into a failed state after Islamist-allied militias took over thecapital Tripoli and other cities and set up their own government, driving out aparliament that was elected over the summer. Themilitia takeover last month has raisedalarm in theWest. Among the militias are Islamic extremists, including Ansaral-Shariah, which now rules thecountry's second largest city, Benghazi. Thegroup is blamed for the killing of the U.S.ambassador andthree other Americans in a2012 attack on aU.S.diplomatic facility in the city. France's defense minister in aninterview published Tuesdaywarned that Libya is a "hub for terrorists" and called for international action, eventalking of moving Frenchtroops to the borders.
Dar Yasin/The AssociatedPress
Flood-affected people row boats past partly submerged buildings Tuesday in floodwaters in Srinagar, India. Raging monsoon floods sweeping across India and Pakistan have killed more than 440 people, authorities said Tuesday. Authorities warned hundreds of thousands more to be prepared to flee their homes as helicopters and boats raced to save marooned victims. Authorities in Pakistan said the floods, which began Sept. 3, are the worst since massive flooding
killed1,700 people in 2010. Pakistan's minister for water and power, Khwaja MohammadAsif, warned parliament that some 700,000 people havebeentold to leave their homes, which could be inundated in the next four days. Pakistani and Indian troops have beenusing boats and helicopters to drop food supplies for stranded families and evacuate victims. However, the challenge of the situation grows as more than 1.5 million people are affected as the rushing waters have destroyed the homes of thousands of families.
DetrOit dankruptCy —The fiercest opponent to Detroit's blueprint for erasing its debts and investing in city services has reached an "agreement in principle" with city officials, court documents filed Tuesdayeveningshowed.Theagreementisexpectedtocleartheway to end the city's court fight over its future and allow it to emerge from bankruptcy far more quickly and smoothly. Thetentative settlement with Syncora Guaranty, a bond insurer that said its exposure in Detroit amounted to hundreds of millions of dollars, came suddenly, a week into a trial aimed atallowing Detroit, the largest U.S. city to file for bankruptcy, to remakeits finances and start over. MilliOn-dallar parking —Whatwill $1 million buy in NewYork City? A diamond-encrusted Cartier men'swatch. Asmall fleet of 2014 Bentley Continentals. Ormaybeyour very ownparking spot. A new development, 42Crosby St., is pushing the limits of NewYork City real estate to newheights with10 underground parking spots that will cost more per squarefoot than the apartments being sold upstairs. — From wire reports
Report: Missilestrike 4th member of Congress unseated likely in Flight 17 crash as this year's primaryseasoncloses New York TimesNews Service BRUSSELS — Eight weeks
after a Malaysia Airlines plane disintegrated over e astern Ukraine, killing all 298 people aboard and triggering a frenzy of East-West finger-pointing, investigators, in their first account of the calamity on 'Ittes-
day, released evidence consis-
cess to the crash site, a wide
By Sean Sullivan
er members of Congress" in
swath of farmland controlled
The Washington Post
his nearly two decades in the
by pro-Russian rebels near the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk, and also their wari-
ness of stepping into a political minefield, only h ighlighted how difficult and far away a definitive reckoning remains. Bitter arguments over what
tentwith an attackbyasurfaceto-air missile but shed no clear
happened to Flight 17have both pained the grieving relatives of
light on who was responsible. A preliminary report issued in The Hague by the Dutch Safety Board, which is leading an international effort to get to the bottom of the tragedy, gave some indirect support to asser-
victims and clouded what is ultimately a criminal case involv-
tions by the United States and Ukraine that pro-Russian reb-
Intense fighting near the crash site kept investigators away, and for days, bodies and debris lay strewn across fields, unguarded, near the Russian
els shot down the aircraft with an SA-11, or Buk, surface-to-air
ing the murder of 193 Dutch nationals, 43 Malaysians, 27 Australians and 35 others from
nations as far-flung as Indonesia and Britain.
missile. Its findings also debunked border. Investigators pieced toseveral theories circulated by gether their account from the Russian media and on the In- plane's recorded flight data and ternet, including reports that, cockpit voice recorders, phomoments before the disaster, tographsof the wreckage, air the pilots of Malaysia Airlines traffic control data, meteoroFlight 17 reported to air traffic logical reports and other sourccontrollers that they were being es of information. tailed by a Ukrainian military Tjibbe Joustra, chairman of the Dutch Safety Board, said in jet. The Dutch report marked a telephone interview from The the first official accounting of Hague that a final report would an episode that escalated ten- be issued sometime in the midsions between Moscow and dle of next year and investigaWashington. Yet the prelim- tors hoped to darify "the type inary findings, constrained of object that penetrated the by investigators' limited ac- plane."
battle in the fight for the Sen-
ate majority. Veteran observers see Shaheen, a steady campaigner, Iraq war veteran Seth Moulgists think that Moulton's win as a favorite — but hardly a ton on Tuesday, becoming will help the party against lock — against Brown, who the fourth sitting member of Republicannominee Richard has fought to overcome early Congress to fall in a primary Tisei, who was unopposed on stumbles. "She seems steady, but I this year. the GOP side. Weighed down Tierney's loss, which came by a family gambling scan- don't expect her to run away as primary season ended dal, Tierney narrowly defeat- with this," said University of across the country, was a ed Tisei in 2012 and faced the New Hampshire political sciblow to prominent Democrat- prospect of a difficult rematch entist Dante Scala. "I think ic establishment figures such against him. Brown stays within shouting as Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Tierney joined f ormer distance." D-Mass., and House Minority House Majority Leader Eric Elsewhere Tuesday, voters Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Ca- Cantor, R-Va., Rep. Kerry in New York and Rhode Islif., who had supported him. Bentivolio, R-Mich., and Rep. land were settling key DemoBut Moulton's win may in- Ralph Hall, R-Texas, as mem- cratic primaries. crease Democrats' chances of bers of Congress to fall in priIn New York, Gov. Andrew holding the 6th Congressio- maries this year. Cuomo, who has been a frenal District, which lies north Tuesday marked the close quent target of liberal comof Boston. of primary season, with vot- plaints, easily defeated chalT ierney, who w a s f i r s t ers also castingballots in Del- lenger Zephyr Teachout, a elected to the House in 1996, aware, New Hampshire, New law professor who ran to Cuodelivered a briefconcession York and Rhode Island. With mo's left. Cuomo's running speech to supporters thank- eight weeks left until the mid- mate, former congresswoming them for backing him. term elections, the most cru- an Kathy Hochul, topped lib"This was just an amazing 18 cial period of the campaign eral law professor Tim Wu for the lieutenant governor nod. years, and we appreciate it, has begun. and we appreciate you standScott Brown, former MasIn Rhode Island, state Treaing with us all the way," he sachusettssenator, comfort- surer Gina Raimondo moved told them. ably won the Republican a step closer to becoming the Moulton, 35, is a first-time nomination for U.S. Senate state's first female governor, candidate who cast Tierney in New Hampshire on Tues- defeating Providence Mayor as an unproductive member day and will continue his Angel Taveras and two other of Congress and sought to quest to unseat Democratic candidates in the Democratic tap into voter frustration with Sen. Jeanne Shaheen this fall primary. She will be favored Washington. He ran an ad in one of the country's most to succeed outgoing Democharging that Tierney missed closely watched races. The cratic Gov. Lincoln Chafee in "more votes than most othrace is shaping up as a key November. Rep. J o h n Tie r ney, House. D-Mass., was defeated by Many Democratic strate-
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Wednesday,September10, the 253rd day of 2014.There are112 days left in the year.
CUTTING EDGE
STUDY
Clever trout rival
HAPPENINGS Presidential address
— President BarackObama will outline his "strategy for degrading and ultimately destroying" the terrorist group Islamic State.
chimpanzeesat •
choosing allies
•
HISTORY Highlight:In1939, Canadadeclared war onGermany. In1608, John Smith waselected president of the Jamestown colony council in Virginia. In1813, an American naval force commanded byOliver Perry defeated the British in the Battle of LakeErieduring the War of 1812. (Afterward, Perry sentoutthemessage,"We havemettheenemyandthey are ours.") In1914, movie director Robert Wise ("West SideStory", "The Sound of Music") was born in Winchester, Indiana. In1919, NewYorkCity welcomedhome Gen.John Pershing and25,000 soldiers who had served in theU.S.First Division during World War I. In1935,Sen. HueyLong died in Baton Rougetwo daysafter being shot in the Louisiana state Capitol, allegedly by Dr. Carl Weiss. In1945,Vidkun Quisling was sentenced to death in Norway for collaborating with the Nazis (he was executed byfiring squad in October1945). In1955, the long-running TV Western series "Gunsmoke," starring JamesArness as Marshal Matt Dillon, premiered on CBS television. In1963, 20 black students entered Alabamapublic schools after a standoff betweenfederal authorities andGov.George Wallace. In1974, the WestAfrican country of Guinea-Bissau became independent of Portugal. In1979, four Puerto Rican nationalists imprisoned for a 1954 attack on theU.S. House of Representatives anda1950 attempt on the life of President Harry Trumanwerefreed from prison after being granted clemency by President Jimmy Carter. In1984, a revival of the TV game show"Jeopardy!" hosted by Alex Trebekpremiered in syndication. In1994, the prison drama "The ShawshankRedemption," starring Tim Robbinsand Morgan Freeman,premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. Tea years age:CBSNews vigorously defendedits report about President GeorgeW. Bush's Air National Guardservice, with anchor DanRather saying broadcastmemos questioned by forensic experts came from "what weconsider to be solid sources." Five years age:President Barack Obamasaid he had accepted Republican Rep.Joe Wilson's apology for shouting "You lie!" during the president's health care speechto Congress. A frail Sen. Robert Byrd addressed theSenate for the first time in months to pay tribute to the late Sen. Edward
Kennedy, his former rival and longtime dear friend. One yearage: President Barack Obama, in anationally broadcastaddress, said diplomacy held "the potential to remove the threat of chemical weapons" in Syria without the use of force, but hedeclared the U.S. military would be "ready to respond" against President BasharAssad if other measures failed. An Indian court convicted four menin the fatal gang rape of ayoung woman on amoving NewDelhi bus. (The four weresentenced to death.)
BIRTHDAYS World Golf Hall of Famer Arnold Palmer is 85. Singer Jose Feliciano is 69. Political commentator Bill O'Reilly is 65. Rock musician JoePerry (Aerosmith) is 64. Movie director Chris Columbus is 56.Actor Colin Firth is 54. Movie director Guy Ritchie is 46. — From wire reports
By Amina Khan Los Angeies Times
Don't play games with
An Iron Man-like suit allow divers to work below 1,000 feet for long periods
morays differ consistently in their willingness to collaborate," the study authors wrote,
"and trout should benefit from just outmaneuver you. preferentially recruiting these These fish appear to be just individuals." as skilled as chimpanzees To find out, researchers led at picking the best, most by Alexander Vail of Camable allies to help them nab bridge University in England some food, new research set up abehavioral experiment the coral trout — it might
without lengthy decompressions. By John Markoff New York Times News Service
An international team of archaeologists plans to return this month to the site of an an-
shows.
The findings,described in Current Biology, show
with fish that almost exactly mirroreda 2006 study ofchim-
panzees' partner preferences. In that experiment, the chimps able cognitive abilities could see food on a plank that are usually assigned outside their cage, with rope to w arm-blooded, big- within reach. Depending on ger-brained species, includ- the rope's position, sometimes ing humans. pulling in the food-laden plank Variousfish species are was a solo endeavor; other
cient shipwreck off a Greek is-
that fish may have remark-
land. This time, they will have
the aid of an advanced diving suit that will give them much more time to search for new artifacts.
Part robot and part submarine, the lightweight suit, called
impressive critters in their
the Exosuit, is intendedto allow
own right. Some have been
a diver to work for long periods
shown to walk better when raised on land; others can
at depths of more than 1,000
feet, avoiding time-consuming decompression periods. The
~HUBLOT
suit provides a diver with free-
times it was a two-chimp job.
To mirror those experim ents, the fish-testers first set
shoot down their prey by
up an experiment where the prey was in the open, or in a
spitting jets of water. But co-
crevice — and the trout had to
operation — and choosing decide whether getting a meal the best candidate for the was worth cooperating with job — is one trait that seems a fake eel, conveniently posito set humans and certain tioned nearby. animals such as chimpanThe scientists found that the
dom of movement because of a propulsion system and from an unusual set of rotating joints
developed by Phil Nuytten, an explorer and diving technology specialist.
zees apartfrom the restof
trout made the right choice
allows the operator to sit on a
the animal kingdom. (collaborate if the fish is hidThe coral trout, however, ing; go solo if it's out in the also seem to possess an un- open) at roughly the same rate derstanding of cooperation as the chimps did in the 2006 to the point that it actually experiment.
bicycle-type seat. It is connect-
collaborates with other spe-
ed to the surface by a highspeed fiber-optic network that relays high-definition video, and it has robotic grippers that will allow divers to manipulate
cies. This trout, of the genus the ante. The researchers Plectropomus, can easily made some of their fake moray
Evocative of the "Iron Man" movies and their hero, Tony Stark, the aluminum-alloy suit
hunt down smaller fish as into the nooks and crannies within the reef itself. That's
Exosuit, a lightweight suit intended to allow a diver to work for long periods at depths of more than1,000 feet.
surfacing, though at first, the shifts will be much shorter. wrist, can withstand up to six
tonsofpressure on a sm allsurface area, Nuytten said. "You feel like you are in a segmented suit of armor," said Brendan Foley, an archaeol-
new diving technology as it is scientists began to u n r avel about field archaeology, said the mystery of its design. AlDavid Mindell, an engineering though it has been described professor at the Massachu- as a primitive computer, it is
setts Institute of Technology not programmable, and Miwho has specialized in marine chael Wright, a British histosystems.
"Brendan is really the only ogist at Woods Hole Oceano- one who is doing what he is graphic Institution in Massa- doing, especially in the deeper chusetts and a director of the waters," he said of Foley. "That shipwreck project who tested stuff is basically land archaeolthe suit this summer. "It's fun- ogy transl atedtoscubagear." ny — I was imagining I was goThis is the third year the ing to feel like Tony Stark, but I divers will operate at the site. felt a lot like Lancelot." On eachexpedition,they have Nuytco, a company founded added advanced technologies. by Nuytten, has made similar P reviously, t he y us e d atmospheric diving suits for dosed-circuit rebreathers rescueoperations for many of devices that scrub carbon dioxthe world's navies. The suits
ide from exhaled breath, allow-
are virtually weightless under-
ing the diver to inhale it again water, and a version developed — and diver propulsion vehifor the U.S. Office of Naval cles equipped with high-resoluResearch will allow divers to tion cameras. swim with flippers for long peBecause of the depth of the riods at great depths. wreck, even with those sysThe shipwreck, off the is- tems, divers were limited to land of Antikythera, was dis- just 30 minutes of exploration. covered by Greek divers in They were able to find new 1900. A Roman vessel that is artifacts scattered over a wide believed to have sunk during area, including pottery, a ship's the first century B.C., itheld the anchor and a range of bronze renowned Antikythera Mech- objects that have not been anism, a mechanical device for recovered. predicting celestial movement, On this year's expedition, along with luxury goods such they will also use several unas pottery and bronze statues. derwater robots, including an Since the original discovery, autonomous vehide called the the Antikythera wreck was Iver, which will be operated by explored once — by Jacques scientists from the Australian Cousteau for several weeks in Center for Marine Robotics. 1976 — until the fall of 2012, That will make it possible to when a team of divers from
suit would be used for up to
tiquities, began a more system- three dives each day duringthe atic exploration of the waters monthlong expedition, with around the island.
each dive lasting two to three
The site holds a second ship-
hours. A small group of divers
wreck, and there is some historical evidence that the two
will share the Exosuit, with others using equipment that re-
vessels were traveling together, perhaps carrying material
quires decompression. This year, the expedition from the conquests of the Ro- will initially map the site, and m an general Lucius Cornelius divers will cover the area careSulla to be displayed in victory fully with metal detectors, Foparades in Rome. ley said. Many of the largest Records from the original artifact s have been removed. dive indicate that one marble The shipwreck itself stretches statue was dropped during almost 150 feet, and the divers efforts to recover it. It is also will have to work at depths of possible that some objects that
were moved from the shipwreck and mistaken for boulders are also artifacts.
t r out
rian who has reconstructed
the mechanism, has said he considers it to be an elaborate planetarium.
Only about half of the originalmechanism has been re-
who are better than others?
It would certainly pay to do so, the authors point out,
covered, and the researchers
are hoping to find the remaining portion.
because not all moray eels
are teamplayers. "Field observations suggest that i n dividual
Archaeologists believe it was
not a unique device. According to Foley, there are historical ref-
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erences to other kinds of mech-
anisms in early manuscripts. "This is the kind of thing
-
•
•
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that quite literally wakes me up
1-888-568-9884
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in the middle of the night," he said. "I can't sleep because I'm
so excited."
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create a 3D map of the ship-
Woods Hole and a Greek gov- wreck sites. ernment agency, the Hellenic Foley said he hoped the ExoEphorate of Underwater An-
S ure enough, t h e
soon learned to pick the more not a problem for the moray helpful eels — and again, at eel, whose snaky body can about the same rate as the easily slip into these holes. chimpanzees did in the 2006 So the coral trout do experiment. "Our study thus strengthsomething incredible: They recruit the moray eel by ens the case that a relativepointing it in the direction ly small brain (compared to of the hidden fish. They warm-blooded species) does use head shakes and head- not preclude at least some fish stands to show the moray speciesfrom possessing cogeel where to go and flush nitive abilities that compare to the fish out. or surpass those of apes," the But could these fish, like researchers wrote, "provided chimpanzees or humans, that the situation is ecologicalactually pick collaborators ly relevant to them."
Alex Deciccio via The New York Times
tained life-support system de- Archaeologist Theotokis Theodoulou prepares for a dive in the
Its rotary joints are extremely resilient; the smallest, at the
eels act as good collaborators
it swims over coral reefs, (go for the fish) and as bad colbut it can't follow its prey laborators (swim away).
artifacts found at the site. The Exosuit has a self-consigned to allow divers to work as long as 2/2 days without
Then the scientists upped
about 180 feet to almost 500 feet. Although the Antikythera
Mechanism wasrecovered at But the project is as much the beginning of the last cenabout experimenting with tury, it wasn't until 1974 that
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A4 T H E BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
Documents: Japan's emperor cautioned against war with U.S. By Martin Fackler New York Times News Service
The agency, which manages ing was not so different from the affairs of the imperial fam-
that of Western nations. At the
MATSUE, Japan — Before ily, explained the delay by sayJapan's attack on Pearl Harbor, ing it took time to put together Emperor Hirohito criticized the 61-volume history fr om plans to go to war with the 3,152 documents and records, United States as "self-destruc- some of them never previously tive" and opposed an alliance made public. with Nazi Germany, though The delay is also widely athe did little to stop the war that tributed to the sensitivity of Japan waged in his name, ac- the subject in Japan, which has cording to the long-awaited not fully come to terms with its official history of his reign re- actions during the war or with leased Tuesday. Hirohito's responsibility for it. The 12,000-page history of Although Hirohito was reHirohito, who served as em- vered as a living god by Japan's peror from 1926 to 1989, indud- soldiers and citizens, most hising during World War II, also torians portray him as largely shows him exalting over the a powerless figurehead. victories ofhis armies in China. At the same time, the emHowever, despite its length peror was criticized for letting and some new details, the re- himself be used as a spiritual port contains little that will symbol for Japanese militasurprise historians or c h al- rism, presiding over the meetlenge the established view that ings of political and military Hirohito had little say in Ja- leaders at which decisions to go pan's decision to go to war, ac- to war were made and reviewcording to the Japanese news ing military parades atop his media, which had first access to the report. It also confirms the view that Hirohito did not want to go to war with the United States.
The most controversial aspect of the reportappears to be the fact that it tookthe Imperial
Household Agency almost a quarter of a century to release its official history of Hirohito,
who died in 1989 at age 87.
same time, China and South Korea, two victims of Japanese
imperial ambitions in the early 20th-century, have accused Japan of trying to whitewash the darker episodes of its past. Whereas the agency's official history of Hirohito was
long awaited by scholars, it failed to contain some hopedfor material,such as records
of several meetings between the emperor and Gen. Douglas MacArthur, the commander of
the U.S. occupation forces after the war, who decided against putting Hirohito on trial as a
war criminal. Instead, it contained inform ation only about the t w o
leaders' first meeting, on Sept. 27, 1945, that had already been
made public in the past, according to the news agency Kyodo News. In delving into H i rohito's
views of the war, the report
white horse.
The official history was re-
said that in the run-up to the
Japanese navy's surprise atrenewed focus, within Japan tack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. and among its neighbors, on 7, 1941, he said that Japan had how Japan's wartime behavior no chance of winning a war shouldbe remembered. with the United States, Kyodo leased at a time there has been
In Japan, nationalists have
reported.
"It is nothing less than a grown more outspoken in demanding more positive por- self-destructive war," the emtrayals of Japan's actions, say- peror was quoted as saying on ing that Japan's empire build- July 31, 1941.
Central Oregonhigh school test results The Oregon Department of Education released scores from the 2013-2014 Oregon Assessment of Knowledge and Skills exam, the state's standardized test. School district
Bend-La Pine Crook County Culver Jefferson County Redmond Sisters
Oregon
2012-13 73.0 57.4 65.0 60.9 70.5 72.3 69.0
Change 73.9 53.8 66.7 72.1 71.7 80.5 70.0
1.2% 6.3% 2.6% 18.4% 17% 11.3% 1 4%
Election
"The Clean Air Act, I don't
think, goes far enough, quite frankly," Wilhelm said. "It
Continued from A1 In their debate Tuesday,
b enchmarks u p
to
filiations, Buehler praised the 202 0 , governor, saying Kitzhaber
the candidates elaborated but we're not making those on the topic, and while the benchmarks." specifics offered differed Buehler interpreted the ecobetween them, both iden- nomics of carbon production tified many of the same differently, saying the state problems facing schools, has to be "very careful" with especially growing class limiting carbon production. " If w e l im i t our carsizesand theneed form ore state funding. bon-based fuels too much, the To achieve this, Wilhelm costs are local, real and imsaid the Legislature must mediate," Buehler said. "Un"prioritize stable funding fortunately the benefits are streams, including those international, long-term and for our four-year univer- uncertain. That can put a very sity in Bend, and increase
responsible for one's failures. Despite opposing party af-
small state like Oregon at a
"is probably one of the most insightful people in regards to health care reform in this c ountry," but
Because of his experience
as a physician in Bend, Buehler said, he could be "a valuable partner in saying, 'Governor, yes, that's the problem, that's the solution, but this is
access to trade and vocational programs." Wilhelm
big disadvantage." how it needs to be operationBuehler did say he supports alized.' " "I think the governor needs also said the expansion of encouraging renewable enerOSU-Cascades must be gy, but would like to see the someone like me desperately made a high priority for state offer credits to consum- to help him bring these reOSU as a whole, a sugges- ers hoping to buy such energy, forms to a conclusion we all tion echoed by his oppo- as opposed to offering money want to see, which is having a nent. The statement was in to energy startups that may great health care system that's cost-conscious and high-qualreference to a ranking of fail to launch. proposed projects by OSU, Opinions on Cover Oregon ity," Buehler added. which placed OSU-Cas- were less disparate, as both As in their first debate, both cades money below other candidates called the pro- candidates emphasized the projects, possibly delaying gram a failure while also em- need to improve the business the local branch campus' phasizing the need to increase climate, with both citing a planned expansion. the availability of health care desire to reduce the amount Buehler's proposal was instead of dismantling the of "red tape" facing small more detailed, offering sug- Affordable Care Act. At the businesses. Buehler suggestgestions such as expanding end of the debate, a Rotari- ed evaluating old regulations the Creative Leadership an directly asked Wilhelm and clearing out those found Achieves Student Success whether he thought Gov. John to be ineffective. Throughout initiative, a federally fund- Kitzhaber, a fellow Democrat, the debate, Wilhelm contined project overseen by should be re-elected after ually underscored the need the Chalkboard Project, a what Wilhelm earlier called to support local businesses, Portland-based education the "Cover Oregon debacle." touching on an idea to offer "Yes I do, I definitely do," he export assistance to companonprofit. The initiative is a testing ground to study said, adding that Kitzhaber is nies hoping to expand interhow to improve teacher responsible for the failure and nationally and to make startevaluations and includes emphasizing that his person- up capital available. the use of teacher bonuses al military experience taught — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tied to evaluations and stu- him the importance of being tleeds@bendbulletin.com dent performance. Buehler also proposed an emphasis on early literacy skills and HunterDoullas combating chronic absenteeism, both of which, he
SEASGN
said, are important factors in student success. Reactions to a question
OF STYLE
about what Oregon should
e ve n t
do to limit the amount of carbon released into the
SEPTEMBER 16-NOVEMBER 4,201$
atmosphere revealed a clear division between the candidates. Wilhelm char-
acterized limiting carbon production as an important economic and health
SPECIAL SAVINGS
initiative, saying he would
on the LiteRise' cordless operating system. Ask for details.
work for stricter limits.
'J!>.„A~ •
Bend-La Pine Crook County Culver Jefferson County Redmond Sisters
Oregon Bend-La Pine Crook County Culver Jefferson County Redmond Sisters
Oregon Bend-La Pine Crook County Culver Jefferson County Redmond Sisters
Oregon
88.6 83.0 80.0 80.1 87.3 93.8 85.0
88.9 82.3 77.2 79.6 86.8 95.0 84.0
0.3% -Q 8% -3.5% -Q $% -Q $% 1.3% 12%
68.3 60.4 56.1 43.6 77.0 81.3 63.0
66.9 61.6 43.9 56.8 66.5 76.9 62.0
2.0%
63.1 42.2 60.0 28.9 61.1 77.7 60.0
64.4 39.3 53.8 40.6 50.0 67.2 59.0
2.0% -21.7%
30.3% -13.6% -5.4% -1.6%
that hi s e x -
pertise is only relevant at a "30,000-foot level," and the governor has a hard time "operationalizing" his reform ideas.
•
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2.1%
-8 9% 10.3% 40.5% -18.2% -13.5% -1.7%
Note: Numbers represent the percent of students meetingor exceeding standards Greg Cross / The Bulletin
Source: Oregon Department of Education
Scores
are especially impressive as released earlier t o s c h ool Madras High School, the dis- districts. "I think generally they reContinued from A1 trict's only high school and the "We areabsolutely focused region's most disadvantaged, f lect th e c o ntinuing w o r k i m prove," on literacy, but w e're also operated without a large fed- we're doing t o working extremely hard to eral grant, which expired after Wilkinson said. "While there were no sighave a laserlike focus on data, injecting nearly $3 million into so we can adjust our instruc- the school over the past three nificant changes, our schools tion for students," she said. years. overall have done quite well, "Along with that, there's an expectation for 100 percent en-
gagement from students in all classrooms across the district.
"This is definitely what we
come out soon, I think they
Molitor said. While the scores for BendLa Pine lacked the drama of
will reflect that." The Oregon Department of
Garden
vided by Deschutes Recycling
half of our food donated from
are distributed to more than
the Oregon Food Bank, and it's
Continued from A1
40 partner agencies around Central Oregon providing food boxes, hot meals and
usually in the form of pallets of canned food, peanut butter,
A recentfrost scarred some
squash and tomato plantsBailey said temperatures tend to be cooler at the landfill than
elsewhere in town — and rabbits, rockchucks, birds and oth-
er critters have taken to dining on the crops. "This is the fourth or fifth year since starting the
garden, and I thinkthey've sort of found us," Bailey said. Sandy Klein, food resource specialist with NeighborImpact, said the vegetables pro-
sack lunches to those in need.
Across the tricounty area, around 20,000 people access food assis tance programs in any given month, Klein said, but suchprograms often have a difficult time keeping sufficient stocksoffresh food. "The produce is really great, because it's not as accessible as some of the other products we get," she said. "We get about
II IIIl
and when school report cards
had hoped would happen,"
Education will release report tion to focus on engagement so those from Jefferson County, cards for districts and schools that all students are focused at a district board meeting this fall, offering a more thoron a daily basis. We call it 'bell Tuesday night, Superinten- ough analysis of performance. to bell.' " dent Ron Wilkinson said he — Reporter: 541-633-2160, The district's gains last year is pleased with the results, tleeds@bendbulletln.com To do this, we look at instruc-
~
,:!
things like that."
Klein said home gardeners with any excess produce can see that it doesn't go to waste
by donating it to the NeighborImpact food program. "I know people really look forward to getting it in the summertime. We never have a tough time getting rid of the fresh produce," she said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletln.com
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Gossip
which airs on Fox. underscored by the public's Based in Los Angeles, TMZ seemingly unending interest
Continued from A1
is the brainchild of Harvey
Levin, a 64-year-old Southern
The Rice video has also
Michael E McElroy/ New York Times News Service
share of white residents by more than 50 percentage points.
Diversity
"The police come here, they do their jobs, they don't try to
exam and a college degree, and a lower tier, called basic patrol,
Continued from A1 get to know anybody," said that does not. Once a basic paBut now, the problem has Turney, who is black. "The po- trol officer is hired, the city will taken on new relevance since
the fatal shooting of a young black man last month in Ferguson, Missouri, where four of the 53 police officers are black, according to the police chief. Nationwide, the total num-
ber of minority police officers has risen, but they remain heavily concentrated in larger cities, with the numbers falling off sharply in smaller ones, such as Ferguson and Maple Heights. Data from a federal survey of police departments in 2007,
analyzed for The New York Times by Andrew Beveridge, a sociologist at Queens College, found that nearly 400 departments, most with fewer than a hundred officers, were sub-
stantially whiter than the populations they served. These are
lice don't wave."
Several Maple Heights officials said the diversity of the police and fire departments
had never been a major issue. It is hard to find qualified can-
reimburse tuition costs, and
many such officers eventually earn a degree and work their way to the upper tier.
The diversity of neighboring police departments poses
didates of any race, said John a challenge to cities such as Popielarczyk, who has been Maple Heights, Lim said: "If the with the Maple Heights Police leadership, if the police chief, is Department since 1990 and the dedicated to getting more diacting police chief since May. versity in the workforce, how Maple Heights, devastated hard is it to figure out how the by theforecl osure crisis,has other department is doing such fallen on hard times, and the agoodjob?" police force has shrunk. And Asked why Maple Heights with most officers staying considered only one candidate on the job for 25 years, Pop- at a time, Popielarczyk said: ielarczyk said, the opportunity "We've always done it that way. to hire is scarce. Of eight recent My understanding is that that's hires, two were black. One, the how we're supposed to do it." chiefsaid,was fired for cause Some Maple Heights resibefore his probationary period dents have triedto persuade ended. the city to hire more blacks, T he department has a d -
periences of the two towns il-
are many, Lim, the sociolo-
Ferguson and Maple Heights are about the same size, just
more than 20,000 people, and in both the black population has surged in recent decades. Both cities have white mayors and largely white political leaderships. And both police departments have fallen far short of reflecting the communities they serve — even as some
lustrate the obstades to achiev- gist, said. Candidates usually ing diversity in law enforce- must pass written tests, physiment, even for departments cal agility tests, psychological that have made it a priority. tests, polygraphs and back"I see all these pundits come ground checks, some of which on the Sunday talk shows and can have a disparate effect on say: 'Of course you can hire minority candidates. Qualified more black people.Of course black candidates are sought they're not trying,' " said Nel- not just by competing police son Lim, a senior sociologist at departments, but also by emthe RAND Institute's Center on ployers in other industries. Quality Policing who has con- And some police chiefs have sulted with departments in Los cited a negative attitude toward Angeles and San Diego. "But law enforcement amongblacks it's very, very, very difficult." that hinders recruiting. There is little hard evidence Police departments have that diversity correlates with tried all kinds of remedies, better performance, in part from personal trainers to help because it is difficult to control with physical fitness tests to for complex variables and to tailored recruiting (a RAND know which outcomes, from survey found that women were crime rates to brutality cases, attractedtothe good salaries in to measure. In fact, one study policing, blacks to the profesof a Florida police department sion's prestige and Asians to found that black officers were the excitement of the job). more likely than white to use
force againstblack suspects. A review of court cases going back to the early 1990s revealed a handful of civil rightsor excessive force cases
But many
barriers and protect themOf course, it's easier to penetrate the veil when you're willing to pay for information, not to mention audio and video re-
stories, but its moment seems still some mystery around
how the site gets its scoops. In the case of Winston, a local reporter contacted the
Tallahassee police about the matter days before TMZ, but TMZ still somehow got the
story first. "There are a lot of stories on which TMZ absolutely eats
our lunch," said Tommy Craggs, the editor of the website Deadspin, a pioneer in sports gossip owned by Gawker Media. "They have more money and better resources, and
when they want to be, they're every bit as gutsy as we like to think we are."
It is impossible to separate the effect of TMZ's Rice scoop from the way it was delivered — via a verite video taken inside a casino elevator. It was,
you could say, the opposite of gossip; it was powerful, verified proof of Rice's brutal behavior. Like many of the most compelling tabloid stories, Rice's is also easily shaped into a parable. Before the release of TMZ's video, he was going to serve a two-game suspension, a punishment that was widely criticized as too lenient. But
within hours of its publication, his team, the Baltimore Ravens, terminated his contract, and the NFL was put on
the defensive.
"It's our expectation that a
price is going to be paid," Gabler said. "That's the payoff of
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I The most comprehensive visitors' guide in the tri-county area, this
colorful, slick-stock-covered, information-packed magazine is distributed through Central
Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state.
I
I INli
signer of the document. Ross
was a teacher in his 20s when he came to Maple Heights, at a
It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year round.
I
When Stone learned about
the agreement, she contacted Frank Ross, the only surviving
•
:I
~
time real estate brokers steered
black customers to a part of town called Presidential Row. He now lives 12 miles away but
agreedtocome to meetings of the new committee, where he suggested that the group call the Community Relations Service of the Justice Department, the same office that helped bro-
ker the earlier deal. Though new discussions w ere openedbetween the city and the service, which pro-
s m all d epart- vides mediation and training to
governments, residents feel the the will, to conduct an ex- talks have stalled. Neither the haustive review of their hiring mayor nor the Maple Heights practices. In Maple Heights, job legal director returned calls for candidates are ranked by how comment for this article, and
that requires a Civil Service
studios and HBO — against
years to start breaking big
some of TMZ's less flattering these tabloid narratives." cordings, which TMZ does coverage, if only a bit. routinely and unapologetiTMZ decided to move becally. It generates revenues yond Hollywood and into primarily via advertising sports after it helped break iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN on its website and through the story of Tiger Woods' ex- managesyour lovedone's medications the syndication of its hour- tramarital indiscretions. The long TV show, "TMZ Live," logic was simple, and it was
ficials threatened to withhold $500,000 in funds but backed down after the mayor submitted a 65-page response.
111 WAYS TO DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON IS ACOMPREHENSIVE GUIDE to places, events and activities taking place throughout Central Oregon during the year. Both locals as well as visitors to the area will discover the services and products your business has tooffer when you advertise in this publication.
giS
I glLAl. ORE GQN
the service does not publicly discuss its work. Participation
by local governments is strictly voluntary.
Stone said economics, not overt racism, had kept the police and fire departments largelywhite. "There was white flight, but people were trying to hold on to their jobs," she said. "I can understand you don't want to give lating, tense situations. 22 outof 102 offi cers are black up that job." In Maple Heights, some res- — do things differently. The Ross saidthat apathy among idents said they would like to chiefs of both departments black voters was partly to see more black officers, while said officials were allowed to blame for the situation. But others said that it was the at- consider the top 10 candidates he does not accept the city's titude, experience and trainon the list, which helps them excuses. "They're telling me in 40 ing of the officer, not race, hire more minority candidates. that mattered. Chris Turney, a Both chiefs said their cities years they can't find any Afrihome renovator who lives with took an aggressive approach to can-American policemen?" he his wife and two daughters, diversity as early as the 1970s. said. "Forty years later — it's said it was more important for Cleveland Heights has two very emotional for me. Forty officers to live in the city. All types of officer positions, one years later, I'm still dealing but one do not.
of the company's more traditional media assets, but if nothing else it may inoculate Time Warner's businessesincluding the Warner Bros.
selves. And that's what the tabloid is all about."
a minority is, and I haven't figured that out." Federal of-
ments lack the resources, or
against the Maple Heights po- well they score on the written lice, two of which involved a exam, earning bonus points white officer who is no longer for fact ors such as previous with the department, and none training, military experience that involved a fatality like the and city residency. For each shooting in Ferguson. opening, the candidates are Still, it is an accepted tenet of considered one by one, in order community policing that when oftheirscore. departments reflect the comSome nearby suburbs such munities they serve, they have as Bedford Heights and Clevean easier time building trust land Heights — where about and defusing, rather than esca- 40 percent of the residents and
the mainstream media. When Time Warner spun off AOL in 2009, it retained TMZ. The site does not make for a seamless fit with the rest
tiesare athletes. It took TMZ Sports a few
a committee member who runs
of Maple Heights' neighboring police departments have achieved much higher levels of diversity. Critics point to the lack of racial balance in police departments as evidence of systemic racism. But experts say the ex-
Two small towns
to have arrived, even if there's
dios are based. Levin, who declined to be
inside cannot erect these
forming a committee called
Civil Service exam in hopes a blog called the Maple Heights that more minority candidates African A m erican G azette, would pass, he said. But, he discovered a long-forgotten added: "The real goal of the affirmative action agreement, department is to provide qual- signed by the mayor, a citizens' ified officers who are compe- committee and a representatent and can provide quality tive from the federal Justice serviceregardless of race. I Department in 1977. don't think people really care In that deal, Maple Heights, about the color of the officer at the time about 96 percent that responds; they care that white, agreed that within three the officer responds quickly, is years minorities would make effective, treats them well and up at least 4 percent of its pois respectful." lice and fire departments. Butit The acting fire chief, James soon became clear that the city Castelucci, said much the was less than fully committed same, adding that one promis- to this goal. "I figure we're all minoriing black candidate withdrew when his current employer of- ties," the mayor at the time, fered him more money. Emil Lisy, told reporters when he was criticized for failing to Diversity's challenge live up to the agreement. "The The obstacles to diversity first thing is to find out what
age points.
the White House has felt
so that the people on the
vertised in minority newspa- the Maple Heights Citizens for of white officers was greater pers and changed the private Change. In 2012, Elaine Stone, company that administers its
own form of pop culture, and some of our biggest celebri-
an agent provocateur. It's there to penetrate the veil
departments where the share
than the share of white residentsby more than 50 percent-
prompted a national con- California native with a law versation about domestic degree from the University of abuse — playing out on Chicago. The letters stand for social media under the Thirty Mile Zone, a reference hashtags ¹WhyILeft and to the radius around Holly¹WhyIStayed — that even wood where most of the stucompelled to weigh in on. ("Stopping domestic vio- interviewed for this article, lence is something that's worked for years as a legal bigger than football," Pres- specialist on local radio and ident Barack Obama said TV before achieving a meaMonday through his press sure of prominence during secretary, Josh Earnest.) t he O.J. Simpson trial. I n As strange as it may 1997, he became the host and s ound given most o f legal analyst on a revival of TMZ's typical fare — on "The People's Court." SeverTuesday, it posted photos al yearslater,he created and of socialite Paris Hilton produced his own newsmagabuying a sandwich from a zine show, "Celebrity Justice," Manhattan Subway — the about the legal issues facing site's aggressive coverage celebrities. When "Celebrity Justice" of these cases ispart of a long journalistic histo- was taken off the air in 2005, ry. Tabloids have always Levin started d eveloping trafficked in gossip and TMZ for what was then AOLscandal-mongering. From Time Warner. The site's first the beginning, though, the big scoop came in the sumidea was never just to titilmer of 2006, when it secured late; it was, at least in part, a copy of Mel Gibson's arrest to hold the rich and power- report for drunken driving, ful accountable. complete with outtakes from "The tabloid was a re- an obscenity-laced, anti-Sebellion against the estab- mitic tirade. lished social order," said From there, TMZ quickly Neal Gabler, the author of evolved into one of America's "Winchell: Gossip, Power biggest celebrity news sites. and the Culture of Celebri- Among other things, it broke ty," placing TMZ squarely the story of Michael Jackson's in this tradition. "TMZ is death an hour before most of
Police officers Matthew Berger, from left, Matthew Rhodes and Sgt. Michael Gazer search a woman pulled over for a traffic violation and found to be driving without a license, in Maple Heights, Ohio. Data from a federal survey of police departments in 2007 found that nearly 400 small police departments were substantially whiter than their towns, with the share of white officers greater than the
in Woods' off-the-course activities: Sports are now their
with the same thing."
/
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P ic 0! 0022 Je n Ave«Bend 041-888-0092
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
BRIEFING
COURT DECISION
Fire prompts evacuations
LA PINE
a ers OSe e era a ea
A garage fire innortheast BendonTuesday night led tothe evacuation of nearbyhomes. The 6:30p.m. fire neartheendof NELesley Place, acul-de-sac, spread tosomepinetrees and a fence,triggering the evacuation offive homes, said Jeff Blake, a battalion chief withthe BendFire Department. "That wasstrictlyas precaution," hesaid. Firefighters snuffedthe blaze after it leveledthe garageandburnedslightly into the1,200-square-foot homeandattic, Blake said. Thefire causedan estimated$35,000in damage,andits cause remains underinvestigation. Smoke fromthefire south of Pilot Buttecould be seenaroundthe city. Neighbors saidthey heard anexplosion before seeing smokeandflames rise from thegarage.Matt Armstrong, 26,wholives adjacent tothegarage,
By Sheila G. Miller
of serving
The Bulletin
a 27-month sentence in a
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals has affirmed that a Bend couple convicted of defrauding investors out of more than $4 million cannot
use their intent or ability to repay investors as a defense.
Former Bend Police Capt. Kevin Sawyer and his wife, former Bend realestate
Sawyers could
build and furnish their vaca-
tion home in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, and make credit card had assets that and car payments. could have been The Sawyers' attorneys, Kevin used to pay back neither of whom returned Sawyer thei r investors. calls for comment, argued The federal in the appeal that the couple didn't intentionally seek to government began investigating the Sawyers' real defraud their investors and estate dealings in early 2009, that the net fair market valand a federal grand jury ue of the couple's companies issued an indictment in Octo- and properties exceeded the ber 2010. amount ofmoney they owed The indictment alleged that their investors. Assistant U.S. not present evi.;t d e nce that they
federal prison in Littleton, Colorado. Tami
T am i
Sawyer pleaded Sawyer guilty to all 21 counts against her, including conspiracy, fraud and money laundering, and is serving nine years in a federal prison
broker Tami Sawyer, were sentenced to prison in April 2013 after pleading guilty to crimes associated with defrauding more than 20 people
in Dublin, California. The two were also ordered to pay more than $5.8 million in restitution.
When thecouple pleaded
between 2004 and 2009, the couple solicited more than 20
out of more than $4 million.
guilty, it was on the condition
people to invest more than $7
Kevin Sawyer pleaded guilty to providing false
that they reserved their right to challenge a ruling by Chief
million for real estate projects
statements to a financial institution and is in the midst
U.S. District Judge Ann
Aiken, who determined the
in Oregon and Indiana. The Sawyers then used that money to pay earlier investors,
Attorney Scott Bradford had
argued whether or not the Sawyers were capable of repaying their investors did not negate the fraud committed with the investors' money. See Sawyers/B6
Man gets 50 years for sexual abuse By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
A Deschutes County judge on Tuesday sentenced a Charleston man to 50 years in prison for the sexual abuse of a 9-yearold girl in La Pine in 2007.
Deschutes County Circuit Judge Stephen Forte sentenced William Paul
Crsneros, 51, after a
Cisneros
12 - person jury found him guilty on 10 counts
OUR SCHOOLS,OUR STUDENTS j
said the blast rattledhis
home. "Itshookitenough that itfelt like someone slammedourfrontdoor," hesaid. After goingoutsideto investigatewhatcaused the noise,Armstrong said hesawa plumeof blacksmoke andflames coming fromthe garage. Armstrong saidheand another neighborkicked downthe doorofthe house andcheckedinside to see whetheranypeople or pets weretrapped. It was smokyinsidethe house, but he didn'tsee flames. "I'm just gladno one was in thehouse," hesaid. Blake saidit wasunclear whatexploded,but it may havebeenaerosol cans in theburning garage. "The garageistotally destroyed socan' I t really tell you whatexploded,"he said. Investigatorswere looking todeterminewhat exploded aswell aswhat started theblaze.
related to the sexual abuse
of the girl, including one count of first-degreerape.
EdUCationalnewsandactivities,andloCal
kids and their achievements. • School Notes andsubmission info, B2
Between Sept. 21, 2007, and Oct. 8, 2007, the victim
eweec iveso ere o coun er cu crea ives
stayed with Cisneros while her mother was serving a jail term for an assault charge in Deschutes County. Cisneros and her moth-
er were dating. To avoid identifying the victim of sexual assault, The Bulle-
tin is not identifying her mother. During the trial, which
began Sept. 3, the victim, now 16, testified about four incidents in which
Cisneros had engaged her in sexual activity, ranging from playing pornographic videos in front of her to engaging in sexual intercourse. The victim alleged that Cisneros abused her in several locations, including his home, a barn he was building and a local motel. Soon after, the victim
and her mother moved to California. The victim disclosed the abuse to her
mother after Cisneros had visited them in August 2012.
After an investigation by the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, Cisneros was arrested and booked
— Bulletinsleffreporh
More briefing, B5
in the Deschutes County
jail on April 1. He has been in custody since. Cisneros, who pleaded
STATE NEWS
not guilty, did not testify
during the trial. The defense denied the
Portland
victim's allegations, stating Cisneros could not remember any instances of sexual Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Sixth-grade students Yoselin Venegas, 11, left, and Even Swenson, 11, right, smile while creating a peanut butter and jelly sandwich Monday in a new engineering and technology class offered as an elective at Elton Gregory Middle School in Redmond.
• Portland: Ex-nurse sentenced to15 years for sexual abuse,B3
By Monica Warner The Bulletin
ixth- and eighth-grade "
"
'
-~e,:~+~
Qajh'%re
.-4 Kgl h'Fl'lls ~
,
S
something other than their core classes," said Principal Tracie Renwick. "For open
period, some kids choose ory Middle School in band, some choose Spanish. Redmond have kicked off This year we've added engithe schoolyear right: with neering and leadership." sandwiches and service. The engineering and This year, the school has leadership classes are deadded two classes that are signed to get kids thinking "different from the norm" to about high school electives their open-period offerings and college and job opin an effort to expand career portunities, according to opportunities for students Renwick. Previously, the who will soon transition to schooloffered drama and high school. choir electives, but those "In a nutshell, what we're programs were cut, leaving going to offer kids in the only band and Spanish for middle level is one period in kids to choose from. students at Elton Greg-
"Due to reduced staffing, due to budget issues ... different programs got cut,"
abuse. In closing arguments Tuesday, defense attorney
Jacques DeKalb pointed to the lack of witness corrob-
cluded," Felton said Monday. "Every eighth-grader will end up coming through this class, and I'm going to
oration of the abuse. "What the state is ask-
ing very hard to bring those back into our program." Chris Felton, a social
betheirsupportontheir
studies teacher, will helm
Criswell, Bladyn Rauch,
the leadership class, where
and Garrett Martin, all 13,
fill this particular hole," DeKalb told jurors. DeKalb also alleged the victim had come forward with the allegations of sex-
students will serve on various service committees and
ual abuse in 2012 to avoid
a sense of community. "I thinkthe way a lot of
delved straight into plans for their recyding committee. "So, make 'go green'posters?" Bladyn suggested. "Yes, with green glitter and everything," Bro-
leadershipclassesaresetup
die said. "Posters inside,
the case as open and shut.
is that students have to meet
posters outside, posters everywhere." See Electives/B2
child molester sitting here with you," McIver told the
Renwick said. "We're work-
develop ideas for how to improve school morale and
a certain criteria, meaning some individuals are ex-
journey." In Monday's class, Brodie
ing you to do is to invent the puzzle piece that will
getting in trouble with her mother for smoking marijuana. Deputy District Attorney Evander McIver presented "Make no mistake, this is a
FIRE UPDATE
SeeCisneros/B5
Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit
• http://inciweb.nwcg. Iev/stat e/38 • www.nwccweb.us/ informatien/firemap. aspx 1. Deception Complex • Acres: 4,181 • Containment: 64% • Cause: Lightning 2. 790 Fire • Acres: 2,963 • Containment: 45% • Cause: Lightning
Sc oo istrictseesincreaseo over300stLi ents • Majority of schools grow at projected rate; BendHighsurpasses 1,700 mark By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
17,118, though Chief Operations and Financial Officer
Oct. 1.
"It's changing fast and furious this time of year," Henry sard. He said the district did
Bend-La Pine Schools grew Brad Henry said that number by 331 students since this is likely to change. During time last year, according to the past two academic years,
a good job at anticipating growth, despite missing the mark in a few spots. The majority of elementary schools
a report presented to the dis-
the district added around 150
grew at rates similar to what
trict's board Tuesday evening. The student population is
students between the end of the first week of school and
the district projected, but threesurpassed expectations
and required additional faculty, while one school, Juniper Elementary, was 59 students short.
Among the high schools, Bend High exceeded the mark by the most students,
passing its projection of 1,652 by 80 students, making it the only high school in the district with more than 1,700 students.
There are many challenges in projecting enrollment, including the trouble with es-
timating how many families will migrate into the district. Sometimes students also fail
to show up. Before school started, Henry said, about 17,250 students were regis-
tered, above the current mark of 17,118.
See Students /B6
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
EvxNT TODAY KNOW WILDERNESS: OUR DESERT WILDERNESS: TheOregon Natural Desert Association will explore life in the high desert; noon; Sisters Public Library,110 N.CedarSt.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070. BENDFARMERSMARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW Franklin and NWOregonavenues; www.
bendfarmersmarket.com.
CASEYNEILL ATHENORWAYRATS: The Portland Irish-inspired rock/ folk and punkbandperforms; free; 7 p.m.; McMenaminsOldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBondSt., Bend;www. mcmenamins. com or541-382-5174.
ENm a
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeCbendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
discuss "The Unlikely Pilgrimage 541-419-0111. of Harold Fry" by Rachel Joyce; CHUCK INGLISH: The hip-hop noon; Redmond Public Library, artist performs, with Bank Sinatra, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. Amsterdam, Chandler P and more; deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or CANCELED; 8p.m.; Volcanic Theatre 541-312-1050. Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Little Century" by Anna 541-323-1881. Keesey; noon; Downtown Bend LOCASHCOWBOYS:The country Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; band performs; $15 plus fees; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 541-617-7050. & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; www.maverickscountrybar.com or CRAIG CAROTHERS:The Nashville 541-325-1886. singer-songwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St.,
Bend; www.mcmenamins.comor 541-382-5174.
TN3RSDAY
BEND COMEDY SHOWCASE: Local comics perform; $5; 8 p.m.; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 NW Oregon Ave.; www.
THE LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Read and
traughberproductions.com or
summitsaloon.com,bendcomedye
FRIDAY X-TREMEAIRDOGS COMPETITION: Dock-jumping dog competition; noon-6 p.m.; Crescent Lake Resort, 23250 Crescent Lake Highway; www.crescentlakeresort.com or 541-433-2505.
SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenueand Ash Street; sistersfarmersmarketcNgmail.com. UNCORKEDSUNRIVER STYLE WINE FESTIVAL:Featuring chocolat es,cheese,winesamples, classes and more; $20 for stemless wine glass and five tasting tokens, $5 nondrinkers, free for children ages 3 and younger; 3-8 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; www. sunriverstyle.com, kimberlydcI srowners.org or 541-585-5000. VFW DINNER:Fish and chips; $6; 3-7 p.m.; VFWHall,1503 NEFourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. MUNCH 8 MOVIES:An outdoor screening of "The Lego Movie" with food vendors and live music;
free; 6 p.m.,moviebegins at dusk; Compass Park, 2500 NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www.
northwestcrossing.com or 541-389-0995. "LES MISERABLES":A new production of the opera about convict JeanValjean;SOLD OUT; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. BEND IMPROVGROUP: The comedy group performs; adult themes; $8 in advance, $10 at the
door; 8 p.m.,doorsopenat 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave.; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. SCREEN ON THEGREEN:A screening of the Spanish film "Blankanieves"; bring snacks, chairs and blankets; free, boxed or canned fooddonationsaccepted;7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 SE ESt., Madras; www. jcld.org or 541-475-3351. ANDRE NICKATINA: The BayArea
hip-hop artist performs, with TNC 9ER and Chandler P; $24 plus fees in advance,$29 atthedoor;8 p.m., doorsopen at7 p.m.;Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.randompresents.com or 541-408-4329. JIVE COULIS:The funk-rock band performs; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. MACHINE:The Portland rock band performs with Patrimony. $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. SUNNY LEDFURD:The countryrockartist performs; $15 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend;
www.maverickscountrybar.comor 541-325-1886.
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch arequest is received.Any newinformation, such asthe dismissal of chargesor acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat9:30 p.m. Aug. 9, in the 100 block of SW Cascade Mountain Court. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:52 a.m. Sept1, in the3300 blockof S. U.S. Highway 97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:52 a.m. Sept.1, in the2000 block of S.U.S. Highway 97. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 9:53a.m. Sept.1, in the1600 block ofN. U.S. Highway97. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 9:57a.m. Sept.1, in the1600 block of N.U.S. Highway 97. Burglary — A burglary was reported and an arrest madeat10:50 a.m.Sept.
1, in the 300block of SWRimrock Way. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 2:45 p.m. Sept. 1, inthe1100 block of SW ForestAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat 3:36 p.m.Sept.1, in the 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:02 p.m. Sept.1, in the2400 block of NW Eighth Street. DUII —Daniel JamesMcCallister, 54, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 9:27 p.m. Sept.1, in the1500 block ofS. U.S. Highway97. Unauthorizedose— Avehicle was reported stolenandan arrest madeat 9:52 a.m. Sept. 2, inthe1100 blockof SW LakeRoad. Theft —A theft was reported at10:34 a.m. Sept. 2, inthe1600 block of SW Odem MedoRoad. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4:01p.m.Sept. 2, in the area ofS.U.S.Highway97and SW Veterans Way. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 416 p m. Sept. 2, in the1000 blockof SW GlacierAvenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at8:51a.m. Sept.
3, in the 200block of SWRimrock Way. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:31 a.m. Sept. 3, inthe 2200 block of SW 19th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:52 a.m. Sept. 3, inthe 800block of SW DeschutesAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:02 p.m. Sept. 3, inthe 300block of NWOak Tree Lane. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:53p.m.Sept. 3, in the area of NW31st Street and NWElmAvenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at10:34 a.m. Sept. 4, in the3100 block of SW Wickiup Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at10:42 a.m. Sept. 4, inthe 300 block of NW OakTree Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:43 a.m. Sept. 4, inthe 2100block of W. Antler Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:52 a.m. Sept. 4, inthe 800block of SW DeschutesAvenue. Burglary —Aburglary was reported at 12:55 p.m. Sept. 4, in the200 block of SW Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest made at1:28 p.m. Sept. 4, in the
1600 block of SWOdemMedo Road. Theft —Atheft was reported andan arrest madeat 4:29 p.m.Sept. 4, in the 300blockofNW OakTreeLane. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at8:47 a.m.Sept. 5, inthe300blockof NWOakTreeLane. Unlawfol entry —Avehicle was reported entered at8:59a.m. Sept. 5, in the 900 block ofSW14th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:13 a.m. Sept. 5, inthe 300block of NW GreenwoodAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:52 p.m. Sept. 5, inthe1700 block of NE Second Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 2:12p.m. Sept. 5, inthe area of SW23rd Street andSWMetolius Avenue. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at4:24p.m. Sept. 5, in the1900 block of NWElmAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:02 p.m. Sept. 5, inthe 300 block of SE EvergreenAvenue. Unauthorizeduse— Avehicle was reported stolen at9:43a.m. Sept. 6, in the1400blockof NWSixthStreet. Unauthorizeduse— Avehicle was reported stolen at2:43p.m. Sept. 6, in
the 900 block ofNW19thStreet. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:25 p.m.Sept. 6, in the100 blockof SW 26th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:51 p.m. Sept. 6, inthe 300 block of NWOak Tree Lane. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 3:52p.m.Sept. 7, inthe 700 block of SWEvergreen Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at4:30 p.m. Sept. 7, inthe 1600 block of N.U.S. Highway 97. Burglary — Aburglary was reported at 6:46 p.m. Sept. 7, inthe 2300 block of SW PumiceAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 9:35p.m.Sept. 7, inthe 4200 block of SW Rhyolite Place.
JEFFERSON COU5PPlf SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:27 a.m. Sept. 2, inthe 2300 block ofSW U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheft and aburglary were reported at12:49 p.m.Sept. 3, in the 2300 block of SW Bear Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at7:44 a.m.Sept. 4, in
the 400 block ofFourth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:18 p.m. Sept. 4, inthe area of Metolius Park North.
REDMOND FIRE
RUNS Sept.1 5:55 p.m.— Brush or brush-and-grass mixture fire, in theareaof N.Canal Boulevard. 7:43p.m. —Unauthorized burning, 3027 SWGlacier Ave. 6 —Medical aid calls. Sept. 2 6 — Medical aidcalls. Sept. 3 10 —Medical aid calls. Thursday 9 —Medical aid calls. Friday 19 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 12 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 4 — Medical aidcalls.
Electives Continued from B1 D own th e
h all i n P a t-
rick Brown's engineering and technology class, 20 sixth-graders prepared t o make an afternoon snack as part of their unit on algo-
l5S
rithms. The class incorporates Gateway to Technology
IJ,
and STEM co u rsework a s an introduction to technolo-
gy and engineering for middle-school students. Andy Tullis/The Bulletin "It integrates sc ience, Patrick Brown, left, explains how to write an algorithm for the technology, engi n eering creation of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. The lesson was part and mathematics into o n e of a sixth-grade technology class at Elton Gregory Middle School cohesive unit, and essential- in Redmondon Monday. ly that's what kids will end
up working with when they get out into the real world," Brown said Monday. "I try to
gear my lessons in terms of teachable moments,those areas that we find light kids up a little bit."
YES to helping kids and having fun!
"It integrates science, technology, engineering and mathematics into one cohesive unit, and essentially that's what kids will end up working
with when they get out into the real world.
— Engineering and technology teacher Patrick Brown The focus of M o nday's class was learning how to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich using direc- sandwich. ny said. "Just write down two "Get two knives...," Destiny tions the st u dents c reated themselves. satd.
"You wouldn't g et t w o
Samm Lindseth and Des-
knives."
The girls finished their 11step guidewith one last-min-
tiny Cook, both 11, were de- knives to make a sandwich ute addition by Destiny. "I'm going to say, 'Tip: slice tailed in t h e ir in s tructions, for yourself, you'd get one coming to a di sagreement knife," Samm countered. if you want to.'" "Well, a no r m al p e r son — Reporter: 541-633-2117, only on the number of utensils needed to prepare the would get two knives," Destimwarner@bendbulletin.com
SCHOOL NOTES REUNIONS The MarshfieldHighSchoolclass of1969will hold a reunion atthe Mill Casino HotelandRVPark, 3201 Tremont Ave., inNorth Bend; 6p.m. Sept.19 to 2 p.m.Sept. 21;free no-host bar, dinner dance$39, brunch$23; registration requested;visit www. mhs1969.info/register.php oremail marshfield69©gmail.com. The CrookCountyHigh Schoolclass
of1964will hold a reunion at the historic Hudspeth Home inPrineville; 1 p.m. Sept. 13; prefunction 7 p.m. Sept. 12 andpostfunction, 7 p.m. Sept. 13, 730 NE Stringline Ct., Prineville; contact Linda Hollis Gagermeier at 541-447-6198 or Golda Condron at 541-447-0430 for more information. The USSMissouri Association will hold a reunion for BB-63 shipmates Sept. 17-23 at the RamadaGateway Hotel in Kissimmee, Florida; contact
,>]+~4j •
Bill Morton at 803-469-3579 or Jack Stempick at 203-281-4693 to register.
TEEN FEATS The following local students have been namedsemifinalists in the 2015 National Merit Scholarship Program: Maxwell Farrens, Ella Feldmann, Ernest Finney-Jordet, Jules Ginsparg, Matthew Sjogren andVictoria Sample.
How to submit
Story ideas
Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358, youth@bendbulletin.com
School briefs:Items and announcements of general interest.
Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend,OR 97708
each
Phone: 541-633-2161
Email: news©bendbulletin.com Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story?
Other schoolnotes: College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion Phone: 541-383-0354 announcements. Email: mkehoe@bendbulletin.com Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
is in ro osa oa e o roe rarea aross By Jeff Barnard
sablefish are caught, Suryan
The Associated Press
sald. Dave Hedrick, who fishes
GRANTS PASS — Federal
fisheriesmanagers have proposed a new rule requiring West Coast commercial fishermen who unroll long lines of baited hooks on the ocean bottom also put out long lines
for black cod out of Seattle, says he has been required to use streamer lines for years in
Alaska, and they work well, but he expects that fishermen will not like the change. "Nobody really likes changof fluttering plastic to scare off seabirds tryingto steal the bait. es to how they are doing The proposed rule published things," said Hedrick. "But as Tuesday in the Federal Regis- an industry, we don't really ter is designed to protect the want to catch birds. It's not soendangered short-tailed alba- cially OK. It's not environmentross, which once numbered tally OK." in the millions but is down to
about 1,200 individuals. The West Coast is the last
piece of U.S. waters within the range of the short-tailed
And it's bad for business
because fishermen can be plagued by flocks of fulmars and gulls, and "Baits that don't get to the bottom don't catch
and tuna off Hawaii, Suryan
from a high point on the boat. sard. Brightly colored tubing hangThe technique was develing from the lines flutters, scar- oped by researchers from Sea ing off the birds. Grant, an arm of the National The new rule would affect Oceanic and Atmospheric Adabout 270 fishing boats using ministration, and Oregon State longlines to target primarily University. sablefish, also known as black The short-tailed albatross cod, a fishery with average is distinguished from other West Coast landings of $33 albatross species by its bubmillion a year. Albatross tend ble-gum pink bill. The bird was to flock behind fishing boats nearly wiped out by feather in the deep waters at the edge hunters in the early 1900s. The of the Continental Shelf where U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
BOat ShOOting —Oregon State Police say an81-year-old property owner is accused of firing his shotgun twice at analuminum drift boat that two Siuslaw River boaters had pulled from the river at his dock after they experienced boat trouble. Lt. GreggHastings says the men rowed to the dockeast of Florence andsecured their boat on Mondayafternoon. Onemanstayed with the boat while the other went to get their vehicle and trailer. They loadedthe boat and were getting ready to leavewhenthe property owner arrived on his boat. Theysay hetold them not to leave, went into his home and returned with a shotgun, firing one shot that penetrated their boat's hull. Hastings says the menreport they started driving off as he wasreloading.Theysayasecondroundhittheboat'sengine. State police arrested EldenNordahl for investigation of menacing, reckless endangering, unlawful use of aweaponand pointing a firearm at aperson. Ashotgun, rifle and ammunition were seized as evidence. Police are looking for additional witnesses.
Nightcled shooting —Police saya23-year-old man indicted
albatross to adopt the protec- any fish." tive measures, which are in The fishery could be shut effect for waters off Alaska down if more than two shortand Hawaii, said Rob Suryan, tailed albatross are killed in a a research associate professor two-year period, NOAA Fishof fisheries at Oregon State eries spokesman Michael MilUniversity. stein said. The public has 30 days to The streamer lines have comment on the proposed rule, been required since 1997 for which is expected to take effect longliners targeting sablefish Rob Suryan/OregonState University/The Associated Press in November. and halibut in A laskan waAn endangered short-tailed albatross flies over the Pacific. Federal The protective m easures ters. They are also requiredfor fisheries managers are proposing a rule to require West Coast are known as streamer lines, longliners targeting swordfish fishermen who lay long lines of baited hooks along the ocean which are towed in the water
AROUND THE STATE
bottom to also tow behind them lines of fluttering plastic to scare away birds trying to steal the bait.
puts the current population at
quired only for boats 55 feet
about 1,200. They nest primar-
and longer, but smaller boats
across the entire North Pacific. The last one to die hooked
NOAA offers a free streamer
ily on two isolated Japanese and tribal fishermen are beislands but forage for food ing encouraged to use them. by a longliner was in 2011 off Oregon. Birds that get hooked are dragged underwater and drowned. Streamer lines would be re-
line, worth about $100, to any longline fisherman on the West Coast, and about 145 have been
given out, said Milstein. The agency is also funding further
in last November's fatal shooting of a manoutside a northeast Portland nightclub has beenarrested in Las Vegas, Nevada. Portland police sayXavier Bolden was arrested Monday on amurder warrant by the LasVegasCriminal Apprehension Team. Portland Police detectives were in Nevada onTuesday to continue the investigation. Bolden wasbooked into the Clark County, Nevada, Detention Center to await extradition to Oregon. Agrand jury in Portland has indicted Bolden onone count of murder, additional counts of attempted aggravated murder and related charges in aNov. 9, 2013, shooting outside the Fontaine BleauNightclub. Thegunfire killed 30-year-old Durieul Harris and injured two other people. Officers arrived that night to find a crowd of 75-100 people involved in a disturbance andHarris suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. Police say anonymous tips given to CrimeStoppers of Oregon and what police called "a few bravewitnesses coming forward" were critical in securing the indictment. Bemd threat —A13-year-old middle school student in Baker City has beenaccused of leaving a bombthreat in a boy's bathroom. Authorities told the BakerCity Herald asearch of the school Tuesday morning turned up nothing suspicious. Thenote was found before classes weredue to begin. Thestaff at Baker Middle School told officers they suspected the13-year-old, based onhis behavior the previous day.Thepolice department said he was charged with disorderly conduct and taken to the regional juvenile detention facility in The Dalles. Cage fight draWI —The managerof a Medford ballpark says cage fighters won't be invited backafter a brawl among fans. Police arrested six adults and ajuvenile Saturday night after fighting broke out amongabout 20 fans at Harry 8 David Field. One officer described the scene in his report as "mass chaos." Lt. Mike Budreausaid people werepunching, kicking, stomping, biting and eye-gouging. Onesecurity guard's face was reported bloodied, andhemayhaveaconcussion.Anotherguard'seyewas gouged. Thecity owns the field. The Medford Rogues baseball team manages it. Its general manager, ChuckHeeman,tells the Mail Tribune that he'd haveconsidered having the mixed martial arts event annually if it had gonewell. But, he says, it didn't, so it won't be repeated. — Fiom wire reports
research.
Former police officer working as nurse gets15 years for abuse The Associated Press PORTLAND — A
Q R E G Q N C
"He knew who would be be-
self out of trouble," prosecutors wrote in a recent filing. "This,
frey McAllister chose his vic-
in turn, kept him employed as
to withhold $250 million in
tims carefully, selectingwomen Medicare funding, and the hoshe thought wouldn't complain pital hurriedly put together a or wouldn't be believed if they prevention plan to salvage the did, The Oregonian reported. money. A lawsuit ~ the Then,pretending to do me d- hospital is to begin in April. ical tasks, the 39-year-old forMcAlliter pleaded guilty mer police officer abused them, to sex abuse, unlawful sexual the prosecutors said. penetrationand other charges. Some women complained, Under the deal, prosecutors but the complaints went no- will dismiss charges such as where or hospital workers rape and sodomy that would didn't believe them. One of the have brought minimum man10 victims was an emergency datory sentences of 25 years in room worker. custody. Federal investigators found
At a trial that was to begin in
S
2009 to April 2013.
emergency room nurse at a interviewing patients, keeping Portland hospital p leaded McAllister on the job during inguilty Tuesday to sexually quiries and, in one case, putting abusing patients and is to be apatient at riskby emailingher sentenced to 15 years in prison. detailed allegations to him. Prosecutors alleged that JefThe government threatened
lieved between himself and a compromisedpatient, and what
methods to employ to talk him-
technician before he became
a registered nurse in the emergency room from 2008 until
that Legacy Emanuel Medical
days, prosecutors were prepar- April2013, when he was fired. Center didn't have systems to ing to characterize McAllister In August, he surrendered ensure patient safety, and the as a "serial sexual predator," hisOregon nursinglicenseand staff flouted regulations by fail- according to court documents will never be able to reapply.
I T Y
S T M E N T R V
I C
E
S
DR. QUINCY I<ROSBY
his intent to try to attack the
rity for Legacy Emanuel and then as an emergency room
N
WITH SPECIAL GUEST SPEAKER
women's veracity by bringing
side who first worked in secu-
U
THE GLOBAL LANDSCAPE
rolled in." McAllister's lawyer signaled
McAllister is a former police officerin Beaverton and Sea-
E
M
Oregon Community Investment Services and LPL Financial proudly presents
a nurse with continued access to patients as the complaints
up past criminal conduct.
M
I NV E
ing to document complaints, that described assaults from f o r mer dismissing allegations without
0
Dr. Krosby is the Chief Market Strategist for Prudential Annuities. In this capacity,she is a member of the investrnent management group for the
annuities division, where she provides perspective on the overseas rnacro-economic environment and financial markets. Dr. Krosby earned her rnaster's and doctoral degrees from the London School of Economics and is asought after expert for media outlets such as LNBL, The Wall Street
journal and Bloomberg Radio. Today's investorsare concerned about the future and the impact of uncertainty on their retirement. This presentation provides insight on
current trends and offers ideas for investors to consider that may help provide some strategies in charting their retirement for the long term. In this informative session, Dr. I<rosby will provide valuable insight on: • Current market trends • Analysison U.S. and Overseas markets
• Portfolio implications and ways to help protect your portfolio
Student's project takes ondirty water By Queenie Wong Statesman Journal
water through a series of
filters. " It takes i t Hur r i c anes,
When:
The science project, called
Dinner will be provided
Aqua Sol, also b ecame a t h r ough t h e
— DRThursday, September 18, 2014 Lunch Session: 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
family activity. Her dad, Nifloods and tsunamis can pol- pump and into the sediment tin, went shopping with her lute the water supply with and carbon filter, which takes for supplies, and her youngbacteria and other contam- out the dirt and the bacteria," er brother, Mihir, helped SALEM
—
inants, which can lead to ill-
ness for people who drink it. "I wanted to do something
that could benefit other people, and I wanted my science project to be practical,"
Megha Joshi said. Joshi is among 300 semifinalists in a national science
and engineering fair for middle school students called
Joshi said. "Then the UV disinfectant system just kills all
"It was a good learning experience for me," she said.
To test the filtration system, Joshi took a water sam-
people at Lowe's picking out all the parts, and I asked my
ple from Pringle Creek last dad an i n ordinate amount year. The water was sent to of questions, probably to the a private lab, and the test re- point of annoyance." sults showed the count for
The Riverhouse Convention Center 2850 Rippling River Court Bend, OR 97701
"I had a lot of help from the
Joshi will l earn Sept. 17
coliform bacteria dropping whether she's one of 30 fiare 19 semifinalists from Or- dramatically after she ran it nalists who will r eceive an egon, one from Salem. through her solar-powered a ll-expenses paid tri p t o In her backyard in Salem, water filtration system. Washington D.C. in Octothe Blanchet Catholic School Joshi said she won't know ber. Finalists enter a f o ureighth-grader d emonstrat- for sure if the water is safe day competition for awards ed how the filtration system for drinking until more tests and prizes, which includes works. are run, and those are costly. $25,000. "I'm really proud of her," The solar panels power a The system can run for eight battery, which then fuels a hours, producing more than her father said. "She took on pump that brings up the dirty 1,600 gallons of water. something really ambitious." Broadcom MASTERS. There
Lunch will be provided
snap photos of the filtration system.
the bacteria by rearranging its DNA sequence so it can't reproduce."
Wednesday, September 17, 2014 Dinner Session: 5:45 pm — 7:15 pm
To reserve your seat, visit our website, give us a call at 541.382.1778, or send
an email to: seminarsSOre onCornmunit CU.o
OregonCommunityCU.org ( 541.382.1778
QN
I 800.365.1111
"Securities and advisory services offered through LPL Financial and Registered Investment Advisor, member FINRA/ SIPC. Prudential Annuities, Oregon Community Credit Union, and Oregon Community Investment Services are not registered broker-dealers and are not affiliated with LPL Financial. Not NCUA Insumd © 2014 Oregon Community Credit Union.
Not Credlt Unlon Guaranteed
May LoseValue
B4
TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
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he late Ted Kennedy had it right: "In the entire his([
tory of the Constitution," he told his fellow senators in 1997, "we have never amended the Bill of Rights, and now is not the time to start. It would be wrong to carve an exception in the First Amendment. Campaign finance reform
m W a~ ~
is a serious problem, but it does not require that we twist the meaning of the Constitution." It's a message the likes of Oregon's two Democratic senators, Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden, have yet to grasp. They voted Monday toforce a vote on a proposed constitutional amendment that would leave much political speech outside the shelter of the First Amendment. The amendment they favor would allow state and federal governments to write special rules
to one campaign:$2,600. Rather, it gave donors the right to give to as many campaigns asthey wish. We'll agree with those ultraconservative folks at the American Civil Liberties Union that true transparency, about donations not only to candidates and parties but also to political action committees, is a good thing. We believe, too, that finding a way to publicly identify donors to 501(c)4 nonprofits for campaign financing. They're whose money is used on political aimed largely at two U.S. Su- spending would serve the public preme Court r u l ings, Citizens well. United v. FEC in 2010 and McIn the end, the proposed constiCutcheon v. FEC this year. tutional amendment has less than The Citizens United ruling said a long shot's chance of passage. Congress could not bar unions It's unlikely to make it through and corporationsfrom speaking the Senate or the House of Reprefor or against candidates, where- sentatives, much less be ratified a s McCutcheon struck d o w n by the 38 states needed to make it the limit on a donor's total gifts part of the Constitution. That, too, during an election cycle. Popular is a good thing. Our constitutionthinking to the contrary, however, al protection of free speech has McCutcheon didnot change the served us well for 238 years. Now amount an individual may give is not the time to weaken it.
M 1Vickel's Worth Stop beingpowerpawns
with "Like it or not, it's all part of an
evolving Bend."
As angry protesters were busy Currently, at 80,000-plus, there is looting and trashing local business- not adequate infrastructure (water, es, the St. Louis Tea Party started sewer, roads, bridges, etc.), public a "BUYcotts" aimed at helping the safety resources, transit systems, businesses harmed by the violence. etc., to meet the needs of Bend today. O ne local b usiness owner w a s There appears to be a lack of budget shocked to learn the people helping to change that, too. were from the Tea Party. Their genFuture growth opportunities such
thiscaseisadequateaccess. Now is the time to support its designation and not fabricate excuses
strategies and operational plans on
heart was changed on the spot because everythinghe thoughthe knew was just proved wrong. That one act
This is the answer to winning how to pull this off. This should also and I don't mean "we" as in "Repub- be "part of an evolving Bend." licans." I mean "we" as Americans, Richard Moms as humans. Stop being pawns in Bend their power game both right and left and pitting me against my neighbor. Those old patterns that we have fall- adequate
Wildern essaccessis
Access is an important consider-
of 1964, it's more important that ad-
ditional wild places be designated as wildernesses. The wilderness legacy of the United States is one of our I, too, feel the need to respond to most enduring contributions to civi-
But technology doesn't solve
to Cathedral Rock. Limited access in
ever could.
racist and heartless Tea Party. His
Test wearable cameras Wake upAmerica on police ferce first
happen.
wilderness visitors to access a trailhead off Muddy Creek Road andhike
of mercy andkindness did more than a thousand of the best arguments
tered every myth this shop owner had ever heard about the so-called
Croolzed River Ranch
w
with private landowners will enable
as OSU-Cascades will not contribute
show love and mercy. Let our humble ation in wilderness designation, but actionsspeak louder than words. it is not the only one. On the 50th Carol Orr anniversary of the Wilderness Act
everything. Police may be more inclined to strictly follow procedures and use less discretion, knowing e very interaction could be r e viewed. That's not always a good thing. For instance, if they pull somebody over, they may be more inclined to always write a ticket. The cost of the cameras has become more reasonable,but they are still several hundred dollars a piece. That doesn't include maintenance and replacement. And it doesn't address the storage of all the data. What will the real longterm costs be for departments? It also raises new questions about when and how long the data should be stored. Who can see it? When are police allowed to turn the cameras off? What if they are interviewing a victim of abuse'? An informant? On balance, wethink cameras could help. What will always matter more is the quality and training of the people in the police department.
without trespassing. Agreements
for delay. The Republican-led House to the funding of growth. Tanyble has done everything in its power to benefits will be decades down the hinder the protection of proposed road. wildernesses over many years. It's Growing to 120,000 with busi- time for Congressman Greg Walden ness-as-usual approaches will be to speak out in support of this proposproblematic. The top focus for the al. His grandchildren will thank him. next decade by our elected officials Broc Stenman and city management should be Bend
uine act of mercy and kindness shat-
en into are not working. We as Americans need to demand justice, but also
hen people think everyone is watching, they act differently. That's why wearablecameras on police could help protect law enforcement and the public. Some argue Oregon law should be changed to make it clear that police can wear them. Currently, the law requires police to notify people if they are being recorded. It makes sense to change the law. But before Oregon takes the step of requiring cameras for all departments, the state should run pilot programs or at least intensely analyze how cameras have worked elsewhere. Cameras could reduce the use of force. They could lead to more polite interactions between police and the public. The demeanor of both police and suspects may shift. The cameras also create a record of events that can help clarify what did and did not
will more than double the number of acres the public is able to access
Needmore public transit What about more public transit
inside the proposed UGB expansion? What about morepublictransit inside the current UGB? Will you always
haveimmediateaccessto a car?You will? I graduated with honors with a
degree in mechanical engineering in 1987 and thought I was immune to a brain injury and that I would always drive. I never dreamed that I would
suffer a brain injury that would leave me totally and permanently disabled at 24 years old. Now I have
the letter ending "Thank God for
lization. Fewer than 10 nations have
Obama." The taxpayers of this country continue to pay for his lifestylegolfing, partying, vacationing every couple of weeks. Nowhe has no strategy! Gee, what a surprise! Wake up
meaningful protection of wilderness areas. Access to the proposed Cathedral Rocks Wilderness is being adequately addressed through the planning process. The primitive Muddy
independent transportation every 40 minutes, Monday through Friday till 6 p.m. Saturday? Every hour and 20 minutes till4p.m. Sunday? None, but hey, like everyone else I don't really have anywhere I need to go on Sundaysanyway.Iwaslike99.99percent of the population and used to think
America, we may need a leader soon!
Creek Road will be open to the public
I would never need to ride a bus or
Jug Darst during the eight months out of the train. But that all changed on July Bend year that anyone is likely to visit the 31, 1988. The weather in Bend is very area. It is a strong likelihood that amenable to everything I enjoy doing Make plans for growth year-round access on the road willbe — if I canget to it. Pleaseincludetranavailable if desired. River access will sit in the current and future UGB exIn a recent column, John Costa be facilitated owing to adding two pansion plans. You never know when discussed some of the effects of Bend miles of publicriver frontage that will you may need it. growing from 80,000-plus today to permit people to hike to and around Brent Yonkovich 120,000 in the future. He concludes Cathedral Rock. Land exchanges Bend
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In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: leiters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Becoming a real person through moral, elite education By David Brooks New Yorh Times News Service
his summer, The New Republic published the most read article in that magazine's history. It was an essay by William Deresiewicz, drawn from his new book,
T
"Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to
a Meaningful Life." Deresiewicz offers a vision of what
it takes to move from adolescence to adulthood. Everyone is born with a mind, he writes, but it is only through
introspection, observation, connecting the head and the heart, making meaning of experience and finding an organizing purpose that you build a unique individual self. This process, he argues, often begins in college, the interval of freedom when a person is away fromboth family and career. During that interval,
the young person can throw himself with reckless abandon at other people and learn from them.
Some of these people are authors
"many of the perversities of the curesiewicz. "Perhaps I am emblematic rent system would vanish overnight." lectual rigor. Some are students who of everything that is wrong with elite What we have before us then, are can share work that is intrinsically American education, but I have no three distinct purposes for a universirewarding. idea how to get my students to build a ty: the commercial purpose (starting Through this process, a student is self or become a soul. It isn't taught in a career), Hnker's cognitive purpose able, in the words of Mark Lilla, a pro- graduate school, and in the hundreds (acquiring information and learning fessor at Columbia, to discover "just of faculty appointments and promo- how to think) and Deresiewicz's morwhat it is that's worth wanting." tions I have participated in, we've nev- al purpose (building an integrated Deresiewicz, who lives in Portland, er evaluated a candidate on how well self). argues that most students do not get he or she could accomplish it." Over a century ago, most university to experience this in elite colleges toPinker suggests the university's administrators and faculty members day. Universities, he says, have been job is cognitive. Young people should would have said the moral purpose is absorbed into the commercial ethos. know how to write dearly and rea- the most important. As Mary Woolley, Instead of being intervals of free- son statistically. They should acquire the president of Mount Holyoke, put it, dom, they are breeding grounds for specific knowledge: the history of the "Character is the main object of eduadvancement. Students are too busy planet, how the body works, how cul- cation." The most prominent Harvard jumping through the next hurdle in tures differ, etc. psychology professor then, William the resume race to figure out what The way to select students into the James, wrote essays on the structure they really want. They have been in- elite colleges is not through any mys- of the morally significant life. culcated with a lust for prestige and a terious peering into applicants' souls, Everybody knows the meritocratic fear of doing things that may put their Pinker continues. Students should be system has lost its mind. Everybody status at risk. selected on the basis of standardized knows that the pressures of the reThe system pressures them to be test scores: the SATs. If colleges ad- sume race are out of control. excellent, but excellent sheep. mitted kids with the highest scores But people in authority no longer Stephen Pinker, the great psychol- and companies hired applicants with feel compelled to define how they ogy professor at Harvard, wrote the the highest scores, Pinker writes, think moral, emotional and spirituwho have written great books. Some are professors, who can teach intel-
most comprehensiveresponse to Der-
al growth happens. The reason they don't is simple. They don't think it's
their place, or, as Pinker put it, they don't think they know. The result is that the elite univer-
sities are strong at delivering their commercial mission. They are pretty strong in developing their cognitive mission. But when it comes to the
sort of growth Deresiewicz is talking about, everyone is on his own. An ad-
missions officermightbias her criteria slightly away from the Resume God and toward the quirky kid. A student
may privately wrestle with taking a summer camp job instead of an emotionally vacuous but resume-padding internship. But these struggles are informal, isolated and semiarticulate.
I'd say Deresiewicz significantly overstates the amount of moral decay at elite universities. But at least he reminds us what a moral education
looks like. That is largely abandoned ground. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
OREGON NEWS
BITUARIES Conway E. Miller Wilma Lucritca Nev. 2,1926- Sept. 6, 2014 Smith Meracle M oved on t o t h e G r e a t B eyond e a r l y Sat u r d a y m orning. C o nway w a s a WWII V e t e r a n an d a l ong-time s a l e sma n f or W estern A u t o , Pe n n y ' s a nd Radi o S h ac k b e f o r e retiring, then on to his f avori te p os i t ion a s a candy-toti
Nev. 17, 1920- Sept. 6, 2014
Wilma Lucritca M eracle, a Ben d r e s i dent, p a ssed away S e p tember 5, 2014. A grave side service w i l l h eld in W i l m a' s h o nor a t M t. J e f f erson Me m o r i a l Park in Madras on Friday, September 12 at 1:30 p.m. Wilma was born Novemb er 17 . 1 920, t h e ng greeter eldest at daughter Wal-Mart. of Marvin He l oved Smith and j' ; Ru t h Cenway Mlller telling s tories o f i C lar r his war days to anyone inSmith. t erested i n l i s t e ning. H e Wilma also loved all t h i ngs John w as b o r n Wilma Meracle and raise Wayne. He was a cowboy at heart. on a farm i n P h i l l ipsburg, H e is s u r v ived b y h i s K ansas. Wilma s pent h e r w ife o f 3 3 y e a r s , L i n d a childhood and young adult M iller, and hi s a dult c h i l years on the family homedren; Cindy, C a r ol , G a ry s tead. Wi l m a ' s m ot h e r (wife S u e) , R o s emary, passed away i n 1 924, her Terry, Clare, Tom, Phyllis, g randparents w e r e h er Margie (husband Terry), r imary c a r e givers a f t e r Janie & J a mes; his niece, er mother's passing. Phyllis and l ots of g r a n dW ilma w a s u n i t e d i n children an d g r e at-grand- m arriage to Joh nn i e c hildren a n d n i e ces a n d Meracle o f Ph i l l i p sburg, nephews. K ansas, J u l y 31, 19 4 0 . In lieu of fl ow ers, Linda Wilma and Johnnie made & Conway want donations their h o m e i n H o l d r e ge, to go to the local Partners N ebraska f o r t w o ye a r s In Care in his name. By his a nd then relocated to O r r equest, there w i l l b e n o e gon in 1942. After l i v i n g services. Just have a beer in Forest Grove and Hillsand salute him. boro, they made their fami ly h om e i n M a d r as, O r e gon i n 1 9 5 1 . A f t e r t h e passing o f h e r h u s b a nd, Wilma r elocated to B e nd, Oregon to be closer to Nev. 27, 1961 - Sept. 6, 2014 family. Debbie R o b ert s p e a c e- One of W i l m a's f avorite fully went home to the Lord h obbies wa s c o o k in g f o r on September 6, 2014 at the f amily a n d fr i e n ds . S h e a ge of 62 . S h e w a s s u r - was able to fulfill this pash er w or k em rounded by h e r h u s band, sion i n p loyed as a cook for 1 5 children, y ears. She then w a s e m and wit h U . & I . C o r p ograndchil- ployed dren as r ation w h ere sh e w o r k e d she l eft for 10 years and retired in 1983. this world. Community i n v o lvement Debbie w as v e r y i mp o r t an t to w as b o r n W ilma. She w a s a m e m NovemalriA b er 27, ber of the Rebekah Lodge 1951 to ¹ 229 and belonged to t h e Debra Roberts Lesley and V FW L a d i e s A ux i l i a r y . D orothy T r o tter i n T u l i a , W ilma v o l unteered m a ny hours with the Senior CenTexas. Sh e attended high school i n D u m a s , T e x as, ter of Bend as well asbeing an active participant in where she met and married her high school sweetheart, t he m an y w o n d e r fu l o f ferings through the Senior Weldon. She was a faithful wife for 44 years, a loving Center. Wilma w a s p a s s i onate mother to three sons, and a about cooking and baking doting gr a n d m other to e ight grandchildren. S h e for others and was always i fting h er w on deifr f u l was an avid supporter of all aked goods to family and family activities, which inf riends. Wilma ha d a g i f t cluded decades of constant and talent for sewing and sporting events. q uilting . Fami ly and She was passionate about f lower g ardening an d a s - friends will fondly remember her through the beautisorted hobby crafts. In part icular, s h e e n j o ye d h e r f ul sewn g i ft s a n d q u i l t s c hurch a c t ivities, w i t h a she made for them. Wilma became a Christian in June special emphasis on worki ng w it h y o u t h a n d w a s of 1970 and was a member known as a project person of the First Baptist Church for special church events. in Madras, Oregon. Wilma was a l o v ing and Debbie was very strong in d evoted wif e an d m o t h er her faith for the Lord, and a nd nothing i n t h e w o r l d was an inspiration to many. was more important to her Debbie was p r eceded in than family. death by her mother, DorWilma is survived by her othy in 2004 and sister, Suandson, D o n a l d Bar zan in 2012. our an d g r a n d daughter, S he is s u r v ived b y h e r h usband, Weldon ; th r e e Julie A l l en , g r e a t-grandsons, Craig Roberts (and daughter, Jessica Steimer wife Ellen), M ik e R o berts a nd h e r h us b a nd , E r i c h e r g r e a t-great(and wife Darce), and Zach gSteimer; randsons, E a s to n St e Roberts (and f ia n c e e, Amanda); fa t h er , L e sley imer and Madden Steimer, Trotter; an d tw o b r others, h er brother, L a rq r S m i t h Dan Trotter and Doug Trot- a nd sister, L o r r a in e H u ter. Her e i g h t gr a n d chil- mes. Wilma was preceded in dren include Haley Roberts, her hu s b a n d , Halie Bates, Taylor Roberts, d eath b y John Roberts, Abigail Bates, J ohnnie M e r acle, he r f a Kyle Roberts, Paige Roberts, ther, M a r v i n an d h er mother, Ruth, herbrother, and Damon Roberts. Wayne Smith, and her sisFor those desiring to say good-bye to Debbie, a visi- t ers, Genevieve Bohl a n d t ation f or f ami l y an d C harlene R o d r i gues, h e r friends is scheduled 2:00 daughter, Doris Mae L en.m. to 5:00 p.m. Thursday, gele, and her granddaughe ptember 1 1 a t A u t u m n ter, Deborah Sue Barbour. Memorial co n t r i b utions Funeral Home in Redmond. m ay be m ade in W i l ma's A Celebration of D e bbie's Life will be held 2:00 p.m. name to the Ladies AuxilFriday, September 12 at the i ary o f V e t e r ans o f F o r Redmond Church of Christ, eign War, Post 1643, 1503 NE 4th St, Bend, OR 97701. 925 NW 7th Street. D eschutes Mem or i a l In line with Debbie's passion fo r c h i l d r en, p l ease C hapel i s h o n o red t o b e feel free to make donations entrusted with Wi lma's arrangements. to the Avery Walker Scholarship Fund. A l l p r o ceeds are dedicated to helping loDEATHS c al y o uth . C h e ck s m a d e payable toRedmond School District w it h r e f erence t o ELSEWHERE Avery W a lker s cholarship fund can be mailed to Redmond School District Attn: Deaths of note from around S heri F o lesbee, 1415 S E theworld: Salmon D r i v e R e d m ond, David Murphy, 93: Senior OR 97756. Also donations CIA officer in Berlin during may b e m a d e t o Br e a st some of the tensest days of the Friend's which provides as- Cold War, who later served as s istance t o wo m e n w i t h ovarian cancer, breast can- the agency's chief of Soviet opcer, and all other cancer, at erations and wrote an authoritative account of espionage in Breastfriends.org.
Debra Lane Roberts
that era. Died Aug. 28 at a re-
Find It All Online bendbullefin.com
tirement home in Alexandria,
Virginia. — From wire reports
ies rom • co i com ica ions icia:
DEATH NOTICES Elizabeth "Liz" l. Yankovich, of Eugene May 26, 1924 - Aug. 21, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services have been held in Eugene, Oregon.
Wilma Lucritca Meracle, of Bend Nov. 17, 1920- Sept. 5, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deachuteamemorialchapeicom
Services: A graveside service will be held for Wilma at 1:30 pm on Friday, September 12, 2014 at Mt. Jefferson Memorial Park in Madras. Contributions may be made to:
The Ladies Auxiliary of Veterans of Foreign War, Post 1643, 1503 NE 4th Street, Bend, OR 97701.
Richard "Dick" Clifford Bouffard, of La Pine May 6, 1934 - Sept. 3, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Services: A private interment was held at La Pine Community Cemetery. Contributions may be made to:
Heart 'n Home Hospice, PO Box 3540, La Pine, OR 97739, (541)536-7399 www.gohospice.com
John C. Partin, of Bend April 24, 1944 - Sept. 3, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home in Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Funeral Services will take place on Thursday, September 11, 2014, beginning with a viewing at 10:30AM followed by the service at 12:OOPM. They will be held at the Old Stone Church in Bend located at 157 NW Franklin Ave. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97702 541-382-5882 www.partnersbend.org
The Associated Press
gon Coast. Lincoln Counhemolytic uremic syndrome, ty officials and the state official said a 4-year-old Or- a type of kidney failure that public health division are egon girl died from compli- can occur after an infection investigating. cations associated with an E. caused byspecific strains of The Oregonian reports coli infection. E. coli. that one other person at the A spokeswoman for a chilThe spokeswoman said the holiday gathering got sickdren's hospital at Oregon girl tested positive for E. coli, a 5-year-old boy. KGW-TV identified the boy Health & Science University but the state public health died from complications of
PORTLAND — A h ealth
in Portland said Serena Prof-
as a friend, Brad Sutton. He's
itt of Lincoln County died Monday night.
been hospitalized at Mary Bridge Children's Hospital in Tacoma, Washington, with kidney complications.
S pokeswoman
laboratory hasn't confirmed the strain. Relatives said she fell ill Ta m a r a after a L a bor D a y w e ek-
Hargens-Bradley said the girl
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued trom Bt
end gathering on the Ore-
broken items can berepaired. The GearFix is located at 345 SW Century Drive inBend.
Pit closingto shooting until December
The Sisters RangerDistrict plans to close acinder pit nearSisters to Maples RestAreaclosed shooting until early December. The Environmental Center's The ZimmermanCinderPit, 3~/~ for construction Rethink Waste Project will host miles west ofSisters, will beclosed The only restarea between its third Repair Cafefrom 5:30 to to shooting fromSundayto Dec.1 7:30p.m.TuesdayatTheGearFix. Sisters and Salem onstate High- to allowcontractors to cleartrees way 22 will be closed starting The RepairCafe is aneventat fromnear thepit, according to the today through Sept. 19. which locals canbring broken DeschutesNational Forest. Thetree The Maples RestArea, just items, such assmall appliances, clearing will readythe pit for cinder east of Gates, will be closed while mining bythe Oregon Department boots and shoes,clothing, small construction crews complete furniture, outdoor gearand of Transportation. a maintenance project, which household goods,andgetthem Elsewhere in the district, the includes repaving, widening fixed for free. Theprogram is Garrison, Schilling andMcKenzie geared toward preventing waste the entrance andexit to the rest pits willremain open for shooting. by salvaging items insteadof area, and building a fence onthe For more information onthe pits, throwing themaway.The event property. people canstop bytheSisters The area will reopen theeveis operated byvolunteers skilled Ranger District office, atthe at repair. ning of Sept. 19. junction of PineStreetand U.S. Attendees areaskedto bring Signs will be in place to reHighway 20in Sisters, orcall 541any replacementparts that might mind motorists of the closure. 549-7700. — Bulletinstsffeports be needed.There is no guarantee
Get your thingsfixed for free Tuesday
Cisneros
"(The victim) is showing... leading the prosecution to argue that Cisneros knew Continued from 61 exactly what he had done. In response to the doubts ic memory," McIver said. Cisneros was sentenced raised by the defense about In reviewing the evidence, to 600 months in prison on the victim's testimony, McIv- McIver also highlighted a one count of f i rst-degree er pointed to the testimony seriesof text messages be- rape,four counts of first-deof Molly Bean, of the KIDS tween Cisneros and the vic- gree sodomy, two counts of Center, a B en d n o nprofit tim's mother after the victim first-degree unlawful sexual that serves children who had disclosed the abuse. penetration, two counts of have been abused or who In the messages, Cisneros first-degree sex abuse and have witnessed domestic apologized for his actions one count of luring a minor. violence. and attempted to "make it After t he sen t encing, up" to the victim and her Bean interviewed the vicDeKalb declined to comtim and stated in court that mother, indicating he would ment on t h e c a se. McIvvictims of trauma typically be receiving his Social Secu- er could no t b e r e a ched remember their experiences rity income soon. However, f or comment a fter t h e piecemeal, as the victim had the victim's mother had not sentencing. -Reporter: 541-383-0367, done in interviews and in yet accused Cisneros of sexcourt testimony. ually abusing her daughter, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com exactly what you would expect in recitation of traumat-
Big band leader dedicated to jazz for 75 years By Derifk J. Lang The Associated Press
FEATURED OBITUARY
LOS ANGELES — Gerald
Wilson, the dynamic jazz big Moore before he formed his band leader, composer and ar- own band. He worked with Bilranger whose career spanned lie Holiday on the singer's tour more than 75 years, has died. He was 96.
Wilson's son, jazz guitarist
I decided to do what I wanted to do, and what I wanted to do was jazz. Because first and foremost, I'm a jazz musician." — Gerald Wilson ln aJazz Times magazine interview
of the South in 1949.
Wilson led his own bands in the '50s and '60s but took fre-
of critically acdaimed recordquent hiatuses as he became ings for the Pacific Jazz label, died Monday at his Los Ange- one of the most in-demand induding such albums as "You les home from pneumonia. arrangers and o rchestrators Better Believe It!," "Moment of The big band leader began in jazz and pop music.He Truth" and "Portrait." his career in the late 1930s as w rote morethan 60 charts for His marriage to a Mexia trumpeter for Jimmy Lunce- Charles, scored motion pic- can-American, Josefina Vilford's band before forming his tures such as Otto Preminger's lasenor Wilson, led him to inown big band in 1944 featuring "Anatomy of aMurder" and corporate Latin music into his female trombonist Melba Lis- served as the conductor and jazz compositions. His tune ton. He played and worked as music director of TV's "The "Viva Tirado," dedicated to a composer-arranger with the Redd Foxx Show." bullfighter Jose Ramon Tirado, likes of Duke Ellington, Count But despite his commercial became a Top 40 pop hit for the Basie, Benny Carter and Diz- success, he never gave up his rock group El Chicano in 1970. zy Gillespie, and he arranged dedication to jazz. "I decided He also composed his first music for Ella Fitzgerald, Ray to do what I wanted to do, and piecefor symphony orchestra, Charles, Sarah Vaughan, Car- what I wanted to do was jazz. "Debut: 5/21/72," on a commismen McRae and Bobby Darin. Becausefirstand foremost, I'm sion from Zubin Mehta and the Wilson, who was born in a jazz musician," Wilson told Los Angeles Philharmonic. Shelby, Mississippi, and moved Jazz Times magazine in a 2011 With his long white hair in with his family to Detroit, start- interview. later years, Wilson became ed on piano and bought his In the early 1960s, he again famous for his dancelike style first trumpet at age 11. During led his own bigbands featuring of conducting, which he said his tenure as a trumpeter with such musicians as trumpeters helped listeners know what Lunceford, he arranged the hit Snooky Young and Carmell they were hearing. "I choreograph the music tunes "Hi Spook" and "Yard Jones, saxophonist Bud Shank Dog Mazurka." and Teddy Edwards, guitarist when I conduct," he told Jazz After four years with Lunce- Joe Pass and vibraphonist Bob- Times in 2011. "Accent everyford and a stint inthe U.S. Navy by Hutcherson. His big band thing — all the high points." W ilson's popularity i n during World War II, Wilson compositions displayed an adsettled in Los Angeles, where venturousapproach with com- creased with his appearances he worked in the bands of Ben- plex voicings, and harmonies at the Monterey Jazz Festival, ny Carter, Les Hite and Phil were spotlighted on a series which commissioned him to Anthony Wilson, said his father
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paidadvertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information onany of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
write extended compositions for the festival's 40th and 50th
anniversaries. His six Grammy nominations included two nods for "Theme For Monterey" in
1999. In 1990, Wilson was named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts, the
nation's highest jazz honor. In his later years, Wilson
continued to compose music and conduct his big band, recording albums for the Mack label beginning with the Gramm y-nominated " New Y o r k , New Sound" in 2003. His last
album, 2011's "Legacy," featured a piece by his son, Anthony, as well as his own compositions based on themes by classical composers Igor Stravinsky, Claude Debussy and Giacomo Puccini. Wilson worked as a radio broadcaster at KBCA-FM and taught jazz at California State
University, Northridge; California State University, Los Angeles; and UCLA.
He is survived by his wife, son, two daughters and four grandchildren.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3, C4 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
RUNNING
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP BOYS SOCCER
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Bigfoot, Dirtyfeot 10K this Sunday
Wyoming linebackers preparing for Oregon offense
Bend's oldest running race is set to take place again this Sunday. The Bigfootand Dirtyfoot10K starts at 9 a.m. at Seventh Mountain Resort west of town. Runners, who have the choice of a road race (Bigfoot) or trail race (Dirtyfoot), finish at the Deschutes Brewery production facility near the OldMill District. Littlefoot kids
races will take place near the finish line at approximately10 a.m. The cost to enter is $25 before Saturday. Runners can register at FootZone or FleetFeet running stores or online at www.ultrasignup. com. All race proceeds go to Bend-La PineSchools cross-country teams. For more information, contact race director Kari Strang at 541-788-
• A quality group will receive astrong test this Saturdayat Autzen Stadium
• tta(n
By Mike Vorel Casper Star-Tribune
LARAMIE, Wyo. — Wyoming's linebackers have played a lot of football. The team's starters-
Mark Nzeocha, Jordan
6412. — Bulletin staff report
GOLF
Stanton and Devyn Harrisare all seniors, with a hefty
Madras' Jose Diaz (8) competes for possession of the ball against Redmond's Gerardo Herrera during Tuesday's nonleague boys
career total of 90 games between them. They have
soccer game in Redmond. The White Buffaloes took a 13-1 victory.
seen boisterous road stadi-
Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Bendplayersnear NW Mid-Amlead
ums, tense rivalry games and overtime thrillers along the way.
KLAMATH FALLS
But never the No. 2 team in the nation. Never a quarter-
— Two Central Oregon golfers are within two shots of the leadafter the first round Tuesday of the Pacific Northwest Men's Mid-Amateur Championship. Jeff Ward, a member at BendGolf and Country Club, shot a 2-under-par 70 at Running Y Ranch to push into a four-way tie for third place. Charlie Rice, who is also a member at Bend, is just a shot behind Ward and inseventh place. Washington golfers Bjorn Bjorke, of Port Orchard, and Tyler Daniels, of Walla Walla, are tied for the lead at 3under. The 54-hole Mid-Amateur, which is limited to golfers age 25and older, is scheduled to conclude on Thursday.
back as dynamic as Oregon's Marcus Mariota.
• Madras is on pace for another playoff run after a 13-1victory over Redmond The Panthers' Joan Gutier-
rez competes for the ball with the White Buffaloes' Josh Solis on
Tuesday.
Bulletin staff report
be competitive."
REDMOND — Madras looked like a team capable
The White Buffaloes, who improved to 2-1 on the
of making a run in the Class 4A state postseason on Tuesday, blasting host Redmond High 13-1 in a nonleague boys soccer contest.
season with the win, were
Jonathan Reynoso and
falling to Ontario in the 4A play-in round. But with seniors Urieta and Felix back
Maylo Urieta each netted three goals and Oved Felix
this fall and Reynoso, a
scored twice to pace the
mediately, Jones expects his squad to be in contention for a league title. "We're a very experienced team and they (Redmond) are building," Jones sard. Humberto Ruiz, a junior,
White Buffaloes. "We've got our core leaders back," Madras coach
Clark Jones said about his squad, which returns seven startersfrom a yearago. "We feel like we're as good as any team in our league (the Tri-Valley Conference).
— Bulletin staff report
6-6-2 overall last year and finished fourth in the TVC,
I don't know if that means we will win it, but we should
freshman, contributing im-
"I hate to say that so early in the season
but we are. They're playing well together and sticking together." Brooke Knirk posted seven kills and
sixblocks for the Outlaws, Hawley Harrer had 21 assists and eight kills, and a rising 5A power, and cruised to a 25-19, Allie Spear finished with 12 digs. Jessie 25-10, 25-22 nonconference volleyball Brigham logged 11 digs for Sisters, and victory on Tuesday night. Nila Lukens added 13 kills and five aces. Detroit Tigers' J.D. Martinez watches his sacrifice fly during the first inning of Tuesday Kansas City in Detroit.
Tigers' win, close in on Royals Detroit pressures Kansas City for first place in the AL Central,C3
CORRECTION A story headlined "Southwestern reunion" that appeared in Tuesday's Bulletin on C1 included aphoto illustration in which the
Estopare sisters were misidentified. Hayley Estopare is shown on the left, Rachel Estopare is on the right. The Bulletin regrets the error.
game with a full head of steam. Through two games, the Cowboy linebackers are three of the team's top four tacklers on the season.
The season-opening 1712 victory over Montana
belonged to Nzeocha, who led the team with 12 tackles,
recorded the Cowboys' only passes.
defeat.
He was named the Mountain West Defensive Player of the Week. Last week, Stanton took
over Air Force. Harris also
championship over the weekend, the Class 4A Outlaws welcomed Bend High,
night's game against
Nzeocha, Stanton and Harris certainly enter the
the reins, finishing with 13 tackles, a sack and a forced fumble in the 17-13 victory
"We're playing well," McFadden said.
Coming off a Cascade Tournament
in Eugene. "It sends a message to everyone around the country, particularly us, how explosive the University of Oregon is."
sack and broke up three
Sisters blows byBendin nonconferencecontest Fadden is having fun. And for good reason.
46-27 victory last Saturday
goal. Redmond dropped to 0-2 on the season with the
PREP VOLLEYBALL
SISTERS — Sisters coach Miki Mc-
many points as they did on Michigan State is very impressive," Wyoming coach Craig Bohl said of the Ducks'
scored the Panthers' only
MLB
Bulletin staff report
Until now. "For Oregon to score as
had 13 tackles, while Nzeocha added nine. SeeOregon/C4
For the Lava Bears, Callie Kruska led the way with seven kills and three
blocks. Aspen Peterman and Molly Warinner contributed with four kills apiece. "They'reagoodteam allthew ay around," Bend coach Kristin Cooper
said. "We're just still trying to figure out our lineup and our flow.... It was fun. It was exciting volleyball."
Nextup Wyoming atOregon When: Saturday, 11 a.m. TV:Pac-12 Radio: KBND-AM 1110
FOOTBALL
Wheaton finally starting to make an impact in NFL
NFL continuesto face questionsover
graphic videoof Rice
By Will Graves The Associated Press
By Ken Belson
PITTSBURGH — Markus Wheaton took his
spot at the line of scrimmage, looked over at Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlis-
New York Times News Service
berger and ordered his brain to hit delete.
tions mounted over its handling of the domestic abuse
The original play call'? Gone. The clock ticking down and overtime looming, Roethlisberger called an audible, looking for a better matchup. The one he chose put Pittsburgh's fate in the capable yet inexperienced hands of the second-year wide receiver from Oregon State, with the wavy dreadlocks and the quick feet.
case involving one of its star running backs, Ray Rice. Commissioner Roger Goodell went on national televi-
SeeWheaton /C4
The NFL remained on the defensive Tuesday as ques-
sion to address what the NFL knew about graphic video
G ene J. Puskar/The Associated Press
Pittsburgh wide receiver Markus Wheaton (11) is tackled by Cleveland safety Robert Golden during
Sunday's game in Pittsburgh.
that showed Rice punching and knocking out his then-fiancee in an elevator. The video was released Monday by TMZ, a celebrity gossip website, prompting the Baltimore Ravens to terminate Rice's contract and the NFL to
suspend him indefinitely. SeeRice /C4
C2 T H E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY BASKETBALL
World Cup, quarterfinal, Francevs. Spain World Cup, quarterfinal, Serbia vs. Brazil
Time 9 a.m. 1 p.m.
TV/ Radio ESPN2
ESP N 2
BASEBALL
MLB, KansasCity at Detroit MLB, Arizona atSanFrancisco MLB, Houston at Seattle SOCCER MLS, D.C.United at NewYork GOLF EuropeanTour, KLMOpen LPGA Tour ,EvianChampionship
4 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
ESPN ESPN
5 p.m.
ESP N 2
Root
2:30 a.m. (Thu.) Golf 4:30 a.m. (Thu.) Golf
THURSDAY BASEBALL
MLB, St. Louis at Cincinnati or Chicago White Sox atOakland MLB, TampaBayat NewYork Yankees or Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
9:30 a.m.
MLB
4 p.m.
MLB
GOLF
PGA Tour,TourChampionship EuropeanTour, KLMOpen LPGA Tour ,EvianChampionship BASKETBALL
FIBA World Cup,semifinal: USAvs. Lithuania noon ESPN W omen's U.S.NationalTeam scrimmage 4 p.m. ESP N 2 SOCCER Women's college, Northwestern at Nebraska 12:30 p.m. B i g 10 FOOTBALL
H igh School, Bergen (N.J.) vs. St. Peters (N.J.) 4 p.m. ESP N U NFL, Pittsburgh at Baltimore 5:25 p.m. CBS, NFL College, Houston at BYU 6 p.m. ESPN 7 p.m. Root High School, Eastlake at Inglemoor AFL, semifinal: Geelong vs. North Melbourne 2:30 a.m. (Fri.) FS2 BOXING
Luis Ortiz vs. Lateef Kayode
6:30 p.m.
FS1
VOLLEYBALL
W omen's college, Texas A&M at USC
8p . m .
Pac-12
Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL U.S. bsatS Slovenia to reaChSemiS at WOrldS —Klay Thompson scored 20 points andJames Hardenhad 12of his 14 in the third quarter after a scoreless first half, helping the U.S.national team turn a closegameinto a 119-76 rout of Slovenia onTuesday in the quarterfinals of the Basketball World Cup inBarchelona, Spain. Kenneth Faried also had 14for the Americans, who will play Lithuania on Thursday in Barcelonafora spot in Sunday's gold-medal game in Madrid. Lithuania beatTurkey 73-61 earlier Tuesday.Goran Dragic of the Phoenix Suns leadSlovenia with 13 points. TheAmericans led by only five points early in the third quarter before going on a27-10 run. Harden andStephen Curry finally got going after the All-Stars combined to miss all 12 shots in the first half. HawkS diSCipline GM Ferry —The Atlanta Hawksare sticking with general managerDannyFerry eventhough the team's new majority owner wants him fired for racially charged comments about Luol Deng. CEO Steve Koonin on Tuesday told the Hawks' flagship radio station that he madethe decision to discipline Ferry but allowed him to keep his job managing the team. Hedid not saywhat the punishment was. Deng,who nowplays for the Miami Heat, says he is "saddenedanddisappointed that this way of thinking still exists today." Ferry madethe inflammatory comments about Deng in aconference call with the Hawks' ownership group in Junewhenthe team pursued Deng as afree agent, saying the forward nhas a little African in him."
MerCury take COntrOI in WNBA FinalS — Brittney Griner shook off two blows to the face to finish with 19 points, DianaTaurasi added 18 andthe Phoenix Mercury made it two straight routs in the WNBA Final switha97-68winovertheChicagoSkyonTuesday night. The underdog Skywerefar more aggressive after being blown out in Game 1,fighting Phoenix for every inch early on while leaving Griner with a scratch on hereyeand a bloody mouth. Griner and her teammates shrugged it off, running awayfrom Chicago with a 15-2 run in the second quarter and grabbing a firm hold on thebest-of-five series. Game 3 isFriday in Chicago.
FOOTBALL EX-IIFL QB Leaf SentenCed to 5 yearS — Former NFLquarterback RyanLeaf hasbeensentenced to five years in prison in Texas for violating terms of his probation. ATexas prosecutor says the former San DiegoChargers quarterback andWashington State standout won't have to serveanytime behind bars in Texas because of time he's served in Montana. Leaf violated his Texasprobation when he ran afoul with the law in Montana for breaking into a home tosteal prescription drugs. Hepleadedguilty for felony burglary and criminal possession of a dangerous drug in 2012. Leafattorney Bill Kelly III said the Texasjudge gave Leaf credit retroactively for his Montana prison time. The38-year-old has beengranted parole but has not been released.
SabreS OwnerS did $1.4 billian far BillS —Buffalo Sabres owners Terry and KimPegula took a highly aggressive approach by bidding an NFL-record $1.4 billion to get the Buffalo Bills and keep them in western NewYork. A person with direct knowledge of the sale process confirmed the winning bid to TheAssociated Press on Tuesday, hours after late owner Ralph Wilson's estate announced reaching a "definitive agreement" to sell the team to the Pegulas. The person spoke onthe condition of anonymity because the sale was conducted privately. Sports Business Journal first reported the Pegulas' bid earlier in the day.Theprice eclipses the previous high of $1.1 billion set in 2009, whenStephen Rosscompleted his purchase of the Miami Dolphins in a deal that also included the team's stadium.
HOCKEY U.S. chargesstemfrom drugsales in Boogaard death
— Aformer minor leaguehockey playerwas arrested on charges he sold illegally obtained prescription painkillers to former hockeyplayer Derek Boogaard of theNewYork Rangers andthe Minnesota Wild who died of anaccidental overdose. Jordan Hart was arrested Tuesday on charges in afederal indictment unsealed in NewYork. Also arrested was aphysician's assistant, Oscar Johnson. His Utah-based employer provided medical services to hockey players. Prosecutors said Hart sold at least somePercocet pills to the Rangers enforcer, who died in 2011. — From wire reports
ON DECK Today Volleyball:Ridgeview,Redmondat Madras, 5p.m. Cross-country: Ridgeview,CulveratSilverFalls OktoberfestInvitational,TBD
ATP MONEY LEADERS
IN THE BLEACHERS
Player 1. Novak Djokovic 2. Rafael Nadal 3. Roger Federer 4. Stan Wawrinka 5. MarinCilic
In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
Thursday Boyssoccer.Molaffaat Sisters, 4:30p.mcEast Linn Christianat LaPine,4:30p.m. Girls soccer: Ridgeviewat McKay, 4p.m.; Sistersat Molaff a,6p.m.;LaPineatCrookCounty,4p.m. Volleyball:BendatCrookCounty 630pm.; Sistersat Summit ,6:30p.m.;MadrasatBurns,6p.m.;Lakeview at LaPine,6:15p.m.
p.m. Boys soccer: CrescentValleyatBend,4 p.m.; Corvallis at MountainView,4 plm.; Milwaukieat Ridgeview, 430 p.m.;Central Christianat CityChristian, 4:15 p.m. Girls soccer: BendatCrescentValley, 4p.m.; Mountain View at Corvagis, 5p.m. Volleyball:CentralChristianat Prospe ct, 5:30p.m.; NorthLakeatGilchrist,5:30 p.m.; ChiloquinatTrinily Lutheran,4:30p.m. Boys waterpolo:Bendat ParkroseTournament Girls waterpolo:BendatChehalem
0 p 0
0 Ctty
Surfboards made of sticks, straw and bricks.
CINCINN ATI 12 B aylor 3 2 l/t
Friday 11 59'/t 33
6 7t/t
Saturday
TENNIS
Toledo BUFFALO
WTA
BOWL GREEN 20l/t 57 Ohio 9'/t 5 4 '/t C. Florida Nc State 2l/t 2 '/t 5 2 S. FLOR IDA MICHIGAN 31 31 53'/t Miami-Ohio FOOTBALL OHIO ST 30 31N 50'/z KentSt O. DOMINIO N14N 1 8 7 2 E. Michigan NFL VA TECH 10l/ 1 1 5 3t/t E. Carolina Syracuse 7t/t 6'/t 51 l /2C. MICHIG AN NATIONALFOOTBALLLEAGUE Pittsburgh 26 2 6 4 7 FLORIDA INT'L All TimesPDT Boise St 16 16 49 UCONN AMERICAN CONFERENCE GATECH 23 2 0 5 7 Ga Southern Easl I OWA 1 4 10'/~ 49 lowaSt l/t W L T Pct PF PA MARYLAND3 3'/t 57 y t W. Virginia 1 0 0 1.000 33 20 VANDER BILT 17 17 45 UMass 1 0 0 1.000 19 14 Louisville 6l/t 6'/t 47 y t Virginia 1 0 0 1.000 23 20 OREGON 44 44 6 4/2 Wyoming 0 1 0 . 0 0020 33 Air Force 12 11N 58'/z GEORGIA ST South MID TENN ST 1 1'/p 65N W. Kentucky W L T Pct PF PA D UKE 1 7 t/t 1 6 5 4 Kansas Tennesse e 1 0 0 1.000 26 10 Georgia 5l/t 5'/t 5 9'/t S.CAROLIA N Houston 1 0 0 1 .00017 6 TEXAS TECH 3 2 6 3 '/t Arkansas Jacksonvile 0 1 0 . 0 0017 34 MIAMI-FLA 17 16'/t 56t/t Arkansas St Indianapolis 0 1 0 . 0 0024 31 Miss St 15 14N 54 S. ALABA MA North MISSISSIPPI 27 27 56N UL-Lafayette W L T Pct PF PA WASHINGTON14N 13l/t 64 '/t ffhnois 1 0 0 1.000 23 16 TCU NL 14 4 7t/t Minnesota 1 0 0 1.000 30 27 I DAHO 2 ' / t 2'/t 5 9'/t W. Michigan 0 1 0 . 0 0027 30 STANFORD 30 28'/t 52 t/t Army 0 1 0 . 0 0016 23 ALABAMA 49 4 8 5 5 So. Miss Wesl UTAH ST 14 14'/~ 44 WakeForest W L T Pct PF PA Tulsa 1l/t 1 52 FLAATLANTIC Denver 1 0 0 1.000 31 24 OKLA ST NL NL UT-S.Antonio SanDiego 0 1 0 . 000 17 18 L SU 31' / t 31 51'/t UL-Monroe Oakland 0 1 0 . 000 14 19 NotreDame 28l/t 2 8'/t 5 5 Purdue Kansas City 0 1 0 . 000 10 26 FLORIDA trt/t 17t/t 50'/z Kentucky NATIONALCONFERENCE Navy 12t/t 11 56N TEXAS ST Easl OKLAHOMA 21 20y, 54yt Tennesse e W L T Pct PF PA U TEP 1 0 ' / t 1 1 6 1 NewMexicoSt Philadelphia 1 0 0 1.000 34 17 Ucla 7t/t 8 4 9 '/2 TEXAS N.Y.Giants 0 1 0 . 0 0014 35 Penn St 4 3 52 t/t RUTGE RS Washington 0 1 0 . 0 00 6 1 7 Usc 19l/t 17t/t 51'/z BOSTON COL Dallas 0 1 0 . 0 0017 28 TEXAS A&M 31 31'/z 71 Rice South N. Illinois 9l/t 10 52'/t UNLV W L T Pct PF PA Arizona St 14 l/t 15l/t 6 8 COLOR ADO Carolina 1 0 0 1.000 20 14 Nebraska 10 10 6 2t/t FRESNO ST Atlanta 1 0 0 1.000 37 34 ARIZONA 15 15'/t 65'/t Nevada NewOrleans 0 1 0 . 0 0034 37 TampaBay 0 1 0 . 0 0014 20 North BASKETBALL
CoupeBanque Nationale Tuesday At ClubAvantage Multi-Sporls deDuebec QuebecCity Purse:$25B,BB B(Intl.) Surlace:Hard-Indoor Singles First Round Lucie Hradecka,Czech Republic,def.Micheff e LarcherDeBrito (6)', Portugal,7-6(4), 6-1. BarboraKrejcikova, CzechRepublic, def.Sachia Vickery,UnitedStates, 6-2, 6-4. Olga Savchuk,Ukraine,def. GabrielaDabrow ski, Canada,6-3,7-5. MirjanaLucic-Baroni, Croatia, def.VeronicaCepedeRoyg, Paraguay,6-3, 6-1. Melanie Oudin, UnitedStates, def. Alize Lim, France,5-7,6-3,6-3. Kristina Mladenovic (3), France, def. Naomi Broady,Britain, 6-4,7-5. TimeaBabos(8), Hungary, def. RominaOprandi, Switzerland,6-1,3-6, 6-4. VenusWiliams(1), UnitedStates, def. Francoise Abanda, Canada,7-5, 6-3.
Wesl W L T Pct PF PA FINALS Seattle 1 0 0 1.000 36 16 (Best-of-5;x-if necessary) SanFrancisco 1 0 0 1.000 28 17 Sunday:Phoenix 83,Chicago62 Arizona 1 0 0 1 .000 18 17 Tuesd ay:Phoenix 97,Chicago 68 (Phoenix leads St. Louis 0 1 0 . 0 00 6 3 4 series2-0) Friday,Sept. 12:Phoenix at Chicago, 5p.m. Thursday'sGame x-Sund ay,Sept.14:PhoenixatChicago,2:30p.m. PittsburghatBaltimore,5:25 p.m. Sunday'sGames SOCCER DallasatTennessee, 10a.m. NewEnglandatMinnesota, 10a.m. Miami atBuffalo,10 a.m. MLS Jacksonville atWashington, 10a.m. MAJORLEAGUESOCCER Arizona at N.Y.Giants, 10a.m. All TimesPDT NewOrleansatCleyeland,10 a.m. Atlantaat Cincinnati, 10a.m. EasternConference Detroit atCarolina,10a.m. W L T Pts GF GA SeattleatSanDiego, 1:05p.m. D.C. United 1 4 8 5 47 42 3 0 St. LouisatTampaBay,1:05p.m. S porting Kan sas C i t y 12 10 6 42 3 9 34 HoustonatOakland,1:25 p.m. N ew England 12 1 2 3 39 3 9 3 8 KansasCityatDenver, 1:25p.m. Columbus 9 9 9 36 38 3 4 N.Y.JetsatGreen Bay, 1:25p.m. Philadelphia 9 9 9 36 43 41 Chicag oatSanFrancisco,5:30p.m. New York 8 8 10 34 41 39 Monday'sGame T oronto Fc 9 11 6 33 3 5 4 2 Philadelphia at Indianapolis, 5:30p.m. Houston 9 13 4 3 1 3 1 4 8 Chicago 5 7 14 29 33 39 College Montreal 5 16 5 2 0 2 9 4 8 WesternConference Pac-12 W L T Pts GF GA All TimesPDT Seattle 16 7 3 51 4 8 3 5 Los Angel e s 14 5 7 49 5 4 2 7 NorthDivision Real Sal t Lake 1 2 5 1 0 46 42 32 Conf. D veraII PF PA FC Dallas 1 2 9 6 42 46 3 6 W L W L 8 8 11 35 47 46 California 0 0 2 0 86 38 Portland 7 6 13 34 33 34 Oregon 0 0 2 0 108 40 Vancouver Colorado 8 13 6 3 0 3 7 4 6 Oregon St. 0 0 2 0 67 44 6 10 9 2 7 3 2 3 6 Washington 0 0 2 0 76 68 SanJose 6 15 6 2 4 2 3 4 7 WashingtonSt. 0 0 0 2 51 65 ChivasUSA Stanford 0 1 1 1 55 13 T oday's Games SouthDivision s Montreal, 4;30p.m. W L W L PF PA Los Angeleat SouthernCal 1 0 2 0 65 23 D.C.UnitedatNewYork,5 p.m. Arizona 0 0 2 0 84 36 SanJoseat Vancouver, 7p.m. Friday'sGames ArizonaSt. 0 0 2 0 103 37 RealSaltLakeat SeattleFc, 7:30p.m. UCLA 0 0 2 0 70 55 Utah 0 0 2 0 115 41 SportingKansasCity atChivasUSA, 7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Colorado 0 0 1 1 58 69 NewYorkat Philadelphia, noon Montrealat NewEngland,4:30p.m. Saturday'sGames TorontoFCat Chicago, 5:30p.m. WyomingatOregon,11a.m. Columbus atHouston,5:30p.m. fflinois atWashington,1 p.m. Vancou veratFCDallas,5:30p.m. Army atStanford,2 p.m. PortlandatColorado,6 p.m. UCLAatTexas, 5 p.m. Sunday'sGame PortlandSt,atWashington St.,5 p.m. Los Angeleat s SanJose, noon SouthernCalatBoston College, 5 p.m. ArizonaSt. atColorado,7 p.m. NevadaatArizona, 8p.m. MOTOR SPORTS
HongKon gOpen Tuesday At VictoriaParkTennisStadium HongKong Purse:$250,000(Intl.) Surlace:Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round SabineLisicki (t), Germany,def. MonicaNiculescu, Rom ania, 3-6,7-6(3), 6-1. KarolinaPliskova(3), CzechRepublic, def. Polona Hercog,Slovenia,2-6,6-4, 6-3. Francesca Schiavone,Italy, def.Christina McHale (4), UnitedStates, 6-4,5-7,6-2. Zheng Jie(5), China,def. MisaEguchi, Japan,6-1, 7-6 (5)r YaninaWickmayer (6), Belgium,def. ElizavetaKulichkova,Russia,6-4, 6-4. JanaCepelova(7),Slovakia,def.Chaneff eScheepers, South Africa, 6-2,6-1. JarmilaGajdosova,Australia, def. LuksikaKumkhum, Thailand,7-6(3), 6-2. Zhang Kai-Lin, China,def. Pauline Parmentier, France,6-0, 6-3. Zhu Lin,China,def. KristynaPliskova, CzechRepublic, 1-6,6-3, 6-3. ZhengSaisai, China,def. Ying-YingDuan, China, 7-6 (I), 7-5. Monica Puig, Puerto Rico, def. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria, 6-1, 6-1. KimikD oate-Krumm,Japan,def.JohannaLarsson, Sweden, 6-3, 6-3. AlisonVanUytvanck, Belgium, def. KatarzynaPiter, Poland,6-2,6-1.
W L 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1
T 0 0 0 0
America's Lin
N. TEXAS 6 t/t BYU 18
College Thursday
Indiana 5 t/t MARSHALL20t/t MISSOURI 9'/t
7
69
P ct PF PA 1 .00034 6 WNBA Playoffs 1.000 35 14 . 0 0020 23 WOMEN'S NATIDNALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION . 0 0016 36 All TimesPDT
Favorite Open Current D/U eUnderdog (Home teamin caps) NFL Thursday RAVENS 3 zt/t 4 3 ' /t Steelers Sunday PANTHERS 2'/t 3 43'/t Lions Dolphins 1 (B) 1 43t/t BILLS R EDSKINS 6 6 43'/ t Jaguars TITANS 3 3N 49 Cowboys GIANTS 1 PK 44 Cardinals Patriots 3 l/t 3 4 9 t/z VIKINGS Saints 6 St/t 4 7 l/t BROW NS BENGALS 5'/~ 5 48 Falcons B UCCAN EERS3'/~ 5 37 ' /t Rams Seahawks 5 l/t 5l/t 4 4 l/t CHARG ERS Texans 2 l/t 3 3 9 t/z RAIDERS PACKERS 8'/t 8 46 Jets BRONCOS 13 1 3 51 ' /t Chiefs 49ERS 7 7 48t/t Bears Monday COLTS 3 3 53'/t Eagles
3l/t 48 18' / t 5 7l /
YTDMoney $8,014,900
6. KeiNishikori
Friday Football:KlamathUnionat Bend, 7 p.m.; Cenrtal at Mountain View,7p.m.; Summit at Franklin, 7 p.m.; Ridge view atSouthAlbany,7:30p.m.;Redmondat EaglePoint, 7p.m.;HenleyatCrookCounty, 7p.m.; SistersatMadras,7p.m.;Jeffersonat LaPine, 7p.m.; Bonanza at Culver, 7 p.m.;Gilchrist at McK enzie, 7
Saturday Boyssoccer:Corvaffis at Bend,11a.mc Crescent Valley atMountain View,11a.m.;North Medford at Summit, 1p.mcSisters at Henley, noon; Culverat Umatiga,1p.m. Girls soccer.Bendat Corvaffis, 11a.m.; Mountain View atCrescent Valey, 11a.m.;Henleyat Sisters, noon;Summit at North Medford,1 p.m. Volleyball:Summit at SouthEugeneTournament, 8 a.m.; Redm ond, Ridgeviewat North Marion Tourney,TBD;Culver at Reedsport Tourney,TBD; Gilchrist atLaPineJVTournament,9a.m4Country ChristianandSouth Wasco County at Trinity Lutheran, 1p.m. Cross-coun try: Mountain View, Redmond, Summit, Sistersat AshCreek XCInvitational in Monmouth, 10a.m. Boys waterpolo: BendatParkroseTournament Girls water polo:BendatChehalem
Through Sunday
NASCAR
SprintCupPointsLeaders Through Sunday 1. BradKeselowski 2. JeffGordon 3. DaleEarnhardt Jr. 4. Jimmie Johnson 5.JoeyLogano 6. KevinHarvick 7. CarlEdwards 8. KyleBusch 9. Denny Hamlin 10. KurtBusch 11. Kasey Kahne 12. AricAlmirola 13. AJAffmendinger 14. MattKenseth 15. GregBiffle 16. Ryan Newman 17. ClintBowyer 18. KyleLarson 19. JamieMcMurray 20. PaulMenard 21. AustinDilon 22. Brian Vickers 23. Marcos Ambrose LaTe c h 24. Casey Mears Hou ston 25. MartinTruexJr.
2,012 2,009 2,009 2,009 2,009 2,006 2,006 2,003 2,003 2,003 2,003 2,003 2,003 2,000 2,000 2,000 746 737 706 701 698 681 645 596 580
TashkentOpen Tuesday At TheOlympicTennisSchool Tashkent,Uzbekistan Purse:$250,000(Intl.) Surlace:Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Irina-Cam elia Begu(2), Rom ania, def. Kateryna Kozlova,Ukraine,6-3, 6-1. KarinKnapp(3), Italy, def.CaglaBuyukakcay,Turkey,6-2,7-6(3). NiginaAbduraimova, Uzbekistan, def. LaraArruabarrena(4),Spain,7-5, 6-4. DonnaVekic(5), Croatia,def.MandyMinega,Luxembourg, 7-5,6-0. Misaki Doi (6), Japan,def. KaterinaSiniakova, Czech Republic,6-4, 6-3. Kseni aPervak,Russia,def.Anna-LenaFriedsam (7), Germ any, 7-6(4), 6-0. Lesia Tsurenko,Ukraine,def. AleksandraKrunic, Serbia,6-2, 3-6,6-2. OlgaGovortsova,Belarus, def. Margarita Gasparyan, Russia6-3, , 6-4. JelenaOstapenko, Latvia, def. ShaharPeer,Israel, 6-3, 7-5. AlexandraPanova, Russia, def. Kristina Kucova, Slovakia,6-1,7-6 (4).
WTAMoneyLeaders Through Sunday
Player 1. Serena Williams 2. Maria Sharapova 3. Petra Kvitova 4. Simona Halep 5.LiNa 6. Euge nieBouchard 7. Agniezk saRadwanska 8. CarolinW eozniacki 9. Sara Errani 10.Eka terinaMakarova 11. FlaviaPennetta 12. Dom inikaCibulkova 13.PengShuai 14. LucieSafarova 15. AnaIvan ovic 16.AngeliqueKerber 17. Rob ertaVinci 18.Jelena Jankovic 19. Andrea Petkovic 20. CarlaSuarezNavarro 21.Venu sWilliams 22. Garbine Muguruza 23. AlizeCornet 24. SabinLeisicki 25. Elena Vesnina 26. Barb oraZahlavovaStrycova 27. VictoriaAzarenka 28. Ca seyDellacqua 29. Sam Stosur 30.Sloane Stephens 31. Ana stasiaPavlyuchenkova 32. Belinda Bencic 33.Svetlana Kuznetsova 34. HsieS hu-wei 35. KristinaMladenovic 36. Mad isonKeys 37.Yaroslava Shyedova 38. Caroline Garcia 39.VarvaraLepchenko 40. KlaraKoukalova 41. KarolinaPliskova 42. Elina Svitolina
43. Kaia Kanepi 44. Mag dalenaRybarikova 45. Kirsten Flipkens 46. ZarinaDiyas 47. Daniela Hantuchova 48.Zheng Jie 49. AjlaTomljanovic 50. AlisonRiske
YTD Money $6,697,698 $4,196,222 $3,661,236 $3,420,589 $3,409,885 $2,831,859 $2,378,449 $2,325,799 $2,274,055 $2,147,952 $2,125,632 $1,890,195 $1,703,309 $1,525,198 $1,456,699 $1,415,798 $1,378,894 $1,235,453 $1,225,241 $1,192,939 $1,161,541 $946,354 $942,906 $913,050 $911,295 $866,927 $857,583 $805,254 $770,519 $701,921 $672,178 $670,346 $670,065 $666,628 $665,253 $578,786 $566,386 $566,208 $535,736 $518,932 $518,394 $513,587 $512,558 $504,080 $498,811 $493,980 $493,435 $483,053 $465,490 $455,126
7. Toma sBerdych 8. MilosRaonic 9. GrigorDimitrov 10. Andy Murray 11. DaviF derrer 12. Jo-WilfriedTsonga 13. Erne stsGulbis 14. Kevin Anderson 15.Feliciano Lopez 16. Rob ertoBautistaAgut 17.GaelMonfils 18.JohnIsner 19.Fabio Fognini 20.lommy Robredo 21.BobBryan 21. Mike Bryan 23. JulienBenneteau 24. Marcel Granogers 25. PhilippKohlschreiber 26.Leonardo Mayer 27.Edou ardRoger-Vasselin 28.Alexandr Dolgopolov 29.Vasek Pospisil 30 Santiago Giraldo 31. Jack Sock 32.Ferna ndoVerdasco 33.Guilermo Garcia-Lopez 34.Lukas Rosol 35.Giges Simon 36. Richard Gasquet 37.Jeremy Chardy 38. NicolaM sahut 39. IvoKarlovic 40. Rade kStepanek 41. Lukasz Kubot 42.Andrea sSeppi 43.lvanDodig 44. Dom inic Thiem 45.Jerzy Janowicz 46. NickKyrgios 47. MikhailYouz hny 48.Sam Querrey 49. DanieNlestor 50. Nena dZimonjic
$6,071,366 $5,609,288 $4,391,938 $4,363,523 $3,303,999 $2,570,001 $2,523,793 $2,346,442 $2,182,174 $2,116,029 $1,721,180 $1,637,970 $1,259,093 $1,257,906 $1,255,472 $1,227,100 $1,171,829 $1,099,699 $1,099,138 $1,078,851 $1,078,851 $1,072,952 $1,069,619 $1,055,269 $1,012,801 $965,495 $943,652 $912,631 $879,751 $853,202 $848,896 $844,207 $815,855 $782,740 $780,307 $772,847 $704,636 $693,622 $684,598 $682,856 $680,213 $666,204 $665,287 $657,124 $636,713 $635,086 $625,281 $619,230 $607,995
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague
CLEVEL ANDINDIANS—Sent OFChris Dickerson outright toColumbus(IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Reinstated INFNick Puntofromthe15-day DL. Extendedtheir playerdevelopmentcontract withVermont (NYP) throughthe 2016season. NationalLeague WASHIN GTONNATIONALS—Signeda two-year playerdevelopment contract extensionwith Potomac (Carolina) throughthe2016season. BASKETB ALL
NationalBasketballAssociation NBA —SuspendedDetroit F-CGregMonroe two regular-season games for pleadingguilty to driving while visibly impaired, inviolationof thelawof the State ofMichigan. CLEVEL ANDCAVALIERS—SignedFShawnMar-
ion to aone-yearcontract. NEWYORKKNICKS— SignedGLangstonGaff owayandFTravis Wear. FOOTBA LL NationalFootballLeague
ARIZONA CARDINALS—SignedRBChris Rainey and CBTeddy Wiliams to the practicesquad. ReleasedWRKevin Conefrom thepractice squad. PlacedRBDominiqueWilliamsonthepractice squad/ injured list. CHICAGO BEARS—Signed OT/GEbenBritton to aone-yearcontract. SignedWRGregHerdtothepractice squad. Terminatedthecontract ofWR-KRMicheal Spurlock.Terminatedthe practice squadcontractof DT RoyPhilon. CLEVELAND BROWNS — SignedTEGereff Robinson. Signed WRIfeanyi Momahto thepracticesquad. ActivatedWRMarlon Moorefromthe suspended list. WaivedOLRyan Seymour. Terminated thecontract of DB AaronBerry. ReleasedLBJustin Staplesfromthe practicesquad. DALLASCOWBOYS— Released FBNikita Whitlock from thepractice squad.SignedWRReggieDunn to thepracticesquad. DENVER BRONCOS— WaivedWRNathanPalmer. SignedTEDominiqueJonestotheir practicesquad. DETROIL TIONS—Placed CBBiff Bentley on injured reserve. KANSAS CITYCHIEFS—SignedDTKevin Vickerson toaone-yearcontract. ActivatedWRDwayneBowe from reserve/suspension.SignedLB Jerry Franklin from thepracticesquad.PlacedLBDerrick Johnson and DEMikeDeVito oninjured reserve.WaivedDB Daniel Sorensen.WaivedFBJordan Campbell, C BenGottschalk,DTHebron FangupoandWRDarryl Surgentfromthepractice squad.SignedWRArmon Binns, OTCurtis Feigt, TEAdamSchiltz, CB Robert SteeplesandDTJerelWorthyto thepracticesquad. MINNESOTA VIKINGS— SignedLBJoshKaddu to thepracticesquad. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— SignedDECameron Hender sontothepracticesquad.ReleasedQBMcLeod Bethel-Thompsonfromthepractice squad. PHILADE LPHIA EAGLES— PlacedOLAllen BarbreandLB NajeeGoodeonseason-ending injured reserve.PlacedG EvanMathis on injuredreserve designated for return. SignedOLWadeSmith. Signed LB Emm anuel Achoand TKevin Graf fromthe practice squad.AddedLBBrandonHepburnandOLTyler Hooverto thepractice squad. SANFRANCISCO49ERS— Signed WR Kassim Osgood. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — Released LBAllenBradford from thepractice squad.SignedWRPhilBatesto the practice squad. TAMPABA YBUCCANEERS—Re-signedDELarry Engli sh.Wai vedDEStevenMeans. TENNE SSEETITANS—SignedTEBrett Bracket to thepracticesquad.ReleasedTEOrsonCharlesfrom the practice squad. WASHIN GTONREDSKINS—PlacedNTBarryCofield on theinjuredreserve/return list. SignedSAkeem Davisfromthepracticesquad. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague TORONTOMAPLE LEAFS— Signed FSpencer Abbott to aone-yearcontract. WASHIN GTONCAPITALS— Re-signedDCameron Schilling toaone-year contract. COLLEGE BIG TEN CONFERENCE — Suspended Northwestern DLC.J. Robbinsonegame for violating the sportsmanshippolicy bystriking anopposingplayer during thefourthquarter of aSept. 6 gam e against Northernfflinois. AUSTINPEAY— Suspended GDamariusSmith for thefirst halfof the2014-15 basketball seasonfor violation ofathletic departmentpolicy. BERRY — Named Emily Stanleyassistant softball coach. HOFSTRA— NamedJameelZiadeh assistant basebalcoach. l HOLY CROSS— NamedJulius Pertiffarwomen's assistantsoccercoach. LONGBEACH STATE— NamedTomWalshcross countryanddistancecoach. MARQU ElTE —Named Biff Schoffvice president and directorofathletics. NEWMEXICO—Announcedtheaddition of women's sand volleyball asanintercollegiate sport for the spring of2015.NamedLisaBeauchenesandvolleyball coach. ROWAN —NamedJoeCrispinmen'sandwomen's assistantbasketballcoach. SETONHALL— Named Dwayne Morton men' s assistantbasketball coachandKyle SmythandKevin Lynchcoordinatorsofmen'sbasketball operations. SHENA NDOAH— Announced the resignation of DavidJenkinsassistant baseball coach.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd T he Dalles 35,915 4,109 3,149 9 8 4 J ohn Day 20,526 1,329 3,352 9 94 McNary 11,975 1,052 6,109 2,355 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 657,075 86,982 241,046 106,191 The Dalles 421,538 61,894 130,306 60,227 John Day 318,241 48,977 77,652 34,527 McNary 262,378 42,027 65,926 30,080
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL uutandings
Baltimore Toronto NewYork
Tampa Bay Boston
Kansas City Detroit Cleveland Chicago Minnesota
LosAngeles Oakland Seattle Houston Texas
Lamb3b 3 0 1 0 Sandovl3b 2 0 0 I Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Zmrmnp 3 0 0 0 Pollockcf 3 0 1 0 Bcrwfrss 0 0 0 0 L aStellph I 0 0 0 Barrettp 0 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 0 0 0 Susacc 3 0 0 I A vilanp 0 0 0 0 Detwilrp 0 0 0 0 Mileyp 0 0 0 0 Ariasss-3b 4 0 0 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 AIMartph I 0 0 0 GBlanclf 4 1 2 0 Hairstn ph I 0 0 0 S pruillp I 0 0 0 Y.Petitp 3 1 I 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 Harrisp 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 4 7 4 Totals 3 1 6 9 6 Pnngtnph I 0 0 0 Atlanta 0 00 202 000 — 4 Totals 2 9 1 4 1 Totals 3 35 124 Washington 41 0 100 ggx— 6 Arizona 000 100 000 — 1 E—Bethan court(1), Desmond (22), Espinosa(5). San Francisco 120 002 Ogx — 6 LOB —Atlanta 3, Washington 7. 28—Bonifacio (16), E—Inciarte (3). DP—Arizona1, SanFrancisco 2. Gosselin(3), Heyw ard(25), Span(37), Werth (33), LOB —Arizona1, SanFrancisco10. HR —Inciarte(4). Espinosa(14). HR—J.Upton (27). CS—F.Freeman S—Y.Petit. SF—Posey. (3). S —Rendon.SF—A.cabrera. IP H R E R BBSO IP H R E R BBSO Arizona Atlanta Miley L,7-11 2 5 3 3 4 I E.SantanaL,14-8 5 8 6 5 4 5 Spruill 4 5 2 I 0 4 Varvaro 1 0 0 0 0 0 Avilan 2 I 0 0 0 0 Harris 2 2 0 0 0 0 San Francisco Washington annW,11-5 6 6 4 2 0 7 Y.PetitW,5-3 9 4 I I 0 9 Zimmerm T—2;29.A—41,683 (41,915). BarrettH,7 11-3 I 0 0 0 1 DetwilerH,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Stammen H,5 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 Marlins 6, Brewers3 StorenS,4-7 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP—E.Snt aana. T—3:02. A—29,233(41,408). MILWAUKEE — Casey McGehee
SKY HIGH
All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 85 59 75 69 73 69 70 75 63 82
.590 .521 10 .514 11 .483 15'/r 434 22'/r
80 65 74 69 64 80 62 82
.552 .552 .517 5 .444 15'/r .431 17'/r
Central Division W L 79 64
West Division
W L 89 55 81 63 79 65 64 81 54 90
Pct GB
Pct GB .618 .563 8 .549 10 441 25t/r
.375 35
Tuesday'sGames
and Marcell Ozunahit back-toback home runs with two outs in the ninth inning, breaking open a tie gameand leading Miami to a win over fading Milwaukee. McGeheeconnected for a two-run shot off Francisco Rodriguez (45). Ozuna, who reachedbasefive times, followed with another shot.
Minnesota 4, Cleveland3 Tampa Bay4, N.Y.Yankees3 Toronto9, ChicagoCubs2 Detroit 4,KansasCity 2 Baltimore 4, Boston 1 L.A. Angel9, s Texas3 Oakland11, ChicagoWhite Sox2 Houston 2, Seatle1
Today'sGam es Baltimore(W.chen 14-4) at Boston(Workman 1-8), 10:35a.m. Minnesota(Gibson11-10) at Cleveland(House2-3), 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay(Odorizzi 10-11)atN.Y.Yankees(Capuano 2-3),4:05p.m. ChicagoCubs(Hendricks 6-1) atToronto(Hutchison 9-11),4:07p.m. Kansas City(Shields13-7)at Detroit(Porcego 15-10), 4:08 p.m. L.A. Angel(S s hoemaker 14-4)at Texas(Tepesch4-9), 5:05 p.m. Oakland(Samardzija 4-5) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Bassitt 0-1),5:10p.m. Houston(Tropeano0-0) at Seatle (Iwakum a 14-6), 7:10 p.m. Thursday'sGames Minnesotaat Cleveland,9:05a.m. Oakland atChicagoWhite Sox,11:10a m. Tampa Bayat N.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. L.A. Angelat s Texas,5:05 p.m. Bostonat KansasCity,5:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE
Washington Atlanta Miami NewYork Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati Chicago
LosAngeles SanFrancisco SanDiego Arizona Colorado
East Division W L 61 71 72 75 77
Pct GB .573 .510 9 .497 11 .483 13 .465 15'/r
74 71 68 77 64 81
.552 521 4r/r .510 6 .469 12 .441 16
82 74 71 70 67
Central Division W L 80 65 75 69
West Division W 82 79 67 59 59
L 63 65 77 85 86
Pct GB
Pct GB .566 .549 2'I~ .465 14'/r .410 22'/r
.407 23
Tuesday'sGames Washington 6, Atlanta4 Philadelphi4, a Pittsburgh3 Toronto9, ChicagoCubs2 N.Y.Mets2, Colorado0 Cincinnati 9,St. Louis5 Miami6, Milwaukee 3 SanDiego6, L.A.Dodgers3 SanFrancisco5, ArizonaI Today'sGam es Atlanta(Harang10-10) at Washington (Strasburg1110),1:05p.m. Pittsburgh(Worley6-4) at Philadelphia(Je.Wiliams 3-0),4:05p.m. ChicagoCubs(Hendricks 6-1) atToronto (Hutchison 9-11),4:07p.m. Colorado(Malzek5-9) at N.Y.Mets (R.Montero 0-3), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis(Lackey2-2) at Cincinnati (Simon13-10), 4:10 p.m. Miami (Cosart4-1) at Milwaukee(W.Peralta 15-10), 5:10 p.m. San Diego(Kennedy 10-12) at LA. Dodgers(Haren 12-10),7:10p.m. Arizona(Cogmenter 10-7) at SanFrancisco (Vogelsong8-10),7:15p.m. Thursday'sGames St. LouisatCincinnati, 9:35a.m. Arizona at SanFrancisco, 12:45p.m. PittsburghatPhiladelphia, 4:05p.m. Washingtonat N.Y. Mets, 4:10p.m. Miami atMilwaukee,5:10p.m. Wild Card AMERICANLEAGUE W L Oakland 81 63 Detroit 80 65 Seattle 79 65 Toronto 75 69 Cleveland 74 69 NewYork 73 69
Pct GB
.563 .552
Carlos Osorio/The Associated Press
Detroit's J.D. Martinez looks skyward after hitting a solo home run during the fifth inning of Tuesday night's game against Kansas City in Detroit. The Tigers closed in on the Royals for first place in the AL Central with a 4-2 victory.
Angels 9, Rangers3 ARLINGTON, Texas— KoleCalhoun hit a leadoff homer, Collin Cowgill had a bigeighth inning and the Los AngelesAngels stretched their winning streak to six with a win over Texas.Cowgill reached on an infield single to start a seven-run eighth. Hescored on Mike Trout's triple and cappedthe outburst with a bases-loaded triple. LosAngeles Texas ab r hbi ab r hbi C alhonrf 5 I I I L Martncf 4 I 1 0 T routcf 5 0 2 I DnRrtslf 5 0 0 0 PujolsIb 5 I 0 0 Rosalesdh 4 0 1 0 HKndrc2b 5 I 2 0 ABeltre3b 3 2 3 1 Freese3b 3 I 0 0 Arencii1b 0 0 0 0 OMallypr 0 I 0 0 Rua1b-3b 4 0 2 2 JMcDnl3b 0 0 00 Telisc 3 0 0 0 Aybarss 4 I I 2 Sardinsss 4 0 0 0 Boeschdh 2 0 0 I Choicerf 2 0 0 0 lannettph-c 0 I 0 0 GRdrgz2b 3 0 0 0 Congerc 3 0 I 0 GBckhph 0 I 0 I Jepsen p 0 0 0 0 M orinp 0 0 0 0 C owgiglf 4 I 2 3 Totals 3 6 9 9 9 Totals 3 23 7 3 L os Angeles 10 0 1 0 0 070 — 9 Texas 0 00 100 020 — 3 E—Choice (4). LOB—Los Angeles 4, Texas 8. 28 — Aybar (28), Rua(2). 38—Trout (7), Cowgig (1). HR — Calhoun (15), A.Beltre(18). SB—Cowgiff (3). CS — Rosales(I). S—Telis. SF—Boesch. IP H
LosAngeles H.SantiagoW5-7 5 GrilliH,9
SalasH,7 Jepsen Morin
Texas
LewisL,9-13
1 1 1 1
R
5 I 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0
7 5 3 Kirkman 1-3 0 0 Mendez 1-3 2 3 RossJr. 1-3 2 3 S.Patton 1 0 0 LewispitchedtoI batterin the8th. HBP —byMorin (Choice). T—3:04. A—26,054(48,114).
Mostks3b 4 0 2 0 Avilac 30I 0 L.caincf 4 0 0 I AnRmnss 4 I I 0 AEscor ss 4 I I 0 RDavis cf-If 4 I I 2 Totals 3 5 2 102 Totals 3 2 4 8 4 Kansas City 00 0 010 010 — 2 Detroit 120 010 ggx — 4
CLEVELAND— Oswaldo Arcia's two-runhomercapped MinnesoE—Infante (9), Moustakas (13). LOB —Kansas ta's four-run fourth inning against City11, Detroit 8. 2B —Moustakas(19), Mi.cabrera Trevor Bauer, and the Twins dent45). HR —J.Martinez (20), R.Davis (8). SB—Infante ed Cleveland's playoff hopes with 9), Carrera(6). CS —Aoki (7), J.Dyson(7). SF—J. a victory. The last-place Twins Martinez. IP H R E R BBBO won for just the fourth time in16 KansasCity J.VargasL,11-8 5 1-3 6 4 4 3 6 games. Crow
K.Herrera Detroit
12-3 0 0 0 0 I 2 0 0 0
ScherzerW,16-5 6 2-3 7 I Alburquerque H,17 1-3 0 0 B.Hardy 0 0 I ChamberlainH,25 I I 0 NathanS,30-36 I 2 0 B.Hardypitchedto I batterin the8th. T—3:26.A—32,603 (41,681).
1 0 1 0 0
4 0 1 0 0
0 1
6 0 0 0 2
Orioles 4, RedSox1
BOSTON—Alejandro De Aza hit two homers, AdamJones added another and Baltimore won for the 10th time in 13games with a victory over Boston. Chris Tillman (12-5) gave upone run in five innings, his18th straight start in which he allowed threeearned runs or fewer. ZachBritton pitched the ninth for his 34th save in 38 E R BBSO opportunities. The first-place I 1 2 Orioles maintained their10-game 0 1 0 lead in the ALEast over the Toron0 0 2 to Blue Jays, who beatthe Chicago 2 1 1 0 1 1 Cubs 9-2. 2 0 3 3 0
0 0 1 2 0
4 1 0 1 0
Athletics11, WhiteSox2 CHICAGO— JoshDonaldsonhad a career-high five hits while driving in four runs, helping Jon Lester andOakland beattheChicago White Sox. Donaldson also scored two runs as Oaklandgot just its third win in12 games. Lester (1410) gave uptwo runs over eight innings, and theAthletics took advantage of aseason-high five errors by Chicago.
Twins 4, Indians3
Baltimore Boston ab r hbi ab r hbi M arkksrf 4 I I 0 Bettscf 3 0 I 0 D eAzalf 4 2 3 3 Navarf 2 0 2 0 A.Jonescf 5 I I I Craigph-rf I 0 0 0 N.cruzdh 5 0 I 0 D.Ortizdh 4 0 0 0 C.Davis3b-Ib4 0 I 0 Cespdslf 4 0 0 0 Pearce1b 3 0 I 0 NapoliIb 4 0 0 0 KJhnsn3b 0 0 0 0 Bogartsss 3 I 2 I Hundlyc 4 0 0 0 Mdlrks3b 2 0 0 0 Flahrtyss 4 0 I 0 Rivero3b 2 0 2 0 Schoop2b 4 0 I 0 JWeeks2b 4 0 I 0 Vazquzc 3 0 0 0 T otals 37 4 104 Totals 3 2 I 8 I B altimore 202 0 0 0 0 00 — 4 Boston 0 00 100 000 — I DP — Baltimore 1. LOB —Baltimore9, Boston8.
2B — DeAza(20), N.cruz(26), Pearce(22), Nava(17), Rivero(1). HR —DeAza2 (7), A.Jones(25), Bogaerts (1 0). SB—Schoop(2).
Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi Y elichlf 5 1 2 0 CGomzcf 5 0 I 0 Solano2b 5 0 21 Gennett2b 4 2 2 0 Stanton rf 4 1 0 0 Lucroy c 5 1 I 0 McGeh3b 4 2 2 2 ArRmr3b 4 0 3 2 O zunacf 3 2 3 2 GParrarf 3 0 I I GJonesIb 3 0 1 1 Braunph-rf I 0 0 0 J eBakrph-Ib 2 0 0 0 KDavislf 5 0 I 0 Sltlmchc 4 0 0 0 Overay1b 3 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 1 0 HGomzpr 0 0 0 0 Koehlerp 2 0 0 0 JRogrsIb I 0 0 0 Bourph I 0 0 0 Segurass 2 0 2 0 H atchrp 0 0 0 0 Garzap I 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 MrRynlph 0 0 0 0 Vldspnph I 0 00 Je frfssp 0 0 0 0 M orrisp 0 0 0 0 Clarkph I 0 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Kintzlr p 0 0 0 0 Dukep 0000 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 RWeksph I 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 7 6 116 Totals 3 6 3 113 Miami 0 02 001 003 — 6 M ilwaukee 0 0 2 0 0 0 100 — 3 E—Morris (I), Garza (3). DP—Milwaukee 1. LOB —Miami 9, Milwaukee13. 28—G.Jones (28), Gennett(30),Ar.Ramirez (20). HR—McGehee (4), Ozuna(21). SB—Yelich (19), Stanton(12), Segura (17). CS —G.Parra (7). S—Gennett, Segura. Miami
Phillies 4, Pirates3 PHILADELPHIA — Maikel Franco
hit a tiebreaking single in the seventh inning to lift Philadelphia to a victory over Pittsburgh. Freddy Galvis homered, doubled and scored the go-ahead runafter an infield single and astolen base. Justin De Fratus (3-1) pitched a scoreless inning for the win.
Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi JHrrsn3b 5 0 I 0 Reverecf 4 0 0 0 S Martelf 3 I 2 0 Franco3b 4 I 2 1 A Mcctcf 3 0 0 0 Utley2b 3 0 1 1 NWalkr2b 3 I 0 0 Howard1b 4 0 0 0 RMartnc 4 0 2 2 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 I .DavisIb 4 0 0 0 Byrdrf 3010 G Polncrf 3 I I 0 DBrwnlf 3 0 0 0 M ercerss 3 0 I I Ruizc 3000 Volqu ezp 2 0 0 0 Galvisss 3 3 3 1 Sniderph I 0 0 0 DBchnp 2 0 1 1 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 CHrndzph I 0 0 0 Lamboph I 0 0 0Gilesp 0 0 0 0 RufIb 0000 Totals 32 3 7 3 Totals 3 0 4 8 4 P ittsburgh 0 1 2 0 0 0 000 — 3 Philadelphia 11 0 010 10x— 4 E—Ruiz(5). DP—Pittsburgh2. LOB—Pittsburgh 7, Philadelphia5. 28—S.Marte (25), R.Martin(17), Mercer(24),Franco(I), Galvis(I). HR—Galvis (2). SB — S.Marte(26), Utley(7), Galvis (1). S—Mercer. IP H R E R BBSO Pittsburgh Volquez 6 6 3 3 2 5 Ju.WilsonL,3-4 1 2 I I 0 2 JHughes 1 0 0 0 0 1 E R BBSO Philadelphia D.Buchanan 6 4 3 2 3 5 2 3 3 De FratusW,3-1 1 2 0 0 0 1 I 0 I GilesH,10 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 I PapelbonS,36-39 1 I 0 0 0 1 0 I 0 HBP —by Volquez (Utley), by D.Buchanan (A.Mc0 I I Cutchen). T—2:56. A—26,900(43,651). I I 7 I 2 4 0 0 I Mets 2, Rockies0 0 I I 0 0 I NEW YORK —JacobdeGrom 0 0 0 burnished his rookie of the year 3 I I Pittsburgh
Minnesota Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi J Schafrlf 3 0 0 0 Bourncf 4 0 I 0 Dozier2b 4 0 0 0 JRmrzss 5 0 3 0 MauerIb 3 1 I 0 Brantlylf 3 0 0 0 KVargsdh 4 1 I I CSantnIb 3 2 2 0 P louffe3b 4 1 I I Kipnis2b 3 I I 0 Arciarf 4 1 2 2 Chsnhff3b 4 0 0 I K Suzukc 3 0 0 0 YGomsc 3 0 I 2 IP H R E dEscrss 3 0 0 0 DvMrprf 2 0 I 0 Miami A.Hickscf 3 0 0 0 THoltph-rf 1 0 0 0 Koehl e r 5 6 2 Giambiph 1 0 0 0 HatcherBS,2-2 1 2 -3 3 I Shuckrf 0 0 0 0 M.Dunn 1-3 0 0 Waltersdh 4 0 0 0 M orris WB-I I 1 0 Totals 31 4 5 4 Totals 3 3 3 9 3 1 0 M innesota 0 0 0 4 0 0 000 — 4 CishekS,34-38 I C leveland 020 0 0 0 010 — 3 Milwaukee 4 6 2 DP —Minnesota 2.LOB— Minnesota3,Cleve- Garza 2 1 I land 8.28—Mauer(24), K.vargas(9), J.Ramirez(7), Jeffress W.Smi t h 1-3 1 0 C.Santana (23), Kipnis (24),Dav.Murphy(22). HR Kintzler 1-3 1 0 Arcia(16). SF —YGomes. 1-3 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Duke Broxton I 0 0 Minnesota F r Rodri g uez L, 4 -5 I 2 3 MayW,2-4 5 5 2 2 4 3 P— Cishek. A.Thompson H,I 12-3 2 0 0 0 2 W DuensingH,6 I 1 1 I 0 0 T—3:50.A—29,590 (41,900). 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 FienH,25 BurtonS,2-2 I 0 0 0 0 0 Reds 9, Cardinals 5 Cleveland BauerL,5-8 8 4 4 4 I 8 CINCINNATI —Devin Mesoraco Rzepczynski 1-3 0 0 0 I I Atchison 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 homered anddrove in three runs, HBP—byBauer (K.Suzuki). WP—May. and Mike Leakepitched into the T—3:04. A—9,489(42,487).
National League
Padres 6, Dodgers3 LOS ANGELES — Andrew Cashner pitched sevenstrong innings to win for the first time since midApril, Jedd Gyorko hit a two-run homer, andSanDiego snappeda six-game skid by beating the Los Angeles Dodgers. TheDodgers had their four-game winning streak end, andtheir NL West lead was cut to 2t/a gamesoverSan Francisco.
credentials by pitching three-hit ball for eight dominant innings, and the NewYork Mets held onto beat Colorado for their sixth win in seven games. Jeurys Familia got Wilin Rosario to ground out with the bases loadedfor his fifth save. Mets closer Jenrry Mejia gaveup seventhinninganddoubled home a run, leading Cincinnati to a victo- two hits and awalkand gotonly ry that ended its six-game losing one out before managerTerry Collins brought on JoshEdgin. streak against St. Louis. TheNL The left-hander struck out slugger Central leaders lost for only the Corey Dickerson. second time in11 gamesand maintained their 4t/a-game lead
over Pittsburgh. Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt3b 4 0 1 0 BHmltncf 4 1 0 0 GGarciph I 0 0 0 B.PenaIb 2 2 I 0 J aycf 3 0 1 1 Frazier3b 5 1 I 0 Bourjoscf I 1 0 0 Mesorcc 3 3 2 3 Hollidylf 4 0 2 0 Phillips2b 4 1 I 2 Phamph I 0 0 0 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 M AdmsIb 4 1 2 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 S crggsph I 0 1 1 Lutzph I 0 0 0 JhPerltss 3 0 1 1 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 D escalsph I 0 1 0 Brucerf 0 0 0 0 Y Molinc 2 0 1 1 Ludwcklf 3 0 I 0 Gonzalsp 0 0 0 0 Bourgspr-If I 0 I 0 Przynsph I 0 0 0 Heiseyrf 4 0 2 2 Mstrsnp 0 0 0 0 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 1 2 I T uivaill p 0 0 0 0 Leake p 3 0 I I Grenwdp 0 0 0 0 RSantg2b I 0 0 0 M.Ellisph I 0 0 0 Taversrf 3 1 1 0 Grichkph-rf I 0 1 0 Wong2b 4 1 1 0 Wachap 2 0 0 0 M ottep 0 0 0 0 T.cruzc 2 1 1 1 Totals 39 5 145 Totals 3 5 9 129 S t. Louis 000 1 0 0 301 — 5 Cincinnati 200 1 4 0 0 2x— 9 St. Louis
Colorado
New York ab r hbi ab r hbi Blckmncf 4 0 I 0 Lagarscf 4 0 1 1 Cuddyrrf 4 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 3 0 1 0 Mornea1b 4 0 I 0 Campg3b 4 0 0 0 Stubbspr 0 0 0 0 Duda1b 4 0 1 0 A renad3b 3 0 I 0 TdArndc 4 I 1 0 CDckrslf 4 0 0 0 Grndrsrf 4 0 2 1 Rosario c 4 0 I 0 Flores ss 3 0 0 0 R utledgss 3 0 I 0 dnDkkrlf 2 I 1 0 LeMahi2b 3 0 00 EYonglf 0 0 0 0 Brgmnp 2 0 0 0 deGrmp 2 0 0 0 Flandep 0 0 0 0Mejiap 0 0 0 0 P aulsnph I 0 0 0 Edginp 0 0 0 0 B rothrsp 0 0 0 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 0 5 0 Totals 3 02 7 2 C olorado 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 NewYork 0 0 0 1 1 ggx— 2 E—Blackmon (6), Rutledge(11). DP—Colorado 1. LOB —Colorado6, NewYork7.28—Arenado(33), Rosario(22), Granderson(22), denDekker(7). SdeGrom. IP H R E R BBSO Colorado BergmanL,2-3 6 6 2 2 0 1 Flande 1 0 0 0 1 1 Brothers 1 I 0 0 0 1 NewYork deGrom W,8-6 8 3 0 0 0 9 1-3 2 0 0 1 1 Mejia H,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 EdginH,5 FamiliaS,5-9 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Flande(denDekker). WP—Mejia. T—2:41. A—21,035(41,922).
IP H R E R BBSO Baltimore San Diego LosAngeles TillmanW,12-5 5 6 I 1 2 5 ab r hbi ab r hbi ,521 4'/r MeekH,3 12-3 I 0 0 1 1 Spngnr3b 5 0 2 I DGordn2b 5 I 2 0 .517 5 A.Miger H,20 2 3 0 0 0 0 2 S.Smi t hlf 5 0 0 0 HRmrzss 4000 .514 5'/r BrachH,5 2-3 0 0 0 0 M aybincf 0 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 I I 2 Z.BrittonS,34-38 I I 0 0 1 0 G randlIb 3 2 2 0 Kemprf 4 0 I 0 NATIONALLEAGUE Boston G yorko2b 4 1 2 2 Crwfrdlf 4 0 2 0 W L PM GB Oakland Chicago R anaudo L, 3 -2 3 1 -3 6 4 4 2 2 R iverac 3 0 0 I Uribe3b 4 I 2 0 SanFrancisco 79 65 .549 ab r hbi ab r hbi 12-3 0 0 0 1 2 V enalecf-If 3 0 0 0 Puigcf 4 0 I 0 D.Britton Pittsburgh 75 69 .521 C rispdh 6 I I 0 Eatoncf 3 0 1 0 Badenhop I I 0 0 0 1 R Lirianrf 4 1 0 0 A.Effisc 3 0 I 0 Atlanta 74 71 .510 1'/r Gentry cf 2 0 I 0 AIRmrz ss 4 0 0 0 M.Barnes 3 3 0 0 0 2 Amarst ss 4 1 I 0 Ethier ph 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 74 71 510 tr/r Reddckpr-rf 3 I 0 I JAreuIb 3 0 1 0 P B—Vaz qu ez . Cashnrp 3 1 I 2 RHrndzp 0 0 0 0 Miami 71 72 .497 3'/r Dnldsn3b 6 2 5 4 AGarcirf 4 0 2 0 T—3:32.A—37,008 (37,499). Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Guerrrph 1 0 0 0 JGoms If 3 I 2 0 Viciedo dh 4 I 1 1 Goeert ph 1 0 0 0 YGarcip 0 0 0 0 Mossph-If 3 0 0 0 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 American League Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 Berndnph 1 0 0 0 Rays 4, Yankees 3 DeNrrsc 5 I 3 I LeGarcph I 0 0 0 Correia p 0 0 0 0 Lowriess 5 I I I Semien3b 3 0 0 0 Astros 2, Mariners1 Pedrsn ph 1 0 0 0 Freimn1b 5 I I 0 JrDnksph I 0 0 0 NEW YORK — Left fielder Matt JWrghtp 0 0 0 0 C allasp2b 4 0 I 0 MTaylrlf 2 I 1 0 League p 0 0 0 0 E—Wong (10), Grichuk(2), Cozart (9). DP—St. SEATTLE — Jonathan Villar hit Sogard 2b I I I I Wilkins ph I 0 0 0 Joyce threw out StephenDrew C.Perez p 0 0 0 0 Louis1, Cincinnati2. LOB —St. Louis10, Cincinnati Fuldrf-cf 5 2 2 2 CSnchz2b 3 0 1 1 in the fifth inning whencatcher a tiebreaking single in the ninth JuTrnrph 1 0 I I 11. 28 —M.carpenter (33), Ma.Adams (30), Scruggs Totals 48 11 1810 Totals 32 2 7 2 Totals 35 6 8 6 Totals 3 6 3 I1 3 Ryan Hanigan blocked the sliding inning to lift Collin McHughand Jh.Peralta (36), Taveras(8), Mesoraco(24), PhilOakland 000 220 116 — 11 B an Diego 0 3 2 0 0 0 010 — 0 (I), Interleague lips (23),Leake(4). 38—Cozart(5). HR —Mesoraco Chicago 000 000 200 — 2 runner, andTampaBay held on to Houston over Seattle. LoganMorLos Angeles 000 002 001 — 3 (23). — S H e ise y.SF—Y.Molina. E — J oh.D ank s (I), A.Garci a (I), Semi e n 3 (12). beat the fading New York Yankees. E —Spang enb erg (3), H. R am irez 2 ( 16). DP — S an Blue Jays 9, Ctibs 2 rison homered off McHugh inthe IP H R E R BBSO DP — Oakland1. LOB—Oakland11, Chicago6.2BDiego1.LOB—San Diego6,LosAngeles8.28St. Louis eighth to tie it, but the Mariners Donaldson(27), J.Gomes (8), Callaspo(15), Fuld Hours after Major LeagueBaseball Spangenerg b (I), Grandal2(15), Cashner(1), Kemp WachaL,5-6 4 6 6 5 3 3 TORONTO — Jose Bautista hit (15), C.Sache n z(3). HR —Viciedo(20). gaveteams andumpiresnew fell a half-game out in the racefor (34), C.crawford (9). HR —Gyorko(10), Ad.Gonzalez Motte I 3 I I 0 0 a go-ahead, three-run double in IP H R E R BBSO (23). SB—G ra ndal ( 3), H.R am i r ez(14). SF — R iv era . guidelines on what catchers can the second ALwild card. With two Gonzal e s I 0 0 0 2 I Oakland IP H R E R BBSO Masterson 1-3 0 0 0 2 0 the seventh inning andToronto 7 2 2 2 8 do under this year's experimental outs in the ninth, Yoervis Medina LesterW,14-10 8 Ban Diego 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 rallied to beat theChicagoCubs. Scribner 1 0 0 0 0 2 CashnerW,3-7 7 9 2 2 I 2 Siegrist rule designed to avoid collisions 2 -3 3 2 2 I I (4-3) walked JonSingleton and Tuivailal a Chicago Thayer I 0 0 0 0 0 Greenwoo d 1 -3 0 0 0 0 0 Mark Buehrle (12-9) allowed two (Story, C4), the latest instructions he advanced tosecond on awild Joh.Danks L,9-11 6 7 4 2 1 3 Quackenbush I 2 1 I 0 2 Cincinnati runs and10 hits in seven innings 1 3 I I 0 1 were put to a test whenDrewtried LosAngeles pitch. Singleton moved to third on Cleto LeakeW,11-11 6 8 3 3 0 6 Lindstrom 1 3 I I 0 0 to stop a six-start winless streak, R .Hernandez L, 8 -11 3 5 5 2 I 3 to score what would have been the Ju.Diaz I 3 I I I 0 Matt Dominguez's single to deep Snodgress 1 5 5 2 0 1 YGarcia 2 0 0 0 I 0 M.ParraH,16 I 1 0 0 0 0 helping the Blue Jays improve to HBP—byLester (Eaton).WP—Snodgress. tying run. shortstop. Villar bounced a1-1 Correi a 2 0 0 0 0 I Hoover 23 2 I 0 0 I T—3:19. A—12,150(40,615). 6-2 in September. 1-3 2 1 I I 0 J.Wright fastball to the right of second baseA.chapman S,31-33 1-3 0 0 0 0 I TampaBay New York 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Leakepitchedto 2battersinthe 7th. League man RobinsonCano,who madea ab r hbi ab r hbi C.Perez I 1 0 0 0 I Chicago Toronto Tigers 4, Royals2 Wacha pi t ched to 3 ba tt e rs i n the 5t h . HBP —byQuackenbush(Ethier). Z obrist2b 5 I 2 I Egsurycf 4 I 2 I ab r hbi ab r hbi dive for the ball as it skipped over HBP—byLeake (Jay). T—3:03. A—45,213(56,000). D eJessdh 4 0 0 0 Jeterss 4 0 0 0 Coghl n lf 5 0 I 0 Reyesss 501 2 T—3:33.A—25,742 (42,319). DETROIT —Max Scherzer eshis glove androlled into right field. L ongori3b 5 0 I I BMccnc 4 0 I 0 J.Baezss 3 2 2 0 Bautistrf 5 0 1 4 capedabases-loadedjam inthe Loney1b 4 I 3 2 Beltrandh 4 0 0 0 Solerrf 4 0 I I Encrncdh 5 0 3 0 Giants 6,Diamondbacks1 Houston Seattle Nationals 6, Braves 4 Myersrf 4 0 0 0 Teixeir1b 4 0 0 0 Valuen3b 4 0 0 0 Pompypr-dh 0 0 0 0 fifth, Rajai Davis andJ.D. Martinez J oycelf 3 0 I 0 Headly3b 2 I 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi C astilloc 4 0 3 I LindIb 3010 Grssmnlf 5 0 1 0 AJcksncf 4 0 I 0 homered, andDetroit beat Kansas Y Escorss 3 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 3 I 2 0 SAN FRANCISCO — Yusmeiro Oltdh 4 0 0 0 StTllsnpr-3b I I 0 0 WASHINGTON — Adam LaRoche Presleylf 0 0 0 0 Enchvzlf 4 0 0 0 K iermrcf 4 I 2 0 Drew2b 3 0 I 0 A lcantr2b 4 0 I 0 DNavrrc 4 I 1 1 City to pull within percentage Petit pitched a four-hitter for his Altuve2b 4 0 0 0 Cano2b 3 0 0 0 kept up his torrid stretch with two Valaika1b 4 0 I 0 Valenci3b-Ib 4 I 1 0 Hanignc 4 I 2 0 CYounglf 3 0 I 2 Fowlercf 4 0 0 0 Seager3b 3 0 0 0 points of the Royals atop theAL secondcareercompletegame, Totals 3 6 4 II 4 Totals 3 1 3 7 3 S zczurcf 4 0 2 0 Pigarlf 4 I 3 0 hits and two RBls, andWashCarterdh 3 0 1 0 KMorlsdh 3 0 0 0 Bay 0 1 2 1 0 0 000 — 4 and San Francisco beat Arizona. G oins2b 2 I 1 0 Central. Scherzer (16-5) allowed a T ampa ington essentially put to rest any Jcastroc 3 0 1 0 MorrsnIb 3 1 I I N ew York 000 1 2 0 000 — 3 CIRsmsph-cf I 2 1 0 run and sevenhits in 6/a innings. DP — TampaBay2. LOB—TampaBay8, NewYork Making his third start since replac- thought that there is still a serious Mrsnckrf 4 1 0 0 Zuninoc 3 0 0 0 G osecf 2 0 0 0 2. 2B —Kiermaier (16). HR —Loney(9), Ellsbury (15). ing Tim Lincecum in the rotation, SingltnIb 3 1 2 1 MSndrsrf 3 0 0 0 Kansas City was down3-1 in the Kawskph-2b I 2 1 2 race for the NL East title with a win SB — Joyce (2), I.Suzuki (12). CS—Kiermaier (4). MDmn3b 4 0 1 0BMiff erss 3 0 0 0 Totals 36 2 112 Totals 3 7 9 149 fifth when Alex Gordon' s deep fly Petit (5-3) faced just two more S —Y.Escob ar . Viffarss 4 0 2 1 over Atlanta. Washington's second Chicago 100 010 000 — 2 to right went just foul with two on. Totals 34 2 8 2 Totals 2 9 1 2 I IP H R E R BBSO than the minimum andmatched Toronto 000 010 35x — 9 victory in two nights over the E—Valaika(2), Arrieta(2). DP —Chicago1, ToronHouston 0 00 100 001 — 2 Gordon walked to load thebases TampaBay his season high of nine strikeouts. Braves gavethe Nationals a nineSeattle 000 000 010 — 1 ArcherW,9-8 61 - 3 7 3 3 0 3 to 1. LOB —Chicago 11,Toronto 7. 2B—J.Baez(6), E—Altuve(10). DP—Houston1. LOB —Houston with one out, but Salvador Perez BalfourH,9 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 The right-hander neededonly sta(26),Encarnacion (25), Valencia(12), Goins game lead over their second-place Bauti 8, Seattle 1. 28 —Singleton (12), Vilar (11). HRBoxbergerH,IB I 0 0 0 0 2 84 pitches to finish the gem,the 5). 38 — Lmd (2). SB—J.Baez (3). CS—Pillar (2). lined out and Eric Hosmer struck rivals with 19 to play. F—Soler. Morrison(7). CS—Grossman(2). McGee S,17-19 I 0 0 0 0 0 out. fewest in a nine-inning complete IP H R E R BBSO NewYork IP H R E R BBSO Houston KurodaL,10-9 3 1 - 3 94 4 0 5 game by anypitcher in the majors Atlanta Washington Chicago 12-3 2 0 0 0 1 61-3 7 2 2 1 5 McHugh W,9-9 8 2 I I 0 4 KansasCity Detroit Huff ab r hbi ab r hbi Arrieta FieldsS,4-8 I 0 0 0 0 I ab r hbi ab r hbi Whitley 1130 0 0 1 2 this season. Bonifaccf 4 0 1 0 S pancf 5 1 I 0 N.RamirezL,2-2 BS,1-42-3 2 2 2 1 1 2-3 4 5 4 1 1 Seattle Aoki rf 4 0 2 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 R.Hiff 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Gosseln 2b 4 2 1 0 Rendon 3b 2 1 0 0 Schlitter Elias 6 6 I I 2 4 JDyson pr 0 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 4120 E.Rogers 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Arizona Ban Franm sco FFrmn1b 4 0 2 0 W erthrf 2 2 I I B.Parker 1-3 I 0 0 0 0 Ca.Smith 2 0 0 0 0 3 Infante 2b 5 0 3 I Micarrdh 3 0 1 0 Outman 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi J.UptonIf 41 1 2 LaRochIb 3 1 2 2 Toronto 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Gore Beimel pr 0 0 0 0 VMrtnzIb 3 0 0 0 Kegey 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Inciadlf 4 1 I I Pagancf 5 3 4 0 Heywrdrf 4 1 1 1 Dsmndss 3 1 I I BuehrleW,12-9 7 10 2 2 0 3 MedinaL,4-3 1 3- 2 I I I I AGordn If 3 0 0 0 JMrtnzlf 3 1 1 2 Dav.Robertson I 0 0 0 0 2 Owings2b 4 0 I 0 Panik2b 5 0 5 0 CJhnsn3b 4 0 1 1 Espinos ss I 0 I 0 Aa.Sanchez H,5 1 0 0 0 0 1 Furbush 1-3 0 0 0 0 I S.Perez c 5 0 0 0 D.Kelly3b 0 0 0 0 Huff pitched to1batter in the6th. TrumoIb 3 0 0 0 Posey1b 4 0 0 2 Bthncrtc 4 0 0 0 H arperlf 4 0 I 0 Da.Norris 1 I 0 0 1 1 WP —Medina. Hosmer Ib 3 0 I 0 Cstllns3b 4 0 1 0 HBP —byArcher (Headley). MMntrc 3 0 0 0 l shikaw1b 00 0 0 ASmnsss 3 0 0 0 WRamsc 4 0 2 I HBP—byBuehrle(J.Baez,Valbuena). WP—Arrieta. T—2:57.A—11,345 (47,476). Wlngh dh 3 I I 0 Carrerpr-cf 0 0 0 0 T—3:18.A—31,188 (49,642). C.Rossrf 3 0 0 0 Pencerf 3 0 0 0 ESantnp 2 0 0 0 Acarer2b 3 0 0 I T—3:04. A—17,903(49,282). 549
I/2
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
BASEBALL
PREP ROUNDUP
clarifies collision rule at home
Oregon
uverta ess ootoutover a ine • Four goals by the Bulldogs' CarlosMartinez pacesthe boyssoccer team to a 7-3win Bulletin staff report
corded two goals in the second half and
dropped a 25-15, 25-22, 25-23 decision
Continued from C1 "That was a huge play at that time," Bohl said of
Stanton's forced fumble on a fourth-and-1 play in the third quarter. " I think i t
really gave a spark to our whole football team."
Stanton, too, was named the Mountain West Defensive Player of the Week.
fellow frosh Aspen Jeter added a score off to Banks. Hamilton collected 20 assists posted four goals and dished out one as- a penalty kick late in Ridgeview's noncon- along with three kills, while McCallissist Tuesday as the Bulldogs topped La ference defeat.Parkrose led 1-0 at half- ter and Laura Fraser totaled three kills Pine7-3in nonleague boys socceraction. time and countered everytime the Ravens apiece. David Gutierrez added a pair of goals (1-2) scored. Burns 3, La Pine 0: LA PINE — The and Ruben Jimenez scored once for CulMadras 2, Redmond 0: MADRASHawks matched the visiting Hilanders ver, which improved to 1-1 on the season. The White Buffaloes picked up their first point for point in the first game before The Bulldogs jumped out to a 6-0 halftime win of the season to improve to 1-2 over- falling 25-21. Burns won the next two
Starting to notice a pattern? The Cowboys' de-
By Ronald Blum
lead and held on for their first win of the
season. Conrad Parker recorded two goals to
C r ook County 1: that's the team I know we're capable of PRINEVILLE — The visiting Lava Bears being," La Pine's first-year coach Kassi
finish better than most.
The Associated Press
lead the Hawks, who fell to 0-2. Ian John-
rolled to a 6-0 lead at halftime and held on
NEW YORK — M ajor League Baseball sent a
memo to teams clarifying this year's experimental rule intended to limit col-
lisions at home plate, saying runners should not be called safe if the ball clear-
ly beats them. The rule, announced in February, says a catcher can't block the plate if he doesn't have the balL There have been several
LA PINE — Culver's Carlos Martinez
all, while the Panthers dropped to 0-2.
sets as well, 25-17, 25-10. "That first game,
Bend JV 6 ,
Conditt said. Senior middle Maddie Fish-
son had La Pine's other goal and Braxton
to hand the Cowgirls (0-2) a nonconfer- er led the Hawks with eight kills and 10 Irvin contributed with an assist. ence defeat. Erin Bush scored 10 minutes digs. Kinsey Pinckney contributed with In other Tuesday action: into the second half for Crook County. eight digs and 12 assists. BOYS SOCCER VOLLEYBALL Trinity Lutheran 3, G i lchrist 0: C rook County 5, B end J V 0 : Cascade 3, Crook County 1; Banks 3, GILCHRIST — Katie Murphy recorded PRINEVILLE — The host Cowboys cap- Crook County 0: TURNER — Jennifer 12 kills and five aces and her sister Maritured their season opener with a shutout Roth racked up 17 kills and four aces, Kar- ah Murphy added seven kills of her own nonconference victory. Jonathan Toledo, lee Hollis added 10 kills, but the Cowgirls as the Saints of Bend swept the Grizzlies Bryan Martinez, Victor Villagomez and
fell to Cascade 25-23, 25-16, 23-25, 25-23 at
25-20, 25-20, 25-7. "Katie just placed the
led by its swarming, experienced, gang-tackling group of linebackers. They may be the team's elder statesmen, but they "One thing Coach Bohl
talks about is continuing
to battle, fighting through it, finding a way to finish," Stanton said after the win over Air Force. "I felt like,
defensively, that's the type of game where we had to finish. We had to keep pushing for however long we were on the field." Those versatile lineback-
Diego Nunez were among the goal scor- a three-team meet at Cascade High. Kay- ball wherever she wanted," Trinity Luers for Crook County (1-0), which led 3-0 la Hamilton posted 36 assists for Crook theran coach Greg Clift said. Cassandra
ers will have their hands
at halftime.
Oregon's offense is both lethal and versatile, featuring 10 different players who have scored in the first two games. Wyoming, by
County, and Jennifer McCallister chipped
disputed calls, including a pair of decisions in the
Parkrose 4, Ridgeview 3:PORTLAND
past 5'/2 weeks that led to
— Raven freshman Saylor Goodwin re-
GIRLS SOCCER
Blum paced Gilchrist with five kills, five
in with nine kills. In the Cowgirls' second blocks, seven digs and four aces. Jasmine match of the night, Hollis led the way with Krohnke added 15 digs and two aces for 11 kills, Roth had 10, but Crook County
the Grizzlies.
runners being called safe after video review. The guidelines sent to
full this Saturday.
comparison, has scored a
teams Tuesday say the catcher's pos i t ioning shouldn't change the call when the throw clearly is ahead of the runner. They also say if the catcher is
entirely in fair territory, he should not be considered to have blocked the plate.
Photo examples w ere included. "It's basically the same
thing, but the officials in New York got to use a little bit of common sense,"
Atlanta Braves manager
Fredi Gonzalez said. "If you're out by 40 feet ... let's
not call that guy safe because of that."
The new g u i delines were tested immediately when Tampa Bay left fielder Matt Joyce threw out the New York Y a nkees'
Stephen Drew trying to score in the fifth i n ning
Tuesday night. Ryan Hanigan gave Drew no lane to the plate as the Rays' c atcher waited for t h e throw, which ar rived in
plenty of time. Hanigan tagged the sliding runner and Drew was called out by plate umpire Vic Carapazza. The ruling was upheld following a replay review, leaving the Rays with a 4-3 lead. Overturned calls led to
tying runs for the home team in the late innings at Cincinnati on July 31
and at San Francisco on Aug. 13. In both cases, the hosts went on to score
more runs in the inning and win. " There's been a
fense, week after week, is
fe w
plays this year where it looks like the guy's been out by 10 feet and they call him safe because he felt like the catcher — he took
the plate away," Colorado manager Walt Weiss said. "You've got to add some common sense to the rule."
"No one knows the pain that the
Rice Continued from C1 Goodell said he had not seen the video of Rice knocking out his fiancee. "We assumed there was a video, we asked for a video, but we were never
media8 unwanted options from the public has caused my family. Tomake uS reliVe a mOmentin Our liVeS that We regret eVery
total of only four offensive touchdowns. tion on the current football season, which began last week.
It all starts, of course,
er of the New England Patriots, came to
with Mariota, Oregon's junior quarterback and H eisman Trophy c a n-
Goodell's defense. That interview was
didate.
Earlier Tuesday, Robert Kraft, the own-
T he
6-fo o t-4,
also broadcast on CBS, which paid the NFL an estimated $250 million to carry day is a horrible thing." eight Thursday night football games this — Janay Rice season. "The way he has handled this situation
219-pound junior this sea-
vldeo.
himself, coming out with the mea culpa in
In a statement earlier Tuesday, the league said it had asked law enforcement graphic video published by TMZ soon afofficials for "any and all information ter the assault in February, video that was about the incident, including any vid- taken from a camera in a hallway and eo that may exist" and "that video was showed Rice dragging his fiancee from
his statement a couple of weeks ago, or 10 days ago, and setting a very clear policy
score. His early production is
granted that opportunity," Goodell told CBS News on Tuesday. "No one in the
NFL to my knowledge"had seen the
of how we conduct ourselves in the NFL,
I thought was excellent," Kraft said on CBS This Morning. "Anyone who is second-guessing that doesn't know him." not made available to us, and no one in the elevator. our office saw it until yesterday." But the According to advocates for victims of Kraft added that he thought Rice would league also declined to say if any of its in- domestic violence, that video should have never play in the NFL again. "I would be shocked if some team vestigators had seen the video, and why it been enough to prompt Goodell to sushad not requested the video from the hotel pend Rice for more than two games. would pick him up," he said. where the assault was recorded by security cameras.
"It didn't leave a lot to the imagination,"
said Kim Gandy, the president of the ¹ On Tuesday, TMZ said an employee of tional Network to End Domestic Violence. the hotel, which recently closed, claimed Gandy, who spoke with Goodell at that the NFL saw the video from inside lengthbeforehestrengthenedthe league's the elevator before it suspended Rice for domestic violence policy last month, said two games in July, a decision that led to she applauded the commissioner's tougha backlash from women's groups, advo- er stance and blamed prosecutors in New cates for victims of domestic abuse and Jersey for reducing the charges against some players. Rice. "It's a sad commentary on the criminal Rice was in the midst of serving that suspension and would have been eligible justice system that there wasn't stronger to play in the Ravens' third game of the action taken," she said. "I guess celebrity season, on Sept. 21. has its privileges." On Monday, the NFL said that during The league said it s i nvestigators its investigation into the case, it had not spoke to the New Jersey State Police and seen the more graphic video. The league "reached out multiple times" to the Atlanhad said it initially suspended Rice for tic City Police Department and the Atlantwo games in part because prosecutors tic County prosecutor's office. The league had dropped the felony assault charge added that it did not interfere in the invesagainst Rice in favor of court-supervised tigation, which led a grand jury to indict counseling. Rice on felony assault charges. Goodell Goodell has been accused of not under- said the league was "particularly reliant standing the severity of the domestic vio- on law enforcement" inthese cases belence and not doing more to unearth evi- cause it was the most dependable source dence in the Rice case. Some commenta- of information. Rice's original two-game suspension tors have called on Goodell to step down. Legal experts said the NFL probably caused such a furor that in August, Goodhad access to the Atlantic City police re- ell took the unusual step of publicly apolport that said that surveillance footage ogizing and strengthening the league's showed that "both parties were involved rules. Players or league officials found to in a physical altercation." have committed domestic violence will The police also noted that the fiancee, now receive a six-game suspension. Janay Palmer, now Janay Rice, was struck Goodell did not, however, revisit Rice's by Rice with his hand, "rendering her un- original suspension until this week. conscious" while she was in the elevator. Goodell has been seeking to explain his Goodell said the NFL had seen the less decisions and refocus the public's atten-
The Ravens had not taken any public
action against Rice until Monday. Coach John Harbaugh stood by Rice this summer, and Monday he told reporters that he
son has passed for 5 85
yards and six touchdowns without an i nterception, and he has run for another not a fluke. Mariota has
passed for nearly 7,000 yards and 68 touchdowns
in barely more than two seasons, adding 15 rushing touchdowns for good measure. Heading into Saturday's game, Mariota's accomplishments are not news
to Wyoming's players and staff. "He
u nderstands t h e
would be willing to help Rice and his wife if needed.
tempo of the offense they
But the team has continued to cut ties with him. The Ravens announced that
cutes it well," Wyoming defensive coordinator Steve
want to run, and he exe-
they would offer an exchange for his jer-
Stanard said. "He's a very
seys at stadium stores. The Patriots did
composed young man, and he knows exactly where
the same last year after tight end Aaron Hernandez was charged with murder.
he needs to put the football
Nike said Tuesday it had severed ties with Rice, and EA Sports said it had re-
based on what he sees." The Wyoming l i n e-
moved him from the Madden 15 video game. Amid the fallout, Janay Rice said her life has turned into a nightmare after her
b ackers, this week, w i l l attempt to make Mariota
husband was suspended and the Ravens severedtheircontractwithhim.
offense than any they have seen this season. Of course, adjusting seems to be one of their
"I woke up this morning feeling like I had a horrible nightmare, feeling like I'm mourning the death of my closest friend," she wrote in a post on Instagram on Tuesday, according to The Baltimore Sun. "But
to have to accept the fact that it's reality is a nightmare in itself." Janay Rice's Instagram account is private, but The Sun said it confirmed that her statement was intended to be public. Janay Rice blamed the media for her
husband's dismissal and suspension. "No one knows the pain that the media
5 unwanted options from the public has caused my family," Janay Rice wrote. "To
uncomfortable and adjust to a quicker, more athletic
strengths.
"I've been really encouraged with their flexibility in the last two weeks with
the styles of offense we've had to face," Stanard said. "I'm really pleased with the way these guys — Devyn and Jordan and Mark, and the rest of the guys too-
have worked hard to apply themselves to learn something new."
make us relive a moment in our lives that
we regret every day is a horrible thing."
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet 1000's Of Ads Every Day
Wheaton Continued from C1 W heaton took off a t
the
snap, raced 20 yards, then turned around to see the ball
coming his way. He cradled it into his No. 11 jersey for his sixth catch of the day before
going down at the Cleveland 24-yard line. A minute later the Steelers escaped with a
30-27 victory, and Wheaton's injury-ravaged rookie season was officially a thing of the past. "That meant a lot, for Ben to come to me that late in the game," Wheaton said. "It showed that he at least has some level of trust in me."
Trust that was hard-earned
Bii weekfor formerBeavs Markus Wheaton WR, Pittsburgh Steelers, 6 receptions, 97 yards Derek Anderson QB, Carolina Panthers, 24-for-34, 230 yards, 2 TD StevenJacksen RB, Atlanta Falcons, 12 carries, 52 yards Jatisizz Rodgers RB, Atlanta Falcons, 6 carries, 34 yards, TD Brandin Cooks WR, NewOrleans Saints, 9 receptions, 101 yards, 1TD
after a nightmarish 2013 in which the third-round draft
pick could not stay out of the ing. Roethlisberger, offentrainer's room. He needed two
sive coordinator Todd Haley
surgeries to repair the broken and headcoach Mike Tomlin pinkie finger on his right hand did what they could to keep and finished with just six re-
Wheaton's spirits up, but the
ceptions in a diminished role. "It was tough," Wheaton said. "I ended up missing so much last year. Coming back I wasn't really in the groove. I
busted finger and the lengthy rehab process took a toll. "Here's a guy who came in with a great deal of confidence and when he did get injured,
wasn't in the mix with every-
never been hurtbefore, that's
body else." Keeping Wheaton in the
hard to manage," Haley said. "You start to kind of feel like
right mindset took some do-
an outsider."
The long road back truly began during a series of o ffseason workouts w i t h Roethlisberger. They spent hours refining pass routes and working on the timing
eran tight end Heath Miller or
a splint on his hand is not his idea of a good time.
versatile running back Le'Veo n Bell with the ball in h i s hands, it was Wheaton.
working for," Wheaton said. "To show so much so early, I
day, it was not Brown or vet-
"It wasn't like it was some
Still, for all his preparation, sort of miraculous play on his Wheaton understood that he part," Roethlisberger said. "I needed to perform when it think it was him being him." counted. Any concerns about That is something the SteelRoethlisberger's confidence ers will need to see regularly in him vanished in the first on Thursday night when they quarter on Sunday. Facing a play at Baltimore (0-1). The t hird-and-6 situation at t h e Ravens will do everything Pittsburgh 44, Roethlisberger they can to shut down Brown, found a streaking Wheaton meaning Wheaton should see down the sideline for a 40-yard plenty of single coverage, at gain. Wheaton reached out to least for now. grab the perfectlythrownpass Asked if he expects Wheawhile expertly making sure he ton to get more attention if he got both feet down inbounds. continues to make big plays, It was the kind of athletic Brown joked "I hope so." play the Steelers need from That is fine by Wheaton. He Wheaton if they want to take is more than happy to play the advantage when defenses get roleof decoy if itm eans sometoo preoccupied with covering one else gets open. Last week Brown on the other side of the he was the guy when it countfield. And it was not a fluke. ed. Thursday night, it might When Pittsburgh got the ball be someone else. He is simback with 47 seconds left in a ply happy to be on the field. It stunningly tied game on Sun- seems watching games with
.b dhUw.
"This is what we've been
He pulled in an 11-yard feel like the sky's the limit for throws that are crucial in Ha- catch to get the drive going us. ley's offense. The momentum before his 20-yard grab set up carried over to training camp, Shaun Suisham to make the where Wheaton had little trou- winning kick. Roethlisberger ble earning the starting spot did not consider the decision alongside Pro Bowler Antonio to go to Wheaton a gamble. WINDOW Brown.
Classifieds
TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980
TREATS
7%1SW10th • Redmand • (541) 5484616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com
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REGISTER ONLNE
W.SISTERSCHURCH.COM HATS-HAP E •
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Over $2000 in raffle prizes! Tickets can be purchased at event / •
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0
•
C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
+
4,552.29
TOdap New loOk
Close: 1,988.44 Change: -13.10 (-0.7%)
1,960 '" " " ' 10 DAYS
,'
'14
2 Q '13
Price-earnings ratio:
1,950 " 1,900
Source: Factset
Sales play Strong sales growth has helped drive earnings this year for Five Below. The gains have prompted the discount retailer, which is due to report fiscal second-quarter results today, to open new stores. Wall Street will be listening for an update on FiveBelow's expansion plans,as well as details on how the company's sales fared at stores open at least a year, a key measurement of retailer performance. $41.70
FIVE ' '14
40
$39.49 ,'
EPS
16,400"
I I'
I
2Q '13 2 Q '14
Price-earnings ratio:
68
based on trailing 12 month results
Dividend: none Source: Factset
Polished up Financial analysts predict Restoration Hardware returned to a profit in its second fiscal quarter. The furniture and housewares company recorded a loss in the same period last year because of charges related to stock awards to its CEO. Restoration Hardware is off to a good start this year. In June, it raised its outlook for the year, encouraged by higher revenue. The company reports its latest results today.
$92.75
A
M
StocksRecap NYSE NASD
A
16,000
StoryStocks
"
"
"
M
A
A
M
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17111.55 16993.29 17013.87 -97.55 DOW Trans. 8569.35 8509.29 8514.67 -59.52 DOW Util. 563.33 556.47 557.37 -6.50 NYSE Comp. 10994.15 10923.00 10945.61 -61.78 NASDAQ 4599.03 4544.44 4552.29 -40.00 S&P 500 2001.01 1984.61 1988.44 -13.10 S&P 400 1438.21 1426.36 1427.44 -11.70 Wilshire 5000 21221.96 21038.20 21075.32 -146.64 Russell 2000 1171.24 1157.85 1158.50 -1 3.81
DOW
82-WK RANGE e CLOSE NAME TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO Alaska Air Group A LK 28.74 ~ 50.49 4 6. 6 0 -.73 -1.5 V L Avista Corp A VA 25.55 ~ 33.60 3 2. 3 1 -.39 - 1.2 V L Bank of America BAC 13 . 60 ~ 18.03 1 6. 1 4 -.21 -1.3 L L Barrett Business B B SI41 .96 ~ 102.2 0 59 . 4 3 -.67 -1.1 V L Boeing Co BA 106.56 ~ 144. 5 7 12 8.21 + . 23 +0.2 L L Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 .11 ~ 6.35 5.19 +. 0 4 +0.8 L L ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.43 ~ 3 0.3 6 26.10 -.11 -0.4 W L Columbia Sportswear COLM 57.88 ~ 8 9.96 76. 1 0 - 1 .37 -1.8 T L CostcoWholesale COST 109.50— o 12 7.32126.11 -.49 -0.4 V L Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ 18.70 12. 6 0 +. 1 2 + 1.0 W L FLIR Systems F LIR 27.91 ~ 37.42 3 3. 3 2 -.11 -0.3 V W Hewlett Packard HPQ 20 . 25 — 0 38.25 36 .79 -.49 -1.3 W L Intel Corp I NTC 22.48 ~ 35.56 3 4. 9 1 -.42 -1.2 V L Keycorp K EY 11.05 ~ 14.70 1 3. 6 0 -.17 -1.2 V L Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ 52.72 8 1. 7 4 -.43 -0.8 V L Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 9.19 7.68 ... . .. L L LA Pacific L PX 12.71 ~ 18.96 1 3. 9 4 -.22 -1.6 w L MDU Resources MDU 26 . 39 ~ 36.05 3 0. 8 4 -.31 -1.0 V L Mentor Graphics MEN T 19.14 ~ 24.31 2 1. 9 8 -.22 -1.0 W L Microsoft Corp MSF T 3 1.20 — o 46.80 46.76 + . 29 +0.6 L L Nike Inc 8 N KE 64.93 ~ 82.79 8 1. 8 4 -.56 -0.7 V L L Nordstrom Inc J WN 54.90 ~ 71.45 6 9. 3 5 -.63 -0.9 V Nwst Nat Gas NWN 40.05 ~ 47.50 4 4. 7 6 -.44 -1.0 V L V PaccarInc PCAR 53.59 ~ 68.81 6 0. 8 2 - .65 -1.1 V Planar Systms PLNR 1.77 ~ 5.30 4.68 -.15 -3.1 V L ~ Plum Creek PCL 40.24 o — 50.0 8 40. 8 6 -.40 -1.0 T L Prec Castparts PCP 220.54 ~ 275. 0 9 24 1.26 - .50 -0. 2 Safeway Inc SWY 23.14 ~ 36.03 3 4. 5 4 -.11 -0.3 V L Schnitzer Steel SCHN 2 4.13 ~ 33.32 2 6. 8 9 -.27 -1.0 W W Sherwin Wms SHW 170.63 — 0 219.21 216.52 -1.40 - 0.6 V L StancorpFncl S FG 53.54 ~ 69.51 6 4. 6 3 -.44 -0.7 W L StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 82.50 7 7. 1 2 -.55 -0.7 V V Triquint Semi T QNT 6.80 ~ 21.48 1 9. 9 8 -.29 -1.4 W L Umppua Holdings UM P Q 15.56 $y 19.65 17 .39 -.11 -0.6 V L US Bancorp U SB 35.69 ~ 43.92 4 1. 6 0 -.43 -1.0 V L WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.53 ~ 2 4.5 3 21.34 -.46 -2.1 V L WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 0.07 ~ 5 3.0 8 81.07 -.40 -0.8 W L Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7 .48 ~ 34.60 3 3.8 4 -.16 -0.5 V L
EURO +.0012 1.2920+
+.09 '
The stock market sank for the second day running on Tuesday amid a mixed backdrop of corporate and international news. The Standard 8 Poor's 500 index and the Dow Jones industrial average notched modest losses. The L.S. dollar reached new highs for the year against both the euro, Europe's shared currency, and Japan's yen. Shares in Apple bounced higher then fell after the tech giant unveiled new versions of its popular iPhone as well as a smartwatch. Home Depot had the biggest drop among the 30 big companies in the Dow. All 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 fell, led by utilities and telecoms. The S&P 500 index has slipped 1 percent this week. Annie's
M
+
Dow Jones industrials
1,850. 1 800
CRUDEOIL
Close: 17,013.87 Change: -97.55 (-0.6%)
8
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -0.57% L L +2.64% -0.69% L L +1 5.05% -1.15% L L +13.62% -0.56% L L +5.24% -0.87% L L +9.00% -0.65% L L +7.58% -0.81% L L +6.32% -0.69% L L +6.95% -1.18% -0.44% L
NorthwestStocks
40
Dividend: $0.72 Div. yield: 1.3%
Operating
16,800"
"
2 Q ' 14
based on trailing 12 month results
$60
"
.
Vol. (in mil.) 2,803 1,913 Pvs. Volume 2,730 1,633 Advanced 7 13 6 3 5 Declined 2418 2046 New Highs 66 53 New Lows 37 56
30
Operating EPS
17,200"
2,000 "
$38.19
40
17,080 "
-.05
$18.84
16,960" ""' 10 DAYS
2,050
$54.06
MW
50
30
S8$P 500
2,000
Men's Wearhouse releases its latest quarterly report card today. Investors will be listening for an update on how the retailer's business is faring since its $1.8 billion acquisition of rival Jos. A. Bank. The transaction closed in June, halfway through Men's Wearhouse's fiscal second quarter. The company has said the deal would help the combined companies better serve an expanded customerbase in more locations.
50
"
SILVER+
GOLD ~ $1,246.80
10 YR T NOTE 2.50% ~
1,988.44
2,040.
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
$60
+
S&PBOO
N ASDAQ ~ 4 0 00
17,013.87
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
BNNY
Close:$46.10L12.59 or 37.6% The natural and organic food company agreed to be acquired by packagedconsumer food giant General Mills for $820 million. $50 40 30
J
J A 8 52-week range $37.86~ $53 .38
Vol.:13.3m (26.9x avg.) Mkt.Cap:$788.08 m
V +27. 0 +6 7 .1 8 2 2 1 1 0. 5 0 V +14.6 +3 2 .1 2 2 1 1 0 1. 2 7 L + 3.7 +14 . 4 77242 19 0 .20f L -35.9 - 6.2 70 24 0. 7 2 L -6.1 +23.2 4810 1 9 2 . 92 T -0.8 - 15.6 7 2 W -5.1 +1 4.3 1 5 7 1 8 0 . 56f T - 3.4 +34.0 44 25 1.1 2 L +6.0 +11 . 9 1 4 46 28 1 . 4 2 L -23.3 + 3 . 1 17 55 V +10. 7 +6. 7 10 40 2 5 0. 4 0 L + 31. 5 +6 9 .7 10194 14 0.64 L +34. 5 +5 9 .8 22011 17 0 . 90 V +1.3 +17. 7 8 6 31 1 3 0. 2 6 L +30. 9 +4 1 .3 2 362 17 0 . 6 6 V +39. 9 +5 7.7 1 444 3 7 w -24.7 -16.7 1385 cc V +0.9 +21. 6 35 6 2 0 0. 7 1 L -8.7 - 0.3 96 7 1 8 0 . 20 L +25. 0 +5 2.8 39927 18 1 . 12 L +4.1 +28 . 3 4 0 47 2 8 0 . 9 6 L + 12.2 +27 .4 1 3 23 1 9 1. 3 2 V +4.5 +16 . 8 84 21 1.8 4 V + 2.8 +16. 5 1 5 82 1 7 0.88 L +84.3 + 1 54.2 3 3 9 7 8 T -12.1 - 3.7 1212 3 5 1 . 76 V - 10.4 +10.0 4 2 0 1 9 0 . 12 L +18.5 +52 .7 9 6 6 3 0.92 L -18.6 + 7. 9 1 7 7 d d 0. 7 5 L +18.0 +27 .4 4 0 8 2 7 2. 2 0 L -2.4 +23.0 1 4 2 1 3 1 .10f V - 1.6 +10.0 2515 3 0 1 . 04 L $.13 9.6 +1 55.6 3372 c c V -9.1 + 1 1.1 9 6 8 2 6 0. 6 0 V +3.0 +17 . 8 6 1 91 14 0 .98f V -8.4 + 6 . 4 5 0 3 1 4 0 . 44f W +12. 5 +2 7 .4 10279 13 1 . 40 L +7.2 +22. 6 2 3 62 2 7 1 . 16f
AVP
Close: $13.17V-0.49 or -3.6% The maker of personal care and beauty products said that Chief Financial Officer Kimberly Ross resigned, effective Oct. 2. $16 14
J
J A 8 52-week range $13.80~ $22.86
PE : 66.8 Vol.:11.8m (3.1x avg.) P E: . . . Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap:$5.72 b Yie l d : 1.8%
Burlington Stores
Y TD 1YR V O L QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
Avon Products
BURL Close:$37.18%1.12 or 3.1% The clothing retailer reported better-than-expected second-quarter financial results and raised its full-year fiscal outlook. $40
Encana ECA Close:$23.25 %0.76 or 3.3% The energy exploration company said it is selling its stake in PrairieSky Royalty through a $2.4 billion dollar stock offering. $26 24
30
22 O ND J F M A M J J A
J
52-week range $31.54~
$3 9.81
Vol.:2.0m(4.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.75 b
A
J
8
52-week range $1697 ~
$ 34 83
PE: 3 09.8 Vol.:6.7m (1.6x avg.) P E: .. . Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$17.23 b Yie l d: 1.2%
Home Depot
HD Fuel Cell Energy FCEL Close:$88.93 V-1.89 or -2.1% Close:$2.42 V-0.25 or -9.4% The home improvement retailer The maker of fuel-cell power plants confirmed that its payment systems reported a 20 percent drop in fiscal had been hacked, potentially expos- third-quarter revenue and the reing shoppers' financial data. sults missed expectations. $100 $3.0 90
2.5
80
A 8 J 52-week range $73.74~ $93 .53 $1.18 ~ $4.74 Vol.: 8.1m (1.2x avg.) PE: 21.1 Vol.:15.9m (2.3x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt. Cap:$119.69b Yi e ld:2.1% Mkt.Cap:$629.27 m Yie ld: ...
J
A J 52-week range
8
J
Francesca's Holdings FRAN SinoCoking Coal Close: $13.34 V-0.63 or -4.6% The retail boutique operator reported worse-than-expected quarterly financial results and lowered its full-year fiscal guidance. $16
SCOK
Close:$7.09%4.17 or 142.8% The coal and coke producer said it signed a deal for technology aimed at converting coal into clean burning fuel at Chinese mines. $10
14 J
DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. 1 -Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distributicn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
'::"'"" Burlington raises outlook Shares of Burlington Stores rose 3.1 percent Tuesday after the discount retailer boosted its full-year earnings outlook. The company now expects full-year adjusted earnings in a range of $1.52 to $1.58 per share. Its prior guidance was for adjusted earnings between $1.25 and $1.35 per share. Management lifted its guidance as the company reported its fiscal secondquarter loss narrowed as sales improved
Burlington Stores (BURL) T 62 'wEpK RANQE
$22 AP
40
and its income tax expense declined. Burlington Stores lost $6.5 million for the three months ended Aug. 2. That compares with a loss of $25 million a year earlier. Excluding certain items, it lost a penny per share. Analysts, on average,expected a loss of 8 cents per share, according to a FactSet survey. In the second-quarter, revenue increased to $1.05 billion from $971.5 million, beating Wall Street's estimate of $1.03 billion.
ue s day's close: $37.18 prjce earnjngs ratjo. lost money
Total return
YTD
BURL S&P 500
17. 1 % 9.8
Tot a l returns through Sept. 9
AmdFocus
SelectedMutualpttnds
J A 8 J J A 8 52-week range 52-week range $1339 ~ $33 .60 $0.83~ $9.37 Vol.:4.9m (5.6x avg.) PE:1 3 .8 Vol.:39.7m (42.2x avg.) PE:177.3 Mkt. Cap:$563.13 m Yield : ... Mkt. Cap:$149.75 m Yield : ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.50 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on consumer and business loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill
. 0 1 .0 1 . 0 4 . 04
5 2-wk T-bill
.09
.08
w
... +0 . 0 1
~
2-year T-note . 5 6 .53 + 0 .03 L L 5-year T-note 1 .76 1 .72 + 0.04 L L 10-year T-note 2.50 2.47 +0.03 L L 30-year T-bond 3.23 3.23
BONDS
. 03 .10
~
L .45 L 1.72 W 2.9 1 3.85
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.06 3.05+0.01 L BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.43 4.43 ... L 32 . 0 % 32.3 % Barclays USAggregate 2.30 2.29 +0.01 L 12.4 3.1 PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.44 5.44 ... L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.08 4.10 -0.02 L Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 2.02 1.98 +0.04 L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2.99 2.98 +0.01 L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
3-M o nt h
~
9-M o nth
W W W L L W W L L L L
W L W
3 .66 5.31 2.63 6.38 4. 7 2 1.82 3.55
AP
BlackRock Latin America is having a great year. Its nearly 20 FAMILY MarhetSttmmary percent return places it in the top AmericanFunds Most Active 3 percent of Morningstar's Latin NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG America Stock fund category.
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 28 . 70 -.11+6.2 +16.0 +16.2+13.0 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.85 -.22 +6.4 +13.6 +12.8+10.0 A A B CpWldGrlA m 47.43 -.19 +6.0 +16.5 +17.9+10.9 8 8 D EurPacGrA m 50.82 -.12 +1.9 +13.0 +13.3 +7.8 A 8 8 Apple Inc s 1872210 97.99 -.37 FnlnvA m 54. 8 2 - .29 +7.1 +20.2 +20.9+15.0 C C C iShEMkts 834904 44.75 -.56 GrthAmA m 46.38 -.31 +7.9 +20.3 +21.9+15.0 C 8 C S&P500ETF 810534 199.32 -1.27 B lackRock LatinAmA m MDL T X IncAmerA m 21.85 -.89 +7.5 +16.1 +15.1+12.7 A A A BkofAm 772418 16.14 -.21 InvCoAmA m 40.84 -.19 +9.9 +22.6 +22.3+14.7 A 8 C VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH Yahoo 505756 40.78 -1.03 NewPerspA m38.81 -.16 +3.3 +15.1 +17.6+12.2 C 8 8 Microsoft 399273 46.76 +.29 WAMutlnvA m42.24 -.22 +8.1 +20.5 +21.2+16.3 A C A SinoCoking 395190 7.09 +4.17 GT AdvTc 373432 14.94 -2.21 Dodge &Cox Income 13.91 -.82 +4.7 +7 .2 + 4.5 +5.7 8 A 8 Petrobras 350700 17.83 -.52 IntlStk 46.82 -.21 +8.8 +20.5 +19.0+10.8 A A A iShBrazil 346472 50.29 -1.13 Stock 182.19 -.95 +9.1 +23.6 +26.6+16.9 A A A Fidelity Contra 101. 9 5 - .76 +7.1 +20.7 +20.5+16.6 8 C 8 Gainers ContraK 101 . 95 -.76+7.2 +20.9 +20.6+16.8 8 C 8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 49.94 -.21 +5.8 +16.6 +21.3+16.7 D D C Fideli S artan 500l d xAdvtg 70.79 -.46 +9.1 +21.4 +22.5+16.4 8 8 A SinoCoking 7.09 +4.17 +142.8 PulseElect 3.10 +1.08 + 53.5 cFrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 55 -.82 +7.5 +14.4 +13.4+11.7 A A A 45 Annies 46.10 $.12.59 + 3 7 .6 53 IncomeA m 2. 5 3 -. 81 +8.4 +15.1 +14.1+12.4 A A A ChinaNRes 4.25 +.80 + 2 3.2 Oakmark Intl I 25.98 +.82 -1.3 +6 .3 +20.0+11.6 E A A InterCld wt 3.09 +.55 + 2 1.7 073 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 89 -.10+6.3 +17.3 +18.4+13.6 D E D AkersBio n 4.20 +.62 + 1 7.3 Moroingstar OwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 18 . 65 -.89+5.7 +16.3 +17.3+12.6 E E E Energous n 12.87 +1.88 + 1 7.1 RisDivC m 18 . 63 -.10+5.7 +16.4 +17.5+12.7 E E E e Fund target represents weighted Endocyte 8.04 +1.17 + 1 7 .0 Q SmMidValA m47.16 -.37 +6.7 +17.6 +18.7+13.6 D E E SignalGn n 5.40 +.70 + 1 4.9 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m39.65 -.31 +6.1 +16.7 +17.7+12.7 D E E Achaogen n 10.82 +1.36 + 14.4 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.3 1 - . 21 +5.6 +15.5 +21.0+14.5 E C C Losers CATEGORY Latin America Stock GrowStk 55.4 9 - . 64 +5.6 +21.6 +22.4+17.9 8 A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 68.6 2 - . 42+18.5 +30.7 +37.0+26.9 8 A A RATING™ ** 1 y1y1y Newlncome 9. 6 5 - .81+ 4.6 + 6 .5 + 3.0 +4.7 8 C D -1.87 -31.3 RadaElec 4.10 ChiMobGm 21.76 -6.44 -22.8 ASSETS $217 million Vanguard 500Adml 184.16 1.21 +9.1 +21.4 +22.5+16.4 8 8 A -.67 -21.4 GigaTr h 2.46 500lnv 184.12 1.21 +9.0 +21.2 +22.3+16.2 8 8 8 EXP RATIO 1.53% 21Vianet 21.88 -5.53 -20.2 CapOp 52.19 -.36 +13.0 +23.3 +27.0+16.9 A A B MANAGER William Landers -.74 -18.0 USEC Inc 3.36 Eqlnc 31.66 -.17 +7.8 +18.8 +21.8+16.9 C C A SINCE 2002-09-30 IntlStkldxAdm 28.70 -.11 +4.4 +12.3 +11.9 NA 8 D RETURNS 3-MO +4.7 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 33.86 -.30 +10.2 +25.7 +26.1+20.1 A A A YTD +14.2 TgtRe2020 28.78 -.13 +6.2 +13.3 +13.0+10.7 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +12.3 Tgtet2025 16.75 -.88 +6.3 +14.2 +14.3+11.4 A 8 8 -22.56 -.50 Paris 4,452.37 3-YR ANNL +0.2 TotBdAdml 10.80 -.82 +4.1 +5.5 +2.3 +4.3 D D D London 6,829.00 -5.77 -.08 5-YR-ANNL +3.4 Totlntl 17.16 -.86 +4.3 +12.2 +11.8 +7.2 8 D C -.48 Frankfurt 9,71 0.70 -47.33 TotStlAdm 50.21 -.36 +8.5 +20.7 +22.6+16.7 8 8 A Hong Kong25,190.45 -49.70 -.20 TOP 6HOLDINGS PCT -.95 I tau Unibanco Holding SA Totstldx 50.18 -.36 +8.4 +20.5 +22.4+16.6 C 8 A Mexico 45,91 5.17 -442.07 ADR 8.79 Milan 21,149.80 -1 44.54 -.68 USGro 30.77 -.25 +7.2 +21.4 +21.9+15.8 8 8 C Bank BradescoADR 5.24 Tokyo 15,749.15 +44.04 + . 28 Welltn 40.19 -.16 +7.2 +15.3 +15.8+12.1 A A A Stockholm 1,382.78 -9.95 -.71 B B Seguridade Participacoes SA 5 . 1 1 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 5.06 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeaadeither a sales or Sydney 5,609.00 +30.00 + . 54 Ambev SAADR Zurich 8,825.60 +8.41 + . 10 Petroleo Brasileiro SA Petrobras ADR 4.84 redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.
Commodities
FUELS
The price of oil steadied Tuesday after three days of steep drops on expectations of falling U.S. supplies. Gold, silver and copper fell. Wheat rose, corn edged lower.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the euro, but gained versus the British pound and the
Japanese yen. The ICE U.S. Dollar index, which compares the dollar's value to a basket of key currencies, fell.
h5Q HS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 92.75 92.66 +0.10 -5.8 1.93 2.00 - 0.45 + 0 . 7 2.79 2.81 -0.64 -9.3 -5.8 3.98 3.88 +2.79 2.55 2.56 -0.53 -8.5
CLOSE PVS. 1246.80 1252.70 18.84 18.89 1385.80 1397.50 3.09 3.16 860.10 885.70
CLOSE PVS. 1.60 1.59 Coffee (Ib) 1.88 1.90 Corn (bu) 3.36 3.39 Cotton (Ib) 0.68 0.67 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 346.00 344.00 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.51 1.51 Soybeans (bu) 10.77 10.91 Wheat(bu) 5.28 5.34
%CH. %YTD - 0.47 + 3 . 7 -0.23 -2.6 - 0.84 + 1 . 1 -2.00 -10.1 -2.89 +19.9
%CH. %YTD +0.73 +1 8.7 -0.82 +69.9 -0.88 -20.3 +1.83 -19.9 +0.58 -3.9 +0.10 +1 0.4 -1.31 -1 8.0 -1.12 -1 2.9 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6091 -.0030 -.19% 1.5701 Canadian Dollar 1.1 004 +.0041 +.37% 1.0368 USD per Euro 1.2920 +.0012 +.09% 1.3259 JapaneseYen 106.34 + . 4 6 + .43% 9 9 . 60 Mexican Peso 13. 2 247 +.0870 +.66% 13.1077 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6267 +.0204 +.56% 3.6124 Norwegian Krone 6 . 3572 +.0289 +.45% 6.0144 South African Rand 10.9466 +.1431 +1.31% 9.9561 Swedish Krona 7.1 1 73 + .0099 +.14% 6.5560 Swiss Franc 9340 - 0004 - 04% . 9320 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0872 +.0109 +1.00% 1.0831 Chinese Yuan 6.1367 .0038 -.06% 6.1213 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7505 -.0002 -.00% 7.7551 Indian Rupee 60.830 +.515 +.85% 65.250 Singapore Dollar 1.2642 +.0067 +.53% 1.2683 South KoreanWon 1036.47 +6.59 +.64% 1082.68 -.00 -.00% 2 9.61 Taiwan Dollar 29.98
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
BRIEFING Another hit for Barnes S Moble Barnes 8 Noble reported a smaller first-quarter loss on Tuesday thanks to cost-cutting, but the struggling retailer, the country's biggest bookseller, could not stave off a 7 percent decline in sales. It is a challenging momentfor Barnes8 Noble, the last major national bookstore chain remaining after Borders closed in 2011. Barnes 8 Noble has struggled to compete in the online retail and e-book market after its Nook e-reader was overwhelmed bymore popular devices. For the quarter that ended Aug. 2, the company reported revenue of $1.23 billion, down from $1.33 billion a year ago. — From wire reports
BEND VENTURE CONFERENCE
UA IA By Rachael Rees
competition, according to a
from the conference, and we're
investment is to level the play-
The Bulletin
news release from Economic Development for Central Ore-
already ahead oflastyear... I have to check the mail every daybecause money keeps showingup."
ing field for Central Oregon
The Bend Venture Con-
ferenceexpectstoaw ardits largest investment — more
gon, the host of the BVC.
than $300,000 — to launch-
ing $75,000 — $50,000from the state's Oregon Growth Account and $25,000 from the Oregon Community Foundation — will contribute again this year.
and conceptstagecompanies next month at the 11th annual conference. Lastyear, the startup that
won the launch stage — the competition for companies
with completebusiness plans and that may havegenerated revenue — received a $250,000 investment. Two new contributions have
Chapterl Filed Sept. 2 • Michael A. and Charlene V. Miller, 2218 NW12th St., Redmond Filed Sept. 3 • Lisa G. Jensen, 2001 NE Rachel Court, Bend Filed Sept. 4 • Kimberly R. Ellenberger, 1724 NE12th St., Bend • Sonja L. Reiter, P.O. Box 5846,Bend • Roland L. and Pamela L Swearingen, 346 SW Dover Lane, No.41, Madras • Carolyn J. Noe', P.O.Box 452, La Pine Filed Sept. 5 • Vernon L. Budd,13577 SE ShawneeRoad, Prineville • Kenneth R. Rutherford III, 240 NWBirch Ave., Redmond • Kathleen H. Beck, 214SW 17th St., No. 3, Bend Filed Sept. 8 • FredBoone, P.O.Box213, Bend • Frankie T. Meyers, 2107 NW ElmAve., Redmond • Timothy R. Childress, 20701 NWO'Neil Highway, Redmond • Craig A. and Lillian A. Mil ne,P.O.Box329, Prineville Chapter13 Filed Sept. 4 • Mary L. and Ronald M. Johnson, 11453 NWLister Ave., Prineville Filed Sept. 5 • Glen A. McClean,20688 NE Overton Place, Bend
Two other investments total-
The conference also will
startups, will be sponsoring anew $100,000 Seven Peaks Ventures Investment Award,
and Cascade Angels Fund has contributed a $121,900 invest-
companies that don't have access to the resources that exist
in tech-dense areas such as Silicon Valley, Vendetti, gener-
al partner at Seven Peaks Ven-
tures, said in anews release.
managed by venture capitalist Dino Vendetti, who will decide
traditionally selected one company to get the largest invest-
BVC LLC, however, has
McClatchy Washington Bureau
in companies that are going afterbig-market opportunities with a highly scalable business model. He hopes the investment will attract higher-caliber
The head of the Senate's tax-writing panel issued a statement Tuesday offering Republicans a carrot to join
startups to compete, which, he
Democrats in blocking the
said, would make the conference evenbetter.
ability of some U.S. corporations to shift headquar-
"Seven Peaks committed to
include funds from BVC LLC,
ment, he said. "What Dino has done with
$100,000, but we're certainly capable of investing more.
the group of multiple private investors who vote on the launchstagewinner,orsidedealsby other investors.
Seven Peaks is, he's opened the floodgates to a completely different funding mechanism for the Bend Venture Conference,"
That just depends on the com-
Vierra said. "This investment
going to end up well ahead of lastyear," said Jason Moyer,
is a magnet forthe conference itself. It makes it much less
to help the ecosystem in Central Oregon."
fund manager for the 2014 BVC LLC. "We're a month out
one-dimensional."
"Any way we cut it, we're
By Kevin G. Hall
He said he's looking to invest
EDCO venture catalyst. It's
with $1,500 for the best busi-
Seven Peaks Ventures, a fund for Pacific Northwest
ing channel, said Brian Vierra,
whether the $100,000 award goes to one company or gets divided amongthe five launchstage participants, Vierra said.
ness plan, bringingthe total to $308,400. The amount does not
Bend-based venture capital
The investment from Seven Peaks Ventures is a new fund-
award a $10,000prize for the winner of the concept stage — typicallyprerevenue companies thatmay still be working on their technology — along
pushed launch-stage investm ents to nearly $297,000asof Tuesday afternoon.
ment to this year's launch-stage
BANKRUPTCIES
Wyden O I ' S cI U S I ' OWSseeks deal on inversions WASHINGTON-
ters across the border or
said in an interview. "It's a
overseas to enjoyhuge tax breaks called inversions. "Following efforts in August, it's clear there is an opportunity for bipartisan
good way for Seven Peaks to
agreement on short-term
find new investments, but also
legislation that will make inversions less attractive,"
panies competing," Vendetti
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
The goal of the Seven Peaks
a in wa ornew omes
Senate Finance Committee
Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said. Republicans have insisted that any effort to thwart inversions, which costs the U.S. treasurybillions in
lost tax revenues, should be done in the context of a
broader revamp of the corporate tax system. That's a bigger lift, and Wyden is looking for a stopgap measureto blockthe most egregious examples of corporations moving their headquarters to tax-haven countries. After meeting with the
top Republican on the panel — Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah
— Wyden issued a statement offering to loosely link any effort to halt inversions
to the broader, more ambitious desire to overhaul the corporate tax code.
"As we press ahead, we continue to believe that any legislation addressing inversions must bridge to comprehensive tax reform," Wyden said. "This is not some abstract issue about corporate accounting.
e
TY|O~p
Without a bipartisan stop-
gap measure inplace, we run the risk of having our business taxbase eroded, leaving mainstream American companies and families holdingthe bill." Inversions have been around for decades but Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Crews clear the site Monday near NW Mt. Washington Drive for the next phase of River's Edge Village, in Bend. Phase XVI calls for 30 residential lots, including 19 that back up to the ninth fairway of River's Edge Golf Course. Taylor Northwest is scheduled to complete improvements by the end of the
have grown in number of the past two years,. These cases often involve
a U.S. corporationbuying a smaller partner internationally and then moving their headquarters there while retaining their presence in the United States. What had
year, with lot sales starting in early 2015, according to Gary Cox, general manager of River's Edge Property Development LLC.
been headquarters then becomes a U.S. subsidiary of a foreign parent company.
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • LaunchYourBusiness: Participants work one-onone with a businessadviser to develop aworking plan; course combines three 1-hour coachingsessions that start the week of Labor Day, with three evening classes Sept. 10, 24and Oct.8; preregistration required; $199 includes $25 workbook;6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • QuickbooksSeminar: Four-hour seminar designed to train business owners the basic functions needed to developaccurate accounting records; registration required; $97; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Accurate Accounting and Consulting, 61383 S.U.S. Highway 97,Suite A, Bend. • Certification in ProductionandInventory Managementinformation meeting:Learn about the benefits of being certified in production and inventory management; free;6-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbupetin.com/bizcal
Apple goesbigwith iPhone, small with smartwatch iPhone 6and6 Plus
By Brian X. Chen New York Times News Service
CUPERTINO, Calif. — After
three years as chief executive of Apple, Tim Cook is starting
Oo
to crystallize his vision for the
Previous generation iPhoneSC and 5S
company. Apple on Tuesday introduced a highly anticipated smartwatch, which combines health and fitness monitoring with mobile computer capa-
bilities such as maps. The company also introduced two
KarlMondonI Bay Area News Group
computer strapped around the
wrist and is the first product made under Cook's leadership that branches Apple into a
new type of product: a device in the growing field of fitness-tracking computers that
5.5
ny's first wearable computer.
inches
4.7
4
quickly. But the devices are nowhere
near as popular as smart-
inches
inches
1920 x 1080
1334x 750
1136x 640 pixels
televisions. And they are a rare instance of Apple's following market trends instead of creating them; Samsung, Apple's chief rival, has captured a major share of the smartphone market with large phones. Apple said that to use Apple Watch, someone must also use one of its more recent iPhones.
different exercises, such as bi-
cyclingorrunning,an accelerSource:Apple
Tyler Davis © 2014 MCT
can be worn on or around the body. Although the Apple Watch is the company's first wear-
And despite the fanfare with which the news media
have greeted Apple's first
but eventually dominate as Apple did several times before
able computer, it enters a
wearabledevice,analystshave
under its former chief, Steve
crowded field. Samsung, Pebble and Sony lead the pack of companiesproducing these devices, and sales are growing
expressed mixed views about its potential to become main-
Jobs?
certainly made it work with the iPhone. Question is, are theygoingto be able to do the same thing with a watch? I
"Jobs made that work with the iPod," said Carl Howe, an
wouldn't bet against them at this point."
stream. Can the smartwatch be a late entrant to a market
to a growing appetite among consumers for bigger screens,
The watch will have a strong
company, estimates that 19 million smartwatches will ship expects will ship this year.
sourceofprofit.They cater
focus on health. An app called Fitness tracks statistics for
phones. IDC, the research in 2014, much lower than the 1.2billion smartphones that it
nificant upgrades for Apple's smartphone lineup, still by far the company's largest
similar to what happened with
iPhone 6
The Apple Watch is the compa-
iPhones with larger screens. The smartwatch, named the
Apple Watch, is a miniature
Apple announced twonew iPhonesTuesday,eachwith larger, higher resolution screens than previous iterations. The phoneswill hit stores Sept. 19, andstart at $199 for the iPhone 6 Plus iPhone 6 and$299 for the 6 Plus.
ometer tracks movements, and a heartrate sensor helpsmea-
sure the intensity of workouts.
analyst at Yankee Group. "He
The new iPhones are sig-
The watch will take advan-
tage of Siri, Apple's tool for controlling the device with voice commands. Apple also said it would release a tool
kitforsoftware developersto build apps for the watch.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing Report, D5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
WATER REPORT
Adding a new element to popular river sport
HIKING
For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6
BRIEFING OregonCancer Bike Out date set The second Oregon Cancer Bike Out, a noncompetitive mountain biking event for all skill levels, is set for Saturday, Sept. 27. The fundraising event will be held at Wanoga Sno-park, southwest of Bend. Trails include Funner, Tiddlywinks, lower Storm King and Tyler's Traverse. Proceeds will support the Knight Cancer Institute, Partners ln Care (aCentral Oregon hospice) and Central Oregon's Candlelighters for Children with Cancer. Cog Wild and Yakima will provide shuttle services during the event, and rental bikes are available through Hutch's Bicycles and Cog Wild. Event registration will include hydration, snacks and lunch. Free camping is available at Elk Lake Resort for participants Friday and Saturday nights, and a dinner and reception
• Stand-up paddleboardingon the RogueRiver whitewateradds an exciting twist to a growingsport By Mark Freeman The (Medford) Mail Trbune
SHADY COVE — Run-
ning the Rogue River's Rattlesnake Rapids while standing erect on a glorified surfboard with a long paddle inhis hands used to elicit strange comments to stand-up paddleboarder Mark Morical i The Bulletin
North Sister, left, and Middle Sister pictured from near the summit of Four-In-One Cone.
Jake Baracker from rafters, kayakers and other traditional whitewater runners.
"There were some snickers, for sure," Baracker says. "I'd get ... 'Do you know whatyou're doinghere?' 'Don't you understand this is a river?"Are you lost?' "
Nowhe's getting, "Where
will be held at the re-
can I rent one of those?"
sort after Saturday's biking. The registration fee is $100 for the ride and an additional $30 for the dinner and reception. To register, visit www.cancerbikeout. org, email cancerbikeout©gmail.com, or call
A year after taking off in Southern Oregon lakes
IOVBS 0 8
and starring in extreme whitewater shows, stand-up
paddleboards arebecoming the watercraft du jour for
amore pedestrian crowd enjoyingsuitable stretches of the upper Rogue on their feet instead of theirbehinds.
"We've seenthem onthe lakes, and now we're seeing
Todd Wells at 541-6395818.
them on the river, and it
Hunting workshop this weekend
used to be just us," says Pete
The Central Oregon Shooting Sports Asso-
Oars and Paddles in Talent.
Newport, a 21-year SUP vet-
eran and owner of Sawyer "We're probably another season awaybefore it really
ciation will host its an-
nual Hunter's Sight-In Workshop from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Range officers will provide assistance to adjust scopes or iron sights. Targets, shooting benches and a covered firing line are provided. There is a $7 fee per gun for nonmembers, $5 for COSSA members. Eye and ear protection is required. The COSSA shooting park is located east of Bend off U.S. Highway 20, a half-mile past milepost 24 on the north side of the highway. For more information, visit www.oregonshooting.com. — Bulletin staff reports
TRAIL UPDATE
takes off. But it's here. It's
he wind blew cold across the jagged lava-
Willamette Valley cattle to
wealthy miners east of the
rockridgeas Cascade peaks rose into the
mountains. Today his route
sky in nearly every direction.
remains as the mostly singletrack path to Four-In-One-
North and Middle Sister were so close I could make out details of the snow on the glaciers that
Cone, Sullivan notes. I made the 45-mile, hour-
long drive to the Scott Trailhead just a few miles past the
Dee Wright Observatory on a cool, sunny morning last
covertheirwest faces.
week. The trailhead is located on
The long day hike to FourIn-One Cone near McKenzie
Pass is not only a challenging workout with rewarding views, but it also offers intriguing lessons in both history and geology.
the north side of the highway
MARK MORICAL
and is a starting point for hikes to Scott Lake, Benson Lake and Scott Mountain to the northwest. But cross the
Highway 242to Four-In-One Cone — a row of four cinder cones in the Three Sisters Wilderness — follows the original path of pioneer Captain Felix
highway immediately from Prominent Oregon hiking the trailhead, and hikers can author William Sullivan offers begin the trek east to FourIn-One Cone. (The more details of Scott's adventures in a recent piece on the Scott renowned Obsidian Trail just Trail. In 1862, according to to the south is a limited-entry Sullivan, Scott blazed a wagarea that requires reservaon road across the Cascades tions and a parking permit.)
Scott.
near McKenzie Pass to sell
The Scott Trail from state
Scatt Trail to
exciting." Raftingliveries and sporting-goods stores offer SUPs
Four-In-One Cone
fordaily rentalsfor around
To reach the Scott Trailhead from Bend, drive to Sisters, then head 16.1 miles west on state Highway 242to the Scott Lake RoadFS 260. Turn right and park at the first trailhead. (About a one-hour drive from Bend.) Cross the highway to find the trail. After 0.2 miles, stay left at a junction to the Obsidian Trail. Trail features deep forest, lava rock and aquick scramble to the lava-rock-covered Four-In-OneCone. Round-trip total is
towaters such asthe 7-mile stretch of the Rogue from
about8t/2miles.
on whitewater.
$40 and steeringpaddlers Rogue Elk Park to Shady Cove, and the water-playing public is responding. Some outdoor stores and programs are now offering SUP seminars, and Barack-
er is now a licensed SUP guide offering tutorials and guided floats on stretches of the riverbest-suitedto a paddler's individual skills. Casual weekend rafters with a decent sense for navigating the upper Rogue can find these surprisingly stable boards easytobecome accustomed to on area lakes or other flatwater confines
before testingtheir mettle SeeRogue River/D2
SeeScott Trail /D2
With ChrisSabo There's been little change on the trails as we approach fall weather. Shorter daylight hours and lower temperatures are setting in, so be sure to be prepared for unexpected delays. Weekend use will continue to be moderate to high on the trails
with good weather. There's a possibility for new blowdown on trails with incoming fall storms, and we'll likely see the occasional snow at higher elevations as the weeks progress. Lava River Caveis closed for the season due to stair reconstruction and will reopen next summer. SeeTrails /D2
sin our's i e -sense'a e When I bought the Spiderman rod, I picked it up late at night. An outdoor writer's reputation is shaky enough without being seen with a Spidey rod. The clerk asked, "Would you like a bag for that?"
"Two, please."
I put the second
bag on top and scuttled out. You can find them in the sporting goods section of any department store. There is usually a selection of themed rodsfor 5-year-old
fishermen. I briefly considered Barbie, Transformers and Disney Princess, but
Spiderman is known for being expert in the applied sciences,for his neuroses,for
GARY
~5
LE WI S
e~eg
Lodge, called to tell me that one of his clients, a 40-something angler who hadn't fishedinthreedecades, caught a 39-pound, 2-ounce
r/ / =
lake trout. A quick scan of
grabbing hold and not letting go. Sounds like a kokanee
the record book reminded me
fisherman.
that the state record is still 40 pounds, 8 ounces. Those
From various points of the compass, a dozen of us converged at Odell Lake Lodge. Sierra Koepfle with Carson
big fish are hard to get in the boat, but I think someone is going to break that record soon.
Oil and Ben Brown from Chevron had put the trip
together, and I tagged along for another chance at catching the new state record. I
wouldn't be using the Spidey pole. Two weeks ago, Jon Dit-
gen, the owner of Odell Lake
ae 0
Lake trout, also called
mackinaw, are gluttons. They eat fish (kokanee, rainbows, bull trout and other macks) up to one-third their size.
While they are choking down the last meal, they try to grab another bite.
SeeSpiderman/D5
Gary Lewis/For The Bulletin
Ken Laudahl shows off a trophy lake trout from Odell Lake. This one measured 33 inches and weighed13-t/2 pounds. Note the bite
marks halfway along the body.
D2 THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
•
• Keep sending us your summer shots to run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work atbendbulletin.com/summer2014 and we'll pick the best for publication.
• Email other good photos of the great outdoors to rendnrphotos©bendbulletin.com andtell us a bit about where and when youtook them. All entries will appear online, andwe'll choose the best for publication in print.
5
•
• Submissionrepuirements:Include asmuchdetail as possiblewhen andwhereyoutook it, andanyspecial technique used—aswell asyourname,hometown andphonenumber.Photosmustbehigh resolution (at least 6incheswideand300dpi) andcannot be altered.
:lclc
=t
LET THERE BE LIGHT
Emma Brandt captures a stunning sunset shining over the Deehutes River.
C \
Rogue River
Dee Wright ' Observat
MOUNT W ASHINGTO N WILDERNESS
Continued from D1 "People recognize this is something they can do,"
McKenzie ' Pass
:„' C
C~ i /
t/P r ogg
C C
C C
\
I
C
c- C // C/ 11
C
cr
/C /
Scott Trail
/
'g Cfco
/
:; ~ Lake
Four-In-OneCone
Scott Trailhe
r
6,258 ft. .--4ScottTrail ' A. intersection ', withPCT THREE SISTERS / C WILDERNESS C .
/
•
IC
/
r--
Collier Cone 7,534 ft.
Mark Morical1The Bulletin
Much of the Scott Trail to Four-In-One Cone is a path between forest and e lava flow.
MOIINT
SCHUTES N ONAL
,'y, WASHINGTDN 'tiIIILDEIINESS',
Sisters
o(
Scott Trail Continued from D1
junction to ascend the highest point of the cone, at 6,258 feet.
'C
CCC
I CC CCC
/
/Ao ' Artr
two hours, making a left at a
I
I
C
C 1
A
North Sister 10,085 ft.
CC
C C
CC
ac
I CC. /
T+ E SISTERS WIL RNFSS /
A
Middle Sister 10,047 ft. C
The trail starts deep in an The trail at the top of the jagalpine forest, and I followed ged-rock ridge follows the rim switchbacks along the pris- of the four cones, which spew so I was ready to descend. tine ribbon of dirt. The path four separate lava flows to the About a mile east of the was rarely steep, but I could west. It's a fairly steep drop- Four-In-One Cone, the Scott
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
the trailhead, the Scott Trail
leads to the summit of 6,116f oot Scott M o untain. T h i s hike also offersspectacular
feel the effects of the steady
offfrom the trailto the sea of
Trail connects to the Pacif-
elevation gain. About one hour and nearly
lava rock below.
ic Crest TraiL I was tempted glimpses of Cascade peaks, to continue to that junction, but it does not lead hikers as
Aside from the breathtak-
ing views of North and Midrain changes drastically from dle Sister to the south, from a dirt path through the forest atop the cone I could also see 3 miles into the hike, the ter-
which features a lupine-dot-
close to North and Middle Sis-
ted meadow, according to
ter as the Four-In-One Cone trip.
Sullivan, but after more than 4 miles, I was ready to head
to a rocky trail through basalt
Mount Jefferson, Three Fin-
flows. The path then becomes more sandy as it follows the edge of a lava rock wall. North and Middle Sister pop into view there but then disappear behind the rocks until hikers reach Four-In-One
gered Jack and Mount Wash- back. ington to the north. To the The hike back to the trailwest were the endless rugged head seemed to take longer tree-covered hills of the west- — as it often does on such ern slope of the Cascades. outings — but I made it back I continued to explore the in two hours for a round-trip trail atop the ridge, but the total of about 8t/2miles in four wind grew so cold and in- hours.
Cone. I made it t here in about
Trails Continued from D1 Brush Creek Trail is impassable to all traffic with no trail maintenance scheduled.
tense that after 10 minutes or
If hiked northwest from
Trails to Cabot, Shirley, Carl and Junction lakes are mostly cleared and opened. Sugar Pine Ridge, Jefferson Lake trail and the section of Cabot Lake Trail north of Junction Lake is off limits due to fire
closure. There are about 15 trees down on the trail around Todd Lake, and the meadows are saturated with muddy sections. The dog-leash requirement will be in effect through Monday
The Scott Trail is one of many in the McKenzie Pass area that allow hikers to get
up close and personal with Cascade peaks without the exhausting inconvenience of,
you know, climbing to the top of them. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
on trails along the Deschutes River corridor and to and around Broken Top, South Sister, Todd, Green and Moraine lakes and trails. Be aware of campfire restrictions, except in designated campgrounds.
Baracker says. "This doesn't
'Hey, throw one of those in.
I'm gonna give it a try,' " Stephenson says during a midday float on the Rogue Elk to Shady Cove stretch. Stephenson typically tells
have to be an extreme sport. first-timers to practice for It can be a lifestyle sport a while in slackwater arlike rafting." eas such as the Elk Creek With o ne exc e p tion: swimming area off HighWhitewater stand-up pad- way 62. The Rogue Elk dlers have zero e xpecta- stretch is home to some of tions of always standing up. the upper Rogue's most "There is a 100 percent manageable whitewater, so chance you will be going that's typically where his swimming at some point in customers take their inauthe trip," Baracker says. gural runs. Stand-up paddleboarding M ost w h i tewater S U P traces its genesis to Hawaii, boards a r e h ar d - plastic where natives have stood inflatables, because they on surfboards and paddled handle the whitewater and around the open surf for rocks better than standard years. The watersports pub- boards. While a typical raft lic took notice in the mid-
is inflated to 2 pounds of
2000s, and the sport has
pressure per square inch,
spread around the world. SUPs inflate to 15 psi, SteIt's ironic t hat S awyer phenson says. "Look at that," Stephenis one of the companies that helped fuel the sport's son says as he raps his w orldwide g r o wt h wit h knuckles on the board. "You the development of the lon- can't even tell they're in-
ger-shaft paddles SUP'ers need, even though locals knew little i f a n y thing about paddleboarding. "If you go over to Bend, you'll see 100 to 200 a day
flated," he says. They cost about $1,000 apiece, and he expects to add more next year as SUP exposure grows. "People are really liking floating t he Des c h utes them," Stephenson says. "I t hrough town, bu t y o u like it, but I'm not that good didn't see it here forever," at it. I still pretty much als ays Mik e M c M u llen a t ways take a face-plant." Black Bird Shopping Center The best way to reduce face-plants is t o c r ouch in Medford. Black Bird has six boards slightly with feet apart, rowand paddles for rent, and ing in steady strokes like in they were initially used by a canoe, with the paddle first-timers taking them to also acting as a rudder. lakes, McMullen says. Beginners often drop to "I see more and more peo- one or both knees through ple trying them on the riv- rapids after generating just er," McMullen says. "Some- enough speed to steer. More times I have all six rented at seasoned paddlers such as the same time." Baracker will point their Devon Step h enson boards upstream and float caught the SUP bug years backward into certain rapago in Hawaii, and now he ids where they can "surf" in paddles the upper Rogue the whitewater such as kayoccasionally. This year he akers often do. added two SUPs to his fam-
ily's Shady Cove rafting business, Rapid Pleasure Rentals, and they have become popular additions. " People rent a r af t a n d
"It's not something that
everybody's going to want to do," Baracker says. "But for s k iers, s nowboarders
and people in other sports, it's a great way to be on the
see them and someone says, river."
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
u e oun 'ssou ernwa erso ersoiu e By Craig Hill • TIre (Tacoma, Wash.) News Tribune
BOSTON HARBOR, Wash.f you don't count the pesky raccoon and the grazing deer, chances are pretty good you'll have Hope Island to yourself if you stay there on a weeknight. As the sun sets, you can still see the house lights
and heartheyapping dogs from theneighborhood across Squaxin Passage, but it hardly spoils the experience of having your own private island. "Hope Island is a great des- cruises that first year. But five years later, he's captain of an Olympia-based s tarting to w onder if m o r e 41-foot ketch c a lled C l ara people are starting to become June. "Seattle has Blake Island interested in exploring the and Winslow, but nothing like Sound's quieter waters. what we have down here." After booking 20 cruises Specifically, that sense of last year, he'd already booked solitude. 40 in early August and expectThe North Puget Sound and ed that number to climb to 60 its iconic boating destinations by the end of the year. "This has been the first year such as the San Juan Islands and Deception Pass cast a where we've felt like this could pretty large shadow over the actually be a business," Kramwaters south of the Tacoma er said. "... But I can't say how Narrows. much is the weather or how And while sailboats, kayaks much is something else." tination," said Rick Kramer,
and watercraft head north, those who head south find wa-
ters that are typically calmer and less crowded. "We're definitely overshad-
Cg
s
Chris Fry, owner of West
Bay Paddleboards, says his business has seen significant growth in recent years, too. Fry was on the front end
Photos by Craig Hill /The (Tacoma, Wash.) News Tribune
The North Puget Sound nnd its iconic boating destinntions such as the San Juan Islands and Deception Pass cast n pretty large shadow over the waters south of the Tacoma Narrows. And while sailboats, kaynks and watercraft head north, those who head south find waters that are typically calmer and less crowded.
owed," said Scott McHugh, of of the stand-up paddleboarding trend when he opened his shop in 2008. Six years later, here to Elliott Bay sometime. he says the South Sound's compare favorably to m o re You get to Tacoma and sud- calm waters are ideal for popular destinations in the denly the number of b oats learning the sport. North Sound. "Really, it's great for any hu"But everybody goes north," multiply. And they keep multiplying the closer you get to man-powered watercraft," Fry Campbell said. "Write about Seattle." said. "It's great paddling." the South Sound all you want. When Kramer and his wife, Ken Campbell, a Tacoma That's not going to change." Ada, started t h eir c h arter s ea-kayaking author a n d At Boston Harbor Marina, company, Mystic Journeys, long-distance paddler, used to visitors typically rent kayaks in Olympia five years ago, it lead guided tours at the Nis- for about two hours, McHugh was hard for them not to feel qually River Delta and other said. That puts Hope Island overlooked. Kramer was start- locations on the South Sound. out of reach for most, so ing to understand why others He's also paddled most of the McHugh says kayakers enjoy who'd opened similar busi- North Sound. paddling the calm waters and nesses in the Olympia area He says South Sound des- watching seals and gulls. " The calmer water is r ewere unsuccessful. tinations such as Jarrell Cove He says he booked about 15 and Hope Island state parks ally nice for people who are the Boston Harbor Marina. "Just take a boat ride from
McMicken Island: Drop anchor and hikethe short trail on the tiny island. Thestate park webHere are12 places worth visiting by boat in the site says the island is home to anactive bald eagle South Sound: nestandanabundanceofshellfish.parks.wa.gov Boston Harbor:For $2 you can makeasoftHnmmersly Inlet: Described by somepaddiers serve ice creamcone. The marina also has a as a saltwater river, this narrow inlet leads boaters surprisingly large selection of beer, thework of to Shelton. The currents can betricky and the Scott McHugh, the storekeeper andresident beer water can beshallow, so this trip is for the expeaficionado. Themarina also haskayak rentals and rienced. sells fresh fish, crab andoysters from its dock. Allyn:Paddle over from Jarreil Cove andyou Brunch buffet on the dock onSundaymornings and specialty brewers sharing their work at Friday won't feel guilty about devouring a BigBubba Super Burger, a1-pound Angusbeef burger covered night"Beer-B-Ques" on Friday nights through withbacon andcheese.bigbubbaburgers.com Sept. 19.bostonharbormari na.com Olympia:Visit Swantown Marina, rent a kayak Hope Island: The only way to reachthis island and eat breakfast at TugBoat Annie's. Visit the is by boat. A2-mile trail loops through the isiand's farmer's market or try yoga on astandup paddleforest. parks.wa.gov at West BayPaddleboards. syrantownmariJarrell Cove:An ideal place to be in the evening board na.com, tugboatannies.com, olympiafarmersmaras the sunset splashesvarious shades of pinks ketcom, yrestbaypaddleboards.com andoranges onthequietcove.ThereisoneCasAnderson Islnnd: With two freshwater lakes cade Marine Trail campsite here; otherwise you'll and quiet streets, the island can be arelaxing have to find a placeamongthe car campers. A getaway. Tacomasea kayaker andauthor Ken marina across the coveoffers plenty of supplies, Campbell recommends the island's loneCascadia a quiet place to relax andshavedice for the kids. Marine Trail camping area atCarlson Bay. wwta. parks.yra.gov olg Eagle Island:There's no camping allowed on HendersonInlet: An ideal place to paddle or this tiny island betweenAnderson and McNeil sail if you want to seeseals. You'll see dozens of islands, but it's easy to paddle to from Anderson them sunbathingontheiog booms, McHugh said. Island and anideal place for a lunch break for those making longer trips. parks.wa.gov Sqnnxin Island:Theisland is off limits, but paddling around it is a classic South Sound trip. Lnngbranch:Rick Kramer, owner of Olympia's If your map shows astate park on the island, you Mystic Journeys, says, "Longbranch is anice harbor to drop anchor in."longbranchimprovehaveanoldmap.Theparkhasbeenclosedsince mentciub.org the 1990s.
I DOZEN DESTINATIONS
O~ y .
inexperienced (kayakers),e McHugh said. "The wake from a bigger boat can really knock the stuffing out of a lit-
tle kayak." Although some boaters will
tell you Puget Sound can almost seem like a lake south of the Tacoma Narrows, that doesn't mean i t ' s w i t h out
challenges. The currents in Dana Pas-
sage south of Harstine Island can takepaddlers placesthey hadn't planned.
Fry said he got caught up in the Dana Passage currents on his paddleboard a few years ago. With big waves tossing him around, he had to drop to his
knees as he paddled toward calmer water.
Fry also enjoys the challenge of Hammersley Inlet. The narrow waterway leading to Shelton is known for
strong currents and should be attempted only by experienced paddlers. Shallow spots make it challenging for other boaters,too,K ramer said.
"You have to do your homework," Fry said. "If you go in
For stunning evening views and a quiet cove great for the whole family, Jnrrell Cove State Park is the place.
there at the wrong time, you
are going to be in trouble. But it really is a rush. A saltwater river. It is fun."
er said. rattled off McMicken Island, Despite the South Sound's Longbranch, Stretch Island
F ry typically puts in i n reputation for c al m w a t er, and a handful of state parks. Shelton and paddles nearly 20 Kramer says he's able to hoist "It's a special place." miles back to Olympia. the sails on about 75 percent "I've done it three times, and
I've been successful once," Fry sard.
Actually, he made it safely all three times, sometimes stopping for a break at Boston Harbor, but only once did he feel as if he timed the cur-
of his cruises. "But people are
happy either way," Kramer said. "There ar e
rents and weather just right so
~+ccoolsculpting
that the trip wasn't especially challenging.
LE F F E L GE N T E R
But that same weather that
can make paddling tough also makes for good sailing, Kram-
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places to explore in the South Sound," Kramer said as he
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
UTDOORS
END
Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylifeibendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of eachmonth; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www.
BIRD WATCHIMG GREEN RIDGEMIGRATION HAWK WATCH:Help High Desert Museum curators and the East Cascade Audubon Society count raptors as they migrate south; meet at 9 a.m. Thursday at the Indian Ford Campground near Sisters; free; 541-382-4754.
sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB: 7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.
HIKIMG
CYCLING
DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Led by skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds, and take in spring wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.
GROUP MOUNTAINBIKERIDE: W ednesday, Sept.17 at5:30 p.m .; meet at Pine Mountain Sports in Bend for a mountain bike ride for men and women of all abilities; divide into groups based on riding levels and pedal to the trails from the shop; free; www. pinemountainsports.com. ROAD CYCLINGFOR WOMEN: Wednesdays at 6 p.m. at Miller Elementary School in west Bend; free; 60-minute women's road rides for all levels; led by former road racing Olympian and world champion Marianne Berglund; 541-647-8149.
HUNTIMG HUNTERS'SIGHT-IN WORKSHOP: The Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association will host its annual Hunter's Sight-In Workshop on Sept.13-14 from 9a.m. to 4 p.m.; range officers will provide
assistance toadjust scopesor
FISHIMG
iron sights; $7 fee per gun for
nonmembers, $5for members; bring eye and ear protection; www.
CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond;
oregonshooting.com.
CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION: Meets W ednesdays at6:30 p.m. on Sept.17, Oct. 22, Nov. 19, and Dec. 3; VFW Hall, Redmond; 541-447-2804 or facebook.com at RMEFCentral Oregon. LEARN THEART OFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learn how to identify and interpret tracks, signs and scat of the animals in Central
www.cobc.us.
DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the
chapter is upto; 6 p.m.; meets on the first Monday of each month; Oregon Natural Desert Association offices, Bend; 541-306-4509, communications©deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509orbendcastingclub@ gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7
Oregon; 8a.m. to noon; two or more walks per month; $35; 541-6337045; dave©wildernesstracking.
com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meetsthe second
BIRD WATCH
North America'ssmallest hawk ShaIII-shinnedhawk Scientific name:Accipiter striatus Characteristics:Thesmallest of the North American accipiters, adult sharp-shinned hawks haveshort, broad wings, long, squaredtipped tails, reddish barring onthe underparts and small headswith a bluish-gray crown. Adults are aslaty blue-gray on the uppersides, while immature birds arebrowner onthe uppersides. Malesaverage10 to 12inches in length, andadult femalesaverage12 to 14 inches. Juvenile birds havethick, brown streaking ontheundersides. Bothadults and juveniles haveseveral dark bands ontheir tails. Juvenil eshaveyellow eyes,andadultshave reddish eyes. Breecling:Mayuseanabandoned crow's nest or build its own ofsmall sticks andtwigs in a tree. Both adults incubatethree to eight eggs for about five weeks;theyoungfledge atthree to four weeksold. Range:Foundthroughout most of North America, andinto Mexico in winter. During migration, hundreds ofsharp-shins may pass by migration counting stations. W ednesday ofeach month;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.
MISCELLAMEOUS WOMEN INTHE OUTDOORS CENTRAL OREGON: National Wild Turkey Federation's program introduces women to outdoors skills; Sept. 20 from 8 a.m. to 4
Tru e icient a i n
Habitat:Found in forests, riparian areasand small woodlands; during migration maybe in more openareas.Often visits backyard bird feedersespecially in winter to preyupon songbirds. Fool:Preys uponsmall to midsized songbirds but occasionally takessmall mammals, amphibians andlarge insects. Hunts bywaiting at a perch for prey,thenwill pursue prey with a rapid flight andwill chaseprey through thickets and shrubs. Comments:Femalesarelarger than males, sometimes byone-third; this sexual dimorCourtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service / Submitted photo phism increasesthe rangeof prey that the Sharp-shinned hawk adults take. In flight, the sharp-shinned's head barely projects beyondthe wings. Accipiter means "ahawk,"and striatus means"striped" Green Ridgehawk migration site abovethe in reference tothe feathering. Thenamesharp- Metolius River. shinned comes from the thin, flattened tarsus — Damian FaganisanEastCascadesAudubon leg bone.Thesebirds of prey areclosely relatSociety volunteerandCOCCCommunity Leaming ed to Cooper's hawksandnorthern goshawk, instructor. Hecanbe rsachedat two other members oftheaccipiter group. damian.fagan©hotmail.com. Current viewing: Woodlands and residential Sources: Oregon Department of Wildlife Resources, areas throughout Central Oregonsuch as whatbird.com and"The Audubon Society Encyclopedia of Shevlin Park. May also be observed at the North American Birds" by John Terres
p.m. at the Redmond Rod and Gun Club; classes in firearms, archery, dutch oven cooking, gardening, bike maintenance, self defense, and fly-fishing; $60 for adults, $35 for youth; register at tinyurl. com/wito2014; 541-610-8081; traceybryan@bendbroadband.com; facebook.com/wito.central.oregon. CENTRAL OREGON GUNAND CUSTOM KNIFE-MAKERS SHOW: Oct.4from 9a.m. to 5 p.m. atthe Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, North Sister room; $5; 541-610-3717.
RAFTING RAFT N' BREW:Thursdays at 4:30
p.m. Sun Country Tours partners with a different local brewery to present a Big Eddy rafting trip on the Deschutes River and a posttrip sampling of the brewery's craft beers; adults 21 and older only; $53 per person; 541-382-6277;
24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports range, milepost 24, U.S. adventures©suncountrytours.com; Association Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318www.suncountrytours.com. 8199,www.pinemountainposse. com. SHOOTING HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear a.m.; first and third Sunday of each and eye protection are provided; month; Central Oregon Shooting parent or guardian must sign in Sports Association range, milepost for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; month; Central Oregon Shooting 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass. Sports Association range, milepost com.
t a es racticean atience
ByRich Landers
want to go. "Those little things can add up to make abig difference." Good paddlers have an appreciation for subtlety.
The Spottesman-Review
SPOKANE, Wash. — Anyone can move a canoe, kayak or stand-up paddieboard over the water, but precious few
The Swansons take turns in
have savored the joy of paddling efficiently. When you see paddlers zigzagging up the Thorofare to Upper Priest Lake, bumping into logs and frittering away calories, they probably don't have a clue that there's a bet-
the bow and stern, although Brook takes the bow in races because his heavier body weight trims the canoe more efficiently. Once underway, the Swan-
ter way.
„.p.
J-stroke. "We do it even when
Even Brook Swanson had that mindset, to some degree.
"My parents were canoeists and I've paddled ali my life, but I didn't realize how much I did
not know until I started hanging out with really good paddlers," said Swanson, who's RichLanders/The Spokesman-Review been dipping into competitive Brook and Lisa Swanson are in perfect synch as they paddle their racing canoe in the Spokane River paddling in recent years. Classicin Spokane,Wa sh. It's no accident that Swan-
tend to think of sports such as
running, bicycling and swimming. Welook at paddling the
nature.
we're just cruising," he said. "We stnve for perfechon tn "It seems natural to us now to every stroke to the point that do as little with the paddle as we don't realize it anymore," possible that isn't pushing the John said. "When we paddle out on boat forward." Their fascination with pad- lakes, we get into a rhythm dling has propelled the Swan- similar to being out on a sons into good showings in long run or striding out on races from Spokane to Sacra- cross-country skis," Megan mento. They joined a six-per- said."It's really feels nice, espeson team that won the voya- cialiy in tandem, when you're geur canoe category in the gliding along." 444-mile Yukon River Quest
son and his wife, Lisa, were th e m o r b eing i n a c anoewith of a second of paddling techrecent Spokane River Classic. them to learn," Swanson said. nique captured in the frames.
the top tandem team in th e
craft over the water. They're
so happy with that; they don't They've become students in Ba u er, one of the local deans "My elbow is bent," Megan get around to appreciating the art of muscle-powering a of marathon paddling, is an said, reacting to the photo there'sso much more they can boat. elite canoeist who doesn't wor- of her applying a stationary do with their craft." "I don't c onsider myself r y a b out car shuttles because cross-bow draw to go around "The forward stroke is the a great paddler, but I've im- h e paddles up and down the a U-turn buoy in the race. last thing we teach in a class," "Note that she used that proved enormously Spokane and Little Megan said. "We spend most by joining up with Spokane when he stroke only briefly to get the of the time on turning strokes members of t h e MOS t fOlkS work sout. turn started to avoid losing like the draw and pry. There's "Jim always em- our momentum," said,John, so much joy in being able to (Spokane Canoe & ar e SO Kayak) Club," he f g t / phasi z es the me- who was applying a sweep maneuver efficiently." "That's the fun part of casard. chanics of the pad- stroke from the stern to aid the Brook te a chestf 78f. f:tT eg CBrt di e stroke, rotating turn while applying power. noeing," John said. "Getting biology at Gonzaga ppppe/ fpejt t he tor s o, re ach- The Rolands say they have your boat to go incircles, sideUniversity and has ing with the lower at least 10different strokes in ways, backwards and off at special interest in Qfgft.Qy gQ hand. Even a f t er their tool box, "and we proba- any angle you want to go." "The hardest thing to teach physiology andbio- Water. They're decades of p ad- bly use them all every time we mechanics. Lisaisa Sp Qgpp y diing , he strives to go out," John said. is an upright paddle," Megan "The top elbow should be said. "When it's in the water, it physlcai therapist bebetter" Swanson th th t They've been marsald. straight," continued Megan, should be perpendicular. Peoriedand boating to- they dOn't Me gan and John a physical therapist. "A bend ple want to do a long stroke gether for 14years ge~ gypUtid $p R o land s ay t h e y loses energy that you absorb from their feet back past their . but were spurred realized how much in your arms rather than in bottom. We teach a more efinto another level j ~" 6 mo r ethey had to your torso." ficient short stroke, with the of enjoyment when tl 1eie S SO l earn wh e n t h e y The Rolands say they've en- paddle shaft perpendicular in they noticed oth- mUCh m pye enrolled years ago joyed teaching and watching the water so it's not pushing er canoes blowing in one of the Spo- people get the feei of efficient clowI1 or Up. ~ "Another tendency is to foipast them e ight kane Canoe 8t Kay- paddling. years ago in a Spo- Wlftl tl7eli ak Ciub' s a n nual Open-mindedness is t he low the hull of the boat with kane River Canoe spring classes. The most important thing a stu- the paddle stroke," John said. Classic. Rolands, who won dent can bring to a paddling "But rather than following the " Part o f g o i n g — John Roland, th e citizens division class, John said. line of the boat (which curves), "Most folksare so comfort- you want to paddle a straight faster is getting a pa ddling instructorof the Spokane Rivbetter boat," Swaner Classic, went on able that they can propel their line forward to where you son said. "But we to become paddling were motivated by people fly- instructors. ing past us. Looking at photos of them"Jim Bauer, Tim Ahern, s elves paddling in the Classic,
endurance race last summer. They've learned to recognize a stroke of genius and apply it, whether it's in the old 80-pound Royalex boat Brook
t h e R o lands and Swansons
ing some local paddling gu- h ad a common response: Inrus. "I've spent a ridiculous stead of beauty in motion, they t i m e w a t ching a i i saw flaws in the 1/1000th
Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDouilas
has kept since childhood or the daggerlike 24-foot OC2 canoe that's so sleek it sports
an outrigger for stability. Once efficient paddling becomes second nature, dis-
tance melts away, Swanson said:"There's a big difference in how faryou cango at5m ph as opposed to 3 mph."
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Hts epiphany came tn the transition from c r uising to
trying to go faster, he said. "That was the biggest realization to me. You can work
aia C ~ S S t p
real hard paddling. It's good,
changingSmiles Denture & Implant Center
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amount o f
"But it also can be an ath-
letic endeavor," Swanson said. "People who want a workout
sons switch sides every few same way, as an outdoor fitstrokes to keep the canoe go- ness sport." ing straight rather than havThe Rolands say efficiency ing the stern paddler apply a eventually becomes second
M ost of u s f i g ure w e learned everything about paddling at summer camp when we were 9.
Stan Mrzygod,e he said, list-
aerobicexercise." Paddling can be casualindeed, you can go fishing and bring acooler of beer in a canoe. People of virtually any fitness level can do it.
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OREGON INSVRANCE DIVISIQN
•
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D5
FISHING REPORT Here is the weekly fishing report for Central Oregon, provided by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife: ANTELOPEFLATRESERVOIR: Fishing has been good for trout ranging from10to17 inches long; however, the quality of the flesh isn't very good due to the warm water. The water level is a couple of feet belowthe end of the gravel portion of the ramp. CLEAR LAKE: Water levels continue to get lower in Clear Lake. No recent reports on fishing. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Anglers report fair fishing in the channels for rainbow. Closed from one hour after sunset until one hour before sunrise. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:Fishing has been consistently good. Anglers are reminded that trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead
Gary Lewis/For The Bulletin
A 22-pound lake trout in the net at Odell Lake. This fishbit a big M-2 Flaffish while choking down s 10-inch kokanee.
Spiderman Continued from D1 At Odell, the kokanee run
here." I handed him the Spidey rod and tied on a red Crippled
Tooth marks. Something
tried to eat that big mack. Something had that 33-inch f ish down
EAST LAKE:Anglers report good fishing with reports of rainbow trout being caught. Catch-andrelease for all rainbow trout that DO NOThave an adipose-fin clip. FALL RIVER:Anglers report good fishing. Restricted to flyfishing only with barbless hooks. HAYSTACKRESERVOIR: Fishing has been excellent for bass. Trout fishing has been slow. HOSMERLAKE:Anglers report good fishing for rainbow trout. Restricted to fly angling only with barbless hooks. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Fishing has been excellent for bass. Anglers are reminded there are small numbers of spring chinookand summer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed. Kokanee are beginning to stage in the upper end of the Metolius Arm before spawning and are averaging 11 to 13 inches. LAKE SIMTUSTUS:Fishing for rainbow trout has been fair in the upper part of the reservoir. Anglers report catching many pikeminnow. LAURANCELAKE: Norecent reports. Creel studies in past years, however, have shown some of the best fishing in the lake is in September. METOLIUS RIVER:Anglers report fair dry fly and nymph fishing. Fly-fishing only above
out 60 feet of line.
i t s t h r oat a n d
clamped down on both sides. is 25. The landlocked sock- Something at least twice as eye are considered one of the big as a 33-inch mackinaw. best-eating of all the salmon We made a slow turn and species. dropped our baits again. This
We trolled, and M c Cort held the rod as if it were a web
Scott K i m m o ns , K en Laudahl, Gene Jones, Corey McCort and I fished with Dit-
Bink. McCort's spider-sense kicked in. "I got one!" He
shooter. The minute hand on my watch ticked off another 30 minutes of tedium.
time, Kimmons grabbed the
rod when it doubled over. I tried to reel in the smaller
reeled in a 10-inch kokanee.
gen the first afternoon. My old Flatfish and hooked his line. McDevittzigged andzagged. friend John McDevitt guided As soon as Ditgen had cut the We dropped the downriggers the other group for kokanee. U-20 free, the fish ran through down, ~ e d t hem up again We motored toward the west the other two lines, and we and changed speeds. No bites end, where, Ditgen said, the had a nasty web of braided on the trolling gear. McCort fish had been the last few days. lines to unwind while Kim- kept jigging, and thenhe set the We found them on the first m ons kept the pressure on the hook again. He swept that Spidey rod up over his head as if it pass, a stack of big macks that big fish. showed as orange smears on This one pulled the scale to were drivingthe steel home in a the depth finder, 90 feet down. 22 pounds and stretched the 50-pound chinook. "Whoa there! With g reat We dropped two M-2 Flat- tape to 38 inches. fish plugs on the downriggers The next fish was McCort's, power there must also come then clipped on two U-20 Flat- an 8-pounder. Then Jones great responsibility." fish on the inside rods. In less landed his, about the same But the filament held, and than five minutes, one of the size. Being last in line, I caught the rod flexed with the weight rods bounced. and released a 5-pounder and of another 10-inch landlocked Laudahl popped the line out a 9-pounder. We had hookups sockeye. You'd have thought we were of the downrigger clip and set on each pass. the hook. The rest of us reeled Our other boat managed to a bunch of 5-year-olds the way in and cleared the decks to land a few kokes, the biggest we celebrated when McCort let him battle the fish. A few of which ran about 16 inches. pulled his second fish into the minutes later, the big spotted In the morning, we swapped net. char flashed like a mirror in boats. We went three hours — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV"and the clear blue water. In the net without a bite. Even the chocit measured 33 inches, and my olate doughnuts didn't have authorof"JohnNosler— Going scale said it weighed almost 14 enough magic to break our Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's pounds. It was a brute, but it slump. Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other was also bleeding from puncM cCort was th e f i rst t o ture wounds on both sides of crack. "Give me something to titles. Contact Lewis at www. do," he said. "I'm going crazy its dorsal fin. GaryLewisOutdoors.com.
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Submitted photo
Raccoon Pink,courtesy Ken's Alaskan Tackle,Soldotna, Alaska.
andmustbereleasedunharmed.
Herring and told him to strip
10 to 18 inches and the limit
FLY-TYING CORNER
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In Alaska's coastal waters, the Dolly Vardenmigrates to the ocean, where it maystay for as long asfive years. When it returns to spawn, it is one of the most aggressive fish in the river. It makes alivingonsalmonspawn,decayingfleshand babysalmon. One interesting pattern used to target dollies in freshwater is the Raccoon, a robust wet fly that when tied in polar pink can imitate shrimp, flesh or a minnow. Fish the Raccoon Pink with a floating line and a7-foot leader. To get the fly to run close to the bottom, pinch a single split shot on the leader about12 inches up from the fly. Cast andswing it, or roll-cast it with the "Kenai Flip" when targeting fish along aseam. Tie this pattern with light pink thread on aNo. 4-6 long straighteye wet-fly hook. Slide alarge brass bead upagainst the eye. For the tail, tie in grizzly schlappen then build the body with polar shrimp-pink UVsparkle chenille. Tie in a soft grizzly hackle collar and finish with a pink thread headwrap behind the bead. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin Bridge 99. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. Trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must be released unharmed. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Norecent reports. The water level is getting low enough that it will make launching larger boats difficult or impossible. PAULINA LAKE: Anglers report fair fishing for rainbow and brown trout. Catch-and-release for all rainbow trout that DO NOThave an adiposefin clip. PINE HOLLOW RESERVOIR: The reservoir is warming up and has been stocked, and is still providing good fishing in the early morning
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and late evening. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR:Fishing has been slow for trout but the fish that have been caught have been large. Bass and crappie fishing has been good. PRINEVILLEYOUTHFISHING POND:Anglers are reminded that fishing is limited to youth 17 years old and younger. There is also a twofish bag limit. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to anglers 17 years old and younger. TAYLORLAKE: Fishing for rainbows will be slow due to hot temperatures, but anglers can shift their efforts to largemouth bass. WALTONLAKE:Fishing has been
good.
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Helping Central OregoniansStay Healthy ThiS glOSSy Bulletin PubliCatiOn anSWerS tough queStiOnS abOut lOCal healthCare tOPiCS. High DeSert PULSE iS a quarterly magaZine Created to helP PrOmOte, enCOurage and maintain an aCtiVe and healthy lifeStyle. EaCh iSSue featureS lOCal StOrieS WhiCh eXPIOre health-related iSSueS WhiCh toUCh Our liVeS, With in-dePth rePOrting that Central OregonianS eXPeCt. The magaZine iS diStributed in The Bulletin and at health OutletS, mediCal OffiCeS and On area raCkS.
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
r ea in awa rom
i c a se i n s
TV SPOTLIGHT
include the sitcom "Frasier" and the current Netflix dra-
By Neil Genzlinger
ma "The Killing." Now a real-
New Yorrr Times News Service
ity show and a company that
A few weeks ago, when the New York Yankees were on the road playing the Baltimore Orioles, Yankee pitcher
produces what the city may be best known for are hoping to cash in: "Grounded in Seattle" is coming to We TV beginning Oct. 11. According
Brandon McCarthy made this wisecrack via Twitter:
" forgetting to p ack m y
wearable 'NO, I H A V E N 'T S EEN TH E W I R E ' s a n d-
as they are on the "The Mc-
Carthys," a CBS comedy to make its debut Oct. 30. The repartee, though, is pretty good as chatty family members meddlein one another's lives. Laurie Metcalf makes a
dandy matriarch.
to an announcement from the
Modesto, California
Barista Coffee Co.,the series will be a " brutally honest
This city is the setting for a midseason ABC series called
look into the lives behind the
"American Crime" that is like-
wich board before coming to Baltimore has proven to be
scenesof girlsfrom a variety ly to generate attention, with of backgrounds" who work as Felicity Huffman and Timo-
disastrous."
costumed baristas in the com-
thy Hutton among the stars.
For better or worse, some towns and cities end up being Ben Garvin/The New YorkTimes defined by their presence in a A setting in a real location outside the tired "New York or Los television show. Baltimore is a Angeles"duopoly can help aTV seriesstandout— alesson some case in point, at least for fans shows making their debuts in the 2014 season have embraced. of the HBO series "The Wire," Here, a statue of Mary Richards, a character in "The MaryTyler which was set there. Moore Show," was erected in downtown Minneapolis in 2006.
pany's coffee stands. It will also apparently be a brutally honest version of product placement.
The story, the show's website says, involves an attack on a white couple and resulting racial tensions, and some locals have not been thrilled.
Television tends to be lazy when it c omes to l o cating
shows. Plenty, of course, are ton, South Carolina, where
where creator Matt Groening
f i c tional p laces, in- it is set. "Topless Prophet," a
cluding the forthcoming Fox shows "Gracepoint," which
said in 2012 the Springfield Cinemax reality show about from "The Simpsons" is set, so-called gentlemen's clubs in just added a Simpsons mural
takes place in a nonexistent
Detroit, is not doing that be-
California coastal commu-
leaguered city any favors.
nity, and "Wayward Pines,"
"The Wire" wasn't the most at some less-than-familiar loflattering portrait o f B a l t i- cales we'll be visiting in the
set in
named fora made-up Idaho town. A wearying number of other series take place in New York or Los Angeles. So when a setting comes along that is not New York, not Los Angeles and yet real, it can help a
series stand out. W hether that's a
g o od
thing for the town involved
is another matter. "Reckless," a CBS legal thriller-melodrama hybrid full of tawdry goings-on, has not exactly improved the image of Charles-
more either, but the series
to its arts center.
So here is a frivolous look coming months. Will the exposure generate the kind of
jasper, Alabama
"It's a sensationalistic, in-
Syfy has built a roster of quite good scripted shows,
accurate media portrayal of fictitious crime in our com-
but on Oct. 7, it tries what
munity that exploits victims
sounds like an amusing twist of crime and our community," on a workplace reality show: the Stanislaus County sheriff, "Town of the Living Dead," Adam Christianson, told The a series about the making of Modesto Bee. a zombie movie. The show is to chronicleefforts of a few
Battle Creek, Michigan
amateur filmmakers in Jasper, near Birmingham, to
Behind-the-scenes names attached to the CBS police drama "Battle Creek," ex-
complete "Thr33 Days Dead,"
which they are said to have pected midseason, include interest that results in T-shirts been working on for six years. Vince Gilligan, the creator of city despite the drug dealing and bus tours? Only time and Hey, the film must be real: It "Breaking Bad," and David and dysfunction depicted. ratings will tell: has a Twitter account and a Shore, whose credits include "House." An FBI agent (Josh Reality-TV towns can jump trailer (which looks terrible). on a bandwagon, too. On Seattle Duhamel) is dispatched to set the home page ofthe MonTelevision has been drawn Boston up a satellite office in Battle roe-West Monroe, Louisiana, periodically to Seattle for a The city has, of course, Creek, where he ends up in a Convention and Visitors Bu- while: The old series "Here been the setting fo r o t her buddy-cop partnership with reau website, the first thing Come the Brides," about log- shows — ever hear of a sitcom a reluctant detective (Dean you see is a picture of the Rob- gers and their womenfolk called "Cheers"? — but the Winters). The i nteragency ertson family of "Duck Dy- just after the Civil War, was attempts at a Boston accent tensions are familiar but alnasty." Springfield, Oregon, set there. More recent shows have rarely been as grating layed with touches of humor. developed such cachet that some of it rubbed off on the
ew a ma sur rise ami
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l
Dear Abby: I am five months they wish to participate, they are pregnant with my second child welcome. If not, make it clear that and engagedtoa wonderful man, you will do it without their help. "Tony." We get along well with my Your baby will not be alone. Acex-husband with whom I
s h are cording to the Census Bureau, the
custody of my first child. But problems may arise when the baby is born. I had a night of sex
this to become an issue between
us. Should I say something again, or just wait to see what Donna does? — Shortchanged Guy
population of mixedrace Ame r icans grew 3 2 p e rcent DEP,R from 2000 to 2010. Dear Abby: My with a friend who is girlfriend, "Donna," of a diff erent race. and I have been toTony knows about it and the possi- gether for eight years. We have a bility that the baby will be mixed. great relationship, respect each He feels strongly that he will help other and never argue. She has me raise the child as his own. a low-paying job, and I don't ask My family knows nothing about much of herin regard to rent or this, nor does my ex. How should other bills, but she does buy a few I handle the possible backlash groceries now and then.
Dear Shortchanged:That Donna would take the money, not tell
and confusion if this child is, in-
someone is in a stall? Should I try
deed, the product of my one-night stand? — Scared in the South
I have always told Donna that
if she ever needs money, all she has to do is ask me and I'll help with what I can. My dilemma is
you, and not pay it back or start
"feeding the kitty" is disappointing. Because it bothers you to the point of w r iting to me, tell her
what's on your mind. If you don't, it will fester until there is an eruption. Better to air this now, before
it grows out of proportion. Dear Abby:Upon going into a public women's restroom where
the doors of the stalls are closed, what is the polite way to check if to open the door or look under to see if therearefeet? — Gotta Go in California
Dear Scared: Say nothing prematurely. If your baby turns out
thatshe "borrowed" about $50 in Dear Gotta:The time-honored, change I had been saving in a cof- foolproof method is to check if
to be mixed race, deal with it mat-
fee can and didn't tell me. When I
there are feet. It's less disruptive
ter-of-factly. While there may be asked her about it, she said she'd than pushing on the door, which confusion, all you have to do is say put it back. That was more than a might startle an occupant. that you and Tony plan to raise this month ago. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com child together in a loving family. If Am I being petty? I'd hate for or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR WEDNESDAY,SEPT. 10, 2014: This year you are subject to wild swings in your luck. Also, a partner or loved one could be most unpredictable. You will learn not to worry so much about these impulsive moments and just go with the flow. You might desire more alone time. If you are single, there will be a tendency to choose people who don't need or want what you want emotionally. Get to know people Starsshowthe ging more thoroughly of dsyyoo I hsvs than usual when ** * * * D ynamic dating. lf you are ** * * p osltlve attached, you will recharge your *** Average
** So-so
romance byes-
* Difficult
caping your daily lives and going on
pace.Tonight:Takea m idweek break.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
have the ability to transform a difficult situation into a much easier one. The unexpected is likely to occur in a meeting or with a friend. Tonight: Where the gang is.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You might want to allow greater give-and-t ake between you and someone else. Though you might want to assume thelead once more, step backand
see what comesforward. Your nervous energy could transform if you exercise. Tonight: A must appearance.
LEO (July 23-Aug.22)
** * * Keep reaching out for more information. You might have the good together. ARIES knows how to spark your interest. fortune of running into someone who is an expert with the issue you are ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * You initially might feel uncom- dealing with. Your optimism will draw in many different types of people, often fortable when dealing with a money from different cultures. Tonight: Be matter. Confusion is likely to add to the adventuresome. difficulty of settling this issue easily. It would be wise to walk away from the VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) issue for a while. A spontaneous action *** * You seem to enjoy oneperson's could recalibrate the situation. Tonight: company more than others. You often As you like it. hang out together, laughing and sharing stories. This person's spontaneity deTAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * Note whatyou feel is going onbe- lights you to no end. Be aware of what you are spending when you're with him hindthe scenes.Don'tallow someone's or her, as you tend to go overboard. Tonervous energy to throw youoff or undermineyou.Stay focused.Know where night: All smiles. you are coming from, and you will create LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) more give-and-take as a result. Tonight: ** * * D efer to someone else, as he or
more vacations
Keep your owncounsel. GEMINI (May 21-June20)
** * * Your smile draws others toward you. Your ideas make sense. Tap into your positive attitude, and you'll
she can handle aparticular issue much better than you can. Don't hesitate to speak your mind and explain your priorities. Your imagination could have a big impact on your schedule. Ease up the
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * You seem to be too focused on achieving a long-term goal. How you deal with someone could change significantly once you have a serious talk with him or her. As a result, you might be more empathetic to this person. Tonight: Play it easy.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * Y our mind seems to take nearly every sentence you hear and head off to Fantasy Land with it. Obviously, staying in the here and now could be a major issue. Acknowledge this tendency to fall into reverie, and avoid making a mistake. Tonight: Go for something frisky.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * Deal with a family member directly, or handle a domestic issue headon. You cannot avoid this situation, even if you would like to. Your spontaneity is likely to take you down a new path, which could shock a partner, roommate or family member. Tonight: Happiest at
home. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh. 18)
** * * You speak, and others listen. Explaining your idea might be easy, yet grasping someone else's thoughts could be a lot harder. Pull yourself out of your own thinking. Try to walk in this per-
son's shoes to seewhere there is com-
mon ground. Tonight: Visit with friends.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You have a tendency to go to extremes. Recognize what is going on, and make a point of walking away from distorted thinking. A sudden risk could toss some confusion into your plans. Be sure that you can take a loss here before committing. Tonight: Get some exercise. © King Features Syndicate
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AS ABOVE/SO BELOW(R) 1:45, 5,7:45, 10:10 • BOYHOOD (R) 12:45, 4:20, 8 • CHEF(R) l,6:20 • THE EXPENDABLES 3 (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:20 • FORRESTGUMPIMAX (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6,9:15 • GHOSTBUSTERS (PG) 1:10, 3:55, 7,9:35 • THE GIVER(PG-13) 12:50, 4:30, 7:25, 9:55 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)Noon,3,6:50, 9:45 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY3-0 (PG-13)12:30,3:30, 7:20, 10:15 • THEHUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY (PG)12:05,3:05,6:05, 9 • THE IDENTICAL (PG) 11:45 a.m., 2:50, 7:15, 10 • IF I STAY(PG-13) 1:20, 4:05, 7:05, 9:40 • LET'S BE COPS(R) 1:30, 4:45, 7:30, 10:05 • THE NOVEMBER MAN(R) 12:20, 3:35, 6:35, 9:25 • SINCITY:A DAME TO KILLFOR (R)3:45,9:05 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-13)11:35a.m., 2:55,6:40,9:IO • WHENTHE GAME STANDS TALL (PG)11:50a.m.,3:20, 6:30,9:30 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
TV TOOAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m.on 2,9,"The Middle" — As the Hecks prepare to take the trip to Walt Disney World that
Sue (EdenSher) won,Axl (Charlie McDermott) anxiously waits for his grades to be posted. Brick (Atticus Shaffer) begs Frankie and Mike (Patricia Heaton, Neil Flynn) for a detour to North Carolina, hoping to meet his online girlfriend. Once the family gets to Florida, a series of unfortunate events threatens their fun in "Orlando." Sp.m.onCW, "Penn STeller: Fool Us" —The use of sharp objects is an element of some magic acts, and since this new episode is titled "Penn Gets Nailed," you can expect that to be the case here — with Mr. Jillette
emerging unscathed,onehopes.
(We can pretty much vouch that he did: The hour was taped several years ago, and he's still around.) Cubic Act, Nick Einhorn, Michael Vincent and Morgan 8 West are the featured illusionists. Jonathan Ross is the host. 8 p.m.on FOOD, "Restaurant Stakeout" —In the season finale,"Million Dollar Stakeout," Willie comes to the aid of Anthony, the owner of Trovato's Due, an Italian eatery in Oakland Park, N.J. He had thought this restaurant would be a cakewalk after
previously opening a very successful pizzeria with his brother, but now Anthony is a very uncool million dollars in debt. Unfortunately, as Willie soon discovers, the biggest obstacle they have to overcome is Anthony's own stubborn nature. 9 p.m. on CW, "The100"Finn and Clarke (Thomas McDonell, Eliza Taylor) escape from one perilous situation only to encounter a new enemy. Raven (Lindsey Morgan) is also confronted with a new danger. Bellamy (Bob Morley) acts heroically to save Jasper (Devon Bostick). Murphy (Richard Harmon) gets his long-awaited revenge. Those still aboard the Ark begin to come to terms with their fate in "We Are Grounders — Part1." 9 p.m. on LIFE, "Bring It!"The Dancing Dolls head to Memphis, Tennessee, to settle an old score with the Dynamic Diamond Dolls, a rival squad, in the new episode "Dolls vs. Dollz — The Rematch." Elsewhere, Camryn has trouble learning a new routine, jeopardizing her dreams of becoming co-captain. The Dolls also compete against an all-male dance team in a hip-hop contest. Cr Zap2it
Pure. &m/6 Co.
aj. B~ dU Bend Redmond
John Day
r
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • DAWN OFTHE PLANETOF THE APES (PG-13)6 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)2:30 • TAMMY (R)9'15 • After 7p.m.,showsare2tandolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. • J
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THE ONEI LOVE(R) 7 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)3:45,6:15,8:45 • THEHUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY (PG)4:15,6:45,9:15 • IF I STAY(PG-13) 4:45, 7,9: I5 • LET'S BE COPS(R) 7, 9:15 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-13)4:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THE GIVER(PG-13) 6:30 • THEHUNDRED-FOOTJOURNEY(PG)6 • MAGIG INTHEMOONLIGHT (PG-13) 6:15 • WHENTHE GAME STANDS TALL (PG)6 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THE EXPENDABLES 3 (PG-l3) 4:20 • THE GIVER(PG-13) 7:10 • THEHUN0RED-FOOTJOURNEY(PG)7 • IF I STAY(PG-13) 5, 7:20 • LET'S BE COPS(R) 4:45 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-l3)4:30,6:50 • WHENTHE GAME STANDS TALL (PG)4:15,6:45 •
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CraffersWanted OpenJury Sat., Sept. 13, 9:30 a.m. Callawav X-12 i caution when pur- Highland Baptist Church, graphite, 3-lob, $100. chasing products or I Redmond. Tina Big Berthagraphite services from out of I 541-447-1640 or DO YOU HAVE fairway metals, 3-13, ~ the area. Sending ~ www anowffakeboutique org SOMETHING TO $40 each. ' cash, checks, o r ' 202 SELL Lady Callaway i credit i n f ormation 241 FOR $500 OR graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 Want to Buy or Rent may be subjected to Broken Top LESS? Bicycles & metals, $100. i FRAUD. For more Furniture Non-commercial Lady TaylorMade CASH for wood Accessories information about an f Moving Sale Miscelas graphite, advertisers may 280 288 dressers & dead washDrexel Her i t age advertiser, you may I 7-SW, driver-7 wood, place an ad ers. 541-420-5640 Estate Sales Sales Southeast Bend Ore g ont 10 speed Bicycle with queen sofa sleeper t call t h e with our $100. ' State Atto r ney ' Rock Shocks, $75. Wanted: $Cash paid for $1100. 2 Dr e x el "QUICK CASH (2) Sun Mountain GRANDMOTHER'S 2 Family Sale! Sat. 9/13 vintage costume jew541-241-9005 (local) Heritage great room i General's O f fi ce Speed Carts, SPECIAL" ESTATE SALE 8am-1 on Tekampe Rd. elry. Top dollar paid for Consumer Protec- • lounge chairs $75 ea. 1 week 3 lines 12 C opper p edal ca r Horse tack, tires, home & Gold/Silver. I buy by the dpress.com $ 1050/pair. 2 D e - t ion h o t line a t i Full suspension Solo 541482-6664 or' Crank telephone Nat. arden, playground slide Estate, Honest Artist signer marble top i 1-877-877-9392. Santa Cruz Mtn racing ~2 e eke 2 tn cash. reg. ¹2 Tin toys )Imore. 541-385-7080 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Rottweiler puppies par- entry bike, good cond, must Ad must Lg coffee mills Burl ents on site. call for $750/pair. H ochests t TheBulletin > sell, $2000. 541-480-2652 Just too many include price of serving central oregonsince 1909 details. 541-923-2437. S even Seas oker wood tables Old adv. 5-families Fri. & Sat., 208 h a ll il e collectibles? e~ t e o i 25oo signs Bixt time clock 9-4. 21115 W ilder- • P ets 8 Supplies Scotty puppies, reserve chest $375. Stanley or less, or multiple Bear skin fur rug Har- ness Way. C rafts, 212 now! Mom & dad on site, c herry stor a ge items whose total Sell them in rison Fisher painting holiday, h o usehold, 1st shots. 541-771-0717 cocktail table $535 Antiques & does not exceed Neon beer signs Mu- elect., man stuff. sml The Bulletin recomThe Bulletin Classifieds 30" r ound $500. mix Stanley Collectibles sic boxes Primitives. furn., clothing, bike, mends extra caution Shi-TZu, Terrier end table $275. DeSept. 18-21, 145586 jewelry, collectibles when purc has- puppies born May 2, signer sq. end table Call Classifieds at 541 -385-5809 L anewood Dri v e , 2014. $ 1 5 0 e ach. $275. Oak antique The Bulletin reserves ing products or ser541-385-5809 the right to publish all RANS Stratus XP M/F (210) 430-65'I 6. Sunforest, La Pine www.bendbulletin.com Fri. & Sat. 8-3. Fishing, vices from out of the dining side board ads from The Bulletin CHECK YOUR AD Sending cash, Siamese kittens, raised camping, clothes, art area. $875. Cane Rocker HUGE Estate / Moving newspaper onto The 2011 Recumbent or credit inin home. Gorgeous! $150. Many accesstuff, sports cards, checks, Sale, 16570 S. Hwy 97 Bulletin Internet web- LWB; exc. cond. 27 Federal .38 spl, 147gr f ormation may be Only $25. 541-977-7019 sories. Photos avail. games, misc. 62175 gears SRAM X9 (4 miles N of Terrebsite. Hydra Shok +P+, 600 subjected to fraud. Ferguson Rd. 949-278-7624 twist shifters; seat onne), Fri-Sat, 9-4 rds, $240. Win .308 For more i nforma- Yorkie pups AKC, 1 girl & bag; specialized The Bulletin 180qr Failsafe, 140 rds, boys, beautiful! Shots, gervfng CentralOregonatnce fgta Rare Barbies, antiques, Huge Garage Sale Fri- tion about an adver- 2 computer/odometer; Couch 6' t a n s uede $150. Hornady .45acp potty training, health guar. tiser, you may call fairing, kick stand on the first day it runs furniture, very nice 2001 Sat 8-4, Sun 8-12, 61550 the O regon State $1100. 541-777-7743 185gr XTP/HP, 100 rds, makes into bed, $180 215 Mitsubishi with sunroof. Ward Rd. Tools, clothes, and more. to make sure it is cor541-280-4942 $80. 541-306-3268 Attorney General's Coins & Stamps rect. 5Spellcheckn and Everything must go! $1400 misc household/outdoor, C o n sumer Couch, black leather w/ 7 Day Sale, Sept. 10-17, auto parts, collectibles, Office 541-504-5224 human errors do oc- GUN & RECREATION Protection hotline at 2 recliners, like new. Private collector buying cur. If this happens to SHOW, 9/1 3 & 14, 12 noon to 8 pm, 16413 hunting/fishing items. 1-877-877-9392. 10am-6pm, La Pine $475. 541-408-0846 postagestamp albums 8 Heath Dr., Lapine. your ad, please conCommunity Center, 541-876-7033 collections, world-wide tact us ASAP so that Kids' things, bikes, furn., The Bulletin Dining chairs (6), light and U.S. 573-286-4343 16405 First S t reet. corrections and any appliances, bedding, Yorkie/Yorkipoo: 1 M wood excellent cond, $30 (local, cell phone). 282 FREE A D M ISSION, adjustments can be misc. Fri. & Sat. 9-4, ea. 541-548-4601 Yorkie, $550; 2 Yorkipoo 541-536-9771 made to your ad. Sales Northwest Bend 61173 Hilmer Creek Dr. Adopt a rescue cat or M's $600; 2 Yorkipoo F's. TURN THE PAGE 541 -385-5809 $700. Readytodayto GUN SHOW kitten! Altered, vacciThe BulletinClassified Sat. Sept. 9/12 8 13, 9 to 3. Cash For More Ads most loving homes! 13, 9am-Spm nated, ID chip, tested, 290 only. Chainsaw, spotSantana Sun. Sept. 14, 9am-3pm CRAFT, 65480 541-389-2517gvoice/ text. Furniture for Sale The Bulletin 246 ting scope, w/T., elect. Sales Redmond Area more! "Sovereign Douglas County Fair78th St, Bend, 1-5 pm 210 lawn mower, art supfrom Log Home: Guns, Hunting 1998" Tandem grounds • 541-530-4570 Sat/Sun. 3 8 9 -8420 240 Oak roll-top desk. plies, camping, house- 2 Family Sale. Fri., Sat. www.craftcats.org. Furniture & Appliances & Fishing aluminum road Coffee table,end Hunters Sight-in Workhold, LOTS of s tuff! & Sun., 8-4, 17225 Crafts & Hobbies bike, size Medium, tables, 2 lamps. 1309 NW Vicksburg. SW Quail Rd, CRR. Bichon Frise AKC reg'd Bend local pays CASH!! shop: Sept. 13-14, 9-4, low usage, disc All beautiful and COSSA Park. $7/gun Tools, hou s ehold,puppies, 1 female 8 1 for all firearms & brakes, good condiAGATE HUNTERS Moving: Fri., 10-4, Sat., DVD's, books, office male left! 541-953-0755 reasonablypriced. non-members; $5 for ammo. 541-526-0617 tion. New, was Polishere • Saws 8-5 in Starwood off members. Bring eye & furniture, clothes, ex- or 541-912-1905. $5000; selling now Tumalo Road, lots of ercise/outdoor equip., 541-549-0805 or ear protection E on Hwy CASH!! for $1500. 541-588-2301 yard furniture, 20774 quilting books, sup- Boxer/French Mastiff pups 42" TV cabinet with Repalr & 8upplles For Guns, Ammo & 20 toward Burns, 5/g mi . ready for new homes 9/8. Call 541-923-2468 Mira Circle. a g a Reloading Supplies. past milepost 24. For plies, patterns, fabric Docked tails, dewclaws s late t ri m $ 2 5 0 ; 541-408-6900. info call 541-480-4695 more. "Follow removed, 1st shots. Fe- Ethan Allen buffet, G ENERATE SOM E Yard Sale, Sept. 13, 8-2 and signs to Quail Sale" EXCITEMENT in your Decor, art, clothes, males, $450;males$500. storage, top folds out f o r se r ving, neighborhood! Plan a Call 541-419-0149 dishes, toys and garage sale and don't $250; Heavy metal other great finds! Freezer, furniture, Yard forget to advertise in beautiful fem, 1.5 yr, queen bed frame, 1543 NW Cumberland tools, VHS/DVDs. 8mm Cat, great hunter, indoor/outnx84 classified! $ 30; Pair 3 8 movies 8 c o llectibles, bla c k-out 541-385-5809. kitchen, Sat. 9/13, 8-2, door, $25. 541-610-6698 beige 284 $15; FoldSales Southwest Bend 1728 NW Kingwood Pl. Chihuahua, tiny teacup, drapes, Slide-in gas range, $75. ing table and 4 fold- GE 5 41-633-0563 M l l es blond male, $ 2 50. i ng chairs, in t h e Saturday, Sept. 13, 9-4. Household, c l o thing, 541-977-0035 Hutchins box, $40. SE Bend. H ousehold, furniture, t ools, m a n y col nrtr 541-508-8784 GE Slide-in gas range, vintage. Good stuff! I e ctibles. Fri. & Sat.Doberman puppy, 4 mo. white, good condition, fem., black & tan, super 60965 Zircon Dr. 8-4, 2431 NW 15th sweet, very intelligent! $75. 541-633-0563 $300. 541-306-4480 286 A1 Washers&Dryers Hide-a-bed by Basset, Household, f u rniture, Sales Northeast Bend o utdoor items, 9 - 2 Donate deposit bottles/ $150 ea. Full warwhile, mattress good ranty. Free Del. Also Sat. 9/13 2432 SW cans to local all vol., shape. good shape, wanted, used W/D's Indian Avenue. non-profit rescue, for $75. 541-382-6773 541-280-7355 ** FREE ** feral cat spay/neuter. Cans for Cats trailer Garage Sale Kit 292 at Jake's Diner, Hwy Call The Bulletln At Place an ad in The Sales Other Areas 20 E; West Bend Pet 541-385-5809 Bulletin for your gaExpress, 14th St; or Place Your Ad Or E-Mail rage sale and redonate M-F at Smith At: www.bendbulletin.com ceive a Garage Sale Garage Sale; Fri. & Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or Kit FREE! Sat. 8am - 4pm. • Loveseat CRAFT, 78th St, TuFurniture, western (chocolate), KIT INCLUDES: malo. Leave msg. for cowhide and horn 73' x 40", $275. • 4 Garage Sale Signs pick up of large amts, chair, tools, glass ~a • $2.00 Off Coupon To 541-389-8420. ware, cook ware, • Recliner/Swivel/ Use Toward Your www.craftcats.org scuba gear, books, Rocker Next Ad cloth's and lots of (cocoa), $275. • 10 Tips For "Garage other goodies. Sale Success!" Antique sideboard/ 55907 Wood Duck Both are very comfy, buffet:Walnut, Dr., Sunriver beautiful detail. Early and like new, PICK UP YOUR 541-771-9542 1900's. Exterior has used only 6 months. GARAGE SALE K!T at 541-647-2314 Oregon Water top drawer & 3 doors 1777 SW Chandler Wonderland with original key. InFRENCHTON puppy, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 side has 2 shelves Questions: 1 male left! Puppy pkg and a drawer. MeaWhere can you find a included, $1150. Bajakenny©aol.com Includes: The Bulletin sures 71x21x36 Ex541-279-3588 helping hand? Servtng rentref Oregon since r9IB cellent cond. Pick-up Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • Feature item photo/graphic From contractors to German Shepherds only. $800 OBO. Sat. only 9-4, 9140 NE • 7 lines of text 541-385-5809 Garaqe Sale Fri-Sat 8-3, Crooked River Drive, www.sherman-ranch.us 415-279-9893 (Bend) yard care, it's all here Quality Germans. 2180 Castle Ave. • Bold headline next to Smith Rock. in The Bulletin's 541-281-6829 Clothes, shoes, kitchen- Antique radios, rockIncludes upto2" in length, with "Call A Service • Border ware, tools, sporting ers, and car ads, tons German Shorthair AKC Appliances border,full colorphoto, bold N~ihborhgod~ale goods, golf, ski, etc. Professional" Directory • up fo 4 days of advertising of books, Rocky 8 Black, new to expups, parents on site, Fri., sat., 8« headlineaftdprice. Bullwinkle collectibles, $550. 541-306-9957 cellent c o ndition! TABLE 6 chairs heavy s-5pm Sat. 9/13,(9-4); Maytag Jet Clean 3347 NE Manchester Ct. and more misc. 64695 Wood Ave. oak, w/pad & extenCheck out the Your ad will also appear in: dishwasher, $250. 541-383-7603. sions. $375 O B O. Loveseat, oak barrel, classifieds online Featuring a variety of SISTERS Multi-home Whirlpool gas con541-312-2448. queen mattress set, • The Bul l e tin • The CentralOregonNickel Ads and hand tools, incl mechan- Fri/Sat., 9-5, Sun., 9-12. tffnffrw.bendbulfetin.com vection range, furniture, tools, • (enfral Oregon Marketpl a ce e bendbulletjn.tom ics size wrenches. '91 16737/16683 BitterUpdated daily $500; W h i rlpool Table and chairs, solid lots of miscellaneous. Ford F250 XLT in exec brush Lane. Furn., oak, pedestal table, 4 microwave hood. condition. Ergo Motion sports/hunt, bikes, Wii, Lab pups, AKC, black $125. windsor style chairs. *Private party adsandfundraisers. Deadline I I:00amTuesday. single bed. Christmas foosball, art supp., male, h i p s/elbows/ 541-420-8636 Great condition. $350. decor. shop tools/equip. 541-382-6773 eyes,$800.541-480-4835 Love cats? Volunteers needed at C RAFT. Responsible t e e ns welcome! At sanctuary, as foster homes, with events & more! 5 41-389-8420, 2 8 0 3172 or 598-5488; OR info © craftcats.org. POODLE puppies,toy, loving companions. 5<t -475-3889 Queensland Heelers Standard & Mini, $150 & up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor
Bed - Beauty Rest, Black King/Sleigh Bed. Yr. old. Pd. $4400. Sell $2500 OBO. Redmond. 360-903-4820
arecommends extra ' The Bulletin
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The Bulletin
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E2 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •
Starting at 3 lines
Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER'500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
lcall for commercial line ad rates)
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*ltlfust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
MX
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 266
325
Heating & Stoves
Hay, Grain & Feed
NOTICE TO Looking for your ADVERTISER next employee? Since September 29, Place a Bulletin 1991, advertising for help wanted ad used woodstoves has been limited to modtoday and els which have been reach over certified by the Or60,000 readers egon Department of each week. Environmental Qual- Your classified ad ity (DEQ) and the fedwill also eral E n v ironmental appear on Protection A g e ncy bendbulletin.com (EPA) as having met which currently smoke emission standards. A cer t ified receives over 1.5 million page w oodstove may b e views every identified by its certifimonth at no cation label, which is extra cost. permanently attached Bulletin to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowClassifieds ingly accept advertisGet Results! ing for the sale of Call 541-385-5809 uncertified or place your ad woodstoves. on-line at 267
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood
purchased.
• Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
Add your web address to your ad and readers onThe Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
business
Please respond with a resume with qualifications, skills, experience and a past employment history via email to James Baisinger, 'baisin er@bendbulletin.com by Monday, September 15, 2014.
e ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's
The Bulletin
"Call A Service Professional" Directory
341
Serving Central Oregon since t903
Horses & Equipment
•-
5,
The Bulletin is seeking a technician within the Prepress department. Prepress Technicians receive press ready files from other departments within the company, impose pages, and output to plate using Computer-To-Plate software systems and equipment. This includes finishing work by bending and punching plates for the press. Familiarity with Graphic Arts, and CMYK prepress workflows preferred, and a fundamental proficiency using Macintosh and PC operating systems is a must.
Food Service - Bruno's Grocery/U-bake is hiring for C a shier & Pizza Maker. Apply: 1709 NE For qualifying employees we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term & long-term 6th, Bend. No phone calls disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. The Get your Bulletin is a drug-free workplace, EOE.
bendbulletin.com
Fuel & Wood
Prepress Technician
Employment Opportunities
Home Delivery Advisor
Food Service The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Whispering position and consists of managing an adult Winds carrier force to ensure our customers receive Retirement superior service. Must be able to create and is seeking a part perform strategic plans to meet department t ime server f o r objectives such as increasing market share dining room. Must and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a be friendly a nd self-starter who can work both in the office enjoy sen i ors. and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary Apply in person at 2 920 N E C o n - with company vehicle provided. S t r ong customer service skills and management skills ners Ave., Bend., are necessary. C o mputer experience is Pre-employment required. You must pass a drug screening drug test required. and be able to be insured by company to drive
I
2001 Silverado 3-horse trailer 5th wheel, 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277
Horseshoeing Tools
Land Management Tech
JHM 110-Ib certifier
anvil, anvil stand w/vise, all GE hand tools, hoof stand & forge tools, all in new condition, $1600 or part trade for generator.
vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we believe in promoting from within, so advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:
The Bulletin Lane County PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction serving central ongonsincersre Public WorksI is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Land Management to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these Aff yearDependable seeks a Land newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Firewood: Seasoned; The Bulletin Management Tech. Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. c/o Kurt Muller Lodgepole, split, del, ($16.17 - $22.41/hr). PO Box 6020 541-430-4449 To apply, visit B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Bend, OR 97708-6020 246 246 246 260 or 2 for $365. Call for www.lanecount .or I'obs or e-mail resume to: multi-cord discounts! or contact HR: Guns, Hunting Guns, Hunting Guns, Hunting Misc. Items kmuller©bendbulletin.com 541-420-3484. 125 E 8th Avenue, & Fishing & Fishing & Fishing No phone calls, please. BUYING 8r SE LLING Eugene, OR 97401, The Bulletinis a drug-free workplace. EOE Seasoned Juniper fire541-682-6929. Closes 'James Bond Classic' Ruger Mod. 77 MKII,350 Taurus 454 stainless, All gold jewelry, silver w ood delivered i n Pre-employment drugscreen required. gold coins, bars, 9/22/14 @ 5:00 p.m. semi-auto, P. Beretta Rem Mag, blue/walnut, ammo, holster & case. and rounds, wedding sets, Central Ore. $190 per EOE/ADA (mdl 418) 6.35 Gar- $500. 541-306-3268 $525. Call after 4 class rings, sterling sil- c ord, or $ 18 0 f o r done VT, made in 541-771-5861. IS ver, coin collect, vin- rounds. 541-419-9859 NIGHT ATTENDANT Italy 1954, $300. Tempur-Pedic x-long twin tage watches, dental Shilo Bumper Pull Whispering W i n ds 269 541-604-0451 adj matt with air cham- gold. Bill Fl e ming, 3-Horse Trailer Retirement is seekGardening Supplies ber, remotes; T.P. pillow; 541-382-9419. with tack room, like ing a person to work Sage Rodw/Tioga linens, in perfect cond, & Equipment new, more extras, the night shift (10 p.m. CRYPT at Deschutes reel, $225. Custom $2500. 541-548-6642 $5500. 541-923-9758 to 7 a.m.) Part-time Memorial G a r den TFO rodwith RedWanted: Collector seeks Meadow Pond space position av a i lable. inqton reel, $200. BarkTurfSoil.com high quality fishing items Duties include light 363 4D4 - dbl depth lawn Simms waders, laundry, misc. office & upscale bamboo fly Business Application Specialist men's Lg, worn once, crypt, full grave for 2. Produce & Food rods. Call 541-678-5753, w ork. A b l e t o r e $200; ladies small, B uyer w il l ne e d PROMPT DELIVERY • New, never fired or 503-351-2746 541-389-9663 to re s ident Responsible for working with business stakenew in box, $175. granite & bronze dbl Weatherby VanGrass fattened natural spond emergencies if holders to understand business requirements Simms boots,men's interment ma r k er 247 guardS2, synthetic beef, cut&wrapped needed. Former car- and identifying approaches to meet business 13, used once, $100; plus interment costs. stock, cal 30-06.$550. $3.50/lb. 541-480-8185 Sporting Goods For newspaper egiving e x perience needs. Responsibilities include providing level ladies 9, new in box, • New, never fired $1500. For more info helpful b ut not 2 and level 3 support; working with the - Misc. delivery, call the THOMAS ORCHARDS $100.Simms wadc all K e l lie Al l e n Howa,wood stock, cal Circulation Dept. at Kimberly, Oregon required. A pply in ing stick,new, $50. application support team to ensure application 541-382-5592 or .300 Win Mag.$725 541-385-5800 Almost new, 1 person seller, 207-582-0732 person to Whispering is functioning a t o p t imal p e rformance; Fishpond chest U-PICK & Must pass backTo place an ad, call Winds, 2920 NE Conpack, $50. pontoon fishing craft. configuring application for feature and function READY-PICKED ground check. Please 541-385-5809 n ers A v e. , B e n d. roll-outs; maintaining current knowledge of the 541-382-6664 $80. 541-548-5988. call 541.389.3694, Freestone canning Call a Pro Pre-employment drug application; working with business users to or email leave message. peaches: Monroe, classifiedttbendbulletin.ccm Whether you need a testing required. analyze current procedures; and managing Elberta. O'Henry vendor relationships. fence fixed, hedges The Bulletin serving central oregonsince rsre • Nectarines• Plums trimmed or a house Roofers Wanted R equires a Bachelor's degree in CIS or • Bartlett pears, Asian Call River Roofing, built, you'll find related field or equivalent education and pears• Gala apples. 270 541-383-3569 experience; at least 4 years of experience professional help in BRING CONTAINERS Like new Necky EsLost & Found working with enterprise applications; strong for U-PfCK!!! The Bulletin's "Call a kia 16' kayak with customer focus and sense of urgency; Open 7 days week, People Look for Information rudder. B ulkheads Service Professional" Found gold & diamond Call 54 I -385-5809 experiencein business process and systems 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! About Products and water tight. Seat like bracelet, Bend Walmart to ro m o te o u r s ervice analysis; good analytical and problem solving Directory new. Hatches, deck parking lot 9/3/14. Call to Visit us on Facebook for Services Every Daythrough skills and experience with common desktop updates and look for 541-3B5-5809 lines and grab loops identify, 541 480-1012. The Bulletin Classifieds applications (MS Office). for us on Wed. at Bend Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care all in perfect condition. Orig i nally Gas Grill: Almost new If you purchased a col- Farmers Market and Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent lector plate at an es- Sat. at NW Crossing. 2-burner Charbroil NOTICE: Oregon state $1450, asking $700 customer service and over 400 stores in the 541-934-2870 law requires anyone obo. P lease c a l l Tru-Infrared Gourmet + tate sale on Nelson western United States. We offer competitive Road in NE Bend in tank, $150. Call/text who con t racts for 541-312-2435. caution when purexcellent benefits, retirement, and cash 434-770-0931. the last couple of chasing products or I pay, construction work to bonus.Please go to www.lesschwab.com to Serving Central months, I found the be licensed with the services from out of a 253 o INI) o apply. Applications will be accepted through How to avoidscam Oregon Since 2003 certificates of authenConstruction Contracl the area. Sending September 19, 2014. No phone calls please. and fraud attempts tication for "The Elk" & tors Board (CCB). An Residental/Commercial • TV, Stereo & Video c ash, checks, o r "The Bighorn Sheep." YBe aware of internaactive license l credit i n f ormation Sprinkler Les Schwabis proud tobe an Video/CD/CD player re- tional fraud. Deal loby Artist, Paul Krapf. means the contractor Activation/Repair l may be subjected to equal opportunity employer. corder, J.V.C., $15. 541-419-6408 is bonded & insured. cally whenever posFRAUD. 541-771-7290 after 5 Verify the contractor's Back Flow Testing sible. For more informaI Lost: in Redmond at CCB l i c ense at tion about an adver- ' Vizio 37" flat screen TV v' Watch for buyers Maintenance Post Office or Bi-Mart, www.hirealicensedwho offer more than l tiser, you may call low hrs, $75. after 5 • Summer Clean up Chief Financial Officer small navy blue coin 421 contractor.com your asking price and purse with cards in it, the Oregon State pm, 541-771-7290 Mowing or call 503-378-4621. aWeekly Schools & Training who ask to have l Attorney General's Community Counseling Solutions (CCS) & Edging finder can keep the The Bulletin recom- •Bi-Monthly 255 money wired or Office C o n sumer f & Monthly money. Return purse IITR Truck School an opening for a Chief Financial mends checking with Computers handed back to them. Protection hotline at l has • Maintenance t o P O B o x 1 8 6 4 , O fficer that will b e b a sed i n o u r the CCB prior to con- •Bark, Rock, Etc. Fake cashier checks REDMOND CAMPUS I 1-877-877-9392. Redmond, OR 97756. tracting with anyone. Heppner,Oregon office. T HE B U LLETIN r e - and money orders Our Grads Get Jobs! Some other t rades 1-888-438-2235 gThe Bull~n quires computer adare common. Landsca in MISSING: female cat ~ also req u ire addiCCCS is a 5 0 1(c)(3) corporation that WWW.IITR.EDU vertisers with multiple VNever give out perfluffy muted gray, ortional licenses and •Landscape provides an array of diverse and dynamic ad schedules or those Construction sonal financial inforange & white in Red certifications. social services, i ncluding: o utpatient, Water Feature selling multiple sysmation. Hawk sub. Redmond, residential and i npatient mental health temsi software, to dis- s/Trust your instincts Mental Health Specialist Installation/Maint. Substantial Reward, Debris Removal treatment, public health and primary care, •Pavers close the name of the and be wary of Any info call •Renovations business or the term outpatient alcohol and drug treatment, someone using an 541-504-0652 Community Counseling Solutions is JUNK BE GONE "dealer" in their ads. •Irrigations Installation developmental disability services, senior escrow service or recruiting for a full-time Mental Health I Haul Away FREE Private party advertis- agent to pick up your Specialist. programs, rental assistance, prevention, Senior Discounts For Salvage. Also ers are defined as merchandise. and peer support services. We employ 130 Bonded & Insured Cleanups & Cleanouts those who sell one REIIIIEMBER:If you This position will be based out of our individuals. The majority of services are 541-815-4458 The Bulletin Mel, 541-389-8107 computer. have lost an animal, Boardman office and will provide services serv>ngcentral oregon sincersrs provided in one or more of the counties of LCB¹8759 don't forget to check to Columbia River Ranch, a non-secure Morrow, Wheeler, Grant, and G i lliam 266 Jack LaLanne Power The Humane Society Electrical Services residential treatment facility. Q u a lified Counties, with a few programs serving Aeration/Dethatching • Ph o tography Juicer, like new, $65 Bend applicants must have a master's degree in larger regions. 1-time or Weekly Services obo. 541-316-0062 541-382-3537 Delta Electric Ask about FREEadded Argus 300 slide projecpsychology, social work, or other human Service,LLC Redmond svcs w/seasonal contract! tor, works fine. $95 Wanted- paying cash service related field. Related experience a Duties of this position are complex and 541-383-2133 541-923-0882 Bonded & Insured. for Hi-fi audio & stuplus. In d ividual will p rovide therapy, varied, and will include: planning, organizdeltaes1 ©gmail.com COLLINS Lawn Maint. 541-419-6408 Madras dio equip. Mclntosh, assessment,case management, and other ing, directing and control the functions of 541-475-6889 ccb¹97803 257 Ca/l 541-480-9714 JBL, Marantz, Dyrelated services to individuals with mental the business/finance programs of CCS, Prineville naco, Heathkit, SanMusical Instruments health and alcohol/drug concerns. Must development and implementation policies, 541-447-7178 Handyman sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Painting/Wall Covering have excellent computer skills and be able procedures and practices for the organizaor Craft Cats Call 541-261-1808 to assist the director in meeting the needs tions business and f i nance systems, 541-389-8420. I DO THAT! ALL AMERICAN of the community. oversight of f u nds a n d i n vestments, Home/Rental repairs USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! PAINTING preparation and development of agency Small jobs to remodels Yamaha Interior and Exterior Pay dependentupon education and experibudget, oversight of purchases, accounting Honest, guaranteed Door-to-door selling with Family-owned Clavinova ence. Salary range $39,200 to $67,200/yr. systems and services, financial analysis, work. CCB¹151573 Residential & Commercial fast results! It's the easiest CLP950 electric Dennis 541-317-9768 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts payroll and benefits, and the manager who way in the world to sell. piano. Built-in For an application please contact oversees senior programs. P e riodically, 5-year warranties F. Weedon Const. & speakers and Nina Bisson at nina.bisson I gobhi.net this position will need to perform duties that Summer Special! The Bulletin Classified Home Services. 95-watt amp, or 541-676-9161 or at our website, are typically done by those they supervise Call 541-337-6149 Handyman & light const. 541-385-5809 excellent condicommunitycounselingsolutions.org. CCB ¹193960 due to high workload or vacancies. This 541-598-6150 Open until filled. tion, $750. position will oversee a staff of 12 dedicated CCB¹186744 263 EOE and talented employees. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS caii 325 Tools 541-504-4416 Search the area's most LandscapingNard Care comprehensive Hay, Grain & Feed T he qualified individual will fill a k e y listing of General Craftsman 10" contracclassified advertising... position in CCS's administrative structure. The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturNOTICE: Oregon Land- real tors table saw w/stand, 260 1st & 2nd cutting orestate to automotive, They will need to be able to carry out the scape Contractors Law day night shift and other shifts as needed. We $295. 541-306-3268 chard grass mix, small Iillisc. Items merchandise to sporting • mission, philosophy and quality services currently have openings all nights of the week. (ORS 671) requires all goods. bales $235/ton. Madras, Bulletin Classifieds that CCS delivers, be a dynamic team businesses that adEveryone must work Saturday night. Shifts OR. 541-420-9736 275 Gallon Like New vertise t o pe r form appear every day in the start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and player, possess strong analytic skills, have Plastic Totes, Overprint or on line. Landscape Construcdemonstrated excellence in finance and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpostock Sale: $109. for Need to get an tion which includes: Call 541-385-5809 sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. management, be mature, proactive and one tote, 2 to 5 totes ad in ASAP? l anting, deck s , www.bendbulletin.com Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a positive, an effective communicator, and a t $99.95/ea., 6 o r ences, arbors, minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts You can place it adhere to a high standard of professionalmore at $89.95 ea. The Bulletin water-features, and inare short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of ism and e thical behavior. Mi n imum serins central oregon si~ rsta Shopsmith online at: GloryBee Foods stallation, repair of irloading inserting machines or stitcher, stackwith bandsaw, requirements include a Bachelor's degree Eugene,OR. rigation systems to be www.bendbulletin.com ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup excellent condition. in business administration or finance. Ideal 541-689-0913 or l icensed w it h th e Parking Lot Maintenance and other tasks. For qualifying employees we Customized extras. candidate will be a CPA, have 10 years of 1-800-456-7923 Landscape Contrac541-385-5809 offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Retired shop broad financial experience, and h ave tors Board. This 4-digit AB Parking Lot Btfylng Dlamonds short-term 8 long-term disability, 401(k), paid teacher; experience working for or with nonprofit number is to be inMaintenance vacation and sick time. Drug test is required /Gofd for Cash don't need anymore! 1st Quality mixed grass corporations. cluded in all adver- For all your parking lot i Saxon's Fine Jewelers prior to employment. hay, no rain, barn stored, Pictures available. tisements which indidnveway needs. $250/ton. 541-389-6655 $475. cate the business has • Commercial sweeper This salaried position is overseen by the Call 541-549-3831 Please submit a completed application attenCall 541-598-6486 a bond,insurance and • Crack fill BUYING Executive Director of Community CounselPatterson Ranch, Sisters tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available workers compensa- • Seal coat Lionel/American Flyer ing Solutions. The salary range for this at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chantion for their employ- • Striping trains, accessories. Alfalfa seed, corn and 265 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be position is $89,100 - $140,000 based upon ees. For your protec- • Dust control 541-408-2191. grass seed. Save obtained upon request by contacting Kevin the individual's education, certifications and Building Materials tion call 503-378-5909 • Snow Removal money. We deliver. Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). e xperience. Exc e llent b e nefits. F o r or use our website: • De-icing • I I Ray Oder m ott No phone calls please. Only completed appliadditional information please c o ntact MADRAS Habitat www.lcb.state.or.us to CCB ¹203383 208-465-5280 or cations will be considered for this position. No RESTORE Kimberly Lindsay, preferably by email, at check license status Call Scott 541-815-2332 800-910-4101. resumes will be accepted. Drug test is rekimberly.lindsay©gobhi.net. Phone: before contracting with Christina D.: Respond to Building Supply Resale quired prior to employment. EOE. Quality at the business. Persons Just bought a new boat? divorce case CV132160 541-676-9161. For more information about Quality Orchard/Mixed LOW PRICES doing lan d scape Sell your old one in the within 30 days. Failure to Grass hay, between our agency visit www.communitycounsel84 SW K St. maintenance do not classifieds! Ask about our do so will result in deBend & Redmond. The Bulletin ingsolutions.org. serving cenrrar oregons/nce rsos r equire an LC B l i Super Seller rates! fault, C a l l cou r ts, 541-475-9722 $230/ton, small bales. EOE cense. 541-667-3034. Open to the public. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 541-385-5809
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DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
C L U B W ednesday,Septem ber10,2014
Seeing the future By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "It's tough to make predictions, e specially about the future." Y og i
to three diamonds, and partner bids three spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner suggests extra strength with six spades and four diamonds. With a m i n imum h andsuchasK J 1 0 5 4 3 , 3 , A K 7 6 , 5 2, he would have rebid two spades. B id four spades. If h i s h and i s
Berra (allegedly)
You can't see the future, but you can prepare for bad breaks. At four spades, South took the ace of hearts and led the king of spades to East's ace. Heruffed the heartreturn and led the queen of spades, hoping for an KQ J54 3, 3, A K 7 6 , Q 2,he will overtrick. usually win 10 tricks. When East discarded, South was in South dealer trouble. If he led another trump, West Both sides vulnerable would take the jack and continue hearts, forcing out South's last trump NORTH while West still had a trump. South 48843 would go down at least one. So South 9 J3 2 led minor-suit winners. He lost two 0542 trumps to West plus a d i amond. A7532 Down one. WEST EAST TRUMP BREAK 48 J765 48A
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South must allow for a 4-1 trump break. (The odds on that break are predictable: 28 percent.) After he ruffs East's heart return at T r i ck Three, South should lead the ten of trumps. West can't gain by playing low. If he takes his jack and leads another heart, South discards his diamond loser. He can ruff the next heart in dummy, draw trumps and claim.
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Y ouhold: 4 A Q K 8 7 5 4 0 Q 10 8 3 4 9 6 4. Y o u r p artner Openinglead — Q 10 opens one spade, you respond 1NT and he bids two diamonds. You raise (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
15Dust collector 16Where business is picking up? 17Memorable 2005 Gulf hurricane 16Prudential rival 19French chicken dish garnished with kemels? 22 Whitish 25 Philosopher who asked "What is enlightenment?" 26 Quartet on an online help page? 30This:Sp. 34 Rapper with the 2008 hit "Paper Planes" 35 It can give you a lift 36 Lie in the hot sun 37 Frequent, in odes
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09/10/14
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Delivery
supplement Your Income Now taking bids for an Independent Contract Hauler to deliver bundles of newspapers from Bend toLaGrande, Oregon on a weekly basis. This will also include a monthly delivery than is made en route to LaGrande. Must have own vehicle with license and insurance and the capability to haul up to 6000 lbs. Candidates must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Selected candidate will be independently contracted. To apply or for more info contact James Baisinger at 'baisin er©bendbulletin.com 775
XIMjjXBI
® URPIKKI
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
New Dream Special 3 bdrm, 2 bath $50,900 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
528
Loans & Mortgages WARNING
®
860
875
880
882
885
932
935
Motorcycles & Accessories
Watercraft
Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
Canopies 8 Campers
Antique & Classic Autos
Sport Utility Vehicles
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome HD Softtail Deuce 2002, Bought new in 2000, broken back forces currently under 20K sale, only 200 mi. on miles, excellent new motor from Har- 16' Old Town Canoe, shape, new tires, ley, new trans case spruce, cedar, fiberglass, professionally winterand p arts, s p o keLake model, 1 owner, ized every year, cutwheels, new brakes, verv good cond, w/extras. off switch to battery, n early all o f b i k e $1000. 541-366-3386 plus new RV batterbrand new. Has proof ies. Oven, hot water of all work done. Re- ds published in "Waheater & air condimovable windshield, tercraft" include: Kay- tioning seldom used; T-bags, black and all aks, rafts and motor- just add water and it's ~zed chromed out with a personal ready to go! For $22,000 obo. Serious willy skeleton theme watercrafts. "boats" please see inquiries, please. on all caps and covStored in Terrebonne. ers. Lots o f w o rk, Class 870. 541-548-5174 heart and love went 541-365-5809 into all aspects. All done at professional gere ng Central Oregon once 1903 shops, call for info. Must sell quickly due 880 to m e d ical bi l l s, Motorhomes $8250. Call Jack at
Lance cabover camper 1991, 18' over cab, 8' in p/up bed. under cover since new, immaculate! $4,100 obo
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5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, Sell for $3500. OR For Hire
Call for quote
1997 Bounder 34' w/slide. $17,900. Excellent condition, must see! Ford 460 w/Banks, new tires, dual A/C, rear camera, triple axle, Onan HONDA SCOOTER gen, 63k miles. 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. 541-306-9897 cond., $975 obo. (541) 2007 Tioga Class C 30' 593-9710 or 350-8711 motorhome, f 7,000+ miles, excellent cond., 865 professionally winterized ATVs every year. $35,000 obo. 541-604-9352
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541-260-4293 908
CHECKYOUR AD
The Bulletin
541-279-9536.
541-548-5069
on the first day it runs Ready to make memories! to make sure it is corTop-selling Winnebago rect. "Spellcheck" and 31 J, original owners, nonhuman errors do ocsmokers, garaged, only cur. If this happens to 18,800 miles, auto-levelyour ad, please coning jacks, (2) slides, uptact us ASAP so that graded queen bed, bunk corrections and any beds, micro, (3) TVs, adjustments can be sleeps 10! Lots of stormade to your ad. age, maintained, very 541-385-5809 clean!Only $67,995! Ex- The Bulletin Classified tended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers!541488-7179
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Chev Trailblazer LS Jeepster Commando 1968 2004,AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, clean title, 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, com12/15 tags,$5995. pletely restored. $12,000 54141 0-6150 obo. 808-430-5133 or 541-382-6300 Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 155 K m i les, $11,500. 541-549-6407
Aircraft, Parts & Service
1/3interest in
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
$150,000
(located O Bend)
Chev E uinox
2011 Loaded and Super Clean 4x4. $23,977 Vin¹463850 ROBBERSON ~a nnm a Studebaker C h a mpion 1957, all orig., 541-312-3986 C lean t i tle , r u n s/ Dlr ¹0205. Pricing drives, easy restore. good thru 9/30/2014 $2200. 541-639-5360
933
Pickups
C J5
1978
V-8 ,
Lockers, new soft top, power steering, oversized h e ater, many extras. $6,000 obo. 541-519-1627
541-288-3333 The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially Dod e Nitro 2011 2005 Diesel 4x4 those asking for ad860 Chev Crewcab duvance loan fees or Motorcycles & Accessories 1/3 interest in wellcompanies from out of equipped IFR Beech Bo- ally, Allison tranny, M ~ • -Fleetwood Prowler nanza A36, new 10-550/ tow pkg., brake constate. If you have 32' - 2001 troller, cloth split concerns or quesprop, located KBDN. 2 slides, ducted front bench seat, $65,000. 541-419-9510 tions, we suggest you Winnebago C 22' only 66k miles. heat & air, great www. N4972M.com consult your attorney H onda Bi g R e d 2002 - $30,500 4x4 Looks as good condition, snowbird Very good condition, UTV. Like new with or call CONSUMER Big engine, heavy as Its name! 2007 Winnebago Original owner, ready, Many upHOTLINE, just over 40 hours Vin ¹ 520014 duty, many extras, Outlook Class "C" $34,000 1-677-877-9392. use. Includes winch, grade options, fi2002 Harley Fat Boy 7.977 31', solar panel, Cat. 21,000 miles, like or best offer. 5-foot snow blade, nancing available! 14,000 original miles. heater, excellent new. Please call for 528 541-408-7826 ROBBERSON i hard roof, half wind$14,500 obo. Excellent cond. Vance condition, more exdetails Loans & Mortgages ~a nnm u & Hines exhaust, 5 shield. L i sts over tras. Asking $58K. 541-280-3251 Call Dick, $14,000; will sell for spoke HD rims, wind Chevy 2007 Silverado Ph. 541-447-9268 541-312-3986 BANK TURNED YOU 541-480-1687. vest, 12a rise handle b est o ffe r ov e r 1/5th interest in 1973 Z-71, loaded, 1 owner, Can be viewed at Winnebago Sightseer Dlr ¹0205. Pricing DOWN? Private party bars, detachable lug$11,000. Call Cessna 150 LLC $19,500. 541-379-3530 Western Recreation 27' 2002. workhorse good thru 9/30/1 4 will loan on real esgage rack w/back 541-575-4267 150hp conversion, low (top of hill) as motor, Class A, tate equity. Credit, no rest, hwy pegs & many time on air frame and in Pnnev/lle. ' slide living rm/diproblem, good equity chrome accents. Must engine, hangared in NfoM4er/ nette, new tires. spare is all you need. Call see to appreciate! Bend.Excellent pertire carrier, HD trailer Oregon Land Mort- $10,500. /n CRR area formance & affordhitch, water heater, call 530-957-1865 Chevy Silverado 2004 gage 541-388-4200. able flying! $6,000. micro/oven, generaLS, 2WD, V8, 57k miles, 541-410-6007 LOCAL MONEY:Webuy tor, furn/AC, outside Holiday Rambler includes bedliner, hard GMC Suburban 1997, secured trust deeds & shower, carbon dioxAlumascape 28' tonneau cover. Asking fully loaded, daily driver, Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' note,some hard money ide & smoke detector, 2003,1-owner. $10,750. 541-588-0131 extra clean, $2650. 1997 loans. Call Pat Kellev bed, with ramps. $700 Allegro 32' 2007, like fiberglas ext., elect. Self-contained, 541-382-3099 ext.13. obo. 541-549-4834 or new, only 12,600 miles. step, cruise control, Ford F250 1984 4x4 King Chevy Astro, runs good, 13' slide, 80W solar 541-588-0068 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 CB radio, 60k miles, Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift $1300. 541-410-4596 panel, walkaround kit, 90% tires, good wood 2005 HD Heritage Soft- Yamaha '06 Rhino 660 transmission, dual ex- awning, TV antenna w ueen+ sofa/bed, truck! $2000 or best ofTail, Big Bore kit, lots of exc. cond, winch, hard haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- booster, flat screen oads of storage eling system, 5kw gen, 23" TV. AM/FM/CD fer. 541-279-8023 extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt throughout. Excellent 1974 Bellanca roof w/lights and ra- power mirrors w/defrost, cond., $9750 firm stereo. $2 3,995. cond., brand new 1730A dio, custom wheels. slide-outs with aw- 541-548-2554 541-318-8668 tires licensed 2015. $6950 541-447-3702. 2 nings, rear c a mera, Must see!$13,700. 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 881 trai(er hitch, driyer door 541-389-9214 870 180 mph, excellent w/power window, cruise, JEEP WRANGLER Travel Trailers Boats & Accessories exhaust brake, central condition, always 2009 hard top vac, satellite sys. Asking hangared, 1 owner 18,000 miles. autoFord F250 4x4 1996, 14' Sea Nymph 1990, $87,500. 503-781-8812 matic, AC, tilt & for 35 years. $60K. x-cab, long wheel base, 632 25hp Merc outboard, cruise, power winbrush guard, tool box, electric trolling motor, dows, power steerpt./Illlultiplex General ln Madras, $3000. 541-771-1667 or brand new top and side FXSTD Harley ing, power locks, alcall 541-475-6302 541-633-3607 curtains. $1000. Davidson 2001, twin 2007 Jayco Jay Flight loy wheels and CHECK YOUR AD Keystone Raptor, 2007 541-420-6524 cam 88, fuel injected, 29 FBS with slide out & 37 running boards, toy hauler, 2 slides, Vance & Hines short awning - Turn-key ready generator, A/C, 2 TVs, Honda Ridgeline garaged. 3300 sq.ft. Hangar shot exhaust, Stage I to use, less than 50 to- satellite system w/auto RTL Crew Cab $22,500. Prineville Airport with Vance & Hines tal days used by current 541-419-5980 Beaver Marquis, owner. Never smoked in, seek, in/out sound sys60'wide by 55' fuel management tem,sleeps 6,m any ex1993 MQ S system, custom parts, no indoor pets, excellent tras. deep with 16' $29,999. In Madras, 40-ft, Brunswick extra seat. cond., very clean. Lots of Lexus RX 350 2012 on the first day it runs bi-fold door. call541-771-9607 or floor plan. Many bonus it ems; many have AWD Luxury & Preto make sure it is cor$10,500OBO. Upgrades include, 541-4754265 16' West Coast rect. "Spellcheck" and Call Today extras, well main- never been used. Price mium pkg. 28kmi., T-6 lighting, 541-516-8684 Aluminum, $3950, now reduced to $18,500 human errors do octained, fire supbamboo pearl. skylights, windows, 2007 Extra nice 4x4, 65 hp Mercury, which is lower range of ¹C136157 $37,995 cur. If this happens to pression behind 14' side RV door, great mpg. ¹541238 Shoreline Trailer, Kelly Blue Book. Call your ad, please con- Harley Davidson 2003 refrig, Stow Master infra-red heating, $19,977 Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r tact us ASAP so that Anniversary Road King, 2014 Stickers, Fish 5000 tow bar, and bathroom, Finder. more info / more photos. corrections and any Stage 1, pearl white, exROBBERSON $23,995. $155,000, Call Bill 541-598-5111 adjustments can be cellent condition, lots of 541-383-3503 541-598-3750 ~m attc a 541-480-7930 Dutchman Denali made to your ad. Kit Companion '94 26', chrome & extr a s. 32' 2011 travel 541-385-5809 1 slide, new stove/fridge, 541-312-3986 Subaru Forester 2010, $13,999. 541-279-0846 Need help fixing stuff? trailer. 2 slides Evcomes with gen. ReThe Bulletin Classified HANGAR FOR SALE. 34,000 me t iculous Dlr ¹0205 pricing Call A Service Professional duced to $4000. erything goes, all 30x40 end unit T miles. Manual, One REDUCED! good thru 08/31/14 541-389-5788 find the help you need. kitchen ware, linens Senior Apartmenthanger in Prineville. owner. No smoking, www.bendbulletin.com etc. Hitch, sway Independent Living Dry walled, insulated, no Pets, Clear Title. Toyota 1986, 46k on ALL-INCLUSIVE bars, water & sewer and painted. $23,500. $17,000. Laredo 30' 2009 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 replaced engine, 5 hoses. List price with 3 meals daily Tom, 541.788.5546 541-4'I 9-7390. spd, 4 cyl, rear wheel Wakeboard Boat Month-to-month lease, $34,500 - asking drive, r un s g r eat, Hangar for sale at check it out! $26,800 Loaded. 940 Harley D a vidson I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Redmond Airport - not good tires, body in Call 541-318-0450 Must see to appreci2006, FXDLI Dyna Vans Full wakeboard tower, a T Hangar $38,000. good cond., $1300. ate. Redmond, OR. Low Rider, Mustang bars, Polk audio 541-420-0626 541-365-4790. 541-604-5993 634 seat w/b a ckrest, light speakers throughout, Fleetwood D i scovery Apt./Multiplex NE Bend new battery, wind40' 2003, diesel, w/all overall length is 35' The Bulletin 935 completely wired for shield, forward conhas 2 slides, Arctic amps/subwoofers, unoptions - 3 slide outs, To Subscribe call Sport Utility Vehicles trols, lots of chrome, Call for Specials! derwater lights, fish satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, package, A/C,table 541-365-5800 or go to Limited numbers avail. Screamin' Eagle exfinder, 2 batteries cus& chairs, satellite, etc., 32,000 m iles. haust, 11K mi. Sewww.bendbulletin.com 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. tom black paint job. Arctic pkg., power Wintered in h eated n ior owned, w e ll $12,500 541-815-2523 Chrysler Town & W/D hookups, patios awning, in excellent shop. $82,000 O.B.O. maintained! $7950 Country LXI 1997, or decks. condition! More pix 541-447-8664 Heartland P rowler LaPine (928)581-9190 at bendbulletin.com beautiful inside 8 MOUNTAIN GLEN, I 2012, 29PRKS, 33', out, one owner, non541-383-9313 $25,500 like new, 2 slides-livQ • Professionally 541-419-3301 BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K smoker,. Ioaded with i ng area & la r g e 197,892 mi. managed by Norris & miles, premium pack- options! closet, 15' power awrec o rds Stevens, Inc. age, heated lumbar Service ning, power hitch & Save money. Learn available. $4 , 950. supported seats, pans tabilizers, 18 g a l . to fly or build hours Call Mike, (541) 615oramic moo n roof, Gulfstream 24' BT water heater, full size with your own air18.5' Sea Ray 2000 Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- 8176 after 3:30 p.m. Cruiser, 2004,2nd queen bed, l a r ge c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o KeeH 4.3L Mercruiser, low non headlights, tan & owner, 25K miles. Indusshower, porcelain sink Commander, 4 seat, hrs, 190 hp BowHarley Davidson black leather interior, ~o Qcgs trial V-10, 4-spd transmis& toilet. 150 HP, low time, rider w/depth finder, sion with overdrive. 35 hrs 2011 Classic Limn ew front & re a r MONTANA 3585 2008, full panel. $23,000 Toyota Sienna $25,000 or make offer. radio/ CD player, rod brakes O 76K miles, ited, Loaded! 9500 exc. cond., 3 slides, on gen.; stove & oven 2005 541-999-2571 obo. Contact Paul at one owner, all records, miles, custom paint holders, full canvas, have never been used. king bed, Irg LR, 541-447-5184. "Broken Glass" by EZ Loader trailer, very clean, $16,900. New micro, new LED TV, Arctic insulation, all 541-388-4360 Nicholas Del Drago, exclnt cond,$9500. BlueRay/DVD, all new options - reduced by 707-484-3518 new condition, tires, back-up camera, 916 $3500 to $31,500. heated handgrips, (Bend) new awnings. Excellent! 541-420-3250 Trucks & 713 auto cruise control. Unable to travel anymore Heavy Equipment $32k in bike, due to health. Real Estate Wanted Leather, Loaded and Look at: only $18,000or best $35,000. 541-548-3595 Keystone Laredo31' AWD. 76k miles Bendhomes.com • WE BUY HOMES• offer. 541-318-6049 RI/ 20 06 w ith 1 2' ¹044698$18,977 for Complete Listings of Any conditionslide-out. Sleeps 6, BMW X3 35i 2010 Area Real Estate for Sale Close in 7 days. queen walk-around ROBBERSON Exlnt cond., 65K miles Scott L. Williams Real bed w/storage underw/100K mile transferc! a c0ct! ~ Inncc n Harley Davidson OPEN ROAD 36' Estate - 800-545-6431 neath. Tub & shower. able warranty. Very 883 Sportster 2005 - $19,995 Peterbilt 359 p o table clean; loaded - cold 2 swivel rockers. TV. 541.312.3986 King bed, hide-a-bed 1998, 20,200 miles, water truck, 1 990, weather pkg, premium 746 Air cond. Gas stove & DLR¹0205 pnang HOLIDAY RAMBLER exc. cond., sofa, 3 slides, glass 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pkg & technology pkg. refrigerator/freezer. good thru 09/30/14 VACATIONER 2003 Northwest Bend Homes shower, 10 gal. wapump, 4-3" h oses, Keyless access, sun$3,800. 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, Microwave. Awning. camlocks, $ 25,000. roof, nayigation, satelsho w er. ter heater, 10 cu.ft. 541-548-2872. workhorse, Allison 1000 Outside 19' Pioneer ski boat, 975 fridge, central vac, 541-820-3724 Slide through storlite radio, extra snow Enjoy NW Shevlin 5 speed trans., 39K, 1983, vm tandem tires. (Car top carrier Automobiles a ge, E as y Li f t . satellite dish, 27" TV P ark, 19186 M t . NEW TIRES, 2 slides, trailer, V8.Fun & /stereo system, front 932 not included.)$22,500. Shasta Dr. B e nd Onan 5.5w gen., ABS $29,000 new; fast! $5800 obo. front power leveling Asking$18,600 541-915-9170 brakes, steel cage cockAntique & N ew 4 bdr m s . 541-815-0936. Ford Focus 2010 jacks and s cissor 541-447-4805 m aster o n m a i n pit, washer/dryer, fireClassic Autos stabilizer jacks, 16' lace, mw/conv. oven, e' aae level, 2. 5 b a ths, awning. Like new! ree standing dinette, 2560 sq. ft., bonus acfsllacEscala~ (2) 1959 1/2-ton Chevy 541-4f9-0566 RV was $121,060 new; now, .e room, 3 car garage, pickups: 1 is 4x4 with CONSIGNMENTS $35,900. 541-536-1008 l ow H O A fee s HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low ower take off winch & Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 & WANTED 541-419-0661 arn hubs; other's 2WD, RV 2 Vance & Hines pipes, We Do The Work ... DE Rink Const. extra parts. Also 1941 Great MPGs make CONSIGNMENTS $12,500. 541-306-0166 You Keep The Cash! 1-ton Ford cab & chassis. Realtors Welcome WANTED this a great comOn-site credit Titles for all. 541-989-8191 2007 Bennington We Do the Work, muter. Vin¹154827 approval team, 2005. All the goodPontoon Boat HDFatBo 1996 You Keep the Cash! web site presence. $11,977 ies. Must see only 763 2275 GL, 150hp On-site credit We Take Trade-Ins! $18,998 Honda VTEC, less Providence 2005 Recreational Homes approval team, ROBBERSON Vin ¹192111 than 110 hours, Fully loaded, 35,000 web site presence. BIG COUNTRY RV ct t! c 0 L a ~ ~ & Property original owner, lots miles, 350 Cat, Very We Take Trade-Ins! ROBBERSON Bend: 541-330-2495 of extras; Tennesclean, non-smoker, Redmond: 541-312-3986 ~ mam a Cabin on Paulina Lakesee tandem axle 3 slides, side-by-side 541-548-5254 BIG COUNTRY RV DLR ¹0205. pricing Buick Skylark 1972 Rare opportunity! Fully trailer. Excellent refrigerator with ice Completely Bend: 541-330-2495 541-312-3986 Dreams do come true! good thru 09/30/14 furnished, ready for wincondition, $23,500 maker, Washer/Dryer, Rebuilt/Customized Redmond: Pampered from day one! Dlr ¹0205. pricing ter & summer recreation. 503-646-1804 Flat screen TV's, In 2012/2013 Award Looking for your 541-546-5254 17K original miles. Lake front 3 bdrm, upgood thru 9/30/1 4 motion satellite. next employee? Photosathemmings.com Winner raded water sys, full Camaro 2011 k'itchen, $95,000 Place a Bulletin help Showroom Condition $19,900. 541-323-1898 all electric, land Ads published in the 885 541-480-2019 Many Extras wanted ad today and line, wood stove. At"Boats" classification Canopies & Campers reach over 60,000 tached wood/tool shed. Low Miles. include: Speed, fishreaders each week. $300,000. 541-383-1885 RV $15,000 ing, drift, canoe, Your classified ad 1995 Lance Camper, 541-546-4807 CONSIGNMENTS house and sail boats. 11.3 ft., sleeps 6, self will also appear on WANTED 773 For all other types of contained, very lightly bendbulletin.com We Do The Work ... Convertible. End of Acreages watercraft, please go You Keep The Cash! Chevrolet Trailblazer used, exc. cond., TV, which currently reSeason Special! to Class 875. 2008 4x4 ceives over 1.5 milVCR, micro, oven, Chevelle Malibu On-site credit vin ¹213931 5.17 acres. 65694 Old 541-385-5609 Automatic, 6-cylinder, fridge, 3 burner stove, lion page views evapproval team, $23,977 Bend/Redmond Hwy. 1966 tilt wheel, power winery month at no q ueen ove r c ab, web site presence. Mtn view, power, waComplete dows, power brakes, $8000. 541-389-6256 extra cost. Bulletin ROBBERSON Servin Central Oreonsince 1 We Take Trade-Ins! ter, septic approved. restoration, air conditioning, keyClassifieds Get Re- Alaska 8 ' ~a nna n a Cab o ver less entry, 69K miles. $174,000 O.B.O. Call HD FXSBI 2006 new WANT TO BUY: 2010 or $32,900. sults! Call 385-5809 BIG COUNTRY RV Brad 5 41-419-1725, cond., low miles, Camper 1998, many Excellent condition; newer 16-1/2-ft boat, with Bend: 541-330-2495 or place your ad 541-312-3986 or Deb 541-480-3956. Stage I download, ex- walk-thru window, standextras, Stable-Lift jack tires have 90% tread. (509) 521-0713 on-line at Dlr ¹0205. Pricing Redmond: debraObendbroad tras, bags. $7900 obo. up top, (2) 4-stroke mosystem. $10 , 500. $11,995. (in Bend, OR) 541-548-5254 bendbulletin.com good thru 9/30/2014 band.com 541-447-0887 tors. 541-388-4038 541-549-9461. Call 541-598-5111
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IThe Bulleti
E6 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN 975
Automobiles
Chevy Cavalier
2000 Inspected & Ready to Go!! ¹239718 $3,977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN~
IM Z OR
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 pricing god thru 09/30/14
Chevy Malibu 2012,
Lots of options; sunroof, 6 speed trans with manual option, bluetooth, o n Star, Sirius satelite, heated seats, pw, pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech engine, 20 MPG city, 35 MPG hwy, USB port, Ipod r eady, $14,900 OBO. 541-504-6974
FIND IT!
BUY IT! SELL ITir The Bulletin Classifieds
Ford Fusion 2012
Dual power heated leather seats for only $1 9,977 Vin¹248502 ROBBERSON IM ROR
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/1 4 Honda Accord 1991 70k miles on rebuilt eng, 4cyl, 5 spd manual, 2 dr, runs great, int. tires & w heels like new + 4 studded tires. Glas Pak muffler, stereo w/Kenwood speakers, reg. good thru 8/16. Must see $2300 cash. 541-385-4790
Infiniti i30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900 obo. 541-420-3277
N ini
r 2 ff
J
Countryman AWD Loaded - Get there in style! ¹H99552 $24,977 ROBBERSON ~
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE C ITY OF B E N D PROJECT NUMBER WA0902 SURFACE WATER I M P R OVEMENT PR O J ECT WATER FIL T R ATION FACILITY. Notice of I nvitation to
Bargain Corral
LINcoLN ~
1000
Legal Notices
mama ~
541-312-3986
Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014
Bid. Mortenson is requesting sealed bids for the following: -Bid P ackage No . 31 0 Stud Framing a nd Drywall. Bid P ackages consists of: BP 310 Stud Framing and Drywall: (INCLUSIVE OF ALL METAL AND WOOD F R A MING, ACOUSTICAL CEILING
A N D WALL SYSTEMS, AND ALL INTERIOR ACCESSORIES). Sealed bid must be received prior to 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday October 7, 2014 at: M.A. Mortenson Construction, C/o City of Bend 18900 Skyliners Road Bend, OR 97701 Attention: Tony Copley, Project Manager. Bids must be physically received at the location listed by the deadline. No faxed or e l ectronic (email) submissions will b e ac c epted. There will be a formal b id opening in t he Mortenson Construction trailers immedia tely following t h e submission deadline. Bids will not be accepted after the stated o pening date a n d time. Late bids will be returned unopened. The invitation to bid, addenda, and notification of bid results for this bid may be viewed, and printed via M.A. Mortenson Company's FTP site: ftp://ftp2.mortenson.co m/12050018. When the login a ppears, enter the f ollowing: Name: User 12050018FTP Password: NEWB2957. BO LI Prevailing Wage Rate publications a p p l icable to this contract are: Prevailing Wage Rates (PWR) for Public Works Contracts in Oregon, dated Janua ry 1, 2 0 12, P W R Amendments to the Determination 2012-01 dated April 1, 2012 and the PWR Apprenticeship Rates A mendment d a t e d A pril 1, 2 0 12. B i d d ocuments can b e viewed on the M.A. Mortenson ftp s i te, Mortenson Construction Trailer, and Central Oregon Builder's "COBE" Exchange 1902 NE 4th Street Bend, O R 97 7 0 1. M.A. Mort e nson Company r e serves the right to reject any or all bids not in compliance with bid package procedures and per ORC 279B.100. Tony Copley, Project M.A. Manager, Mortenson Company, tony.copleyomortenson.com / 425.736.4343.
LEGAL NOTICE CP-SRMOF 11 2012-A Subaru Outback 2012 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, auto. trans., AWD, leather heated seats, AWD, power moon r oof, a n d mor e ! 25,600 miles. Below KB @ $ 26,500 541-344-5325 annie2657oyahoo.com
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-
ways garaged, all
maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulietin.com
I The Bulletin recoml mends extra cautionI
I when
p u r chasing I
Trust, U.S. Bank Trust National Association, not in its i ndividual capacity but solely as Trustee, Plaintiff/s, v. Susan Currie Sagnimeni FKA Susan E. Sagnimeni; M a r tin Wayne S a gnimeni; and Occupants of the Premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0360. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, November 13, 2014 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 407 NW Delaware Avenue, Bend, O regon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i dders m u st arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm
LEGAL NOTICE Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, f S ending c ash , as trustee for the regchecks, or credit in- q i stered holders o f formation may be I Morgan Stanley abs [ subject to FRAUD. Capital I I nc. Trust For more informa2007-HE6 Mortgage f tion about an adverPass-Through Certifitiser, you may call cates, Series I the Oregon Statel 2007-HE6, Plaintiff/s, Attorney General's ~ v. Olivia D. Servantes; Office C o nsumer I Mortgage Electronic f Protection hotline at Registration Systems, 1-877-877-9392. I nc., Decision o n e Mortgage Company, LLC; Citibank (South Serving Central Oregon sinceSIB Dakota) N.A; persons
f products or servicesf from out of the area.
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or parties unknown cashier's c h e cks est bidder, for cash claiming any r i ght, made payable to or cashier's check, title, lien or interest in Deschutes County the real p roperty t he p r operty d e - Sheriff's Office will commonly known as scribed in the com- be accepted. Pay16280 Leona Lane, plaint herein, Defen- ment must be made La Pine, Oregon d ant/s. Case N o . : in full immediately 97739. C onditions 12CV1132. NOTICE upon the close of of Sale: P o tential OF SALE U NDER the sale. For more bidders must arrive WRIT O F E X ECU- information on this 15 minutes prior to TION - REAL PROP- sale go to: www.orthe auction to allow ERTY. N o tice is egonsheriff s.com/sa the Desc h utes hereby given that the les.htm County Sheriff's OfDeschutes C o u nty f ice to rev i e w LEGAL NOTICE Sheriff's Office will, on bidder's funds. Only Everbank, Plaintiff/s, Thursday, December U.S. currency 11, 2014 at 10:00 AM, v. Mariah L. T r oy, and/or ca s h ier's Mortgage Electronic in the main lobby of checks made paythe Deschutes County Registration Systems, able to Deschutes C i t iMortgage, County Sheriff's OfSheriff 's Office,63333 Inc., W. Highway 20, Bend, Inc., Oregon Afford- f ice will b e a c Oregon, sell, at public able Housing Assis- cepted. P a yment tance C o r poration, must be made in full o ral auction to t h e occupants of the pre- immediately upon highest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier's mises, Defendant/s. t he close o f t h e No.: sale. For more incheck, the real prop- Case erty commonly known 1 3CV1544FC. N O - f ormation on t h i s as 1861 NE Altura TICE OF SALE UN- sale go to: www.orDrive, Bend, Oregon DER WRIT -OF EXegonsheriff s.com/sa ECUTION REAL les.htm 97701. Conditions of PROPERTY. Notice is Sale: Potential bidLEGAL NOTICE ders must arrive 15 hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty GMAC M ortgage, minutes prior to the Sheriff's Office will, on LLC, its successors auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Thursday, December in interest and/or Sheriff's Office to re- 11, 2014 at 10:00 AM, assigns, Plaintiff/s, view bidder's funds. in the main lobby of v. Jason Portlock; Only U.S. currency the Deschutes County and Occupants of 's O ff ice,63333 the premises, Deand/or cashier's Sheriff checks made payable W. Highway 20, Bend, fendant/s. Case No.: to Deschutes County Oregon, sell, at public 13CV0998FC. NOSAL E Sheriff's Office will be oral auction to t he T ICE O F UNDER WRIT OF accepted. P ayment h ighest bidder, f o r ca s hier's EXECUTION must be made in full cash o r immediately upon the check, the real prop- REAL PROPERTY. close of the sale. For erty commonly known Notice is h e reby as 17115 Faun Lane, given that the Desmore information on Cou n t y this s al e g o to: La P i ne, O r egon c hutes 97739. Conditions of Sheriff's Office will, www.oregonsheriffs.c Sale: Potential bid- on Tuesday, Noom/sales.htm ders must arrive 15 vember 25, 2014 at LEGAL NOTICE minutes prior to the 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e Deutsche Bank Naauction to allow the main lobby of the tional Trust Company, Deschutes C o unty Deschutes County as Trustee for hold- Sheriff's Office to re- S heriff's Of fi c e , e rs o f t h e G S A A view bidder's funds. 63333 W. Highway Home Equity Trust Only U.S. currency 20, Bend, Oregon, 2006-16 and/or cashier's sell, at public oral Asset-Backed Certifi- checks made payable auction to the highcates Series 2006-16, to Deschutes County est bidder, for cash its successors and/or Sheriff's Office will be or cashier's check, assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. accepted. Payment the real p roperty Sheldon P r e scher; must be made in full commonly known as Alisha Prescher nka immediately upon the 1383 So u t hwest Alisha R. Schaan; As- close of the sale. For 27th Street, Reds ociation o f Uni t more information on m ond, Ore g on Owners of Bend Riv- this s al e go to: 97756. C onditions erside Motel Condo- www.oregonsheriffs.c of Sale: P o tential minium, Inc.; and all om/sales.htm bidders must arrive other person or par15 minutes prior to LEGAL NOTICE ties unknown claimthe auction to allow ing any right, title, lien, Fannie Mae ("Fedthe Desc h utes or interest in the real eral National MortCounty Sheriff's Ofproperty commonly gage Association"), f ice to rev i e w its successors in known as 1565 NW bidder's funds. Only interest and/or asWall St ¹208, Bend, U.S. currency OR 97701, D efen- signs, Plaintiff/s, v. and/or ca s h ier's dant/s. Case N o .: Unknown Heirs of checks made pay1 3CV1149FC. N O - Michael H. Prager; able to Deschutes Mic h ael County Sheriff's OfTICE OF SALE UN- Palmer P rager; Emp i r e DER WRIT OF EXf ice will b e ac H o m e- cepted. P a yment ECUTION - REAL Crossing owners Association; PROPERTY. Notice is must be made in full hereby given that the the Real Property immediately upon Deschutes C o u nty l ocated at 6 3 0 99 t he close o f t h e Sheriff's Office will, on Fairey Court, Bend, sale. For more inTuesday, December Oregon 97701; and f ormation on t h i s O ccupants of t h e 9, 2014 at 10:00 AM, sale go to: www.orPremises, D efenin the main lobby of egonsheriff s.com/sa the Deschutes County dant/s. Case No.: les.htm 13CV0203. NOSheriff 's Office,63333 SA L E LEGAL NOTICE W. Highway 20, Bend, T ICE O F HSBC Bank USA, Oregon, sell, at public UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION National A ssociaoral auction to t he REAL PROPERTY. tion as Trustee for h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's Notice is h e reby Mortgageit Securties Corp. M ortacheck, the real prop- given that the DesCou n t y gage Loan Trust, erty commonly known c hutes Sheriff's Office will, S eries 2007 - 1 , a s 1565 N W W a l l Mortgage Street ¹208, B end, on Tuesday, DePass-Through cerOregon 97701. Con- cember 16, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e tificates, its succesditions of Sale: Posors i n int e rest tential bidders must main lobby of the and/or ass i gns, arrive 15 minutes prior Deschutes County Of fi c e , Plaintiff/s, v. Phillip to the auction to allow S heriff's Galvan; Le o n or the Deschutes County 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, Galvan; Mortgage Sheriff's Office to resell, at public oral Electronic Registraview bidder's funds. tion Systems, Inc., Only U.S. currency auction to the highsolely as nominee and/or cashier's est bidder, for cash for Mortgageit, Inc.; checks made payable or cashier's check, to Deschutes County the real p roperty Terrango Glen AFH L LC; an d o c cuSheriff's Office will be commonly known as pants of the preaccepted. Payment 63099 Fairey Court, B end, Oreg o n mises, Defendant/s. must be made in full Case No.: immediately upon the 97701. Conditions NOclose of the sale. For of Sale: P o tential 13CV0258. T ICE O F SAL E more information on bidders must arrive UNDER WRIT OF this s al e go to: 15 minutes prior to EXECUTION www.oregonsheriffs.c the auction to allow the Desc h utes REAL PROPERTY. om/sales.htm County Sheriff's OfNotice is h e reby LEGAL NOTICE f ice to revi e w given that the DesDeutsche Bank Nabidder's funds. Only c hutes Cou n t y tional Trust ComU.S. currency Sheriff's Office will, pany, as Trustee, in and/or ca s hier's on Thursday, Detrust for the regischecks made paycember 18, 2014 at tered cer t ificate able to Deschutes 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e h olders o f Fir s t County Sheriff's Ofmain lobby of the Franklin Mortgage f ice will b e a c Deschutes County Loan Trust Series cepted. P a yment S heriff's Of fi c e , 2 006-FF7, Mor t must be made in full 63333 W. Highway age Pass-Through immediately upon 20, Bend, Oregon, ertificates, Series t he close of t h e sell, at public oral 2006-FF7, sale. For more inauction to the highPlaintiff/s, v. J e ff f ormation on t h is est bidder, for cash Maxwell; V i r ginia sale go to: www.oror cashier's check, Maxwell; Mortgage egonsheriff s.com/sa the real p roperty Electronic Registrales.htm commonly known as tion Systems, Inc.; 20994 Lupine AvNationpoint, A DiviLEGAL NOTICE e nue, Bend, O r sion of Nat. City Federal N a t ional egon 97701. CondiBank of IN.; OccuMortgage Associat ions of Sale : pants of The Proption, its successors Potential b i d ders erty, D efendant/s. in interest and/or must arrive 15 minNo.: Case assigns, Plaintiff/s, u tes prior to t h e 13CV1200FC. NOv. Charlie D. Canizio auction to allow the T ICE O F SA L E aka Charles DomDeschutes County UNDER WRIT OF minick Canizio aka S heriff's Office t o EXECUTION Charles C a n izio; review bid d er's REAL PROPERTY. Helen F. C a nizio f unds. Only U . S. Notice is h e reby aka Helen Fayne currency an d / or given that the DesCanizio aka Helen cashier's c h e cks c hutes Cou n t y Faye Simpson aka made payable to Sheriff's Office will, Helen Fayne Stone; Deschutes County on Tuesday, DeLarry R. Stone; OcSheriff's Office will cember 16, 2014 at cupants of the Prebe accepted. Pay1 0:00 AM, i n t h e mises; and the Real ment must be made main lobby of the Property located at in full immediately Deschutes County 16280 Leona Lane, upon the close of Sheriff's Off i c e, La Pine, O regon the sale. For more 63333 W. Highway 97739, Defendant/s. information on this 20, Bend, Oregon, Case No.: sale go to: www.or13CV1094FC. NOsell, at public oral egonsheriff s.com/sa auction to the highT ICE O F SAL E les.htm UNDER WRIT OF est bidder, for cash or cashier's check, EXECUTION LEGAL NOTICE the real p roperty REAL PROPERTY. IN TH E C I R CUIT commonly known as Notice i s h e r eby COURT O F THE 2215 NW Hemlock STATE OF OREGON given that the DesPlace, R e dmond, c hutes Coun t y FOR THE COUNTY O regon 977 5 6 . Sheriff's Office will, OF DES C HUTES Conditions of Sale: on Tuesday, DeU.S. Bank National Potential b i d ders cember 9, 2014 at Association, Plaintiff, must arrive 15 min1 0:00 AM, i n t h e v. Cynthia D. Farleigh, u tes prior to t h e main lobby of the Unknown Occupants; auction to allow the Deschutes County et al , D e f endants. S heriff's Offi c e , No.: Deschutes County Case Sheriff's Office to 63333 W. Highway 14CV0442FC. SUMreview bid d er's 20, Bend, Oregon, MONS BY PUBLICAfunds. Only U . S. sell, at public oral TION N O TICE TO DEFENDANTS READ currency an d / or auction to the high-
T HESE PAP E RS C AREFULLY! You must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i thin 30 days of the date of first publ i cation, 8/27/2014, along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service o n t h e Plaintiff's attorney or, if the Plaintiff does not have a n at t orney, proof of service on the Plaintiff. The subject of this a judicial foreclosure of real property commonly known as 5 2667 S k idgel Road, La Pine, OR 97739 for n on-payment of m o r tgage debt. I f y o u h a ve questions, you should see an attorney immediately. I f you need help in finding an attorney, you may call the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral S ervice a t (503) 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. D A T ED: August 25, 20'l4. /s/ Katrina E. Glogowski, OSB ¹035386, Allegiant Law Group, 506 2nd Ave Ste 2600, Seattle, WA 9 8 104 (206) 903-9966. Fax (206) 405-2701. LEGAL NOTICE IN THE C I RCUIT C OURT OF T H E S TATE O F OR E GON FOR T H E COUNTY OF CROOK JUVENILE DEPARTMENT. IN THE MATTER OF J OHNSON, D A RRAH, DOB: 06-15-2004, A Child. CASE NO. 14JU00653. SUMMONS. TO: Georg ia Johnson. I N THE NAME OF THE S TATE O F OR EGON, you are directed to a p pear before the above entitled Court at 300 NE Third S t reet, Prineville, Oregon on October 31, 2014 at 8:30 a.m. in conn ection with t h e above entitled matter. A hearing will be held upon a Petition filed on March 17, 2014, c o ncerning Darrah J o h nson. This summons is published pursuant to the order of the Circuit Judge of the Juvenile Court. The order directs this summons be published once a week for three weeks circulation in Prineville, Oregon. You have a right to be r epresented by counsel at every stage of the proceeding. If you are financially unable to retain an attorney, the court will appoint one to represent you. Telephone (541) 447-6541 i f yo u wish assistance in obtaining a court-appointed attorney. If you have q uestions abo u t
Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, Octob er 28, 2 014 a t 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff's Off i c e, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 57303 Ove r look Road, Sunriver, Oregon 97707. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 51365 Evans Way, La P i ne , O r egon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY
LEGAL NOTICE Nationstar Mortgage LLC, Its Successors and/or Assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Travis Yamada; and all Other Persons or P a rties unknown clai ming any right, title, lien or int erest in t h e R e a l Property commonly known as 314 NW Hill S treet, Bend, O R 97701, Defendant/s. Case No.: 1 3CV1220FC. N O TICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, December 11, 2014 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 314 NW Hill Street, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of S a le: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm
to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm
If you have any interest in t h e s e ized property d e s cribed below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The w r itten claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will a c cept f u t ure m ailings from t h e court and f orfeiture 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 sel 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: D a i n a Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 N E T h ird Street, Prineville, OR 97754.
Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfei-
ture because it: (1)
Constitutes the proceeds 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 Chapter475); and/or (2) Was used LEGAL NOTICE or intended for use in Nationstar Mortgage committing or faciliLLC, its successors tating the violation of, and/or assigns, Plain- solicitation to violate, tiff/s, v. R onald R. attempt to violate, or Vetter; MA & RR Enconspiracy to violate terprises, LLC; and the criminal laws of Mortgage Electronic the State of Oregon Registration Systems, regarding the manuInc., Def e ndant/s. facture, distribution or Case No.: 13CV0375. possession of conth N OTICE OF S A L E trolled su b stances U NDER WRIT O F (ORS Chapter 475). EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is IN THE MATTER OF: hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty (1) US Currency in Sheriff's Office will, on the am o un t of Thursday, December $3,200.00, Case No 11, 2014 at 10:00 AM, 14-00204971 seized in the main lobby of July 24, 2014 from the Deschutes County Jesus Alvino. Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Find It in Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e The Bulletin Classifieds! h ighest bidder, f or 541-385-5809 cash o r ca s hier's check, the real propLEGAL NOTICE erty commonly known Ocwen Loan Servicas 732 8 734 SE 5th ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Street, Bend, Oregon R obert E . Oh l d e; 97702. Conditions of Sale: P otential bid- C indy L . Ohl d e ; ders must arrive 15 Tammy Lynn Ohlde; Mortgage Electronic minutes pnor to the Registration Systems, auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Inc. as nominee for Sheriff's Office to re- Alliance Bancorp; and view bidder's funds. Persons or P a rties ming any Only U.S. currency unknown clai and/or cashier's right, title, lien, or inchecks made payable terest in the Property to Deschutes County described in the comSheriff's Office will be plaint herein, Defenaccepted. P ayment d ant/s. Cas e N o . : must be made in full 11CV1124. NOTICE immediately upon the OF SALE U N DER close of the sale. For WRIT OF E X ECUmore information on TION - REAL PROPis this s al e g o to: ERTY. N o tice hereby given that the www.oregonsheriffs.c Deschutes C o u nty om/sales.htm Sheriff's Office will, on LEGAL NOTICE Tuesday, November Nationstar Mortgage 18, 2014 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of L LC, Plaintiff/s, v . Robby James Patrick; the Deschutes County Sally M a r y Ann Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 LEGAL NOTICE Patrick; U.S. B ank, W. Highway 20, Bend, JPMorgan C hase National Association; Oregon, sell, at public Bank, National AsHSBC Bank Nevada o ral auction to t h e sociation, its sucN.A.; and FIA Card h ighest bidder, f o r cessors in interest Services N.A., Defen- cash o r ca s hier's and/or ass i gns, d ant/s. Case N o . : check, the real propPlaintiff/s, v. Michael 1 3CV1222FC. N O - erty commonly known P. Sullivan; Colleen TICE OF SALE UNa s 2138 S W 2 8 t h C. Sullivan; AssoDER WRIT OF EXStreet, Redmond, Orciation of Unit OwnECUTION REAL egon 97756. Condiers o f M o u ntain PROPERTY. Notice is tions of Sale: PotenView Lodges; Ochereby given that the t ial b i dders m u s t cupants of the preDeschutes C o u nty arnve 15 minutes pnor mises, Defendant/s. Sheriff's Office will, on to the auction to allow Case No.: Tuesday, December the Deschutes County 13CV0778. NO16, 2014 at 10:00 AM, Sheriff's Office to reT ICE O F SAL E in the main lobby of view bidder's funds. UNDER WRIT OF the Deschutes County Only U.S. currency EXECUTION Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 and/or cashier's REAL PROPERTY. W. Highway 20, Bend, checks made payable
LEGAL NOTICE
Oregon
H o using
and Com m unity Services D e partment, State of Oregon, Plaintiff/s, v. David J. Gregory, an individual; and Monica A. Keeney, an individual, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0538. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, December 16, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 17566 Sutter Street, La Pine, O regon 97739. C onditions of Sale: P otential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e ac cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE P ennymac L o a n Services, LLC, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Harold E. Bentley JR. AKA Hal Bentley AKA Hal Edward Bentley; Oregon Affordable Housing Assistance Corporation; Occupants of the premises; and the real property located at 2038 Sou t hwest 22nd Street, Redm ond, Ore g o n 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0815. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED窶「 541-385-5809
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Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, December 23, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 2038 So u t hwest 22nd Street, Redm ond, Ore g o n 97756. Conditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full i mmediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE P ennyMac L o a n Services, LLC, its successors in interest and/or assigns, P laintiff/s, v. W i l liam H. Holmes aka William Ho w a rd Holmes; Karrie K. Holmes aka Karrie K aye Holm e s; American General Financial Services (DE), Inc.; State of Oregon; Emerson H ardwood C o m pany; Capital One (USA) N.A.; a nd O ccupants of t h e Premises, D efendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1095FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y
Sheriff's Office will, on Monday, N ovember 10, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p r operty commonly known as 12310 N o r thwest 29th Court, Terrebo nne, Oreg o n 97760. Conditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s hier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately u pon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS LEGAL NOTICE P ennyMac L o a n Services, LLC, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. K elly Oberst AKA Kelly Richard Oberst AKA Kelly R . O b e rst; Cassidy C r o cker and Emily Crocker; Michael Obe r st; Miller Lumber Company; Ray K l e in Inc.; an d O c c upants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0899. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, November 20, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM, i n
the
main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 2249 Northwest 5th
Street, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County
Sheriff's Office will
be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE P NC Bank, N a tional A s sociation through its loan servicing agent Select Porffolio Servicing, Inc., Plaintiff/s, v. Melinda M. Delery, Simon J. D e lery; U.S. Bank, National Association; Crescent Creek Owners' Association; Occupants of the property, D efendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0245. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, December 18, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 51871 Hollinshead Pl., La Pine, Oregon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE TS N o .: 013325-OR Loan No.: * *** * 291 9 Reference is made to that certain trust deed (the "Deed of Trust"") executed by ALEX F. BERGER A SINGLE PERSON, as Grantor, to WESTERN TITLE A ND ESCR O W COMPANY, as Trustee, in favor of NATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE A DIVISION OF NATIONAL CITY BANK OF INDIANA, as Beneficiary, dated 6/13/2006, recorded 6/16/2006, as Instrument No. 2 006-41851, in t h e Official Records of Deschutes C o unty, Oregon, which covers t he f o llowing d e scribed real property situated in Deschutes County, Oregon: LOT THREE (3), BLOCK SIX (6), CLEAR SKY ESTATES, RECORDED APRIL 7, 1977, IN CABINET B, P AGE 2 25 , D E S CHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. APN: 106494 C o mmonly k nown as: 835 SE POLARIS CT BEND, OR 97702 The current beneficiary is: 21 ST M O RT G A G E CORPORATION Both the beneficiary and t he t r ustee h a v e e lected to s ell t h e above-described real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to ORS 86.752(3). The default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Installment of interest only payments which became due on 11/1/2009 plus late charges if any, and all subsequent interest, advances, late charges and foreclosure fees and costs that become payable. Delinquent Payments: Dates: 11/1/2009-7/1/2010 No. 9 Amount $1,343 39 Total: $12,090.51 Dates: 8/1/2010-7/1/2013 No. 36 Amount $1,336 07 Total: $48 , 0 98.52 Dates: 8/1/2013-5/1/2014 No. 10 Amount $688.57 Total: $6,885.70 Late Charges: $ 4 7 4.80 Beneficiary Advances: $12,865.51 Foreclosure Fees and Expenses: $ 1 , 220.00 T otal R equired t o Reinstate: $81,635.04 TOTAL R E QUIRED TO PAYOFF: $287,461.62 By reason of the default, the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by the Deed of Trust immediately due and payable, including: the principal sum of $207,200.00 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.875 % per annum, from 10/1/2009 until paid, plus all accrued
late charges, and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs, and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Deed of Trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee, CLEAR R ECON COR P . , w hose address i s 4375 Jutland Drive, San Diego, CA 92117, will on 10/9/2014, at the hour of 11:00 AM, standard time, as est ablished b y OR S 187.110, At the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N . W. Bond Street, Bend, O R 97701, sell a t public auction to the h ighest bidder f o r cash the interest in the above-described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a r easonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Deed of Trust r einstated by p a y ment to the beneficiary of t h e e n tire a mount the n d u e (other than the portion of principal that would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorneys' fees, and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the Deed of Trust at any time not later than five days before the date last set for sale. Without limiting the trustee's disclaimer of r epresentations or warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice that some residential p roperty sold at a trustee's sale m ay have been used in manufacturing metha mphetamines, t h e chemicalcomponents of which are known to be toxic. Prospective purchasers of r esidential prop e rty should be aware of this potential danger b efore deciding t o place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing a n o b ligation, t h e performance of which i s secured by t h e Deed of Trust, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 5/27/2014 C LEAR RECO N CORP., 4375 Jutland Drive, San Diego, CA 92117, 858-750-7600 By: Hamsa Uchi, Authorized Signatory of Trustee. A-4462600 08/27/2014, 09/03/2014, 09/1 0/2014, 09/1 7/2014 LEGAL NOTICE TSツケ 14-27900 TRUSTEE'S NOTICE
OF SALE Reference is made to that certain Deed of T rust (hereafter referred to as the Trust Deed) made by HARRY R. FORD, FEE SIMPLE as Grantor to FIRST A MERICAN T I T LE INSURANCE CO. OF OREGON, as trustee, i n favor o f G E NWORTH FINANCIAL HOME EQUITY ACCESS, INC., FORMERLY KNOWN AS LIBERTY REVERSE MORTGAGE, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 1/5/2010, r e c orded 1/12/2010, in m o r tgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon Document No. 2010-01606 in Book Page covering the following d e scribed real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: Lot 14 in Block 6 of CONIFER ACRES, Deschutes County, Oregon. The s treet a ddress o r other common designation, if any, for the r eal p roperty d e scribed above is purported to be: 52231 Dorrance M e a dow R d. La P i ne, O R 97739 T h e Tax Assessor's Account ID for the Real Property is purported to be: 114709. Both the beneficiary and the trustee, Benjamin D. Petiprin, attorney at law have elected to foreclose the above
r eferenced Tru s t Deed and sell the said real property to satisfy the o b ligations secured by the Trust Deed and a Notice of Default and Election to Sell has been recorded pursuant to ORS 86.735(3). AII right, title and interest in the said described property which t he grantors had, or had power to convey, at the time of execution of the Trust Deed, together with any interest the grantors or their successors in interest acquired after execution of the Trust Deed shall be sold at public auction to the h ighest bidder f o r cash to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed and the expenses of sale, including the compensation of the trustee as provided by law, and the reasonable fees of trustee's attorneys. The default for which foreclosure is m ade is: T h a t a breach of, and default in, the obligations secured by said deed of trust have occurred in that "A Borrower dies and the Property is not the principal residence of at least one surviving Borrower"' and, the borrower has died and there are no other borrowers occupying the p roperty, and therefore, the lender had declared all s ums s e cured thereby forthwith due and payable plus the foreclosure costs, legal fees or any advances that may become due, and such sums have not been paid. The amount req uired to c ure t h e default in payments to date is calculated as follows: From: 2/4/2014 Total of past
due
paym e nts:
$136,674.77
Lat e Charges: $0.00 Additional charges (Taxes, I nsurance): $ 0 .00 Trustee's Fees and Costs: $3,054.26 Total necessary to cure: $139,729.03 Please note th e a m o unts s tated herein a r e subject to confirmation and review and are likely to change during the next 30 days. Please contact the successor trustee Benjamin D. Petiprin, a ttorney at law, t o obtain a "reinstatement' and or "payoff" quote prior to remitting funds. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by the Trust Deed due and payable. The amount required to discharge this lien in its entirety to date is: $139,729.03 Said sale shall be held at the hour of 1:00 PM on 10/30/2014 in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, and pursuant t o OR S 86.771(7) shall occur at the following designated place: At the front entrance to the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond St., Bend, OR Other than as shown of record, neither the said beneficiary nor the said trustee have any actual notice of any person having or claiming to have any lien upon or interest in the r e a l pr o perty hereinabove described subsequent to t he interest o f t h e trustee in the Trust Deed, or of any successor(s) in interest to the grantors or of any lessee or other person in possession of o r o ccupying t h e property, except: NONE Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire a mount t he n d u e (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t he r d e f ault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under t he o bligation(s) of t h e Trust Deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, t ogether w it h th e trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by O RS 8 6 .778. T h e mailing address of the trustee is: Benjamin D. Petiprin, attorney at law c/o Law Offices of Les Zieve One World
T rade Center 1 2 1 Revised Statutes has Southwest S a lmon the right to have the S treet, 1 1t h F l o o r foreclosure proceedPortland, OR 97204 ing dismissed and the ( 503) 946-6558 I n Trust Deed reinstated construing this notice, by payment to t he the masculine gender Beneficiary of the enincludes the feminine tire amount then due and the neuter, the (other than such porsingular includes the tion of said principal plural, t h e wor d as would not then be "grantor" and/or due had no default "grantors" i n cludes occurred), t o gether any successor in in- w ith t he cost s , terest to the Grantor Trustee's or attorney's as well as any other fees and curing any person owing an obli- other default c omgation th e p e r for- plained of in the Nomance of which is se- tice of Default by tencured by the Trust dering the Deed, and the words performance required "trustee" and "benefi- under the obligation or ciary" include their re- Trust Deed, at a ny spective successors time prior to five days i n interest, if a n y. before the date last Without limiting the set for sale. In contrustee's disclaimer of struing this notice, the r epresentations o r masculine gender inwarranties, O r egon cludes the feminine l aw r e quires t h e and the neuter, the trustee to state in this singular includes plunotice that some resi- ral, the word "Grantor" dential property sold includes any succesat a t rustee's sale sor in interest to the may have been used Grantor as well as any in manufacturing other persons owing methamphetamines, a n o bligation, t h e the chemical compo- performance of which nents of which are is secured by said known to be t oxic. Trust Deed, the words Prospective purchas- "Trustee" and "Beners o f re s i dential eficiary" includes their property should be respective s u ccesaware of this poten- sors in interest, if any. tial danger before de- D ated: August 1 3 , ciding to place a bid 2014 First American for this property at the Title Insurance Comtrustee's sale. Dated: pany By: Cindy Engel, 6/23/2014 Benjamin Authorized Si g n or D. Petiprin, attorney at First American Title law c/o Law Offices of Insurance Company Les Zieve Signature c/o MTC Financial Inc. B y: B e njamin D . dba Trustee Corps Petiprin P1 1 11227 1 7100 Gillette A v 9 /10, 9 / 17 , 9/ 2 4 , enue Irvine, CA 92614 10/01/2014 9 49-252-8300 F O R SALE INF O RMATION PLEASE CALL: LEGAL NOTICE TS No Priority Posting and Publishing at OR08000056-14-1 APN 20 2 04 1 / 714-573-1965 Web151305DA03800 Title site for Trustee's Sale Order No 8 4 42625 Information: www.priTRUSTEE'S NOTICE orityposting.com THIS OF SALE Reference COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLis made to that certain Trust Deed made LECTOR AND IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLby, Richard W Bodily &Claudia L Bodily as LECT A DEBT. ANY Grantor t o F i d elity INFORMATION OBNational Title Insur- TAINED W IL L B E ance Co. as Trustee, USED FOR T H AT in favor of First Ten- PURPOSE. n essee Bank N a - P1108479 8/20, 8/27, tional As s o ciation 9/3, 09/10/2014 successor t h r ough LEGAL NOTICE merger with First Ho- Wells Fargo Bank, r izon Home L o a n N.A. as trustee for Corporation as Ben- WAMU M o rtgage eficiary and recorded Pass-Through Ceron December 27, t ificates Ser i e s 2006 as I n strument 2006-PR1 Trust, its No. 2006-83962 of of- successors in interficial records in the est and/or assigns, O ffice of t h e R e - Plaintiff/s, v. Ray M. corder of Deschutes Lawler C ounty, Ore g o n to-wit: APN:202041 / 151305DA03800 LOT 9 2, MOUN T A I N GLENN PHASE 1, in the City of Redmond, County of Deschutes, State o f Ore g on. Commonly known as: 1969 NW P O PLAR PLACE, R e dmond, OR 97756 Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said Trust Deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes. The default for which the foreclosure is m ad e is the G rantor's failure t o p ay: failed to p a y payments which became due Monthly Payment $322.49 By this reason of said default the B e neficiary has declared all obligations secured by said Trust Deed imm ediately due a n d payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $50,887.02 together with interest thereon at t h e ra t e of 3.25000% per annum from April 22, 2013 until paid; plus all accrued late c harges thereon; a n d all Trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said T rust D e e d. Wherefore, notice is hereby given that, the undersigned Trustee will on December 2, 2014 at the hour of 01 :00 PM, Standard of Time, as established by Section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at the front entrance to th e D eschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond St., Bend, OR 97701 County of Deschutes, 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 the execution by him of th e s a i d T r ust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs an d e x penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the T rustee. Notice i s further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon
arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made m full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
f ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately u pon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Edward Charles Miller aka Edward C. Miller, Jr.; Doris Jean Miller; JP Morgan Chase Bank LEGAL NOTICE National A ssociaWells Fargo Bank, tion, successor in N.A., its successors i nterest b y pur in interest and/or c hase f ro m t h e assigns, Plaintiff/s, Federal Deposit Inv. Mary C. Winfrey surance Corporaaka Mary Christine tion as receiver of Winfrey; L arkspur Washington Mutual Village HomeownBank; U.S. Bank, ers As s ociation, National A ssociaInc.; an d O c c u- tion; Occupants of the Premises; and pants of the Premises, Defendant/s. the Real Property Case No.: located at 5 2 7 01 12CV1205. NOAmmon Road, La T ICE O F SA L E P ine, Oreg o n UNDER WRIT OF 97739, Defendant/s. EXECUTION Case No.: REAL PROPERTY. 13CV0518. NONotice is h e reby T ICE O F SA L E given that the DesUNDER WRIT OF c hutes Coun t y EXECUTION Sheriff's Office will, REAL PROPERTY. on Tuesday, DeNotice is h e reby cember 23, 2014 at given that the Des1 0:00 AM, i n t h e c hutes Cou n t y main lobby of the Sheriff's Office will, Deschutes County on Tuesday, DeS heriff's Of fi c e , cember 9, 2014 at 63333 W. Highway 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e 20, Bend, Oregon, main lobby of the sell, at public oral Deschutes County auction to the highS heriff's Of fi c e , est bidder, for cash 63333 W. Highway or cashier's check, 20, Bend, Oregon, the real p roperty sell, at public oral commonly known as auction to the high20667 Honeysuckle est bidder, for cash L ane, Bend, O r or cashier's check, egon 97702-2780. the real p roperty Conditions of Sale: commonly known as Potential b i d ders 5 2701 Ammo n must arrive 15 minRoad, La Pine, Oru tes prior to t h e egon 97739. Condiauction to allow the tions of Sale: PoDeschutes County tential bidders must Sheriff's Office to arrive 15 m inutes review bid d er's prior to the auction funds. Only U . S. to allow the Descurrency an d / or c hutes Cou n t y cashier's c h e cks Sheriff's Office to made payable to review bid d er's Deschutes County funds. Only U . S. Sheriff's Office will currency an d / or be accepted. Paycashier's c h e cks ment must be made made payable to in full immediately Deschutes County upon the close of Sheriff's Office will the sale. For more be accepted. Payinformation on this ment must be made sale go to: www.orin full immediately egonsheriff s.com/sa upon the close of les.htm the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.orLEGAL NOTICE egonsheriff s.com/sa Wells Fargo Bank, les.htm N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Marcy L. Keeler LEGAL NOTICE aka Marcy L y nn Wells Fargo Bank, Keeler; K ar l L. N.A., its successors K eeler ak a K a r l in interest and/or Lance Keel e r; assigns, Plaintiff/s, Capital One Bank v. Kelley R. Hansen; and Occupants of ( USA), NA; R a y K lein, INC., D BA the Premises, DeProfessional Credit fendant/s. Case No.: S ervices; Oc c u - 12CV1307. NOT ICE O F SAL E pants of the Premises; and the Real UNDER WRIT OF Property located at EXECUTION 51471 Birch Road, REAL PROPERTY. La Pine, O regon Notice i s h e r eby 97739-9635, Defengiven that the Desdant/s. Case No.: c hutes Coun t y 13CV0935FC. Sheriff's Office will, AMENDED NO on Thursday, DeT ICE O F SA L E cember 18, 2014 at UNDER WRIT OF 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e EXECUTION main lobby of the REAL PROPERTY. Deschutes County Notice is h e reby S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway given that this Desc hutes Cou n t y 20, Bend, Oregon, Sheriff's Sale origisell, at public oral nally scheduled for auction to the highest bidder, for cash A ugust 26, 2 0 1 4 has been moved to or cashier's check, Thursday, Septemthe real p roperty b er 18, 2 01 4 a t commonly known as 3073 Northeast By1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the ers Court, Bend, Deschutes County Oregon S heriff's Of fi c e , 97701-8194. Conditions of Sale: Po63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, tential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes sell, at public oral auction to the highprior to the auction to allow the Desest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, c hutes Cou n t y the real p roperty S heriff's Office t o commonly known as review bid d er's 51471 Birch Road, f unds. Only U . S. La Pine, O regon currency an d / or 97739. Conditions cashier's c h e cks of Sale: P o tential made payable to Deschutes County bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to Sheriff's Office will the auction to allow be accepted. Paythe Desc h utes ment must be made County Sheriff's Ofin full immediately f ice to revi e w upon the close of bidder's funds. Only the sale. For more U.S. currency information on this and/or ca s hier's sale go to: www.orchecks made payegonsheri ff s.com/sa able to Deschutes les.htm County Sheriff's Of-
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LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Susan H. Scott aka Susan Scott; John D. Scott aka John Dale S cott; Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., successor by merger to Wachovia Mortgage Corporation; Mid l a nd Funding LLC; Occupants of the Premises, and the Real Property located at 787 Nort h west Spruce Str e e t, Redmond, Oregon 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0514. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, November 4, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 787 Nort h west Spruce Str e e t, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s hier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately u pon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheri ff s.com/sa les.htm
LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., on behalf of Registered Holders of Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities I LLC, Asset-Backed Cert ificates, Ser i e s 2007-AC3, Plaintiff/s, v. G onzalo Naj a r ; M ortgage Ele c tronic Registration Systems, Inc.; Security Nati o nal Mortgage Company; Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as trustee for Meritage Mortgage Loan Trust 2005-2; O ccupants of t he property, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13C V 0669. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, Octob er 21, 2 0 1 4 a t 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 2766 N E R a inier D rive, Bend, O r egon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
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