Bulletin Daily Paper 09-12-15

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SATURDAY September12,2015

ames,cn e e review SPORTS • C1

UMAGAZINEINSIDE

bendbulletin.corn STORY IN LOCAL• B1 • I

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TODAY' S READERBOARD

HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATIONS

Haggen —Asthe grocery

In drought, pressure to irrigate even more

chain files for bankruptcy, about 40 of its creditors are located in Central Oregon.CS

Breedlove —Theboutique guitar-maker celebrates 25 years in Bend.D1

MlgrantS —Asmuggler in Turkey describes helping desperate people makethe dangerous crossing to Greece.Al

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Despite drought conditions declared in 24 of Ore-

Racial controversies-

gon's 36 counties, residents in some neighborhoods remain under pressure to keep their lawns green and lush. Homeowners associations frequently require

Institutionalties to slavery. AS PIUS:Michael couldn't get his poem published. So he changed his name toYi-FenChou. A6

residents to maintain their

And a Wedexclusive

landscaping to a certain standard, which can often

— Holy lobbying: Climate change andabortion are in the spotlight for the pope's visit. beadbulletia.cern/extras

mean watering a thirsty

lawn through the hottest and driest months of the year. Mike Buettner, Bend's water conservation manager, said there are more

EDITOR'5CHOICE

than 100 homeowners as-

Ashes on the gridiron? Pleasedon't, schoolssay By Chuck Culpepper The Washington Post

The outset of another col-

lege football season brings the onset of a request both touching and tricky. It

comes to university athletic departments not in droves but in a reliable trickle: Be-

reavedrelativesand friends aim to scatter, at stadiums,

sociations in Bend, though

Photos by JoeKline I rhe Bulletin

Freshman Kaitlyn Maestas grabs some strawberries as other volleyball players also get food during dinner service after practice

Friday evening at BendHighSchool. The pilot program began serving meals this week to students still at school in the evening.

By Abby Spegmane The Bulletin

a handful of residents who

cafeteria and a feeding frenzy was happening k

"Can I have some of that, too?" asked Trin-

Are political ads still effective~

ity Barudoni, a freshman right side hitter on the volleyball team, reaching for strawber-

around them. Such eternal tributes are

strips,tater tots, carrot sticks, peaches and

Around herteammates grabbed up chicken Tracy Sampson, left, and Aimee Filson prepare corn dogsand tater tots for students' supper at BendHighSchool on Friday.

The Washington Post

"the salt burn of the tissue

Beginning this week, Bend High is offering free supper to students after school, many of them athletes finishing practice and games. Previously the district

because there's so much

servedafter-school meals

calcium, calcium phosphate that you' re putting on that

at mostly elementary and middle schools with

The first TV commercial riculture, which reimburses

thereare also academic-based

schoolsform eals. "The caution was you

after-school programs. And as long as a high school has an

couldn't serve just your foot-

elementary or middle school

ball team after-school meals," said Heidi Dupuis, school

in the same attendance area that meets the 50 percent re-

the schools had to host ac-

nutrition manager at Oregon

quirement, it can serve supper,

ademic-basedafter-school programs, not interscholastic sports, according to guidelines from the U.S. Department of Ag-

Department of Education. But the USDA loosened its rules a few years back, Dupuis said, and now students in sports can eat as long as

50 percent of students or more eligible for free or reduced lunch based on family income. To qualify,

as the USDA calls it, even if the high school doesn't meet the requirement, as is the case

at Bend High. SeeSuppers/A5

Then, with the soil, "it

can prevent anything else from growing there for a while because it completely throws off the nutrient balance for a while."

McElroy and fellow Auburn-minded souls know this well and lately. In the exhilarated aftermath of the 2013 Iron Bowl, which Auburn won over Alabama

on a shocking return of a missed field goal on the final play, an unknown fan deposited ashes on the field at Jordan-HareStadium. SeeAshes /A5

Related

bmnstorming session

• Perry at Walker exits the headquarters: race,A4 Fl a shes of angry liberal protests that made him a national conservative

By Peter Baker and Julie Hirschfeld Davis

repairing relations with allies e r s to dear the air after a bitter lars in sanctions relief from the and constraining Tehran's re- a n d starkly partisan debate nudear accord — money that gional ambitions. over the merits of the the prime minister has argued He got started FriAN ALY S IS Ir a n deal and the depth will go directly to funding terday even as the House of American commitrorism against his country. Unwas still voting by announcing ment to Israeli security. til now, Netanyahu has refused that he would host Prime MinThe president will use the to talk about strengthened ister Benjamin Netanyahu of m e e ting to renew a longstand- security cooperation to avoid Israel at the White House in i ng o ff er of more military aid to looking as if he was accepting November. The session will of- b olster Israel's defenses as Iran the Iran deal. fer an opportunity for the lead- receives tens of billions of dolSee Deal /A5

an organization barred by law from coordinating

The Bulletin

Q l/i/e use recycled newsprint

ences at Auburn. "It' ll burn

said, because it "draws all the water out of the plant, so (it' s) a salt burn in effect"

looks like the product of a

Next for nudear deal: making it work

McElroy, professor of crop, soil and environmental sci-

fertilizer on the ground, he

promoting Scott Walker's campaign for president

hero, followed by Walker himself — sleeves rolled up, shaking hands and giving a speech. But the ad — which started running in Iowa this week as part of a planned five-month, nearly $7 million campaign — was creat-

leaf tissue," said Scott

the plant, any plant." It' s akin to putting excessive

By Sean Sullivan

boxes of milk and apple juice.

seem. Universities don' t tend to allow the practice

the grass and mar the soil. The grass succumbs to

at the yogurt bar.

ries to go with her yogurt-and-granola snack.

even on days when stadiums lie empty. For one thing, where living grass is involved, the ashes both kill

feel the rules are unjust in light of the drought. SeeDrought/A5

It was nearly 6 p.m. in the Bend High School

the ashesofdeparted souls who identified with football programs strongly enough to build autumn social lives harder than they might

many are effectively inactive and not enforcing the rules and regulations. He said he does not know how many of Bend's homeowners associations aggressively enforce regulations about keeping landscapes green but has heard from

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Having beaten back a congressional campaign to derail his nuclear agreementwith Iran,resident Barack Obama now faces a panoply of challenges that may be just as daunting: making the deal actually work while

TODAY'S WEATHER rrr

Mostly sunny High 91, Low53 Page B6

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C7-8 Comics/Puzzles F3-4 Dear Abby D6 Obituaries B2 Community Life 01-6 Horoscope D6 S oI F1-8 Crosswords F 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

B5 C1-6 D6

An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 113, No. 255,

36 pages, 5 sections

ed by Unintimidated PAC, strategy with the Wiscon-

sin GOP governor since his campaign launch in July. Unintimidated is one of

about a dozen well-funded super PACs poised to dominate the airwaves this fall

like never before. SeeAds /A4

': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

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