Serving Central Oregon since190375
MONDAY October 13,2014
fe Qll'$ FQ ll$ fllll Bme Discover NatureDay SPORTS • B1
LOCAL• A7
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
BEND
REVIVING A LANDMARK
U.S. Housecandidates
debate —GregWalden, Ae-
app for vacation
lea Christofferson square off in Sunriver.Al
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
The city of Bend received
Winter gOlf —Colder
nine vacation home rental
weather doesn't meanyou havetoputtheclubsaway.The Central Oregon Winter Series is returning.B1
applications in June. The
Runnlng Stl'Ong — Powered bya strong marathon, Bendtriathlete finishes12th at Ironman World Championships.B1
next month, the number was 11 and, in August,
• Planning begins to repurpose the historic, two-story brick building into a city hall By Leslle Pugmire Hole The Bulletin
up this fall, the city has
REDMOND-
seen a spike in applications. September brought in
Ebnla in the U.S. —Dallas
omewhere in the Evergreen school building, perhaps buried between layers of modern
nurse becomesthe first person to contract Ebola within the United States.A2
drywall, is a door covered in the signatures of students from days gone by. Down in the
And a Web exclusive-
there was a small BP jum p to 19. But on AS as debate over the density and placement of rentals heated
65, while as of last week,
basement, behemoth equipment for the original vacuum vapor heating system sits still, its nearly century-old technology a point of pride for the town when it was installed.
Some Mormonsarepushing the church to becomemore accepting of gay members. bendbunetin.cem/extras
October had already seen 26 filed with the city. Assistant City Manager Jon
Skidmore attributes part of the rush to "the prohibition effect," a feeling among applicants that they must act now or possibly lose out on the chance.
In all of 2013, 110applications were submitted, while this year, the number
is already approaching200.
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Skidmore cautioned that
Ellt
Columbus Day in the crosshairs
not all of these applications represent new rentals, as 51 applications have been received since the start of
,~
September in response to a city program to encourage
a
rentals operating without
land use approval to apply. SeeRentals/A8
By Sarah Kaplan
Medicare plans under
The Washington Post
Who knew that a paid
day off from work could be so dlvlslve? The Seattle City Coun-
cil's unanimous vote last
week to rename Columbus
fire in audit
can activists cheering and
reports
Day "Indigenous People's Day" had Native Ameri-
Italian heritage groups up in arms. Depending on whom you asked, the name change was either a long-overdue recognition that a genocidal, directionally challenged sailor
Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
The upstairs hallway of the former Evergreen Elementary and historic RedmondUnion HighSchool in Redmond. The city plans to
By Robert Pear New York Times News Service
invest $9 million into refurbishing the building and converting it into a city hall.
WASHINGTON — Fed-
eral officials say they have repeatedly criticized, and in manycasespenalized,
doesn't really warrant a
After 92 years as the center
of educational and social life
Requests for proposals from design teams and con-
Heather Richards.
postal holiday, or an affront to Italian-Americans and the American tradi-
in Redmond, the two-story
struction managers will be
brickbuilding is entering a new life, as the city launches
issuedbeforemonth'send, with a goal of beginning the planning process with the newyear and for construc-
Redmond has been down the historic preservation road,
and restore the building. The idea was to lease the building and therefore recoup the restoration costs, but the
but last time — mindful of
depot has been vacant for
of claims for medical ser-
some taxpayer views against public money spent on res-
18months and was forced
vices and unjustified limits on coverageofprescription drugs. The findings, cataloged in dozens of federal audit
tion of discovery. "We say today, 'Basta!' We say, 'Enough.' We say, 'No more discrimination.' Not now and not here," Seattle activist
Ralph Fascitelli, who is coordinating an effort to reverse the name change,
said at a news conference Thursday.
an effort to restore Evergreen
to its historical glory and position as Redmond's heart. Currently, the plan calls
for a $9 million investment, using a mixture of savings, bonds, urban renewal and
general funds, to refurbish the main school building into a city hall.
tion to begin before 2016.
"We will be looking for a team with demonstrative
This won't be the first time
toration — it tried to make
the project break even. The city purchased Redmond's historic preservation experioriginal passenger train ence, and a plus is experience depot for $1, bought land with historic rehab for public along the railroad in south use," said Redmond Commu- Redmond and spent slightly nity Development Director less than $1 million to move
to cut its lease rates with the recession. This time, the city intends to inhabit the school — forgo-
ing an earlier idea ofbuilding a new city hall — and perhaps lease out some unneed-
ed space. SeeEvergreen/A5
But Seattle isn't the first
Medicare health plans for
serious deficiencies, including the improper rejection
reports, come as millions
of older Americans prepare to sign up for private health plans and prescription drug plans. SeeMedicare/A8
jurisdiction to dismiss the federal holiday. South Dakota has been calling it "Native American Day" since 1990, while in Alaska
and Oregon, the second Monday in October is recognized as ... the second Monday inOctober. In fact, opposition to Columbus Day goes back to its inception. It was first
given national prominence by way of an 1892 dec-
In Britain, an IslamicState recruiter wields influence Islamic State sits in a London sweets shop, laying out his
By Griff Witte The Washington Post
LONDON — As British war planes arc throughMiddleEast-
Rniutn» • "
ern skies and security
laration from President Benjamin Harrison in the
services race to unravel terrorist plots at home,
wake of the high-profile lynching of 11 Sicilian immigrants in New Orleans,
the nation's most prom-
inent propagandist for the
radical vision between
bites of dessert. y IraqandSyria,An.. jem C houdary says " confidently, are only " the beginning. The Islamic State's signature bla c k flag will fly over 10
Downing Street, not to mention the White House. And it
won't happen peacefully, but only after a great battle that is now underway. "We believe there will be
complete domination of the world by Islam," says the 47-year-old, calmly sipping tea and looking none the
worse for having been swept up in a police raid just days earlier. "That may sound like some kind of James Bond movie — you know, Dr. No
and world domination and all that. But we believe it."
With such grandiose proclamations, it is tempting to dismiss Choudary as a
cartoonish hate preacher straight out of central
casting. Many do. But harder to ignore is his record of inspiring impressionable young men to carry out violence in the name of Islam — both in Brit-
ain and overseas. SeeRecruiter/A4
and it was named a fed-
eral holiday by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1934 as a way of counter-
ing widespread anti-Italian immigrant sentiment. SeeHoliday/A4
TODAY'S WEATHER w<l~r
Mostly sunny High 77, Low 45
Page B10
The Bulletin
INDEX Calendar A7 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope
C4 Local/State A9 Movies A9 Nation/World
A7 SportsMonday B1-9 A9 Tee to Green B1,B8-9 A2 Television A9
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 112, No. 2ee, 26 pages, 3 sections
Q I/I/e use recycfed newsprint
o
IIIIIIIIIIIIII 8 8 267 02329
A2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
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OR LD
Da asnurseist e irstto contract E oa wit inU.S. By Manny Fernandez
541-382-1811
• • 8olea4Aw.
NxTroN +
became the first person to c ontract Ebola w i t hi n t h e United States, prompting lo-
cal, state and federal officials who had settled into a choreographed response to scramble Sunday to solve the mystery of how shebecame infected despite wearing protective gear and to monitor additional places and people possibly at risk. The news further stoked fearsof health care workers across the country, many of
Liberianursesthreatenstrike overEbola pay MONROVIA, Liberia — Liberian officials are pleading with nurses and physician assistants to show up towork today amid a dispute over hazard paythat has prompted calls for a strike in the middle of the Ebolaepidemic. A strike could deliver a serious blow to the fight against Ebola in Liberia, where theWorld Health Organization has recorded more than 2,300 confirmed, suspected andprobable deaths from the deadly disease —morethan any other country. President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf personally toured Ebola treatment units around Monrovia onSaturday asking health workers to remain in their posts, assistant health minister Tolbert Nyenswah said Sunday. "Everybodyisappealingbecauseithasadverseandverynegative consequences onpeoplesuffering from Ebola andprogress that has beenmadewith the fight," Nyenswah said. — The Associated Press
whom have grown increasingly anxious about having to handle Ebola cases. The
confirmation Sunday of the
of Ebola being transmitted in
second Ebola case in Dallas — four days after the death
this country. Officials expand-
Wednesday of the first patient, Thomas Eric Duncan, 42, a Liberian national who
should be transferred to hos-
pitals with special contained the pool of people they had ment units and experience in been monitoring, because the treating the disease. nurse had not been among the
48 health care workers, relarrived in this country in Sep- atives of Duncan and others tember — opened a new and whom they were evaluating more frightening chapter in daily. the unfolding public health The U.S. Centers for Dis-
T he CDC said i t w o u l d conduct a nationwide train-
ing conference call Tuesday for thousands of health care workers to ensure they would be fully prepared to treat a pa-
drama.
ease Control and Prevention
tient with Ebola.
While the new Ebola patient was not publicly identi-
recommended that h ealth officials look more closely at
tients can be done safely, but
fied, officials said that she was
the protective gear that nurs-
a nurse who had helped treat Duncan at a hospital here
"The care of Ebola pa-
it's hard to do it safely," Dr. es, doctors and hospital assis- Thomas Frieden, director of
tants use when treating Ebola patients. It also, for the first
the CDC, told reporters Sun-
day. "Even a single, inadverlated safety protocols. It was time, was considering the idea tent innocent slip can result in the first confirmed instance that patients with the virus contamination." and that she may have vio-
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Adel Hana I The Associated Press
Palestinians walk betweenthe rubble of their destroyed building in Shijaiyah neighborhood of Gaza City in the northern GazaStrip on Sunday. Delegates representing some 50nations and20 regional and international organizations attended a donor conference in Cairo, Egypt, on Sunday to help Gaza rebuild after the war between Israel andGaza's militant Islamic group Hamasthis summer.
PrOteStS near FerguSOn —Officers arrested 17 protesters and usedpepperspraytosubduesomeofthem SundayinaSt.Louisneighborhood not far from thesuburb whereviolence erupted this summer after the shooting of ablack manbyawhite policeman. Thearrests were the only incident in anotherwise peaceful weekendof demonstrations in the city to protest thefatal shooting of18-year-old Michael Brownin Ferguson inAugust. Theshooting sparked sometimesviolent demonstrations in thepredominantly black suburb. Early Sundaymorning, about 200 protesters gathered inShaw,asouth St. Louis neighborhood where last weekanother black18-year-old waskilled by awhite police officer, St. Louis PoliceChiefSamDotson said.. BOlityinn OIOCtinnS —President EvoMorales of Bolivia said Sunday night that hehadwon a third consecutive term, althoughelectoral authorities wereslow to reveal votetotals. Morales' re-election was widely anticipated, and the president, who faced afractured opposition, was propelled by abuoyant economyanda sustained drop in poverty in one of theregion's poorest countries. Moralesannounced his victory in a speechfrom the balcony of agovernment building in oneof the main public squares of LaPaz,saying, "This victory is the victory of the anti-colonialists andtheanti-imperialists." He suggested that hehad received morethan 60 percent of thevote while a crowd chanted his name.
CalifOrnia health eXChange — California's healthinsurance exchange hasawarded $184 million in contracts without thecompetitive bidding andoversight that is standard practice across stategovernment, including dealsthat sent millions of dollars to a firm whose employees have long-standing ties to theagency's executive director. Covered California's no-bid contracts were for a variety of services, ranging from public relations to payingfor ergonomic adjustments to workstations, according to anAssociated Pressreview of contracting records obtained through thestate Public RecordsAct. Several of those contracts worth a total of $4.2 million went to a consulting firm, The Tori Group, whose founderhasstrong professional ties to agency Executive Director Peter Lee,while others wereawardedto a subsidiary of a health care company heonce headed.
Uklainn tnlkS —Russian andUkrainian officials on Sundaycontinued aseries of measuredstepsaimedat decreasingtensions before the countries' presidents meetthis week to discuss thesix-month conflict in Ukraine's east. Despite thecontinuing fighting over disputed territories, President Petro Poroshenko ofUkrainesaid hebelieved that afull cease-fire could soon beachieved under a peaceplan that he and Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, hadendorsed. OnSunday, Russian news agencies reported that Putin hadordered troops deployed on the Ukrainian border to return to their bases. It wasthe second time this year that Putin hadannounced that military exercises along the Ukrainian border hadbeencompleted andthat 17600 soldiers would be withdrawn to their usualbases.
y a ~
TALK TO A REPORTER
on Sundaystruck downAlaska's first-in-the-nation ban ongaymarriages, the latest court decision in abusyweekfor the issue. It wasn't immediately clearwhenmarriage licenseswould beissued to same-sex couples in Alaska,howeverthe state doeshaveathree-day waiting period betweenapplications and marriage ceremonies. Thelate Sunday afternoon announcementcaught many peopleoff guard. Norallies were immediately planned. "This is just anamazing dayfor Alaska. We'rejust so fortunate that somanyhavefought for equality for so long — I mean, decades," saidSusanTow,who along with her wife, Chris Laborde,were among coupleswhosought to overturn Alaska's ban.
CyCIOne killS8 —A powerful cyclone thatslammedinto India's eastern seaboardweakenedas it movedinland today, leaving at least eight dead in its wake.Rescueworkers readied helicopters, aircraft and ships to carry out relief operations oncedaylight madeclear the extent of damage. Inanother storm lashing Asia, TyphoonVongfong was downgraded totropical storm as it hit the Japaneseisland of Kyushu after battering thesouthern island of Okinawa.At least 37peoplewere injured, andauthorities advised 150,000 people to evacuate.Train service and flights weredisrupted in Kyushuandthe neighboring island of Shikoku. Japan'sMeteorological Agencysaid thestorm could reach the Tokyo area byearly Tuesday.
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Alaska's gay marriage ban struck down — Atederal judge
Organizers of the Cairo conference hopepledges of over $5 billion by donors will be paid over the period of three years to aid reconstruction in the Gaza Strip, which borders Israel andEgypt. BothcountrieshaveblockadedGazasinceHamas took power there in 2007,causing the territory of1.8 million people economic hardships and high unemployment.
Battle in KOdani —Theshells were already roaring down onthe Kurdish fighters from thehill aboveKobani when morethan 30 Islamic State militants backed bysnipers andpickups mountedwith heavy machine gunsbegantheir assault across thedusty fields. Holed up inan industrial area ofsquat, concrete buildings on Kobani's easternedges, the outgunnedKurds could dolittle to repel theattack, recalled Dalil Boras, one ofthedefenders during theOct. 6assault. TheIslamic State group's firepower provedtoo much, sothe Kurds withdrew through the gray streets to atree-lined park, ceding afoothold in the town to the extremist fighters, who promptly raisedtwo blackflags over their newly conquered territory. Aweeklater, the Kurdish menandwomenof the People's Protection Units, or YPG, are still holding out, if barely, with a helping hand from morethan 20airstrikes by theU.S.-led coalition against Islamic Statepositions. — From wire reports
Turkey to allowcoalition Reseamhers replicate to Ljse bases,territory
Alzheimer'sbrain cells
By Karen DeYoung
By Gina Kolata
WASHINGTON — Turkey has agreed to allow the U.S.led coalition to use its military
and State Department diplo-
Islamic State and to use Turk-
travel to Turkey this week to
ish territory as part of a training program for Syrian opposition fighters, Obama admin-
finalize the plans. Rice said that Turkey has joined Saudi Arabia — a coun-
istration officials said Sunday.
try with which it has strained
"That's a new commitment and one that we very much
relations — in agreeing to the training program. "They have
welcome," Susan Rice, Presi-
said that their facilities inside
dent Barack Obama's national security adviser, said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
of Turkey can be used by the
neurons genes for Alzheimer's disease. Within weeks, they For the first time, and to saw the hard Brillo-like dumps the astonishment of many of known as plaques and then their colleagues, research- the twisted spaghetti-like coils ers created what they call known as tangles — the deAlzheimer's in a Dish — a fining features of Alzheimer's petri dish with human brain disease. cells that develop the telltale The breakthrough allows structures of A l zheimer's researchers to quiddy, cheaply disease. In doing so, they re- and easily test drugs that might solved a longstanding prob- stop the process in the first lem of how to study Alzhei- place. mer's and search for drugs to treat it — the best they
coalition forces — American
had until now were mice
and otherwise — to engage in activities inside of Iraq and Syria," she said. Turkey had been reluctant
that developed an imperfect form ofthedisease.
The Washington Post
Obama's special envoy to the anti-Islamic State coalition, mat Brett McGurk.
A D efense Department bases for the fight against the planning team is expected to
Defense officials said that they expect clearance to use Incirlik Air Base, a U.S.-built facility about 35 miles inland from the eastern edge of the
to sign on t o t h e c oalition against th e I s l amic S t ate,
Mediterranean Sea, near Tur- which it believes has divertkey's border with Syria, for ed attention from the effort to airstrikes against the Islamist militants. Incirlik is a joint facility where both the Turkish
and U.S. air forces operate. Defense Secretary Chuck
oust SyrianPresident Bashar
Assad. Its government has long been critical of delays in the U.S. training program.
The key to their success,
said the lead researcher, Dr. Rudolph Tanzi of Massa-
0 COS
C,
S
Don't s etttefor anyone but a p lcuticsurgeon for
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in Boston, was a suggestion by his colleague Doo Yeon Kim to grow human brain cells in a gel where they formed networks as in an
actual brain. They gave the
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quests. It was discussed with by retired Gen. John Allen,
LE F F E L CE N T E R
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Hagel said last week that use
Turkish officials during a visit there Thursday and Friday
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014•THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Monday, Oct. 13, the 286th
day of 2014.Thereare 79days left in the year.This is the Columbus Dayholiday in the U.S., as well asThanksgiving Dayin Canada.
HAPPENINGS Ebela —Thousandsof health care workers in Liberia are planning to strike, with demands for better working conditions and protective equipment.A2
Air traffic control center te reapen —TheFederal
Aviation Administration says it plans to reopen an air traffic control facility near Chicago after a two-week shutdown resulting from a fire allegedly set by a contract worker.
HISTORY Highlight:In1914, the Boston Braves swept theWorld Series, defeating the PhiladelphiaAthletics 3-1 in Game4 played at Fenway Park. InA.D.54, RomanEmperor Claudius I died, poisoned apparently at the behest of his wife, Agrippina. In1307,King Philip IV of France ordered thearrests of Knights Templar on charges ofheresy. In1775,the United States Navy had its origins astheContinental Congress orderedtheconstruction of a navalfleet. In1792, the cornerstone of the executive mansion, later known as the White House,waslaid during a ceremony inthe District of Columbia. In1843, the Jewish organization B'nai B'rith was foundedin New YorkCity. In1932, President Herbert Hoover andChiefJustice Charles EvansHugheslaid the cornerstone for the U.S. SupremeCourt building in Washington. In1944, during World War II, American troops entered Aachen, Germany. In1962, Edward Albee's four-character drama"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" opened onBroadway. In1974, longtime television host Ed Sullivan died inNew York City at age73. In1981,voters in Egyptparticipated in areferendum toelect Vice President Hosni Mubarak the new president, oneweekafter the assassination of Anwar Sadat. In1999, the Senaterejected the ComprehensiveNuclear Test Ban Treaty, with 48 senators voting in favor and 51against, far short of the 67neededfor ratification. In Boulder, Colorado, the JonBenetRamseygrand jury was dismissedafter13 months of work with prosecutors saying therewasn'tenough evidence to chargeanyonein the 6-year-old beauty queen's slaying. Ten yearsage:President George W.Bushand Democratic rival JohnKerry held their third and final debate inTempe, Arizona, trading blows onthe Iraq war, taxes, guncontrol, abortion and jobs. Five yearsage:The United Nations Security Council voted unanimously to extend theU.N. peacekeeping mission in Haiti for a year. Oneyearage:Gunmenabducted six RedCross workers and a Syrian RedCrescent volunteer after stopping their convoy in northwestern Syria. (Four of the sevenwerereleased by the next day.)
BIRTHDAYS Playwright Frank D.Gilroy is 89. Singer-musician PaulSimon is 73. Singer-musician Sammy Hagar is 67.Actor Reggie Theus is 57. Sen.MariaCantwell, D-Wash., is 56. SingerMarie Osmond is 55.Former White House presssecretary Ari Fleischer is 54. NBAcoach Doc Rivers is 53.Collegeand Pro Football Hall of Famer Jerry Rice is 52.Actress Kelly Preston is 52.Actor Matt Walsh (TV: "Veep") is 50.Actress Kate Walsh is47.Actress Tisha Campbell-Martin is 46. Olympic silver-medal figure skater Nancy Kerrigan is 45.Country singer Rhett Akins is 45.Actor Sacha BaronCohenis 43. NBA All-Star Paul Pierce is37. Singer Ashanti is 34. — From wie leporls
STUDY
DID YOU HEAR?
a uIe ILIm SnLIr ure W enI COmeS 0 BCB BmlC BC IBVBPlen A new study confirms the well-established finding that intelligence reigns
Comet will come very close to Mars By Deborah Netburn Los Angeles Times
of a m ountain w il l c o me within 87,000 miles of Mars
on Sunday, and NASA is
for a slew of personality traits, including persistence and belief in one's power.
that its nucleus is between half a mile cluding three Mars orbiters, and 5 miles wide. two Mars rovers,and a suite a dozen NASA assets in-
that family resources had no impact on the likelihood that
of British students' performance on a test universally administered at the end of
a student would graduate high
compulsory education, at around the age of
C/2013 Al, also known as comet Siding Spring, from several different angles and in different lights. " Normally y o u send
16.
Kelly Fast, a program sci-
college degree or beyond. In this idealized world, which
lts massive tail extends the distance
between Earth and the sun.
entist at NASA. "Here, the c omet is c o ming t o o u r
dent's likelihood of academic the journal PNAS, are based achievement, and how do na- on a study of 6,653 pairs of
no more similar than any pair of biological siblings, allows
twins in Britain. The twins — 2,362 pairsof them identical and 4,291 pairs of them
researchers toinfer the role
dictate those outcomes'? A new study confirms the well-established finding that fraternal — were born in intelligence — a highly her- 1994, 1995 and 1996. A multiitable trait — reigns supreme national team of researchers, in this calculation. But the led by Eva Krapohl of King's new research also stakes out CollegeLondon, authored the a surprisingly powerful role research. for a slew of personality and In addition to taking the other individual traits — in- General Certificate of Secondcluding persistence and belief ary Education, or GCSE, tests, in one's power — in influ- the participants answered a encing a child's educational battery of q uestions, which attainment. measured such individual facBut here's the catch: Given tors as academic enjoyment, the key role that genetic inher- engagement with school, optiitance plays in these other im- mism, grit, happiness, life satportant factors, nature indis- isfaction, physical health, beputably trumps nurture in de- havior problems and anxiety. termining an adolescent's levThe researchers asked the el of academic achievement. teensto describe school and In all, inheritance accounts home environments, includfor roughly 62 percent of Brit- ing such factors as parental ish students' performance on monitoring and support and a test universally adminis- levels of chaos or predictabiltered at the end of compulsory ity in both. The twins' parents education, at aroundthe age of were asked to report and rate 16. The researchers were able their c h i ldren's b ehavioral to accountfor three-quarters problems, including antisoof that heritability, attributing cial behavior, depression and it to a wide range of factors, impulsivity. including temperament and When they're large enough, intelligence. Environmental twin studies can be a powerfactors — the quality of teach- ful way to suss out the relaing, the style of parenting, tive contributions of genetics the chall enges or comforts of and environment — nature home, and habits picked up and nurture — on a given outalong the way — contribute 26 come. Since each child was percent to the likelihood of a raised in the same home with student's academic success. his or her twin, environmenIn Britain,these test scores tal factors can be roughly as— not a child's ability to pay sumed tobe the same for each f or university education pair. powerfully influence students' Studying identical twins, options for further education. who share the same DNA, The findings, published in and fraternal twins, who are
The gas cloud that surrounds its head is 12,000 miles across.
spacecraft to comets," said
factors would influence a stu-
ture and nurture conspire to
Scientists estimate
Thursday, officials described how they will use more than
of telescopes to see comet
school and go on to earn a
toward the sun.
n e w s c o n ference
By Melissa Healy
Inheritance accounts for roughly62 percent
million-year journey
just about everything the agency's got.
Los Angeles Times
Let's imagine for a minute
near the end ofits
planning to observe it with In a
supreme in academic success, but it also stakes out a surprising powerful role
Comet Siding Spring was first spotted in January 2013,
A speeding comet the size
of genetics. Researchers can assume environmental factors play a major role when fra-
spacecraft." Comet Siding Spring was first spotted in J anuary 2013, near the end of its million-year journey toward the
has never before entered the inner solar system, so it will provide a fresh source of cl ues to oursolarsystem's earliest days," said John
sun. Scientists estimate that
ternal twins consistently turn
its nucleus is between half a Grunsfield, associate admin-
out the same despite genetic
mile and 5 miles wide. The
differences. When i dentical
gas cloud that surrounds its M ission Directorate, in a head is 12,000 miles across. statement. NASA's various assets in Its massive tail extends the distance between Earth and space, on Mars, and here on the sun. Earth will be deployed to And it will be going fast. look at the size and shape of When the comet makes its Siding Spring's nucleus, the closest approach to Mars at composition of the gases in 11:27 a.m. Pacific, it will be the comet'scoma, and how hurtling through space at much water it is spewing 126,000 miles per hour. into space. The Curiosity Scientists are eager for and Opportunity rovers will any opportunity to study the turn their cameras toward bodies that zip through our the Martian sky and, fingers solar neighborhood, but Sid- crossed, capture the first ing Spring is especially en- image of a comet from the ticing. That's because it gives surface of another planet. humanity our f irst chance The orbiters will study how to get an up-close look at a the Martian atmosphere recomet from the Oort cloud, a sponds to the comet's flyby. collection of icy bodies at the The researchers said the edge of our solar system. first images from the flyby Embedded in the nuclei of should be released by Oct. these comets are primordial 20. There will also be more materials from the dawn of i nformation c oming n e x t
twins are more similar to each other across traits than are fraternal twins, researchers
attribute those likenesses to genetics. Calculating the degree of likeness and difference between the nearly 7,000 sets of
twins,and usingpastresearch findings that assign heritability scores for different traits
and factors, the researchers were able to determine how heavily genetics and environment contributed to the test
outcomes. The authors of the PNAS
study say their findings may nudge attitudes about education policy, but do not clearly point to reforms. Appreciating the overwhelming role of genetics in determining an ad-
olescent'sacademic achievement, for instance, "counters the deplorable tendency to
blame teachers and parents rather than recognizing that learning is inherently more difficult for some children," they wrote. We may value equality of educational opportunity, for instance, but that should not be confused with equal out-
comes, they added. "Equality of e ducational opportunity will not get rid of geneticdiff erences between children," they wrote.
istrator for NASA's Science
the solar system that have
week about how to follow
been in a deep freeze forbil- along through social media. lions of years, researchers Comet's are n otoriously say. But as the comet moves unpredictable, so scientists toward the s un, th e i c es cannot say for sure what will trapped in its nucleus begin happen when Siding Spring to melt, releasing ancient approachesMars. Allofus, gases into space. even the experts, will have to "This particular comet wait and watch.
DOES EVERYONK MUMBLE?
HEARING AIDS
Connect Hearing
y4
YOUII HKARINGPROFESSIONALS
2 Locations in Bend
Giving doctorsguidance on drugs to preventHIV By Donald G. McNeil Jr.
cause San Francisco was an
New York Times News Service
early center of the outbreak. The new hotline is aimed
The medical school at the
University of California, San at American doctors, but if Francisco, has opened a free PrEP is rolled out around the telephone consulting service world, it could be a model for doctors who are not HIV for other countries, said Dr. specialists and want help Ronald Goldschmidt, the diprescribing the right AIDS rector of the school's clinical drugs for preventing infec- consultation center. tion in healthy patients. Since 1993, he said, the T he service, k n ow n a s center has fielded phone PrEPline for pre-exposure calls from doctors seeking prophylaxis line, was an- help. Typically, they are obnounced last week. stetricians treating p regIn pre-exposure prophy- nant women infected with laxis, patients at high risk for HIV; emergency-room docHIV, such as gay men who tors treating nurses who frequently have unprotected have had a needle injury; or sex with strangers, ward off
p atients who had sex w i t h
infection by taking Truvada, a pill containing two antiretroviral drugs.
someone they suspect is infected. South Africa and Ethiopia
U ninfected men, i f t h e y have sent doctors for trainhave doctors at all, usually ing to offer similar services see general practitioners, at home, he said; prophylaxis who rarely prescribe antiret- is still rare in poor countries rovirals. By contrast, doctors because they are struggling at UCSF have decades of ex- to pay for medicine even for perience in treating HIV be- those with advanced AIDS.
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Discover the Benefits of Peace Corps Service Information Session Wednesday, October 15 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Downtown Bend Public Library Brooks Room 601 N.W. Wall Street
Bend, Oregon Returned PeaceCorps Volunteer Sarah Kassel willdiscuss how you can make a difference overseas and return home withthe experience and global perspective to stand outin a competitive job market.
@GO~
Life is calliny. How far will you yo?
Weekly Arts 0 Entertainment ••
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
Recruiter
late 20s and soon converted
Continued fromA1
Islam. "People like Anjem know
Counterterrorism o f f icials
from Christianity to r adical
A broad —andgrowing — network Choudary's network isn't
Holiday Continued fromA1
a national day off for m a-
jor-league baseball's Opening Day.
remembered." Still, it's unlikely that we'll
ropean todiscover America. Erikson also has a day de-
Just like Columbus Day, be skipping work on Super these holiday proposals re- Bowl Monday anytime soon. volve as much around poliA Congressional Research tics as anything else: the pol- Service report found that itics of identity, the politics of federal holidays cost t axvoting, the politics of sports payers about $200 million affiliation. T h ey're a b o ut per day (and that was back recognition. They're about in 1999). This was part of the honor. argument against the estab-
and experts say Choudary and what it i s t h a t p eople like couraged acolytes across Euthe many shadowy groups he Richard are craving — iden- rope to set up groups similar to has frontedhave directly con- tity, respect, empowerment," his own, providing them with tributed to the indoctrination said Dart's step-brother, Robb inspiration and guidance. of dozens of people who have Leech. "They push all the right Last month, 46 members of gone on to plan or commit at- buttons — make them feel spe- one such group, Sharia4Beltacks in the United Kingdom. cial. And once you're in the gium, went on trial in Antwerp His network, they say, has also door, it's like family. They all in Belgium's largest Islamic become a vital facilitator in lookaftereach other." extremism case to date. Only the flow of some of the thouDart and other Choudary eight defendants were pressands of Europeans who have followers burned an American ent in court, with the rest preswarmed to the battlefields of flag in front of the U.S. Em- sumed to be in Syria, either Iraq and Syria, and who could bassy on the anniversary of dead or still fighting. return to carry out attacks in 9/11 and cursed British troops After Choudary v i sited the West. during their homecomings. Indonesia last October and But even as a coalition that But Dart wanted to go furspoke at a Sharia4TheWorld
sevelt' s predecessors,Calvin Coolidge, had declared that
Islamic State, Choudary and other enablers remain free to spread their seductively mes-
sianic ideology on the streets of the United Kingdom and globally, through the Internet. They do so by taking advantage of the very rights they condemn as un-Islamic and by using their considerable charisma to lure lost souls.
rally, the Islamic State saw a
surge in Indonesian volunteers. Choudary also has a prodigious following on the Internet, where he keeps a steady
stream of vitriol churning
tionally been repatriated. Po- through Twitter. lice uncovered the plot before it could be carried out, and last
It's doubtful that Choudary
himself is sending would-be fighters to Syria, said Raffa-
spring, Dart was sentenced to six years in prison. ello Pantucci, a c ounterterLeech said he doesn't think rorism expert with the Royal C houdary d i rected D a r t United Services Institute think
"These guys are very good to plan the attack. But nei- tank. "He's so careful about at knowing where the limits of ther does Leech think his what he says and does," Panthe law lie," said Richard Bar- step-brother would be in pris- tucci said. rett,a former counterterrorism director with Britain's for-
on today without Choudary's
But Hope Not H ate esti-
influence. "Anjem was Richard's role eign intelligence service, MI6. "They're also very slick, very model — completely," said plausible and very persuasive." Leech, who has made two Their elusiveness helps d ocumentaries about h i s explain why extremism con- step-brother's conversion, artinues to flourish in Britain rest and conviction. "If Rich-
mates that several hundred
despite more than a decade ard wanted to know some-
cruitment network for Islamist militants.
of concerted effort to stamp it thing, he'd ask Anjem." out, and why security officials
among the several thousand
Europeans who have gone to fight in Syria passed through Choudary's organization or one of its affiliates — making it the continent's largest re-
logh, who teaches 20th-cen-
he believed Norse explorer Leif Erikson was the first Eu-
Controversially, one of Roo-
ther. He traveled to Pakistan for terrorist training and, upon his return, planned an attack in Royal Wootton Bassett, the British town through which soldiers' remains have tradi-
case may be," said Brian Batury political history at the University of Virginia. "I understand why people fight hard to have certain days
limited to Britain. He has en-
includes Britain and the United States wages war on the
clared mandatory holidays) to almost-as-serious-but-significantly-less-likely, such as this spring's Budweiser-endorsed petition to c reate
voted to him — Oct. 9 — but
government employees are required to show up for work
thatday. The Columbus Day holiday was formally legalized by Congress in 1968, but even then states and private
A petition to establish the Lunar New Year as a federal to recognize it, and many holiday stated that the desdidn't. As of this year, only 23 ignation would lend the holstates and the District grant iday "the same importance their employees the day off. and weight" as other cultural Considering how difficult days. And the most recent init is to create a federal hol- carnation of the ongoing peiday — just four have been tition to put an end to Columadded to the calendar in the bus Day argues that doing businesses weren't required
past 100 years — perhaps it's not surprising that Italian-Americans are so reluc-
tant to see theirs changed. But the challenge of getting the government to declare a
day off (without the benefit of a couple of inches of snow, at any rate) hasn't dissuaded people from trying. Thousands o f pe o ple
lishment of a Martin Luther
King Jr. holiday, which came into effect in 1983 only after Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., introduced it during every session of Congress for the better partof15years. What holidays do or don't
get honored with bank closures an d p u b lic-school
so would "acknowledge (the v acations often has m o r e United States') colonial past." to do with politics and PR Football fans want in on campaigns than philosophy. the commemorative action, Labor Day was the product too. A "We the People" pe- of an election-year comprotition f ro m J a nuary 2 0 13 mise intended to a ppease
called on the president to
angry unions in the wake of President Grover Cleveland's the Monday after the Super deployment of troops during Bowl, thus honoring "the the violent suppression of the most popular event in mod- Pullman rail workers strike sign petitions on the White ern American culture." of 1894. And the thing that "I make jokes about, 'Oh, finally put M a r ti n L u t her House's "We the People" site each year asking for new another mattress sale, it must King Jr.'s birthday on the celebrations to be added to be Presidents' Day.' But, in calendar? Stevie Wonder's the federal calendar. They fact, these holidays do gener- 1981 single "Happy Birthrun the gamut from totally ate stories and get some peo- day," which was released two serious (a concerted effort to ple thinking about presidents years before the holiday was have federal election days de- or Columbus or whatever the signed into law. closeoffices and schools on
remain so nervous about what Prime Minister David Camer-
on has called the greatest terror threat the country has ever known.
Britain has longbeen a locus of Islamist extremism, with
its large Muslim immigrant communities and its tolerant approach toward those with
radical views. In the late 1990s and in the years after the Sept.
Together we're mal<ing a difference.
11, 2001, al-Qaida attacks, north London's Finsbury Park mosque became a critical way station for global terrorists.
But years of aggressive policing and intelligence efforts have shifted th e e x tremist threat away f ro m B r i tain's mosques and into the hands
of freelancers who are much harder to monitor and control.
Elusiveandcharming Choudary — a lawyer by training,nota preacher orreligious scholar — has proved particularly adept at staying out of reach of the authorities. Late last month, police raided his home on the suspicion that he was involved in terror-
ism-related activities, and his passport, phone and laptop were confiscated. But authorities held him for only a night before letting him go. Choudary has been, for nearly two decades, at the forefront of a succession of
groups — induding al-Muhajiroun, Islam4UK and Muslims Against Crusades — that have
been outlawed for extremist activities. Once a group was banned, Choudary quickly set up a new one with a similar structure and many of the same members but with a new
name. The majority o f B r i t ons convicted of Islamic-extrem-
ism-related offenses in the past 15 years have been members
or supporters of Choudary's network. Choudary himself, despite multiple arrests, has
never been convicted of anything more than staging an illegal demonstration.
Days after his latest release, sitting in the sweets shop in the northeast London neighbor-
hood of Ilford, he is unbowed and almost dares the government to come after him.
"You need sufficient evidence," he says, as numerous well-wishers stop by to vow
their support. "And they have no evidence whatsoever." Choudary maintains that he
has never directly encouraged young people to fight for the Islamic State but acknowledg-
es his followers have a habit of "popping up" in Syria.
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What they do there he does
not know, Choudary claims. He says he doubts they are there to fight because the Is-
lamic State already has more than enough recruits.
"There are up to 1,000 people wanting to join the Islamic army every day," he says approvingly. Richard Dart i s a mong
those who found his way into
Choudary's orbit — and nearly became a killer. Dart, the son of schoolteach-
ers, was raised middle-class in the quaint English town of Weymouth. But he fell under
Choudary's spell while in his
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014•THE BULLETIN
Evergreen
A5
Be a partofhistory
Continued fromA1
The city and its RedmondLandmarks Commission is searching for memorabilia, stories and photos from throughout Evergreen's 92-year history to be used in the restoration process and aspart of the overall project. Everything helps, whether you recall when alterations were made tothe building andwhy or the photos taken in your1955 chemistry class.
"We're collecting a list of in-
terested parties for the space we don't need now, including some that can pay and some
that can't," Richards said. "Obviously, that will be the value of our project steering com-
Be a partoftheprocess
mittee. We'll look at whether
we need paying tenants or not
The city is looking for community members to serve ona stakeholder advisory committee for Evergreen's restoration. Committee members will meet approximately four times during the design discussion from January through Mayand helpadvise the city on the public spaces. Contact Heather Richards, 541-9237756 or heather.richards@ci.redmond.or.us.
and about how the decision is made about who the best tenants are."
The school's history The opening of Redmond Union High School in 1922 created a real "school system" by combining with the city's only other school, which housed all 12 grades and was bursting at the seams. City business leaders purchased the necessary lots Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin to own the blocks between A classroom in the former Evergreen Elementary and historic Redmond Union High School that will Ninth and 11th streets and be restored during the renovation. Evergreen and Deschutes avenues for $1,565. Architect Lee A. Thomas was hired to and, throughout the school, arrested Oct. 9 and the build- the missing cornice. However, design a building in what was canvas wainscoting covered ing now has increased video Dortignacq's study recomdescribed as the "American the walls. surveillance. mended that the unreinforced "Evergreen is a prized com- masonry walls undergo some style of utility." The then-rectEnrollment in the school's angular building had slight or- first year was 148. munity asset that will be the seismic upgrades, such as an namentation behind its Doric In later years, the school un- future home of City Hall by interior concrete wall or secolumns, cast-stone flourishes derwent many additions and 2017. If anyone in our commu- curing the exterior walls to the at the entrances and a wrap- alterations. In 1939, a stage nity considers it a playground interior framework. around concretecornice that and dressing rooms were add- forvandalism and recklessbeAs far as building infrahas since been removed. ed to the gym, which burned havior, they are sorely mistak- structure, the s t udy f o und In the planning stages, the in 1944. The replacement art en," said City Manager Keith that Evergreen has most of school was expected to cost deco detached gym also con- Witcosky. its original wiring, plumbing $64,000, but by th e t ime it tained locker rooms and a and heating systems, much was finished — four months stage and, during the same Art of restoration of which would have to be relate — the cost was $100,000. decade, a classroom addition The Evergreen building placed or upgraded. "You don't want to spend Redmond's Erickson 8t: Olson was built onto the school's has significant historical inconstruction firm completed west side. In the 1950s, an- tegrity, according to Portland money on everything else and the work despite competition other detached building was architect Robert Dortignacq, have tocome back for somewith 17 other contractors for added, this one for vocational who performeda preliminary thing like that," he said. "Methejob. education. adaptivereuse study of Ever- chanical things are expensive The buildinghad no gymBy the mid-1960s, the school green in 2010 and 2011. but also a big factor in the life " Historic p r eservation i s nasium when it opened but w as overcrowded and, i n span of the building, so during did boast a 225-seat study hall 1971, a new high school was intriguing. We try to balance renovation is a good time to inwith a library alcove; an in- built and the historic building all things and look where the vest in those things." dustrial arts department with converted to a junior high, priorities are, what the owner Dortignacq recommended a wood shop, forge and me- then an elementary. At that is trying to achieve," he said. retaining the majority of Everchanical drawing room; rec- point, the school was renamed Dortignacq's firm has com- green's interior layout, includitation rooms and a spacious Evergreen. pleted a long list of major ing the vaulted ceilings and home economics room with The four years Evergreen historic renovations for both large classroom spaces. " When we looked at t h e an adjoining cafeteria. In fact, has sat unused has taken a private and public owners, the "model modern cafeteria" toll. After several years with including Portland's Union city's needs, we were able to — decked out in white enamel little more than a handful of Station and Woodburn's Car- envision putting quite a few — was run by home ec depart- broken windows, this year the negie Library. departments i n t h e c l a ssment head Emily Husbands building has had a series of E vergreen's exterior is i n rooms with an open office layand her students. The school's vandalism incidents, includ- surprisingly good condition, out," he said. "That way, they manual training shop con- ing intruders breaking into the he said, and will need only can avoid taking out interior structed the cafeteria's tables, building. Two juveniles were minor repairs in addition to walls entirely." Many of Ever-
green's windows will have to prolongeddiscussion. Before be replaced or restored, Dor- the recession, Redmond was tignacqadded,butthey can be seriously considering a new done in a manner that retains building for City Hall possibly the historical look. to be constructedacross the Historic building renova- street from Centennial Park. tions for public and private Even after p r eliminary owners have some things studies indicated the price per in common, he said, but not square foot for a renovated Evall. Private owners might be ergreen was less than the new looking to recoup their invest- building being considered, the ment by leases or sales, while idea of investing public funds public owners tend to see the in preservation did not sit well restoration as a l ong-term with everyone. Most Redmond investment. City Council members were
A community investment The project has not been without c o ntroversy. A f t er
supportive — if for no other
reason than to open up the current City Hall for redevelopment — but Councilor Ed On-
determining the facility had imus nevercared forthe idea. "It's a want, not a need," he outlasted its usefulness as a school — twice — Redmond said. Onimus isn't confident School District finally put the that selling the current City school up for sale in 2009 for Hall site will be the boon othmore than $3 million. Despite ers see. "Our vacancy rate is the fact the school covers an alreadypretty high.There are entire city block and has three no guarantees." separate buildings, the propAccording to Richards, city erty received no serious offers staff looked at three things before the city — prompted by before recommending to the citizens who wanted to ensure council to restore Evergreen it would not be torn down or for a city hall: price comparsignificantly altered — offered isons, whether t h e s c hool $250,000. would work in terms of spaInitially, the city t r ied to tial configurations and the attract private developers or level of risk in the inherent public partners to the proj- unknowns that come with an ect, but with recession in full older building. "It certainly has been part swing that effort stalled and the property sat s huttered.
of the outcome, which is that
Last year, with the economy and city coffers showing positive signs, the idea of restoring the building to serve as Redmond City Hall resurfaced.
preserving t h i s
The decision to restore Ev-
ergreen did not come without
cost eff ective and preserves a landmark, but preservation was never the driver," she said. — Reporter: 541-548-2186, lpugmire@bendbulletin.com
— A4 MDAY-THU D A Y C
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A6
13, 2014
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014• THE BULLETIN
CIVIC CALENDAR TUESDAY
Bend-la PineSchools hoard ofdirectorsRegular meetingat6 p.m. in La PineHighSchool library, 51633CoachRoad. Agendaincludesa discussion of whether tolabel Troy Field,at690 NWBond St. in downtownBend,as surplus property potentiallyavailablefor sale.
MadrasCityCouncil
— Meeting at7 p.m.at Madras CityHall,125 SW ESt. Council isexpected to approvethe purchaseof a new$21,780snowplow to be installed ona public works sandingtruck, and hold a publichearingabout proposed amendmentsto cityzoning ordinance.
Prineville CityCoun-
Cll —Meeting at6:30 p.m. in councilchambers at Prineville CityHall, 387 NEThird St..Council isexpected tovoteonacityordinancelevying a5 percent taxon medicalmarijuana and10 percenttaxon recreationalmarijuana.The taxes wouldcover marijuanaandmarijuana-infused products. TheNovember ballot includesMeasure 91, whichwould legalize recreationalmarijuanause in Oregon.
Redmond City Coun-
Cll —Meeting at6:30 p.m. in councilchambers, 777 SWDeschutesAvenue. Council isexpectedto vote on aproposed city ordinancelevying a5 percent taxon medicalmarijuana and a15 percenttax on recreationalmarijuanaif Oregonvotersapprove Measure 91onNov.4. The measurewould legalize recreationalmarijuanause. The taxeswould cover marijuanaandmarijuana-infusedproducts.
0 onentsWa en,C risto erson e ate By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
SUNRIVER — U.S. Rep.
Greg Walden, R-Hood River, took on his democratic challenger Bend businesswoman
~
NOV. 4 ELE CTION
bendbeuetin.com/eiections Welden
debate Sunday evening in
are working on," Walden said. First elected to Congress in
Sunriver.
1998, Walden had not debat-
Topics ranged from forest health to health care during the 45-minute debate, the first
ed a Democratic challenger since 2010. About 150 people showed up for Sunday's debate, hosted by the Oregon Forest Industries Council.
Aelea Christofferson in a
between the eight-term in-
cumbent Walden and political newcomer Christofferson, the
Jamie Christman of the
founder and president of ATL
Bend ChamberofCommerce
Communications in Sunriver. They are vying for Oregon's
moderated the event, which
2nd Congressional District
seat. Both candidates said they came away feeling confident about how they did in the
debate. "I feel good," Christofferson said, adding that she felt she
made her supporters proud. Walden was also upbeat after the debate.
"I just tried to stay positive
and stay focused on what we
organizers styled after a presidential debate. After opening remarks, the candidates first took questions
filled out in advance by members of the audience and then asked a question each of each
other before giving closing thoughts. Walden steered many of his
responses to the issue of jobs, sayingmany economic problems couldberemedied by
responded that he weighs each cause Washington is broken," she said. decision, sometimes voting Whether there will be more against the stance of people debates between Walden and who gave him money. Christofferson is unclear. "I owe people two things," Christofferson, who had been he said. "'Thank' and 'you,' calling for a debate since and that's it," he said. August, said she'd like to Walden's question for Chris- have more around the district vote and tries to make the best
Christof-
ferson creating more employment opportunities. "We can grow good jobs in America ... and Oregon can lead the way," he said. Christofferson said she'd
tofferson was whether she
— which covers the eastern
would have voted for changes to the Affordable Care Act, which he called "Obamacare."
two-thirds of Oregon. Walden said other groups have invited them to come and debate but
also like to see more jobs cre-
President Barack Obama
ated, and she wants more vocational education in schools to make it happen. She said
signed the act into law in
he didn't know whether there would be more. "Campaigning is one long debate," he said. Among the audience,Rich-
March 2010. Christofferson
said she wouldn't have voted for the changes. jobs but hasn't done it. In closing, Walden waxed "Greg has had 16 years to do patriotic. "I commit to do everything that and we haven't seen much progress," she said. I can to get America back on Walden said he has helped the right track," he said. create jobs, including forestry For her final thoughts, Chrisjobs, and wants to spur more. tofferson reminded voters that Given a chance to ask she wouldbring change. "It is time to look at someWalden a question, Christofferson asked whether one who is more moderate, campaign contributions sway (who) brings more business his congressional votes. He experience to Congress, beWalden talks about creating
ard Jenkins, 67, of Sunriver
said the "jury is still out" on who he'll vote for, though he typically leans to the Democratic candidate. He said the debate didn't help him choose
a candidate. "I think it was full of sound bites and no content," Jenkins stud.
DISCOVER NATURE DAY
x orin n a u reami au umn in en
BendCityCouncil
— Worksession at5:30 p.m. in councilchambers at BendCity Hall, 710NW Wall St.. Topicsinclude solid wastecollection franchisees.Regular meeting at7 p.m. also incouncil chambers.Citycouncilors plan to approveawritten version oftheir rejection ofan appeal ofOregon State University-Cascades' site planapplication. The council voted toreject the appealSept.29. The council isalso expected to approve thepurchaseof portable radiosandrelated equipmentfor acost of $106,374.
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Violet Robles holds Liam Carrington, 3, of Bend, while he looks through the microscope to examine the details of leaves during Discover Nature Dey: Fell Festival, which wes put on by The Children's Forest of Central Oregon et Hollinshead Perk in Bend on Sunday.
missioners meetat6 p.m. at16345 Sixth St.. The
By Dylan J. Darling
point in March.
scopes and placed paper over
agenda includesareview of possiblegeographiclimits for marijuanafacilities.
The Bulletin
Known as the Deschutes Children's Forest since 2011,
leaves, then pressed crayons
Contact:541-383-0354,
news©bendbulletIn.com.In emaIls, pleasewrite "Civic Calendar" In the subjectline. Include a contact name and number. SubmissIons may be edited.Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.
EVENT CALENDAR TODAY PUMPKINPATCH: Featuring apumpkin patch, petting zooandvarious actiVities; freeadmission, chargeforactMties;9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836NESmithRockW ay, Terrebonne; www.ddranch. netor541-548-1432. OUTLAWSTOGETHER BINGOANDCOMMUNITY DINNER: Featuring bingo, dinner, prizesandmore to benefit theSisters High SchoolAthletics Department; free;5:30 p.m., dinnerat6:30 p.m.; Sislers HighSchool, 1700 W. McKinneyButte Road; www.outlawnet.com,tim. roth@sisters.k12.or.usor 541-549-4050.
Kids at Discover Nature
Day played games Sunday, tried healthy food and made crafts — all while learning about the outdoors. "They are having fun while they are learning some really key things about nature," said Linda "Bo" Bonotto, of Bend. She took two of her grand-
daughters to the event, put on by the Children's Forest of Central Oregon at Hollins-
head Park in northeast Bend. About 125 kids and adults turned out to enjoy a warm,
sunny fall day. The group has put on similar events in the spring and summer, but Katie Chipko, Children's Forest of Central Oregon coordinator, said this
was the first one in the fall. The next one is planned for Cline Falls State Scenic View-
lUESDAY PUMPKINPATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free
admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne;
the group changed its name
over them to make rubbings. Organizers geared the
Regularly sporting a faux coonskin cap, Nora Taylor, 8, of Bend, fit in with the teach-
er leading the hide tanning demo. Well, except for bright coloredjump rope shecarried
earlier this month to represent its expansion from
activities toward kids 5 to 10.
Deschutes County to Crook
had nature-themed games,
around. Like Owen's teeth, the
and Jefferson counties. The
seasonally inspired healthy snacks — including pumpkin
jump rope was a handout. So
organization brings together school districts, health care organizations, land-management agencies and many other groups to create programs connecting children to the
natural world. Partners of the group turned out Sunday to lead activities.
Erica Pelley, associate curator of education at the High
Other stops around the park
smoothies — and wildlife track identification. Folks from the Wildheart Nature School in Bend also ran a
popular demonstration about tanning hides. "It's nice to see the kids
doing a variety of things," Chipko said. "They're doing some education things, (and) jumping in leaves." When asked what he liked
Desert Museum in Bend, spent some of her time Sunday aboutthe event Owen Greeteaching kids about leaves. nough, 5, of Bend, just smiled "Fall is a great time to apand revealed vampire teeth he preciate leaves," Pelley said. picked up at one of the stops. Kids examined freshly fall- He was there with his mom, en leaves closely with microMeagan Greenough, 38.
www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. "DISRUPTION: CLIMATE. CHANGE.": Showing of the 2014 film aboutthe consequences of climate change; free; 6:30 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend;
www.envirocenter.org or 541-389-0785. "UNFAIR: EXPOSING THEIRS": Learn about the alleged cover-ups at the Internal Revenue Service; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend;
541-312-2901. MUSIC OFINDIA: THE MYSORE VIOLINBROTHERS AND PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE:Featuring classical music of South India by The Mysore Violin Brothers; $15 in advance, $20 at the
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarlingibendbulletin.com
BRIEFING
WEDNESDAY
la Pine Planning Commission —Com-
A7
was a pedometer, which Nora used to count her steps and
jumps around the park. "I did 200 before and now
I'm restarting," said Nora, who was there with her mom, Amy Taylor, 41. Lila Boeck, one of Bo Bonotto's granddaughters, was also keeping a tally of her footsteps with a pedometer. She said it's hard to say what her favorite activity was Sun-
day, but she was glad to have come out to the park.
Police, search
and rescuedusy Police and searchand rescue teamswerebusy over the weekend, particularly on Saturday. A 3-year-old child was reported missing at10 a.m. Saturday from a house on NERosemary Drive and found by a Bend Police officer at 10:25 a.m. in the garage, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Another 3-year-old child wanderedaway from a home inDeschutes River Woods south of Bend at 2:09 p.m. Saturday and anOregon State Police trooper found the child walking by railroad tracks about a half mile away at2:54 p.m., according to the sheriff's office. Minutes later, at 2:57 p.m., a call came in regarding a man inCrane Prairie Reservoir about 200 yards from shore. Themanhadshota goose andwas trying to retrieve it by swimming out to it and beganto struggle, according to the sheriff's office. He was clinging to a treeand wasn't able to swim back to shore. Threesheriff's deputies, with the help of bystanders and aU.S. Forest Service law enforcement officer, used two boats to rescue the man at 3:30 p.m.Steven Jones, of Bend, and Patrick Schatz, owner of the Crane Prairie Resort, used their boats to help rescuers. Paramedics with the La PineRural Fire Protection District took the man toSt. Charles Bend so hecould be treated for hypothermia. At 3:39 p.m. Saturday, a call came in reporting that an 81-year-old man had wandered from a home eastof Bend and had been missing for 1/2 hours, according to the sheriff's office. Deputies found the man, who was disoriented and confused, at 4:03 p.m., walking down anearby load. — Bulletin staff report
"It think it's been great," she
sard. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
door, free for children and COCC students/staff with ID; 7-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.j.mp/musicofindia,
bendashtangayoga© gmail.com or
541-350-9642. MAD CADDIES: The California reggae-pop band performs, with Strive Roots; $17 plus fees in advance, $20at the
door; 8 p.m.,doors open at 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541-408-4329.
WEDNESDAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. Contact:541-383-0351, communIIylife©bendbulletIn.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted atleast 10 days before publication.
AS THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
Vacationrentals in Bend According to tax records from the city of Bend, as ofAugust there weremore than 350 active vacation homes in the city. Eachdot on the mapbelow represents one vacation homebased on the address provided by the city. More than100 applications for vacation rental homeshavebeen placed since then. For amore detailed look at the data, see the interactive map at www.beudbulletiu.com/vacatioureutaLL
30 GRANDPARKNTS
• = vacation rental home
that want to hear their grandchildren
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PKOPLK WILL BK SKLKCTKD by October 22"', 2014
ILES
HEALTH NOTIFICATION
Source: City of Bend
Rentals
ular area, or citywide, could also come into play. AccordContinued from A1 course to address the issue ing to the proposed timeline, During recent City Council through changes to city code public input would begin this meetings, homeowners con- and the creation of a program fall and continue through the cerned about the impact from t o protect n eighbors f r om winter. a crush of new rentals have noisy vacationers. Qualifying fo r v a cation "This is definitely some- rental approval is fairly easy. called for an immediate stop to the approval of applica- thing the staff is encouraging An occupancy limit is set on tions. The argument has been the city do right," Skidmore two people per bedroom plus made that rentals are destroy- said. "To do that, it's going to two additional guests, there ing the character of neighbor- take some time." must be at least one off-street hoods, and vacationers are ofEarlier this month, the City parking space per bedroom ten loud and disruptive. While Council accepted a timeline and no travel trailer or tent councilors have expressed that gives the city until March can be used on the site. Adsympathy and a desire to act, to fully study and address the ditionally, all rentals must be Assistant City Attorney Gary issue. Next week, the council registered with the city, keep Firestone said the imposition will be tasked with approv- a logbook of guests, pay an of such a l i m itation would ing a budget for the project. application fee and contribute possibly be illegal. So far, city staff suggested taxes. "Restrictions on v acation $200,000 be used to create Changing this process will home rentals are land use teams to study vacation home be another d i scussion, as regulations, and the state has rentals,better fund enforce- Skidmore said inspections specific rules for adjusting ment of existing regulations, could become required, and land use," he said. "Unless create a hotline for com- noise complaints could carry this qualifies as a moratori- plaints and possibly pay for a a penalty. "These rentals obviously um, we have an adopted land staff position to manage vacause procedure that allows va- tion rentals. wouldn't be popular if there "We need to set up a team wasn't a market demand," cation home rentals. We can't just tell them to stop." so we have the ability to look Skidmore said. "But as with Firestone noted any mora- at what other municipalities other new things, there's been torium attempted by the city have done and to work with some growing pains. We need would be vulnerable to a legal the community to see what the time to do the public outchallenge. State law allows makes the most sense here," reach process and to make moratoriums on construction Skidmore said. sure any changes to codes and land d evelopment but Skidmore said the city will or permitting are done well. doesn't specify that one can look at ideas such as making This is a basic private propbe placed on a particular land rentals a conditional use that erty rights issue, and if tweak use on an existing property, must be deemed "compat- anything here, we need to be such as turning a standing ible" with the surrounding deliberate." home into a rental. neighborhood. A limit on the — Reporter: 541-633-216O, In the face of such limita- density of rentals in a partictleeds@bendbulletin.corn
Medicare
city is charting a longer term
audits, "beneficiaries and pro-
setts — highly ranked by
viders did not receive an ade-
the National Committee for
Continued from A1 quate or accurate rationale for Medicare's annual open the denial" of coverage when enrollment period b egins insurersrefused to provide or Wednesday an d c o n tinues pay for care. through Dec. 7. • When making decisions, About 16 million people, insurers often failed to conaccounting for 30 percent of sider clinical information prothe 54 million beneficiaries, vided by doctors and failed to are in private Medicare Ad- inform patients of their appeal vantage plans, which provide rights. a fullrange ofhealth careser• In 61 percent of audits, vices under contract with the insurers "inappropriately regovernment. An additional 23 jected claims" for prescription million people are in prescrip- drugs. Insurers enforced "untion drug plans, which cover approved quantity limits" and only medications. required patients to get perFederalofficials expressed mission before filling prescripf rustration that t h e y w e r e tions when such "prior authoseeing the same kinds of de- rization" was not allowed. ficienciesyear afteryear.In a • Medicare plans frequentmemorandum to health plans, ly missed deadlines for mak-
Gerard Mulcahy, the Medicare official in charge of oversight and enforcement, listed
common "areas ofnoncompliance" identified in program audits.
Medicare officials impose civil fines and take other enforcement actions when they
see practices that could harm beneficiaries by delaying or denying access to care. Insurers usually do not dispute the audit findings, but say the care they provide is superior to that
in the traditional fee-for-service Medicare program. The Centers for Medicare
and MedicaidServicesreported these findings: • In more than half of all
re ou
tions on immediate action, the
Quality Assurance, a private nonprofit group — have been cited for "serious violations" of Medicare's patient-protection
requirements. John Gorman, a former M edicare official who i s a consultant to many insurers,
said, "It's unforgivable that so many Medicare Advantage plans are still struggling with basic compliance issues." Insurers often hir e c om-
panies to manage their drug benefits. "These companies know
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014•THE BULLETIN
A9
ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT
'Marry Me'. In sickness and in healthy ratings TV SPOTLIGHT I
M
"Marry Me" 9 p.m. Tuesday, NBC —II
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II i
By Margy Rochlin
N •rI
ing to share one plot turn. Night Live" (albeit a short one). "Spoiler alert," she s aid. Just outside Caspe's office
H
New Yortr Times News Service
L OS ANGELES —
II
couple, their friends and their family." That said, Wilson was will-
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year, a few weeks after ABC canceled "Happy Endings," a sitcom with a cult following but weak ratings, its creator,
M
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-
David Caspe, needed a new
premise. Pitching season was beginning, and this would be a chance to get another show
on the air. He looked no further than a "Happy Endings"
Emily Berlrrhe New York Times
Casey Wilson, the co-star of "Marry Me," with David Caspe, the NBC sitcom's creator — and also her husband — at their home.
cast member, Casey Wilson, at
the time his girlfriend and now his wife, and the path it took to pled Caspe nodded his head in merge their lives. agreement. "She's insane," he "I am a lower-key guy," said sald. Caspe, 35, who also thinks of With hi s o pposites-attract himself as fastidious, quiet and conceit in place, Caspe made an avoider of confrontation. the rounds at the networks, Wilson, on the other hand, is sketching out episodes, charmessy, an u n filtered talker acters and comic possibilities who is as quick to fly off the for the new show. He also hit handle as she is to switch gears upon a unique selling tool he into a sunny mood. couldn't disdose to Wilson. "We've had our struggles," "I was openly telling all said Wilson, 33, as she and
these rooms of executives that I
Caspe ate lunch in his window- was going to propose to Casey, less "Marry Me" office at Par- but she didn't know yet, and amount Pictures. "I once told him in a fit of rage that I want-
ed to drive my car through his new house," she said. "Then five minutes later, he saw me
that Season 1, I would be living
it as I'm writing it," he recalled. "Technically, all the presidents of all of the networks knew I
"There will be a wedding at the sits a huge dry-erase board dense with story ideas. EmThen again, the season fi- bedded in the swarm of scribnales of "Happy Endings" bles is the outline for a future which, like "Marry Me," had a episode inspired by a true sprawling ensemble cast and event: Last year, Wilson's fafeatured sharply written dia- ther, political strategist Paul logue filled with pop culture Wilson, got engaged at the references and insults, deliv- same time as both Wilson and ered at extremely high speeds her younger brother, Fletcher — were known to end with Wilson, a medical technology weddings, too. entrepreneur. Although "Happy EndThen she recalled an anings" had a steadfastly loyal ecdote, one she had shared following, part of the couple's with the writing staff, about s elf-deprecating banter i n - buying a box of weight-loss volves jokes about how few shakes from a neighbor and viewers tuned into the series. finding herself inserted into a When the show was canceled, shifty-sounding sales strategy. "I could see the glint in their Wilson said, "the three people thatwere watching were soup- eyes when I told the writers set, and one was suicidal." h ow suddenly w i t hi n t w o Wilson, who studied drama hours of buying these shakes, at the Tisch School of the Arts I'd been called by this top perat New York University, has son, I'd given them my social, a filmography that suggests and they were trying to get me that she works constantly: She to Facebook about it," Wilson has a small but showy role as a said. "And they were all like, loudmouth neighbor in "Gone 'You did what?'" Girl" and appears on Hulu's "We turned that into an epi"Real Housewives" sendup, sode about a pyramid scheme," "The Hotwives of Orlando." Caspe said. "You did?" Wilson said, her She wrote and starred in (with her writing and performing eyes widening in surprise. partner of 12 years, June DiCaspe smiled at his wife. "I've said this about Casey ane Raphael) a 2013 indie film called "Ass Backwards." She before, but I'd love to just put a and Raphael, both Upright Cit- camera on her and just watch izens Brigade mainstays, also her bounce off the walls of this wrote (with Greg DePaul) the world." end ofthe firstseason."
gs
5I
which bought the conceptkept mum. But apparently Wilson wasn't completely in the dark.
"I thought it was some big surprise," Caspe said of the evening he popped the question. "But she showed up in full hair and makeup. She totally knew what was happening." In the pilot episode of "Marry Me," which begins Tuesday, the couple at the heart of the series— mild-mannered Jake (Ken Marino) and Annie (Wilson), the emotionally chaotic woman he loves — stumble through a nightmare version of the evening that Caspe asked for Wilson's hand. Yet in
was going to propose to Casey eating gummy bears and before Casey or anyone else Caspe's view, "the title is mislaughing at the TV. I think did. Then I'd swear everyone to leading," he said. "It's not like those emotional swings have secrecy." Episode 1 is the proposal, Epibeen a lotforDavidtoprocess." In the end, th e n etwork sode 2 is trying to get the dress. The bearded, slightly rum- brass — including that of NBC, It's really just a show about a
One canceleddate not a personal rejection Dear Abby: My lunch date for company you enjoy, unless you are today canceled on me. Generally, a masochist when a girl does this, I delete her Dear Abby: I am a mother of three number and move on. But in this grown children who all have sucinstance, it wasn't a first or second cessful careers. The problem is they date. We havebeen seeing each oth- seem to have lost touch with the real er for about a month and have built world. They no longer have compasup some degree of intimacy. More- sion or respect for people who must over, I know she's not live with less, or who lying when she says are not as well-edshe had a busy week. ucated as they are. DEAR She apol~ d ~ This indudes my husABBY text not o n ce, but band and me.
posed tobe there forever. Dear Abby: I have a wonderful daughter who is a perfect mother andwife. Theproblemis, she's inher 40s and dresses really inappropriately, sometimes wearing skirts and shorts so short theybarely cover her
twice.
exposed that sometimes when she
We feel like we no
bottom. She's also very voluptuous
and ahvays shows deavage. When she goesout for the evening, she shows practically everything. She takes lots of photographswith her family, and in all of them she's so
Nevertheless, I feel longer fit into their gives me prints, I have to add magic that as genuine as her apology was world. It has become hard for us to marker so she looks more modest. and as she has seemed in the time
have any relationship with them.
we have been together, this incident indicates either a lack of caring or integrity. Would I be right to forget her? Or
How can I make them see that mon- by everyone, so I don't know how to ey and status are not the only things handle this. Pleasehelp me.
is this the one time a cancellation is
justified? — Classic Overanalyzer in LA.
Dear Overanalyzer: Your problem isn't that you are a classic over-
in this world, and that they should
showmore compassionto others? — In Touch With the World tnOhio
She is a sweet person who is loved — Covered UpIn Oakland,
California Dear Covered Up: You say your daughter is a perfect mother and
Dear in Touch: You have my sym- wife in her 40s. She may display her because ithasbeenaw inning pathy, but the lessons you would like assets to teach your adult children are ones
combination for her so far or be-
analyzer; it's that you seem to be they should have learned during extremely insecure to the point of childhood. Sometimes people who
cause herhusband likes it. The time is long past when you
are"nouveauriche"tryto forget their
should tell her what or what not to
courting rejection when none is
there. People cannot always control humble beginnings by avoiding the wear, even if you are well-meaning. their schedules. And cancellations peoplewho knew them when they The best advice I can offer is to concan happen more than once without were regular folks. It couldn't hurt tinue wielding your magic marker it being an indication of lack of in- to remind your offspring that money andprayfor colderweather. terest or caring. I see no reason why and status can be lost as quiddy as — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com you should "forget" a woman whose they were earned, but family is sup- or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
not war. Tonight: Out late.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, OCT. 13, 2014: This yearyoucould
YOUR HOROSCOPE
manifest a dream. Be sure that what you By Jacqueline Bitrar go for is what you really want; otherwise, you might have a problem. Review your goals every few months to make sure they a light on a potential new relationship are valid. If you are single, do not commit that might not have existed if you were to the first person who comes by. Think looking at the possibility at a different aboutyour choices, because there will be time. Tonight: All smiles as you treat a pal options. If youare to dinner. Starsshowthekind attached, the two CANCER (June21-July 22) of you cement your ** * You could feel as if someone is ofttsy yos'll hsve ** * * * D ynamic bond by incorporaining on your parade, and you more ** * * p osltlve rating more of the than likely are right. You will assume the *** Average qu a lities you desirepart of the observer — not the one mak** So-so into your relationing the decisions. Roles will reverse later ship. Acceptance * Difficult in the day, which is when you will be much of each other happens naturally. more upbeat. Tonight: As you like it. CANCERcould play a very important role LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) in your life. ** * * Emphasize what is positive in your immediate environment. You won't ARIES (March 21-April 19) want to distance any friends at the mo** * * You'll express your feelings ment. You will see that negative feelings and thoughts, while others seem to be will pass. Take some time to yourself, short-tempered and unusually curt. You whether that means going for a walk or off could have some difficulty dealing with on an adventure. Tonight: Downtime. a partner or loved one. The issue likely will be finances. Be as open as possible VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) aboutasuggestion. Tonight: Happily head ** * * People usually don't enjoy havhome. ing additional responsibilities dumped on them, but you'll step up to the plate TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * * Y ou might be spending your anyway. Pressure could build and cause time trying to get everyone on the same you to be slightly more in touch with your page. Know when that is impossible. You needs. Trytosay"no" more often. Tocould be tired of having to explain your ev- night: Focus on your long-term goals. ery thought. You are likely to discover that LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) you have a feisty associate on your hands. ** * * Your imagination travels to lands Tonight: Catch up on a friend's news. where others might not be able to reach. GEMINI (May 21-June20) Your ability to manifest long-term goals ** * * * You might want to explore your comes from this ability to see the trees options. Others see you in a very favorfrom the forest. A child or new friend able light. Your imagination could shine could be extremely irritating. Make peace,
2009 Anne Hathaway studio comedy, "Bride Wars." And Wilson did a stint on "Saturday
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and INiAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Oec.21) ** * * You might consider what needs to happen in order to get past the issue at hand. Anger could be close to the surface, and if you are not careful, you could be reactive to a partner or others in general. Tonight: Opt for togetherness.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * You might be compelled to complete a project, but a sense of profound irritation could get the best of you. You tend to come from a very serious perspective. Juggle what is going on, and allow others to participate. You will get finished faster. Tonight: Out with friends.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * You might want to crank down the high energy, flirtatiousness and the wittiness for now. It seems as if others might not be in the same jovial and upbeat mood. Maintain a sense of humor, and the results will be better. Tonight: Catch up on what you need to do.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ** * * * You could be busy dealing with a personal matter. Listen to what you are hearing, and follow through on what is important. Your creativity will solve an issue and also add some levity to the moment. The older the day gets, the better you feel. Tonight: So what if it is Monday? O King Features Syndicate
I
r
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • INTO THE STORMlPG-13) 8:30 • LUCYlR) 6 • After 7p.m.,showsare21and olderonl y.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m. ifaceompanied by alegal guardian.
5p.m. on TCM, Movie:"ANight atthe Opera" — Theplotofthis 1935comedyinvolvestwoyoung operasingers looking for their big breakand the managerandhis two bumbling buddies whotry to help. Butas with any Marx Brothers movie, the plot is just a delivery
device forGroucho'sone-liners,
Harpo's slapstick andChico's language mangling. Margaret Dumontisonceagainon handasthe brothers' oh-so-proper foil. 8 p.m. on 5, 8, "The Voice" — The"battle rounds" start in this newepisode, aseachof the
coaches gets amusic-pro adviser to work with. In thecase of Gwen Stefani, it's all in the family, since she's matchedwithhusband Gavin Rossdale. Stevie Nicks partners with Adam Levine,Alicia Keysassists Pharrell Williams, andBlake Shelton gets fellow country stars Little Big Town.The coacheswill be able to select two contenders cut from other teams tojoin theirs. Carson Daly is thehost.
9 p.m. on 6, "Scorpion"Against the advice ofAgentGallo (Robert Patrick), TeamScorpion heads to LasVegas for what they're confident is going to be a"simple" casino job. Things quickly go south, however,when a robbery leads toWalter's (Elyes Gabel) arrest, forcing the restof the gang to focus onclearing his name. Corbin Bernsen,Alicia Lagano and Chris Mulkeyguest star in the newepisode"Shorthanded." 10 p.m. on 5, 8, "The Blacklist" —What mightturn peaceful people into killers? Andcould it involve Pee-weeHerman?Those questions areanswered inthe new episode"Dr. Linus Creel," featuring Paul Reubens as guest a star as a wave of murders is committed by very unlikely perpetrators. Liz (Megan Boone) is perplexeduntil
Red (JamesSpader)clues her
into a psychological experiment thatcouldbe the cause.Redalso remains concernedaboutex-wife
Naomi (gueststar Mary-Louise Parker). 11 p.m. on 7, "Independent Lens" — Controversial andmuch-discussed during its theatrical release, this 2011documentary "Bully" will remain significant for as long as thetitle situation exists in schools. To thatend, students, parents, educators andbehavioral experts comment asfilmmaker Lee Hirsch, whowas abullying victim himself, focuses onfive relevantsituations — including that
of a teen whofaces consequences from arming herself. ©Zap2it
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NW Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • BOYHOOD lR) 6 • THE CONGRESS lno MPAArating) 3:30
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * Be sensitive to what is happening behindthescenes.You understand the forces at work better than the majority of people. An animated discussion regarding finances could occur. There is no right or wrong, but different styles will be questioned. Tonight: Speak your mind.
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ALEXANDER ANDTHE TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD,VERY BAD DAY lPG)Noon,3:05,6,9 • ANNABELLE lR1:15, ) 4:15, 7:30, 9:55 • THE BOXTROLLS (PG)12:05, 6:25, 9:05 • THE BOXTROLLS 3-D (PG)2:30 • DOLPHIN TALE 2(PG) 12:15, 3:15, 6:45, 9:20 • DRACULA UNTOLD lPG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:45 • DRACULA UNTOLD IMAX (PG-13) 1,4, 7, 10 • THE EQUALIZERlR)11:35a.m.,2:40,6:40,9:50 • GONE GIRL lR) 11:30 a.m., 2:50, 6:10, 9:35 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY lPG-l3)12:50,3:50,7:05, 9:50 • THE JUDGE (R) 11:45 am., 3, 6:15, 9:30 • KILLTHE MESSENGER lR) 1:05, 4:10, 7:20, 10:05 • LEFT BEHIND lPG- I3) 12:25, 3:20, 6:05, 9:15 • THE MAZE RUNNER(PG-13) 12:40, 3:40, 6:50, 9:30 • ONE DIRECTION: WHEREWEARE (no MPAArating) 12:55, 7 • THESKELETON TWINS lR)3:55 • THIS IS WHERE ILEAVEYOUlR) 1:25,4:25, 7:40, IO: l0 • AWALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES lR)9:40 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
TV TODAY • More TI//listingsinside Sports
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdem Medo Road, 541-548-8777 • ALEXANDER ANDTHE TERRIBLE,HORRIBLE, NO GOOD,VERY BAD DAY lPG)4:15,6:15 • ANNABELLE lR5, ) 7:15 • DRACULA UNTOLD lPG-13) 4:30, 6:45 • THE JUDGE (R) 3:40, 6:30
TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO
•J
Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • GONEGIRLlR) 3,6 • THE JUDGE (R) 3, 6 • LOVE IS STRANGE (R) 6:15 • MY OLDLADY lPG-13)3:45 • THIS IS WHERE I LEAVEYOUlR) 6: I5 • THE TRIP TO ITALY (PG-13) 4
•
•
PlaII Well, Retire Well
r t~r
Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • ALEXANDER ANDTHE TERRIBLE,HORRIBLE, NO GOOD,VERY BAD DAY lPG)5:20,7:20 • ANNABELLE lR4:50, ) 7:10 • THE BOXTROLLS (PG)4:35, 6:50 • GONE GIRL lR) 6:40 • LEFT BEHIND lPG- I3) 4:30, 7 •
775SW onneWay,Suite120•Ben 541-728 -0321swww.elevationcapitalstralegies.com
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • ALEXANDER ANDTHE TERRIBLE,HORRIBLE, NO GOOD,VERY BAD DAY lPG)6:30 • GONE GIRL lUpstairs — R) 6:15 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus •film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p i e m e n t s h o m e . c o m
A10 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
HEARING AIDS
+ PriceMa tchGuarantee'
Maybe it's time to get your hearing checked... With our 2 We-ek Free Trial, nowis the time! Spending time with friends and family can be less enjoyable if you are struggling to hear conversation. At Connect Hearing we understand this. As the strongest network of Hearing Care Professionals in the country, we are committed to helping more people sfay connecfed to the sounds of life through better hearing, better care and the best state-of-the-art digitalhearing aids the world has to offer.
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glgQ)gggg "Certaintypesofhearinglossmayrequirea hearingaidmodelthat isnotappropriatefortheTwoWeekFreeTrial. Seecenterfordetails.Lyricexcluded.4AsamemberoftheConnectHearingnetwork, ifwedon'talreadyhavethelowestprice,wewillmatchanyvalidmmpetitorquote priceonhearingaidswithin60daysofpurchase.t096finandng offerissubjectto creditapproval. Ifat thetimeofyourapplicationyoudonotmeettheueditcriteria previouslyestablishedforthisofferortheinmmeyoureportisinsuflicientbasedonyourobligations, ) )yy~~ y g " oradvertised we maynotbeableto offerthis finandng.Complimentary hearingscreeningandconsultationrequired. Somerestrictionsapply Offerexpires 10/31/14.
IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Sports in brief, B2 Motor sports, B3 NHL, B3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
The week ahea
A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and elsewhere in the world of sports:
Today
Wednesday
Thursday
Saturday
Sunday
Major league Baseball, ALChampionship Series, Baltimore at KansasCity, 5 p.m. (TBS):After beating the Orioles twice in Baltimore, the upstart Royals are in control and cantake acommanding 3-0 lead in the best-of-seven series with a win at hometonight as they close in on their first World Series appearance since1985.
High schoolcross-country, Central OregonRelaysiuBend,3p.m.:Runners from nearly every area high school will be at Bend PineNursery for this meet, which serves as afinal tuneup for next week's district championships. Thestate championship meet for all classifications is set for Nov. 1 at LaneCommunity College in Eugene.
College football, Utah at OregonState, 7 p.m. (FoxSports1): The Beavers play four of their next five games atReser Stadium, starting with the No. 20Utes. Both teams are4-1 overall, 1-1 in Pac-12 play and coming off conference road wins. If either of these teamsexpects to make any real noise in thePac-12this season, this figures to be amust-win game.
College football, Washington atOregou, 5 p.m. (Fox Sports1): The Ducks are looking to make it11 in a rowagainst the Huskies in this storied Northwest rivalry. Both teamsare coming off impressive road wins —Oregonover UCLA, Washington over Californiaand both are 5-1overall with designs on securing the top rung of the Pac-12 North standings.
Running, SuperDave's Down8 Dirty Half Marathon, Bend, 9a.m.: This annual13.1-mile challenge starts and finishes at Seventh Mountain Resort southwest of Bend. Theroute is made upof singletrack and dirt roads andincludes some taxing climbs. A10-kilometer race is also available. For more information: www.superfitproductions.com.
GOLF
TRIATHLON
Bend pro52ndat Dutch Sr.Open
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
A strong finish for a rough outing
AMSTERDAM-
Bend's Chris van der Velde finished in atie for 52nd place Sundayat the Dutch Senior Open. The 50-year-old managing partner of Tetherow Golf Club shot an 8-over-par 81 in the final round Sundayat
4
i
The International to fall
Nt
• Bend's Corbin runs asub-3hour marathon atIronman
lfg~9:
By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
Linsey Corbin was not
to11 over for the 54hole tournament. Van der Velde, adual Netherlands-U.S. national making his first appearance on the European Senior Tour, started the tournament with a 3-under 70 Friday that put
0
• Oregon's offense silencesits critics with a robust runninggame
pleased with her swim Sat-
urday, and her bike leg was a little off as well. But the
33-year-old professional
~
r
By Anne M. Peterson
him in early contention. Former British Open championlanWoosnam surged in the final round to win the 64-player tournament, an annual event on Europe's 50-and-over pro circuit, at11 under par.
The Associated Press
Bend triathlete
h
ran like hell and salvaged a top-15 finish at the 2014 Ironman World
two games, Oregon responded
r Co rbin
Championships in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, placing 12th in the pro women's field in 9 hours, 25 minutes and 38 seconds.
/
with a much more typical outburst against UCLA. The 42-30 rebound victory over the Bruins on Saturday at the Rose Bowl was just what the Ducks
yg
Australia's Mirinda Carfrae
won the women's world championship in 9:00:55. "When I came off the bike,
I was 25th or 26," Corbin recounted by phone from Hawaii on Sunday. "With my fitness level going into the race, I
4ext gp
needed as they
j
— Bulletin staff report
After struggling on offense for
~
prepare to face rival Washington this weekend at Autzen Stadkum.
ksi
thought I'd be closer to the top 10. It was frustratingbeingthat
Washington at Wlheu5 P rlh
1pp1
Bengals Panthers
3
Brown Steelers
31 10
Packers Dolphins
2 24
Charge Raiders
31 28
ears Falcons
2 13
Cowbo Seahawks
3 24
Cardinals Redskins
3
Eagles Giants
2 0
AM 11'1 p FM
. upset loss to Arizona in the previ-
ous game.
portion of the race, posting a
But against the then-No. 18 Bruins, true freshman Royce Freeman broke free with 121 yards and two
the race." While Corbin's ninth trip to the Ironman World Championships did not turn out quite
how she wanted, 2014 proved
touchdowns on 18 carries, and the Ducks re-established themselves as a top-10 team (No. 9) in The Associ-
ated Press rankings.
e ' ~vg"
to be a stellar season for the
former Cougar athlete. SeeCorbin /B4
Inside
See Ducks/B9
Runforthecentury True freshmanRoyceFreeman turned in theDucks' first100-yard rushing performance oftheseason Saturday against UCLA andthe most yards since theseasonopener against SouthDakota.Thetopgamesthisseason:
121 Inside
Marshall
• For Oregon State's scout team, every week is a new test, BS • All of a sudden, the state of Mississippi is college football's epicenter as Mississippi State is No.1 andOleMiss isNo.3,B6
lons
Vikings Bills
demolished the 26.2-mile run
Mark J. Terrill /The Associated Press
31 17
Patriot
144 yards on the ground in a 31-24
pressure onyourself at that point when you're so far out of
ron Jets
Hadio:KBND-
Corbin, a 1999 Mountain View High School graduate,
road. There's actually a lot less
4 17
T V: FS1
100-yard rusher
Corbin, who placed 10th at the world championships a year ago and eighth in 2012. "You just run as hard as you can and see how faryou can get up the
Ravens Buccaneers
Saturday
all season, and the team was held to
there's not much to lose," said
1 14
Oregon (5-1
far back, so I just went for it on
was after she swam 2.4 miles in the choppy waters off Kona and biked 112 miles against the island's crosswinds. "When you're that far back,
itans Jaguars
overall, 2-1 Pac12) had not had a
the run." Did she ever.
time of 2:58:58. That, of course,
NFL
Freeman Freeman Marshall
90 89 85 80
UCLA South Dakota
Michigan St. Arizona Wyoming
• More community sports: Calendar, news, scoreboard,B4
3 22 37
20
Inside • Seahawks stunned by DeMarco Murray, Cowboys. NFL roundup,B4 • Behind Adrian Peterson's perfect public image in an imperfect man,B7
MLB PLAYOFFS A light layer
of snow remains in the
shaded areas as group of golfers play a round at Juniper Golf Club in Redmond. The Central
Oregon Winter Series is about to get
underway. Ryan Brennecke l The Bulletin file
photo
TEE TO GREEN
Winter Seriesremainsstrong By Zack Hall The Bulletin
Pat Huffer wants to make
it clear that every golferman, woman, ace or hack — is welcome in the Central
Oregon Winter Series. Those golfers just need an official handicap and some warm clothing. "It really is designed for
ALL golfers," says Huffer, the head golf professional at Crooked River Ranch and creator of the Central Oregon Winter Series, an
11-tournament swing played through Central Oregon. "It's not just for those
who are top-of-the-game players." SeeWinter Series/B8
Inside • A look at events through the Central Oregon Winter Series. Golf scoreboard, B9
Cardinals tie series on HR Kolten Wong leadsoff the ninth inning with a home run after the Cardinals lost the lead in the top of the inning,B3
Cain emdod les Royals' spirit
Kansas City outfielder Lorenzo Cainhasmatured through the season to lead Royals,B3
B2 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY BASEBALL
MLB playoffs, Baltimore at KansasCity
Time 5 p.m.
TV/Radio
5 p.m.
NBATV
TBS
BASKETBALL
NBA preseason, Phoenix at Houston FOOTBALL
NFL, SanFrancisco at St. Louis SOCCER Euro 2016 qualifier, Bosnia and Herzegovina vs. Belgium Euro 2016 qualifier, Iceland vs. Netherlands Euro 2016 qualifier, Wales vs. Cyprus Women's college, California at UCLA
5:15 p.m. 11:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 11:30a.m. 7 p.m.
ESPN
ESPN2 FS1 FS2
Pac-12
11:30 a.m. ESPN2 11:30 a.m.
5 p.m.
FS2 ESPN
1 p.m. 5 p.m.
FS1 TBS
BASEBALL
MLB playoffs, St. Louis at SanFrancisco MLB playoffs, Baltimore at KansasCity HOCKEY
NHL, Buffalo at Carolina
4:30 p.m. N BCSN
FOOTBALL
College, Louisiana atTexasState
Today Boys soccer: Molalla at Madras,4p.m.; Gladstoneat CrookCounty, 4p,mcCulveratRiverside,2 p.m. Girlssoccer: MadrasatMolaffa,4pmcCrookCounty at Gladstone,4:15p.m.
IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomics.com/inthebreachers
ra/rs
Tuesday Boyssocc er.SummitatRedmond,4:30p.m.;Bendat Ridgeview,4:30p.m.;Sisters atElmira, 4:30p.m. Girls soccer: Bend at Ridgeview,3 p.m.; Summit at Redmond, 3 p,mcElmira at Sisters, 4;30p,mcLa Pine atPleasantHil, 6:30p.m. Volleyball:Redmo nd at Mountain View,6:30p.m.; Ridgeview at Summit, 6:30p.m.; Sistersat Sutherlin, 6:45p.m.;Madrasat Estacada, 6p.mcCorbet at CrookCounty, 6 p.m.; LaPineat Creswell, 6 pm.; Mitchelatl Central Christian,5pmc Gilchrist at NorthLake,5:30p.m. Boys waterpolo:Bendvs.MountainViewatJuniper Swim &FitnessCenter,6:20 p.m.
TUESDAY SOCCER Euro 2016qualifier, Denmarkvs. Portugal Euro 2016 qualifier, Germanyvs. Ireland International friendly, U.S. vs. Honduras
ON DECK
5 p.m.
ESP N 2
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby Tfv'or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL Diirant to miSS Start Of SeaSOn —Kevin Durant, the NBA's leading scorer of this decadeandthe reigning MVP,will likely miss the first six to eight weeks of the seasonafter fracturing a bone in his right foot. The OklahomaCity star forward complained of an ache in his foot after practice Saturday, the teamsaid. Tests showed he has a "Jones fracture," a broken bone atthe base of his small toe. Thunder general managerSamPresti said Sunday that surgery is likely, and that similar injuries haveforced players to miss six to eight weeks. TheThunder openthe season Dct. 29 at Portland. A six-vveek absence could haveDurant back for the start of December, with about 65 games remaining.
Wednesday Volleyball:Gladstoneat Madras, 6p.m. Crosscountry: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit, CrookCounty, Sisters, La Pine,CulveratCentral OregonRelaysat Bend Pine Nursery,3 p.m. Thursday Boys soccer.Ridgeview atSummit,6;30p.m.;Redmondat Mountain View,4:30p.m.;SistersatJunction City,4:30p.m.; Madras at Estacada, 6 p.m.; Corbett at CrookCounty,4 p.m.; SantiamChristian at La Pine,4:30p.m.; Central Christianat C.S. Lewis,4:15p.m. Girls soccer:Redmond at Mountain View,3 p.m.; Ridgeview at Summit, 4:30p.mcJunction Cityat Sisters, 4p.m.; Estacadaat Madras,4p.m.; Crook Countyat Corbett, 4:15p.m.; Jeffersonat LaPine, 3 p.m. Volleyball: Bendat Summit, 6:30p.mcRidgeviewat MountainView,6:30p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 6:45 p.m.; Estacadaat CrookCounty, 6 p.m.; Coquille atLaPine,5 pm.; Culverat Irrigon,5p m. Boys waler polo:MountainViewvs.SummitatJuniper Swim &Fitness Center, TBD Friday FoolbaB: BendatLiberty,7p.m.;RedmondatMountain View, 7p.m.; Ridgeviewat Summit, 7 p.m.; CrookCountyat Corbett, 7p.m4Sisters at Elmira, 7p.m.;Madrasat Molala, 7 p.mcLaPineat Coquiffe,7 p.mcPilot RockatCulver, 7p.m.; Triadat Gilchrist, 4p.m. Volleyball:CentralChristianat Gilchrist, 5:30 p.mc Trinity Lutheran at Paisley, 4;30p.m. Boys waler polo:Summitat Ridgeview
Saturday Boys soccer: CulveratRiverside,1 p.m. Volleyball:Ridgeviewat Philomath Invite, TBD;Madras atCorbettTournament, TBD ; CrookCounty at WestLinnTournament; Stanfield, Weston-McEwen at Culver,noon;Butte Falls at CentralChristian, 2:30 p,mcGilchrist at HosannaChristian, 2:30 p.m 4Prospect atTrinity Lutheran,2:30 p.m. Boys waler polo:Summitat Redmond
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesEDT
VOLLEYBALL U.S. winS firSt majar title — Kimberiy Hiii ied the United States to its first major women's volleyball title, scoring 20 points in a 3-1 victory over China onSunday in theworld championships in Milan. Hill had the final kill, and captain Christa Dietzenadded 15points in the Americans' 27-25, 25-20, 16-25, 26-24 victory before12,600 fans at the Mediolanum Forum.TheU.S.women had never vvonthe world championships, World Cup orOlympics. The Americans finished second in theworld championships in1967 and 2002.
RUNNING Kenyan SweeP in ChiCagO — Kenyans ruledthe Chicago Marathon on Sunday,with Eliud Kipchoge leading a1-2-3 men's sweep and compatriot Rita Jeptoo repeating as thewomen's winner. Kipchoge pulled awayover the last tvvo miles for his first major marathon victory, finishing in 2 hours, 4 minutes, 11seconds. Hewasfollowed by SammyKitwarain2:04:28and DicksonChumba in2:04:32.Jeptoo vvas timed in 2:24:35 in winning her fourth straight major marathon. She also captured the 2013-14World Marathon Majors points championship and took theBoston Marathon in April.
TENNIS PliSkOVa rallieS fOr LinZ ViCtOry —Karolina Pliskova of the Czech Republic saved amatch point before defeating Camila Giorgi of Italy 6-7 (4), 6-3, 7-6 (4j in the final of the Generali Ladies onSunday in Linz, Austria. Pliskova led 5-1 in the final set but failed to serve out the match twice. Shedropped 6-5 behind but Giorgi sent a backhand into the net on match point. Pliskova converted her first chance in the tiebreaker. Theseventh-seeded Pliskova, vvho is ranked 30th, earned her second WTAtitle in as many months after also winning in Seoul in September. Sheimproved to 3-3 in career finals. The42nd-ranked Giorgi played hersecond final of the season and is yet to win her maiden trophy.
StOSBr repeatS at Japan WOmen'S Open —Defending champion SamStosur recovered from a tough first set to win her third Japan Women'sOpentitle Sunday, defeating Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan 7-6 (9-7), 6-3 in Osaka.Stosur, seeded first, didn't drop a set all week in capturing her first WTA title of the season. The 30-year-old Australian was broken byher fifth-seeded opponent in the first game of atight opening set before drawing on her power and experience to pull away.
RiSke beatS Bencic fOr1St WTA title —Alison Riskeheld on to defeat Belinda Bencic 6-3, 6-4 in the final of the Tianjin Openon Sunday for her first WTATour title. The sixth-seeded American led 6-3, 4-1, but Bencic fought back to level the match at 4-all and held a break point to go up5-4. Riske savedthe break point, though, and captured the final tvvogames to close out the match. The17-year-old Bencic vvasattempting to become theyoungest winner on the WTA Tour since 15-year-old Tamira Paszek captured the Portoroz title in 2006. The third-seededSwiss vvasalso playing in the first WTAfinal of her career.
Federer WinS 4th title Of year —Shanghai Masterswinner Roger Federer vvas sorusty in his first match back this week after a month-long break that hewas close to packing his bags and heading home. TheSwiss star had racked up 57 unforced errors against Leonardo Mayer in the second round andfought off five match points before finally pulling through well after midnight. Four days after his narrow escape, however, hecaptured his fourth title of the year with a 7-6 (6), 7-6 (2j win over France's Gilles Simon in Sunday's final.
OLYMPICS Kayak gOld medaliSt faCeSdOPing iRPiiiry — Australian Canoeing says LondonOlympics kayak gold medalist Tate Smith has been provisionally suspendedpending an investigation by the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority. Chief executive GregDoyle issued a statement Sundaysaying Australian Canoeing is aware of media reports about Smith, who was amember of the Australian team that vvonthe K4 event in London in 2012. Brisbane's Courier Mail newspaper reported the 32-year-old Smith tested positive for a banned substance during a training camp in Hungary in July. If proven, the newspapersaid Smith could lose his London medal and faces a tvvo-year banwhich would prevent him defending his title in Rio de Janiero. TheCourier Mail quoted a spokesperson assaying the Australian Olympic Committee is "aware of the investigation andwe are following it closely." — From wire report
EasternConference Montreal TampaBay Detroit Ottawa Toronto Boston Florida Buffalo
Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA 3 3 0 0 6 10 7 2 1 0 1 3 5 5 2 1 1 0 2 4 4 2 1 1 0 2 5 5 3 1 2 0 2 11 12 3 1 2 0 2 3 7 2 0 1 1 1 3 8 2 0 2 0 0 3 9
MetropolitanDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA NewJersey 2 2 0 0 4 11 5 Columbus 2 2 0 0 4 8 3 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 0 4 11 6 N.Y.Islanders 2 2 0 0 4 9 6 Washington 2 1 0 1 3 5 2 N.Y.Rangers 3 1 2 0 2 8 13 Philadelphia 3 0 2 1 1 8 12 Carolina 2 0 2 0 0 6 9 WeslernConference CentralDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA Minnesota 2 2 0 0 4 8 0 Nashvile 2 2 0 0 4 7 3 Chicago 2 2 0 0 4 9 4 St. Louis 2 1 1 0 2 6 4 Winnipeg 3 1 2 0 2 7 9 Dallas 2 0 1 1 1 3 7 Colorado 2 0 2 0 0 0 8 PacificDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA SanJose 2 2 0 0 4 7 0 Vancouver 2 2 0 0 4 9 6 Los Angeles 3 1 1 1 3 6 8 Anaheim 2 1 1 0 2 7 8 Arizona 2 1 1 0 2 5 8 Calgary 3 1 2 0 2 8 10 Edmonton 2 0 1 1 1 6 10 Bunday'sGames Toronto6,N.Y.Rangers3 Los Angele4, s Winnipeg1 Today'sGames Colorado at Boston,10 a.m. Anahei matBuff alo,noon Ottawa atFlorida, 4:30p.m. MontrealatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Tuesday'sGames N.Y.Islandersat N.Y. Rangers, 4p.m. Anaheim at Philadelphia, 4p.m. SanJoseatWashington, 4p.m. DallasatColumbus,4p.m. Buffaloat Carolina,4:30 p.m. Colorado at Toronto,4:30p.m. NewJerseyatTampaBay,4:30 p.m. CalgaryatNashvile, 5 p.m. Edmonto natLosAngeles,7:30p.m.
BASKETBALL NBA preseason NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AH TimesPDT
Sunday'sGames Brooklyn97,Sacramento95 Washington 91, Detroit 89 Dallas106,Indiana98 Portland119,L.A.Clippers114 GoldenState116,L.A. Lakers75 Today'sGames Orlandoat Charlotte, 4 p.m. TorontoatNewYork,4:30 p.m. Denverat Chicago, 5p.m. Phoeni xatHouston,5p.m. L.A. ClippersatUtah,6p.m. Tuesday'sGames NewYorkvs. PhiladelphiaatSyracuse,N.Y.,4p.m. Milwaukee at Cleveland, 4p.m. Atlantaat Miami,4:30p.m. HoustonatNewOrleans,5 p.m. MemphisatOklahoma City, 5p.m. Sunday'sSummary
Blazers119, Clippers114 L.A. CLIPPERS (114) Bullock 2-4 0-0 6, Griffin 4-161-1 9, Jordan 4-4 3-9 11,Paul6-15 2-3 15, Redick5-112-2 14, Barnes1-70-03, Crawford 8-131-1 23,Hawes5-13 2-4 15, Farmar5-10 0-0 13,Turkoglu1-1 0-0 3, Davis 0-02-22,Wilcox0-00-00.Totals41-94 13-22114. PORTLAND (119) Batum4-6 3-413, Aldridge4-13 8-816, Lopez 0-42-22,Mccoff um 7-120-019,Matthews8-13 0-0 22, Blake 2-4 0-0 5, Barton3-5 3-3 10,Kaman 5-8 2-2 12,Freeland3-4 0-0 6, Wright0-0 0-0 0, Robinson 2-30-04, Crabbe3-42-410. Totals 4176 2B-23119. L.A. Clippers 2 B2 6 29 4B — 114 Porlland 29 26 34 31 — 119 3-Point Goal— s L.A. Clippers 19-39(Crawford 6-8, Farmar3-5,Hawes3-6,Bullock2-3,Redick2-5, Turkoglu1-1,Barnes1-5,Paul1-6), Portland17-25 (Matthews6-7, Mccollum5-8, Batum2-3, Crabbe 2-3, Blake1-2,Barton1-2). FouledOut—None. Rebounds —L.A. Clippers 45 (Jordan8), Portland55
(Kaman 9). Assists—L.A. Clippers 23(Farmar7), Portland28(Blake7). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 20, Portland 22.Technicals—L.A. Clippers defensive threesecond.A—17,784(19,980).
CoachesTop25 Pol Record Pts Pvs 1 . MississipState pi (26) 6-0 1 490 6 2. FloridaState(31) 6 014 8 9 1 3. Mississippi(5) 6-0 143 6 4 4. Baylor 6-0 1392 3 5. NotreDame 6-0 1292 5 5-1 1129 8 6. MichiganState 5-1 1121 7 7. Alabam a 8.Auburn 5-1 1111 2 9. Oregon 5 -1 101 7 11 10. Georgia 5 -1 1013 1 0 5-1 1005 9 11. Oklahom a 4-1 12. TCU 824 12 13. OhioState 4-1 7 3 7 15 14. KansasState 4-1 7 1 0 16 15. Oklahoma State 5 1610 18 16. EastCarolina 5-1 5 1 8 19 17. Arizona 5-1 5 0 2 13 18. ArizonaState 4-1 4 7 1 20 5-1 4 3 3 21 19. Nebraska 4-2 20. Stanford 344 22 21. Texas A&M 5-2 2 6 9 14 22. Clemson 4-2 2 4 4 25 4 -1 1 6 1 NR 23. Utah 6 -0 15 3 NR 24. Marshall 25. SouthernCal 4 -2 12 5 NR Others receiving votes: UCLA116,LSU80, Minnesota78, Duke70, Was hington 70, Kentucky 37, Wisconsin34, West Virginia17, lowa15,Georgia Tech14,OregonState10, ColoradoState5, Missouri 5, Brigham Young2, Rutgers1. Pac-12 AH TimesPDT NorthDivision Conlerence W L W 2 1 5 2 1 4
BASEBALL
CONCACAF Women's Championship
MLB playoffs
GROUPSTAGE AH TimesPDT
MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL AH TimesPDT LEAGUECHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(Best-of-7;x-if necessary) Sunday'sGame St. Louis5, SanFrancisco4, seriestied1-1 Today'sGame Baltimore(chen16-6)atKansasCity(Guthrie13-11), 5:07 p.m.,KansasCity leadsseries2-0 Tuesday'sGames St. Louis(Lackey3-3) atSanFrancisco,1:07 Baltimore(Gonzalez 10-9) atKansas City(Vargas 1110), 5:07p.m. Wednesday'sGames x-Baltimore atKansasCity,1:07 p.m. St. Louis(Miler10-9) atSanFrancisco, 5:07p.m. Thursday'G same x-St. LouisatSanFrancisco, 5:07p.m. Friday'sGame x-Kansas CityatBaltimore, 5:07p.m. Saturday'sGames x-SanFranciscoatSt. Louis,1;07p.m. x-Kansas CityatBaltimore, 5:07p.m. Sunday,Oct.19 x-SanFranciscoatSt. Louis, 4;37p.m. Sunday'sboxscore
COLTS 3
3'/t
3'/ z
10
4 3Vt
46tat
Sunday 3 49
WASHINGTON 4 4 tr t 3t/t BEAR$ 3 Browns 4tat 4 t/t
Thursday'G same
NewEnglandat Houston, 5p.m. Friday'sGame RealSaltLakeat Portland, 7p.m.
Saturday'sGames
MontrealatToronto FC,11a.m. FC DallasatColorado,noon SportingKansasCity atPhiladelphia, 4p.m. ChicagoatD.C.United, 4 p.m. Vancouver at SanJose, 7:30p.m.
CONCACAF Champions League FIRSTROUND AH TimesPDT
GroupFive W D L GF Portland(USA) 3 0 0 14 Dlimpia(Honduras) 2 0 1 9 AlphaUnited(Guyana) 0 0 4 1
Tuesday,Oct.21 Olimpiavs. Portland,7p.m.
GAPts 3 9
4 6 17 0
TENNIS WTA Generali LadiesLinz Sunday at Linz, Austria
Championship KarolinaPliskova(7), CzechRepublic, def.Camila Giorgi, Italy,6-7(4),6-3, 7-6(4). TianjinOpen
Seahawks PACKERS 7 RAVENS 7
RA M S
JapanOpen Sundayal Osaka, Japan Championship B engals Samantha Stosur (1), Australia, def. ZarinaDiyas Titans (5), Kaza khstan, 7-6(7), 6-3. Jets
48tat Dolphins 45 JAGUARS RAMS
ATP
7 49 P anthers ShanghaiRotexMasters F a lcons 7 49t/t Sunday at Shanghai B ILLS 4Vt 4' / z 43 Vi k ings Championship L IDNS z v t 2v z 51 Vt S a ints CHARG ERS 5H 5Ht 45tat C h iefs RogerFederer(3), Switzerland, def. Giles Simon, COWBO YS Giants France,7-6(6), 7-6(2). 43'/z RAIDERS Cards 4 4 BRONC OS 49ers *Monday
S TEELERS 4
TEXAS ST
3
Va Tech Utah
3 ttat
BOISE ST HOUSTO N
4
44t/t
College Tuesday
3 Thursday
3 1H Friday 1 5 15 tpA tr"rt
Saturday
Marshall 21ta 21ta Syracuse 3H 3 Ht ND ILLINOI S 14 14 IP H R E R BBSO Akron San Francisco MINNES OTA 1 3 13 Peavy 4 4 2 2 3 2 MARYLAN D 3 3 Affeldt 2 0 0 0 1 1 9tat 9'/z Baylor MachiBS,1-1 1 - 3 1 1 1 0 0 DUKE 3 3 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 J.Lopez Ga Tech 1'/g 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 Strickland 1414 RomoL,0-1 0 1 1 1 0 0 LOUISVILLE 12'/z 12'/z UMASS St. Louis B OWL G R E E N 3 3 52-3 6 2 2 1 3 Lynn AN 7A 7 Ht 1-3 0 1 1 1 1 CMICHIG Choate I-Georgia 3 3 CMartinez 1 2 0 0 0 0 Neshek 1 0 0 0 0 2 WYOMING PK PK A IR FO R C E 11H 11H RosenthalBS,1-1 2-3 2 1 1 2 1 PK PK Maness W,1-0 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 TULSA LATECH Choatepitchedto 1batterin the7th. 10'/~ 10'/~ NTEXAS Romopitchedto 1batterin the9th. Cincinnati 14 14 WP — Rosenthal. PB—Tcruz. TROY tpat 6'/z T—3:41. A—46,262(45,399). BYU 11 11 Army 5H 5H 3t SOCCER Stanford at 3H OREGO N 20 20 Ucla 7A 7 Ht MLS MID TENN ST PK PK MAJORLEAGUEBOCCE OHIO ST 19'/z 19'/z AH TimesPDT ALABAMA 12ta 12ta USC 20 20 Eastern Conference MichiganSt 14'/~ 14'/~ W L T Pts GF GA Clemson 7tat 7'Iz x-D.C.United 1 6 9 7 55 49 35 OKLAHO MA 9'/2 9Ht x -New England 15 1 3 4 49 48 45 IDAHO 4 4 x-Sporting KansasCity14 11 7 49 47 37 6ALABAM A 17 17 x-New York 12 9 11 47 52 47 W Kentucky 3 3 Columbus 12 10 10 46 47 40 COLOR ADOST 51/2 51/2 TorontoFC 11 14 7 40 43 52 MISSISSIPPI 1 7 17 Houston 11 15 6 39 37 54 TEXAS 1 2 12 Philadelphia 9 11 12 39 48 48 4'/2 4Ht FLORID A Chicago 5 9 1 8 33 38 48 TEXAS TECH 14Y2 14Y2 Montreal 6 18 8 26 36 56 TCU 9 9
Sunday'sGames
2 193 134 1 225 161 1 206 157 1 1 4 1 198 107 1 2 4 2 210 171 0 3 2 4 190 214
Sundayat Tianjin, China Championship NFL AlisonRiske(6), UnitedStates, def.BelindaBencic Favorite Open Current Olu Underdog (3), Switzerland, 6-3, 6-4. Today
San Francisco S t . Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi GBlanccf 5 0 2 1 Mcrpnt3b 4 1 1 1 P anik2b 4 0 1 0 Jaycf 4010 Poseyc 4 0 0 0 Hollidylf 4 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 5 1 1 0 MAdms1b 3 2 1 1 Pence rf 4 0 1 1 JhPerlt ss 2 0 1 0 Belt1b 3 1 1 0 YMolinc 2 0 1 0 Bcrwfrss 3 1 0 0 Tcruzc 1 0 0 0 Ishikaw If 2 0 1 0 Wong 2b 3 1 1 1 M orseph 1 0 1 0 Grichkrf 3 0 1 1 M achip 0 0 0 0 Lynnp 2000 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Strcklnp 0 0 0 0 CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 Susacph 1 0 1 0 Taversph 1 1 1 1 MDuffy pr 0 1 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Peavy p 1 0 0 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Ariasph 1 0 0 1 Affe ldtp 0 0 0 0 J.Perez ph-lf 1 0 1 0 Totals 35 4 10 3 Totals 2 9 5 8 5 San Francisco BBB B11 1B1 — 4 S t. Louis BB1 1 B B 111 — 5 No outswhenwinningrunscored. DP — San Francisco 1, St. Louis 1. LDB—San Francisco9, St. Louis5. 28—Sandoval(2), Ishikawa (1). HR —M.carpenter (1), Ma.Adams (1),Wong(1), Taveras (1). CS—Jay(1). S—J.Perez, YMolina.
D.C.United3, Houston1 FC Dallas2, LosAngeles1
1 209 128 1 141 117 5 245 245
America's Line
P ATRIOTS 10
x- clinched playoffberth
Overall L PF PA 1 260 146 2 158 60 2 257 233
Thursday'sGame Utah atOregonState, 7p.m. Saturday,Ocl. 18 UCLAatCalifornia,12:30 p.m. ColoradoatSouthern Cal,4 p.m. WashingtonatOregon,5p.m. StanfordatArizonaSt., 7:30p.m.
FOOTBALL
4 9ers
W L T Pts GF GA x-Seattle 19 10 3 60 61 48 x-LosAngele s 1 7 6 9 60 67 33 x -Real SaltLake 14 8 1 0 52 52 39 x -FCDallas 15 11 6 51 54 43 Vancouver 11 8 13 46 41 40 Portland 11 9 12 45 59 52 Colorado 8 16 8 32 43 60 ChivasUSA 8 18 6 30 28 59 SanJose 6 15 11 29 35 49
Utah UCLA
Colorado
Wednesday'sGames Guatemalvs. a Haiti, 3 p.m. UnitedStatsvs.Trinidad &Tobago, 5:30p.m. Thursday'sGames Jamaicavs.Martinique, 3p.m. Costa Ricavs.Mexico,2:30p.m. Friday'sGames Haiti vs.Trinidad&Tobago,3:30p.m. UnitedStatesvs. Guatemala, 6p.m. Saturday'sGames CostaRicavs. Jamaica,1p.m. Martiniquevs. Mexico, 3:30 p.m. Monday,Oct.20 Trinidad&Tobagovs.Guatemala, 2p.m. Haiti vs.UnitedStates,4:30p.m. Tuesday,Oct.21 Martiniquevs.CostaRica 2p.m. Mexico vs.Jamaica,4:30p.m.
Cardinals 5, Giants4
WesternConference
Oregon Stanford California 2 2 4 Washington 1 1 5 OregonState 1 1 4 WashingtonState 1 3 2 SouthDivision SouthernCal 3 1 4 Arizona 2 1 5 ArizonaState 2 1 4
CFLORID A
Nebraska 7 7 LSU 10'/~ 10'/~ FLORIDA ST 11'/z 11'/z SANDIEG OST 9'/2 9Ht
T e xans
MO TOR SPORTS Formula One
UL-Lafayette PITTSBU RGH OREGO NST
FresnoSt Temple FLORIDA INT'L
WAKEFO REST Miami-Ohio OHIO U Purdue lowa WVIRGINIA Virginia NCARO LINA Nc State EMichigan WMichigan Ball St ARKAN SAS SanJoseSt NewMexico S Florida Tx-SAntonio So Miss SMU App'chian St Nevada KENT ST ARIZONA ST Washington CALIFOR NIA Uab Rutgers Texas A&M Colorado INDIANA BOSTON COLL Kansas St NewMexicoSt GeorgiaSt FLAATLANTIC UtahSt
Tennesse e lowaSt Missouri Kansas Oklahoma St Tulane
RussianGrandPrixResults Sunday al SochiAutodromcircuit, Sochi, Russia Lap length:3.63 miles 1. Lewis Hamilton, England,Mercedes, 53 laps, 1:31:50.744,125.732mph. 2.NicoRosberg,Germany,Mercedes,53,1:32:04.401. 3. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,53,1:3208.169. 4.JensonButton,England,McLaren,53,1:32:20.978. 5. Kevin Magnussen, Denm ark, McLaren, 53, 1:32:44.360. 6. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,53, 1:32:50.760. 7. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Red Bull, 53, 1:32:52.556. 8. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 53, 1;32;56.929. 9. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Ferrari,53, 1:33:09.621. 10. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia,53, 1:33:10.811. 11. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Wiliams,53,1:33:11.621. 12. Nico Hulkenberg,Germany, Force India, 53, 1:33:12.053. 13. Jean-Eric Vergne,France,Toro Rosso, 53, 1:33:28.039. 14. DaniiKvyat, l Russia,ToroRosso,52,+1lap. 15. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,52,+1lap. 16. Adrian Sutil, Germany,Sauber,52,+1lap. 17. RomainGrosjean, France,Lotus, 52,+1lap. 18. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus, 52,+1 lap. 19. MarcusEricsson,Sweden,Caterham,51,+2laps. Not Classfied 20. KamuiKobayashi, Japan,Caterham,21, Retired. 21. MaxChilton, England,Marussia,9, Retired. DriversStandings(Afler 16 of 19races): 1, LewisHamilton,291points. 2, NicoRosberg, 274. 3, Daniel Ricciardo,199.4, Valtteri Bottas,145.5, SebastianVettel, 143. 6, FernandoAlonso, 141. 7, JensonButton,94.8, NicoHulkenberg, 76.9, Felipe Massa,71.10,Kevin Magnussen,49. 11, Sergio Perez, 47.12,Kimi Raikkonen,47. 13,Jean-EricVergne, 21. 14,Rom ain Grosjean, 8. 15,Daniil Kvyat,8. 16, JulesBianchi,2. Constructors Standings:1. Mercedes, 565 points. 2,RedBull, 342.3, Wiliams, 216.4, Ferrari,188. 5,McLaren,143.6, ForceIndia,123. 7, Toro Rosso,29.8, Lotus,8.9, Marussia,2.
NAlaCAR Sprint Cup
LEADERS 1. JoeyLogano,3,088; 2. KyleBusch, 3,082;3. Kevin Harvick,3,081;4.RyanNewman,3,077;5.Carl Kentucky Edwards ,3,076;6.Jeff Gordon,3,074;7.DennyHamNotreDam e lin, 3,073;8.Kasey Kahne,3,057;9.MattKenseth, Hawaii 3,056;10.BradKeselowski, 3,038;11.JimmieJohnson, 3,031;12.DaleEarnhardt Jr., 3,031.
N'WEST ERN
College AP Top 26 Record Pts Pv 1. Mississippi State(45) 6-0 1,480 3 2 . Florida State(12) 6 - 0 1415 1 3. Mississippi(3) 6-0 1413 3 4. Baylor 6-0 1,317 5 6-0 1,228 6 5. NotreDame 5-1 1,144 2 6. Auburn 5-1 1,068 7 7. Alabama 5-1 1,015 8 8. Michigan State 5-1 1,014 12 9. Oregon 10. Georgia 5-1 981 13 11. Oklahom a 5-1 935 11 4-1 12. TCU 917 9 4-1 13. OhioState 648 15 4-1 14. Kansas State 626 17 15. Oklahoma State 5-1 620 16 5-1 16. Arizona 590 10 4-1 17. Arizona State 459 20 18. EastCarolina 5-1 449 19 19. Nebrask a 5-1 402 21 4-1 20. Utah 305 24 5-2 21. Texas AdM 264 14 4-2 22. SouthernCal 258 NR 4-2 23. Stanford 223 25 4-2 24. Clemson 188 NR 25. Marshall 6-0 148 NR Others receivingvotes:UCLA 110, LSU67, Duke45,Kentucky36, Minnesota36, WestVirginia 27, Washington22,GeorgiaTech11, Arkansas10, Louisville 7, Rutgers7, lowa6, ColoradoState3, North DakotaState3, SouthCarolina 1, Virginia 1, Wisconsin 1.
DEALS Transactions HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague ARIZONA COYOTES—AssignedFJustin Hodgman toPortland(AHL). CAROLINA HURRICANES— RecalledFZachBoychuk fromCharlotte (AHL).PlacedFJeff Skinneron injuredreserve,retroactivetoDct. 5. MINNES OTAWILD—SignedDJonasBrodin toa six-yearcontractextension.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 1,542 34 0 3 2 1 11 1 The Daffes 1,906 60 6 8 2 3 298 John Day 2,425 6 5 6 98 5 331 M cNary 2,310 1,125 1,801 6 6 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneviffe1,138,039182,752 318,393 127,587 The Daffes757,103 129,307 242,644 95,302 John Day 635,543 113,067 186,221 70,094 McNary 587,774 103,813 190,708 67,596
MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014• THE BULLETIN
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
NLCS
B3
NHL ROUNDUP
Slumping Leafs
Tempers flare while hopes for title fade
find their
The Associated Press
sel, James van Riemsdyk
offense The Associated Press NEW YORK — Phil Kes-
CONCORD, N.C. — Matt
and the rest of the Toron-
Kenseth, usually so calm and composed, lost his cool and
to Maple Leafs broke out of their scoring slumber with five goals in the second period against Henrik Lundqvist and wrecked the New York Rangers' home opener with a 6-3 victory Sundaynight.
attacked Brad Keselowski at
Charlotte Motor Speedway. If Kenseth is fighting, then tempers are certainly running quite high. They reached a boiling point in the aftermath of Saturday night's race as Keselowski, Kenseth, Dale Earn-
t
hardt Jr. and Jimmie Johnson
all saw their championship hopes fade to near-desperate
Toronto mustered only
five goals total in dropping its first two games of the
t(
season at home, but bust-
week — in N A SCAR's new
ed out against the Rangers, fueled by Kessel and van Riemsdyk, who both notched their first goal and
championship format, and
first point of the season.
the frayed nerves unraveled
Kessel chipped in two assists, and van Riemsdyk
'3
I
status.
The pressure is on — every
on the track, on pit road and in the garage. Denny Ham-
had one.
Cody Franson scored in the first before Kessem,
lin had to be restrained from
going after Keselowski, but
!'.t '
Kenseth got to the 2012 cham-
pion in a dark area between a pair of Team Penske haulers. Kenseth q u i ckly approached Keselowski from behind and nearly tackled him. He had Keselowski wrapped in his arms before crew members quickly peeled him off,
Nazem Kadri, van Riems-
dyk, 7yler Bozak and David Clarkson connected in the second — driving JeffRoberson/The Associated Press
St. Louis' Kolten Wong celebrates after hitting a walk off home run to beat San Francisco 5-4 in Game 2 of the NL Championship Series on Sunday in St. Louis. The series is tied1-1.
short-handed breakaway. Also on Sunday: Kings 4, Jets 1: LOS
to be a chokehold. As race winner Kevin Har-
ANGELES — Los Angeles linemates Jeff Carter, 7yler Toffoli and Tanner Pearson
vick celebrated in Victory Lane, activity in the garage came almost to a halt as drivers and crews watched replays
each had a goal and an assist in the Kings' first victo-
ry of the season. Anze Ko-
of the melee.
"When you s ee M a t t Kenseth mad enough to fight,
pitar also scored and Drew
Doughty had two assists for the defending Stanley Cup champions.
you know that this is intense
because that's way out of character for him," Harvick said.
By R.B. Fallstrom
enth and Matt Adams in the eighth to
"When you see that emotion
The Associated Press
take a 4-3 lead.
out of Matt Kenseth, you know
ST. LOUIS — Kolten Wong hit a leadoff home run in the bottom of the ninth
It was arare postseason failure for the reliable San Francisco bullpen,
Wong hit an 0-1 pitch from Sergio Romo for his second big home run this postseason. The rookie's seventh-inning drive was the decisive blow in Game 3
inning and the resilient St. Louis Cardi-
which allowed a home run in each of the
of the NL Division Series against the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
Keselowski retaliated with a failed attempt to spin Hamlin. That is when Keselowski set his sights on Kenseth, hit-
final three innings. "They are the reason we're in this Sunday night, evening the NL ChampionshipSeriesatone game apiece. situation, and you give (the Cardinals) The Cardinals won after losing All- credit," manager Bruce Bochy said. Star catcher Yadier Molina to a strained "They threw out some good at-bats and oblique muscle in the sixth. Molina was we made a couple of mistakes and they getting further tests and manager Mike took advantage of them." Matheny said it "didn't look real good." The Giants tied it when pinch-run"We just knew we had to keep grind- ner Matt Duffy dashed home from secing," Wong said. "When you lose some- ond base on a two-out wild pitch in the one like Yadi, it's definitely tough for us, ninth. San Francisco wound up losing but we told ourselves we've been going for just the second time in its past 14 through this all year. Grinding up and postseason games. down, not getting any easy pass, so The best-of-seven series resumes we're all so confident." Tuesday night with Game 3 in San FranIn a back-and-forthgame, St. Lou- cisco with John Lackey going for St. is then got late homers from rookie Louis and Tim Hudson starting for the
ting him on a busy pit road.
pinch-hitter Oscar Taveras in the sev-
ing run.
That was at the root of the post-race Charlotte activities:
There is no room for error in the Chase, and a bad night will put a driver on the brink of
elimination. Hamlin
admi t te d
to
brake-checking Keselowski during the cool-down lap, and
nals beat the San Francisco Giants 5-4
Giants.
St. Louis, last in the NL w it h 105
owski's front end.
Keselowski then headed to the garage, with Hamlin in pursuit. Their cars made con-
tact and were briefly stuck together, so Keselowski hit the gas to pull away. That left a burnout mark and led Hamlin to accuse Keselowski of being "out of control." K eselowski met with N A -
SCAR after a cooling-off period. Kenseth crew chief Jason Ratcliff went v oluntarily t o talk to NASCAR, and Kenseth
crew member Jesse Sanders was summoned by officials. It is not clear if Keselowski — or Hamlin or Kenseth
— will be punished by NASCAR on Tuesday, the day penalties are normally issued. NASCAR vice president of competition Robin Pemberton
said the sanctioning body will review the final on-track laps, as well as everything that oc-
curred on pit road and in the garage. Harvick said there is no way NASCAR takes any action.
"They love it. They were fighting afterwards, that's what it's all about," Harvick
said. Also on Sunday: Lewis Hamilton wins inaugural Russian GP:SOCHI, Russia — Lewis Hamilton cruised
— seven in the seventh inning or later. Earlier, Matt Carpenter connected for
the fourth time this postseason.
to victory in the inaugural Russian Grand Prix, leading a 1-2finish for Mercedes. Nico
Rosberg placed second despite having to pit early in the race but now trails his teammate
by 17 points in the standings with three races remaining.
I
Seth Maness retired Pablo Sandoval
on a comebacker with the bases loaded to end the top of the ninth, and got the
I) rg. '~
/. '
win.
Maness came on after closer Trevor Rosenthal couldn't hold a one-run lead. Rosenthal's pitch bounced off the
glove off backup catcher Tony Cruz and Duffy, running on a full count, never broke stride and slid home with the tyDon Ryan/The Associated Press
Portland's Wesley Matthews drives past Los Angeles guard J J Redickduring the Trail Blazers' 119-114 victory Sunday night in Portland. Matthews led the Trail Blazers with 22 points.
ALCS
Cain em o ies Roas'never- uits irit By Vahe Gregorian
daily (basis)." The flip side of his work was the deflating impact he has to be having on the Orioles.
The Kansas City Star
B ALTIMORE — B y t h e time the Royals had finished unfurling the latest chapter in
this magical, mystical tour of
No one in the Baltimore
theirs on Saturday at Camden
clubhouse was likely to ad-
Yards, the Baltimore Orioles could be forgiven if they could
mit that, but i t i s
not shrug off the specter of
standpoint.
e asy to
understand from a hitter's
outfielder Lorenzo Cain. In Kansas City's 6-4 victory to seize a 2-0 lead in the Amer-
ican League Championship Series and ascend to two wins from the World Series, Cain
was as everywhere as the air
Patrick Semansky/The Associated Press
— and about as vital to the cause.
Kansas City center fielder Lorenzo Cain makes a catch during
His latest set of customari-
number of ridiculous catches that has made him a fan favorite.
Game 2 of the American League Championship Series, one of a
ly ridiculous catches and four hits made him as much an
Orioles nemesis as a Royals was Andruw Jones — but catalyst, so omnipresent that that Cain might be as good or you had to wonder if he had better. been cloned or was zapping Much of this is nothing new holograms of himself around for Royals fans, who have the field. seen Cain, 28, mature through Here he was triggering the this season. Royals' two-run first inning, Then again, on this postseaand there he was puncturing son platform, the recent father would-be Orioles outbursts also seems to have further riswith diving catches — first in center field, later in right field
NBA PRESEASON
home runs during the regular season, has hit 11 homers in six playoff games
Tony Stewart was the innocent bystander in that mess, w ith hi s c a r d r i l led f r o m
behind after Keselowski hit Kenseth. He responded by backing his car up and into Keselowski to crumple Kesel-
24 shots. Kessel's goal was puck under Lundqvist on a
of the scrum in what appeared
right thing to this Chase because everybody is on offense and gouging for every single position that you can get every lap."
ter he stopped only 18 of also on a power play, and van Riemsdyk stuffed a
and Keselowski crew c hief Paul Wolfe pulled Kenseth out
that NASCAR has done the
Lundqvist from the net af-
into postseason he became an
animal. "He gets it now, the intensity and taking care of his body and getting in here early and doing his treatments and get-
"You try not to let (a great play) affect you, but it does," Royals designated hitter Billy Butler said, smiling and adding that "just when you think (Cain) can't get any better, he keeps getting better at the time you need him most." To wit: Cain's diving catch
of Hardy down the right-field line (he had been moved to right field) with the bases loaded in the seventh inning. "He had an extra giddyap in his step because that's a
double right there, possible triple," Kuntz said. "Then all of a sudden he gets around ting his workouts in. Just ev- first base and looks up." erything is coming together There is a certain joy in forhim. that for Cain, who says as a "And now he's a new dad,
hitter it's "heartbreaking" to
en to the moment, embodying
so he's got more of a purpose have that happen to you, so
in many ways the flourishing
now. That's what kids do to
— of J.J. Hardy. of a team that had scant playIf any one player embodies off experience. "There's the son growthe never-say-die resiliency of the Royals, it just might be Lo- ing up in front of your eyes," renzo Cain. Royals first base and outfield Royals general manager coach Rusty Kuntz said. "It Dayton Moore said the best just clicked for him about six center fielder he ever saw weeks ago, and once we got
the more he can inflict it, the you, they just drive you to be- better.
That is also why he almost
come abetter man. "He's understanding the
seems to treat defense with
hard work — and the reward.
an offensive mentality.
"I feel like that's one thing I And now he's on the biggest stage in the world, and every- can really, really control," he body else in baseball gets to said. "I'm just trying to be a see what we get to see on a playmaker for my guys."
Matthews scores 22 in Blazers' victory The Associated Press PORTLAND — Wesley Matthews scored 22 points, Portland was 17 of 25 from
3-point range and the Trail Blazers beat the Los Ange-
les Clippers 119-114 in an exhibition game Sunday night. Matthews made 6 of 7
3-point attempts to lead Portland to its first presea-
son win in three games. C.J. McCullum made five 3-pointers and scored 19
points. Blazers All-Star forward LaMarcus Aldridge went
8 of 8 from the free throw line and scored 16 points.
Los Angeles guard Jamal Crawford came off the bench to score 23 points.
Chris Paul and Spencer Hawes had 15 points each for the Clippers (0-2). Portland guard Damian
Lillard missed his second consecutive
pre s eason
game because of strained left foot. McCullum started in his place.
B4
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
NFL ROUNDUP
O MMUlVITY
P O RT S
ElVD A R
Email events at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.
BASEBALL
NORDIC SKIING
BEND ELKSINSTRUCTIONAL CAMP: Oct.19-19; Instruction from current and former pro baseball players; $95; Oct. 18 for ages14-18, 9 a.m.- noon; For ages13 and under1-4 p.m.; Oct.19 for ages 14-18, 11 am.-2 p.m.; Forages13 and under 8:30-11 a.m.; Bend Field House,1182 Centennial Court; 541385-5583 or www.bendelks.com
BEA DEVELOPMENT TEAM: BendEndurance Academy;Nov.12-March 6;Ages11-14; Weds, Sat, Sun;one,two,and three daysaweekoptions; Program designed to motivate middle-schoolers to consider nordic skiing as their favorite winter sport; no ski pass necessary and transportation provided; Cost: Oneday$400,twoday $600,threeday $800; Parent Meeting October 22, BEA offices www.
BASKETBALL
bendenduranceacademy.org
BEND HOOPS MID-OCTOBERBASKETBALL CAMP: Dct. 16-17;Basketball camp for kids in grades1-8; $85; 9a.m.-noonand1-4 p.m.; Bend Hoops, 1307 NE1st Sreet„www.bendhoops.com COBO MV BOYSHOOPS TRYOUTS: Oct.29 and Nov. 2;Tryouts for fifth-, sixth-, seventh-, and eighth-grade junior Cougar COBOMountain View basketball teams; free; Grades 4-6, 6-7:30 p.m. on Oct. 29and 3-5p.m. on Nov.2.Grades 7-8, 7:30-9p.m. on Oct.29 and 5-7 p.m .on Nov.2.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or creidtebendcable.com COBO PRESEASON CLINICS: Bct.19;Preseason clinic to enhance skills before COBO tryouts; $49 in-district or $59 out-of-district; 4-6 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or www.bendparksandrec.
org RIDGEVIEW YOUTHBASKETBALL WORKOUTS: Oct.19and26;Free Sunday clinics for boys in the Ridgeview boundary in grades1-8; free; Oct. 12, 1-3:30 p.m.; Oct. 19 and16, 9-11 a.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 SW Elkhorn Ave, Redmond; 541-504-3600 or nathan.covill@ redmond.k12.or.us YOUTH GIRLSBASKETBALL TUESDAY OPEN GYM: ThroughOct.26;Bend High girls COBO will be holding open gyms Tuesday nights for girls in grades 5-8; free; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; 541-383-6290 or allison.gardnertNbend.k12.or.us
CLIMBING BEND ENDURANCE COMPETITIONCLIMBING TEAM: Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays; Competitive climbing team; $1,600; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 S.W. Bond St., Suite142; www.bendenduranceacademy.org BEND ENDURANCE DEVELOPMENT CLIMBING TEAM: Mondays andWednesdays; For ages 9 and older; developmental climbing team; $480; 4 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 S.W. Bond St., Suite142;www.bendenduranceacademy.org ROCTOBER CLIMBING CAMP: Oct. 16-17; Outdoor climbing camp; $150; 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 S.W. Bond St., Suite142; www.bendenduranceacademy.org W EDNESDAY OUTDOOR CLIMBS: Oct. 15; Early-release outdoor climbing for middle school students; $200;; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 S.W. Bond St., Suite142; www.
bendenduranceacademy.org
BEAHIGHSCHOOLTEAM: Bend Endurance Academy;Nov.12-March 6;Ages14-18; W eds, Sat,Sun;one,two,andthreedaysaweek options; High School Compteam is designed to provide an additional resource for training and technique coaching while still being fully involved with high school skiing; No ski pass necessary and transportation provided; Cost: One day $400, two day $600, three day$800; Parent Meeting October 22, BEA offices www.bendenduranceacademy.org YOUTH CLUB: Bend Endurance Academy; Bec 20- March1;Ages 7-11; one and two days a week options; Sat and/or Sun; TheYouth Clubfocuses on fun and introducing youth to the basics of
LORD'S ACREDAY:Nov. 1; Featuring a craft sale, bakedgoods,live music,a barbecuedinner,an auction, 10K run, 5K walk and more; proceeds benefit Powell Butte Christian Church projects; $15 for race; registration required; 9 a.m.; Powell Butte Christian Church; www.pickhardt5toyahoo. com CORK THURSDAY PERFORMANCE RUNS: Locations vary. Call Roger Daniels at 541-3896424 for more info; 5:30 p.m.; Bend. FLEETFEET WEDNESDAY RUNS: FleetFeet's Run this Town runs, usually 3-5 miles; free; Wednesdays,6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 GROWLERRUN:Group run of 3-5 miles on Thursdaysfrom Fleet Feet. Share a growler of beer from Growler Phil's after the run; free; 6 p.m.; Growler Phil's, 1244 NWGalveston Ave, Bend, OR 97701, Bend; 541-390-3865 MOMS RUNNING GROUP: Rain or shine, 3 to 4.5 milesevery Thursday,9:30 a.m; free; 9:30 a.m.; FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or angelatNfootzonebend.com or lisa.nasrtN
me.com
MOVE IT MONDAYS: Carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled; all other runs start and necessary and transportation is provided; Cost: One finish at FootZone; 3-5 miles; paces 7-12minutes day $200, two day $375; Parent Meeting October permile;free;We dnesdays,5:30p.m .;Bend; 22,BEA officeswww.bendenduranceacademy.org melanieiNfootzonebend.com AFTER-SCHOOL CLUB:Bend Endurance Academy; NOON TACORUN: Noontaco run onWe dnesdays Jan 7- Feh 25;Ages 7-11; Weds early release from FootZone. Order food from the TacoStand for Highland, Westside, High Lakesand Miller it will be ready upon your return; free (tacos not Schools; New for this skiing season, the Nordic included); noon; FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; After School program is designed for participants 541-317-3568 or teagueefootzonebend.com that have little to no previous experience andare excited to get outside and moving in the snow; BEA TUESDAY PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP WITH MAX KING:Interval-based running group. staff pick-up participants from select schools at Locations vary;free;Tuesdays,5:30 p.m.; early dismissal and return to BEA offices; No ski pass necessary and transportation provided. $160; FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or maxtifootzonebend.com www.bendenduranceacademy.org REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP: Tuesday group runs in Redmond. Meet at 314 SWEleventh St. RUNNING All abilities welcome; free; 6:30 p.m.; Downtown ANABELLE'S ANGEL GLOW SK:Oct.17;An Redmond; wwww.runaroundsports.com evening 5K run and 2Kfun walk through the Old RORK SATURDAY RUNS: Weekly run or walk Mill District; wear bright neon colors and bring with the Redmond Oregon Running Klub. flashlights; proceeds benefitAnabelle Wilson Saturdaysat 8 a.m. Email Dan Edwards for and Sparrow Clubs USA;$20-$25 for adults, more info; free; 8 a.m.; Downtown Redmond; $15-$20 for teens, $5-$10 for kids, registration rundanrun19@yahoo.com or www.raprd.org suggested; 5 p.m. festivities begin, 6:17 p.m. racebegins,6:23 p.m.walkbegins;LesSchwab TABLE TENNIS Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-408-4949, sparrowglowtigmail.com or www. MONDAYEVENINGPLAY: Evening play hosted anabellesangelglow.org by Bend TableTennis Club; drop in fees are $3 for CORKCROSS-COUNTRYSERIES: Oct. 21; Last of adults and $2 for youths and seniors;Mondays, three classic cross-country races between 5-7K on 6-9 p.m.; Boys 8 Girls Club of Central Oregon rolling grass terrain; $5 for CORKmembers and$10 (Bend), 500 NWWall St Bend, OR97701; www. for everyone else; 6 p.m.; River's EdgeGolf Course, bendtabletennis.com 400 Pro Shop Drive, Bend; 541-389-2828 or www. centraloregonrunningklub.org VOLLEYBALL MONSTERDASHSKRACE:Oct. 26; Featuring a 5K CLINIC: Bct. 19; Volleyball clinic and10K race and a'Little Monster' mile, costumes VOLLEYBALL are encouraged; $20-$25 for 5Kand10K, $12for focusing on serving, setting and hitting; for grades Little Monster mile, registration required; 10 a.m.; 3-5; $49 in-district or $59 out-of-district; 5:30 Highland Magnet School, 701 NWNewport Ave., a.m.-7:30 p.m.; Pilot Butte Middle School,1501 Bend; 541-389-1601 or www.fleeffeetbend.com/ N.E. Neff Road, Bend; 541-383-6260 or www. events/monster dash bendparksandrec.org
cross-country skiingandjoys ofwinter; Noski pass
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF RUGBY COCC winS OPener —TheCentral Oregon Community College Rugby Football Clubwon its opening match ofthe seasonSaturday, topping Oregon Tech inKlamath Falls24-14. Dalton Chambersscored14 points for the visiting Bobcats andLevin Penter andTrevor Prater eachscored five points. COCC hosts Seattle University at1 p.m. Saturday.
Bend Rugdy Club takeS league matCh — MikeHunter scored two tries, four conversions and two penalty kicks Saturday to leadthe Bend RugbyClub to a44-22 victory over the Oregon Sports Union in Portland. Kevin Baker,Taylor Ulbricht, Jerel Pulicicchio and Shane Lamumin eachadded atry for the Roughriders, who improved to 2-1-1 in league play and3-2-1 overall. Bend Rugbyendsthe fall regular season at
Bowling Week 2 FridayNightSpecial Team highs —Scratchseries: Tobis's BadDogs, 2157;Scratchgame: No.3, 813; Handicap series: No Worries,2807;Handicapgame:tGIF, 941. Men's highs —Scratchseries: DougGray, 661; scratchgame:BuckBuck,247. Women's highs —Scratchseries: Ari Mayeis, 610; Scratch game;Julie Mayers,185. Week 4 Grizzly MountainMen'sLeague Team highs — Scratchseries: BishopTire Factory, 2848;Scratchgame: Clark CustomDesign,1003; Handi capseries:TheUdderGuys,3223;Handicap game: Rohrer DentureCenter,1139. Men's highs —Scratch series:LarryGerke,688; Scratchgame:Levi Nichols, 268;Handicapseries: MarcTurner,723;Handicap game; BuckBuck,285.
Lava Lanes,Bend Leagueleaders andhighscores Sept.29-Oct. 5 CASINOFUN— TheGang;JamesHall226/64t;Laree Williams185/513 GUYSAND GALS— OhSplit;JosiahOhlde247/654; LauraMartin 234/578 LAVALANESCLASSIC— MoandPops;KelleyBamer 300/785 ;MonittueMcCleary209/600 TEA TIMER S— Inspiration Strikes; DonnaBrown 216/544 LATECOMERS— NoThreat;SusanThomas-Reed 209/503 FREE BRE ATHERS — Survivors; Jim Whitson 233/655;suesnedden205/534 Hls ANDHER S — I Can't BelieveIt's NotGutter; JaymeDahlke299/7226; cierra Oliver243/614 REJECT S—Gutter Dusters; David Pete222/594; Jaime Fillipeli 227/545 WEDNE SDAY INC— Jake's Diner; TadBurzynski 258P50;DaveLarson264P37 TNT —Team17; Ken Fisher267/667; patti sundita 212/540
The Assoclated Press
two touchdown passes, and
D e M arco Arizona beat Washington to Murray scored on a 15-yard take the sole NFC West lead. run with 3:16 left and the Larry Fitzgerald caught six SEATTLE —
Dallas Cowboys stunned the defending Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks 30-23 on Sunday. Dallas, 5-1 for the first time
passes for a season-high 98 yards and his f irst touch-
down of the season to help the Cardinals (4-1) bounce back from a 41-20 drubbing
since 2007, overcame a pair at Denver. of special teams turnovers to Chargers 31, Raiders 28: become the first team outside the NFC West to win in Seat-
tle since 2011. Murray's touchdown run
capped a 75-yard drive that saw Tony Romo convert a third-and-20 with a pass to
Terrance Williams along the sideline. Murray had 115 yards on 29 carries to join Jim Brown as the only running backs in NFL history to open a season
with six straight 100-yard games. Murray also had six receptions for 31 yards. Romo was 21 of 32 for 250 yards and two touchdowns without an interception.
R ussell Wilson had a 9-yard touchdown run, and Mike Morgan r eturned a
blocked punt 25 yards for a score for Seattle (3-2). Wilson was 14 of 28 for 126 yards
OAKLAND, Cali — B ran-
den Oliver scored on a 1-yard run with 1:56 to play and San Diego spoiled interim coach Tony Sparano's Oakland debut. Philip Rivers threw three t o uchdown
p a sses
and engineered the winning drive to give San Diego (51) its fifth straight win and send Oakland (0-5) to its 11th straight loss. Panthers 37, Bengals 37: CINCINNATI — Cincinna-
ti's Mike Nugent missed a 36-yard field goal attempt on the final play of overtime, and the Bengals and Carolina played to the NFL's first
tie this season. Nugent made a 42-yard field goal that put Cincinnati (3-1-1) up after the opening drive of overtime. Carolina (3-2-1) tied it on Graham Gano's 36-yarder
and an interception, and was with 2:19 left. limited to 12 yards on two Titans 16, Jaguars 14: carries. NASHVILLE, Tenn. Also on Sunday: Sammie Hill blocked a field Broncos 31, Jets 17: EAST goal attempt in the final secRUTHERFORD, N.J. — Pey- onds, and Tennessee held off ton Manning connected with winless Jacksonville to snap Julius Thomas twice and a four-game losing streak. Demaryius Thomas once,
Jackie Battle ran for a touch-
leaving the Denver quarter- down, and Ryan Succop back two shy of Brett Favre's kicked three field goals to record for career touchdown help the Titans (2-4) bounce passes, and the Broncos held back after blowing the bigon to beat New York. Man- gest lead ever by a home ning has 506 touchdown team in the regular season in passes, and could tie or break a loss to Cleveland. Favre's record next Sunday at Browns 31, Steelers 10: -
BASKETBALL
Manning finished 22 of 33 for Hoyer passed for 217 yards 237 yards — a far cry from and pulled off a rarity for last w e ek's
Adult leagueS Starting —Registration for the BendPark & Recreation District's adult basketball leagues is set for Oct. 17.Three different leagues will be offered this winter: an18-and-over women's league,an 18-and-over men' sleague,anda35-and-overmen'sleague.Eachteam will play12 regular-season gamesbefore ayear-end, single-game elimination tournament. Seasons run from Nov. 2 toMarch15 andgameswill be played onSundayafternoons. Cost per team is $675 andspace is limited in each league.For more information, go to www.bendparksandrec. org or contact Rich Ekmanat 541-706-6126. — Bulletin staff report
PROGRESSIV E — BoomerDucks; Dart Sample 246/693 T.G.I.F —RedHots; Bret Borovec268/693; Peattee Denmark 206/547
RedmondVolleyball Association oct. 10
Kiss MyAce SnapCracklePop Hit List TheVolleyGirls Just Lucky SittingDucks I'd Hit That PurpleBandAid cowpie spikers
TuesdayCo-Ed
chersElectric Hot chillies
Tcs
SuperAwesomes Kiss My Ace Dysfunctionals RockHardBalls Kill A BlockingNerd
Volleyball Women'sLeague
CLEVELAND
Brian
p e r formance a Cleveland q uarterback,
against Arizona, when he leading the Browns to rout passed for a career-high 479 over Ben R oethlisberger yards with four TDs. and rival Pittsburgh. Hoyer Patriots 37, Bills 22: OR- threw a 51-yard touchdown CHARD PARK, NY. — Tom pass to Jordan Cameron and Brady threw four touchdown
improved to 6-2 as Cleve-
passes and had his 60th 300yard game to lead New England past Buffalo. Brandon LaFell had two touchdown catches, including a 56-yard-
land's starter as the surprising Browns (3-2) beat the 23 games. Cleveland hadn't beaten Pittsburgh so badly
er, and the Patriots forced three turnovers that result-
since a 51-0 victory in 1989.
quarter.
for 381 yards and a touch-
Steelers for the third time in
Bears 27, Falcons 13: ATed in 13 points in the second LANTA — Jay Cutler threw
TMNT
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18 16
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10 7 7 6 3 1
Thursdayco-Ed 8 2 0 L 11 ff 12 15 17
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Kiss My Ace
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before planning out her 2015 satisfied with this result, but triathlon schedule. "D/tro Iron- by the time I get back to Bend Continued from B1 man wins, an American re- on Wednesday, I'll be ready She won both Ironman cord. I had some good break- to ride mountain bikes, drink Los Cabos in M e x ico a nd throughs. The biggest thing some good beers and relax." Bend's Nicole Pressprich Ironman Austria t his year, was staying healthy and be-
the race Saturday but did not
and at the latter event set an American record with a blistering finish time of 8:42:42.
ing able to be consistent with
Championships. Hollander
my training. I felt like before Saturday. A former standout (Saturday's) race, regardless swimmer at Bend High and
set that record in 2012 when he finished the race at the age
She placed second at a pair of
of the outcome, I'd won."
of 82 years and 129 days. Germany's Sebastian Kien-
a lso competed at Kona on Oregon State, the 26-year-
"The move back to Bend old Pressprich placed 25th has been a positive," added in the amateur female 25-29 urday was the third-fastest Corbin. She and her husband, division, completing her first finish by an American wom- Chris Corbin, r elocated to Ironman World Championan in the race. Central Oregon from Missou- ships in 11:09:27. Overall, "Looking back at the sea- la, Montana, at the end of last Pressprich finished 132nd out son, I can't complain," reflect- year. "I'll build on that platof 621 female competitors. ed Corbin, who says she plans form. I need about 48 hours Lew H o l lander, a n other Ironman 70.3 events and 10th at another. Corbin's time Sat-
to get over this. I'm not super
at home byCowboys
home against San Francisco.
Corbin
to take the next month off
Seahawks stunned
1 p.m. Saturday with a homematch at High Desert Middle School.
COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD Rimrock Lanes,Prineville
Elaine Thompson/TheAssociated Press
Dallas' DeMarco Murray runs for a touchdown in the second half of the Cowboys' 30-23 win at Seattle on Sunday.
Central Oregonian, started
finish. Hollander, 84, was attempting to break his own Guinness World Record as being the oldest person to complete the Ironman World
le won the pro men's race Sat-
urday, finishing in a blistering 8:14:18. Ben Hoffman, of Boulder, Colorado, placed second
and was the top American in 8:19:23. — Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastes@bendbulletin.com.
Packers 27, Dolphins 24: down, Matt Forte ran for a M IAMI G A R D ENS, F l a . coupleofsecond-halfscores, — Aaron Rodgers threw a and Chicago picked up an4-yard touchdown pass to other road victory by beating Andrew Quarless with 3 sec- Atlanta. A f ter the Falcons onds left to lift Green Bay (2-4) rallied from a 13-3 halfpast Miami. Green Bay twice time deficit to tie it late in gave up leads and trailed 24- the third quarter, the Bears 17 before Rodgers directed a bounced back to hand Atlan68-yard drive for a field goal ta its third straight loss. with 4:09 to go. The Packers Lions 17, Vikings 3: MIN(4-2) quickly forced a punt to NEAPOLIS — Tahir Whitestart at their 40 with 2:04 left,
h ead intercepted tw o
of
and Rodgers hit Jordy Nelson Teddy Bridgewater's passes, on fourth-and-10 for 18 yards and Joique Bell put the game to keep the winning drive away with a fourth-quarter alive.
Eagles 27, Giants 0:PHIL-
touchdown run in Detroit's victory o v e r Min n esota.
ADELPHIA — N ick Foles With Calvin Johnson and threw two touchdown pass- Reggie Bush missing, the Lies, LeSean McCoy had a ons played a low-risk game. season-high 149 yards rush- But their defense made aning and Philadelphia beat other case for top billing in New York for its first shutout the league. Ziggy Ansah had in 18 years. A rough night 2t/2of Detroit's eight sacks, for the Giants (3-3) became Ravens 46, Buccaneers worse when wide receiver Victor Cruz tore the patellar
tendon his right knee while leaping for a pass on fourth down from the Eagles 3 in the third quarter. Cruz was crying and holding his hands to his face as he was carted off the field with an injury that's expected to end
17: TAMPA, F la. — Joe
Flacco threw for 306 yards and five touchdowns to help Baltimore beat Tampa Bay.
Baltimore (4-2) scored on six straight possessions to begin the game, with Flacco throwing touchdown passes on the first five. Torrey Smith caught the first two,
his season. and Kamar Aiken, Michael Cardinals 30, Redsklns 20: Campanaro and Steve Smith GLENDALE, Ariz. — Carson Palmer returned from a
five-week absence to throw
had the others as the Ravens
rebounded from a road loss to Indianapolis.
B6
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
How To Get Rid Of Knee Pain Once And For All • •• Without Drugs,
Shots, or Surgery Now, In Deschutes County, one doctor is helping local residents with knee pain live more active, pain-free lives. V
Steve Gress I Corvallis Gazette-Times
Oregon State freshman quarterback Marcus McMaryion, who is redshirting this season, works with
the scout team this week asthe Beavers prepare to take on Utah in a key Pac-12matchup Thursday.
A New Treatment Is Helping Patients With Knee Pain Live A Happier, More Active Lifestyle
For 10 days I am running a very special offer where you can find out if you are a candidate for COLD Laser. What does this offer include? Everything I normally do in my "Knee Pain Evaluation". Just call in the next 10 days and you will get.... An in-depth consultation about your problem where I will listen...really listen to the details of your case.
The scout team members play a key role in preparing the defensive starters for each different offense.
For the Beavers'scout team, every week is atest By Kevin Hampton
A complete neuromuscular examination. A thorough analysis of your exam findings so we can start mapping out your plan to being pain free.
Mariota.
prepared sothe players just The Pac-12 quarterbacks are have to execute. "They have cards and stuff, CORVALLIS Sunday a particularly diverse group nights are hectic for Oregon this season. so you pretty much read off the Statescoutteam offense coach In addition to Mariota, who cards, so it's not too difficult," Keaton Kristick. is a major threat running the McMaryion said.sYou have a First, the coaches break ball and can also throw the ball flash card, you look at it and down the previous game, then with accuracy, there are Con- see what you've got to do and work begins on the upcoming nor Halliday at Washington just kind of just react to it." contest. State and Jared Goff at Cal putFor Kempt, playing quar"We start working on cards ting up big passing numbers. terback on the scout team is a at about 10 o'clock at night for The Beavers just faced a top chance to work on aspects of Monday practice and some- passer in Colorado's Sefo Liu- the game that the Beavers do times that goes until about 1 or fau and will go up against two not usually run, such as the 2 a.m., just trying to get ready talented Utah quarterbacks zone read. "So for the QBs, we're for practice," Kristick said. this week. "Then you've got to have the Scout team quarterbacks working on mobility, being guys meet in the morning so Marcus McMaryion, Nick comfortable in t h e p o cket, they can kind of see the film so Mitchell and Kyle Kempt have throwing on the run," Kempt Monday's practice isn't a wast- the athletic ability to give the said. "There's not a lot of sited practlce. Oregon State defense a good uations where you're going Time is valuable, particular- look. to have a clean pocket on the "They've all done an excep- scout team, so you get used to ly when the goal is to get the scout team ready to play the tional job week in and week out throwing with guys around part of a Pac-12 offense. of mimicking what the quar- you." The conference has a variety terback does from the snap to Every opponent presents of high-powered offenses. how they run and their pro- the Beavers with a fair share There are pass-happy Wash- gressions," Kristick said. "And of problems, but there is one ington State and California, I thinkthey've done agreatjob. offense that is especially diffithe zone read of Oregon, and It would be really hard to mim- cult for the scout team to sort the ground game of Stanford's ic a guy like Oregon's quarter- out. "With Oregon, they're really pro-style attack. back, Marcus Mariota, with a "We'vegotto come in and guy who couldn't run nearly as particular with their running come out each and every day good as he does." backs and quarterbacks and and tell these guys what to do," McMaryion, a redshirt how they line up and attack Kristick said. freshman from Dinuba, Cal- the hole. It's all very detail ori"It really is a test on us. ifornia, said playing on the ented for them," Kempt said. Drawing cards that night, scout team provides a good op- "For the scout team, you have watching film with the guys to portunity to improve skills and to be on point for that." try to emulate what they do. It get reps. When practices are over, really is a test." And, he added, it's fun. the scout team takes in the "This week with Utah, their The scout team is made up game to see how its work pays primarily of freshmen taking quarterback runs a little more, off. If the defense comes up their redshirt season, along so we jump in there and have big for the Beavers, the scout with walk-ons and young fun. Everyone gets a chance to teamers know they have done players who are deeper on the run the read option and throw their job for the week. "It makes us feel accomdepth chart. the ball around," McMaryThose who practice against ion said. "I know the quarter- plished," McMaryion said. Beaver starters and regular backs are looking forward to "They tell us that how the deplayers have to be sharp men- the Washington State (game fense performs on Saturday is tally and talented physically to week), because they're going to up to us, whether we give them play the roles of athletes such be airing it out the whole time." a good look or not. It definiteas Colorado receiver Nelson McMaryion said K r i stick ly feels good going out and Spruce, Southern California and the other coaches help watching the defense and berunning back Javorius Allen ease the process each week. ing able to call out some of the or Oregon quarterback Marcus The coaches have everything offensive plays."
You'll see everything firsthand and find out if this amazing treatment will be your pain solution, like it has been for so many patients.
Corvallis Gazette-Times
Mississippi:Thecenter of collegefootball By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press
The M ississippi m ania sweeping college football is
Dak Prescott routed Auburn 38-23 in Starkville.
Ole Miss and its nasty de-
Living with knee pain can feel like a crippling experience. Let's face it, your knees aren't as young asthey used to be,and playing with kids or grandkids isn't any easier either. Maybe your knee pain keeps you from walking short distances or playing golf like you used to. Nothing is worse than feeling great mentally, but physically feeling held back from life because your knee hurts and the pain just won't go away! My name isDr.Tim Lind. Since we opened over 20 years ago, we have seen hundreds of people with pain leave the office pain free. If you are suffering from knee pain, a new breakthrough in medical technology may completely eliminate your pain and help restore normal function to your knees.
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they were the previous week, polls dating to last season host when both had breakthrough has steadily turned around No. 5 Notre Dame on Saturday victories at home. a program that was flailing. night. The Fighting Irish are M ississippi S t at e an d Mullen, the former Florida of- the only ranked team left on Heisman Trophy c ontender fensivecoordinator under Ur- Florida State's schedule.
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Finally, You Have An Option Other Than
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Drugs or Surgery And It's Pain Free! The COLD Laser is an outpatient, non-surgical procedure, often used in physical therapy and sports medicine to accelerate the healing process. It offers non-invasive treatment to promote healing for those who suffer from pain in muscles, nerves and joints, like that associated with chronic knee pain. This is the same procedure used by professional sports teams including the New York Yankees.
Remember what it was like before you had knee problems. When you were pain free and could enjoy everything life had to offer. It can be that way again. Don't neglect your problem any longer - don't wait until it's too late.
lt Promotes Rapid Healing
Here's what to do now:
This pain-free, non-surgical approach works by stimulating the body's natural healing processes, providing pain relief and reducing injury damage. This leading edge technology has an impressive success rate of retuming patients to work, sports and competitive activites as well as everyday life. Patients treated with the COLD Laser often show a higher level of function, both during and after treatment perlod. The therapeutic laser provides a tremendous altemative for those facing surgery.
Could This Non-lnvasive, Natural Treatment Be The Answer To Your Knee Pain?
Due to the expected demand of this offer, I urge you to call our office at once. The phone number is:
541-389-3072 Call today and we can get started with your consult ation and exam as soon as there is an opening in our schedule. Tell the receptionist that you would like to come in for the knee evaluation.
Yours in Health, Dr. Tim Lind, DC Now you might be wondering.....
"Is this safe? Are there any side effects or dangers to this?"
23-48 inthe six seasons before
held No. 1 for 10 straight AP
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fense, led by t adde Robert
In Starkville, coach Dan Mullen took over in 2009 and
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During more than 20 years of use by health care providers around the world, very few side affects have ever been reported. Occasionally some old injuries or pain syndromes may feel aggravated for a few days, as the healing response is more active after treatment. Of course, at our office, the laser is never anywhere near your eyes and we will give you a comfortable pair of goggles for safety. Don't wait and let your knee problems get worse, disabling you for life. Take me up on my offer and call today!
more than just a temporary
were evenbetter Saturdaythan
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ban Meyer, is 42-28 at Mississippi State. The Bulldogs were
Mullen arrived. Ole Miss coach Nkemdiche, dominated Texas Hugh Freeze was hired after condition. It just keeps getting A&M 35-21 in College Station, the Rebels went 2-10 in 2011. better for the Magnolia State's Texas. They won seven games in his Southeastern Conf e rence If you are wondering, and first season and eight last year. teams. you probably should be, the He landed one of the best reMississippi State, a school Rebels and Bulldogs play at cruiting classes in the country with just one SEC champion- Ole Miss in Oxford on Nov. 29, between his first and second ship on its resume — in 1941 the Saturday after Thanksgiv- seasons. Now the Rebels have — is No. 1 this week in The As- ing, in what could be an Egg their best ranking in the AP sociated Press college football Bowl extravaganza. poll since 1964. poll. The Iron Bowl on the same So where do the Rebels and Mississippi, which has not day could end up being just an Bulldogs go from here? won an SEC title since 1963, undercard, the way LSU-FlorThe Bulldogs, who went is still No. 3, but just a couple ida and A l abama-Arkansas from unranked to No. 1 in a of points behind No. 2 Florida were on Saturday. record five weeks, could be in "It's surreal," said Cleveland, for a pretty good run at the top. State. "I think it's an affirmation a Mississippi native. They areheading into an off of how good football has been For the both the Rebels and week before a stretch of schedfor a long time in Mississippi," the Bulldogs, it has been a star- ule that looks accommodating said Rick Cleveland, the exec- tling rise after recent struggles. (at Kentucky, Arkansas, Tenutive director of the Mississip- Inthe rugged SEC West, where nessee-Martin) before a trip to pi Sports Hall of Fame and a Alabama (three national titles), Alabama on Nov. 15. longtime newspaper columnist LSU (two) and Auburn (one) The Rebels come home for in the state. "Now they're rec- have been the powers during Tennessee on Saturday before ognizing the talent and keep- the BCS era, the Mississippi going to LSU and hosting No. ing it home." schools have usually been rele- 6Auburn. The Bulldogs and Rebels gated to second-tier status. Florida State, which h ad
Until October 8th, 2014 you can get everything I have listed here for only $69.00 The normal price for this type of evaluation is $189, so you are saving a considerable amount by taking me up on this offer.
541-389-3072
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LIND CHIROPRACTIC CENTER 444 NE Norton, Suite 102 Bend, OR 97701
541-389-3072 Federal and Medicare Restrictions May Apply.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014• THE BULLETIN
B7
NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE
By Mike Kaszuba, Rochelle Olson andPaul McEnroe (Minneapolis) Star Tribune
the year listed just one donation to a food bank — the North Texas Food
Bank, based in Dallas. Colleen Brinkmann, the chief philan-
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With a new season, a new coach and a $1 billion stadium on the way,
thropy off icerfor the N orth Texas Food
Bank, said that while her agency partnered with Dallas Cowboys players, she could not recall ever getting money from the All Day Foundation. "Was he withthe Cowboysbefore'?" sheasked of
the Minnesota Vikings turned to
their undisputed star last summer to appear on the team's yearbook cover:
Adrian Peterson, standing confidently in a dirty purple jersey. In an accompanying interview, Peterson said it was easy being the public face of the Vikings because "I
pg/~-::s
Peterson. "I'm not a football fan."
Panickedsponsors
don't really get into a lot of trouble."
Peterson insisted that he never intended to injure his son, that he was
Just a few weeks later, he was indicted in Texas on charges of whipping his child, and now a Hall of Fame careerhas come to a jarring halt. Peterson made his first court appearance Wednesday, when a Texas judge set a tentative Dec. 1 trial date for Peterson to face a felony charge of child abuse, and he remains on a paid suspension from the Vikings until the
merely disciplining him the same way he had been disciplined as a child. But the child-abuse indictment has left Vi-
kings fans reeling — a recent Star Tribune poll found that 57 percent of adult
Minnesotans found Peterson'sbehavior abusive — and has stunned Peterson's corporateand charitable partners.
case is resolved. On the field, Peterson has been
a breathtaking athlete, seeming to relish running over defenders even more than running past them. BillySmith II/ Houston Chronicle Raised by a single mother in rural Minnesota Vikings running back Adrlan Peterson leaves court accompanied by his wife, Ashley Brown Peterson, center Texas — his father was a felon-
left, and hls mother, Bonlta Jackson, left, in Conroe, Texas on Wednesday. A judge tentatively set a Dec. 1 trial date for
he had grown up to sign the richest Peterson on a charge of felony child abuse for using awooden swltch to discipline hls 4-year-old son earlier this year. running-back contract in NFL history. Off the field, his winning smile and modest, gentle demeanor made turning it. His mother told report- sure the "jersey chasers" — young Peterson previously became upset him one of the NFL's most bankable ers that the family could not afford women seeking out Vikings players when she saw him having sex with players. In one of countless volunteer the payments. A former dealership — were kept away. another woman. She started an ar"I don't know where these dollies gument that lasted at least an hour. events recounted by Vikings staff, owner defended Peterson's arrangePeterson took children holiday shop- ment, saying it was normal to allow came from," Guimont remarked, but According to the report, when she ping at Dick's Sporting Goods last potential buyers to drive a car before he noted that Peterson was one in a told him that she was "emotionally group of Vikings who stayed away attached to him," Peterson reminded year, spending more than $100 on financing was secured. each child. Some of the most promAfter Peterson's indictment last from the women who frequented his her that he was engaged to another inent corporate brands in America, month, Oklahoma head coach Bob bar. woman and had a baby. such as Nike and General Mills, have Stoops praised his former star. He Peterson has not, however, alThe next day,one of the women told "The Dan Patrick Show," a syndi- ways proved so disciplined. He has filed a police complaint that was inlinked their image with No. 28. Sometimes, that has meant look- cated sports television program, that fathered six children by six women, vestigated for months. Peterson ining past incidents of questionable Peterson "had a good, strong fam- and the children live in at least three sisted on his innocence and, at one judgment and troubling behavior. ily around him." At the same time, states — Minnesota, Georgia and point, arrived to provide evidence at Records examined by t h e Star Stoops acknowledged that Peterson's Texas — according to court records police headquarters through a back Tribune show that Peterson, who father was in prison while Oklahoma reviewedby theStarTribune,and ac- door, his face shrouded by the hood was married earlier this year, has was recruiting the young star. cording to sources familiar with his of his sweatshirt.
Seventy-two hours before he was indicted on Sept. 12, Peterson hosted 100 people for a Special Olympics fundraiser at his home. Special Olympics Minnesota said the event "celebrated the power of sport and
how it transforms, unites and reveals the champion within." Barely a week later, with Peter-
son's career in free fall, Special Olympics joined other corporate partners in abandoning the running back. "In light of the information," spokeswoman Lynn Shelander said in a two-sentence email, "we are ab-
staining from any engagement with Adrian Peterson at this time." Minnesota-based General Mi lls,
which last year featured Peterson on three limited-edition cereal boxes and called him "an inspiration both
on and off the football field," pointed out that their arrangement had ended five months before his indictmentand that most of the Wheaties boxes
featuring Peterson were probably off store shelves by now. At the Vikings' headquarters, team
His attorney, Peter Wold, arranged
officials scrambled to contain the fall-
wedlock.Two of them, a boy and a his junior year at Oklahoma, recently girl, were born to different mothers donated $1 million to the university.
a son, shortly before the boy died last for Peterson to take a polygraph test year in South Dakota after being and said he quickly passed and that
out. The team, which knew that Peter-
a month apart in May and June 2010,
beaten by another man.
fathered at least six children out of
Peterson, who was drafted after It was the largest financial gift to the
family. He met one of those children,
he alsotested "clean" for drugs.
according to birth records. Peterson also has ha d s everal scrapes with the law in Minnesota
and Texas, two involving nighttime carousing. In 2011 he was the subject
of a six-month police investigation of alleged criminal sexual misconduct during a night of partying at a Twin Cities hotel; no charges were ever filed. And while Peterson is known for his generosity to local charities, his own charitable foundation has
filed contradictory financial records. Yet any contradictions between
Peterson's public image and private life did not seem to matter — until the photos of bloody welts on his 4-yearold son surfaced last month, and the public began to ask how well they actually knew the genial young athlete. Peterson and his attorney declined to comment for this story.
the assertions of their upbeat star play-
Next year, Adrian Peterson will turn 30, anage at which many NFL running backs begin to slow down. With his case still pending, it is unclear whether he will ever take the field in a Vikings uniform again. Even before his indictment, the Vikings' fickle fans had begun to move on to the next rising star, quarterback Teddy Bridgewater, whosejersey sales were surpassing Peterson's by midsummer.
er and his Texas attorney, who insisted that nothing would come of the case. Now they were dealing with widespreadoutrage overtheirSept.15decision to allow Peterson to play in the next game. Target and other retailers were pulling Peterson jerseys from their shelves. Carlson Cos., owner of the
In an interview with ESPN a year
schoolfrom a former footballplayer. "He's a beautiful person," Oklahoma athletic department spokesman
ago, Peterson declined to say how many children he had. "I know the
Pete Moris said in a recent interview.
Night of partying
Radisson Hotel brand, informed the "The presumption of guilt is magni- Vikings that it was planning to refied for someone like AP, even when
lease a video in which Trudy Rautio,
truth," he said. "I'm comfortable with
he's innocent," Wold said. the company's chief executive, would Hennepin County prosecutors, af- expand on the decision to suspend its
that knowledge."
ter reviewing the file, declined to file
corporate partnership with the team.
charges.
U.S. Bank, a leading candidate for the naming rights on the Vikings' new
As Peterson's fame grew, the Vi-
kings always tried to give Minneso2007, Peterson's popularity rocket- ta a star the fans could admire. The ed nearly every time he touched the team highlighted Peterson's many football. In Sports Illustrated's annu- charity appearances, and he was al NFL season preview issue on Sept. known around the Vikings' Winter 1, Peterson anchored an eight-page Park training facility for greeting A celebr ated freshman ad for the league's Sunday Ticket and janitors with the same warmth and Adrian Peterson arrived at the Uni- DirecTV. enthusiasm he extended to Zygi Wilf, versity of Oklahoma in 2004 as one of When Peterson suddenly appeared the team's owner. One source dethe most heralded high school play- at the Minnesota State Capitol one scribed the afternoon that Peterson ers in the country. In his freshman day in 2012, with the Vikings' stadi- suffered a potentially career-ending year he finished second in balloting um subsidy package hanging in the knee injury during a game yet, while for the Heisman Trophy, college foot- balance, Vikings representative Les- being carried off the field, insisted on ball's most prestigious honor. ter Bagley made sure that several leg- signing a jersey he had promised to a Soon, he was confronting the islators got a chance to ride in a capi- youngfanbeforethe game. hazards of sports stardom. While at tol elevator with the star. In an interview with the HuffingOklahoma, Peterson was investigatWhen the Vikings broke ground ton Post last week, former Vikings ed — but cleared — over the aborted on their new stadium last December, punter Chris Kluwe called Peterson purchase of a Lexus from a local auto Peterson was the only player to par- "one of the most down-to-earth sudealer. Two teammates, including the ticipate in the ceremony. perstars I have ever met." Sooners'starting quarterback, were But for Peterson and other Vikings, Those images were juxtaposed dismissed from the team after school temptation was never far away. with more jarring headlines. In one officials investigated reports that Dan Guimont owned Boomtown, incident, Peterson was accused of they had received extra money from a bar in Mankato, Minnesota, where resisting arrest during a scuffle at a the dealership. the Vikings gathered during sum- Texas nightclub, though he was not Peterson himself had possession mer training camp. Guimont said he charged. Back in Minnesota, he was of acar forseveralweeks before re- would hire security guards to make cited in 2009 for driving 109 mph in a 55 mph zone. In fall 2011, by then one of the
PEFERSW
son had appearedbefore a Texas grand jury during the summer, had believed
Once he arrived in Minnesota in
Charity questions Peterson's problems came despite NFL programs designed to help playerscope with sudden wealth and fame.
stadium, was also pressuring the Vi-
kings to reverse course. The bank's CEO, Richard Davis, and former Carlson Cos. board chair Marilyn Carlson
The NFL holds regular symposiums to Nelson had headed a group that suchelp rookies prepare for"their newpo- cessfully persuaded the NFL in May to sitionsas ambassadors ofthe league."
hold the 2018 Super Bowl in Minnesota.
In June, the four-day session took Now top Vikings executives hudplace in Canton, Ohio, the site of the dled again, holding a nine-hour conPro Football Hall of Fame. Retired Vi-
ference call with Peterson's agent, the
kings wide receiver and Hall of Famer NFL Players Association and other Cris Carter was among the speakers. parties, running late into the evening. Still, some NFL veterans say the
league has not done enough. Matt Blair, the Vikings' former All-
The decision to bench Peterson ap-
peared on the Vikings' website early the next day — at 12:47 a.m., with
Pro li nebacker,said the league needs Wilf insisting that the news be anto do a better job of spelling out what nounced as quickly as possible. is off-limits to young athletes who may Next year, Adrian Peterson will have had little preparation for riches
turn 30,an age at which many NFL
and stardom.
running backs begin to slow down. With his case still pending, it is un-
There still is no concise list, Blair said, adding that the "NFL has to pro-
vide (one) — from A to Z."
clear whether he will ever take the
field in a Vikings uniform again. Even
a l s o before his indictment, the Vikings' thrown a spotlight on his charity, fickle fans had begun to move on to P eterson's indictment ha s
Adrian Peterson's All Day Foundation, the next rising star, quarterbackTeddy which focuses on at-risk children, par- Bridgewater, whose jersey sales were ticularly girls. The charity shut down surpassing Peterson's by midsummer. NFL's greatest runners, Peterson its website following the September Peterson's mother, Bonita Jackson, signed arecord-breaking contract, indictment. has come to his defense, noting that a seven-year agreement that could The charity's 2011 financial report she and his father used corporal punpay him as much as $100 million. showed $247,064 in totalrevenue,and ishment on their children. But in an Three months later, he was at it listed just three organizations that interview with the Houston Chron-
g
The Associated Press file photo
Fans walk to TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis wearing Adrian Peterson jerseys before the start of a game in September.
the center of an incident in an Eden received money. A fourth outlay, titled P rairie, M i n nesota, h otel r o o m simply "clothing for needy families," that resulted in an accusation of listed "unknown" for the number of
icle, she captured the complexity
rape and triggered a lengthy police recipients. investigation. In 2009, the charity said its largest The 38-page police report details gift, $70,000, went to Straight From the a night of drinking, arguing and Heart Ministries in Laurel, Maryland. sex that involved the running back, But Donna Farley, president and foundtwo relatives — including Peterson's er of the Maryland organization, said
proud to be his mom."
brother, a minor — and four women,
it never received any money from Pe-
a marketing professor at New York's
in various pairs. One of those pres- terson's foundation. "There have been ent, Chris Brown, a Peterson relative no outside (contributions) other than who lives with him in Eden Prairie, people in my own circle," Farley said. told police that he paid for the room "Adrian Peterson — definitely not." using a company credit card for PeThe East Texas Food Bank, based terson's All Day, Inc. in Tyler, said it received money from As the night wore on, the report Peterson's foundation in 2009, alsays, one woman who said she knew though the foundation's tax filing for
Pace University. But a comeback is not out of the question, Chiagouris
of his case: "My son is not a perfect man, by no means, but in the end I'm Yet sports marketing professionals say his career might not be over. The alleged abuse "does pretty much wipe out everything he's done off the field," said Larry Chiagouris,
said, if Peterson were to admit he was
wronginthe way he punished his son, pay his dues and get back to work. "There will be a team next year,"
Chiagouris said, "that needs a running back."
BS
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
T EE TO
R EEN ROUNDUP
Bae wins PGATour opener at Silverado The Associated Press
eagle putt on the par-5 16th and Phatlum made a double Sang-moon built a big lead bogey on the par-3 15th. Feng and was steady enough parred the last two holes to on the back nine at Silver- finish at 18-under 266 at KuaNAPA, Calif. — Bae
ado to win the Frys.com
la Lumpur Golf and Country
Open on Sunday in the first
Club. She's projected to jump
event of the new PGA Tour season.
from ninth to fifth in the world.
affected the margin. He
She was trying to become the LPGA Tour's first Thai win-
Playing a group behind Feng, Bae missed a short birdie Phatlum birdied the 16th and putt on the 18th that only closed with two pars for a 70. closed with a I-over 73, the first player on the PGA Tour since Ben Crane at the
Stacy Lewis. The 17-year-old
win with a final round over
New Zealander needed to win and have Lewis tie for 12th or
over Steven Bowditch, who closed with a 67 on a dry,
hot day in the Napa Valley. The only drama came from the 28-year-old South
The Bulletin file photo
Continued from B1 Perhaps that is why the series has proven to be so popular in spite of Central Oregon's
typically less-than-hospitable winter golf weather. The all-encompassing Winter Series tees off for a sixth season on Friday at Broken Top Club in Bend, and already interest has been high. In the two days after Huffer posted details of the Broken
Top tournament last week, 72 golfersregistered for the event.
Such enthusiasm is right on par for the Winter Series, which consists of a schedule
of 11 two-person team events from mid-October through early April. The series has grown froma series ofevents that would often attract 40 or
so golfers to one that frequentlyhosts full fields of nearly 120 entries.
In all, 292 golfers played in at least one Winter Series event last year. The number
of golfers was down a bit from the previous year, a decline that Huffer attributes to heavy snow in late November and
again in February. Still, the size of the Central
Oregon Winter Series is more than Huffer could have ever expected when he f irst devised it.
"Six years ago we were getting anywhere between 40 and maybe 80 players, and
shows that, for many Central Oregon residents, golf is a year-round sport. The Winter Series is also able to capitalize on less competition. ... During the winter, there is far less to choose from, which helps to make the winter tournament series a huge success. Every competitive golfer in the area that plays during the winter wants to take part in the Winter
Series events." — Zach Lampert, head pro at Meadow Lakes Golf Course
capitalize on less competition. ... During the winter, there is far less to choose from, which helps to make the winter tour-
nament series a huge success. Every competitive golfer in the area that plays during the winter wants to take part in the Winter Series events."
The series has made some adjustments. This year, every golfer in the field will play from the same tees. And the Winter Series
14-under 202 at Prestonwood
Country Club. Triplett fol-
will feature more better-ball tournaments this year than in
suyama, Martin Laird and
ter the third and final round
at the Frys.com Open.
further bad weather. Levy had
Bae, who f i n ished at 15-under 273, won for the
rounds of 63 and 61 at Ocean-
second time in his career
der 124. Belgium's Nicolas Colsaerts was second, three strokes back.
and earned a return trip to the Masters in Aprih
Also on Sunday: Shanshan Feng rallies to win LPGA Malaysia: KUALA L U M PUR, M a laysia
— China's Shanshan Feng LPGA Tour title, playing a six-hole stretch on the back nine in 6 under. The
25-year-old Feng, f o ur strokes behind Thailand's Pornanong Phatlum enter-
16 under and pulled away with a four-stroke swing when she holed a 10-foot
At 33, Smith is the eldest of PGA's rookies "
Carolina, after a Web.com Tour
part in the Volvo World Match
the UK," Reed said.
victory, Smith said he played Play Championship at London bass guitar in a reggae-punk Golf Club next weekend. He Old Course band and concentrated on his is the lone American in the 16Rory McIlroy wouldn't destudies. He majored in philoso- man field, though certainly not scribe his affection for the Old phy. His senior thesis was titled, the only Ryder Cup player. De- Course at St. Andrews as love "Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and fending champion Graeme Mc- at first sight. " Hated it," h e s a i d l a s t Nothingness, Bad Faith." Dowell, Henrik Stenson, ThomSo how did golf get back into as Bjorn, Victor Dubuisson, week at th e D u nhill L i nks the picture? He went on a fam- Jamie Donaldsonand Stephen Championship. ily holiday to British Columbia, Gallacher also are playing in an McIlroy first played the Old
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TheBulletin
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EVERGREEN'
"Thought it was the worst
golfcourse I'veeverplayed,"he said. "I just stood up on every
ico Victoria to finish at 18-un-
COVERINGS •
16 playing in the St. Andrews Links Trophy.
was washed out because of
rallied to win th e LPGA Malaysia for h e r f o u r th
Nos. 11-14 to tie Phatlum at
Course in 2005 when he was
MOURA, Portugal — France's
birdies, and tied for third for the second straight year
over Phatlum. Feng birdied
mosphere. The 16 players come from 13 countries. Reed was 3-0-1 in his Ryder Cup debut at Gleneagles, the only American not to lose. At Tourevent. Smith finished seven strokes the Match Play Championship That includes Byron Smith, back at the Frys.com Open on in Arizona earlier this year, he 33, the oldest of the rookies. Sunday.. lost in the second round. "Although we suffered a very Smith grew up in Palm DesBack to Britain ert, California, and went to disappointing loss at GleneaPepperdine until quitting the Patrick Reed is headed back gles, I enjoyed the competition team after his sophomore year. to Britain for another dose of of my first Ryder Cup and can't In an interview with The News match play. wait to getbackout there to play 8 Observer of Raleigh, North Reed has been invited to take in another match play event in
geys with birdies. Lehman eagled the par-5 17th in a 70. Bernhard Langer and Kenny Perry tied for third at 10 under. Langer, the 2012 win-
Bryce Molder. Matsuyama Alexander Levy of France finished with two straight won the Portugal Masters af-
NOTEBOOK
even that truly has a "world" at-
lowed each of his three bo-
lead. But he hit a poor chip ner, finished with a 68. Perry, on the 15th that led to bo- the 2011 champion, had a 67. gey, and he barely got out Langer extended his lead in of the bunker on the par-5 the season-long race Charles 16th that kept him from a Schwab Cup race. He has a birdie. tour-high five wins — two of Mahan closed with a them majors — and leads the 70 and wound up in five- money list. way tie for third with ReFrance's Levy wins shorttief Goosen, Hideki Mat- ened Portugal Masters: VILA-
for a three-stroke victory
was talked into bringing his clubs and shot 67. He got the The PGA Tour has 21 play- bug again and told his father he ers designatedas rookies for planned to turn pro. "He said, 'A pro in what?' the 2014-15 season, and four of them haveneverplayed a PGA Smith said.
Triplett wins Champions Tour's SAS Championship:
Hunter Mahan, one of
ing the round, closed with a bogey-free 8-under 63
By Doug Ferguson
a 70 to tie for eighth at 11 under. Lewis had a 69 to tie for 21st at 7 under.
four players in the field who were in the Ryder Cup two weeks ago, looked as if he mightmake a run when he holed out from 91 yards on the 13th hole for eagle to get within two shots of the
years past, which will allow golfers more opportunity to look where it's gone," Huffer bucks in October," says Jim play their own ball throughout says. "Now," he adds with a Cubillas, the head pro at Bro- the round. laugh, "it's like I don't even ken Top. "It's a great series But otherwise, the successwant to run one unless there and chance to extend the sea- ful formula will remain the same — and for good reason. are at least 80 players." son as much as possible." Finding willing venues to What is the appeal to the Huffer says that there could serve as hosts has also not golfers? be room togrow the series, been difficult. Zach Lampert, the head which runs from mid-October Each host facility gets about pro at Meadow Lakes and a through early April. But he is half of the $50-per-golfer entry frequent player in the Winter hesitant to stretch it any earfee, according to Huffer, who Series, says that the events lier or later on the calendar. makes nothing for organiz- are fun despite the generally "Otherwise," he quips, "we ing the Winter Series. (Hosts wintry weather. And allow- would have to call it the Fallthis year include Bend-area ing golfers of all levels into the Slash-Winter Series." courses Awbrey Glen, Broken field gives the tournaments Huffer says he does not Top, Lost Tracks, Pronghorn/ broad appeal. want to water down the WinNicklaus and Widgi Creek, Plus, Lampert notes, Cen- t er Series w it h t o o m a n y in addition to Eagle Crest/ tral Oregonians have limited events. Besides, the event has Ridge,Juniper in Redmond, opportunities to play compet- already accomplished its main Brasada Canyons in Powell itive golf once November rolls objective. "I think it just helps keep Butte, Crooked River Ranch, al'ound. K ah-Nee-Ta n e a r War m "I believe that the success golf in the forefront and in the Springs, and Meadow Lakes of the Winter Series shows minds of golfers," Huffer says. in Prineville.) that, for many Central Oregon "It's just my small part to grow "I think it is a great deal for residents, golfis a year-round the game." the courses, especially in my sport," says Lampert. "The — Reporter: 541-617-7868, case where I can make a few Winter Series is also able to zhall@bendbulletin.com.
AP Golf Writer
worse. Instead, Ko closed with
Korean, who was six shots CARY, N.C. — Kirk Triplett ahead when he made a par won the SA S Championon the 10th hole. Bae had ship for his second victory of a trio of three-putts — two the year and fourth in three of them from just off the seasons on the Champions green — to start coming Tour. The 52-year-old Triplett back to the field. But no one closed with a 3-under 69 for a got closer than two shots three-stroke victory over Tom all day. Lehman. Triplett finished at
Even in the winter, High Desert golf courses are active with the Central Oregon Winter Series.
"I believe that the success of the Winter Series
to take the No. I ranking from
St. Jude Classic in June to par. Bae won by two shots
Winter golf
ner. Lydia Ko missed a chance
O 2014 Begeet Hometlte is a refitteef trade Mmeof teet ftton e e e
1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com ••
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tee and was like, 'What is the
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014• THE BULLETIN
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its weekly local gcll results listings andevents calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed to the sports deparlment, 541-3850831, emailed to sportscybendbulletin.com, ormailedtcP.O.Box8020;Bend,OR97708.
Club Results AWBREYGLEN
2014 Men'sAwbreyCup,Oct. 1-3 TeamMatchPlay Overall —Tea mWaskomdef. TeamWarner,13-7. Four Ball —Morton/Leeties Larson/Macri. Hagstro m/Johansondef.Rosencrance/Waskom,3and2; Lemp/Wa tson, def. Bleyer/Grudin, 5 and3; Mount/ Manis cal co def.Mack/Long,5 and 4;Quattrone/ Quanstrom def. Warner/Hinkle,4 and3. Foursomes — Rosencrance/Waskom def.Morton/Lee,4and3; Larson/Macri def. Hagstrom/Johanson,2and1.Mack/Grudindef.Long/Hinkle,3and2; Quattrone/Qunst arom, 1 up;Mount/Maniscalcodef. Warner/Bleyer, 2and1. Singles — ArchieBleyerdef. RonLemp, 1 up; DougWatson def. DuaneWarner, 2and 1; KenWaskom def.LarryHinkle,4 and3; Michael Mountdef. Ed Hagstrom,2and1;BertLarsondef.BobJohanson, 1up; ShelleyGrudindef. GaryQuanstrom,1up; Bil Longties BobRosencrance;David Quattronedef. Jim Lee,4and3. Men's Closer,Oct. 8 Shamble 1, Don Fellows/LarryHinkle/KerryMadsen/Bert Larson,110. 2, JohnManiscalco/Jim Larsen/John Hoheng arten/EarleHonnen,110.3,BobRosencrance/ Jim Kloch/LarryHaas/MichaelFlynn,110. 4, Jerry Heck/ Ron Foerster/Chuck Woodbeck/Doug Moore, 114. 5, Gary Mack/RonHomer/Henrik Jahn/Brian Bell, 114. KPs — 0-14handicaps:BobRosencrance, No. 6;Jim Lee,No.13. 15-18:ChuckWoodbeck, No. 6; ChuckSheppard, No.13. 19andhigher:Fred Higyard, No.6;JohnSpeckmann,No.13. Women'sCloser, Oct. 0 Shamble 1, RosieCook/CarmenWest/Sally Batchelder/B.J. Migs,110.2, Carol Lee/Edith McBean/Norma Barnes/ Ruth Mack,112. 3, Shannon Morton/Barb Chandler/ LindaStump/CandyO'Rear,121.
Adrienne Castle, 4 and1. Blue-LindaWakefield/Mary AnnDoyledef.Red-JanetKing/Pam Garney,3and1. Red-JackieYake/BarbSchreiber def. Blue-Sally Martin/ChereeJohnson, 1up. LOSTTRACKS Men's Club,Oct.1 Stroke Play Grcss:1 ,BeauJohnson,74.2,Jeff Templ eton,77. 3 (tie), MikeReuter, 85;SteveAnderson, 85. 5, Tom Archey ,86.6,DavidBlack,89.7,JoeWestlake,90. 8, GuyInglis, 94. 9,EdWilard, 95.10,FrankSpernak, 96,11,KimKellenberg, 98. 12,Al Derenzis, 102. Net:1, BeauJohnson,66.2,DavidBlack,70.3,Jeff Templeton,71.4(tie), SteveAnderson, 73;GuyInglis, 73. 6 (ffe),MikeReuter, 74;FrankSpernak,74. 8, Ed Willard,77.9, Al Derenzis, 78.10(tie), TomArchey, 79;JoeWestlake, 79.12, KimKeffenberg,81. KPs— JoeWestlake,No.5;Tom Archey,No.11. LO —BeauJohnson. Long Putt —JeffTempleton. Men's Club,Oct8 Best Ball
Gross: 1 (tie), CodyJohnson/DaveFiedler, 71; BobGarza /Ed Wilard, 71;DanO'Connell/Stan Brock, 71.4,ChuckGeschke/KeithWood,73.5,Tom Archey/ Mike Reute76. r, 6 (tie), JeffTempleton/Flip Houston, 77; RandyOlson/JohnFowler,77.8,BeauJohnson/ Guy Inglis,78.9 (tie), DaveBryson/Roger Bean,80; KevinMoore/SteveAnderson, 80. 11,JoeWestlake/ Kim Kellenberg,89.12r DavidBlack/FrankSpernak, 94. 13, JimFehlberg/RichNikl, 100.Net: 1, Chuck Geschk e/Keith Wood,58.2,Dan O'Connell/Stan Brock,59.3, CodyJohnson/DaveFiedler, 62.4 (tie), BeauJohnson/Guy Inglis,63;DaveBryson/Roger Bean, 63.6,RandyOlson/JohnFowler,64.7,Tom Archey/Mike Reuter, 66. 8, BobGarza/Ed Wilard, 67. 9(tie),JeffTempleton/Flip Houston, 68;Kevin Moore/ SteveAnderson,68. 11,Jim Fehlberg/Rich Nikl, 71. 12, DavidBlack/FrankSpernak,74. 13,JoeWestlake/ Kim Kellenberg,76. QUAILRUN Men's Club,Oct.8 Net BestBall 1, DanaCraig/Al Rice,57. 2(tie), DonBanducci/ Bill Quinn,60;RichardBeeson/Richard Johnson,60. KPs —JimMyers, No.2; JimElmblade,No.10.
Hole-In-One Report
BENOGOLF8 COUNTRY CLUB Ladies GolAssoci f ation, Oct. 1 AABB,CCOO Mixer
AABB Flight ITwo Gross, One Net) — 1, NancyBreitenstein/JeannieAdkisson/Cindi Eielson/ PamCaine,221. CCOO Flight (OneGross/Two Net) —1,Saly Schafroth/LindaCorson/Sandy Edwards/Joy Strickland (bffnd draw),220. Nine-Hole Division (StrokePlay) — Gross: 1, Debbie Roark,58. Net:1, CarolynOlsen,40. Men's DailyGame,Oct. 2 King cf the Hill First Flight (12handicapor less) — Gross: 1, Jeff Wilson,75. Neb1, CraigSmith, 66. 2(tie), CraigBraje,71;GaryHatfield, 71. SecondFlight (13 andhigher) — Gross:1, Mike Binns, 83. Netr1, Bill Campbell,62. 2 (tie), Don Christensen, 64;ChipCleveland,64. Oeschutes' Children's FoundationChip-in Fore Kids Oct.10 Scramble Gross: 1, JeffMartin/JohnNolan/Devin Harrigan/EricCarmichael,52.Net: 1, KathyCoffom/Scot Holmberg/Adam Martin/NancyWirth, 53.Last Place Gross: MarcFaa st/Danny Harris/Roger Laubacher/ ChuckWright,77. LOs —Men:JeremyCox. Ladies: Alison Huycke. KPs —Men:JohnNolan. Ladies: SarahStevens. BLACKBUTTERANCH Women'sNine-Hole Closer,Sept. 30 Nine-HoleShamble AFlight — 1,NancyEliott/Barbara Love,29. 2, Lori Cooper/Pat Rhoads, 33. 8 Flight — 1 (tie),JoanMeyer/Barbara Schulz, 31; JulianeKaneko/Alicia Knox,31;LaurineClemens/ Rosemary Norton, 31. Men's Club,Oct.1 at Big Meadow 1, MarvHoff,64.2,TimShuler, 67. 3,MelJolly, 70. 4, JerryKvanvig,72. BROKEN TOP Bend Chamber MemberInvitational, Sept. 28 Scramble 1, StateFarmFred HornbackInsuranceAgcy-Kerry Schoni ng/MattBurgess/Jim Schoning/RandySchoning, 52. 2, Bend Dermatology Clinic-JoeNeuhaus/ Justin Livingston/Tom Porfirio/TraceWicks, 53. Twc BeslBalls Gross: 1, GaryGrunerChevrolet-Chris Dupont/ DennyStory/GaryGruner/SpudMiler, 69. Net: 1, C.O.Sauce& Seasoning-Mid Oregon Credit Union,
Oct. 2 DESERT PEAKS
Rcbbie Earnest, Madras No. 8...........................90yards.......... pitchingwedge Oct. 3 THE GREEN SAT REDMOND
Craig Knight, Redmond No.9..........................110yards.......................9-iron Oct. 4 BLACKBUTTERANCH-GLAZEMEADOW
Tim Gray,Portland No.14........................145yards.....................3-wood Ocl. 8 THE GREEN SAT REDMOND
Jared Macedo,Bend No. 7..........................125yards................ gapwedge Ocl. 8 JUNIPER
Pat Majchrowski, Redmond No.13.........................83yards.......... pitchingwedge Ocl. 0 THE GREEN SAT REDMOND
John Glover,Bend No.17........................148yards.......................y-iron
Calendar The Bulletin welcomes contributions to its weekly local golf events calendar. Items should bemailedtoP.O.Bcx8020,Bend,OR 07708; taxed tothe sports department at 541385-0831; oremailed to sports@bendbulletin. com. CLINICSORCLASSES Oct. 30: Performance Series Clinic at theTetherow GolAca f demy inBendbegins at6 p.m.Tetherow Academy instructor MikeLewis wil join Titleist PerformanceInstitute-certified fitness instructors Adam Huycke andChris Cooper, whois aBendphysicaltherapist, for aone-hourclinic onthesimilarities between the physicalrequirements of golf andskiing. Clinic will include exercises, aPDFfile ofall exercises,and beverages.Costis $10andclass sizeis limited. For moreinformationorto register: ccooperrbtaiweb.com. TOURNAMENTS
Ocl. 17: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat BrokenTopClub in Bend. Better-ball tournament beginswith an11 a.m. shotgun.Two-person teams 53. with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team. Cost is$30for professionals, $50foramateurs. Cost CROOKEDRIVERRANCH includes grossand net skins compe titions. Cart Men's Club,Oct.7 costsextra.Agplayers must sign upbynoon onthe ABCOScramble Wednesday before the event. Toregister orfor more 1, ChrisFerrara/PatMarquis/Terry Kirkpatrick/Don information, call PatHuffer,headpro atCrookedRivDean,61.2 (tie), RayHanna/JimLester/Jack Martin/ er Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpat© Terr y Rodger,62;Mac Kilgo/Tom Macdougag/Ted crookedriverranch.com . Carlin/HalJamison, 62; GeorgeMitchener/RogerFerOcb 18: Season closer at JuniperGolf Course in guson/Vene Dunham/Herbert Carter, 62.5 (tie), Gary Redmond.Four-personscrambledivided intotwo-couOlds/DennisCooper/NickHughes,63; BobJones/Guy ple teams.Shotgun start at 11a.m. Costis $140per Crapper/NickTrudeau/EddieMaroney, 63. team.Toregister, call theJuniperproshopat 541-5483121 ordownloadentry format www.playjunipercom. OESERTPEAKS Ocb 23:CentralOregonGolf Tour individual stroke Wednesday Ladies Club, Oct. 1 playtournam entat BrasadaCanyonsGolf Clubin Powell Hard Holes Butte.TheCentralOregonGolf Tour isacompetitive golf 1, Teresa Lindgren, 38.2, SaraGephart, 44.3,Betty seriesheldat golf coursesthroughout Central Oregon. Cook,48.5. Grossandnet competitions opento agamateur golfers KP —TeresaLindgren of agabilities. Prizepoolawardedweekly, and memberThursday Men'sClub,Oct.2 ship notrequired.Formore information orto register: Hard Holes 541-633-7652,541-350-7605, orwww.centraloregon1(tie), RobEarnest, 38; BruceStecher, 38.3, Joe golftourcom. Stanfield,41. Ocb25:PumpkinBashPar3ChallengeatMeadow KP — BruceStecher. LakesGolf Course in Prinevige,Individual stroke-play LO —ValPaterson. tourname nt, but ag18holes areplayedaspar 3s. Play SundayGroupPlay,Oct.8 beginswith10a m.shotgun. Cost is $20per golfer plus Stroke Play $25 per-person greenfee.For more information orto Gross:1(tie), Denny Story, 74;GaryHopson,74. register,call theMeadowtakes proshopat541-447Net: 1 (tie), FredBlackman, 68; RichVigil, 68; Sid 7113. Benjamin68. , Oct. 13: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat KP — MikeGardner. Widgi CreekGolf ClubinBend. Shamble tournament LO —GaryBurtis. beginswith an11 a.m. shotgun.Two-person teams SundayCouples, Oct. 5 with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team. Chapman Cost is$30for professionals, $50foramateurs. Cost 1, MikeFunk6 JuaniceSchram, 31.3. 2, Carl6 includes grossand net skins compe titions. Cart Teresa Lindgren,33.2. 3, Ed&CarolMcDaniel,34.1. costsextra.All playersmustsign upbynoon onthe Wednesday before the event. Toregister orfor more EAGLECREST information, call PatHuffer,head proatCrookedRivMen's Club,Oct.8 er Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpat@ at Resorl Course crookedriverranch.com . 1,2,3Net Best Balls Nov. 7: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at 1, Randy Myers/RonCady/DanMyers/Cliff Shrock, AwbreyGlenGolf Club in Bend.Better-ball tourna129. 2, RexJohanson/Dennis O'Donneff/Gary Jack- ment beginswith an 11a.m.shotgun. Two-person son/ErnieBrooks,131. 3 (tie), Mark Scott/Helmut teams with nomorethan oneprofessionalallowedper Bloo/Dave McKinney/blind draw,132; SteveAustin/ team.Costis$30for professionals, $50foramateurs. Mike Bessonette/AngeloRada ti/Terry Black, 132; Cost includesgrossand net skinscompetitions. Cart Andy Lesko/Hank Cavender/Bill Martin/Tim Meyers, costs extra.All playersmustsign up bynoononthe 132. 6,TimSwope/GeorgeSteelhammer/BobHocker/ Wednesday beforetheevent. Toregister orfor more DonGreenman,133. 7,JoePerry/BruceBranlund/Phil information, call PatHuffer,headpro atCrookedRivChappr on/MacHeitzhausen,135. er Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpatC! crookedriverranch.com . THE BREENS AT REDMOND Nov.8:TheTurkeyShootOpenatMeadow Lakes Ladies of theGreens, Oct. 7 Golf Course in Prineville is a best-ball tournament for Stroke Play two-person teams. Event teesoffwith a9a.m.shotgun. Flight A —Gross:1, LynneEkman, 41.2, Hazel Cost is$40plus$25per-persongreenfee. FormoreinBlackmore,41. 3,BevTout, 44.Net:1, KayWebb,28. formation orto register, calltheMeadowLakesproshop 2, CarolStrand,31.3, LynneHolm, 34. at 541-447-7113. Flight B — Gross: 1, BertGantenbein,47. 2, Nov. 14: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat VivienWebster, 47.3, DeeBaker, 50. Net: 1r Linda Lost TracksGolf Clubin Bend.Scramble tournament Johnston,31.2, Carol Wolfe, 34. 3,Marilyn Feis, 34. beginswith an11a.m. shotgun.Two-personteams Flight C —Gross:1, Ethel MaeHammock, 46. with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team. 2, Peggy Roberts,48. 3, RenateFalk,52. Net:1, Mary Cost is$30for professionals, $50foramateurs. Cost Bohler ,27.2,DagmarHaussler,29.3,RuthChaff ey, includes grossand net skins compe titions. Cart 34. costs extra.All playersmustsign up bynoononthe Flight O — Gross: 1,EvelynKakuska,55. 2, Wednesday beforetheevent. Toregister orfor more JackieHester 59.3,JoyceHeater 60. Net:1, KaeVel- information, call PatHuffer,headpro atCrookedRivmeden, 33.2, Anita Epstein, 37. 3, Dorothy Fuller,39. er Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpat@ Golfer of theWeek— KayWebb, 28; Ethel Mae crookedriverranch.com . Hammock,28;PeggyRoberts,28. Nov. 21: Central OregonWinter Seriesevent Low Putts —Carol Strand,14. at EagleCrestResort's RidgeCourse in Redmond. LOs — FlightA: LynneEkman. Flight 8:Norma Better-ball tournamentbegins with an 11 a.m. Carter.FlightC:Ethel MaeHammock. Flight D:Evelyn shotgun.Two-person teamswith nomorethanone Kakuska. professionalallowedperteam. Cost is $30for proKPs —Flight k LynneEkman. fessionals, $50for amateurs.Cost includesgross and net skinscompetitions. Cartcosts extra. Aff JUNIPER player smustsignupbynoonontheWednesday Women'sClub, Oct. 8 beforetheevent. Toregister or for moreinformaNet MatchPlay tion, call Pat Huffer, headpro at CrookedRiver Red-Shan Wattenburger/Darla Farstveldt def. Ranch, at541-923-6343or email him atcrrpate Blue-SandyCameron/Jackie Cooper, 2 and1. Blue- crookedriverranch.com. Jan Carver/CarolynHoughton def. Red-SueAdams/ Oec. 13: Christmas GooseGolf Tournament at
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MeadowLakes Golf Coursein Prineviffe. Chapman is for two-person teamsandtees off with an11a.m. shotgun.Costis$30plus$25per-persongreenfee. To registerorfor moreinformation, call theMeadow Lakesgolf shopat541-447-7113. Jan. 23: Central OregonWinter Seriesevent at Kah-Nee-TaHigh Desert Resort near Warm Springs. Triple-six tournamentbeginswith an 11 a.m. shotgun.Two-personteamswith nomorethan one professionalallowedperteam.Cost is$30for professionals, $50 for amateurs. Cost includes ross andnetskins competitions. Cartcostsextra. II playersmustsign upbynoonontheWednesday beforetheevent. Toregister orfor moreinformation, call PatHuffer,headpro at CrookedRiver Ranch, at541-923-6343or email himat crrpat@ crookedriverranch.com. Jan.31:Super BowlScramble atMeadow LakesGolf Course in Prineviffe.Scrambleis for four-personteamsandtees off with an 11 a.m. shotgun.Costis$80perteamplus $25per-person greenfee.Toregister or for moreinformation, call the Meadow Lakesgolf shopat 541-447-7113. Feb. 8: Central OregonWinter Series event at Meadow LakesGolf Club in Prineville. Shamble tournamentbegins with an 11 a.m. shotgun. Two-personteamswith nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam. Cost is $30for professionals,$50for amateurs. Costincludesgross and net skinscompetitions. Cartcosts extra. Affplayers must signupbynoonontheWednesdaybeforethe event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call Pat Huffer, head pro at CrookedRiver Ranch, at 541923-6343 or email him at crrpat©crookedriverranch.com. Feb. 21: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat Crooked River Ranch. Better-ball tournament begins with an11a.m.shotgun. Two-personteamswith no morethanoneprofessional allowedperteam. Cost is $30 for professionals,$50for amateurs. Cost includesgross andnet skins competitions. Cart costs extra.Affplayers mustsignupbynoononthe Wednesdaybeforetheevent. Toregister orfor more information, call PatHuffer, headpro at Crooked River Ranch, at 541-923-6343or email himat crrpat©crookedriverranch.com. March7:PolarBearOpenatMeadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. Individual stroke-play tournamenttees off with a10 a.m.shotgun. Cost is $20 perteamplus$25per-person greenfee. To register or formoreinformation, call the Meadow Lakesgolf shopat541-447-7113. March 13: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at JuniperGolfCoursein Redmond. Scrambletournamentbeginswith an11a.m. shotgun. Two-person teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam.Costis $30for professionals, $50 for amateurs.Costincludes grossandnet skins competitions. Cart costsextra. Aff playersmust sign upbynoonontheWednesdaybeforetheevent. To register orfor moreinformation, call PatHuffer, headpro atCrookedRiver Ranch, at 541-923-6343 or emaihi l mat crrpat@crookedriyerranch.com. March 20: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at Brasada CanyonsGolf Clubin Powell Butte.Better-baff tournamentbegins with an11a.m.shotgun. Two-personteamswith nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam. Cost is $30 for professionals,$50for amateurs. Costincludesgross and net skinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra. Affplayers must signupbynoonontheWednesdaybeforethe event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call Pat Huffer, head pro at CrookedRiver Ranch, at 541923-6343 or email him at crrpat©crookedriverranch.com. March 28:CrossCountry tournament at Meadow LakesGolf Course in Prineville. Individual stroke-playtournamentforcesgolfers to takeanew path around MeadowLakesover12 holes.Teetimes begin at 8a.m.Flighted field includes both gross and netpayoutsandKPcompetitions. Costis$20 plus reduced greenfeeof $15. Formoreinformation or to register,call the MeadowLakes proshop at 541-447-7113.
B9
Sime DarbyLPBA Malaysia Sunday atKualaLumpur Golf andCountry Club, KualaLumpur, Malaysia Yardage:8,248;Par:71 Final ShanshanFeng,$300,000 PornanongPhatlum, $184,703 Pernilla Lindberg,$107,022 ChellaChoi,$107,022 So YeonRyu, $107,022 Na Yeon Choi, $68,258 lheeLee,$57,135 Mi HyangLee,$43,483 CarolineMasson,$43,483 SunYoungYoo, $43,483 LydiaKo,$43,483 CarlotaCiganda,$32,258 BrittanyLang,$32,258 BeatrizRecari, $32,258 Mirim Lee, $32,258 GerinaPiler, $25,787 AmyYang,$25,787 JennyShin,$25,787 AyakoUehara, $25,787 JessicaKorda,$23,258 AnnaNordqvist, $21,236 StacyLewis,$21,236 Mi JungHur,$21,236 AzaharaMunoz,$21,236 AustinErnst,$18,961 Eun-Hee Ji, $18,961 MariajoUrIbe,$16,862 SandraGal, $16,862 CatrionaMathew,$16,862 AriyaJutanugarn,$16,862 ChristinaKim,$14,076 Xi YuLin, $14,076 HeeYoungPark, $14,076 MarinaAlex,$14,076 KarrieWebb,$14,076 LizetteSalas,$11,447 Daniege Kang,$11,447 K. Muangkhu msakul, $11,447 PaulaCreamer, $11,447 Jodi Ewart Shadoff ,$11,447 Lexi Thom pson,$9,911 AngelaStanford, $9,911 Ji YoungOh,$8,615 JulietaGranada, $8,615 DewiClaireSchreefel, $8,615 Thidapa Suwannapura, $8,615 NatalieGulbis,$8,615 KatherineKirk, $7,685 MichegeKoh,$6,688 Dori Carter,$6,688 SarahJaneSmith,$6,688 Kelly Tan,$6,688 SuzannPettersen, $6,688 Kris Tam ulis, $6,688 MoriyaJutanugarn,$6,688 MorganPressel,$5,864 LauraDavies,$5,663 CharleyHull, $5,259 JenniferRosales,$5,259 HaejiKang,$5,259 KarineIcher,$4,905 Lee-Anne Pace, $4,905 KimKaufman,$4,703 HaruNomura, $4,703 LauraDiaz,$4,449 BelenMozo,$4,449 MinaHarigae,$4,449 CandieKung,$4,246 ArethaPan,$4,146 Ainil JohaniBakar,$4,045 AmeliaLewis,$3,995 JeanChua,$3,943 Michele PLow,$3,893
April 3: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat PronghornClub'sNicklaus Coursein Bend.Shamble tournamentbegins with an 11a.m, shotgun. ChampionsTourSASChampionship Two-personteamswith nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam. Cost is $30 for profesSunday atPrestonwoodCountryClub,Cary, sionals, $50for amateurs. Costincludesgross and N.C. net skinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra. Affplayers Yardage:7,240;Par:72 must signupbynoonontheWednesdaybeforethe FinaI event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call Pat Kirk Triplett(315),$315,000 70-63-69—202 Huffer, head pro at CrookedRiver Ranch, at 541- TomLehman(185), $184,800 6 7 -68-70—205 923-6343 or email him at crrpatecrookedriver- BernhardLanger(138), $138,075 73-65-68—206 ranch.com. 72-67-67—206 KennyPerry(138), $138,075 68-67-72 —207 PaulGoydos(86),$86,450 Professi onal MarkMcNulty (86),$86,450 72-68-67 —207 KevinSutherland(t6), $86,450 69-68-70—207 Frys.ccmOpen 67-70-71—208 Sunday atSilveradoCountry Clun-aorth, MarcoDawson (63), $63,000 Napa, Calif. DavidFrost(63), $63,000 69-69-70—208 Yardage: 7,203;Par 72 MichaelAllen(41),$41,300 73-67-70—210 Final 66-70-74—210 GuyBoros(41),$41,300 Sang-Moon Bae(500),$1,080,000 66-69-65-73—273 Bart Bryant(41), $41,300 72-70-68—210 StevenBowditch(300),$648,000 73-68-67-67—275 FredFunk(41), $41,300 72-64-74—210 RetiefGoosen(125), $270,600 69-71-66-70—276 GaryHallberg(41), $41,300 73-68-69—210 MartinLaird(125), $270,600 67-67-71-71—276 Jeff Hart(41), $41,300 73-68-69—210 HunterMahan(125), $270,600 70-68-68-70—276 SteveLowery(41),$41,300 70-70-70—210 H. Matsuyam a(125), $270,600 70-67-69-70—276 71-71-68—210 BryceMolder(125),$270,600 70-69-69-68—276 CoreyPavin (41), $41,300 76-65-69—210 RobertAllenby(76), $168,000 70-71-66-70—277 JoeySindelar(41), $41,300 $25,375 72-70-69—211 Jon Curran (78),$168,000 68-72-67-70—277 Bigy Andrade, BrooksKoepka(78), $168,000 68-70-67-72—277 RogerChapman,$25,375 69-72-70—211 —277 John Inman, 71-69-71—211 Hudson Swafford(78),$168,00070-69-71-67 $25,375 Zachary Blair(59),$117,600 69-66-69-74—278 Colin Montgom erie, $25,375 73-66-72—211 71-68-72-67—278 ScottBrown(59),$117,600 MarkO'Meara, $25,375 69-69-73—211 DerekFathauer(59),$117,600 70-71-68-69—278 TomPerniceJr.,$25,375 72-70-69—211 TonyFinau(59),$117,600 69-73-68-68—278 74-72-66—212 Faxon,$19,152 LeeWestwood(59),$117,600 73-69-69-67—278 Brad Forsbrand,$19,152 72-70-70—212 ScottLangley(54),$93,000 70-66-69-74—279 Anders $19,152 73-68-71—212 DavidLingmerth854),$93,000 68-68-70-73—279 Skip Kendag, 69-68-75—212 Ryo Ishikawa (52), $81,000 71-71-67-71—280 GaryKoch,$19,152 Craig Stadl e r, $19,152 71-71-70—212 ByronSmith(52), $81,000 73-66-68-73—280 76-66-71—213 KevinKisner(48),$62,400 71-72-70-68—281 TomByrum,$15,820 77-66-70—213 71-68-66-76—281 MarkCalcavecchia,$15,820 Matt Kuchar (48), $62,400 71-73-69—213 Spencer Levin(48), $62,400 73-69-67-72—281 BobTway,$15,820 ScottStallings(48), $62,400 71-69-70-71—281 Tommy Armour III, $11,970 74-70-70—214 Brendan Steele(48), $62,400 72-70-69-70—281 SteveElkington,$11,970 75-68-71—214 TomGilis (43),$44,400 70-68-72-72—282 MikeGoodes,$11,970 74-71-69—214 AndresGonzales (43), $44,400 66-74-70-72—282 Hale Ir 68-72-74—214 Colt Knost (43), $44,400 68-71-71-72—282 69-73-72—214 Cameron Percy(43),$44,400 69-70-70-73—282 72-68-74—214 Cameron Tringale (43), $44,400 69-69-73-71—282 71-73-70—214 AaronBaddeley(37), $33,300 68-73-72-70—283 68-73-73—214 CharlieBeljan(37), $33,300 68-72-70-73—283 73-69-72—214 Brendon deJonge(37), $33,30072-71-70-70—283 73-69-72—214 72-70-71-70—283 JarrodLyle(37), $33,300 74-69-72—215 Jeff Overton (37), $33,300 70-71-67-75—283 69-72-74—215 Scott Pinckney (37), $33,300 71-70-70-72—283 RobertStreb(37), $33,300 74-68-74-67 —283 75-69-71—215 Cameron Wilson,$33,300 71-68-74-70—283 69-73-73—215 Blayne Barber(29),$23,400 73-67-74-70—284 70-72-73—215 ChadCampbell (29), $23,400 69-72-70-73—284 70-74-71 —215 Graham DeLaet (29), $23,400 71-70-71-72—284 71-72-72—215 72-68-72-72—284 MaxHom a(29), $23,400 71-69-76—216 69-72-72-71 —284 JerryKelly(29), $23,400 77-70-69—216 JohnPeterson(29),$23,400 70-72-74-68—284 78-68-70—216 KyleReifers(29), $23,400 68-74-73-6M284 73-71-72—216 TrevorImm elman(22), $16,046 76-67-71-71—285 71-70-75—216 MarcLeishman(22), $16,046 69-73-71-72—285 73-69-75—217 DSumm erhays(22),$16,046 71-72-72-70—285 Erik Comp ton(22), $16,046 74-66-69-76—285 69-72-76—217 BriceGarnett(22), $16,046 71-70-70-74—285 76-66-75—217 JasonKokrak(22),$16,046 70-73-70-72—285 75-71-71—217 73-67-72-73—285 Danny Lee(22), $16,046 75-70-72—217 70-69-72-75—286 AdamHadwin (17),$13,890 75-69-73—217 MarkHubbard(17),$13,890 71-65-75-75—286 77-69-71—217 73-70-71-72—286 ChezReavie (17), $13,890 70-72-76—218 Shawn Stefani(17), $13,890 73-69-73-71—286 72-73-73—218 Tim Clark(12),$13,260 69-74-70-74—287 72-72-74—218 DerekErnst(12), $13,260 72-71-70-74—287 73-71-75—219 Chesson Hadley (12), $13,260 73-69-74-71—287 74-73-72—219 71-71-73-72 —287 CarlosOrtiz,$13,260 76-69-74—219 Carl Pettersson (12),$13,260 71-69-73-74—287 71-71-73-72—287 72-72-75—219 BrandtSnedeker(12), $13,260 JimmyWalker(8), $12,840 75-66-73-74—288 72-74-74—220 HarrisonFrazar(7), $12,720 71-71-71-76—289 74-73-73—220 StuartAppleby(5), $12,480 69-70-74-77—290 75-72-73—220 Bo Van Pelt (5),$12,480 73-70-74-73—290 71-74-76—221 Tim Wilkinson(5), $12,480 76-67-74-73—290 72-72-77—221 LukeGuthrie(2), $12,120 68-72-76-75—291 77-69-75—221 DavidHearn(2), $12,120 72-71-78-70—291 73-77-72—222 72-71-73-75—291 RusselKnox l (2), $12,120 77-73-72—222 CharlesHowell III (1),$11,820 73-67-75-77—292 77-75-71—223 SteveWheatcroft (1), $11,820 75-68-73-76—292 78-77-75—230 SamSaunders(1), $11,580 73-69-76-75—293 82-75-74—231 TyroneVanAswegen(1), $11,58068-72-77-76—293 73-83-77—233
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W EAT H E R
B9.0 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014
Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014 I
o
i
'
I
TODAY
rI
TONIGHT
HIGH TT'
Yesterday Normal Record 86' in 1991 19'in 1915
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" 0.49"in 1910 Record M onth to date (normal) D.o ooo(0.17oo) Year to date (normal ) 5.73 (7.34 ) Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 18"
O ct 30 N o v 6 Set 6: 2 6 p.m. 6: 2 4 p.m. 9 : 1 4 p.m. 4 : 0 7 p.m. 7: 5 4 p.m. 6 : 5 4 a.m.
9:59 a.m. 6:09 p.m.
Uranus
75/52
• 75/45
79/44
• EUgeile
65/55
65/ Gold ach W 49 MedfO d 81/
64/51
eums
76/50
Fields •
• Lakeview
76/42
H i/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty 66/51/0.02 67/53/r 63/50/r Ln Grande 60/51/Tr 68/39/s 69/43/c Ln Pine 79/57/0.00 64/51/s 59/51/r Me d fcr d 62/26/0.00 78/37/s 72/41/c Ne wport 71/45/0.00 74/51/pc 63/48/r No r th Bend 65/27/0.00 76/42/s 65/39/c O n tario 64/21/0.00 77/40/s 69/38/c Pe ndleton
Frenchglen
'75/38
,eo/49 IOamath • Ashl nd Falls
'
Bro ings
ercckings
• Ch ristmas alley Beaver Silver 76/41 Marsh Lake 74/41 76/44 • Paisley Chiloquin 77/46 •
Gra ra
'Baker C 68/39
tario 7 44
Valen 73/44
Nyssa
Juntura 73/41
76/41
74/41
79/51
62/
Baker City
~ 4~ N 2
77/40
Jordan V Hey 71/50
• Burns Jun tion • 77/49 Rome 78/47
Mcoermi 73/49
Yesterday Today Tuesday Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
city
Yesterday Today Tuesday Hi/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W
63/ 48/0.01 72/46/s 70/43/c 66/29/0.00 74/42/s 61/39/c 76/4 1 /0.00 80/49/s 67/46/r 64/5 2 /0.00 65/55/pc 61/51/r 72 / 50/0.00 66/55/pc 63/52/r 68/45/0.01 74/44/s 75/48/pc 67/ 5 0/0.00 77/50/s 70 /47/c
Portland Prineviiie Redmond Rnseburg Salem Sisters The Dalles
65/5 1/0.1172/55/pc 63/52/r 64/ 3 8/0.0079/44/s 61/42/c 68 / 33/0.0081/44/s 66/41/c 77/ 4 7/0.0079/51/pc 64/49/c 69/48/0.00 74/52/pc 64/50/r 66/35/0.00 79/43/s 64/40/c 71 / 50/0.0177/51/s 64/49/c
Eugene Klamnth Falls Lnkeview Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shnwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-rnin, sf-snnwflurries, sn-snnwi-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data ssnf 5 p.m. yesterday
35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exireme.
POLLEN COUNT T r ee s Ab s ent
•
Cresce t • 76/42
72/43 EnterPrise • • 70/44
• John uu Day 1/41 74/ 5 0
• Pa lina
city
JosePh Grande • Union
n Se d Brothers 74 46 Su iVern 77/45 u 75/ 2 • La pine Ham ton e Grove Oakridge • Burns 76/51 51 • Fort Rock Riley 78/37 Roseburg
Wee d s Abs e nt
NATIONAL WEATHER
Source: OregonAiiergyAssccistus 541-683-1577
~ tos ~os ~ o s WATER REPORT NATIONAL As of 7 n.m.yesterday Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES (for the C rane Prairie 301 3 6 54% YESTERDAY 25'yo 48 contiguousstates) Wickiup 49057 Crescent Lake 5 6 8 87 65% National high: 103 Ochoco Reservoir 15075 34% at Death Valley,CA Prinevige 87164 59% National low: 21 River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. at Lakeview, OR
~ t o s ~ 203 ~ 30s ~dos ~50s ~e os ~7 08 ~e os ~9 0s ~toos ~ttos Cnlgn
h e 1/3
no/41 49/54
•
53/
d
sr'omnrck 72/55
• Billings
45/33
Port
e o
.d d d
Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 86/50/0.00 72/49/s Akron 66/35/0.00 72/62/c Albany 61/32/0.00 63/54/c Albuquerque 75/50/Tr 65/43/s Anchorage 44/37/0.20 47/32/pc Atlanta 85/68/0.05 82/66/pc Atlantic City 62/50/0.00 69/63/c Austin 78/62/Tr 76/48/I Baltimore 62/46/Tr 68/61/c Billings 59/47/0.12 63/45/s Birmingham 84/67/0.25 84/64/pc Bismarck 57/47/0.07 65/33/s Boise 62/46/0.00 72/51/s Boston 59/44/0.00 64/54/s Bridgeport, CT 62/45/0.00 65/60/c Buffalo 61/35/0.00 70/61/sh Burlington, VT 59/38/0.00 62/55/pc Caribou, ME 54/29/0.00 60/39/s Charleston, SC 87no/0.00 86/71/pc Charlotte 62/57/Tr 78/67/c Chattanooga 77/66/0.22 82/68/pc Cheyenne 47/44/0.04 55/37/s Chicago 63/38/Tr 69/60/r Cincinnati 64/46/0.00 78/66/sh Cleveland 66/32/0.00 72/61/c ColoradoSprings 59/44/0.02 59/34/s Columbia, Mo 61/49/0.02 69/52/r Columbia, SC 72/69/0.00 86/69/pc Columbus,GA 89/64/0.00 86/69/pc Columbus,OH 66/42/0.00 76/63/c Concord, NH 61/30/0.00 64/47/s Corpus Christi 86/67/0.11 89/59/I Dallas 75/52/Tr 71/52/r Dayton 68/40/0.00 76/65/c Denver 57/45/0.07 60/38/s Des Moines 56/43/Tr 61/50/r Detroit 60/35/0.00 72/61/sh Duluth 61/40/0.00 55/43/sh El Paso 84/55/0.00 74/47/s Fairbanks 36/29/0.15 37/22/c Fargo 59/46/0.03 65/38/pc Flagstaff 68/40/0.00 63/32/s Grand Rapids 63/34/0.00 71/62/sh Greenesy 59/37/0.00 64/50/r Greensboro 58/54/0.13 76/64/sh Harrisburg 64/39/0.00 65/60/sh Hsrffnrd, CT 63/34/0.00 64/55/c Helena 57/47/Tr 66/44/s Honolulu 89/76/0.01 stn68 Houston 87/65/0.35 81/55/1 Huntsville 76/66/1.20 83/64/pc Indianapolis 62/45/0.00 76/64/I Jackson, MS 87/69/Tr 86/56/1 Jacksonville 86/62/0.00 86/69/s
Hi/Lo/W 77/52/s 77/56/sh 74/61/c 70/46/s 43/30/pc 72/56/t 75/64/c 78/47/s 76/63/c 75/51/pc 73/54/r 69/38/s 77/50/pc 71/61/pc 72/63/pc 80/63/c 74/63/c 67/56/pc 86/68/t 81/61/t 72/57/t 71/43/s 66/49/r 68/53/r 75/55/r 73/41/s 56/46/r 86/65/t 74/55/1 73/55/r 71/54/pc 83/56/s 76/49/s 68/54/r 74/44/s 62/45/sh 69/55/r 60/37/pc 77/50/s 33/22/pc 65/39/s 71/36/s 69/53/r 56/46/r 76/64/1 75/64/c 74/61/pc 74/48/pc 88/77/pc 78/50/s 71/55/r 67/53/r 70/50/pc 86/67/t
Amsterdam Athens
65/52/r 76/61/s 64/50/pc 94/68/s
60/51/pc 76/62/s 66/52/pc 94/71/pc
62/41/s 80/69/s 69/57/pc 64/47/c 76/57/pc 74/56/pc 92/71/s 84/68/pc 60/41/pc 87/76/t 54/45/r 52/40/pc 65/48/t 90/61/s 86/73/s 68/59/pc 72/55/s 87/53/pc 69/59/pc 66/57/r 61/50/r 63/51/pc 89/78/t
68/44/s 79/68/pc 62/50/t 65/47/c 74/53/pc 77/63/pc
nfifnx 1/48
Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 216 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 906 Deschutes R.below Bend 79 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1410 Little Deschutes near LaPine 129 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 1 4 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 3 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 63 Crooked R.near Terrebonne 151 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 2
-
FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver Mod~erate ~ ~ Redmond/Madras ~M od ~erate ~ Sisters ~M o d~erate ~ Prinevige ~M o d~erate ~ La Pine/Gilchrist ~M od ~erate ~
p 41/3
'e
5
Source: USDA Forest Service
TWO MILLIONREADER IMPRESSIONS ... that get results!
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegss Lexington Lincoln Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Puorin Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
Providence Raleigh
94nO/s
82/66/s 67/40/pc
stn48
54/46/pc 53/43/sh 67/52/pc 90/59/s
85n5/s
69/59/c 70/54/pc 80/59/pc 69/60/pc 69/64/pc 59/48/r 63/48/t 88/78/t
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 51/47/0.82 50/41/pc 49/38/sh 59/51/Tr 60/48/r 63/43/sh 61/32/0.00 71/61/sh 68/53/r 89/68/0.00 82/59/s 86/63/s 75/54/Tr 82/66/c 71/55/1 67/39/0.03 61/45/r 67/36/pc 70/57/0.07 77/54/I 67/51/pc 81/67/0.00 85/64/s 78/62/pc 71/53/Tr 82/67/I 71/56/r 64/36/0.00 65/53/r 57/46/r 77/61/0.00 81/57/I 65/54/sh Sgnt/rr 88n8/pc 89/77/pc 58/38/0.01 65/58/r 62/48/r 61/42/0.00 59/47/sh 62/40/pc 77/58/0.05 88/73/0.16 63/48/0.00 64/44/0.00 66/61/Tr 75/48/0.00
83/62/pc 72/54/r 87/63/I 76/58/s
65/62/c 65/61/c tt/66/c 62/45/r 60/43/Tr 61/47/r 89/68/0.00 89//2/pc 103/69/0.00 95/67/s 58/40/0.03 74/60/I 64/46/0.00 67/62/c 94no/o'.oo 89/64/s 64/37/0.00 72/60/sh 63/36/0.00 63/50/s 63/39/0.00 63/53/s 61/57/0.01 80/67/c 50/46/0.35 61/33/s 71/46/0.00 82/49/s
Rapid City Reno Richmond 64/55/Tr Rochester, NY 60/33/0.00 Sacramento 91/60/0.00 St. Louis 62/48/0.05 Salt Lake City 61/50/Tr Ssn Antonio 84/63/Tr Ssn Diego 75/67/0.00 Ssn Francisco 91/59/0.00 Ssn Jose 87/56/0.00 Santa rc 67/45/0.01 Savannah 90/68/0.00 Seattle 64/53/0.00 Sioux Falls 63/43/0.01 Spokane 62/38/0.00 Springfield, Mo 65/53/Tr
74/66/c
75/65/c 79/68/pc 71/43/s
65/41/pc 89/73/t 94/66/s 66/51/r 77/66/c 92/67/s 80/61/c
69/57/pc 71/60/pc 79/68/t 71/42/s
78/48/pc 78/66/c 81/68/c 71/59/sh 82/64/c 91/57/s 79/58/pc 76/57/I 63/51/sh 64/45/s 77/54/s 80/54/I 83/54/s 78/65/s 76/66/pc 81/61/s 73/61/c 85/56/s 73/57/c 61/35/s 69/39/s 86n1/s 86/66/1 69/54/pc 60/51/r 63/40/r 64/36/pc 69/51/s 66/48/c 68/51/r 57/45/r sgn2/D.oo 90n4/pc 86/73/t 87/61/0.00 86/60/s 91/62/s 63/54/Tr 65/50/r 69/44/pc
Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC 65/53/0.00 71/67/c Wichita
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106/84/0.00 98/76/t 70/53/0.35 74/54/I Montreal 55/39/0.00 61/53/pc Moscow 55/45/0.22 58/42/c Nairobi 82/61/0.01 83/60/c sgng/0'.fo 89/78/t Nassau New Delhi 93/69/0.00 93no/pc Osaka 74/60/1.48 73/62/r Oslo 51/46/1.11 51/40/pc Ottawa 57/32/0.00 62/52/c Paris 61/48/0.22 64/48/pc Riu de Janeiro 73/66/0.00 91/72/s Rome 79/64/0.00 79/64/pc Santiago 81/43/0.00 80/53/pc Snn Paulo 95/63/0.00 91/66/s Ssppnrc 64/42/0.02 55/42/c Seoul 81/52/0.00 69/44/s Shanghai 76/65/0.10 71/52/pc Singapore 90/80/0.00 9Ong/c Stockholm 52/37/0.67 52/41/c Sydney 79/56/0.00 78/55/r Taipei 81/69/0.00 79/65/pc Tei Aviv 83/65/0.00 80/68/s Tokyo 66/53/0.04 70/67/r Toronto 54/36/0.00 64/58/c Vancouver 57/48/0.07 59/50/c Vienna 70/52/0.00 70/56/pc Warsaw 63/50/0.00 68/54/pc
99ns/s 67/44/I 74/59/c 49/42/c 82/58/c
gont/pc 77/67/I
67/52/pc 50/41/c 74/59/c 65/51/pc 83/72/c 79/66/pc 81/53/c 89/66/pc 50/46/r 65/45/s 70/53/pc 89/79/c 52/41/sh 65/54/r 76/65/pc 78/67/s
74/60/pc 74/62/c 59/47/r 68/53/pc 70/52/t
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61/48/0.60 81/57/0.00 • 72/51 Auckland 60/54/0.00 Baghdad 87/75/0.05 d 6/42 sok che n Bangkok 90/79/0.10 e Precipitation: 1.95" 44/4 55/3 ilndolpiun eeijing 64/51/0.00 % 'e xx w 'nn i < n l m 7/42 Beirut 81n2/0.00 at Corpus Christi, TX nh nhcloco • Don + ++ + + + X %X V . V .V. X X Berlin 63/56/0.00 sf/6f Ingfon QJI %vvw w w ox xxxx 40/3 u o * Lno V no Bogota 68/52/0.03 ' v. g y +v Q 82l/e * * 82/5 Budapest 72/50/0.00 60 48++>~ BuenosAires 73/48/0.00 * „* „* * . Lo s A n I oo Csbn SsnLucss 97/78/0.00 * * * * • '" ' • 62/46 • ~~ ~ ~ ~ k Cairo 84/67/0.00 Phoen ol'n ** Calgary 61/41/Tr * a * • Sg/Cin Albuquorqu Cnncun 88n5/0.09 ** * ** 3 n Dio 65/43 7 45 Sl Pn Dublin 57/34/0.00 Dnaoo < 4/4 Edinburgh 54/37/0.01 71/52' ~ ~ ~ +ov ' *' x Geneva 63/52/0.04 * *o Hsrnre • nn 0 87/64/0.00 + +o Orleans 'e'e 'e 'eX ~ Hong Kong 88/73/0.00 ' < < < < > <X . St/63 Honolulu Chihunhun .'e xot ~ . f Istanbul 66/63/0.02 etne 78/43 . v .v. 'e'ehh» Jerusalem 73/61/0.00 Monfo 'e x Yk x xQd + ~ Johannesburg 81/56/0.15 7 SS > v v v v '+ '+ '+ v '4 '+ n 'v Lima 66/61/0.00 Lisbon 63/61/0.61 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 59/43/0.53 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 68/55/0.02 Manila 84/77/0.15 4 3/45
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OREGON EXTREMES Co 66 5 YESTERDAY
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THE PLANETS T he Planets R i se Mercury 7:59 a.m. Venus 7:01 a.m. Mars 12:37 p.m. Jupiter 1:51 a.m. Saturn
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increase today.Some Yach 63/55
rain around tonight. Rain continues at times tomorrow.
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62' 41'
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72/5
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Today Tue. Sunrise 7:17 a.m. 7: 1 8 a.m. Sunset 6:25 p.m. 6: 2 3 p.m. Moonrise 10: 33 p.m. 11 :27 p.m. Moonset 1 2:42 p.m. 1:29 p.m. Ne w
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SUN ANDMOON
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TEMPERATURE 64 33'
THURSDAY
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WEDNESDAY
63' 41'
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cost effective advertising solution for your
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3.THE REDMOND SPOKESMAN Allcoupons will be includedin aholiday"Gift Guide"for all SubSC riberSOfOur RedmOnd Weekly. APPrOXimately 4100CO PieS,9,000readerS, On NOV. 26th.
2. THEBULLETIN ONTHANKSGIVING DAYThe mOStPO Pular editiOnOfthe hOliday SeaSOn.COuPOnS 4. THE NICKELAll couponswil runasaspecial Will be rePrintedOnaSPeCial hOliday"WraP"that section wrap inthisfree rackdistribution shopper COntainS five SeaSOnal inSertS. All COuPOnSWill be which isdistributed throughout CentralandEastern in full COIO r andPrinted OnaneleCtrobrite PaPer.
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014 •
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Ads starting as low as
Call for package rates
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Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
:'hours:
contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
. Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.
. .Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad
T he
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
B u g I e t I n:
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Furniture & Appliances
Coins & Stamps
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Computers
Misc. Items
Building Materials
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
$75 541-610-6158
Want to Buy or Rent
Private collector buying postagestamp albums 8 Capstan Rope Winch collections, world-wide (new) $275., Royal and U.S. 573-286-4343 Throne Tent $ 70., (local, cell phone). many more hunting items. Call for details. 240 Culver area ~ Crafts & Hobbies 541-325-6193
The Bulletin Cralters Wanted recommends extra FinalOpenJury CASHfor wood Mon., Oct. 20th, 6:00pm dressers & dinette sets. I oa to n o e n p r Highland Baptist Church, chasing products or • 541-420-5640 Redmond. services from out of I 206 Tina 541-447-1640 or 8 the area. Sending 8 www.enowflakeboutique.org Pets & Supplies • cash, c hecks, o r • l credit i n f o rmation 241 Adopt a rescued cat or may be subjected to Bicycles & kitten! Altered, vacci- l FRAUD. For more nated, ID chip, tested, information about an g Accessories more! CRAFT, 65480 advertiser, you may l 78th St, Bend, Sat/ / call t h e Or e gon / Sun 1-5. 3 8 9-8420' State Atto r ney ' www.craftcats.org. l General's O f fi ce Aussie miniature, 1 blk & Consumer Protec- • h o t line at I white male left, 1st shots, tion tails docked, wormed, i 1-877-877-9392. $300. 541-771-0956 Beach Cruiser > TheBulletin > LACustom Chihuahua, 10-wk. male, Serving Central Oregon since tgpa made, sweet disposition, shots one of a kindup to date, potty training. no 2 alike! 212 $250. 541-610-2083 Excellent condition. Antiques & Fun, fun, fun! Chihuahua pups, pureCollectibles bred lonq hair, parents on $850. site, $300. 541-420-9474 541-749-8720 Antique china hutch, Free to approved ma$100 obo. ture home, 7-year-old Medium full-suspension 541-480-4296 spayed female rag Solo Santa Cruz Mtn racdoll Siamese indoor Antiques wanted: tools, inq bike,qood cond,must furniture, sports gear, sell, $3000. 541-480-2652 only, and no other pets. 541-408-4566. early B/W photography, advertising, beer cans... 242 German Shepherds 541-389-1578 Exercise Equipment www.sherman-ranch.us Quality Germans. 541-281-6829 Treadmill, Pro-Form XP550E, exlnt cond, $100. 541-408-2535
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Argus 300 slide projector Model German Shorthair 111 Series. also Pups-AKC.1 fem,3 slides of Drake Park, males. 541-306-9957 local camping/huntGerman Shorthair pure- ing/fishing trips and bred puppies, g reat Alaska - in hunting dogs! 2 females 1950's-1960s. $75 left, ready to go 10/10. obo. 541-419-6408 $450. 541-728-1004 Huge sale Oct. 18-19, 8-4 to benefit CRAFT n cat rescue! Donations of items needed, tax g' deductible. Also need dep. cans/bottles for cat spay/neuter pro- Circa 1950 eCastleton gram (ongoing). At big J une" C h in a s e t . barn, 8950 S. Hwy 97, Serves 8 ... just in Redmond, 2 mi. N of time for the Holidays!! Tumalo Rd. 419-7885. 541-419-8900. Lab AKC, 3 blk m, OFA vet/vx/chip. $800. CH FT lines. 541-480-4835 Queensland Heelers Standard & Mini, $150 8 up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor HO Scale Train Set. circa 1950 incl. tracks dpress.com & transformer, locomoScotty puppies, reserve tive, 13 cars & scenery. now! Mom & dad on site, $300. 541-419-8900 1st shots. 541-771-0717
• G olf Equipment
Callawav X-12 graphite, 3-lob, $100. Big Berthagraphite fairway metals, 3-13, $40 each. Lady Callaway graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 metals, $100. Lady TaylorMade Miscelas graphite, 7-SW, driver-7 wood, $100. (2) Sun Mountain Speed Carts, $75 ea. 541-382-6664 CHECK YOURAD
Pm
®
on the first day it runs to make sure it is corn rect. Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, Mahogany GlassChina corrections and any 2 boys, beautiful! Shots, Closet, 68nH x 39 nW x can be potty training, health quar. 16 nD, 3 d r awers, adjustments glass front d o ors, made to your ad. $1100. 541-777-7743 541-365-5809 good shape. $425. 210 The Bulletin Classified 541-382-6773 Furniture & Appliances A1 Washers8 Dryers $150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
Qr ! ag d I e r
210
Sofa 3-pce blue sectional, heavy f oam cushions. Exc. cond. $170. 541-389-1922 Wingback chair, o ff white light blue stripes, 202
1 7 7 g S W.
Pump Organ, ¹11948 built in 1870 by New
England Organ Co. IT WORKS!
Couch, black leather w/ 2 recliners, like new. $400 obo. 541-408-0846 G ENERATE SOM E EXCITEMENT in your neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809.
Beautiful carved cabinet. In 1878, it took 2nd place in Sydney, Australia. Was presented to a minister after his service in the Civil War. $600.
King Bed and mattress set,Sleep Comfort massager, includes linens, and electric blanket, $800 obo 541-516-8578
The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.
541-385-4790
The Bulletin gervtngCentral Oregonsince fgte
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Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
200 rds factory 25acp, $100. 200 rds 38 spl, $100. 541-647-7950
reBUYING 4 Brand new Milgard quires computer ad- Lionel/American Flyer single hung vinyl clad trains, accessories. ThompsonContender vertisers with multiple windows. 4'x5', retail BarkTurfSoil.com 541-408-2191. istol w/2 barrels: 44 ad schedules or those $259/ea, $500 for all em Mag/Gen1 with selling multiple sys4. 541-419-8249 PROMPT DELIVERY BUYING & SE LLING Bushnell scope & carry tems/ software, to dis- All 541-389-9663 gold jewelry, silver La Pine Habitat case; & 22 LR match close the name of the gold coins, bars, RESTORE with Bushnell scope & business or the term and carry case, $850. "dealer" in their ads. rounds, wedding sets, Building Supply Resale For newspaper rings, sterling silQuality at Savage Mod. 116 .300 Private party advertis- classcoin CASH!! collect, vindelivery call the Win Mag, stainless LOW PRICES ers are defined as ver, For Guns, Ammo & tage watches, dental Circulation Dept. at steel w/scope 8 case, 52684 Hwy 97 those who sell one gold. Bill Reloading Supplies. Fl e ming, 541-385-5800 541-536-3234 $550. computer. 541-408-6900. 541-382-9419. To place an ad, call Mossberg300A 12Ga Open to the public . 541-385-5809 with 2 barrels: one 22" 257 CRYPT at Deschutes or email modified; & one IONNff IS%5 Memorial G a r den claggifiedObendbulletin.com Musical Instruments Natural gas Ruud 181/2", $250. Meadow Pond space tankless water Background check The Bulletin 4D4 - dbl depth lawn heater, brand new! required. Please call gervtngCentral Oregonsince fgte DO YOU HAVE crypt, full grave for 2. 199 BTU, $1600. 541.389.3694, Iv msg. SOMETHING TO B uyer w il l ne e d SELL Newton CE5.2 cordless granite & bronze dbl In Sunriver area. FOR $500 OR electric mower, exc cond, i nterment ma r k er 530-938-3003 Wanted: Collector seeks LESS? $100. 541-408-2535 high quality fishing items plus interment costs. Non-commercial 8 upscale bamboo fly $1500 For more info Troy-Bilt PonY rototiller, advertisers may 2009 Beautiful rods. Call 541-678-5753, c all K e l lie Al l e n New Trex Select 2x6s electric start, exclnt cond, place an ad Lowrey Full 20' Bundle -$1400' $500. 541-312-2448 or 503-351-2746 541-382-5592 or with our Adventurer II Organ 541 706 1331 seller, 207-582-0732 "QUICK CASH Absolutely perfect 270 Wanted: high-quality Prineville Habitat SPECIAL" condition, not a Wanted- paying cash hunting dog shock Lost & Found ReStore 1 week3lines 12 scratch on it, about for Hi-fi audio & stucollar. 541-408-0014 oi' Building Supply Resale 4-feet wide, does dio equip. Mclntosh, 1427 NW Murphy Ct. Found Bull Terrier mix everything! Includes ~oeeke ao! JBL, Marantz, Dy247 541-447-6934 brindle w it h w h i te Ad must a nice bench, too. naco, Heathkit, Sanmarkings, at Gordy's Open to the public. include price of $650obo. Sporting Goods sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Truck Stop. La Pine 541-385-5685 e~nle tem oi gooo Call 541-261-1808 Misc. 267 541-948-0097 or less, or multiple items whose total Fuel & Wood 263 FOUND gps Unit, hand Kayak, very fast, won Back to School SALE! does not exceed Family Division of PPP. 25%-35% OFF held, near Waldo lake, Tools $500. $200. 541-593-0312 all music equipment. sund. oct 5, call to ID. WHEN BUYING Bend Pawn & Trading Co. C ommercial Susie 5413503748 Delt a Call Classifieds at FIREWOOD... 61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend Unifence table saw, 541-385-5809 FOUND GPS unit, hand 541-317-5099 To avoid fraud, e xtended ben c h , www.bendbulletin.com held, near Waldo lake, The Bulletin router, new lift, comSun., Oct 5, call to ID. Harp- $1500 Lyon & piete grip m a ster. recommends paySusie 541-350-3748 Healy Troubadour III Many extras. $1500. ment for Firewood 541-554-3157 only upon delivery Lost 2 fly reels on Cen541-923-6427 and inspection. Like new Necky EsDrive, returning from • A cord is 128 cu. ft. tury Crane Prairie 10/2. Rekia 16' kayak with 4' x 4' x 8' rudder. Bulkheads ward! 541-678-5753 • Receipts should water tight. Seat like include name, LOST: Military ID. new. Hatches, deck • New, never fired phone, price and CASH REWARD! lines and grab loops Weatherby Vankind of wood 503-348-1846 all in perfect condiSPINET PIANO guardS2, synthetic purchased. tion. Orig i nally Shopsmith 1973 Fayett S Gable stock, cal 30-06.$550. • Firewood ads $1450, asking $700 made by Everett & with bandsaw, • New, never fired MUST include obo. P lease c a l l excellent condition. Sons, excellent conHowa,wood stock, cal species 8 cost per REMEMBER:If you 541-312-2435. dition, recently Customized extras. .300 Win Mag.$725 cord to better serve have lost an animal, Retired shop Must pass backtuned. sounds great! our customers. don't forget to check ground check. Please teacher; $1000 The Humane Society 251 541-385-8367 don't need anymore! call 541.389.3694, The Bulletin Bend leave message. Pictures available. ServingCennal Oregon sincetgte Hot Tubs & Spas 541-382-3537 $400. Redmond 260 Call 541-598-6486 Hot Spring 4 - person All yearDependable 541-923-0882 Spa, Salt Water (water Misc.ltems Remington 11-87 Firewood: Seasoned; Madras Police 12ga with rifle feels great & n e yer Lodgepole, split, del, 541-475-6889 Check out the sights, $700. Baikal needs chemicals). Like Buying Dlamonds Prineville B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 new, used only 3 times. classifieds online /Gold for Cash Bounty Hunter 12 541-447-7178 condition forces Saxon's Fine Jewelers www.bendbulletin.com or 2 for $365. Call for ga, 20" double bar- Medical multi-cord discounts! or Craft Cats sale. 916-812-01 76 541-389-6655 rels with screw-in Updated daily 541-420-3484. 541-389-8420. chokes, $350. Caldwell Lead Sled DFR rifle rest, SOLD! Ruger 10/22 with 3x9 scope, SOLD! All like new! 541-550-7189
Sage Rodw/Tioga reel, $225. Custom TFO rodwith Redington reel, $200.
Simms waders, men's Lg, worn once, $200; ladies small, new in box, $175. Simms boots,men's 13, used once, $100; ladies 9, new in box, $100.Simms wading stick,new, $50. Fishpond chest pack,$50. 541-382-6664
THE LAW AND LOGIC O F A RMED S E LF DEFENSE - 7 p.m., Oct. 23. Taught by a lawyer and p o lice 300 rnds of factory .380 ammo, $190. trainer. $65. C lass 541-647-7950 size limited. Sign up at Double Tap Fire550 rnds o f f a ctory arms (541-977-0202). 9mm ammo, $200. 541-647-7950 Where can you find a helping hand? Bend local pays CASH!! for all firearms & From contractors to ammo. 541-526-0617 yard care, it's all here Bird hunting in Condon, in The Bulletin's OR - 2014. Also big "Call A Service game hunting access in 2015. 541-384-5381 Professional" Directory 250 rds of .357 mag ammo, $160. 541-647-7950
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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction 763 is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right 1-877-877-9392. Recreational Homes to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these & Property newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. will loan on real es- Cabin adj. to F.S. Iand tate equity. Credit, no 8 mi. from Sisters, mtn 286 341 476 476 view, horse corral, problem, good equity 1/7th share $49,500. Sales Northeast Bend Horses & Equipment Employment Employment is all you need. Call 541-928-6549 or Oregon Land MortOpportunities Opportunities 503-260-9166 gage 541-388-4200.
** FREE **
Horseshoeing Tools
860
870
870
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories Boats & Accessories REDUCED!
16' Driftboat Alumaweld Oars, anchor, engine mount, and trailer. $2950.
541-546-7144 Harley D a v idson 2006, FXDLI Dyna Low Rider, Mustang seat with backrest, new battery, windshield, forward controls,lots of chrome, Screamin' Eagle exhaust, 11K mi. Se17.5' Seaswirl 2002 nior owned, w e ll Wakeboard Boat maind! $7950 L a I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Pine (928)581 -91 90 tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. Harley Davidson $12,500 541-815-2523 2008 FXDL Dyna Low Rider-Only 3200mi. Stage 1 & 2 Vance & Hines pipes, detachable windshield, new battery. Includes assorted Harley gear/ clothes. Clear title. $20,000 invested19' Pioneer ski boat, Reducedto $10,500. 1983, vm tandem 541-306-01 66 trailer, V8. Fun & fast! $5800 obo. 541-815-0936.
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $18,000orbest offer. 541-318-6049
Harley Davidson 883 Sportster 1998, 20,200 miles,
exc. cond.,
$3,800.
2006 Bayllner 185 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio 8 Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345.
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours,
original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500 503-646-1804
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
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Watercraft ds published in eWa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal
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The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincergia
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Motorhomes
2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras.Asking $58K. Ph. 541-447-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prineville.
Alfa See Ya 2006 36' Excellent condition, 1 owner, 350 Cat diesel, 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, icemaker, gas stove, oven, washer/dryer, non-smokert 3 sbdes, generator, invertor, leather interior, satellite, 7'4e ceiling. Clean!$75,000. 541-233-6520
775 Look at: CAUTION: © s U B ARU 541-548-2872. Manufacturedl Ads published in Bendhomes.com "Employment O p - Sales Mobile Homes for Complete Listings of professional to portunities" include Sales Join Central Area Real Estate for Sale New Dream Special employee and indeOregon's l a r gest 3 bdrm, 2 bath pendent positions. 2008 11'x2' Zodiak like ca r de a ler LOCAL MONEy:Webuy $50,900 finished Ads for p o sitions new new ActiV hull safe secured trust deeds & Subaru of B e nd. on your site. that require a fee or KIT INCLUDES: note, some hard money lock canister, 15HP Offering 401k, profit J andM Homes • 4 Garage Sale Signs upfront investment loans. Call Pat Kelley Yamaha wl t r olling Harley Fat Boy 2002 sharing, me d ical 541-548-5511 • $2.00 Off Coupon To must be stated. With 541-382-3099 ext.13. 14k orig. miles.. Explate, 6 gal Transom plan, split shifts and use Toward Your any independentjob 541-430-4449 cellent cond. Vance & tank, less 30 hrs, 2 paid vacation. ExpeNext Ad opportunity, please Hines exhaust, 5 chest seats, full Bimini rience or will train. • 10 Tips For "Garage i nvestigate tho r spoke HD rims, wind :g. top, Transom wheels, Allegro 32' 2007, like 90 day $1500 guarSale Success!" oughly. Use extra e rise handle vest, 12 cover, RV's special. new, only 12,600 miles. a ntee. Dress f o r caution when apbars, detachable lug$5500. 541-923-6427 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Good classified adstell success. P l e ase plying for jobs ongage rack wl back PICK UP YOUR the essential facts in an transmission, dual exapply at 2060 NE line and never prorest, hwy pegs & many People Lookfor Information haust. Loaded! Auto-levGARAGE SALE KIT at interesting Manner.Write Hwy 20, Bend. See vide personal inforchrome accents. Must About Products and eling system, 5kw gen, 1777 SW Chandler from the readers view -not Bob or Devon. see to appreciate! mation to any source Services EveryDaythrough power mirrors w/defrost, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 the seller's. Convert the $10,500. In CRR area you may not have The Bulletin Classiffarfs 2 slide-outs with awinto benefits. Show call 530-957-1865 researched and nings, rear c a mera, The Bulletin thefacts 860 Servrng Cenrraf Cregon since talB reader howthe item will deemed to be repuService Technician 632 20' 1978 Thomson with trailer hitch, driyer door help them insomeway. table. Use extreme Terminix, a growing Apt./Multiplex General Motorcycles & Accessories window, cruise, trailer, 205 Mercury w/power HDFatBo 1996 This c aution when r e exhaust brake, central pest control comHuge sale Oct.18-19, engine, transom re1985 Harley Davidson advertising tip s ponding to A N Y satellite sys. Asking pany is hiring! Com8-4 to benefit CRAFT! placed, low mileage, vac, CHECK yOUR AD 1200C with S portster brought toyouby online employment petitive pay, medical $67,500. 503-781-8812 Please donate items, $500. 541-549-8747 frame and '05 Harley ad from out-of-state. & r etirement protax deductible, will crate motor. Rat Rod The Bulletin We suggest you call Sa g Ca I al Onge s cetata gram. Must have: pick up large amts. look, Screaming Eagle the State of Oregon clean driving record; Help needed at sale, tips, leather saddlebags, Consumer Hotline ability to pass drug too! 8950 S. Hwy 97, Horse stalls, pasture 8 at 1-503-378-4320 e xtras. S acrifice a t Completely test; bac k ground Redmond, 2 mi. N of arena. Owner care. For Equal Opportu$4000. Call Bill Logsdon, Rebuilt/Customized check and state lion the first day it runs 458-206-8446 (in Bend). Tumalo Rd. 419-7885. F amily ranch S W nity Laws c ontact 2012i2013 Award censing exams. Will to make sure it ise corRedmond. $150/mo. e Oregon Bureau of Winner 541-207-2693. train right candidate. rect. Spellcheck and What are you Showroom Condition Labor & I n dustry, Complete an applihuman errors do ocC all 54 /-385-580 9 Civil Rights Division, Many Extras Just bought a new boat? looking for? cation at 4 0 SE cur. If this happens to to r o m ot e o u r service 971-673- 0764. Low Miles. Sell your old one in the Bridgeford Bl v d ., your ad, please conYou'll find it in classifieds! Ask about our Bend. 541-382-8252. tact us ASAP so that $15,000 The Bulletin Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Super Seller rates! 541-548-4807 corrections and any Serving Central Oregon sinceSie The Bulletin Classifieds 541-385-5809 adjustments can be 541-385-5809 NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landmade to your ad. law requires anyone scape Contractors Law Get your 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all • Sl , Add your web address The Bulletin Classified business construction work to businesses that adto your ad and readbe licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Senior Apartmenters on The Bullefin's 325 Construction Contrac- Landscape ConstrucIndependent Living web site, www.benda ROWI N G tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Hay, Grain & Feed ALL-INCLUSIVE HD FXSBI 2006 new bulletin.com, will be Silverado 2001 5th active license p lanting, deck s , with 3 meals daily cond., low miles, able to click through wheel 3-horse trailer with an ad in means the contractor fences, arbors, 1st Quality mixed grass Month-to-month lease, Stage I download, exautomatically to your 29'x8', deluxe showhay, no rain, barn stored, 2001 Honda Goldwing tras, bags. $7900 obo. is bonded & insured. water-features, and inThe Bulletin's check it out! website. man/semi living 1800cc w/2005 CaliVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir$250/ton. Call 541-460-5323 541-447-0887 "Call A Service CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be Call 541-549-3831 quarters, lots of exfornia side car trike www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Patterson Ranch, Sisters tras. Beautiful condiProfessional" conversion, 40K ace•e 656 S UBA R U contractor.com Landscape Contraction. $21,900. OBO tual miles, every op~ Directory Houses for Rent Premium orchard grass, 541-420-3277 tion imaginable! CD, HD Softtail Deuce 2002, or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit Auto -Sales barn stored no rain, SW Bend Sales professional to AM/FM, cruise, has 5' broken back forces The Bulletin recom- number is to be in1st cutting $225, 2nd Hrake, side rails, some sale, only 200 mi. on mends checking with cluded in all adverJoin Central 3 bedroom 2 bath, dbl $250, delivery avail. Oregon's l a r gest riding gear. Well sernew motor from Har- the CCB prior to con- tisements which indiCall 541-420-9158 or viced. Iocated in Mt. new ca r d e a ler caution when pur- garage, 1450 sq ft, natual ley, new trans case tracting with anyone. cate the business has 541-948-7010. gas. $1350/mo.; $1500 Subaru of B e n d. Vernon, OR. Trailer and p a rts, s p o ke Some other t rades a bond, insurance and chasing products or I security dep. 1473 SW req u ire addi- workers c ompensaOffering 401k, profit optional.$22,500. wheels, new brakes, also licenses and tion for their employQuality Orchard/Mixed sharing, m e d ical services from out of e Wheeler. 541-815-4185 541-350-5050 n early all o f bi k e tional ees. For your protecarea. Sending Grass hay, between plan, split shifts and l the brand new. Has proof certifications. ash, checks, o r 663 tion call 503-378-5909 Bend & Redmond. of all work done. Repaid vacation. Expe- l ccredit or use our website: i n f ormation $230/ton, small bales. Houses for Rent rience or will train. movable windshield, Debris Removal www.lcbistate.or.us to Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 90 day $1500 guar- l may be subjected to T-bags, black and all Madras check license status FRAUD. a ntee. Dress f o r chromed out with a JUNK BE GONE before contracting with 421 success. P l e ase For more informa- I 3 bdrm/1ya bath home in willy skeleton theme I Haul Away FREE the business. Persons Looking for your tion about an adver- • country about 3 mi. from 2005 HD Heritage SoftSchools & Training apply at 2060 NE on all caps and covdoing lan d scape For Salvage. Also next employee? Hwy 20, Bend. See l tiser, you may call Madras on 1 acre. Avail. Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of ers. Lots o f w o rk, Cleanups maintenance do not & Cleanouts the Oregon State extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt Place a Bulletin Bob or Devon. $1000 mo, 1st/last. heart and love went DTR Truck School r equire an LC B l i l Attorney General's 11/1. cond., $9750 firm Mel, 541-389-8107 help wanted ad 541-815-9253 into all aspects. All REDMOND CAMPUS cense. 541-318-8668 e Office C o n s umer e today and Our Grads GetJobs! done at professional Advertise your car! l Protection hotline atl reach over 1-888-438-2235 shops, call for info. Handyman I 1-877-877-9392. Add APicturel 60,000 readers WWW.11TR.EDU Must sell quickly due Banl &RaRs Reach thousands oi readers! TURN THE PAGE t o m e d ical bi l l s, each week. I DO THAT! Call 541-385-5809 LThe Bulletin g Pm Wh $8250. Call Jack at For More Ads Your classified ad 470 Home/Rental repairs The Bulletin Classifieds 541-279-9538. will also Small jobs to remodels The Bulletin Domestic & appear on Honest, guaranteed In-Home Positions NEWSPAPER bendbulletln.com work. CCB¹151573 Harley Davidson which currently Dennis 541-317-9768 2001 FXSTD, twin T herapeutic Fos t e r recelves over cam 88, fuel injected, Parents are urgently 1.5 million page Vance & Hines short needed for youth in Landscaping/Yard Care 713 views every shot exhaust, Stage I your community! Work The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and enHONDA SCOOTER Serving Central with Vance & Hines month at no from home part-time thusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to Real Estate Wanted 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. Oregon Since 2003 fuel management extra cost. and get reimbursed join a staff that covers the wide range of comcond., $975 obo. (541) Residental/Commercial system, custom parts, Bulletin u p t o $ 1 800 p e r petitive and recreational activities for which our • WE BUY HOMES• 593-9710 or 350-8711 extra seat. month for each youth region is famous. Any conditionClassifleds Z~oe~ gnalup Sprinkler $10,500 OBO. Close in 7 days. in your care (max 2). Get Results! L'acarg ge e y<o. Call Today KAWASAKI Scott L. Williams Real BIOIN-Out Contact us for more Call 541-385-5809 We are seeking a reporter who can cover ev- Estate - 800-545-6431 541-516-8684 KLX125, 2003, Sprinkler Repair information! or place your ad MANAGING erything from traditional sports to the offbeat good condition. 1-888-MSOREGON on-line at and extreme, with particular emphasis on comCentral Oregon $1100. Malntenance WWW.MAPLEbendbulletin.com General 541-593-8748 munity (participation) sports and preps. NecesLANDSCAPES STAROR.ORG • Fall Clean up sary skills include feature writing, event cover- The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturSince 2006 •Weekly Mowing age, and the ability to work well on deadline. A day night shift and other shifts as needed. We Yamaha V-Star, 250cc & Edging NEWSPAPER college degree is required. Reporting experi- currently have openings all nights of the week. 2011 motorcycle, new Fall Clean Up •Bi-Monthly & Monthly ence, polished writing skills and a track record Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts custom seat for rider, Don't track it in all Winter Maintenance start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and of accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of vinyl coating on tank, •Leaves the duties of this position require evening and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo•Cones 2 helmets included. ~Landaaa in sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. weekend availability. • Needles Gets 60mpg, and has •Landscape Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a The Bulletin is seeking a sports-minded journal• Debris Hauling 3,278 miles. Construction of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts ist to join our sports staff as a part-time preps Also important is the ability to conceptualize the minimum Asking $4700, firm. •Water Feature are short (t f:30 t:30). The work consists of multimedia components that might complement assistant. Duties include taking phone and email Winter Prep Installation/Maint. loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack- Call Dan 541-550-0171 information from sources and generating con- stories, including video, audio and slide show •Pruning •Pavers product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup 865 cise accounts of local high school sports events. elements. Experience using social media sites, ing •Renovations .Aerating and other tasks. For qualifying employees we Hours vary; must be available to work week- including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred. ATVs •Fertilizing •Irrigations Installation offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, nights and Saturdays. Interpersonal skills and & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Senior Discounts professional-level writing ability are essential, as The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned short-term and sick time. Drug test is required Compost are a sports background and a working knowl- newspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 sur- vacation Bonded & Insured prior to employment. rounded by snow-capped mountains and home Applications 541-815-4458 edge of traditional high school sports. to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a Use Less Water LCB¹8759 Please submit a completed application attendrug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an $$$ SAVE $$$ tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment employer. Pre-employment drug screening is Improve Plant Health at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanrequired prior to hiring. drug screen required. H onda Bi g R e d Painting/Wall Covering dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be UTV. Like new with 2015 Maintenance obtained upon request by contacting Kevin To apply, please email cover letter, resume To apply, please emailresume and any just over 40 hours ALL AMERICAN Package Avallable Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). and writing samples to: relevant writing samples to: use. Includes winch, PAINTING No phone calls please. Only completed applis ortsre orter@bendbulletin.com s ortsassistant@bendbulletin.com 5-foot snow blade, Interior and Exterior EXPERIENCED cations will be considered for this position. No hard roof, half windFamily-owned resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reCommercial No phone inquiries please. No phone inquiries please. shield. L i sts over Residential & Commercial quired prior to employment. EOE. & Residential 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts $14,000; will sell for 5-vear warranties b est o ff e r ove r Senior Discounts The Bulletin FALL SPECIAL! $11,000. Call Serving Cenrral Oregon sinceiaea 541-390-1466 Call 541-337-6149 541-575-4267 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 5erving Central Oregon since 1903 Same Day Response CCS ¹t 93960
Garage Sale Kit
Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!
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.
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCT 13, 2014
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B
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Spingold drama By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Near the end o f t h e S p i ngold Knockout Teams final at the Summer NABC, the multinational team led by Richard Schwartz held a 4-IMP lead — like an extra point in footballover favored "Team Monaco." At both tables in t oday's deal, North's two clubs artificially showed a spade fit. At one table, South for SCHWARTZ jumped straight to four spades. West led the ten of clubs: deuce, six, ace. South led a trump to dummy and a heart to his queen. West won but failed to find a diamond shift, so South made thegame.
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35 Word before limits or space 36 Home for a bird 39 Home for the Heat 42 Dermatologist's concern 43 In front 45 Prophet whose name sounds like a mineral 47 "Trip to somewhere you've been before 50 "I need a short break," in chat rooms 53 Brit. bigwigs 54 Vote of approval 55 Explosive initials 56 Egg cells 57 Either "Bye Bye
Love" brother
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parts 58 Exceptionally 59 2014, for one 61 Hurt 62 Salesstaff
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27
28
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50
51
52
19 22
31
26 32
33
34
35
38
39
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T N E A T T R O O I N S E D S O D I E E C R C K O P S U N E P E T P L A Y L
16
25
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employee 63 J ima 64 Quickness of mind
ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
17
36
answers to the starred clues?
40 Fine spray
15
30
and for the
in?" 38 Exacts revenge
5
20
51 Place for Winnebagos ...
37 "Can I get a word
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60 Comprehends 62 *Selling point of a home on the 62 63 Hudson, say 66 65 Take the part of 66 Fancy pitcher 69 67 Actor Morales
68 Mowing the lawn, e.g.
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36 Fish that complains a lot?
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By Carol Hacker ©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
10/13/14
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C6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2014•THE BULLETIN
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