Bulletin Daily Paper 09-14-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q

SUNDAY September14,2014

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COMMUNITY LIFE• C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

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Insurance renewalHave a plan through the health exchange?You'll probably be back online this year.Al

• Salem's legislative leadersredirect their donations to vulnerable seats — expect lots of moneyto movesoon By Taylor W.Anderson

twt —, NOVEMBER 'Flushable' wipes — They

~

may makeyou feel fresh and clean, but they're gumming up sewer systems.A6

ELE CTION

Mufe traVel —Visiting Berlin, 25 years after the fall of the wall.C3

SALEM — A donation to

benfibulletin.cem/electiens

OpetION

leaders in either chamber of of cash spread across Demthe state Legislature. ocratic and Republican

The Bulletin

F)

05IA

ffo safp. haven

State leadership tends to

House Republican Leader Mike McLane this year very likely means a donation to any Republican candidate — as is true for

give generously to candidates who are considered

any donation to Democratic

expected to bring a flurry

McLane, R-Powell Butte,

who's running unopposed

networks.

this election, has given $247,450 in 2014 to other GOP candidates and the

Some campaignfinance expertssay therolesofparty and legislative leaders have been expected to prop

vulnerable in election

years. Whatever the case, the next six weeks are

Promote Oregon Leadership PAC, the campaign

up weaker candidates over the past decade.

arm of House Republicans. See Cash/A4

< Inside:Whatthe candidates for BendCity Council sayabout the future of Mirror Pond, F1

Star-spangled biceutennial —The national anthem turns 200 today.A3

Plus: NewcitizensThirteen people takethe oath in Redmond.B1

u0 an i

Ducks' mascot is no Mickey Mouse

e cour room in

1S ie

By John Branch New Yorh Times

EUGENE — The

And a Wedexclusive

Oregon Duck — the Duck — was onstage, sittingbetween four

— An online crusader takes up the cause of food safety against China's fake meat. benfibelletin.cem/extras

Inside

menin

• Game while coverage, u1 a jaunty hat, aneckerchief and

EDITOR'5CHOICE

4"e 3.

Whyvideo evidence prompts a response

no pants. The Duck poumi Froot Loops and milk and apound of sugarinto abowl, thenpretendedto eat it. Crystals of sugar cascadedbecause, of course,the Duckhas nolips. "College GameDay," ESPN's travelingpregame show, was on campus Sept. 6for No. 3 Oregon's game with

~=' sft~s"s

No. 7Michigan State.

By Jesse Washington

At the endof every

ls

The Associated Press

show, the hosts predict the winner of the day's

(

We only respond if

top games. The Duck pantomimed his picks — holding an elephant for Alabama, donning

there's video. That's one lesson that

can be drawn from the belated reaction to football

player Ray Rice knocking out his fiancee in an elevator. Rice was arrested back

in February, and in July was suspended for two

aleprechaun's hat for Dan Reesor spends time with his 4-yesr-old twins, Ella, left, end Owen inside their home in Bend last week. Reesor, a deputy district attorney for Deschutes County, suffers from a liver disease and liver cancer, but his insurance won't pay for a transplant.

games. But once video of

Donald Sterling's racism; abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib — but only grow outraged and force action when video or audio or images emerge. How many injustices

claim in May, saying a liver transplant was not medically necessary in his case. Since January, Deschutes County DepReesor's situation has ignited a commuuty District Attorney Dan Reesor has nitywide campaign to fund the surgery. "Our phoneshave been ringing offthe been arguing outside of the courtroomfor his own life. hook," Reesor said. And it's not just a battle with the powerOn Wednesday, he sat on the couch of ful disease that is destroying his liver. his Bend home with his wife of 12 years, Reesor is fighting the denial of a med- Jo Mongan, while Mongan's parents took ical claim for a liver transplant surgery Reesor's and Mongan's 4-year-old twins, that, by his and his doctors' accounts, is Ella and Owen, out to the park to play. the best chance that he could survive. More than 1,000 letters have been sent The deputy district attorney has health to Deschutes County commissioners urginsurance through Deschutes County, ing that Reesor's case be reviewed, acwhich is self-insured. The county pays cording to Mongan. Current DA Patrick a third-party administrator, Employee Flaherty and DA-elect John Hummel also

s (Dan) is, in fact, getting a bureaucratic runaround, and it could cost him his life," Flaherty said on Wednesday. Reesor was diagnosed with primary sclerosing cholangitis, an inflammatory liver disease, on Jan. 8, his 40th birthday. Three days later, he was diagnosed with liver cancer. He had started feeling sick in late December of last year, experiencing extreme fatigue, jaundice and lack of appetite. He

getshortshriftbecause

Benefit Management Services, to evalu-

nobody's recorder was rolling?

ate claims. The company denied Reesor's port of Reesor.

forlivercancer,Reesorsaid. SeeFighting/A6

the actual punch surfaced this week, he was banned indefinitely. Time and again, we are informed of outragesRice's domestic violence;

beheadings and rape by the fanatics calling themselves the Islamic State;

Notre Dame, shooting a foamrocket for Toledo. The hosts giggled their waythrough their analysis and prognostications. "Sometimesyou pick like Daffy Duck,"

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

sent letters to the commissioners in sup-

Lee Corso said to the

Duck. That insult might have struckviewers

athome. Theymight have wondered, but probably did not, just whythe Oregon Duck looks like Donald

went to Bend Memorial Clinic for initial evaluations, and then to Oregon Health

Duck, but in a differ-

8 Science University in Portland, where doctors said they could perform a trans-

ent-colored sailor's ensemble. The short answer:

plant because of his liver disease, but not

because he is Donald Duck.

See Mascot /A4

"It's frustrating," said

ValendaCampbell,who is in charge of creating video and photo images for CARE, one of the world's

largest humanitarian organizations. Campbell and her colleagues at Atlanta-based CARE call it the "CNN

effect". when TV cameras arrive at a crisis, donations start pouring in. "We have a responsibility to help one another. Every day we see these emergencies, and nobody seems to be aware of them," said Campbell, whose organization is now responding to humanitarian crises in South Sudan, Syria, the

Central African Republic and Gaza. SeeVideo /A5

The simplewayshealth insurancecanchangeyour life By Todd C. Frankel

insurance card stowed in her

doctor for years. But now she

would be unremarkable. Ho

WEST PLAINS, Mo. — Sta-

segments. The hospital was a short drive into town. She intended

pocket. Her silver rings and necklace sat in the house. She

had insurance. "We should probably go get

hum. But her medical insurance was made possible by

cy Benesh had a few minutes

to savor this moment by tend-

wasn't looking forward to a

this over with," Benesh said.

the Affordable Care Act. The

to spare, a spotoftime before

ing to her animals. Her colonoscopy was in an hour. She walked through the kitchen and into the sprawling backyard, her new medical

camera poking around in her large intestine. But she was

It was time. A colonoscopy is a common procedure. If

federal law, especially in this part of the country, is often

overdue for it. She was 54. Her

Benesh's visit had been cov-

called "Obamacare" with a

stomach had hurt for months and she had avoided seeing a

ered by private insurance or even Medicare or Medicaid, it

derisive twang. SeeInsurance/A7

The Washington Post

heading to an exam that, depending on how it went, could end up splicing her life into neat "before" and"after"

TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 83, Low44 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

E1-6 Community Life C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B 4 - 5 Sports G1-6 Local/State B 1-6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies

AnIndependent

C6 01-6 C8

Q l/i/e use recycled newsprint

Vol. 112, No. 257,

7 sectlons

0

88 267 0 23 30

7


A2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

HOW to reaCh ljS STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

EbOla faafS —Ebola is thousands of miles awayfrom Kenya's pristine Indian Oceanbeaches, but the deadly diseaseappears to be discouraging tourism there andelsewhere in this vast continent. Harald Kampa, ahotelier near Mombasa, says the Ebolaoutbreak in West Africa is hurting his business. For two weeks inAugust, he had no international arrivals at his Diani SeaResort, leading him to suspect that Ebola hadfrightened away his clients. He noticed an improvement only after KenyaAirways canceled flights to the Ebola-hit West African nations of Sierra Leoneand Liberia, action that the local tourism fraternity said was necessary to assure tourists of Kenya's determination to keepEbola out.

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China jOurnaliSt CraCkdOWn —Conditions for foreign journalists working in Chinahavegonefrom bad to worse over the past year, with the Chineseauthorities increasingly seeking to influence coverage by intimidating reporters and their interview subjects, barring journalists from large portions of the country or withholding visas and blocking the websites of overseas newsoutlets, according to the Foreign Correspondents' Club of China. Its report, issued Friday, depicts mounting pressure on foreign journalists as the ruling Communist Party seeks to aggressively limit negative coverageabroad and punish news organizations and reporters who defy warnings to steer clear from so-called sensitive topics.

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Darko Voiinovic/The Associated Press

People collect drinking water from a supply pipe in Luhansk, Ukraine, on Saturday. More than 200 Russian trucks carrying humanitarian supplies entered into Ukraine with supplies for the city of Lu-

hansk, which has for weeks beencut off from electricity and water supplies.

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LUHANSK, Ukraine — A convoy of more than 200 white

through the rebel-held city on Saturday morning. In the other regional capital of Luhansk, one of the

trucks crossed the Russian bor- worst-hit cities where tens of der to deliver humanitarian aid thousands have been without to a battered Ukrainian city on water, electricity, or phone conSaturday, am ovemade without nections for weeks, the streets Kiev's consent yet met with si- were calm as Russian drivers lenceby Ukraine's top leaders. unloaded aid packages into lo"Early in the morning, we cal warehouses. entered Ukraine to bring aid to Stepanov said the goods Luhansk," said Yury Stepanov, consisted mainly of foodstuffs a Russian who was oversee- — rice, sugar, and canned fish ing the convoy. eWe came in and beef — but also induded around 215 vehicles," he add- medicine, technical equipment ed, as workers unloaded boxes and dothes. The deliveries into a local warehouse. were in dosed boxes, small The much-needed aid ar- enough to be easily carried by rived as fighting flared again one person, but rice was seen between pro-Russian rebels spilling from a broken bag. and governmentforces,further Inside the warehouse, an Asimperiling an already fragile sociated Press journalist saw cease-fire in the region. water bottles carrying the logo On Saturday, Ukraine's mil- of Russia's LDPR party, led by itary operation in the east said

virulent nationalist Vladimir

"The militia will feed itself

separately. This is for the residents of the Luhansk People's

Republic," Tsepkalo said. Luhansk shows deep scars of an unsuccessful, weekslong shelling campaign by government troops. The government had regained growing swathes of territory from the separatists

overseveralweeks,butam ajor rebel counteroffensive beginning in late August halted and reversed that trend. Luhansk itself was at one

point almost totally surrounded by government troops. Those forces have since aban-

doned many of their former positions. As the Russian trucks drove

back along the border toward Ukraine, rebel fighters along the road punched the air and

waved in greeting. At the border point of Iz-

it had repelled a rebel attack on Zhirinovsky. the government-held airport of While dozens of local workDonetsk, which came under ers unloaded boxes, several artillery fire from rebel posi- carloads of armed militiamen tions late on Friday. Ukrainian in camouflage arrived to inauthorities also admitted for spect the scene. the first time since the ceaseStepanov said his team was fire started last week that they responsible only for delivery,

varine, a l in e o f

have inflicted casualties on the

tween Russia, Ukraine, and the international Red Cross

and distribution will be han-

rebel side. dled by local authoritiesContinuous rocket fire could which for now means the sepbe heard overnight in Donetsk. aratist leaders of the self-proA statement on the city coun- claimed Luhansk People's cil website said that shells hit Republic. residential buildings near the Gennady Tsepkalo, a senior airport, although no casualties separatist official, said retirees, were reported. A column of hospital patients and schoolthree Grad rocketlaunchers children would be priorities for — all its rockets still in place aid. He said the food would not — was seen moving freely be used to feed rebel fighters.

c ar s t h at

stretched for severalkilometers was filled with refugees who had fled to Russia but briefly

returned during the cease-fire to grab all the household items

they could. An August agreement beallowed Moscow to bring aid to the region, as long as all vehicles were inspected by Ukrainian border guards and escorted by the ICRC. After two weeks of waiting at the

borderfor all sides to agree, Russia sent the cargo across the border w i t hout K i ev's

consent.

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Maaysia ris s enraging C ina i itaowsU.S.spy ig ts By Jane Perlez New York Times News Service

Malaysia's reported invitation to the United States to fly

spy planes out of East Malaysia on the southern rim of the

warned National Security Adviser Susan Rice during her

ister, was asked at a n ews conference whether permis-

visit to Beijing that the Obama sion had been given for "U.S. a dministration should h a l t fighters" to operate out of East what he called the "close-in" Malaysia. "That is not true," he

te Qar Q aa QtQeQ

surveillance flights by P-8 Po- said, according to accounts in seidon planes over the South the Malaysian press. The minto intensify China's anger at China Sea and along China's ister was not asked about surU.S. surveillance of the strate- coast. veillance planes. gic waterway and its disputed As China under the leaderDiscussions between Maislands, analysts say. ship of President Xi Jinping laysia and the United States The United States' chief of asserts claims in the South for the use of an air base in naval operations, Adm. Jon- China Sea and develops a Sabah, in northeast Malayathan Greenert, told a forum more sophisticated fleet of sia, have been underway for in Washington last week that submarines, it has increasing- some time, according to a sethe recent offer by Malaysia ly contested the right of the nior Asian diplomat who is for P-8 Poseidon aircraft to fly United States to conduct sur- familiar with the talks. The out of the country's most east- veillance flights over what it diplomat declined to be named ern area would give the United says are China's territorial wa- because ofthe secrecy of the States greater proximity to the ters. Among other capabilities, matter. the P-8 Poseidons can detect South China Sea. The Chinese Foreign MinMalaysia, which has had submarines. istry did not respond to a rewarm ties with China, has not Last month, a Chinese fight- quest for comment on the reconfirmed whether it m a de er pilot flew within 30 feet of a ported Malaysian offer. the offer. The United States P-8, causing a near collision, The Malaysian offer to the

The estimated jackpot is now $171 million.

has vowed to maintain its influence in the region in the

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

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Giant Afghan flag —A giant flag was hoisted over Kabul's Wazir Akbar Khan hill Wednesday.Flying from a flagpole more than200feet high, the 97-by-65-foot banner is big enough to drapeover a Dreadnoughtus dinosaur. Thehalf-million-dollar gift was underwritten by an Indian billionaire whoseFlag Foundation of India encourages Indian homes to fly their own flags. Political pundits quickly noted the symbolism of India's helping Afghanistan erect a flag big enough to be seen from the U.S.surveillance blimp on the other side of the capital. The point would surely not be lost on Pakistan, which traditionally has looked unfavorably at overtures between India andAfghanistan. Air FralIC8 Stflka —Air France-KLM warned Saturday that it was preparing to cancel around 60 percent of its scheduled flights Monday because of adispute with pilots, a move that has the potential to disrupt the travel plans of tens of thousands of passengers. Frederic Gagey, chief executive of the company's Air France unit, said negotiations would continue through the weekend in the hope of reaching an agreement with pilots, who are seeking to ensure that the new pilots the group aims to hire for its budget carrier will be employed under the samecontract as those flying under the main Air France brand. NOrth KOrea —North Korea held a trial Sundaymorning for American Matthew Miller, who wasdetained in April for violating his tourist status when heentered the country. Details were not immediately available. Thespecific charges or punishment he could facewere not announced before the trial. Miller, 24, of Bakersfield, California, is believed to havetorn up his visa at Pyongyang's airport and demanded asylum. A trial is also expected soon for Jeffrey Fowle, 56, whoentered the North as atourist but was arrested in May for leaving a Bible at a provincial club. In anearlier interview with TheAssociated Press, Miller and the other mencalled for Washington to send ahigh-ranking U.S. representative to make adirect appeal for their freedom. The U.S. has repeatedly offered to send its envoy for North Koreanhuman rights issues, Robert King, to Pyongyang to seeka pardon for U.S. detainees, but without success. Police ambush —A late-night ambush outside a state police barracks in Pennsylvania's rural northeastern corner left one trooper dead and another critically wounded, andauthorities scoured the densely wooded countryside andbeyond on Saturday looking for the shooter or shooters. State Police Commissioner FrankNoonan said a "very dangerous, armed criminal" eluded quick capture. "This attack was an ambush. Ourtroopers were ... shot without warning and really had no chance todefend themselves," Noonantold reporters Saturday afternoon. Thedeadlawman was identified as Cpl. Bryon Dickson of Dunmore, aseven-year veteran who hadtransferred to the region from the Philadelphia barracks several months ago.Trooper Alex Douglass underwent surgery andwas in critical but stable condition, Noonan said. ClintOn in lOWa —Hillary Rodham Clinton will wade back into lowa and the unique brand of retail politics that confounded her during the 2008 campaign today, taking her first steps back toward the presidential stage. Clinton's attendance at the37th and likely final steak fry hosted in Indianola, lowa, eachyear by Sen.Tom Harkin, a Democrat who is retiring, will bestow somemuch-needed heft on Democratic candidates in lowa whoarestuck in tight midterm races. The handshaking, speechmaking andbeef eating will also allow Clinton, alongside former President Bill Clinton, to take ameasure of the pivotal early caucus state. Pay phOneS? —Apple wants the plastic credit card to becomeas rareasthepapercheck.Lastweek,thecompanyannouncedApple Pay, a digital payment system that lets people payfor retail store purchases using their phones rather than cash or credit cards. The service, which will work both with iPhonesand Apple's newWatch, is backed by ahost of big retailers, along with most major banks and credit card issuers, including Visa, MasterCard andAmerican Express. So-called contactless payment isn't new. Starbucks, McDonald's, PayPal, GoogleandSquare offer their own services, but only a small portion of customers usethem. Someexperts believe Apple Pay — with its presence onmillions of iPhones and its advanced security features —could bethe service that leads to widespread adoption of the digital wallet. — Fromwirereports

Ilo ur Hands Hurt'V

South China Sea seems likely

face of China's rise and this year won an agreement with the Philippines to give U.S. troops, warships and planes greater access to bases there.

the Pentagon said. That P-8,

United States came, in part,

a new fast, high-flying plane because "China has surprised built by Boeing and loaded Malaysia by bringing military with digital electronics, was

based with a squadron of six

ships into its waters and tacitly

threatening offshore Malaysia oil and gas exploration," said base in Japan last year. The Ernie Bower, senior adviser G reenert spoke th e d a y Pentagon has more than 100 for Southeast Asia Studies before Gen. Fan Changlong, P-8s on order from Boeing. at the Center for S trategic a vice chairman of China's Hishammuddin Hu s sein, and International Studies in Central Military Commission, the Malaysian defense min- Washington. P-8s that arrived at Kadena air

Do your hands turn white, blue, purple or transparent when cold? Are the back of your hands shiny with no lines on your knuckles? Do you have unexplained weight loss? Do you experience shortness of breath? Do you have swallowing difficulties or heartburn?

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day

It's Sunday, September 14, the 257th day of 2014. Thereare 108 days left in the year.

ANNIVERSARY

SCIENCE QS.A

Seeking

HAPPENINGS SWedell —The country will hold parliamentary elections, with polls showing the left-leaning Social Democrats poised to return to power after eight years of center-right rule.

HISTORY Highlight:In1814, Francis Scott Key was inspired to begin writing the poem"Defence of Fort McHenry" after witnessing how anAmerican flag flying over the Maryland fort had withstood a night of British bombardment during the War of 1812; the poemlater became thewords to "The Star-Spangled Banner." In1861, the first naval engagement of the Civil War took place as theUSSColorado attackedandsanktheConfederate private schooner Judah off Pensacola, Florida. In1901, President William McKinley died in Buffalo, New York, of gunshot wounds inflicted by anassassin; Vice President Theodore Roosevelt succeeded him. In1914, actor Clayton Moore, TV's "Lone Ranger," was born in Chicago. In1927, modern dancepioneer Isadora Duncandied in Nice, France, whenher scarf became entangled in awheel of the sports car shewas riding in. In1944,the GreatAtlantic Hurricane passed close to North Carolina andVirginia before heading up the northeastern U.S. coast; nearly 400 people died, most at sea. In1954, the Soviet Union detonated a 40-kiloton atomic test weapon. In1964, Pope PaulVl opened the third session of the Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican, also known as"Vatican II." (The session closed two months later) The submarine adventure series "Voyageto the Bottom of the Sea"premiered on ABC-TV. In1975, Pope Paul Vl declared Mother Elizabeth AnnBayley Seton the first U.S.-born saint. In1982, Princess Grace of Monaco, formerlyactress Grace Kelly, died at age 52of injuries from a carcrash the day before; Lebanon's president-elect, Bashir Gemayel, was killed by abomb. In1984,the first MTV Video Music Awards wereheld at New York's Radio City Music Hall; The CarswonVideo of the Year for "You Might Think," but singer Madonnastole the show with a provocative performance of heryet-to-be released single "Like aVirgin." In1989, Madonnadivorced actor Sean Pennafter four years of marriage. In1994,on the 34th day of a strike by players, Acting Baseball Commissioner BudSelig announced the1994 season was over. Tea years ago:Guerrillas bombed aBaghdad shopping street full of police recruits and fired on apolice van north of the capital, killing some 60 people. President GeorgeW. Bush told veterans in LasVegas he wasproud of his time in the TexasAir National Guard as he sought to deflect questions about his Vietnam-era service. Five years ago:Lecturing Wall Street on its own turf, President Barack Obamawarned financial leaders not to usethe recovering economy to race back into "reckless behavior" that could cause anew meltdown. Oneyear ago:A diplomatic breakthrough on securing and destroying Syria's chemical weapons stockpile, negotiated by the U.S. andRussia, averted the threat of U.S. military action.

BIRTHDAYS Actress ZoeCaldwell is 81. Actor Walter Koenig is 78. Basketball Hall of Famecoach Larry Brown is 74.Singer-actress Joey Heatherton is 70. Actor Sam Neill is 67.Actress Melissa Leo is 54. Actor-writer-director-producer Tyler Perry is 45. RapperNas is41. — From wire reports

Written amidst ahattle inthe War of 1812, Francis Scott Key has the anthem constantlyasking: Have we survived as a nation?

a linkfQr akohQi dementia

By Michael E. Ruane The Washington Post

By C. Claiborne Ray

BALTIMORE — The firing had stopped more than an hour earlier, after an all night

New York Times News Service

Is there a difference

• between alcoholic Q dementia and "regular"

shootout in the rain between

16 British warships and the rugged American citadel of

dementia in the elderly'?

Fort McHenry. But at 9 a.m. Sept. 14, 1814,

Dementia refers to

A • the general catego-

amid the mist and lingering

ry ofdiseases that cause acquired cognitive loss, usually in later life, said

smoke, it was not clear who had won. Would the British

now barge into this metropolis of 50,000, burning and looting as they had done in Washington the month

Dr. Mark Lachs, director of geriatrics for the New

before?

scores of possible causes,

Was this fledgling collection of "united states" for real

he said, but Alzheimer's disease is the culprit in a

or just a dream?

vast majority of cases in

As the Georgetown lawyer, devout Episcopalian and

the developed world.

York-Presbyterian Healthcare System. Such loss has

Alzheimer's and w h at doctors call alcohol-relat-

amateur poet Francis Scott

Key peered into the murk, he anguished over his country's

ed dementia affect parts Linda Davidson/The Washington Post

fate during the War of 1812.

Historical re-enactments at Fort McHenry in Baltimore are a part of the 200th-anniversary celebration

Suddenly, a g igantic red, white and blue ensign with 15 huge stars and 2-foot-wide stripes was hauled up the fort's flagpole. Key, 35, was jubilant and inspired to write. Yet he

for the "Star-Spangled Banner."

would end the first stanza of

his stirring new song with a question mark: 0 say does that star-span-

of the brain cortex that

control memory, language and the ability to follow motor commands. Because A l z h eimer's

policies and support for Native Americans.) Key wound up watching the assault while under Royal Marine guard aboard an

and excessive drinking are relatively common in

the older population and can occur at the same time, and because many of their clinical features

American truce ship, accord-

ing to Steve Vogel, author of the book, "Through the Per-

overlap and affect similar parts of the brain, "it is more accurate to say that

gled banner

ilous Fight: Six Weeks That

yet wave

Saved the Nation." Having pillaged Washing-

each condition potential-

ton and burned the W h ite

Lachs said. Abstinence is the treat-

0'er theland of the free and the home

of the brave? This weekend, Baltimore and the nation marked the 200th anniversary of the nat ional anthem, w h ich s t i l l

opens with Key's cosmic question. A nthem festivities at t h e

fort were already underway

House, the British army and navy were intent on sacking Baltimore, a much larger and more important city. While

tary of state Colin Powell, a

ment of choice in a l cohol-related dementia, with

or w i thout

its army closed in from the east, its navy hammered Fort

J. Lawler Duggan/The Washington Post

The Library of Congress has a handwritten copy of the lyrics to McHenry, which guarded the the "Star-Spangled Banner," which Francis Scott Key wrote in entrance tothe inner harbor, on Sept. 13 and 14.

last w eek, a n d P r e sident But an American sharpBarack Obama had a private shooter killed a British genvisit Friday. eral, and the Br itish army Events culminated Saturfound itself outnumbered and

day with an air show by the Navy's Blue Angels flight team, an evening speech by Vice Joe President Biden, and a gala music and fireworks program. Today's schedule includes a speech by former secre-

ly exacerbates the other,"

September 1814.

The slugfest went on for 25

re-enactment of the dramat-

hours. "The portals of hell ap-

screen. He told how he had

expertsrecommend great-

ordered the fabrication of a

ly moderating alcohol consumption or eliminating it,

huge "garrison flag" — 30 by 42 feet — to inspire his men. He directed the firing of a reproduction of one of the

Key, who was later released by his captors, called

fort's 2V2-ton guns, w h i ch

could fling a 24-pound iron ball a mile and a half. And as he spoke, a huge banner, the same size as the

original, flew from the fort's flagpole and snapped in the

At Fort McHenry on Tues-

0

cy," he said. "Because it's always unfinished. It's always a day-to-day contribution that

we all make to make sure that it goes on, that it's a success." "The way Key writes the

%,

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recent U.S. Navy victory over North Af rican pirates. The lyric contained such lines as

"by the light of the star-spangled flag of our nation." And it ended: Where, mix'd with the olive, the laurel shall wave,

country'? Did the British kick our butts? Are we still in exna istence? Schissel said. "He

And form a bright wreath forthe brows ofthe brave. Key set the words to a pop

actually answers that" in a later verse:

melody of the time, "To Ana-

P

creon in Heaven," which had

What is th a t wh i ch t h e startedout years before as a breeze, o'er th e t o w e r ing jaunty ode to a Greek poet. steep, Now, as he anguished in

As it fitfully blows, half the rain and shells exploded conceals, half discloses? over Fort McHenry, the same .. . ' Tis the star-spangled melody came to him, perhaps banner! 0 long may it wave fragments from his earlier 0'er the land of the free song and powerful new lyrics. They "were born out of exand the home of the brave! In September 1814, Key treme tribulation," said Schiswas headed to Baltimore sel, of the Library of Conto negotiate the release of a gress. "It was not him sitting friend, who had been seized at home.... This is written in (The U.S. had declared war on Britain two years earlier over aggressive British naval

C'0 8

as even occasional drink-

the Battle Afar," in honor of a

poem ... he's asking: 'Is the flag still flying? Are we still a

by the British, when he, too, was detained.

Even in p atients with

"pure" Alzheimer's disease or another kind of dementia, Lachs said, most

worked. We're still here.'"

day, Park Ranger Bailey was damp breezethat blew offthe ic flag-raising that prompted decked out in the uniform, water. Key's lyric outburst. peared to have been thrown epaulets and big feathered "It's the only national anopen — the earth and air, hat of Maj. George Armithem that exists that ends nay all the elements, seem to stead, the fort's commanding ~<~ ~coolsculpting (as usually sung) in a ques- have been combined for the officer in 1814. tion mark," said Loras John destruction of man," an eyeHe swaggered about as LE F F E L Daeys ettle faranyone Schissel, a music specialist witness wrote, according to Armistead, issuing orders as CE N T E R bsr apl a sticssrgeae for 8 Coolsrslpnng' at the Library of Congress, Vogel. thousands of schoolchildren long the center of anthem Key had dabbled in writing watched o n a Ju m b otron www.leffelcenter.com '541-3SS-3006 scholarship. patriotic lyrics before. "I think that's so appropriIn 1805, he wrote "When ate for this big thing we call the Warrior Returns From the experiment in democra-

other form of dementia.

alizing in that split second: 'It

facing formidable land defenses outside Baltimore. his song the "Defence of Fort The navy, meanwhile, en- M'Henry." countered terrible w eather But canny music publishand a defiant Fort McHenry, ers saw the need for a jazzier bristling with heavy guns title and began marketing it and a garrison of about 1,200 as the "Star Spangled Banmen, National Park Service ner." Schissel said, "It's a Ranger Jim Bailey said. great title."

Blue Angels encore, and a

c oncurrent

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

Where does the leadershilI money go? From a Bulletin review of campaign finance recordson Orestar

HOUSELEADERS

Democrats tilt courts, buildingObama'slegacy

House RepublicanLeaderMike Moi.ane in 2014 Donations to HouseCaucus (Promote ORLeadership) .... $175,000 Donations to House candidates......................................... ..$72,450

By Jeremy W. Peters

now hold a majority of seats

New York Times News Service

on nine of the 13 U.S. Courts

Total.................................................................

WASHINGTON — D emo crats have r eversed t h e

of Appeals. When Obama t ook office, only one of

partisan imbalance on the

those courts had more full-

$247,450

House SpeakerTina Kotek, D-Portland Donations to House Caucus (FuturePAC).......................... Donations to Senate Caucus (SDLF).................................. Donations to House candidates ......................................... Total................................................................. House Majority Leader Val Hoyle, D-Eugenein 2014 Donations to House Caucus.............................................. Donations to House candidates,......................................... Total.................................................................

Senate PresidentPeter Conrtney, D-Salem Donations to Senate Caucus (SDLF)................................. Donations to Senate candidates ........................................ Donations to gubernatorial candidate ............................... Total................................................................. Senate Majority LeaderDiane Rosenbanm, D-Portland Donations toSDLF............................................................. Donations toSenatecandidates........................................ Donations to U.S.Senatecandidate.................................. Total................................................................. Source: Orestar

$40,000 ...$1,000 ...$1,000 $42,000 $50,000 ..$3,500 ......$500 $54,000

Mascot

headwear (the Duck wears

Continued from A1 university's original nick-

Duck has a fluffy beret with a ribbon) to the stripes on their cuffs (two for the Duck, one for Donald). And the Duck

name for its sports teams,

is in better shape — leaner

the Webfoots, had morphed into Ducks. Live ducks, usually n amed Puddles, took turns patrolling the sideline during

through the hips. But the biggest difference

$145,000 ....$1,000 ..$10,750 $156,750 $40,000 $10,250 $50,250

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

time judges nominated by a long favored conservatives, Democrat.

a sailor hat, while Donald

I t has been t hi s w a y since 1947. By then, the

Cash Continued from A1 House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, has given $156,750 this year to House and Senate candidates and the House Democrats' campaign arm, FuturePAC.

To help win close races, Oregon's six top leaders from both parties have sent more than a half-million dollars to different campaigns and parties. "A lot of the money is used to defend our Democratic incumbents," said Tom Powers, who

heads the campaign arm of the Senate Democrats. Bend Democrat C r aig Wilhelm picked up a nearly $55,000 in-kind donation from FuturePAC to air his first TV

ad in his race against Repub-

perspective," said M i chael Gay, spokesman for the Senate Republicans'Leadership Fund.

If history shows anything, Oregon legislative candidates who face tough election battles should expect an avalanche of money to come over the next six weeks. Mail-in

ballots are sent out in mid-October, meaning th e

p a r ties

will ramp up spending in the month ahead. Senate P r esident

P e t er

Courtney, D-Salem, Senate Republican Leader Ted Ferrioli, R-John Day, and Kotek each

gave far more money away in the weeks leading up to Election Day in 2010 and 2012

than they did during the nine months before. Leaders who are either un-

lican Knute Buehler, of Bend, for House District 54. All of

opposed in re-election efforts or face easybattles tend to give

Wilhelm's nearly $76,000 in

more widely than those with

in-kind donations comes from FuturePAC and Kotek.

contenders, records show. However, Courtney, a long-

Oregon's campaign finance time Democratic leader, is faclaws were briefly changed in ing a challenge this fall from the 1990s before the state Su-

preme Court threw out the

Marion County Commissioner Patti Milne.

So Courtney has given just limited format. Now, any cor- $42,000 this year, primarily to changes for the current, un-

poration, PAC, candidate, vot-

the Senate Democratic Lead-

er and union can give as much ership Fund. as it wants to any candidate. Giving much of the camFive other states — all Re- paign's money to the party p ublican-controlled — a l s o PACs or other candidates isn't have no limits on campaign exclusive to state leadership, donations. though the leaders do most of "There's not really any law the heavy lifting. Candidates that forbids coordination be- not facing tough re-election tween Oregon PACs," Powers challenges or senators in said. "We can coordinate as off years also funnel money much as we want and with as through the PACs. much money as we want. We Along with Oregon's widejust have to report every single open contribution laws, voters transaction." can track campaign finance "When it comes to cam- using ORESTAR on the Orepaigns, that means that there's gon secretary of state website, members trying to help out as http%/os.oregon.gov. much as they can to elect can— Reporter: 406-589-4347, didates that share that same

appeals court in the nation,

after the Supreme Court. last summer to force the conThe full appeals court firmation of three nominees agreed this month to hear a little-noticed shift w i t h The shift, one of the most to the U.S. Court of Appeals Halbig v. Burwell, a case that far-reaching c o nsequenc-significant but u n herald- for the District of Columbia could unravel the system of es for the law and President ed accomplishments of the Circuit a f te r R e p ublicans federal insurance exchanges Barack Obama's legacy. Obama era, is likely to have blocked them. "This will established by the Affordable For the first time in more ramifications for how the affect America for a gener- Care Act. Before Democrats than a decade, judges ap- courts decide the legality ation, long after the interne- curtailed Republicans' right pointed b y Dem o cratic of some of th e p resident's cine battles on legislative is- to use filibusters, which they presidents considerably out- most controversial actions sues are forgotten." accomplished by rewriting number judges appointed on health care, immigration With so many of the adSenate rules through a maby Republican presidents. and clean air. Since today's ministration's policies fac- neuver known as "the nucleThe Democrats' advantage Congress has been a grave- ing legal challenges, the in- ar option," the District of Cohas only grown since late yard for legislative accom- creased likelihood that those lumbia court was dominated last year when they stripped plishment, these j udicial cases could end up before by judges who were appointRepublicans of their ability confirmations are likely to more ideologically sympa- ed by Republican presidents. to filibuster the president's be one of its most enduring thetic judges is a reassuring Today it has four Republican nominees. achievements. d evelopment to t h e W h i t e appointees and seven Dem"With all the gridlock, it Democratic app o i ntees House. Nowhere has this ocratic appointees, four of who hear cases full time is forgotten that one of the dynamic been more evident whom Obama picked.

$58,500 $24,000 $82,500

Total.................................................................

Schumer, D-N.Y., who led the push with the White House

federal appeals courts that

SENATELEADERS Senate RepublicanLeaderTedFerrioli, R-John Day Donations to Senate Caucus (Leadership Fund)............... Donations to Senate candidates........................................

most profound changes this than at the District of ColumCongress made was filling bia court, which is considered the bench," said Sen. Charles the second most important

tanderson@bendbulletin.com

is in the eyes. Donald Duck

Oregon wanted a consistent Duck image.

has small oval pupils resting at the bottom of his giant eyes. The Duck's pupils these days are round and big, as if he were stuck in a dark clos-

T he university was i n

et. And Donald Duck speaks

games. But in the 1940s,

luckbecause Oregon's athletic director at the time,

in a spittle-spraying lisp; the Duck is mute. Leo Harris, was a friend of The University of Oregon Ducks mascot crowd-surfs after the On S aturdays, "College Walt Disney's. Disney told team's PAC-12 Championship win in 2011. GameDay" reaches its cliHarris that the university max when Corso unveils his was welcome to use Donchoice in the day's big game. ald Duck, who debuted in character, wildly popular at now and again to toughen his Typically, he reaches under 1934, as the mascot, pro- events like Saturday's foot- look, to make him a snarling the table, grabs the costume vided it was in good taste. ball game against Wyoming duck or a fighting duck, may- h ead of the mascot of t h e And so Oregon did(and available for appearanc- be even put pants on him, but team he thinks will win and first in r enderings and es at $300 per hour), came tradition has held. puts it on his head. logos, including a Donald to look more and more like Although the mascot's biThis t i m e , t he Duc k poking out of an Oregon Donald. ography calls him Donald, reached under the table and "O." Eventually, the cosFor a university that sells Oregon officials call him the handed Corso a w rapped t umed mascot came t o its sartorial soul to the whims Duck, as if to distinguish the package. Corso tore into it, look quite a bit like Don- of Nike, assembling a new characters. And they might revealing a Duck head. Hunald, too. combination of psychedelic point out that the two are not dreds of fans surrounding the A fter D i sney d ied i n colors on the uniforms nearly identical. set cheered as Corso put the 1966, officials realized every game, the Duck stands Besides the color schemes Duck head on his own. that there was no formal out for his indifference to of their minimalist naval atNow there were two identiagreement between the style. tire, their clothing has slight cal Ducks, wide-eyed and faparties to share the imThere have been pushes variations, from the style of miliar and they hugged. age of Donald Duck. But Oregon produced a photograph of Disney wearing an Oregon letterman's jacket, with t h e

The Bulletin file photo

D o nald

Duck logo on the chest, and a written contract was

signed in 1973. On merchandise, the Donald Duck logo can be hard to find these days. Part of the agreement with Disney was to restrict the

sale of the Donald logo to mostly around Eugene and Portland, said Craig

John Sterling

Pintens, the u n iversity's senior associate athletic

Conservation Alliance Executive Oirector

director. Oregon's primary logo is a stark yellow, duckless "O."

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Video Continued from A1 She has learned to work within this reality. Her job as

seniormanager formarket ing and creative services is to doc-

ument images of disaster and injustice — and the healing that follows — which help gen-

Islamic State claims Iraq's primeminister orders it has beheaded halt to shelling of civilian areas British aid worker By Semeer N. Yecoub The Associated Press

erate the funds CARE needs to

provide assistance. "It always goes back to the

old adage that seeing is believing," Campbell said. "We are visual beings, and more and more this is a visual culture," she continued. "Seeing things provides more information and puts a human face on whatever the situation

is, and helps people relate on a much more personal level to what's going on." In the Rice case, video was

released Feb. 19 of the Baltimore Ravens running back dragging his unconscious fiancee,Janay Palmer,outofa casino elevator, after what police

described as an altercation. Rice, who married Palmer the following month, was

By Griff Witte and Karla Adam ed by the SITE Intelligence The Washington Post Group, was released just LONDON — Islamic State days after President Barack militants on S aturday re- Obama gave a prime-time leased a video showing the s peech fro m t h e Wh i t e execution of British aid work- House in which he described er David Haines in the same an open-ended campaign grisly manner as the murder to combat the Islamic State of two American journalists both in Iraq and in Syria. in recent weeks, along with a threat to kill another Briton. The video, titled "A Mes-

sage to Allies of America," shows Haines clad in an orange jumpsuit kneeling beside a man who speaks in the same London-accented English as the apparent execu-

T he president said t h e United States would work

in concert with "a broad coalition" of allies, including Britain.

Obama released a statement late

S aturday c on-

demning Haines' killing: "Our hearts go out to the tioner in two previous videos. family of Mr. Haines and The masked man address- to the people of the United Kingdom. The United States es British Prime M i nister David Cameron, telling him

stands shoulder to shoulder

that the killing is retribution tonight with our close friend for "your evil alliance with and ally in grief and resolve."

video from inside the elevator,

ment late Saturday saying

of the knockout punch itself. There was an enormous up-

that "the murder of David H aines is an ac t o f p u r e them. "We have sent messages evil. My heart goes out to

him from the team. Many predict he may never play in the NFL again. "We saw video, and then we demanded justice," sports

broadcaster Dan Patrick said on his program. "Until you have that vid-

eo, it's, 'Oh, really, that happened?'" Patrick said.

A similar dynamic was recently evident concerning the Islamic State group, whose crimeswere welldocumented yet provoked little international action until two videos were

released of American journalists being decapitated. On Wednesday, President Barack

Obama announced a military response that includes U.S. missile strikes and ground troops from other nations. "It is very, very scary that we could go to war over two vid-

eos," said Robert Thompson, a professor ofpopularculture at Syracuse University. "Words are abstractions, and pictures are a presenta-

America, which continues to

strike the Muslims of Iraq." T he video ends with a threat to kill a m an, Alan

Henning, whom the Islamic State claimed is another Brit-

ish hostageof the terrorist gl'oup. Cameron tweeted a state-

his family who have shown extraordinary courage and fortitude." Cameron also vowed to "do everything in our power to hunt down these murderers and ensure they face justice, however long it takes."

The killing of Haines, a

4 4-year-old father o f

two

The Islamic State has re-

leased two previous videos showing the execution of the American journalists James

Foley and Steven Sotloff. The group threatened to kill Haines at the end of the Sotl-

off video, which was released less than two weeks ago. On Friday, Haines' family urged his captors to contact

to you to which we have not received a reply," the family statement said. "We are ask-

ing those holding David to make contact with us." Haines was abducted in M arch 2013 near the A t -

meh refugee camp along the Ttrrkish border in the Syri-

an province of Idlib. He was

from Scotland who was working for the French aid agency ACTED, is likely to

a veteran of the Royal Air

intensify calls in Britain for

security expertise to work

more direct action against

for aid agencies in conflict zones.

the Islamic State.

Iraq's BAGHDAD prime minister said Saturday he has ordered the army to stop shelling popu-

• i:

lated areas held by militants

in order to spare the lives of "innocent victims" as the

armed forces struggleto retake cities and towns seized by the Islamic State extremist group this summer. "I issued this order two

4 • .,

days ago because we do not

Force, and since leaving the armed forces he had used his

Britain has previously said B ritish n ewspaper T h e it is sending arms to Kurdish Telegraph quoted his wife, fighters battling the group Dragana Haines, saying last and is supporting American week that their 4-year-old airstrikes with surveillance daughter had been asking about her father every day and intelligence. Britain hassofarrefrained for the past year and a half. "He's everything to us. from carrying out airstrikes He's our life. He's a fantastic itself. But Cameron and his allies have suggested that man and father," she told the they might be open to direct newspaper in an account British military intervention. published early today. "NoThe video of Haines' kill- body can understand how ing, which was first report- we are feeling."

victims falling in the places and provinces controlled The Associated Press by Daesh," Haider al-Abadi A boy walks outside his home that was damaged in e bombing, told a news conference in in Fallujeh, Iraq, in July. Such residential areas controlled by the Baghdad, referring to the Islamic State will no longer be bombed by Iraq. Islamic State group by its Arabic acronym. He accused the militants hiding behind the civilians," he this year. The Shiite-led govof using civilians as a hu- added. ernment is under mounting man shield to stop the adThe United Nations envoy to pressure from the international vance of Iraqisecurity forc- Iraq, Nickolay Mladenov, who community to reach out to both es. But he vowed to continue

was present at the conference,

Sunnis and Kurds in order to form a united front against the

military operations against welcomed al-Abadi's committhe al-Qaida breakaway ment to protect civilians. The army's heavy-handed group, which seized large territories in the north and tactics have long fueled anger west in an unprecedented among the country's SunJune offensive. ni minority, leading many to ''We w ill c ontinue t o welcome the insurgents as libchase them gS fighters) erators when they swept into and we know that they are Sunni-majority areas earlier

militant onslaught. Also Saturday, the U.S. mili-

tary said that it had conducted two airstrikes Friday against Islamic State militants near the

Mosul dam, bringing the total numberto160 acrossIraq since the military campaign began.

Kerry finds little aid in Mideast New York TimesNewsService CAIRO — Secretary of State John Kerry received

lies like Egypt and Turkey.

his drive to mobilize support for a campaign against the Is-

After meeting with Kerry

lamic State. Saudi Arabia has

lic commitments from Egypt on Saturday as he continued

in Cairo, Sameh Shoukry, Egypt's foreign minister, declared at a joint news conference that "Egypt believes it is

his tour of the Middle East

very important for the world

bases in its territory, but no country in the region publicly

broad assurances but no pub-

pledged to allow the training of Syrian rebel forces opposed to the Islamic State at

to try to assemble a coalition to come together to fight this behind an American cam- extremism." paign against the extremist But Egyptian officials degroup known as the Islamic clined to specify what help State. they would provide in the The professions of good campaign against the Islamic intentions underscored the State, and Shoukry made it long and potentially lonely clear that he also had in mind road ahead for the Obama fighting Islamist militants administration as it attempts at home and in neighboring to roll back and dismantle the Libya. Islamic State, with only spoKerry has already visited ken pledges so far by Iraq's Baghdad, Amman, Jordan, government to win back the and Ankara, Turkey, and he trust of the Sunni minority attendedan emergency meetand only token commitments ing of regional governments of support from regional al- in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, in

detailed what military sup-

port it might provide. The Obama administration is keen to enlist mate-

rial support from regional powers with Sunni Muslim

majorities like Egypt, Turkey and Saudi Arabia to avoid the impression that the United States is intervening in a

sectarian war on behalf of the Shiite-dominated Iraqi

government against its opponents in the Sunni minority, some of whom have lent support to the Islamic State.

tion of the thing itself," he said.

"On some level, we are probably wired to be much more responsive to something we

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see." Which canbe a good thing, Thompson said, citing images that turned the course of America's involvement in the Vietnam War and the 1960s

A •

A

civil rights movement — Vietnam photos of an execution

and a fleeing girl, her clothes burnt off by napalm, or film of African-American protesters

being battered by fire hoses and bitten by dogs. There are stories that command attention without sensa-

tional video, such as Edward Snowden's leaked documents.

There is national outrage over the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, though there is no video of the fatal shots. And when there is video, it can be interpreted in differ-

ent ways, such as the Rodney King police beating tape. But television is the most

popular way people get their news, followed by computers, according to a 2014 study by the Media Insight Project. On television, news can be elevated or ignored depending on how "dramatic" the video is — regardless of whether

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The exploding online culture,

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The Rice video was in some ways "the smoking gun," said Todd Boyd, a scholar of popular culture at the USC School of Cinematic Arts. " As citizens, we're in t h e

digital age now so things are differ ent. In previous generations, we d i dn't n ecessar-

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of private information. Now there is so much available to

the public, and we treat it like evidence." He said that people now

expectto see some sort of evidence connected to a news story. "This has become part of the experience," Boyd said. "Where's the tape?"

-

t

want to see more innocent

charged with assault, which carried a penalty of up to five years behind bars. Charges were later dropped when Rice entered a pretrial intervention program. The NFL suspended him for two games, there was widespread criticism of the penalty as too light — and we moved on. Then TMZ.com released

roar. The NFL suspended Rice and the Baltimore Ravens cut

A5

"QNer enA ti31I20ts. Now residential High4peed Internol (Hsl) or aislins residenssl pure sroadhend~ cuslomersonly. Exissngcusteners will lose cwront discounls bysubscribing tothis offer. Lisles monthly rocusins charge ol41185/mo. applios toHigh4peed Internel serviw (up to t0Mhps)for twehre months (Ifter which oe then-cwronL stensars monthlyrate will apply) Ins requires esubscrisson to • qualifyingcenturyunlh Homephoneplan. QNerrequires esNehe monlhtermasreemenl. AnIdsitional monlhlyorsst fee, inslallasonfee, end separateshippinsInd hanslins hemsyIpply to customor'smosemor router. sepensinsonHsl packasoInd optionsseleoes. QNerexdusestsxes, leosandsurcharses. Ilay not be combinabb with oser oNers.servicesand offers notavailable everywhere. cenrurylink msychange,cancel, or subsstute offersandservices, or vsry thembyservice area, at its sole discretion without notice. Requirescredit approval anddeposit mayberequired. Additional restrictions apply. TermsInd consilions - All produas andservices lsted are govemedbytariffs, terms of seNice, ortermsandcondNionsposted 8t www centurylinkcomTIxw, Fess, Ind surchIrses-Applicabletaxes, fees andsurchargesincludea carrier Universal service charge,National AccessFeeor carrier costRecoverysurcharge a onetime High-speedIntemet activation fee state andlocalfeesthat varybyareaandcertain instate surcharges.costrecovery feesarenottaxesorgovemmentrequiredsarsesfaruse Taxesfees andsurNargesapplybasedwstandardmonthly notpromotional,rates.callforalistingofapplicabtetaxes fees andsurcharges.MonlhlysIlI-Monthlyrateapplieswhilecustomersubswibestoallqualifyingservices Ifonearmoreservicesarecancelled, the standardmonthly feewill apply toeachrenainingservice. Hish-splsd Ishernsl-Asdeterminedby service location, an earlytermina00nfeewill applyss either a sat$99 fee a the applicablemonthly recuriing service fee multiplied by the numberof months remaining in oe minimumservice period, upto$200. Gustomers must axeptHiespeed IntemetsubscriberAgreementpria to usngsenrice Lisledbroadbandspeedsvary duetoconditionsautside ofnetwarkcontrol, indudingcustomerlocation andequipment sndarenot suarameed I2014 centurytink All Rights Reserved Thenamecenturytinkand thepathwayslogoaretradenarks of Cwturylink. All othermarksarethe propertyof their respectiveowners.



SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

UPDATE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT

Insurance

enewin ea t covera ema not e so automatic

Continued from A1 Missouri's Republican-led legislature has tried repeatedly to stop the legislation from taking root, including pushing back against an effort by Democratic Gov. Jay

By Robert Pear

able to them, which could be

New York Times News sen iee

one or two years old. For this

health care. Floating above were big questions about

WASHINGTON — M i l - r e ason, they said, consumers lions of consumers will soon should go back to the marketreceive notices from health p lace and report changes in insurance companies stating income or family size, which that their coverage is being could affect the amount of automatically renewed for t h eir subsidies.

A7

Nixon to expand Medicaid.

So Benesh's doctor's visit felt like an act imbued with political motive, a simple

hospital trip transformed into a journey through the nation's caustic battle over the role of government and

whether health care is a right. Benesh was aware of

all this. But she cared only about finding out what was

Nlkkl Kahn/The Washington Post

wrong was her gut. Janet Weilbrenner, left, and $tacy Benesh are surrounded by their animals at their farm in West Plains, cial assistance they received large nonprofit health plan, She drove. The battered Missouri, on July 9. The couple, both artists, recently received health insurance through the Affordthis year f ro m t h e f ederal s a i d i n a recent letter to the Prius bounced along the ableCareActand now canaddress medicalissuesthey havenotbeen able to manage. government. administration t ha t r e q uirgravel road. Her partner of But consumer advocates ing consumers to go to an 24 years, Janet Weilbrenner, "So she survived'?" and insurers say they see a exchange to ascertain their sat in the passenger seat, while moving a hay bale, she Ozark Medical Center, there significant potential for confu- new subsidies would "signifisipping iced tea. saw a doctor but didn't go were radio and newspaper ads, She did. sion because some of the infor- cantly increase the adminisWeilbrenner asked Be- through with the referral to plus fourhealth carenavigators And then they were going mation will be out of date and t r a t ive burdens on enrollees, nesh if sh e r emembered an orthopedic specialist. She to counsel residents on what to home. Benesh sat in a wheelmisleading on costs and other marketplaces and carriers" everything she needed. Be- found a $100 knee brace on do. But the hospital never saw chair, talking about the weathaspects ofcoverage. and seemed to denesh patted the pockets of eBay and lived with a limp, a hoped-for influx of new pa- er and the need for rain with a Some people who feat the purpose of her jean shorts. Yes. instead. And when a doctor tients, despite only a quarter of hospital volunteer pushing her a "pass i ve renewal have been receiv- Mie Wljj These two were always pushed Benesh to get an MRI a its clients carrying private in- down the hall. Weilbrenner tng mont y su st enCOuyage together, side by side, in couple of years ago, she did so, surance. The problem was the walked beside them. The hosproc e ss dy payments this If people update sickness and in health. They but regretted it because they're county was too poor. pital hummed with doctors and year could get much yy their i n f o r mation were known as "Janet and still paying off the bill. They Because Missouri is among nurses. Stacy" or "the tie-dye girls," made friends with the staff at the states thathave not expandless if they stay in tO COme online, A l b r ight Weilbrenner got the car. "I think a nap's in order," Betheir current health QaCk tO th e sai d , t hey will be for the shirts they favored. the local low-cost medical clin- ed Medicaid eligibility under plans. directed to the "plan They were artists who trav- ic, giving them fresh eggs from the Affordable Care Act, there's nesh said. " P The Obama adfmder" at H e altheled the country sellingtheir their hens. Weilbrenner was a coverage gap. The working In the car, Benesh laid out ministration a n - tO u p d a t e C are.g ov, w he r e handmade copper turtles. convinced the eggs were the poor are the ones left out, said the results. No polyps. No tu, too , reason the clinic offered her an hospital spokeswoman Gay mors. No signs of cancer. A biJu e thejy ejjgjgility th ey can see all the T hey sold real ~ that most people insurance o ptions with a specialty in Nigerian unexpectedopening for a free Watson. They either didn't opsy was performed to look for ' with insurance pura vailable i n t h e i r dwarf goats. pre-diabeti ceyeexam. qualify for Medicaid or thought colitis. But the doctor found no "It was a little bit like egg in- they couldn't afford coverage clear sign of what was causing chased in the fed- an d S hOP area. I f t h e y l i k e Weilbrenner and Benesh eral m a rketPlace fOy the tiest thei r c u r rent cov- tended to stand out. "Just surance," she said. under the Affordable Care her pain. The news was comwould be automaterage, they can retwo gay women in the BiThen they traded egg insur- Act, Watson said. The hospital, forting, but also frustrating. g new it b y e ntering ically enrolled in ble Belt," Weilbrenner said, ance for ACA insurance. along with the Missouri Cham- At least it wasn't cancer, Weilthe same or similar Op tlOn that the 14 - digit identilaughing. But this rural They each pay $100 a month ber of Commerce, has pushed brenner said. Benesh said her Plans next y ear, meetS the jy fication number for town of 12,000 people, 30 in premiums, with a $500 an- for state lawmakers to expand primary-care doctor probably so they would not their health plan. miles from the Arkansas nual deductible. There's a pre- Medicaid. A few weeks before would want to examine her need to file appli- n d Or they can search border, was home. scription benefit, too. Shortly Benesh's visit, West Plains had right ovary to see if it was the cations or go back for the Plan in the after the insurance kicked in served as the backdrop for Nix- culprit. Andrew$iayitt A major expense "But apparently I'm good to to HealthCare.gov with the new year, Benesh on to ask lawmakers to change the No 2 off jcjal online catalog of to continue their They always had health made a doctor's appointment. their minds. go," Benesh said. a t the Center for Prt . coverage. i nsurance, paying t h e She was so proud that she In the hospital waiting room, The car danced on the rutMedicareand oPtions known as Now, h owever, Medicaid $ervices Plan ComPare. $1,400-a-month premium, danced into her doctor's office, the minutes ticked by. Weil- ted road. Soon, Benesh, woozy the administration I nsurers hav e tolerating the $5,000 annual waving her insurance card. brenner wondered how much and worn out, would headback is emphasizing that complained to the deductible. It was a big ex- That's when she complained to the colonoscopy would cost, to bed. Weilbrenner would sit consumers should administration that pense. They saved money the doctor about her stomach. knowing they never would've at the computer to plan out the revisit the marketplace to t h e process is much more where they could. Art fairs After a round of antibiotics and gotten this far without insur- summer's art fairs. The animake sure they are getting the cumbersome than the one folin the Southwest would turn an ultrasound of her gall blad- ance. Benesh would've just mals in the back yard would right amount of financial as- lowed by workers at private into cross-border dashes, der, the doctor recommended ridden out the pain at home. need tending. And weeks latsistanceand to compare other companies. with Weilbrenner and Be- she have a colonoscopy. During the five years they were er, they would learn that their "Consumers will be frushealth plans. nesh loading up on cheapThe hospital seemed asleep uninsured, every ache or pain insurance company had been President Barack Obama t r ated and confused by having er prescriptions in Mexico as Weilbrenner and Benesh was a threat. They imagined billed $5,583 for colonoscopy. "See, you were basically said in April that 8 m i llion t o l o cate their current option for themselves and their walked past an empty front losing their home, their aniokay," Weilbrenner said now as people had enrolled in private in Plan Compare, or by havanimals. desk, down one hall and up an- mals, their business. "The fear of one of us getting they drove. "I'm glad." health plans through federal ing to type a 14-digit number Then the recession hit. other before running into ahosand state marketplaces creat- d i r ectly into the website," Blue Makers of "nonfunctional pital worker. sick was always there," WeilShe patted her partner's "I'm supposed to have a colo- brenner said. "A huge stress." ed under the Affordable Care Cross and Blue Shield plans eye candy" did not fare well, hand, wrapped in pink gauze. "Now," Weilbrenner added, Act. The Congressional Bud- s a i d in a recent letter to the Weilbrenner said. The mar- noscopy this morning," Benesh Now, they felt as though they get Office estimates that the a d m i nistration. ket vanished for their $400 sald. could manage. Visits to the "we just got to get your ovary "Oh," the hospital worker doctor and the hospital might checked out." total will climb to 13 million Tax c r e dits are affected by turtle sculptures and $1,000 in the next open enrollment thepremiumcost for abenchlonghorn skulls. Business said. "I can help you." still be expensive, but they had That meant another trip to period, which runs for three mark"silver"policyandcould stumbled and kept falling. They sat in a little cubicle. help. Medical calamities might the doctor, another chance to "Blue Cross is your insur- still come, but they would not use theirinsurance, another monthsstartingonNov. 15. cha nge even if a person has They stopped buying the Federal health officials told t h e same income and remains local newspaper. They cut ance, is that correct?" be financially devastating. And hunt for a diagnosis. More to ''We just got i n surance something was wrong with come. insurers this month to send i n t h e same health plan next back on cable. They stopped out standard renewal notices year, experts say. eating out at E l C h arro, January 1," Benesh replied, Benesh. They just didn't know But their fear, at least, was written by the government. Th e government says peo- where they had enjoyed beaming. what. gone. "I don't want anything bad The notices inform consumers p l e with insurance should reMargarita Mondays. Soon, Benesh disappeared of the new monthly premium port "income or life changes" Andthen, for the first time behind swinging doors labeled for her, but I would like some for their health plans in 2015 — if, for example, they marin their lives, they dropped "GI lab." Weilbrenner sat in kind of identification of what's and the most recent amount of r y , have a new baby or start their health insurance. a seven-chair waiting room. going on," Weilbrenner said. any subsidy, or tax credit, paid receiving coverage through They t r ied t o ar t f u l- Magazines lined one wall. The procedure took less than for a household in 2014. a job. The changes can be rely manage their medical A bulletin board advertised an hour. At 8:20 a.m., a nurse In many cases, insurers will ported online or by telephone, needs. meetings for enrolling in the came out to get Weilbrenner. "For years," Benesh re- Missouri Health Insurance notify consumers that they bu t a dministration officials face higher premiums but will said th e federal exchange called, "we almost nev- Marketplace. notprovidethemanyinforma- would no longer accept such er went to the doctor for tion about higher subsidies in information by mail. fear they'd find something Coverage gap WINDOW 2015, a prospect that distressC o n sumer groups objected wrong." A wave of publicity had TREATS es insurers an d c o nsumer t o e l imination of the mail opCoughs and fevers were swept acrossthe state encouradvocates. tion. Many low-income people medicated athome. When aging people to sign up. In 7%1SW10th • Redmand• (541) 5484616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com A typical letter to consum- d o n o t have ready access to Benesh blew out her knee the ruralregion served by the ers says: "You don't have to do computers, said Lynn Quinanything. You'll automatically cy, a health policy analyst at 2 015, along with the f inan -

K ais e r P e r m anente, t h e

be enrolled and just have to

C o n sumers Union, and "call

pay the monthly premium." In centers will be inundated with some cases, it says, "You will m i l lions of new applicants be automatically enrolled in a

FOR YOU:

d u r i n g th e open enrollment

new plan, but the plan won't period." offer lower co-payments, coinC o n sumers can expect at surance and deductibles based l east two notices this fall, one

from their insurer and anoth-

on income." In June, the administration

e r f r o m th e federal or state

emphasized the benefitsof exchange through which they passive re-enrollment. bought their insurance. "At least 95 percent of conT h efederal exchange does sumers in t h e

m a rketplace n o t have accurate enrollment

will not have to do anything and payment records for some to renew plans and their fi nancial a ssistance," A aro n

c o n sumers because the "back e n d " of the computer system

Albright, a spokesman for

f o r H e althCare.gov, which

the Centers for Medicare and

k e eps such data, has not been

Medicaid Services, the agency completed. As a result, the that runs the federalmarket- government and insurershave records that can differ on who place, said at the time. Consumer advocates com- is enrolled, the dates of coverplained that this was the a g e and demographic factors wrong message to send be- used to calculate premiums cause it incorrectly implied

a n d tax credits.

that no action was required Th u s , for example, an inand that nothing was chang- surer may have terminated ing, and administration offi- c overage for a consumer who failed to pay premiums, but cials have responded. "We will encourage every- the government may not have one to come back to the mar-

HEALTHY IV8f. workplace wellness program

Y Moneyavsedonhealthcarecosts Y Reduced employee sick days s/ Increased employee productivity

FOR YOURTEAM: s/ Improved health

Y Personal health coaching Y Incentives for healthy habits

Grow your company's bottom line while improving employee health and morale. Call541-706-5973 for more information or visitStCharlesHealthCare.org/HealthyLives

a r e cord of the termination, so

ketplace to update their eligi- the federal marketplace would bility information and shop for send a notice saying the coverthe best coverage option that age will be renewed in 2015. meets theirneeds," Andrew The government and inSlavitt, the No. 2 official at

the Medicare agency, said last week. Federal officials said they did not have the abilityto compute 2015 subsidies from the income data currently avail-

s u r ers are trying to reconcile

their records, but the effort is behind schedule. "This coming year will be one of visible and continued i mprovement, but not perfect i o n ,"Slavittsaid.

St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM


AS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

Target thanks you, and the

kids thank you.

T®g.

By shopping for your back-to-school supplies at

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notebooks, pencil sharpeners, glue, rulers, folders, scissors, pencil cases, cra s , markers, pens, and/or possiblyother items. Actual items donated may be based on clas eomneed, items purchased. This purchase/donation was not tax deductible for Target gu s. For rnore information, visit target.com/givesupplies.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

uver-area orse rea e or es ie, u ac ome now By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

A Culver-area horse was recently treated for West Nile

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit

• bttp://inciweb.nwcg. gov/stnte/38 • www.nwooweb.ns/ information/firemap. nspx 1. Deception Complex • Acres: 5,318 • Containment: 70% • Cause: Lightning 2. 790 Fire • Acres: 3,036 • Containment: 70% • Cause: Lightning

virus, the first case of the disease in Central Oregon this year, and only the third case

"Generally, (West Nile) causes neurological symptoms, imbalance, falling down. One of the really classic signs in horses is a twitching muzzle." — Dr. Wendy Krebs, veterinarian with the Bend Equine Medical Center

Dr. Wendy Krebs, a veterinarian with the Bend Equine clinic earlier in the week, and

has since recovered and been returned to its home pasture. Transmitted primarily by mosquitoes, West Nile virus spreads through the mosquito

of the mosquito population is

carrying the disease. Horses or other animals that have been infected with

in the state this year.

Medical Center, said Saturday the horse was brought to the

earlier in the summer, by September, a larger portion

m ammals are regarded as "dead-end hosts" that cannot transmit the infection to other mammals, and carry too little of the virus to pass it on to ad-

ditional mosquitoes.

population via host animals,

Only two other cases of West Nile have been reported

mostly birds. A mosquito that

in the state this year, Krebs

bites an infected bird can then pass on West Nile virus to the next animal it bites,

said, one in Union County and one near Baker.

Krebs said, though infected

Culver horse had not recently

Krebs said the infected

traveled and was not vaccinated against West Nile virus.

She said the vaccination is effective and widespread

among horses in Central Oregon, but an annual booster is required to provide protection

against the disease. Septemberand October are typically the peak months for West Nile infections among horses. Krebs said while mosquitoes are more prevalent

West Nile virus will typically display unusual behavior. "Generally, it causes neuro-

logical symptoms, imbalance, falling down. One of the really classic signs in horses is a twitching muzzle," she said. West Nile virus is fatal in

about 40 percent of cases among horses, Krebs said, but infected animals can develop

irreversible neurological problems if not treated promptly. "The sooner you get them in for treatment, the more opti-

mistic the outlook," she said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers®bendbulletin.com

Local man's

— Bulletin staffreport

Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!

The Bulletin Call n reporter Bend .......................541-e17-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine..................541-383-Oae7 Sunriver ................541-383-0367 Deschvtes............541-383-0367 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 Salem...................541-383-03e7 D.C....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Publicsafety.........541-383-0376

Submissions • School newsandnotes: Emailnewsitemsand noticesofgeneral interest to news©bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academic achievements toyouth©bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

WASHINGTON-

Senate Republicans successfully filibustered a proposed constitutional amendment onThursday that would allow Congress andstates to impose limits on campaignfinance.TheDemocrat-sponsored amendmentcame inresponse to the U.S.Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling in 2010, which allows corporations and unions to spendunlimited amounts during elections, in many cases without disclosing where the moneycame from. Needing 60votes to overcome afilibuster, the bill failed to advance by a 54-42 margin. The votes were along strict party lines, with all the yes votes coming from Democrats andall the noes cast by Republicans.

Jeff Medrley (D) ................Y Ron Wyden(D).................Y

Re mon we comes new citizens

mother killed The 87-year-old mother of a Bendman died Friday whenthe pickup he wasdriving went off the Florence-EugeneHighway west of Walton in Lane County. A Toyota pickup driven by William L. Calhoun, 64, of Bend, veered off state Highway126W about 3:30 p.m. and struck a tree near milepost 26, according to Oregon State Police Sgt. Casey Codding. Calhoun's mother, Beverly Louise Calhoun, of Florence, was trapped in the pickup andextricated by Western Lane Fire/EMS personnel. She was flown by LifeFlight to Sacred Heart Medical Center at RiverBend in Springfield with critical injuries and died at the hospital, state police said. Thedriver received minor injuries but declined transport to a hospital. Both were using safety restraints. Driver fatigue may have been acontributing factor, state police said. An investigation into the accident is continuing.

WEEK

U.S. SENATEVOTE

FESTIVAL OF CULTURES BRIEFING

WASHINGTON

and voted with151 Dem-

l

~ +LISQ~

On Tuesday,the House of Representatives passed abill designed to stop theEnvironmental Protection Agency from applying its new definition of waters under its jurisdiction. Under theWaters of the United States Regulatory Overreach Protection Act, the EPA could not implement the proposed change under theClean Water Act. Themeasure passed 262-152, with 35 Democrats joining 227 Republicans in supporting the bill. One Republican broke ranks

Y LW I

~

~

ocrats against the bill. ,

' ~ 364838y6

U.S. HOUSE VOTE Greg l/l/alden (R) ...............Y Ead Blumenauer (D) .........N SuzanneBonamici (D) .....N Peter DeEazto(D) ..............N Kurt Schrader, (D) .............Y

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Nln Hartzell receives her citizen certificate Saturday during the swearing-in of new American citizens at the Festival of Cultures in Redmond. Hartzell says life in Eugene is much more relaxed than in Jakarta, Indonesia.

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

REDMOND — Thirteen new American citizens took the oath of citizenship Satur-

day at the Festival of Cultures in Redmond's Centennial Park.

A citizenship ceremony has opened the Festival of Cultures foreach ofthepastfiveyears.

in Redmond in front of friends and family. Bob Eberhard, president of Eberhard's Dairy in Redmond,

a train to the West Coast, meeting his brother in Port-

addressed the new citizens,

small community of Swiss dairymen.

relayingthe story ofhis father's immigration to the United States from Switzerland

world are invited to complete the last step tobecoming citi-

during the Great Depression. Arriving in the country at 19, $300 in debt, speaking no English and carrying all of his possessions in a single

zens at an outdoor ceremony

suitcase, John Eberhard took

Oregonians from around the

land. The two brothers headed for Tillamook, home to a The elder Eberhard bounced

around Oregon for years, becoming a citizen and moving

cream into butter. Sixty-three

years later, Eberhard's Dairy employsmore than250people. Eberhard told the new citi-

zens at Saturday's ceremony that they, too, have a chance to make a new life for themselves

eration collecting cream from

in their adopted home country. "My message for you is, look for your opportunity, and when it comes, grab it," he said. "Grab it and give it everything you've got."

local farmers and turning the

See Citizens/B5

from one dairy to another

before arriving in Redmond in 1951. He bought a small op-

Also on Tuesday,the House voted to admonish President Barack Obama for not informing Congress ahead of time before exchanging Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl for five Taliban commanders ln May. Bergdahl, of Hailey, Idaho, hadbeen held since his capture in Afghanistan in June 2009. TheObamaadministration had defended the lack of notice for the exchange bysaying it was worried that news of the swap would leak if it consulted congressional leaders, potentially scuttling the deal. The resolution passed, 249163, with 227 Republi-

cans and 22Democrats voting in its favor. All of the votes against came from Democrats.

U.S. HOUSE VOTE

YESTERDAY

'Alley OOP'COmic StriP makeSa SPlaSh in 'l939 Compiled byDon Hoiness fromarchivedcopiesofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

100 YEARSAGO

— Andrew Clevenger, The Bulletin

for Bend.

you'll get it."

Fall term with an enrollment of

The papers have been full of Bend's praises and many of

"Did Bend put it over? Well, I wonder! There wasn't anything to it and you can just bet your own sweet little life that

50 more pupils than last year. The greatest increase is in the High School which now has a membership of 50 as against

we Portl anders appreciated and enjoyed your program

33 in 1913.

from start to finish. There

of the schools, but also of the

• Salem

new school building. While some of the finishing details

• Roseburg

the excursionists have written

appreciation of their good time on the Central Oregon junket. Here are a couple of charac-

For the week ending Sept. 13, 1914

teristic letters, both from prominent Portlanders:

500 would join next Bend excursion

about it now, we could get up

So writes enthusiastic

Greg l/l/alden (R) ...............Y Ead Blumenauer (D) .........N SuzanneBonamici (D) .....N Peter DeFazio(D) ..............N Kurt Schrader, (D) ............. Y

"From the way the boys feel

acrowd of500 ifweeverstart for Bend again. The bunch that didn't go is kicking itself because it overlooked the big

wasn't a hitch — everything moved along as though the track had been sprinkled and rolled every day for the last year and four months. "I hopethat this willbebut

• Obituaries, DeathNotices:

Portlander echoing sentiment

DetailsontheObituaries page inside. Contact:541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

of Admen — value of junket invaluable. Echoes of the Ad Club ex-

bet. The trip was really a revelation to all of us. The value

• Community events:

cursion are coming thick from

of the trip as a whole will be

landbusiness men in the future and that we shall have the plea-

Email eventsto communitylife@ bendbulletin.com orclickon "Submitan Event"online at bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact:541-383-0351

Portland, and their enthusiasm shows what a hit the affair was

incalculable and I know that

sure of returning the kindness

everything Bend ever wants with the 103 business men who down here she can have, and if came here last week and how she wants Portland to help her tremendously valuable it was get anything anywhere else,

the beginning of many visits of this kind on the part of Port-

you extendeduswhilein Bend."

Schools have 50newpupils Bend's schools opened the

STATE NEWS

It was not only the opening

are not quite completed, the

structure is ready for use in all its important points. The new structure is called the Reid

school in honor of Bend's first principal, Miss Ruth Reid, now Mrs. H.J. Overturf. Note to readers: That "new" school isnow 100years old and home to the Deschutes County Historfcal Society Museum.

See Yesterday/B2

• Salem:Officials are preparing to send out voter-registration reminders to 900,000 Oregonians,B3 • Rosebnrg:After 37 years, one trail-tending ranger is hanging up the chainsaw,B3


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

E VENT TODAY

ENDA R 541-617-7050. "LES MISERABLES":A new production of the opera about convict Jean Valjean; SOLDOUT;3 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. MARE WAKEFIELDAND NOMAD: The Nashville-based folk duo performs, with Terence Neal; $15 suggested donation; 7

KOLLECTIBLE OR KEEPSAKE: Have an item appraised by a panel of antique experts; $40; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www. kollectible-or-keepsake.com, info© assistancel eaguebend.com or 541-420-3387. p.m., doors open at 6p.m. for FORT ROCK HOMESTEADERS potluck; The Glen at Newport ASSOCIATION REUNION Hills,1019 NW Stannium Drive, POTLUCKAND AUCTION: Event for the homesteaders, descendants Bend; houseconcertsintheglen© bendbroadband.com or and families of Fort Rock; bring 541-480-8830. a dish to share; $5 for annual family dues; 10 a.m.; Fort Rock Grange, 64651 Fort Rock Road; www.fortrockoregon.com or MONDAY 541-480-9442. SISTERS FALLSTREETFESTIVAL: NO EVENTSLISTED. Arts, crafts, food and a silent auction to benefit the Sisters High School Visual Arts Department; TUESDAY 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; downtown Sisters; www.centraloregonshows.comor THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read 541-420-0279. and discuss "Running the Rift" by X-TREME AIRDOGS Naomi Benaron; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift COMPETITION: Dock-jumpingdog competition; free for spectators; 10 Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ a.m.-3 p.m.; Crescent Lake Resort, eastbend or 541-330-3760. 23250 Crescent Lake Highway; REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: www.crescentlakeresort.com or 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh 541-433-2505. Street and Evergreen Avenue; redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: A fiddle performance; free, donations com or 541-550-0066. accepted; 1-4 p.m.; Powell Butte FALL REPAIRCAFE: Event that Community Center, 8404 SW Reif connects people with broken things Road; 541-462-3736. and people that like to fix things; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; The Gear OREGON BOOK AWARD Fix, 345 SW Century Dr., Bend; TOUR:Featuring authors Elena 541-617-0022. Passarello and Kari Luna; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Jane Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. Kirkpatrick will present her novel "A Light In The Wilderness"; $15 deschuteslibrary.org/bend or

Yesterday Continued from B1

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vpvpM/.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

by Student Exchange, Inc. of which JW. Miller is director.

three nonprofits; free, registration requested; 5:30 p.m.; private residence, 22055 Rickard Road, Bend; www.harmony4women.com or trixytazzy©live.com. TONY FURTADO: The Portland roots-rock artist performs, with Stephanie Schneiderman; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. WILD & SCENIC FILM FESTIVAL: Featuring outdoors and conservation films as part of the Oregon Natural Desert Association Wilderness Weekend, with food,

BEND FARMERSMARKET: 3-7

p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW Frankli n and NW Oregon avenues; www.bendfarmersmarket.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Author Beth Baker will speak on her book"With a Little Help from Our Friends: Creating Community as We Grow Older"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina SpringsBooks,422 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491.

cheese eaterswhoadopt avegan

area, gamesand awiener dog

diet for six weeks; $15; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16& IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. "LES MISERABLES":A new production of the opera about convict Jean Valjean; SOLDOUT; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. BEND COMEDY SHOWCASE: Featuring Doug Morgan, Last Comedian Standing semifinalist; $5; 8 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd.; www.bendcomedy.com,

THURSDAY THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Sense of an Ending" by Julian Barnes; noon; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/lapine/ or 541-312-1090. HARMONY4WOMEN SINGER'S KICKOFFPARTY: Women and teens are invited to sing in an annual concert to raise funds for

race; free admission; 5-10 p.m. Friday, noon-10 p.m. Saturday, all agesuntil6 p.m.;downtown Bend; www.bendoktoberfest.com or 541-788-3862. MUSIC FORAN AUTUMN EVENING:Dinner and musical fundraiser for scholarships awarded to south Deschutes Countystudents;$40;6-9 p.m.; Holy Trinity Church, 18143 Cottonwood Road, Sunriver; sunrivercf@gmail.com or 541-593-1833. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Author Jane Kirkpatrick will speak on her book "A Light in the Wilderness"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491.

scotti e©cocomedyscene.com or 480-257-6515. "JANAPAR: LOVEONA BIKE": Screening of a film about a

PUBLIC OFFICIALS

recreationists out over a two mile lava trail to the summit

Transportation arrangements of Little Belknap Crater, from were also made by Student Ex- which spilled much of the lava change, Inc., for Kimiko Chiba, that spilled over the McKen75 YEARSAGO from Japan who is completing ziePass country thousands of For the week ending a practical nurse course here, years ago. Sept. 13,1939 and will attend Central Oregon Collegethis year. This will be 25 YEARSAGO U.S. warships to patrol coast her second year in Bend. President Roosevelt today Yoshihiko and Kimiko are For the week ending ordered a patrolby destroyers, the onlystudent-age Japanese Sept.13,1989 coast guard vessels and air- in Bend. They have had anopplanesextending severalhun- portunity to become acquaint- District's plans for dred miles off the American ed, and converse in their native Hollinshead Park rile coastline. The patrol is to gath- tongue. neighbors er information on any activities Yoshihiko, who is 17, is being Development plans for Holof belligerent vesselsin a step hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Owen linshead Park i n n o r theast to protect U.S. neutrality in the Panner and family. Yoshihiko Bend may lead to a showdown European war. and Owen Jr., also 17, will be between local officials and seniors. Other members of the neighbors, who say planned Airplane factories Panner family are daughters improvements will dangerousworking at top speed Kathy, 14,and Rene, 11. ly increase traffic and will deAssembly lines in big AmerYoshihiko comes from the stroy the rural ambiance of the ican aircraft factories turning city of Takarazuka, which has park. out 100war planes a week for a population of 70,000. Its ¹i Many people, including France and Britain were hum- mate is warmer than Bend's, two relat ives of park donors, ming today despite President but some of the scenery is sim- signed a petition objecting to Roosevelt's neutrality embar- ilar. Yoshihiko says the trees the Bend Metro Park and Recgo. For the time being the ships remind him of home. reation District's improvement will be stored in a warehouse. Yoshihiko is considering a planned for the 41 acre parcel. A representative of one of career in journalism. His hobPark District Director Vince the three plants here hold- by, in a related field, is photog- Genna, who knew theHollinsing $33.000.000 in orders for raphy. He has been a photogra- heads, said the development France and Britain said pro- phy dub member for two years plans match what the Hollinsvisions had been made in the at his high school at home. He headsenvisioned. "I'm not going to do anycontracts for the eventuality of uses a Nikon camera. such an embargo. At Bend High School, his thingto go back on my word "We are going to obey the subjects will be junior English, to the Hollinsheads," Genna president's proclamation to the advanced mathematics, typ- said. "We're going to keep the letter," the representative said. ing, speech, modernproblems ruralatmosphere as much as "But regardless of what and journalism. we can and still meet the rehappens we will go ahead and He has had five years of En- quirements of the city planning build the airplanes. It's up to glish study in Japan, where En- department." Britain and France to figure glish is required in junior and Genna added that the disout how the planes will be de- senior high. In that country trict "got that property not for livered to them. That's in the there are six years of elementa- the neighbors tolook at. We got contract." ry school,three years of junior it for people to use." high and four years of high Bob Keefer, assistant park Alley Oop comes here school. School attendance is re- district director, said the distomorrow, full page size quired through junior high. trict will meet all deed reA full page episode in the Yoshihiko has a younger sis- quirements and added that the adventures of Alley Oop, the ter. His father is a taxi cab com- district will try within reason comic caveman who is now pany director. to keep the park in its natural entangled in the Trojan wars, The Japanese student, away state. "Our intent is to try to keep will appear in The Bulletin from his homeland for the first tomorrow. Alley Oop's popu- time, made the trip to America the integrity of the park as larity with Bend readers has alone. He traveled by ship to much aspossible but to still ingrown amazingly during re- Los Angeles, and by bus to Eu- vite usage," he said. cent weeks while his creator, gene, where he was met by the Keefer added that developVince T. Hamlin, pushes back Panners. ment plans aren't much differthe curtain of time to display He finds the food in America ent now than theywere in 1986, Alley'sprowess against aback- similar to that at home, except when neighbors embraced the drop of ancient Troy. that rice is served in his coun- district's outline. Ooola has joined her boy- try once or twice a day. He The chief change, he said, infriend on the Trojan battlefield, finds the substitution of other volves renovation of the house but unfortunately she is in the cerealgrainsand potatoes ac- to accommodate park district camp of the Greeks while Al- ceptable to his taste. classes. The renovated house "I am very happy to be here can hold 70 people, which has ley is hobnobbing with Helen of Troy. Sooner or later the two in Bend," Yoshihiko said. "I alarmed neighbors. Still, disare going to get together. And will do my best to represent my trict officials doubt whether that, we think, will be worth country well." more than40 people ever will waiting for. use the building at one time. Watch for Alley Oop in to- 'Moon'area attracting Eventually, t h e dis t r i ct many visitors morrow's paper. wants to restore the turn-of"If you can't go to the moon, the-century homestead house come to Central Oregon." on the property, make one 50 YEARSAGO Recreationists apparently barn into an educational muFor the week ending are heedingthis advice:They seum and renovate the other Sept. 13,1964 were in the jagged McKenzie barn into a multipurpose arts lava fields over the weekend center. Also,picnic and recreYoshihiko Marutani in great numbers. It was there ation areas willbe installed. new exchange student that astronaut Walter CunOne neighbor said neighbors Yoshihiko Marutani, from ningham recently tested the are not opposed to the park, Japan, is an exchange student lavas, walking over the lunar but they do object to the extenat Bend HighSchool this year. surfacein aspacesuit. sive developmentproposed by His stay here was arranged Some of thestrolls even took the district.

SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue and Ash Street; sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. VFW DINNER:Fish and chips; $6; 3-7 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 NE Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. BEND OKTOBERFEST:Event includes oompah music, family

advance, $10 at the door; 7 p.m., doorsopen at6 p.m.;The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www.ONDA.org/wild8scenic or 541-330-2638. "FAT, SICK & NEARLYDEAD2": Documentary about three meat and

Tony Furtado, the Portland roots-rock musician, will perform with Stephanie Schneiderman at The Belfry in Sisters on Thursday.

WEDMESDAY

FRIDAY

beverages, araffle and more; $8 in

Alicia J. Rose/Submitted photo

suggesteddonation;6-8 p.m .; Partners in Care, 2075 NEWyatt Court, Bend; 541-382-5882. KNOW WILDERNESS:OUR DESERT WILDERNESS:The Oregon Natural Desert Association will explore life in the High Desert; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. "A STREETCARNAMEDDESIRE": A showing of the 2014 Young Vic production of the Tennessee Williams play; $18; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 541-312-2901.

23-year-old who cycles across three continents; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. THE VAM COMMANDERS:The Ashland punk band performs, with Problem Stick; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.

COMGRESS

LEGISLATURE

• Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NW Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. ReaWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 W eb: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave.,Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 NWBond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

Senate

Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state. OI'.Us

Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. John Huffman, R-District59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. NE,H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state. ot;us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ huffman • Rep. MikeMcLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.nikemclane©state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District53 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state.

• Sen. TedFetrioli R-District30 (Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp,R-District27 (portlon of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. DougWhitsett, R-District28 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state. ot'.Us

Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett

House ef Representatives • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-477 Salem, OR97301

-

oi'.Us

Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ whisnant

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

a e e sse omai vo er-re is ra ionremin ers By Jonathan J. Cooper

tion is Oct. 14.

The Associated Press

There will be people who are registered who still re-

who have moved, and death

records from the Social SeSALEM — Nearly 900,000 curity Administration to flag Oregonians who have a driv- ceive the cards because infor- people who have died. er's license or state identifica- mation in their voter registraStates joining the consortion card but aren't registered tion, such as their birthday, tium agree to mail postcards to vote will soon get a postcard doesn't match their driver's at least once every two years reminding them to register. license, said Tony Green, a to people who appear eligible The secretaryof state's of- spokesman forthe secretary to vote but unregistered. The fice says the postcards will of state's office. Those voters success rate has ranged from go out on Monday. Officials are still eligible to cast a bal- 3 to 10 percent, said John Lindsay they'rerequired to com- lot, but they are encouraged back, a former Oregon elecply with the requirements of to update their voter registra- tions chief who is now the cona multistate consortium that tion so election officials can sortium's executive director. "If you talk to people who seeks to clean up voter rolls maintain clean records. and expand participation. OrS even states formed t h e are in the business of direct egon joined it last year. Electronic Registration Infor- mail and trying to encourThe postcards say "it ap- mation Center in 2012. Three age people to do something pears you may not be regis- more, including Oregon, and through direct mail, they tered to vote" and direct people the District of Columbia have would consider those healthy to a website where they can since joined. The consortium responses," Lindback said. register. The deadline to par- collects data from the states, S ecretary o f S t at e K a t e ticipate in the November elec- helping them identify voters Brown, a Democrat in her sec-

Eugene adduCtiOll —Police in Eugeneareinvestigating a report that a mantried to abduct a12-year-old girl. The girl told police that the man tried to coax her into avan onThursday. She said he asked several times to give her aride, evenafter she refused. Police say the girl got homesafely and the mandid not try to follow her. She reported the incident to a school resource officer. TheEugene Register-Guard reports that the girl described the van asbeing purple-greenish, with a wide scrape onthe front passenger and sliding door. She said thevan had adent on the passenger-side headlight.

ond term, tried unsuccessfully to persuade state lawmakers to automatically register people to vote based on DMV records. The postcards areunrelated to

Teen fallS —Portland Fire andRescuesays agirl in her early teens sustained life-threatening injuries whenshefell more than 40 feet off the cliffs at a popular hiking and climbing spot. Crewsarrived minutes after receiving reports Friday evening saying the girl had gone over the edge at Rocky Butte. Firefighters searching with powerful lights from the top of the cliffs spotted her moving down below, thenset up a high-angle rope rescuesystem. Officials say they begantreating her many injuries and carried her in a litter one-third of a mile to awaiting ambulance, which brought her to LegacyEmanuel Medical Center. Authorities aren't sure what caused the fall.

Brown's legislative effort and

aren't an attempt to help Democrats, Green said. "Everyone has an interest

in clean voter rolls no matter what party you're in," he said. The secretary ofstate's office estimates that the mail-

ing will cost $123,000. A

Bridge Study —A $4 million study will explore ways to beefup a critical transportation link in Southern Oregon that could bewiped out in a major earthquake.Thestudy commissioned by the Oregon Department of Transportation will consider methods of strengthening a 3,200-foot viaduct that carries Interstate 5 through the heart of Medford. The study also will look at other options for routing traffic in case it fails or requires upgrades. TheMedford Mail-Tribune reports that federal moneymay beavailable to pay for upgrades once the study describes the options.

grant from the Pew Charita-

ble Trusts will cover 75 percent, leaving the state's tab at $31,000, Green said. There are six versions of the postcards. A

r e s earch

group funded by Pew will study which cards get the best response.

— From wire reports

Trai-ten in ran er an su t ec ainsawater 7 ears By Rob McCallum

Lake is around 6,200 feet). been the best job I've ever had.

The News-Review

With Menke's section of trail

I had a lot of great partners."

ROSEBURG — As long as there has been a North Umpqua River, it has swollen with spring snowmelt every year and struck the same bank near Toketee with fury.

being on the eastern edge, it gets covered in snow all winter and into the spring.

Despite the f o reboding name and yearly washouts,

4

remains a favorite for Menke. "It's the most beautiful part, time to assess the damage. Trail repairs shouldn't be in my opinion," he said. "It's done too early in case a spring right on the river or up on a storm hits. bluff above it and so scenic. "I'd do a segment and The North Umpqua is one of wouldn't usually go back un- the most beautiful rivers, not less there were some major just in Oregon, but anywhere. issues," Menke said. "There It's quite a treat to be able to

When it came to blaze a

trail following the river, the topography of the region left no other place to go than by that

same spot. Every winter, the river washes out the 200-yard section of the North Umpqua Trail.

/'

4 t

are so many trails there just

For the past 20 years, in

Menke has embarked each

spring to repair the trouble-

' jg i

some section. The frequent washout is

rather than sitting in an office," Menke said. "Which I still had to do more than I wanted to."

later. By that time, he was Michael Sullivan/The News-Review

tera 37-year career,spentall Umpqua National Forest ranger Randy Menke carries a chainsaw as he walks along a section of the with the Umpqua, Menke re- North Umpqua Trail he helps maintain east of Idleyld Park, Oregon. Menke retired in July after a

a lready working with t h e Umpqua National Forest as

37-year career, 20 of which were spent with the Umpqua National Forest.

Menke's beat extends from the eastern terminus at the

derness Act prevented him

strong windstorm in the late

from using power tools. So

1990s blew down more than

specialist). In 1995, two years before the official opening of the the last two years it has been NUT, the ranger who headed just me (maintaining trails) up trail maintenance for the due to budget cuts," said Men- UNF retired. "I asked if I could help out ke, who worked out of the Diamond Lake Ranger Staand they said, 'No, you can do tion in Toketee. "I'd scrounge it,'" Menke said. "I did it for 20 around and see if I could get a years and really enjoyed it. It's

Cascade Crest to Marster's

Menke hauled a crosscut saw or ax to cut t hrough fallen timber.

1,000 trees on the Dread and

volunteer or a buddy. It's a lot

Terror section. Clearing that proved to be too much for

of work."

dictable river, hazards to the

notch in a log on the eastern

Menke and the other ranger on t r ail m a intenance at

trail include landslides, towering trees prone to windfall and ever-encroaching brush. For most trail clearing,

side of the trail, chances are, the time, so contractors were Menke made it possible. hired to help. "If I come to a log, I reach "I usually had one other out from the middle of the person working with me, but

Menke brought his aforemen- trail and cut where my fingers ready to get out and hike the tioned chainsaw. But when touch," Menke said. "That trails at my own leisure inthe trail skirts the Boulder makes it wide enough so a stead of bringing a chainsaw Creek Wilderness in the Jes- person can get in there." with me." sie Wright Segment, the WilMenke said a particularly

If you've walked through a

The SearChfOr uniVersity'S neXt

PreSident in Chairman'ShandS

The elevation increases on the North Umpqua Trail from

responsibility of identifying, EUGENE — T h e s earch vetting, interviewing and forf or a new p resident of t h e warding candidates. University of Oregon will be Lillis said the university a marked departure for the needs a new approach because school, conducted largely in of a host of factors, including private and run largely by the the "churn of presidents." chairman of the new board of The last president, Michael trustees. Gottfredson, resigned abruptIt will be marked by recruit- ly in August, with a $940,000 ing peoplewho may not be s ettlement raised from p r i thinking of themselves as the vate donors. His predecessor, university president, Chair- Richard Lariviere, was fired man Chuck Lillis said as the after he upset the state board board voted 12-1 on Thursday then running the school and to approve the plans he drew the governor over issues of Up. school independence and "There's a p r etty g ood salaries. chance that the person we Each served only two years. think is terrific isn't looking Lillis, who made his money for a job, and we may have in telecommunications and to convince them that this is private equity investing, was where they should land," he among the prominent alumni sard. who pressed for greater indeThe plans give Lillis much pendence for the university, of the authority for the search. which was governed by the For example, he alone has State Board of Higher Educapower to rank and eliminate tion until July. finalists, the Eugene RegisAmong their concerns was ter-Guard reported. the state's unwillingness or inability to provide universities with at least a stable budget.

Mako, a people-oriented bordercollie mixwith a sweet disposp tion, is 4 years lp old and weighs 38 pounds.Once you and he establish a relationship, he will be highly trainable. He doesn'tbark at other dogsand seems indifferentto cats. Mako knowsbasic obedien ce,isgoodona leashand with other dogs.Thisis one very sweet and special boy. Seebrightsideanimals.orgl adoptable-dogs for morephotos and vldeo; meethim Tues.-Sat.,10-5.

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west to east (the Swiftwater Trailhead near Idleyld Park is at 800 feet above sea level, and where the trail intersects the

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MAKO

a silviculturist (reforestation

tired on July 24. "I love maintaining trails. It was my favorite part of the job," said Menke, 56. "But I'm

In the last two searches, in 2008 and 2011, the state ap-

something by clearing a trail

Forestry from Umpqua Community College two years

maintaining for the UNE Af-

Roseburg on Highway 138. Besides the predictably unpre-

"It gave me great satisfac-

tion to see that I accomplished

an Associate of Science in

just one part of the 45 miles Menke was charged with

Trailhead, 50 miles east of

walk near it." T he most b e autiful, h e said, but also the hardest to maintain.

wasn't time to do all of them, so you had to time it right." Menke said he followed his brother, Bill, into forestry out of high school. After graduating from Roseburg High School in 1976, Menke earned

order to keep the trail a con-

tiguous 79 miles, Umpqua National Forest ranger Randy

the Dread and Terror segment

Once the snow melts, it's

-

smaller number of people will recruit in private "until we get the candidate we want." The plans call for a 14-mem-

ber "assist" committee largely of trustees and administrators with a second 12-member

committee that includes some students and office workers to provide "relevant perspectives

and insights." Representatives of o rganized staff and teacher groups objected. Carla McNelly, president of the Local 85 of the Ser-

vice Employees International Union, said being relegated to the "input" committee would

"send a signal to the incoming president that our voice is not important enough to have

been on the search committee that picked them."

The only vote against the Lillis plan came from Trustee Kurt Willcox, a labor union ad-

vocate and part-time research analyst at the university. "None of us on the board

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had actually seen this proposal before this morning," he

pointed broadly representative In the search for a new said. "That's a real concern besearch committees of 21 to president, Lillis said, no hir- cause I know it's been talked 25 members, who shared the ing deadline will be set, and a about for a while."

~ -

-

• •

o o •


B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

BITUARIES Daniel (Don)

Micheale Giesler

R. Jeter

Sept.19,1939- Sept. 5, 2014

itev. 9, 1931 - Sept. 6, 2014

July 21,1931 - September 1, 2014

Francis p a s se d aw a y early Saturday morning at Hospice House after a si x ear battle with cancer, his amily by his side. He was born in Philadelp hia a n d attended Roxbor-

D on wa s b o r n t o E u l a Mae (Addkison) and Francis Jeter on July 21, 1931, in Mesa, Arizona. H eart f a i l ur e t o o k h i m

Micheale "Mimi" Giesler passed away on September 5, 2014 in B e nd, O r egon. Micheale was born September 19 , 1 939 i n L y n d e n, W ashington t o J im an d Vera Porter. Sh e attended and graduated from Washington State University with a degree i n s o c ial w o r k . M icheale worked as a s o cial worker in the State of Washington before moving to Alaska where she continued her w or k a s a s o cial worker and later worked for t he J uvenile J u stice D e partment for the City of Anchorage. U p o n r e t irement Micheale received an award from t he Gov e r no r of A laska honoring her l o n g commitment and dedication to Ju ve n i l e Justi c e . Micheale was also an avid r unner having ru n o ver a dozen marathons including running the original marat hon r o u t e i n A th e n s , Greece. Micheale moved to Bend, Oregon in 1995. For m any yea r s , M i ch e a l e served on the boards of and dedicated numerous volunt eer h o ur s t o b o t h th e L anglaufer C lu b a n d t h e Central Oregon Nordic Ski Club. She also w o rked at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center as a sk i h o s t a n d t a ught young children Nordic skiing. Micheale's greatest joy in life wa s he r g r andchild ren: Z ach G i esler, N i c k Giesler, B l ai r D r a n gsholt a nd Brian Drangsholt. T h e

Francis Harvey Legner

ough High

away Sep-

t ember 1 , 2014 Don

gradu-

ated from Gilbert graduatHigh i ng as S chool i n President 1950. of his S erved i n class. the United He th e n Don Jeter Francis Legner joined the States Air Force and wa s h o n orably US Air Force reaching the rank o f St a f f Se r g eant. discharged in 1954. A lifetime farmer, beginDuring his service, he was s tationed i n T e x a s , G e r - ning i n G i l b e rt , A r i z o na, until coming to Oregon, in many, and Kirknewton Air B ase n e a r E di n b u r g h , 1962, where he continued f arming o p e r ations u n t i l Scotland where he met and married h i s w i f e of 6 1 his passing. D on i s s u r v i ved b y h i s years, Norma June. H e graduated fro m F o r - wife of 6 3 y e ars, L avera; his children, Margie (husestry School at the Univerband, G a r y ) Sh o c key, sity of Montana with a de(wife, gree in w o o d t e c hnolo@r Redmond, Dan Cu lv e r, Ty a nd spent h i s c a r ee r i n D iana) (wife, Lori) B end; eight various management positions in s p ecialized w o od grandchildren; three greatg randchildren; a si st e r , products working forcom( husband, D i c k ) panies such as A n a conda Bella F orest P r o d u cts , E v a n s M iller, E l f r i da , A r i z o n a ; P roducts a nd Ro sb o r o s everal nieces an d n e p h L umber Comp a n y o f ews. Don was preceded in d eath b y h i s d au g h t er , Springfield, OR. Beverly Ann Jeter. He was preceded in death The family invites you to by his parents and only sibling, B a r bara . H e i s a ttend a mem o r i a l c e l survived by his wife, sons, ebration of his life on Saturday, September 20, 2014, Dana of Eugene, Alan and wife, Katy, (Eugene), Barry between the hours of 4:30 p .m. to 7 :30 p .m., a t t h e and wife, Kathy (Portland) and d aug h t e r , L i sa Redmond Grange Hall, loM ichael o f B e n d ; t h r e e cated at 707 SW Kalama g randchildren, A man d a , St., in Redmond. Please h o no r us w it h Alanna and Derek and two y our p r esence an d s h a r e s tep-grandchildren, A a r on your special memories of and Stephanie. He liked the outdoors and Don. School

enjoyed

family p l ans

World Series star FrankTorre, Joe's older brother, dies at 82 The Associated Press N EW Y OR K — Fr a n k Torre, the World Series star who helped put little brother

Joe on a path that led to the Hall of Fame, has died. He

was 82. The Major League Baseball commissioner's office

s aid

Torre died Saturday at a hospice in Palm Beach, Florida. He had previously received heart and kidney transplants, and had been ill in recent years with cancer.

Torre played seven seasons in the majors with the Milwaukee Braves and Philadel-

phia Phillies. Though he hit only 13 home runs in 1,482 career at-bats in the regular sea-

son, he homered twice in 10 at-bats during the 1957 World Series as Milwaukee beat the

New York Yankees for its only championship. In Game 7, he drove in a run at Yankee

Stadium during the clinching 5-0 victory. Frank Torre, nearly nine

years older than Joe, guided his signing with the Braves and was long his mentor. Joe Torre starred as a play-

bendbulletin.com Weekly Arts Sc Entertainment In

M]LGiLZBK •

ceremoniesin July.Joe previously said that among all the great advice he got from his older brother, there was one time he missed — when

Frank offered his opinion on becoming manager of the

cancer in Houston. Yankees. "Frank said I was crazy to Magda Olivero, 104: OperJoe Sample, 75: Pianist, atic soprano whose long, sto- take this job," Joe joked. composer and a f ounding riedcareerwas matched only In his first season with the m ember of thegenre-crossing by the extraordinary devotion Yankees, Joe Torre guided Jazz Crusaders who helped of her followers, who were them to the World Series title. pioneer the electronic jazz- drawn by her dramatic intenFrank Torre was in the hosfunk fusion style. Died Friday sity. Died Sept. 8 in Milan. pital recovering from a heart of complications from lung — From wire reports transplant th e d a y b e f ore Deaths of note from around the world:

— Dr. Mehmet Oz assisted

Obituary policy

policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted Until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submIssion, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

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Bend, OR97708

Francis "Fritz" D. Lawson 1933-2014 Fritz was born on March 24, 1933 in Bandon, Oregon to Harry and Grace (Conn) Lawson. He passed away on August 23, 2014 in Santa Ana, CA after a short battle with brain cancer. Fritz's first memories are of Standing in the ocean with his family and wildlife while the town of Bandon was burning in 1936. He spent his childhood in Bandon. Emma Jean Gans became his wife on Sept 2, 1951 in Independence, Oregon. t For 15 years, he proudly served as a Sergeant in the 929th Field Artillery :.':«i'"=R~r...~RKu a~"- B at t a lion, a training division for the Army Reserve. 1 t tJSOQOI '+'+'+I t l :, « ~ e

formed a friendship that en-

dured for decades, and I was minor league system in 1951 touched to speak with him before serving two years in yesterday. "Some of t h e f o ndest the military. He hit .273 in 714 games in the majors. memories of my life involve ton Braves and played in their

The Braves sent him to the minors during the 1960 sea-

Frank's M i lwaukee Braves

teams from 1956-1960, and son. He barely missed play- his great play in the 1957 Fall ing with his brother when the Classic was one of the keys team brought Joe to the big to bringing the World Series leagues later that year. championship to my homeAfter finishing as a player, town," he said. "Frank's longTorre worked for the Rawl- time support of the Baseball ings sports goods company. Assistance Team ... was an He later became an executive illustration of how much he with the Baseball Assistance cared about our game and the Team, which helps those who people who are a part of it." have been in the game and Selig called Joe Torre, who their families in need. was visiting his brother in Commissioner Bud Selig the hospital, on Friday. Frank grew up in Milwaukee root- took the phone to talk with ing for the Braves. his longtime friend and fan. "I am d eeply saddened "Frank and I grew up toby the loss of Frank Torre, gether in Brooklyn and I ala closefriend for nearly 60 ways looked up to him as a years and a man who marked baseball player and thereafthe start of a great baseball ter how he conducted himself family," Selig said in a state- as a person," New York Mets ment. "Before my career in chairman Fred Wilpon said.

Micheale s a shes i n th e summer. He's now an execum ountains s h e l o v e d s o tive with MLB. m uch f o l l owing t h e f i r s t Frank Torre was unable snowfall. to make the trip to Cooperstown, New York, for the Hall

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmittedby phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submIssions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary

baseball began, Frank and I

er, won four titles while man-

on the operation — when he

Find It All Online

seven games to the Yankees. Torre signed with the Bos-

aging the Yankees and was t o s p r ead inducted into the H al l l a st

c a m pin g and

fishing with his family. A t hi s r e q uest, n o s e r v ices wil l b e h e l d . T he f amily w i s h e s t o th a n k Partners In Care for t h eir compassion an d w o n d e r f ul care o f F r a n k d u r i n g his final days. In lieu of f l o w ers, donat ions m a y b e ma d e t o Partners In Care. N iswonger-Reynolds F u neral Home is in charge of arrangements.

FEATURED OBITUARY

Bricklayer/stone mason and restaurateur were the two CareerS he chose to - earn his living. His family was always involved in his occupations, his children first working for him and then eventually he working for them. Fritz and Sons evolved into Lawson Building and Masonry. He started the La Esperanza in Redmond eventually opening restaurants in Hermiston, OR and Yakima, WA. He was always willing to help others repair whatever they needed. Even after his retirement, his business card read "If it's on the fritz...let Fritz fix it." Fritz and Emma raised their five children in Salem, OR and were charter members of the People's Church (central Assembly of God). He led a christian life teaching sunday school for most of his adult life. In 1969, the family started a series of mOveS that Fritz said were necessary for his children to meet their future spouses. First, the family moved to Winslow, AZ to help build a church on the Navajo Indian Reservation. Ken married Roxanne Hadler while there. They have one son and three grandsons and live in Redmond, OR. The next move was to washington state where Becki (now deceased) married Michael Rogers. Mike and his second wife, Teri, now reside in Phoenix, AZ. They have three children and six grandchildren. Wenatchee was where Vickie Jean met her future husband, Patrick Monroe; they now reSide in Powell Butte, OR and have two sons and three grandchildren. - In 1976, the first La Esperanza in Redmond, OR was started. Tom married Tammy Cook; they now reSide in , Yakima, WA. They have two daughters and two grandchildren. A second La Esperanza in Hermiston, OR was where Connieio met her husband, Mike Yutzie. This union produced twochildren and eleven grandchildren. While living in Redmond, Fritz served on the Redmond City Council working on an airpOrt expansion committee. After retirement, Fritz and Emma lived in Desert Hot Springs, Alhambra and Santa Ana, CA. He is also survived by three brothers and one sister - David and Patti of Graham, WA; Harry and Sylvia of Keizer, OR; Dan and Grace of Noblesville, IN and Dollie Culbertson of Pacific, WA. He was preceded in death by his parents, two Children and two grandsons. His memorial will be held on Saturday, September 27, 2014 at 11 a.m. at Dayspring Christian Center, 7801 N 7th Street, Terrebonne, OR 97760. Condolences, special memories, stories or jokes can be sent to L. fritzmemories@bendbroadband.com.

watched the Yankees clinch the crowd. Earlier t h a t ye a r , the Torres' older brother, Rocco, died of a heart attack. When

Joe Torre was asked to help design the Yankees' championship ring, he had the word "heart" inscribed as a tribute to his brothers and the team. In 2007, Frank Torre had a

kidney transplant, and the donor was his daughter. Torre was with the Braves

as they reached the World Series in 1957 and again the

Larry Everett Baker of Redmond, Oregon, passed away peacefully at his home on September 8, 2014. He was 78. Larry was born February 22, 1936 in Spokane, Washington, to Ray and Ruth lsniderl Baker. Larry and his family traveled throughout the country before finally settling in Redmond, Oregon in 1946, where he grew up and attended school. Larry graduated from Redmond High School in 1955.

Larry briefly attended college before deciding to join the U.S. Army in 1959, where he was stationed in Baumholder, Germany. While stationed there, he met his future wife, Else Eigner. In February, 1961, he returned to the U.S. at Fort Lewis, Washington. Else arrived on June 7, 1961 and they were married in Redmond, Oregon on June 18, 1961. On September i, 1961 Larry was discharged from the Army; he then went to work with his father at Redmond Ace Hardware, the business his father began in 1946. 'Ihe business was passed on to Larry in 1996, which he continued to own and operate until his retirement in May, 1997. Larry enjoyed old cars, watching sports, especially football and basketball, tinkering around the house with all his tools and spending time at the Oregon Coast. Larry is survived by his wife of 53 years, Else Baker of Redmond, OR, his daughter, Melissa Baker, of Redmond, OR, and his three grand kitties. At his request, no funeral services will be held. His wishes were to be cremated and a private family memorial will be held at a later date at the Oregon Coast. Memorial contributions may be made in Larry's memory to Hospice of Redmond,~732 SW 23rd Street, Redmond, OR 97756, www.hospiceofredmond.org. P

Autumn Funerals of Redmond has been entrusted with the arrangements: (541) 504-9485.

next year. In 1958, they lost in

Richelle K Hartman July 9, 1959 — August 18, 2014 Richelle K Hartman, a Bend resident for 44 years, passed away August 18, at age 55. A Celebration of Life will be public at the Baptist Eastmont Church on Neff Road, 11:00 a.m. Saturday, September 20, with a POTLUCK (Rocky's I request). All are encouraged to wear casual jeans with green and gold in honor of the University of Oregon Ducks. Richelle was born In McMinnville, Oregon and attended Memorial School through the sixth grade. She moved to Bend in 1970 and attended Pilot Butte Middle School, Bend Senior High and COCC. In high school she was on the drill team, and at COCC was a cheerleader for the basketball team. She held various jobs as a teenager and beyond, including flagging traffic. Richelle was employed at St. Charles Hospital for 24 years in communications and as a certified flight communicator for Airlife/Airlink, assisting doctors, hospitals and flight crews in the transfer of patients all over Oregon. Paramount in her duties, and In her mind, was to keep her flight crews safe. The nickname "Rocky" was born. The "Rock Star" never gave up, keeping a smile for everyone through 11 years of chemo and surgeries. Air medical servicesalloverOregon and beyond knew Rocky ofBend. Richelle had to retire in November of 2013. She loved her job and all the people she worked with. She was given the honor of Caregiver of the Month in June, 2013 by St. Charles Medical Center and Em-!", . ployee of the Year by Air Link. She loved all sports but mainly football, rooting for her "Ducks" and the 49'era. In younger days she 'i played on a city volleyball team and softball teams, and had many trophies. Her five-woman team, sponsored by the Pine Tavern, won a trophy In the 1982 Pole Pedal Paddle race with Richelle, a friend and large dog in the canoe. 1 Richelle belonged to Rim Rock Riders when she was 16 t018 with her wonder horse, Cola, a "really big" surprise gift at Christmas. She sold crafts at the craft shows, had crystal parties, and loved holiday decorating with Christmas villages and much, much more. Richelle was in the pet parade several years and the Christmas parades with her fellow workers. Her cocker spaniel, Fred, was always by her side. Her Ford pickup was well known all over town and she called it Harrison Ford. She has so many Christmas ornaments, we will be giving them to participants at her celebration. This lady will be sorely missed by all who knew her. Richelle is survived by her mother, Kendra Vogt, and brother, Robert Hartman, both of Bend, Oregon; nephew, Ty Hartman, his wife, Vanessa, and their children, Shahalic and Bryson of Redmond, Oregon;; niece, Tia Retherford and her husband, Mike and their children, Makayla, Ashton and Faith of Toledo, Oregon; her Uncle, Ron Winans and his wife, Cookie, of Roseburg, Oregon; her family at St. Charles and . Airlink, and all who knew her. Her family would like to thank all of her doctors, nurses, caregivers, co-workers and office staff who worked tirelessly to help her with her fight. All the fellows at work who shaved their heads the third time she lost her locks, she so appreciated all of you. Thank you, St. Charles and Airlink. To all the staff at Partners In Care Hospice, you know how much you mean to families coping with cancer care. As her mother, I need to thank her many friends who have helped me through this trying time. Memorial contributions may be made in her name to Equine Outreach, 63220 Silvis Rd., Bend, OR :. 97701; St. Charles Foundation, 2600 NE Neff Road, Bend, Oregon 97701, with memo Richelle or Rocky gift contribution; and Partners In Care at 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, in lieu of flowers. '

al'-


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Citizens

T HE

ES T

doesn't speak very good French. "We had two kids, and it

Continued from B1

Fit orcom at, utnot orcoe etown By Adam Nagoumey

' 'h

New York Times News Service

DAVIS, Calif. — The police department of t h i s m o dest

college town is among the latest California beneficiaries of surplus military equipment: a $700,000armored car that is the "perfect vehide," the police

B5

Saturday's new citizens, just felt right — I had to beall Oregon residents, came come a citizen," she said. from around the world, A h elicopter pilot i n with five immigrants from France, Cameron has been Mexico, two from El S albusy raising the couple's vador, and one each from children in recent years, Indonesia, Canada, Iceland, but has gone back to school Turkey, France and South to b e come a n av i a t ion Korea. S haron Rummery w i t h U .S. Citizenship and I m -

instructor.

migration Services h as organized the citizenship ceremonies in R edmond for the past five years. She

be polite and quiet, a con-

Cameron said she's found the residents of Salem to trast to life in France. The French, she said, like the

Spanish and Italians, have a well-deserved reputation of why immigrants opt for citi- being outspoken. "We don't have inhibizenship. Some want to vote, while others are looking for tions; we give our opinions better job opportunities or very rapidly," she said. the chance to travel under Nia Hartzell, of Eugene,

LIFT y

said there's no one reason

chief told the City Council, "to

performrescuesofvictims and potential victims during active shooter incidents." It i s we l l mai n t ained,

an American passport, she

met her husband, Galen Hartzell, online when she

low-mileage and free, the chief, Landy Black, said in explaining why the department had augmented its already sizable

sard. Rummery said for many, the decision isn't about any personal gain, but the feeling that, after however long,

cache of surplus materiel, in-

the United States has be-

duding rifles, body armor and

come their home.

the United States on a permanent resident visa.

an American citizen,'" she

here, it's not hot, nobody

sard.

cares what religion you are," she said.

tectedvehide. But the City Council directed Black last month to get rid of it

inthe face of anuproarthathad swept through this community, Max Whittaker/The New York Times with many invoking the use of Lt. Thomas Waltz climbs down from an armored vehicle recently acquired by the police department similar equipment by the police in Davis, California. The city council of this college town has ordered police to get rid of the $700,000 against protesters in Ferguson, armored car, driven by uproar over the use of similar military surplus equipment against protesters in Missouri, after the fatal shoot- Ferguson, Missouri. ing of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager. The vehicle, a behemoth in The concentration of miliof our budgets had a tremen- of overaggressive policing. In brown camouflage paint, is tary equipment in California dous strain on them because 2011, campus police officers at now parked out of sight in front reflects, in part, the long eco- of the recession. It allowed the University of California, of a steamroller in a gully next nomic downturn over the past departments that had b een Davis, used pepper spray to put to a city garage; on a recent day, decade, which forced policede- gutted to obtain the necessary down a student demonstration, a lone pigeon cooed overhead. partments and sheriff's offices equipment." and a video of the event went "This thing has a turret — it's to contend with budget cuts at Davis waited two years to viral. Wolk, the mayor, said the kind of thing that is used the very time that increasingly get its armored vehicle, Lt. the episode had made residents in Afghanistan and Iraq," said sophisticated crime-fighting Thomas Waltz said as he used evenmorewaryofthearmored Dan Wolk, the mayor. "Our equipment was coming on the both arms to pull open thehuge car. community is the kind of com- market. The Defense Depart- driver's-side door. The police That wariness is not isolatmunity that is not going to take ment's surplus program, along chief was given 60 days to re- ed to Davis. Brown of Santa well to having this kind of vehi- with grants from the Depart- portbackto the City Council on Barbara County said there had been "a lot of misunderstandde. We are not a crime-ridden ment of Homeland Security how to get rid of it. city." to buy materiel, gave officials O nly one member of t h e ing about the program — in The mayoradded:"When it what was, at least until the c ouncil, B r et t L e e , v o t ed some quarters, even hysteria." "The reality is that this is a comes to help from Washing- vote in Davis, an irresistible against instructing the chief to ton we, like most communi- opportunity. return the equipment. great program," he said. "It pro"A number of agencies be"I wasn't sure whether we vides law enforcement with a ties, have a long wish list. But a tank, or MRAP, or whatever came very adept at finding needed one or didn't need one," lot of very valuable equipment what was available," said Sheriff Bill Brown of Santa Barbara

Lee said in an interview. "Let's

fornia — whose crime rate, like

those of many other states, is on the dedine — has one of the

highest concentrations of surplus military equipment in the

Q R E G Q N

nation. That is perhaps not sur-

prising for large cities like Los Angeles, but it is just as true in generally placid seaside getaways like Santa Barbara and here in this quiet community

C

shotguns and pistols, as well as 7,094 pieces of night-vision equipment, the highest allocation of any state in those categories, according to the De-

and bayonets, second to Texas;

and 18 grenade launchers for tear gas and smoke grenades, trailing Florida and North Carolina. The trend of putting such gear in the hands of police departmentshas raised concerns all around the country after

the sight of police officers with armed vehicles and sniper rifles pointed at demonstrators

M

M

U

DR. QUINCY l<ROSBY Dr. Krosby is the Chief Market Strategist for Prudential Annuities. In this capacity,she is a rnernber of the investment rnanagement group for the

Today's investorsare concerned about the future and the irnpact of uncertainty on their retirement. This presentation provides insight on

current trends and offers ideas for investors to consider that may help provide some strategies in charting their retirement for the long terrn. In this informative session, Dr. Krosby will provide valuable insight on: • Current rnarket trends •Analysis on U.S. and Overseas markets

• Portfolio implications and ways to help protect your portfolio

Dinner will be provided

— ORThursday, September 18, 2014 Lunch Session:12:00 pm - j.:30 pm

When:

At the City Council meeting in Davis where the vote took

place, nearly 40 people spoke, and almost everyone urged the

Lunch will be provided

Council to return the MRAP.

The Riverhouse Convention Center 2850 Rippling River Court Bend, OR 97701 To reserve your seat, visit our website, give us a callat 541.382.1778, or send

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mored vehicles are extremely

valuable. They are very expensive. Most police departments cannot afford to buy them."

vious next step, particularly

citizen.

after the birth of their now-

3-year-old daughter. "I already have family in Salem, said after marry- here. My husband is here. I ing an Americanman and have mykidhere. Why do I spending eight years in the have to move back home?" United States, she felt it was she said. "My life is here time for her to decide where now." Beatrice Cameron, born in France and now living

she should be a citizen -

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers®bendbulletin.com

and, she joked, her husband

3Iajie Stovef June 7, 1926 — Au st 25 2014

J

Ma lee b aced life passionately. Admirably, shelived • each dayto the fullest, engaging family and friendsfrom all walks of iifein all ofher adventures. She was adevotedwife, proud mother,and adoring grandmother. She andher husband,Bill, moved their family

gjl <

from thewest coast to the east coast and back, and finallyto the Doninican Rep blic ar

Marieservedas the family foundation for her children, Bill and Sue. Marie wasparticularly dear to her four grandchildren, Kelley, Will, Brett, and Pete. Grandma's camp,croquet and remote control car racing in thesandat Cannon Beach, and Christmasholidays at Grandma's house created indelible memoriesfor her grandchildren. "Gma" had

Marie was anoutstanding athlete and fiercely competitive. She was a collegiatetennis champion, softball captain, water and downhill skier, and golfenthusiast through her 88th birthday just last June. Queenof thegolf coursewith 4 lifetime hole-in-ones, her consistent drives down thefairway andchips onto the green wereher hallmarks, but Marie's magnetic personality drew golfers toher cart for snacks, conversation, and laughter atevery hole.

some members of Congress are

chief of police in Citrus Heights, a quiet suburb of Sacramento. "All of this equipment is needed, and this makes obtaining such equipment affordable. Ar-

coming a citizen as the ob-

is a sought after expert for rnedia outlets such as CNBC, The Wall Street

Journal and Bloomberg Radio.

talking about proposing legislation to limit the program.

lice Chiefs Association and

in the United States, it was

time for him to become a

thatunique ability to makecertain that each ofher grandchildren knew that theyowneda special placein her heart.

is also planning hearings, and

savior," said Christopher Boyd, president of the California Po-

oath of c i tizenship Sat- Hartzell, a Ch r i s t ian, urday, Gilberto Gonzalez said religion became a diMatuz beamed and waved a visive issue in her predomsmall American flag as his inantly Muslim country of two grandsons joined the birth after the 9/11 attacks. son of another new citizen She said several Christian in leading the group in the churches around J akarta Pledge of Allegiance. were bombed, and she felt A Mexico-bornfarmhand increasingly out of place. from Ontario, Gonzalez Since getting married Matuz, 60, said after spend- and settling i n O r egon, ing nearly half of his life Hartzell came to see be-

annuities division, where she provides perspective on the overseas macro-economic environment and financial markets. Dr. I<rosby earned her master'sand doctoraldegrees from the London School of Economics and

Wednesday, September 17, 2014 Dinner Session:5:45 pm — 7:15 pm

has been made available to

Shortly after taking the

foremanin the hydroelectric dambuilding era.

WITH SPECIAL GUE5T SPEAKER

Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee

"Some of the equipment that

I T Y

THE GLOBAL LANDSCAPE

in Ferguson. President Barack Obama hascalled fora review of the military surplus program, with an eye toward curbing or canceling it. The Senate

Council members were also deluged with emails. The backlash worries some law enforcement officials.

N

Oregon Community Investment Services and LPL Financial" proudly presents

fense Department. Over that

period, it also received 49 armored vehicles, with only Texas and Florida obtaining more; 59 helicopters and airplanes, secondtoFlorida;2,370knives

O

® IN V E S T M E N T S E R V I C E S

outside Sacramento. 8,533 surplus assault weapons,

they decided to get engaged, and in 2009, she moved to

that in many instances — in

not just send it back until we've fact, most instances — could County, whose office used the determined whether we need notbe obtainedorafforded,and waves of concern among police program to stock up on heli- one or don't need one." allows us to do a better job of officials across the state and copters. "And that word spread, This community is partic- protecting our citizens and our highlighted the fact that Cali- and it spread at a time when all ularly sensitive to perceptions own public safetypersonnel."

Since 2006, police agencies in California have received

nesia. He visited her and

"I've always respected the Life in Eugene is much people who do it because it's more relaxed than it was in just in their heart. One day Jakarta, Hartzell said. "There's n o p o l lution they decide, 'I want to be

riot helmets, with an MRAP: a mine-resistant, a m bush-pro-

you choose to call it, is not on that list." The council's decision set off

still lived in Jakarta, Indo-

Not NCUA Insured © 2014 Oregon Community Credit Union.

Not Cmdlt Unlon Guaranteed

May LoseValue

Always theopportunist, innovative and trulybrilliant, this "Powerhouse of a Woman," as Marie wasonce referred, learned andmastered different trades from peasorter, chemistry teacher, and locksmith to real estate listing analyzer, taxpreparer, Goodie'sChocolate "packer," and home security service provider. Marie's workethic was admirable and allowed her to be self-supporting throughoutlife, particularly after her husband, Bill, died at anearly age. She was a lifelong learner; a University of Kansas graduate with a BAin Chemistryin lust three years,and the first in the familyto engage all newtechnologies from the first Tandy 16 kb computer tothe most recent IPhone and iPad. For those fortunateenoughto call Marie "friend," they wereconfident in apersonwho was fiercely loyal with a caring ear andjoyous laugh. For those fortunate enough tocall Marie "neighbor," they were blessedwith the "Matriarch of theNeighborhood" providing everyonewith snow removal in thewinters, a watchful eyeyear-round, and the knowledgeto advise on repairing just about anything that needed attention. In return, Marie's life was filled with manyfriends andneighbors that cared for andrespectedher, aswell. Marie lived a lifemost of us aspire to — onefilled with ceaseless adventure,loving family, supportive friends, and, of course, chocolate. Mariepassedawaypeacefullyin her home surrounded by her children. Marie issurvived by two children and four grandchildren —left to follow their own passionsandpursuits, fueled by her memory and love. "Gma" is dearlymissedandloved by her family. 'Ihe familyis honoringMarie'srequest for no service, and will be gatheringprivately to celebrate her life. Pleasedirect donations in Marie's memory to Partners In Care or Special Olympics.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014

o

I

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

HIGH 83'

+r fi+

ALMANAC

'

44'

' '

TUESDAY

"'"

85' 51'

+Pt

Mostly sunnyandvery warm

Clear

83' 48'

TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 93' in 1922 22'in 1927

EAST:Plenty of sunshine and nice today. Clear tonight Sunny to partly cloudy andvery warm tomorrow.

ria Seasid

/5

74/55

Cannon

/64

Portland

~

Clouds and sunwith a shower possible

city

Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W 72/52/0.01 83/67/pc 65/54/Tr 66/45/s 59/45/0.36 63/41/pc 77/51/0.00 81/60/I 60/52/0.46 60/48/sh 86n3/Tr 80/68/t

lington 84/40

iQ

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver ~ ~ xtrem~e Redmond/Madras ~x tre ~me Sisters ~E xt re~me PrineviRe ~~ xt rem~e La Pine/Gilchrist ~x tre ~ me Source: USDA Forest Service

0::::

48 contiguousstates) National high: 116 at Death Valley,CA National low: 18 at West Yellowstone,

91/58

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43/42

4

d

'Six Californias' initiative won't make it onto ballot

,d„

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Sili-

con Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper has missed a key step in his audacious plan to break up California into six g ather

enough signatures to qualify his initiative for the November 2016 ballot, the Secretary

of State's Office reported Friday. The slip-up seemed like the punch line to what had mushroomed into a national joke, with TV talking heads and late-night comedians taking potshots at the Golden State's latest political weirdness.

Political experts expressed amazement Friday that Drap-

er's $5.2 million personal investment in the proposed ballot measure didn't do the trick.

"That should've been more than enough money toqualify," said Graeme Boushey, a University of California, Irvine political-science professor. " It s houldn't h a v e been particularly onerous for them, given the money and the professional petition circulators." Thad Kousser, a Universi-

ty of California, San Diego political expert, said that the effort's failure doesn't say

anything about the merits of the proposaL Instead, he said, "I think it says everything about a lack of organizational savvy by its proponents." S t ate's

Office reported that county registrars did a random check Of about 54,000 Of the

more than 1.1 million petition signatures that Draper's campaign collected. Based on that sampling, officials estimated that only 752,685 signatures would be valid — far

less than the 807,615 needed to qualify. Draper blasted the ruling Friday, saying in a statement that his paid signature gathe rers collected more t h a n

enough to qualify the measure, and "we are confident

that a full check of the sig-

86/66/pc 71/52/pc 63/42/s 87/70/pc 59/35/pc 88/55/s 66/51/s 71/53/s

62/45/pc 59/39/pc 59/36/pc 85/73/t 73/62/sh

83/68/pc 75/45/s 63/49/s 70/46/s

65/46/s 80/52/s 69/54/s 77/68/I

"It could've been an important social debatebecause itgave voice to a sense of alienation in California. This wasn't a cure that Californians were going to swallow, but it would've been good for the state to havea conversation about the illness." — Thad Kousser, University of California,

San Diego political expert Silicon Valley. California's northernmost parts would view signatures determined become Jefferson, as some to be invalid by several coun- counties up there have wantties' registrars to see whether ed for years. Some North Bay they're actually valid because counties would become part his contractor Carls- of North California; Stockbad-based A r n o Po l i t ical ton, Fresno and Bakersfield Consultants — had predicted would be among Central Cala much higher validity rate. ifornia's largest cities. Los "It is yet another example Angeles, Ventura and Santa of the dysfunction of the cur- B arbara would wind Up i n rent system and reinforces W est California. An d S a n the need for six fresh, mod- Diego would anchor South ern governments," he said. California. He didn't say whether he The nonpartisan Legislawas considering a lawsuit tive Analyst's Office said the that would challenge the sec- breakup of California — now retary of state's ruling or the 14th among the 50 states in election code section that sets per-capita income — would the random-sampling pro- create the n a tion's r ichest cessforballotm easures. state (Silicon Valley) and its As things stand now, un- poorest (Central California). less Draper can persuade the Former Assembly Speaksecretary of state to revisit er Fabian Nunez, who just the issue, he would have to last week was named chairstart from square one with a man of the "One California" new attempt to put the mea- committee created to oppose sure on the ballot. He didn't Draper's measure, issued a indicate Friday whether he'd statement Friday saying the be willing to do that. measure had been "a soluIn July, several voters from tion in search of a problem different parts of California that didn't address any of our told this newspaper that paid state's challenges." signature gatherers for DrapBut some political experts er's measure had lied to them, almost seemed disappointed. claiming the measure did the Although it wouldn't likely exact opposite of what it real- have passed, Kousser said, "it ly does. would've been a fun thing to M ichael Arno, owner o f kick around for a couple of the political consulting firm, years." " It could've been an i m downplayed the reports at the time and contended that past portant social debate beallegations of skulduggery by cause it gave voice to a sense his company in other cam- of alienation in California," paigns had been trumped up he said. "This wasn't a cure by political foes. that Californians were going Under Draper's plan, much to swallow, but it w o uld've of the Bay Area, plus Santa been good for the state to Cruz andMonterey counties, have a conversation about the would become the state of illness"

Hi/Lo/W 88/68/1 69/52/pc 68/52/pc 85/61/t 60/48/sh 80/69/t 75/62/pc 92/70/t 77/61/pc 74/48/s 85/68/t 67/42/s 90/59/s 69/57/pc 72/60/s 67/52/s 66/50/pc 61/41/pc 86/73/t 81/66/t 84/67/1 67/46/s 63/46/r 73/54/pc 69/52/pc 70/48/s 70/51/t 85/71/t

42' Partial sunshine

70/48/s 63/35/pc 87/74/t 84/69/pc 69/47/s 82/50/pc 67/53/pc 64/48/pc 59/42/pc 79/64/1 72/46/pc 61/39/pc 73/47/1 61/47/pc 62/47/pc 72/61/sh 68/48/s 70/44/pc 69/38/s

sen4/s

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W 61/51/0.07 62/46/pc 63/37/0.00 72/59/pc 58/46/0.35 61/45/pc

HiRo/W 62/48/c 68/48/r 64/43/r 101/74/0.00 98n6/s 100/77/s 68/60/0.01 73/51/s 76/58/s 63/35/Tr 72/55/pc 67/44/1 Litiie Rock 70/56/Tr 77/61/s 80/65/1 Lcs Angeles 94/69/0.00 98n4/s 98/74/s Louisville 67/57/0.00 73/51/s 75/60/s Madison, Wl 58/38/0.00 63/48/pc 61/38/sh Memphis 68/59/0.00 78/61/s 82/66/pc Miami eenw0.64 86n7/t 88/77/pc Milwaukee 57/41/0.04 62/51/pc 62/45/r Minneapolis 60/39/0.00 65/47/pc 62/45/s Nashville 68/61/0.00 78/58/pc 80/61/pc New Orleans 85/78/0.02 89n7/t 89/75/t New YorkCity 69/60/0.24 72/56/s 75/62/s Newark, NJ 69/58/0.25 72/53/s 75/60/s Norfolk, VA 80/72/0.32 73/65/c 78/69/c OklahomaCity 68/50/0.00 80/66/pc 85/63/I Omaha 62/41/0.00 69/56/pc 66/45/1 Orlando 92/74/0.00 90//2/t 89/72/t Palm Springs 110/87/0.00 107/84/s 109/84/s Puorin 62/41/0.00 65/48/s 62/46/r Philadelphia 72/63/0.36 73/53/s 77/63/pc Phoenix 100/85/0.00 101/83/pc 105/84/pc Pittsburgh 65/53/0.01 66/43/s 70/52/pc Portland, ME 58/43/0.12 65/43/pc 65/49/pc Providence 71/52/0.18 71/49/s 73/55/pc Raleigh 80/69/0.02 72/62/sh 80/67/1 Rapid City 65/31/0.00 61/36/s 68/44/s Reno 91/55/0.00 88/56/s 90/59/s Richmond 76/69/0.06 75/58/c 81/66/pc Rochester, NY 64/45/0.05 61/43/pc 68/51/s Sacramento 103/63/0.00 100/63/s 91/58/s St. Louis 65/45/0.01 69/53/s 76/56/I Salt Lake City 85/50/0.00 86/61/s 86/61/s Ssn Antonio 70/63/0.22 87/73/pc 93/75/t Ssn Diego 84nt/0'.00 91n5/s 92/77/s Ssn Francisco 75/60/0.00 74/60/pc 73/59/pc Ssn Jose 82/60/0.00 82/60/s 78/58/s Santa rn 75/45/0.00 79/53/I 81/52/t Savannah etnelr'r 86n3/t 85/72/t Seattle 83/50/0.00 84/55/s 87/58/s Sioux Falls 60/36/0.00 65/47/pc 63/43/pc Spokane 74/47/0.00 78/48/s 82/53/s Springfield, Mo 67/45/Tr 75/58/s 77/58/1 Tampa 92/76/0.00 eonen 88/75/t Tucson 93/75/0.31 95n5/pc 96/76/pc Tulsa 67/52/0.00 81/65/pc 83/62/t Washington, DC 73/67/0.23 74/60/pc 79/67/s Wichita 68/42/0.00 80/63/pc 82/58/t Yskimn 81/39/0.00 81/42/s 86/50/s Yuma 107/83/0.00 106/84/pc 108/85/pc City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln

87non esnon

74/54/pc 68/46/pc

egnen

86/71/t 71/50/pc 67/49/s 64/44/r 66/48/sh 58/43/s 82/65/pc 70/42/s 64/44/s 75/46/pc 62/44/r 61/39/pc 80/66/1 73/57/s 72/52/pc 78/43/s 91/76/pc 90/73/t 85/64/t 69/51/pc 89/69/1

86/71/pc 82/64/pc 68/47/s 86/67/pc 89/71/t 87non

o

Amsterdam Athens

69/55/pc 82/67/t

61/53/pc 106/76/s 92/79/t 80/56/s

eenT/s 75/58/I 66/46/c 70/55/t 68/48/s 83/74/r

94ns/s 69/44/s

eene/pc 61/51/pc 61/55/c 75/54/pc 84/55/s 94/82/t 79/68/s 78/62/s 84/58/s 67/59/c 77/67/I 70/55/c 82/58/c 84/78/r

4

I

Mecca Mexico City

106/87/0.01 101/80/1 69/56/0.33 69/54/1 Montreal 54/43/0.53 57/40/pc Moscow 72/49/0.03 55/43/sh Nairobi 79/57/0.00 80/55/s Nassau 88/72/0.23 88/77/t New Delhi 91/75/0.00 92n6/t Osaka 83/64/0.00 83/62/pc Oslo 66/43/0.00 64/45/pc Ottawa 50/45/0.27 56/41/pc Paris 73/55/0.00 72/55/pc Riu de Janeiro 75/66/0.00 83/69/s Rome 77/59/0.00 78/59/s Santiago 54/48/0.58 68/44/s Snn Paulo 81/59/0.00 86/66/s Ssppnrc 68/59/0.01 69/55/pc Seoul 83/60/0.00 81/65/pc Shanghai 79/73/0.04 82/74/pc Singapore 88/80/0.02 88n7/t Stockholm 64/50/0.00 65/44/pc Sydney 64/52/0.00 75/54/s Taipei 93/81/0.00 93/81/I Tei Aviv een2/o.oo 85n5/s Tokyo 75/69/0.03 78/67/pc Toronto 57/48/Tr 59/46/pc Vancouver 70/50/0.00 73/54/s Vienna 64/55/1.29 65/57/I Warsaw 79/57/0.00 76/55/pc

103/80/s 72/55/t 63/50/pc 59/45/s 81/57/s 88/77/s 92/77/t 83/65/pc 62/44/pc 64/45/pc 74/55/pc 87/71/s 78/61/pc 76/47/s 89/60/s 72/60/sh 80/60/c 82/74/pc 87/78/pc 65/46/pc 70/54/pc 95/81/s 86/74/pc 76/68/pc 67/48/c 75/58/pc 69/55/I 71/50/pc

Seattle policechief seeksdismissal of 66 pot tickets written by oneofficer By Steve Miletich The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — Police Chief San Jose Mercury News

70/57/s

70/59/0.00 68/54/pc Minnenp 88no/0.00 84/69/s Boise • 9/ O /51 /47 ss/5 • an City~ ~ uffnlo Auckland 58/55/0.47 60/51/sh ilwa e 'e' w York nf/34 Baghdad 102/79/0.00 105/75/s Choyenn e 51 OI 2/56 Bangkok 93/79/0.08 93/78/t 75/45 ., '57763 4 MT ilndelpiup eeijing 79/61/0.00 79/55/c C icog ' 7C o t mb /53 Beirut 86n6/0.00 84/76/s Precipitation: 3.39" nn nnaoco S n n Lnko Omah 4 /4V 84/41 Berlin 67/62/0.07 72/60/t 74/60 ington at Harlingen, TX 82/5 uo ao 7 LnoV no Bogota 64/52/0.13 65/48/c 73/51 9S/7 Kansas Gfy 51. u Budapest 66/61/0.29 67/57/1 4W Buenos Ai r es 66/48/0.02 63/51/r noh S Los An leo Csbn SsnLucss 93/74/0.00 88/77/t 8/74 • L' Cairo 90/73/0.00 91/72/s Phoen AnchoEngo AII „que uo kl n boma C' 7 61 • Calgary 54/36/0.02 63/38/s so/4 61/40 6 Cnncun eone/0'.04 87/78/pc 5 nnio rming om 'Nmp Juneau al Pn Dallas • Dublin 66/45/0.00 61/52/pc d s4/ev Edinburgh 66/45/0.00 60/52/pc o 42/44 e ew Geneva 70/52/0.00 73/55/pc d Houston 9/7 • rfnndo Hsrnre chihuahua 85/60/0.00 82/55/s o Ssnf 73/40 • Hong Kong 89/81/0.19 93/82/t Honolulu ntewn Istanbul 82/70/0.00 81/70/s svn4 IViinmi 0 Jerusalem 80/62/0.00 77/63/s ,« X Se /Ta-<IV~v Johannesburg 81/58/0.00 86/57/s Lima 70/59/0.00 68/59/c Lisbon 77/64/0.03 76/67/1 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 70/54/0.00 70/57/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 86/61/0.00 84/58/s Manila 83/80/1.23 82/78/r

PII O

WEST NEWS

By Josh Richman

~

o

Wickiup 52981 Crescent Lake 6 2 2 55 72% Ochoco Reservoir 16394 37% Prinevige 96127 65% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 228 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1490 Deschutes R.below Bend 130 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1890 Little Deschutes near LaPine 119 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 2 2 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 215 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 163 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 7

8 1' 48'

Yesterday Today Monday

WATER REPORT

~

THU RSDAY "'" 70'

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. Umatiaa Hood 85/43 RiVer Rufus • ermiston "

The Secretary o f

~

Partly sunny

Abilene Akron Meac am Losti ne 72/56 2/ Albany 76/3 • w co 8 /47 82/45 PRECIPITATION dl to he Oaa Albuquerque • • Sf/46 Tigamo • 83/ 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL:Plenty of andy • Anchorage 89/48 79/54 Mc innvie • 0.02"in 1939 sunshine andwarm JosePh Atlanta Record • He PPner Grande • G ove nt • upi o Condon 2/46 41 Atlantic City 73/64/0.1 0 Cam u 84 8 37 Month to date (normal) Tra ce (0.18 Union ) today. Partly cloudy Lincoln o Austin 66/60/0.21 78/ Year to date (normal ) 5.51 " (6.94 ) tonight .Sunnyto Sale 73/53 Baltimore 68/62/0.15 • pray Graniteu Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 6" partly cloudy and 94/5 • /48 Billings 58/37/0.00 'Baker C Newpo 80/42 warm tomorrow. • 84/49 Birmingham 80/69/0.00 SUN ANDMOON 2/53 71/50 • Mltch 8 82/34 Bismarck 67/38/0.00 0 a m P S h m a n R 8 4I WEST:Plenty of sun83/42 Today Mon. I\ 0 rV U8I Boise 80/50/0.00 84/44 • John uU Sunrise 6:43 a.m. 6 : 4 4 a.m. shine with near-record Yach 95/50 Boston 70/52 • Prineville oay 4/40 tario Bridgeport, CT 67/53/0.12 Sunset 7:18 p.m. 7: 1 6 p.m. heat today. Clear 69/56/0.30 86/48 • Pa lina 83 / 5 0 87 48 Buffalo 62/47/0.06 Moonrise 11: 02 p.m. 11 :51 p.m. tonight. Near-record Floren e • EUgeile n Se d Brothers 83 48 Valen 72l52 Burlington, VT 54/40/0.12 heat tomorrow. Moonset 1:0 6 p.m. 2:0 1 p.m. Su iVern 83/44 • 44 88/52 Caribou, ME 55/33/Tr Nyssa • 83/ Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 90n6/0.01 • La pfne Grove Oakridge Charlotte 86n3/0.73 Last Ne w Fir s t Full • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES co 86/43 92/53 /52 Chattanooga 80/70/0.00 74 3 • Fort Rock Riley 86/38 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 84/46 Cheyenne 73/34/0.00 83/42 83/47 Chicago 59/41/Tr High: 96' eandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 66/55/0.00 S ep 15 Sep 23 O c t 1 Oc t8 at Medford Jordan V gey 70/51 Beaver Frenchglen 99/57 Silver 84/41 Cleveland 61/55/0.02 Low: 2yo 83/53 Marsh Lake 85/47 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 77/39/0.00 83/42 at Meacham Po 0 85/46 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 64/40/Tr T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 70/ a Columbia, SC 88n4/0.29 • 86/49 Mercury 9:01 a.m. 8: 0 1 p.m. Chiloquin Columbus,GA 88/74/0.06 ach 95 58 Medfo d '64/41 Gold Rome Venus 5:46 a.m. 7 : 0 0 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 68/56/Tr 64/ nee 87/46 Mars 12:50 p.m. 9 : 5 8 p.m. Klamath Concord, NH 58/39/0.16 • Ashl nd • FaNS Jupiter 3:18 a.m. 5 : 4 7 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 78no/0.35 Bro Ings 92/5 85/45 Saturn 11:38 a.m. 9: 4 0 p.m. 68/5 84/41 85/54 Dallas 71/56/0.03 Dayton 66/53/Tr Uranus 8:06 p.m. 8 : 5 4 a.m. Denver 79/35/0.00 Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Des Moines 62/39/0.00 city H i/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W city Hi/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 58/50/0.33 Portland 89/5 1/0.0091/58/s 95/59/s 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin 86/50/0.00 80/53/s 77/56/pc Ln Grande 81/34/0.00 82/37/s 88/46/s Duluth 56/34/0.00 Baker City 80/28/0.00 82/34/s 86/41/s Ln Pine 84/27/0.00 83/45/s 85/50/s Prineviiie 77/ 3 3/0.0086/48/s 85/53/s El Paso 74/56/0.00 3 N(~ 5 ~ 5~ N 3 ercckings 72/47/Tr 6 8/52/pc 65/53/pc M edfcrd 96/5 4/0.00 98/58/s 96/57/s Redmond 76/ 30/0.0084/40/s 86/47/s Fairbanks 73/53/0.07 The highertheAccuWnntherxmmIIVIndex number, eums 86/34/0.00 86/38/s 88/44/s Ne wport 70/4 5 /0.00 71/50/s 65/51/pc Rnseburg 96 / 52/0.00 99/57/s 91/55/s Fargo 66/39/0.00 the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 90/43/0.00 95/52/s 91/51/s N o r th Bend 72 / 46/0.00 73/51/s 65/53/pc Salem 89/48/0.00 94/53/s 94/55/s Flagstaff 79/43/Tr 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Extreme. Klamnth Falls 85/40/0.00 85/45/s 84/48/s O n tario 82/39/0.00 87/48/s 89/53/s Sisters 74/28/0.00 84/41/s 86/47/s Grand Rapids 61/48/0.21 Lnkeview 86/36/0.00 84/41/s 84/47/s Pe ndleton 77/ 4 3/0.00 83/48/s 87/56/s The Dalles 8 5 / 43/0.00 89/48/s 92/56/s Greenesy 58/39/0.09 Greensboro 80/67/0.13 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 Harrisburg 68/56/0.25 G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hsrffnrd, CT 65/50/0.18 Absent Ab s ent Abs e nt Helena 62/39/0.00 Source: OregonAiiergyAssccistus 541-683-1577 Honolulu 90/74/0.01 ~ t os ~2 0s ~sos ~dos ~50s ~eos ~708 ~aos ~90s ~toos ~ffos ~ fos ~os ~ o s Houston 76no/0.01 Huntsville 78/67/0.00 NATIONAL Indianapolis 63/47/Tr As of 7 n.m.yesterday • i titng ' +r aay 5 9/4 Hn l o Jackson, MS 73/67/0.01 Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES Jacksonville 91n2/0.00 C rane Prairie 288 0 7 52% YESTERDAY(for the Port Wianam aiomnrck 26'yo

states: He failed t o

WED NESDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 74 40'

MONDAY

LOW

Plenty of sunshine

I f' I

73 39'

TONIGHT

Kathleen O'Toole has asked the city to seek dismissal of all

citations issuedby abicyde officerwho wrote 80 percent of the tickets during the first half

of this year for using marijuana in public. The request to the city at-

torney's office stems from a conclusion that the 66 ci-

O'Toole said.

ization as "silly." O'Toole is still considering Jokela referred to City Attor- disciplinary action against ney Pete Holmes, a supporter Jokela and is awaiting findof legal marijuana, as "Petey ings on why she was not told Holmes." about the officer's actions beOn many of t h e t ickets,

The tickets were written for the "wrong reasons," O'Toole sald. In addition to the references to Holmes, Jokela wrote on

forethe department released

toss to decide which of two

the tickets written by Joke-

a tainted report on marijuana enforcement. O'Toole asked the city attor-

ney to petition the Municipal one ticket that he used a coin Court to vacate and dismiss

men would get a ticket. On an- la from Jan. 1 to July 30, Sgt. of a personal agenda on the other he described state voter Sean Whitcomb, a departpart of Officer Randy Jokela, approval of marijuana legal- ment spokesman, said Friday. tations were written as part

natures would confirm that fact." He said his team will re-

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patients both in the Bend and Redmond clinics. Bend — 541-389-7741 Redmond — 541-504-7635

pu


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C3-7 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT

Door art project supports Habitat In celebration of its upcoming ReStore grand reopening, the Bend Area Habitat for Humanity is seeking design proposals for its "Doors to the Future" Art Show and Fundraiser. During the event, artists will "re-purpose a salvaged door into a work of art, an alternative functional piece or to be used as adoor once again," according to a news release. Door design (drawings/sketches) and artist submission forms are due by Oct. 15. Once designs are approved, artists must deliver completed works to the new ReStore property at 224 NE Thurston Ave., Bend, on Nov. 1 (between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.). The top 20 works will be selected for the "Doors to the Future" silent auction. Prizes will be awarded to artists with top bids. Submission forms are available on the Bend Area Habitat for Humanity's website at www.bendhabitat.org.

Barb Gonzalez /For The Bulletin

Rugged headlands define the Mendocino coastline along California Highway1 north of Fort Bragg. It requires about 90 minutes to drive the 59 miles straight through from Fort Bragg to Gualala, but most travelers find vistas and quaint towns that add hours to their drive.

in

Ornia'S

IOL1

Contact: 541-312-

6709 or pshull©bendhabitat.org.

Celebrate signing of Constitution In commemoration of the 227th anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution,

the Bend chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution encourages local schools, businesses, churches and individuals to participate in a nationwide bell-ringing at1 p.m. Wednesday. Called "Bells Across America," the event is meant to signify the bells that rang throughout the city of Philadelphia after the signing of the Constitution in 1787. The Daughters of the American Revolution started the annual Constitution Week celebration in 1955 by petitioning Congress to dedicate the week to honoring the signing of the Constitution.

BEATcast tackles Hitchcock Lelia Smith-Daines is directing an adaptation of Alfred Hitchcock's "The Trouble with

Harry," which will be performed at the 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Avenue, Bend, from Sept. 26 to 28and Oct. 3to 5. Tickets cost $15 for adults and $10 for students and can be purchased through www. beattickets.org. For more information, visit Bend Experimental Art Theater's website at www. beatonline.org or call 541-419-5558. — From staff reports

Contact us with

yourideas Have a story idea or event submission? Contact us! • Community events: Email event information to events©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351.

• Story ideas: Email communitylife@bendbulletin.com.

By John Gottberg Anderson«For The Bulletin

POINT ARENA, Calif.

-

he rocky shoreline of California's Mendocino coast is like few others. Blame the San Andreas Fault. The great divider that separates the North American

Nendocinocoast

and Pacific tectonic plates defines the dramatic coastline northwest of San

Fort Bragg

Francisco. Its legacy is a rugged line of tilted marine platforms, carved by

Willits

Caspa

eons ofrelentlesswaves into a landscape ofrippled rocks and sea caves,

I

sinkholes and natural bridges. The great San Francisco earthquake of 1906 left its mark on Point Arena, 120 miles from the city.

Lands are the first mainland

towns of Fort Bragg, Mendoci-

extension to a federal sanctu-

no, Point Arena and Gualala. We continued along the Sono-

But surf continues to crash upon the cliffs of the twist-

posed reefs alongthe length of the California coast.

then turned inland and re-

ed Stornetta Public Lands,

A hike along this contorted shoreline, through a

turned to Oregon via Interstate 5 and U.S. Highway 97. Along the way, we discovered quaint historic communities, spectacular state parks,

a once-private ranch that extends along more than

ary that protects more than 20,000 islands, rocks and ex-

late-morning mist that slowly

administered by the Bureau of

gave way to sunbeams and blue-skybreaks, was the highlight of my visit with photographer Barb Gonzalez last month to Mendocino County. Following California Highway 1 south from Leggett, on U.S. Highway 101 in the heart

Land Management, the 1,665 acres of the Stornetta Public

three days drivingthrough the

two miles of seabird and

marine-mammalbreeding grounds immediately south of a historic lighthouse. Added in Marchby presidential decree to the California Coastal National Monument,

of redwood country, we spent

ma County coast, including Fort Ross and Bodega Bay,

h t,, P a Sa

I Point Arena

unique architecture and an unexpected wildlife park. But

Anchor Bay

nothing stood out in our mem-

--- Gualala

ory so much as the Stornetta Public Lands.

SeeMendocino/C4

five years Annie's junior, became a star basketball player. Then, on Easter Sunday 10 years ago, Annie, then 21,

National Recovery Month, the event is a

cavalierly shared that her

the book's re-

coffee last week. "We were a

weight loss was from using

nice family. My husband and

meth. She then went into a It/z-year tailspin of addiction,

lease, but also of recovery.

"I tell people we were the family that this could never happen to. We were the

Cleavers," Barbara Cofer Stoefen said over a cup of I were attentive, and we were

very involved in our kids' lives." Stoefen, of Bend, was recalling her nuclear family's more halcyon days of more than a decade ago, before her

said with September being

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

meth at age 21. Life had been good to Stoe-

Faith, and Crystal Meth." Stoefen will hold a book

release celebration Sept. 23 at with whom she runs a docBarnes & Noble in Bend (see "If you go"). Stoefen, a drug tor-recruitment firm. Their daughter, Annie, had been an prevention activist and advofen and her husband, Pete,

A bright kid "She was a good

about addiction," Stoefen

very bright child. Not a particularly

said. "When your kids are becoming teenagers, you think about alcohol and partying. You think about alcohol and

a reallybright kid, and pretty squared /I Very Fine House , «<„n,...s<i„o< <.u

Barbara C«ter Stoeren

Court Judge Alta

Brady and of course, Stoefen, whose memoir,

her first book, is being published by Zondervan, a divi-

been all my life? This kind of fixes everything for me.'" When her children were younger, "never did I think

kid. She was a ve diligent student, but

The event will

daughter became addicted to

r u a u Se

sion of HarperCollins.

celebration not only of

arrests and homelessness. include appearStoefen writes of the events ances by De— and much of what she schutes County learned trying to pull Annie Commissioner out of the depths — in a new Tammy Baney, memoir, "A Very Fine House: Deschutes A Mother's Story of Love, County Circuit

Ukiah

oonville

Manchester

rants, quirky artists' colonies,

catefor recovering addicts,

Redwood • Valley

MENDOCINO COUNTY

one-of-a-kind inns and restau-

honor's student at Bend High School, where their son, Jeff,

The Bulletin

Navarro

Elk

emoir eveSino ami By David Jasper

MENDOCINO COUNTY

Li Albion

away," Stoefen said of Annie. Annie had

experienced depression as early as age 11. When

sex. You think about alco-

hol and driving. Never did I think about alcoholism." After Annie graduated and headed to Arizona State

University, "things really started to fall apart," Stoefen

she tried alcohol for the first time

said. "She got away from the family nest, the structure and

just shy of her

the support system and ... al-

Submitted photo 18th birthday,

Stoefen said, "Her brain interpreted alcohol as, I think, 'OK, where have you

cohol was coming out of the faucets. She completely came unglued that first year." SeeDrug abuse/C7


C2 T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

M IQESTON~ + ~L

Fomvvfcrengesementw,eddinganniversary crbirthday announcements areavailableai TheBelleilnl,777sylcChandlerdvev Bendcr by

7

emai l i n g m ilestones®bendbulletin com. Forms and photos mustbesubmittedwithinonemonthof the celebration. Contact: 541-633 2117.

MARRIAGES

ANNIVERSARIES

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Colette Barnes and Jeffrey Messerschmidt l

Barnes — Messerschmidt

& McLennan Companiesin San Francisco. The groom is the son of Amy and Jerry Messer-

Colette Barnes and Jef-

frey Messerschmidt, both of

Miranda Robbins and Andrew Aschoff

Robbins —Aschoff

works as a nursing assistant at St. Charles Medical Center. Miranda Robbins, of Burns, The groom is the son of and Andrew Aschoff, of Bend, Terry Aschoff-Kaminsky and were married Sept. 13 at Larkspur Park in Bend. A reception

Nathan Aschoff, of Bend. He is a 2004 graduate of Bend

followed. The bride is the daughter of

High School. He works as a driver for Bend Garbage & Recycling. The couple plan to honey-

Debbie Thomason, of Grants

schmidt, of San Jose, California. He is a 2004 graduate

San Francisco, were married

Pass, and Perry Robbins, of Burns. She is a 2009 graduate moon in Oahu, Hawaii. of Burns High School. She They will settle in Bend.

July 26 at Broken Top Club in Bend. A reception followed. The bride is the daughter of Alice and Greg Barnes, of Bend. She is a 2004 grad-

of Archbishop Mitty High School and a 2009 graduate

Bill and Jody (Leagjeld) Warrick

of California Polytechnic State University where he

Warrick

in Bend. They have two children, Amanda Cunningham,

studied business. He works

as a certified public accounand a 2008 graduate of Santa tant at Navolio & Tallman Clara University where she LLP in San Francisco. studied finance and economThe couple honeymooned ics. She works as the vice in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. president of private equity They will settle in Walnut and M&A services at Marsh Creek, California. uate of Summit High School

Bill and Jody (Leagjeld)

and Kaitlyn, both of Bend;

Warrick, of Bend, will cel-

and two grandchildren.

ebrate their 25th wedding

Mr. and M r s . W a r rick work at N ewport Avenue Market.

a nniversary with a t rip to Maui.

The couple were married Sept. 24, 1989, at Aspen Hall

They are lifelong Central Oregonians.

s ow

o u essa ' o ' o w e i n r e a i By Maria Sciullo

champagne fountainand a ter. Guests' name tags were man in a "Jason" mask punc- printed as train tickets, with tuated the eclectic reception. old suitcases incorporated into The Berkopec-Lee affair was the decor. held outdoors at a communiShe said she was pleased ty center, a nod to the couple's that the TLC crew of produclove of sports. ers and cameramen was relaKunkle said she wasn't a big tively small and unobtrusive: sports fan but she did love the "I forgot they were there." view of Pittsburgh's skyline The toughest part seems to

'! E ".,

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

P ITTSBURGH — A l o n g with the old, here's something

relatively new: having your wedding filmed for a reality television show. For Tyler Dikeman, who married Bobby Kunkel in August 2013, signing up for TLC's "Four Weddings" was a lark. "I was subscribed to (popular online wedding site) The Knot, and they send you these

ee

pg i

' Nr<~ .

email blasts. They sent one

saying 'Four Weddings' was going to be in the area ... I ac-

I

tually forwarded it to my fian-

ce — now my husband — and said 'hahahaha,' then deleted it," she said. Eventually, they

from PNC Park. "It's so beautiful," she said. "I'm from Oklahoma — that's

be the episode finale, when the

Micah Southwood and her

where Westhead notes"I ac-

fourbrides are reunited to see who wins the grand prize. A where Bobby and I met — and limousine arrives, bearing the we wanted to show all of our groom of the highest-scoring Oklahoma friends and family couple. the city of Pittsburgh and we Judging from the brides' thought PNC was THE best comments from previous epplace to get that experience." isodes (and a press screener

prospective brides who have just met attend one another's

husband met while working at Dick's Sporting Goods corporate headquarters. They endured along-distance relationship during the early part

weddings and rate them on the dress, the venue, the food

Southwood said, adding "I time to pick a wedding theme, would totally do it again. It

changed their minds.

e

The show's concept: Four

and overall experience. They are encouraged to be nit-picky is more nice than nasty.

-

.Beei

Richard Vagg/MCClatchy-Tribune NewsService

"Four Weddings," a new reality show on TLC, has four prospective brides attend one another's weddings and rate them on the dress, venue, food and overall experience.

There is no financial compensation, but the top vote-getZatman, anarea event planing honeymoon" to an exotic ner and business owner. "I've locale. never had anyone on a realLooking at P i t tsburgh's ity show, but the No. 1 advice case gives an inside look at would be 'Don't be a Bridezhow the show operates. "Four illa sort of person,'" referring Weddings" is based on a Brit- to a former reality show that ish show of the same name, captured and encouraged the

terreceives a free, "breathtak-

and other international versions are set in Germany, Fin-

absolute worst diva behavior

reception at a community cen- the-mill weddings; one from ter; and Angi Moser and Matt Westhead, who were married

an earlier season was literal-

j u s t c r a zy,"

at St. James Meeting House in Boardman, Ohio, and greeted guests at Avion on the Water, a banquet hall, in nearby Canfield. TLC isn't looking for run-of-

attraction, such as the Moser-Westhead "Friday the 13th"

event. They had a traditional ceremony, but the reception was a horror show.

Fake rats, eyeballs in the

of women and their weddings.

TLC filmed shows in the

ior is absolutely atrocious. So,

Pittsburgh area last year. One aired as the season six

again, keep your composure, don't come off as a Bridezilla."

premiere Aug. 15, and the Dikeman-Kunkle wedding is

Micah G r aham m a r r ied Andrew Southwood last sum-

among the western Pennsyl-

mer. When she received the

vania weddings that were to

same e-mail from The Knot,

be featured. "Some of these interviews

she immediately responded to

apartments and an events cen- husband.'"

The Bulletin MI LESTONE G UI

INES

If you would liketo receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful informationto plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of thesevalued advertisers:

it with a top 10 list of why TLC

might be taking place at 2 in should have her on the show. the morning and you've been For months, nothing. Then at that venue since maybe 2 she got a reply in the spring p.m.," Tyler (now) Kunkle said. o f 2013 an d e v entually a "Maybe you're going to (ap- Skype interview that July and pear) a little more snarky than "boom, boom, boom ... and I if you had a fresh brain." had a wedding to go to the folAfter each wedding recep- lowing week," Micah South-

I II

.

II

wood sald.

have to list what they liked, That wedding was the Dikeor not, ultimately assigning a man-Kunkle's, at PNC Park. points score. One visitor might Due to legal complicationscite how much they enjoyed TLC filming at a Major League this kind of cake, or that dress' Baseball venue required cuttrain, yet in the editing, the ting through red tape — her only comment to make it on wedding almost didn't make it air, Kunkle said, was "Well, into the TLC package. "They have a back-up (wedmaybe I didn't like this one flower in her bouquet." ding) when things like that "You have t o r e m ember happen," Kunkle said. that these (other brides) have Two other couples had their put in as much work and care weddings in the running: Brie and importance into their own Berkopec and Patrick Lee, weddings as you," said Shari who had their wedding and

they went with "Travel." was a cool experience, and After their c eremony at not many people can say they First P r esbyterian C h urch had their wedding on nationof Pittsburgh, they held their al television. Ten years from reception at th e Pennsylva- now, I can say, 'I was on a renian, a former railway hub ality show and I didn't have in downtown Pittsburgh that to eat bugs or do anything was turned i nt o c o rporate crazy. I just had to marry my

ly a circus. Themes are a big

land, Australia and Canada. The show "gave some sort Apparently, snark plays well of importance to that aspect in almost any language. of weddings and that behav-

tion, the three visiting brides

"That w a s

of their dating. When it came

— this is entertainment TV, af-

ter all — but the tone generally

tually threw up twice when we got here"), the experience is more nerve-wracking than anything else.

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

ears a er, erinisaw Oenewci By Zofia Smardz ~ TheWashington Post

BERLINt's been at least 25 minutes since we got on the U-Bahn in Berlin's Mitte district, and still the subway stops keep coming — Potsdamer Platz, l-'»i < s s s s

Gleisdreieck, Bulow Strasse. Aargh. Listening with one ear to the Valley Girl chatter of the 20-somethings across the aisle, I wonder where all these American kids in the city are coming from. Not to mention the Swedes and the Poles, the French and Spaniards,Israelisand Russians.And the ones whose languages I can't identify. It's a veritable mini-U.N. here in Germany's capital. Next stop, Zoologischer even think of the city that way ping here. But also way fewer Garten. Why is this taking so anymore. Do they remember people. Iong7 It never took this long to the Wall'? We walk up in the mornget around before. Because I still do. ing through Prenzlauer Berg, Well, of course it didn't. which was Dissident Central in That's because "before" was

Checkpoint Charlie

the East German days. Then, it

I can't believe it. What used was dark and gray and empto be Checkpoint Charlie is ty, the prewar buildings still was half the size it is today. You a circus. There's a big crowd pockmarked with bullet holes. know, in the days of the infa- milling around in the street at I was stalked by the Stasimous Wall, which deft the oc- the intersection of Friedrich- the East German secret police cupied city in two and turned strasse and Z i mmerstrasse. — here. But now it's prettily West Berlin into an island of Tourists are streaming in spruced up and cheery in the freedom in a communist sea. and out of the souvenir shops August sunlight, and the idea West Berlin was Berlin back surrounding the little booth that someone would be followthen. "I'm going to Berlin," I'd that stands on the spot where ing you with suspicious intent say — just Berlin — whenever American MPs used to check is just ridiculous. my reporting job sent me there papers of those crossing into We pass the modernist Recfrom the West German capital East Berlin. It's not real — just o nciliation Chapel, built i n of Bonn. And that other half- a replica of the original guard 1999 onthe site of the 19th-cencity, over the wall'? That wasn't booth that stood here in 1961, tury Reconciliation Church Berlin. That was East Berlin, a when the wall went up. that the East Germans blew up forbiddingfortress of a place, It comes complete with a in 1985, just four years before gray and lifeless, brooding and stack of sandbags, a copy of the end. And then there it isdull. the original sign ominously a preserved section of wall. My Berlin, by c o n trast, w as warning, "You are leaving the husband shoots a few snaps of bright and shiny, chic and fash- American sector" (the r eal me in front of it (it rises straight ionable. I'd flit up and down the one's in the nearby House at from the sidewalk and towers Kurfiirstendamm, the elegant Checkpoint Charlie Museum) above my head), and then we shopping avenue, and have — and actors in military uni- cross the street and climb up lunch at the Hotel Kempinski form who'll gladly pose for a an observation tower to look and shop at the famous de- photo with you. The laminat- down on the re-created death partment store KaDeWe, and ed sheets dangling from their strip behind the gray concrete. sometimes I'd head to Check- waists let you know it'll cost Yup, that's what it looked like — dirt and barbed wire point Charlie for a quick incur- you "2 euro; 3 $U.S." sion into the East. (And hold There's an air of revelry and a watchtower, and on the my breath until I got back out.) all along Zimmerstrasse ap- far side, another wall. It's a And it never took long to get proaching the checkpoint in- scene I saw lots of times in anywhere, because eventually tersection. "Curry at the Wall" years gone by. you always ran into the Wall. shouts a big sign topped by a But it just seems unbelievWhich we foreign correspon- Berlin bear holding up a gi- able now. dents knew would never come ant sausage, advertising the city's signature street food, East Berlin down in our lifetime. UntilI'm ju s t ga g a for shock — it did. currywurst (sausage covered And now it's been 25 years in curry-infused ketchup). As Ampelmann. "Oh, Tony, your traffic-light — exactly 25 on Nov. 9 — and we pass the Trabant museum, it's all just one big, sprawling a couple of the little rattletrap guy's wearing a little hat," I city, open and free and exhil- East German cars, paint- remark as we cross the street arating, construction boom- ed in kooky neon patterns, after dinner. A strutting liting and change all over the come tootling down the road. tle behatted green "go" figure place. But now it's a slog to get They're back from a tour, the has just taken the place of his across town, from our hotel in drivers going "honk, honk" on arms-spread-wide red "stop" the former East Berlin to my the tinny horns and waving counterpart. "That's so cute." "Oh yeah, that's Ampelmhnfriend Tony's place in Char- like celebrities. It's capitalism with a capital nchen," says Tony, a British l ottenburg, the heart of t h e former West. As we get off the c. journalist who's never left BerU-Bahn (which couldn't even But Bernauer Strasse, the lin. "He's Eastern, you know. run this far back then) and memorial to the city's 28-year Just about the only Eastern make our way down the leafy division by concrete, is much thing that's been adopted citystreets, I muse whether people more sober. No tourist-trap- wide. It's the only thing they won out on." It helps that he's so ador-

more than aquarter-century ago, when the Berlin I knew

I ~~Ta

)

to the little fellow. As I stock

up on Ampelmann gummis and T-shirts and place mats

ry ' v .. At the East SIde Gallery, people get a close look ata painted, preserved section of the Berlin Wall.

8 914 7 6 3 2 5 ) 4 2 5 1

57 89 63 74

3 6 7 5

2 3 4 9

9 1 2 8

1 7 9 6

6 5 8 3

8 4 1' 2 !

SUDOKU IS ON C6

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE

ZQ5LK X Answer: T OWARD H U N GR Y FORAGE HERMIT R U CKUS P L U RAL Even though he couldn't participate with his team at the tug of war, he was-

ly forlorn heart of Berlin that was mostly trapped behind the Wall, a massive communist-built TV t ower remains on Alexanderplatz. But down on Unter den Linden, the Kem-

®

pinski chain has rebuilt the ruined Hotel Adlon as a five-

E T P R H E R A O T N Y

B UO A T F MA M A H E S H A K

K Y O A F R I N

S T A B

O D H E S C OO

A R D S 0 R I R U E D I T E T E D A A F L I F E Y S F R L Y N E M M E P O O R L I M R D A A M E D E R G N R E S O M S O L I O T N N S I

A V A T A R

L A M O E R I T D G E O O N E W EW E L B A S I M B R A Z A N L E T U I N B L B O S O C H 0 U T I A C K Y R T E N C E R A R A A G O U L D U T R A L A C A G E

B A J A O D I N A S T A

E D E N

D A F T

E S C O O N R I L T O E N I L F A I I L A C K M O A S N T H T I O U P N S E C C A D M A E S

S P E E V E R G U R A G V S O F E A R U M U T R I L S A T T L T S A R B I I MA G T H O E D A R R E G A T E A V E D U A N I L L A T L O C S E N E

Michael Jackson hotel!" says a breathless bicycle tour guide, referring to the infamous episode whenthe late singerdangled his infant son from a hotel balcony) And the huge, boxy presidential palace that the communists built after razing

Photos by Gordon Welters /The Washington Post

Top Image: Tootling around Berlin on a Trabi-safari, tourists pass the Brandenburg Gate in what was East Germany's most common vehicle. Nov. 9 will mark the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. Bottom Image: During the Berlin Wall era, Checkpoint Charlie

was the major crossing point for foreigners Into East Berlin and a symbol of the city's division. Today, you can have your photo

the war-damaged royal Ho- snapped — for a fee, of course — with actors In military uniform in henzollern palace is gone, to be front of a replica of the original booth. replaced by ... a replica of the Hohenzollern palace. Oh, the

irony.

Not like at Hohenschonhau-

••

TheB u lletin

through the

B r andenburg

Gate, from former West to

former East, just like that. I'm thinking this as we stand in the dome and stare at that

monument, lit up and glowing in the dark below. I bet all those young people we see there every day, crowding the Pariser Platz like a German

Times Square and gabbling in their cacophony of tongues, don't give it a second thought. That whole East-West thing?

So 25 years ago. Though perhaps not quite erased yet. The next day, we're walking down the Friedrichstrasse and pass a young 20-something couple on bikes consulting a street map on a corner.

"Oh," says the young man.

"We were in the West." He sounds confused. " But i t

looked like the East." You're getting there, Berlin. Maybe just another 25 years.

Main Center 2150IIEStudioRd,SuiteIO

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times are better, for sure. What a thrill to walk right

2 locations in Bend

S A S S

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate

I used to do — shopping at KaDeWe, lunching at the Kempinski (now Kempinski Bristol), strolling the KuDamm. It felt like old times. But these

To keep another piece of the

real East Berlin alive. If you care to remember.

D E E P

CROSSWORD IS ON C6

I

F

ANSWER TO TODAY'S PUZZLE R A T T L E

FFIC

star celeb center. ("That's the

and mugs, my husband grouses, "I can't believe they have a Richinhistory "It's like sitting on top of whole store devoted to a traffic light." But of course they do. history." It's capitalism! This is my husband on our

PULLING FOR THEM JUMBLE IS ON C6

the Mitte district, the former-

dining choice for the evening — the restaurant on the roof sen, a former remand prison of the Reichstag, the German far in the depths of the east. Parliament building. It's historic, all right — the The walled-in red-brick prison complex in a tree-lined Reichstag, not the restaurant. residential neighborhood was The Nazis are famously bewhere dissidents and other po- lievedto haveburned it in 1933, litical prisoners were brought then blamed the communists to confess to their "crimes" be- and other "troublemakers" fore being formally tried or ex- so that they could consolidate pelled from the country. Back their power. In 1945, it was in the day, says our guide, seized by the occupying Soviet Bjorn, it didn't appear on any troops, who planted their flag maps, and the shoe-box hous- on the ruined roof. After the es all around it were occupied Wall went up, just yards away, by Stasi agents and their fami- it sort of sat there, just an occalies. So no nosy Parkers would sionally used West Berlin event sniff around, inquiring about and exhibit space. But when what went on behind that wall, the Wall fell, it was the scene of you see. joyous, triumphal celebration. The complexhad a role in And now it's back, a glitzy the 2006 movie "The Lives of contemporary restaurant, Others." But this was no mov- serving fine food with panie. The whole place is creepy, oramic views of Berlin. Even especially on this gloomy, better is an observation area at rainy day, with the window- the top of the glass dome that less cells in the basement, and now crowns the building. That the antiseptic halls up above, dome's a big attraction; I can and the metal doors with their see the people snaking their peepholes and the cramped, way up and down the ramps cagedoutdoor cells where the to the top. My favorite factoid prisoners took their "exercise." from our sightseeing bus tour: able. In fact, Berlin's official There's nothing interactive The dome's glass represents bear mascot had betterwa tch or theme-park here. It's just transparencyin government, out: A couple of days after I the real thing, chilling in its and the visitors walking innotice A m p elmann ( t h at's drabness. After reunification, side it show that the people are "traffic-light man" in German), the government wanted to de- above the government. we're on our way to busy Alex- molish the place, Bjorn tells us. We've spent most of t h is anderplatz (the "hub" of East "But former inmates rose up day in my old Berlin stompBerlin), and right on the main and protested," and the place ing grounds, now known as drag is a whole store devoted opened for tours in 1994. City West, doing all the things

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to go wrong. Before heading down the

Expensesfortwo

Photos by Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin

TOP: Nineteenth-century buildings line Main Street in Mendocino village, a community of 900 that is listed in its entirety on the National Register of Historic Places. It has been a popular tourist destination since the 1950s, when it became home to a thriving community of artists. BOTTOM: Built in 1915

as the original Fort Bragg hospital, the Grey Whale Inn hasnewlife as a popular bed-and-breakfast. With a population of 7,300, Fort Bragg is the largest town on the Mendocino coast; it was built as a lumber and fishing port at the mouth of the Noyo River.

Mendocino

off the winding local roads to

Continued from C1

We traversed about 4 miles for a nuclear power station, on foot, making plenty of stops we learned. Only the presence in our walk of t hree hours, of the San Andreas Fault led past a wind-tossed cypress to plans being abandoned in grove and along a low sand- 1973. Residents of the Point stone bluff that overlooked the Arena area, already strugwaves. Just offshore, a cluster gling with economic recovery of islets called the Sea Lion after the collapse of the timRocks (for their marine den- ber industry, had fought hard izens) had also been adopted against it. They must have by waterfowl as a rookery. wondered why a fault-line reJet-black, long-necked cor- actor had ever been suggested morants cared for chicks in in the first place. crevices in the rocks, while on Today Point Arena is home the mainland, gulls splashed to the surprising B. Bryan in a freshwater pool above a Preserve. A sort of open-air waterfall. zoo,the preserve is home to There were no ridges to a half-dozen species of Afsummit, so the walk was far rican hoof stock — giraffe, from strenuous. But the tor- zebra and various antelopetuous thrust faults, uplifted that are nurtured and bred in above the Pacific surf at odd large open fields just inland angles and cut by the waves, from the tiny harbor town. brought the force of nature Twice-daily, 90-minute Jeep

Unbeaten Path We learned of this newly dedicated domain from Margaret Lindgren, who owns a small company called Unbeaten Path Tours. Lindgren guides day hikers at various "Mendonoma" (Mendocino-Sonoma) locations, from Bowling Ball Beach to the redwoods of Salt Point State Park.

But none piqued our fancy like the newly established national monument. We met her at a trailhead off

Lighthouse Road, a couple of miles south of the Point Arena Light Station, near the estuary of the salmon-rich Garcia Riv-

er. A native New Englander who moved to this coast with her British husband seven

explore its environment.

The Stornetta Public Lands

w ere once designated as a site

years ago, Lindgren has cou- into our outdoor living room. tours, by reservation only, inpled her love of nature with And a nearby sinkhole, its troduce visitors to each of the a background in education. deep cavity disappearing into species at feeding times. Now, her year-round walking a fingerlike sea cave, made the But the 115-foot lighthouse, tours provide visitors with an

action of the dramatic erosion

built in 1870, remains Point

alternative means of getting

all the more palpable.

Arena's biggest draw. The tall-

as a passenger train. Steamand diesel-powered locomohas several art collectives, tives pull rail cars through indicative of a thriving local dense redwood forests, passstudioscene;the GuestHouse ing through two tunnels and Museum, an area history mu- crossing 30 bridges and tresseum in a t h ree-story, 1892 tles. At the halfway point of Victorian home beside the wa- Northspur, trains stop to allow ter; and the pleasant Mendoci- passengers to get food and no Coast Botanical Gardens, drink and to swap those who covering47 acres atop coastal may continue to Willits rather bluffs. than return to Fort Bragg. Fort Bragg's Glass Beach Continued next page is unusual, to be sure. About a century ago, local residents coast the next morning, we discovered that this little town

• Gas, Bend to Gualala and return, 1,085 miles at $3.90/gallon — $169.26 • Meals en route (all-day drives) — $40 • Lodging (one night including breakfast), GreyWhale Inn, Fort Bragg — $121.10 • Dinner, Cucina Verona, Fort Bragg — $79.80 • Lunch, Mendocino Cafe — $45.77 • Lodging (one night including breakfast), Mar Vista Cottages, Gualala$205.35 • Unbeaten Path Tours$110 • Dinner, St. Orres, Gualala — $121.48 • Lunch, Trink's, Gualala$29.51 • Admission, Fort Ross State Historic Park — $7 • Lodging (one night including breakfast), Valley Ford Hotel — $140.97 • Dinner, Bodega Bay$53.23 • TOTAL — $1,123.47

threw their h ousehold gar-

bage over acliffowned by a lumber company. In later decades, controlled burns and an urban cleanup removed appliances and other large discarded items, but the glass remained, pounded into small, smooth pieces of col-

ored "sea glass." Locals and tourists alike now file to the end of Elm Street and clamber

down to the beach to collect souvenirs. But the Skunk Train lures the most visitors. Built in 1885 port, the California Western

Railroad runs 40 miles up project of longtime area chef Joe Harris. With fresh seawine list, live jazz guitar and

an owner gung-ho about expanding its daily operation to include breakfasts, it was hard

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Fort Bragg

TRAVEL SMART101

We had begun our Mendocino visit at Fort Bragg, the largest town on this county's coastline, with 7,300 people.

< Thurs, Sept 25th i

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Perhaps best known as the home of the Skunk Train (of-

6:00PM

ficially the California West-

This new workshop focuses on tips for traveling safely and securely as a first-time traveler.

ern Railroad), this town at the mouth of the Noyo River was established as a Pomo Indian

reservation and military post in the mid-1800s. It grew as

TRAVEL SMART, PAGK LIGHT

a redwood lumber port and

commercial fishing center. We lodged at the Grey Whale Inn, the original Fort

< Sat, Sept 27th i

Bragg hospital when it was built in 1915. Indeed, its three

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connected by wide ramps rather than stairways, and

we could almost hear gurneys being wheeled past during the night. (There are rumors that it may be haunted). Amiable owner Michael Dawson, however, turned out to be quite the Old-fashioned water towers, such as this one, are a trademark of Mendocino village, whose19th-century residents employed them to pipe water into their homes. Some of the towers have been restored; others have been converted to art studios or rental apartments.

chef, preparing homemade quiche and other gourmet breakfast dishes, and we were

glad to have stayed the night. We also had a fine Italian dinner at Cucina Verona, the

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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Ifyou go

Photos by Barb Gonzalez/For The Bulletin

TOP: Built in 1882, the MacCallum house is now a bed-and-breakfast inn and an acclaimed fine-dining restaurant. In its walking-tour brochure, the Mendocino Historic Preservation District listed 28 buildings dated 1894 or earlier, most of them painstakingly restored.BOTTOM: The Sea Ranch Chapel,a nondenominational sanctuary built in1985 by architect James Hubbell, was designed to honor a man who considered art as the intermediary between the physical and the spiritual. Its cedar roof is topped with a dis-

tinctive bronze spire. From previous page

Historic Mendocino The picturesque village

county. MacKerricher, Point Cabrillo, Russian Gulch, Van Damme, Navarro River Redwoods and Manchester state

parks each have a wild beauty of their own, stretching but it seems a world away. along 35 miles of Mendocino Home to about 900 people, the County coastline. community fairly drips with of Mendocino is less than 10

miles south of Fort Bragg,

maritime history and indeed is listed in its entirety on the

National Register of Historic Places. With its wooden architecture, landmark water towers and a location atop striking

headlands, the hamlet is reminiscent of what I imagine a 19th-century New England coastal town to have been like. Indeed, it was cast as

Gualala hospitality

Past Point Arena and the S tornetta Public L ands, in southern Mendocino County,

the unincorporated community of Gualala has a character all its own. It's a 59-mile

Cabot Cove, Maine, in numer-

drive from Fort Bragg (about 90 minutes on winding Highway 1). We were delighted to find one-of-a-kind treasures — to stay and to dine — as we passed through.

ous episodes of the 1980s and

The dozen rustic Mar Vis-

1990s TV series "Murder, She Wrote."

ta Cottages at Anchor Bay were built in the '30s and '40s

Tourism drives the local

by a Danish fisherman, and they retain a sense of yesterBragg, in the 1850s as a log- year even eight decades later. ging and fishing community, Hand-constructed as houseits isolation kept it from any keeping cabins, built of native economy. Founded, like Fort

sort of boom until the late 1950s, when artist Bill Zacha built the Mendocino Art Center and stimulated an influx

redwood with simple kitch-

ens, they offer a rural experience complete with gardens and farm animals. of bohemian artisans. The Renata and Tom Dorn uphandmade clothing, jewel- graded the cabins after they ry, arts and crafts of modern bought the property in 2000, practitioners now fill dozens adding an herb-and-vegetaof shops along Lansing and ble garden where guests may Main streets, and the entire pick their own greens. Freshpopulation supports the an- ly laid henhouse eggs are denual Mendocino Music Festi- livered each morning, while val, which takes over the vilrabbits and goats wander the lage each July. grounds. "It's a joy," said ReA good place to begin an nata Dorn, who worked in exploration is the Ford House hotel management for major Visitor Center, which also San Francisco hotels for 35 serves adjacent Mendocino Headlands State Park. The

house was built in 1854 by lumberman and town founder

years. "We don't attract peo-

ple who want chocolates on the pillows." We enjoyed dinner at St.

J.B. Ford, who raised his five Orres, its classic design drawchildren here. ing comparisons to that of a Restored in the 1970s, it dis-

classic Russian stave church.

plays a collection of historic photographs and artifacts, including a circa-1890 model of the village. Walking tours — guided and self-guided — begin from the Ford House or from the

Our dinner — rack of venison with wild huckleberries,

Kelley House Museum, just down the block. They take

Service was of the level usu-

pheasant breast with locally

foraged mushrooms — could have been drawn directly from the redwood forest that

fringes the establishment.

ally reserved for elegant bigin such sights as the Temple city eateries. of Kwan Tai, built a r ound 1854 to serve a Chinese Tao-

A rchitect-partner

Er ic

Black and chef-partner Roseist community, and the 1868 mary Campiformio called Mendocino P r esbyterianupon many local artists and Church, one o f t h e s t ate's craftspeople in creating St.

937-6141, www.mendocinocafe.com. Lunch anddinner. (All addresses in California) Moderate St. Orres FineDining. 36601 N INFORMATION Highway1, Gualala; 707-884Visit Mendocino County. 345 3335 or 707-884-3303, www. N Franklin St., Fort Bragg; 707-964-9010, www.visitmen- saintorres.com. Dinner every docino.com. day, brunch Sunday.Expensive Trink's. 39140 SHighway1, LODGING Gualala; 707-884-1713, www. Grey Whale Inn. 615 NMain Breakfast and St., Fort Bragg; 707-964-0640, trinkscafe.com. 800-382-7244, www.greywha- lunch every day, dinner Monday, WednesdayandFriday. leinn.com. Rates from $110 Budget and moderate MacCallum House Inn& ATTRACTIONS Restaurant. 45020 Albion St., B. Bryan Preserve. 130RivMendocino; 707-937-0289, 800-609-0492, www.maccal- erside Drive, Point Arena; 707-882-2297, www.bbrylumhouse.com. Rates from $149 anpreserve.com. Tours by reservation at 9:30 a.m. and4 Mar Vista Cottages atAnchor p.m. only. Bay. 35101 SHighway1, Gualala; 707-884-3522, 877Fort House Visitor Center. 735 855-3522, www.marvistamen- MainSt.,Mendocino;707-937docino.com. Rates from $185 5397, www.mendoparks.org. The Mendocino Hotel & GarFort Ross State Historic Park. den Suites. 45080 Main St., 19005 Highway1, Jenner; Mendocino; 707-937-0511,

800-548-0513, www.mendocinohotel.com. Rates from $99 Valley Ford Hotel. 14415Coast Highway1, Valley Ford; 707876-1983, 866-539-8430, www.vfordhotel.com. Rates from $127 DINING Cucina Verona. 124 ELaurel

www.parks.ca.gov. Gualala Arts Center. 46501 Gualala Road,Gualala; 707884-1138, www.gualalaarts. org Kelley HouseMuseum.45007 Albion St., Mendocino; 707937-5791, www.mendocinohistory.org. St., Fort Bragg; 707-964-6844, Point Arena Light Station. www.cucinaverona.com. Three 45500LighthouseRoad,Point Arena; 707-882-2809, www. meals every day. Moderate pointarenalighthouse.com. Fisherman's Cove.1850 Bay Skunk Train (California WestFlat Road, BodegaBay;707377-4238, www.bodegabaern Railroad). 100 W.Laurel yoysters.com. Threemeals St., Fort Bragg; 707-964-6371, every day (until 6 p.m.). Budget www.skunktrain.com. to moderate Unbeaten PathTours. Stewarts Mendocino Cafe. 101451 Point; 707-888-6121, www. LansingSt.,Mendocino;707unbeatenpathtours.com. be the intermediary between

Sea Ranch and Fod Ross

the physical and the spiritual. But for me, the highlight

Just south of Gualala, and of the Sonoma County coast across the Sonoma County is Fort Ross. This California line, is Sea Ranch. Designed state historic park contains a in the 1960s by a team of restoration of Fortress Rossinoted architects led by Law- ya, the deepest penetration of rence Halprin, the develop- the 19th-century Russian Emment extends along 10 miles pire on the North American o f c o astline,

artist who considered art to

1971 and opened for dining in 1977aftera m ajorreconstruc-

ance House (1878) is now the tages and eight lodge rooms, quaint Mendocino Hotel. along with a cozy spa. In all, 28 buildings dated A nother a t t raction h e r e 1894 or earlier are listed in is the Gualala Arts Center, a brochure published by the which every August since Mendocino Historic Preser- 1962 has hosted the Art in the vation District. Weathered by

the salt air, fog and wind, they have mostly been painstakingly restored, their gardens again filled with blossoms and foliage.

Redwoods festival. A fine art

exhibit highlights the festival, featuring paintings, photographs, sculpture, woodwork, jewelry and fiber creations, most of which are offered for Mendocino is central to nu- sale. On the grounds, amid a merous state parks along the sculpture garden, an artful north coast of its namesake pizza kiln is the centerpiece

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TOP:Fort Ross State Historic Park features a restoration of Fortress Rossiya, which from 1812 to 1841 was a colony of the

Russian Empire on the Sonomacoast. An Orthodox chapel, right, and manager's house, left, are replicas; one house, built in1836, has survived intact. BOTTOM: Built in the style of a Russian stave

church, St. Orres specializes in dinners of wild gameand foraged berries and mushrooms. A southern Mendocino landmark since 1977, St. Orres also has a small spa and welcomes overnight

guests in cottages and lodge rooms. thodox chapel, a fur

w a re- Fort Ross in 1841 to gold-rush

house, the manager's two-sto- pioneerJohn Sutter,who took ry home, barracks and block- hardware and livestock to his houses. The 3,386-acre histor-

Sacramento Valley fort.

ic park (established in 1906) also preserves a Russian cemetery, a garden and an orchard, and the visitor centerfeatures a research library

of Fort Ross is the San Andreas Fault. It would be sur-

Running through the heart prising indeed if the Russians did not experience at least one major shake during their three decades on the site.

and bookstore along with interpretive exhibits.

The Russians established the

— Reporter: j anderson@ bendbulletin.com

f i r s t ma r i n e-mammal

conservation laws in the Pacific, in the early 1820s, when they realized overhunting had severely depleted otter and seal populations. But they NAreuoMww

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www.AgateBeaehMotelJlom Private,vintage,oeeanfront getaway ewport, o tR 1 0'0'-7ss-s 74

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Russians began exploring the Pacific coast as early ture — build-out is at about 1742, seeking sea otters and three-quartersof the 2,400 other fur-bearing mammals. projected homes — is intend- Following t h e es t ablished to blend into the landscape ment of an Alaskan colony w ith consideration for t h e (at Kodiak) in 1784, the Rusprevailing ocean breezes and sian-American Co. b egan hilly topography. to expand, first to Sitka and Of all the buildings at Sea the Hawaiian island of KauRanch, none is as distinctive ai, then to California in 1812. as the Sea Ranch Chapel. A With help from dozens of n ondenominational s a n c - Alaskan Aleut natives, this tuary designed by architect stockade was e stablished James Hubbell in 1985, this on the site of a centuries-old Hobbit-like structure features Pomo Indian village 18 miles a cedar roof with a bronze northwest of Bodega Bay. spire, teak doors and native The only surviving strucredwood throughout. The ture is the Rotchev House,

with two other partners in

restaurant, they offer 14 cot-

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acclaimed fine-dining restau- tion. Today, in addition to the

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CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3

©2014Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Hidcote Gardens Hidcote Bartrim, near Chipping Campden Gloucesiershire

011-44-1608-658850

www.bouldfarm.co.uk A 350-year-old farmhouse with two double rooms andone family room. E-mail:siay@ bouldfarm.co.uk. Rooms from $116 for a couple.

Where toeat The King'sHead The Green, Bledinglon Oxfordshire 011-44-1608-658365

thekingsheadinn.nel Gaslropub that features local and organic ingredients. Mains start at $22. The Chepuers Church Road,Churchill Oxfordshire 011-44-1608-659393 www.thechequerschurchill. com Popular gastropub in a picturesque village. Mains start at$20.

011-44-1386-438333

www.nationaltrust.org.uk/ hidcote

Landscaped garden in the North Colswolds created byan American horticulturalist. Daily 10a.m. lo 5 p.m. in summer, weekends only in winter. $17. Chastleton House Chastleton, near Moreton-inMarsh Oxfordshire 011-44-1494-755560

www.nationallrusl.org.uk/ chastleton-house Stately home virtually unchanged since theearly1600s. Wednesday-Sunday1 p.m. io 5 p.m. Closed most of the winter. $14. The OxfordshireWay www.oxfordshire.gov.uk A 65-mile trail through the Coiswolds and nearbyChiltern Hills.

Burford www.burfordcotswolds.co.uk Charming Cotswold village

The Wild Rabbit

So face them we must, unless

Church Street, Kingham Oxfordshire with a variety of walking trails, 011-44-1608-658389 antiques shops, cafes and www.thewildrabbil.co.uk pubs to explore. Newly openedgastropub with a short, seasonal menu. Mains start at $30. cotswolds.com

we wanted to get stuck out of doors in the dark. "They're just cows, right?" I said, feeling very much like an awkward urbanite. "They'll probably wander off once we

Information

We opened the gate and stepped through. The animals didn't seem fazed by our presence in their territory, but

grewup on a farmin Wales, as several local gastropubs that did her husband, Gwyn. "The Lynne had recommended.

they weren't getting out of the

B&B we started to help the fi-

way, either. Oli clapped his hands and shouted, and they

nances, because farming, you Farm, the King's Head is a know, it's just up and down 16th-century pub that has

backed off. Butthen the group

all the time. The B&B actual-

broke up, and a few of the young bulls pivoted and start-

ly helped save the farm when Kate Middleton on more than prices were very low." one occasion. We were there The farmhouse itself early in the evening in the which is home to Lynne, her middle of the week, but the husband and their adult son, bar was already full of locals Robert — dates to 1650. In fact, by the time we arrived. We the stones that line the floor settled into a table in the cor-

ed to run toward us. My heart

thumped. S outh Pass Pass 24 20 AII Pass

What to do

Bould Farm Near Idbury, Chipping Norton Oxfordshire

ly through this field of cows.

start to walk past them."

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known for its green hills and rich farming heritage. Dusk was falling, and the path that we needed to take cut direct-

Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols LeWIS

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many public trails that crisslittle corner of England that's

CD

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NORTH

had much of a choice.We were on our way back to our B&B, walking along one of the cross the Cotswolds, an idyllic

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD

ee capital

I wasn't so sure. Maybe it had something to do with

chances.

Tribune Content Agency

ACROSS I Impsdes 8 Trendy IS Break the law, Inaway 20 LIke some reasoning 21 Invlnc 22 Threshold 23 Heroic medal whoserecipient didn't feel worthy of it? 2e Distinguishing quality n

wouldn't go across this field if it were dangerous."

a baby carrier on Oli's chest, so I wasn't looking to take any

By FRANK STEWART

4 Carrierthat mergedwith Meridianain

side of their fence. "The path

daughter with us, strapped in

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Bermuda Bowl Trials

uYOU OUGHTABE 104 Clever IN PICTURES" By maneuver bya MAlT SKOCZEN gradeschool

to see us, standing on the far

ic. We had our 5-month-old

DAILY BRIDGECLUB

The most successful teams in U.S. bridge history have been sponsored and captainedby New York financier and expert Nick Nickell. In May, NICKELL won Trials and will play for the U.S. in th e 2015 World Championship. A second U.S. team will be determined next year. Late in a seesaw final, NICKELL (Katz, Levin-Weinstein, MeckstrothRodwell) trailed John DIAMOND (Platnick, Bathurst-Moss, GrecoHampson) but produced one of their patented comebacks. W ith NICKELL behind by 1 7 IMPs, today's deal furnished support for my view that the modern active competitive s tyle — y o u b i d w henever it's your t urn — h a s adversely affected the judgment of even top players. When WeinsteinLevin sat East-West for NICKELL, Bobby Levin opened one spade. Then North climbed in with a double even though his partner was a passed hand. Surely that was ill advised. North's chances of buying the contract were u ncertain at best, and even if h e escaped a penalty, he would tell EastWest where the missing high cards lay. Steve Weinstein redoubled, and after some scrambling, South played at two diamonds doubled, down three. Minus 500 might have been only a small loss — or even a gain if EastWest bid and made game in the other

called — that had trotted over

the way they were pawing the ground and tossing their heads. Thesecattl e seemed restless, a little too energet-

JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3

SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3

ing out to rub the nose of one of the dozen or so young male cattle — bullocks, they're

Where tostay

"Come on, let's move." Oli's

voice was tense. We struck out across the

E ven older

than B ould

hosted Prince William and

field, doing our best to run on of the downstairs have been ner, and I dived into my venthe uneven ground. We didn't in place since the house was ison burger, which was made

have too far to go, maybe 100 built, and the shoulder-high yards to the fence on the other fireplace in the living room is side. Shouting and waving our also original. There are a few arms at the cows that came rooms for guests upstairs, close,we moved as fast as we which Lynne manages herself. could. The place gets plenty of visiPanting, we made it to the tors, many from overseas. far gate and quickly let ourI asked whether we could selves through. My hands see the farm at work — I'd were shaking as I closed the imagined chipping in by shovlatch behind us, but our little eling manure, feeding livegirl was as happy as ever, coo- stock or maybe even milking ing to herself as she gnawed cows — but Lynne hesitated. on her finger. Danger averted, The farmers have their work we continued on to our home to do, she said carefully, and for the night. visitors can get in the way,

Serenity Our little adventure with the cows aside, our visit to Bould

Farm, a 350-year-old working farm on the eastern edge of

sometimes with unfortunate

from a deer that had been shot within a 10-mile radius of the restaurant, our waiter

told me. Oli enjoyed his fish cakes and pint of lager, while Alice kicked in her high chair and chewed the edge of the table.

It was walking home from dinner that we had our encounter with the cows. Apart

from those few minutes of panic, it was a beautiful evening walk, with the setting sun casting long shadows across the rolling wheat fields and pastureland.

results. She described one The next morning, we enguest who insisted on having joyed a classic full English her grandchildren watch the breakfast, courtesy of Lynne: birth of a lamb. It was still- two pieces of sausage, two born, and the children were slices of bacon, an egg, roast-

the Cotswolds, was as peace- devastated. "It's a dangerous place, the ful as we could have hoped. We'd come to get a taste of countryside," Lynne s aid. life in the countryside, but "The reality isn't like you see the countryside, as it turned on the telly."

ed tomatoes, fried mushrooms

out, wasn't quite what we had

in, I mentioned our run-in with the cows the night before. She

expected. We'd come on the train from

Not just farm life

and toast with butter, jam and marmalade. And, of course, tea and coffee.

When Lynne came to check

There are plenty of things to nodded and bit her lip. "There have actually been a do beyond the farm, though, an easy ride that took us past which makes a n e x cellent few incidents lately," she said, rolling green hills, stone farm- base from which to explore addingthat a man had been our home in Oxford that day, houses and countless flocks

of grazing sheep. A 10-minute bus ride from the train

the Cotswolds. There's hiking

trampled to death on a farm in

along the Oxfordshire Way, a a neighboring county a couple 65-mile trail that passes with- of weeks earlier. "The counstation in Kingham delivered in a mile of the farmhouse. tryside isn't a park, you know." us straight to the door of our Stratford-Upon-Avon, ShakeMy stomach did a little flip farmhouse, where L y nne speare's home town, is 45 min- upon hearing this, imagining "the f a rmer's utes away, and there are sever- how things might have ended Meyrick wife," as she later described al gardens and historic stately differently the night before. I herself to me — was waiting to homes within easy driving asked Lynne what she would greet us. distance. The nearby villag- have done in our situation. Lynne showed us to our es of Burford and Stow-on- She said that she would have room on the second floor and the-Wold are full of antiques walked across the field, but quickly helped us set up the shops and cozy tearooms. taken a large stick to warn the baby bed for Alice. I made a It was already midafter- animals off. cup of tea with the little elec- noon by the time Alice had finOur bellies full, we ambled tric kettle on the dresser and ished her nap, so Oli and I de- off to explore the village of pushed open the window to cided to stay close to the farm Kingham, just a few miles admire the flower garden be- for the remainder of the day. up the road from Bould. We low. Birds were chirping in We strapped the baby back strolled past cottages with the tree branches a few feet into her carrier and, following thatched roofs and walls made away, and a cow and her calf Lynne's directions, walked to of honey-colored Cotswold were resting quietly in a field a little nature reserve that sits sandstone. W e w an d ered just on the other side of a stone adjacent to the Bould property. through the graveyard outside wall at the bottom of the garIt was mid-May — bluebell the 800-year-old St. Andrew's den. We had been at Bould for season in this part of England Church and poked our heads only about half an hour, but I and the indigo-colored into the Wild Rabbit, a highalready felt fully immersed in flowers were in f ull b loom, end gastropub that opened the rural quiet. thickly covering the shady last year. Later that afternoon, as we forest floor. There was a little We spent the whole mornsat for a chat in the garden, map at the entrance to the re- ing on foot, enjoying the warm Lynne told me about Bould serve, but we just followed our spring sunshine and giving Farm. It encompasses 400 noses along the network of Alice some fresh air. As we acres,she said,and the main trails. Oli spotted a deer before walked out of Kingham, we crops are oats and wheat. The too long, and I saw a fox slide passed a field filled with butlivestock consists of about 100 across the path up ahead. tercups and lacy white wildcattle and nearly 1,500 sheep. We wound our way through flowers. A few cows sat in the There were chickens and a the woods for an hour or so be- middle, placidly chewing their rooster until t hey w ere al l fore making our way back to cud. "demolished" by a fox, Lynne the road. It was about 6 o'clock There was an inviting litsaid, with a shake of her head. by that point, so we decided tle path cutting across this "It's a proper working to stop in for an early dinner picture of rural bliss. But this farm," said Lynne, 67, who at the King's Head Inn, one of time, we stuck to the road.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C7

Continued from C1

To-do istforfamiyfun in Denveris amie high

Annie didn't make it through the first semester. When she

By Lynn O'Rourke Hayes

Drug abuse

The DaIlas Morning News

transferred to the University of Oregon, she experienced an-

No longer a Western outpost, Denver is an internation-

other meltdown.

"She just didn't have coping skills; something just wasn't right," Stoefen said. Annie had never been re-

ally recognized community of arts, culture and culinary ad-

venture. Here are five family favorites: • Union Station: Recently

bellious as a teen, but in her

early 20s, "we started noticing it more ... there was this real

push-back, and hiding and lying," Stoefen said. "We brought her home again, and she was being so incredibly disrespectSubmitted photo ful, and not the girl we knew," Barbara Cofer Stoefen Stoefen said. "We said, 'If you're going to be treating us this way, and if you're going to be out all night without letting

us know what's going on, you can't livehereanymore.'" A few weeks after that confrontation, Annie went to a

party, where she tried meth for thefirsttime.

"She had tried cocaine once before, and she asked a guy at the party, 'Anybody got any cocaine?' He was showing off for her, and the only white thing he had on him, he offered to her. It turned out to be meth.

Ifyougo

What:Book release of Barbara Cofer Stoefen's "A Very Fine House" When:5:30 p.m. Sept. 23 Where:Barnes & Noble, 2690 U.S. Highway20, Bend Cost:Free Contact:www.methstory. com

opened, this historic transportation center has been reinvented as a gathering place that is also home to bike, taxi,

rail and bus lines that connect the city center to outlying ar-

eas. Stay in one of the Crawford Hotel's rail-themed guest rooms and choose from an

array of dining options and shops, including the Tattered Cover, afamed indie book-

store. The station's Grand Hall is a vibrant scene where

visitors play shuffleboard and

enjoy a snack, conversation to clever create-and-takes, and a parade of people passing the Denver Art Museum welthrough. comes families into the artistic Contact: thecrawfordhotel. fold. Family backpacks, availcom; u n i onstationindenver. able for use during a visit, are com full of art supplies, games and • Denver Botanic Gardens: puzzles. Children will also enBold hues and striking silhou- joy the Mile High City's extenettes dazzle families who visit sive public art program. Concelebrated glass artist Dale tact: denverartmuseum.org; Chihuly's stunning extrav- artsandvenuesdenver.com/ aganza at the 24-acre urban public-art oasis. Expect a boatload of • Foodie fun: Introduce the brightly colored glass bau- kids to the world's best street bles afloat amid the garden's food at Linger, a trendy establily pads, a 30-foot neon tow- lishment that overlooks the er and red glass reeds that city. The founders searched rise among the prairie grass. the world for fare that deThe world-renowned, Ven- fines regions from Mumbai

formaldehyde bottles for water

service and specials printed on toe tags. Stop by the adjacent giant milk can, the original Little Man ice-cream shop, for a sweet treat. Contact: lingerdenver.com

• Bikes abound: Denver's e nvironmental focus a n d commitment to health and af-

fordable transportation are a few of the reasons the city supports an extensive bike-share

program. Residents and visitors can pick up a bright red bike at any B-station and ride to their destinations. The Cherry Creek Bike Path, ice-trained artist's work is on to Manhattan. Built in an old a 15-mile path along the creek, viewthrough November. mortuary, Linger's quirky in- provides a great way to see the Contact: chihuly.denver.org terior is made up of cleverly sites while avoidingtraffic. • Indulge in art: From art recycled items, induding taContact: denver.bcycle.com/ dasses and kid-focused camps bles constructed from railcars, home.aspx

"She tried it, and she said,

'This is great stuff. This is the

thing for me.' Not everybody likes how meth makes them feel, but apparently she did. And she spent the next year and a half chasing that," Stoefen said. "It was horrible. My daughter, who was an honor's student at Bend High and sang with the Dynamics (the school's vocal jazz ensemble), lived for over a year on the streets of Bend as a drug addict."

Downward spiral Annie began getting arrested and stealing from her

The day she returned from Paris, "I saw it was a very,

very public arrest. She was in the wrong place at the wrong

• US.Cellular.

time," in a house law enforce-

ment was observing for drug activity. Because of her prior trouble, "she was afraid she

was going to go to prison," Stoefer said. That same day, Annie called from Deschutes County Jail

asking if she could still take her parents up on an earlier offer of getting treatment at a facility in

your phone

California. "I said, 'Do you want to go to

parents' home, Stoefen said, treatment'?' "She said, 'No, but I'll die if I stressing that when a loved one is in the full throes of addiction,

don't.'"

"the person is no longer who Healing theywere." "It's really kind of like a Calls were made to Annie's death, because you have lost probation officer and to the disthe person that you knew and trict attorney's office. "When who you raised. It's this very

witla tlae hest planin wireless.

we all showed up that day, we

intense grieving process had a plan in place," she said. it's like they die over and over Annie was released to her again. One crisis after another,

parents, and, two days after

one call after another." Whenever they did see An-

the phone call from jail, they were on a plane to Southern

nie, "she looked terrible," Stoe-

California.

fen said. After Annie broke in, she

The help the family received from local law enforcement "is

and husband Pete made the

the stuff mirades are made of,

month

tough call to report it — as an as far asI'm concerned,"Stoeintervention. fen said. "She w asn't around; w e

She decided to write "A Very

couldn't stage one of those in- Fine House," after "I felt the diterventions at home," she said. vine nudge to do (it)." "We decided to go that route in

The recession hit her busi-

an effort to (do) what they call

ness hard, she said. "Our

'raise the bottom.' Because if

business was down about 50

you stand back and wait for percent and one day I was just bottom, addicts can be there praying, 'OK, God, what am I forever. Annie will say now, going to do? I'm almost 60, is 'We'll ride it until the wheels our business going to sustain come off.'" us forthe rest of my career? The officer who respond- I can't imagine ... what I can ed told a crying Stoefen, "You possibly do, if you have any know, ma'am, your daughter ideas, please weigh in on this.'" didn't do this. Drugs did." A week later, she felt the That was a breakthrough nudge. "But it wasn't my own. moment for Stoefen. She be- I hadn't even been thinking of came involved in a local sup- writing a book." port group, Meth Friends and Stoefen didn't have any writFamily, which was launched in ing experience when she set 2005 by the Meth Action Coa-

out to write a book. Her family

lition, a grassroots organiza- was a little skeptical. "As Annie tells it now, she tion of which Stoefen became president. was like, 'Oh, isn't that pre"The more you learn about cious'? Mom wants to write a addiction — it's not your fault," book,'" Stoefen said. she said, adding that genetic But Stoefen did write one, predisposition toward addic- over the course of two years. tion, problems in the home and

To learn how, she worked with the prevalence of drugs in one's Jim Lund, a local freelance

environment all come intoplay. editor. Even as she read books "There are all t hese risk about how to self-publish, she factors, which indudes mental was putting together a book illness. And by mental illness proposal. I mean depression, anxiety, Shortly after C hristmas ADD, as well as the bigger 2012, she sent a query letter to stuff — bipolar disorder and two literary agents. Not long schizophrenia. More than half

pay off your old contract. Valid for families

and businesses.

Hello Setter;

after, one of the agents landed

of drug addicts have some sort her two offers. "There was even a little bit of of co-occurring disorder." For Annie, using meth was bidding going on. It was absonot so much about getting lutely surreal," Stoefen said. high, but rather trying not to Two years ago, Annie comfeel, Stoefen said. "Then the pletedher college degree.Tomore havocyou wreak, andthe day she's a 31-year-old adult more damage, the more shame running a small Central Orthere is. You really don't want egon business with her husto sober up to look at that." band. Occasionally, Annie The rest of the family tried joins Stoefer when she gives to maintain a normal life for drug prevention talks in local themselves and their son. Two schools. "You know t hat b ook, days into a two-week trip to Paris, she learned Annie had

'All I Really Need to Know, I

been arrested again. "I go, 'Oh, thank goodness. Now I can enjoy my Paris vacation. I know she's safe, she's eating and she'll sleep the first

Learned in K indergarten'? For me, it's like everything I

week,'" Stoefer said.

Switch now and we'll

Samsung

GALAXY$

5

need to know, I learned from

drug addicts," Stoefen said. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbuIIet1'n.com

'You know that book, 'All I Really Need to

Know, I Learned in Kindergarten'? For me, it's like everything I need to know, I learned from drug addicts." — Barbara Cofer Stoefen, author of "A Very Fine House: A Mother's Story of Love, Faith, and Crystal Meth"

ThingsweII|I you to know:NewRetail Installmentilantracts andSharedConnect Planrequired. Credit apprwal required.Device activation feeof $25perline mayapply. Regulatory CostRecovery Feeapplies (currently$1.82/line/month);this is not atax orgvmt requiredcharge. Add.fees,taxesandtermsapply andvarybysvc. andeqmt Ofhrsvalid in-storeat participating locationsonly,maybefulfilled through direct fulfillmentandcannotbecombined. Seestore orum,elular.cam for details. $140PricePlanbasedon$100/mo. 10GBShared Connect Planplus 4 lineswith discounted$10Device ilonnedion Charges each.RetailInstallmentContract requiredto receivediscounts, otherwiseregularOevice Ilonnection Ilhargesapply. Otherdim,ountsavailablefor additional SharedConnect Plans.Contract PayomPromo: Offer valid on up to 6consumerlines or25businesslines. Mustportin current numberto U.S.Celular andpurchasenewSmartphoneor tablet throughaRetail InstallmentIlontract ona Shared Connect Plan.Submit final bill identifyingearly terminationfee(ETF)chargedbycarrier within60daysof activation dateto www.uscelularcom/contraciIjayoff or viamail to U.S.IlelulaP' ContractPayoffProgram5591-61; POBox t52257; El Paso,TX88575-2257. Customerwil be reimbursedfor theETFreflected onfinal bil upto$350/line. Reimbursement in formof a U.S. Cellular MasterIlard~ Debit CardissuedbyMetaaank Member FD IC pursuantto licensefromMasterCardInternational Incorporated.Thiscarddoesnot havecash accessand can beused at anymerchant locationthat acceptsMasterCard Debit Cards within theU.S.only. Cardvalid throughexpirationdateshownonfront ofcard.Allow12-14weeks for processing. Tobeellglble, customermust register for MyAccount. Iletail InslalmentContrads: Re tal InstallmentContract (Contract) and monthlypayments accordlng tothePayment Schedule intheContract required. If youareIn default orterminateyourContract, wemayrequire youto immedlately paytheentire unpaldAmount Financedaswell as ourcollectloncosts, attorneys'feesandcourt costsrelatedtoenforcing yourobligations under theContract Upg radeyourhandset after 12consecutlve payments madeonContract. KansasCustomers: Inareas in which U.S.Cellular receivessupport fromthe Federal Universal Service Fund, all reasonable requesls forservicemust bemet Unresolvedquestions concerning services availability canbedirected to theKansas CorporationCommissionOfflceof Public AffairsandConsumer Protection at1-800-662-0027.Limited-time offer. Trademarks andtrade names arethe property of their respectiveowners. Additlonal termsapply. Seestoreoruscelular.comfor details. ©2014U.S.Cellular


CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Nev c umanwei sinononinei ent TV SPOTLIGHT

I think it's importKnowing all you know A •• While ant for people to learn Q • • now, what would you do

By Jenniffer Weigel

about online accountability,

Chicago Tribune

I don't think it can be earned

Yaniv "Nev" (pronounced "neeve") Schulman knows a thing or two about being duped. He is the protagonist of the 2010 documentary "Catfish," which followed his pursuit of an online romantic relationship, the result of which

without real-life accountability; one sort of builds off the

ing," when someone dupes another via social media. In his MTV gig as host of "Catfish: The TV Show"

(which just wrapped up its f o urth

Brad Barket/The Associated Press

Producer Nev Schulman, the protagonist of the 2010 documentary

slated for 2015), Schulman has "Caffish," has released a new book, "In Real Life: Love, Lies 8 seen dozens of online relation- Identity in the Digital Age." ships crumble because of virtual deception. In his new book, "In Real hide behind a screen'? Name some red flags Life: Love, Lies &

I d entity

in the Digital Age" (Grand Central Publishing), Schulman shares pieces of his personal journey and discusses memorable episodes from his MTV show as well as the

documentary. Schulman, 29, wh o l i v es

in Los Angeles, offered some advice from the trenches regarding online relationships, romantic or otherwise, and

the challenge of living an authentic life, online and off. Fol-

lowing is an edited transcript.

Q

• Y our MTV s h ow h a s

• unmasked dozens of online relationships. Do you think the Internet makes peo-

ple braver because they can

A in my life, I would offer the

• advice back to that time

suggestion that perhaps this tions, your choices are yours, distraction, perhaps this new and they're real. And wheth- relationship, these new peoer you say it as a comment on ple who are fresh and clean Facebook or to someone's face, and disconnected from your every action has a reaction. past and your present life, Just because that person can't are really just an excuse for give you a nasty look to show you to continue not dealing you that you've hurt their feel- with yourself. And while you ings doesn't mean that you should engage with people haven't. (online) and share creativity But the problem with the In- and ideas, make sure you're ternet is that you can just leave doing it for the right reasons that Web page or log out, so and you're not sort of chasing you never have to see those re- your tail and putting off learnactions. I guess I'm just hope- ing how to really connect with ful that people will begin to people. other. Your words, your ac-

helped coin the term "catfish-

third season, with a

differently? • If I could give myself

I don't think people are • more brave; I think it's

A•

Q •• t hat m ay i n d i cate t o

consider that the things they

do or the actions they take someone they could be the vic- have very real implications

the total opposite. I think peo- tim of a catfish. ple have become less brave, • Red flags of an online less confrontational, even • relationship run v ery though by definition what they parallel to red flags in a real, are doing (lying on the Inter- physical relationship: Not benet) is wrong. And they're per- ing available or seeming to (alhaps doing it more comfort- ways) have excuses, an inabilably and living their lives in ity to provide you with seemways that are actually less au- ingly simple things like details thentic and less risky so they about a job or family, or proof

and effects.

don't have to put themselves in situations that make them

and heartbreaking, it's also

A

that they are who they say

say we all are catfish. Q ••You Can you explain?

• In some ways, we all• through our social me-

speak in the book Q •• You about your experience in the documentary, falling for

dia — are catfish in the sense that we create a version of ourselves. We have the power

to present the version (of our• While that experience selves) we would like people

a woman who didn't exist.

• was one that I wouldn't

to see, and because of the sys-

wish on other people and was tem that is in place now with in some ways embarrassing social media — the currency of "likes" and the value of ap-

they are. Also, if the excuses the one that does define my pealing to the most people and feel uncomfortable or vulner- are of the dramatic naturelife and certainly gave me the being able to see immediately able. The Internet has given sickness, illness, accidents, di- opportunity to have this terrif- what people like or don't like them permission to do things sasters — that's a sign they're ic career that I'm just getting ... we've all started to crave they would never otherwise do lying to you. started, so I wouldn't change and almost become addicted or simply aren't ready to do in anything. to that external appreciation real life. How important is online and attention and sort ofbeing • accountability? liked.

Q•

c oo ai e ea s rivate etais

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f

Dear Abby:I have overheard a person who works as an aide at the local elementary school talking

silence the wagging tongue of a gossip who uses confidential in-

about the students — discussing

you should do is inform the princi- need to do is tell him that you are pal of the school and let him or her very busy. Then explain that you "seal the leak." If that doesn't work, agreed the last time as a special fa-

their special needs, behavioral issues, etc. I think it is appalling that she's relaying confidential infor-

formation to get attention. What

you should inform the parents be-

mation to others in

cause they may want

the community. The rule for employees here is, "What hap pens in the school

to take action. But

to do. I have heard from her too

don't jump the gun; go through channels first. Dear Abby:I have a friend whose son is in sales, and he asked to give me

many times that it was "just an

a presentation. My friend instruct-

DFP,R

ABBY

stays in the school." I'm not sure what

oversight" on her part. Should I let ed me that I was under no obligathe parents of these students know, tion to purchase anything; he just or make the school administrators

needed to practice it. I complied

aware of the situation? The peo- and didn't buy anything he was ple listening are, of course, just as pitching. guilty. Perhaps it's not my place to He has now contactedme again interfere; however, I find her be- to do another presentation behavior to be unprofessional, and cause he has changed companies she should not be working in such and wants to "practice" again. I a setting. dislike sales pitches and I'm also If you publish this, I hope it will very busy. Ordinarily, I would just be all it takes to open someone's say no. However, because he's eyes and seal their lips. What do my friend's son I am unsure how you think? to respond. Can you give me any — Boiling Over in New England suggestions? Dear Boiling Over: I'm print— Anonymous Out West ing your letter, but I doubt it will Dear Anonymous:Because you

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, SEPT. 14, 2014:This year you discover the power of your words, and you see the results in the way others chooseto respond.You are in a com pletion phase right now, as you will enter

a new12-year luck cycle next summer.

If you are single, check out anyone you meet with care. People might not be who they project themselves to be. If you are attached, Starssbowfbe kind you and your of dsyyon'll hsve sweetie often love

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

make all the difference in how you're received by others. Tonight: Your call.

CANCER (Jnne21-July 22)

** * * Be more deliberate in how you deal with someone. You could be surprised by how much your intuition plays into your interactions. You might be much more in tune with others than ** * * * Dynamic being alone asa you realize. Open up to new possibilities. ** * * p osltlve co u ple. Schedule Tonight: Keep your opinions to yourself. ** * Average afu n and long-deLEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** So-so sired vacation for ** * * T he Lion roars and people lis* Difficult just t h e two of ten, especially since it appears that you you. GEMINI is know how to enjoy yourself more than always full of ideas. other signs. You will opt for a different ARIES (March 21-April 19) form of entertainment, and others will ** * * N ote the intensity around you. follow. Your words have an effect that Observe who is trying to please whom. can't be ignored. Tonight: Leader of the You might want to look past the obvious gang. and head in a new direction. Your comVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) munication will excel as you become ** * * Y our intuitive ability to know more vibrant and direct. Tonight: Say what will please someone else will make what you think, not what you think you a big impact. A partnership could take should. on aquirky tone.Reach outto someone TAURUS (April 20-May 20) who can be erratic at times, but equally *** Be more aware ofyour spending as exciting. Understand what needs to habits. A direct approach with a loved happen. Tonight: Move forward. one will make a difference in the long run. Detach in order to gain a new perLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * You could be the focal point spective, and you will be happier as a of making a decision that could affect result. Yourefforts matter. Tonight: Be today's plans for your immediate circle willing to pitch in. of friends. Spontaneity is the way to GEMINI (May 21-Jnne20) go. Honor afamily member's need for a ** * * You'll smile, and others will change of pace as well. Tonight: Return respond in kind. Know what you want and expect. Your ability to communicate calls and respond to emails. allows greater give-and-take. Add more SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) pizazz to your word choice, and it could ** * You are instinctive in how you

agreed previously, the young man may not realize that his asking again is an imposition. All you

vor to his parent, that you can't do it, but you wish him luck with the

new company. Dear Abby: What do you do when the hostess at a club meeting

won't tolerate shared information or food, but instead tells you to be

quiet and listen only to HER history, gripes and opinions? — Dues Payer, Anywhere, U.S.A.

Dear Dues Payer:Before or after some of those meetings, have a chat with other club members. Find out

if they, too, are being treated this way and, if they are, how they feel about it. If you are all dues-paying members and can vote, it may be possible to remove her as hostess.

However, if you are the only person she does this with, you might be happier being involved in another organization where your contributions will be appreciated instead of stifled. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

proceed with a personal matter. Listen to your sixth sense to find a solution. You know your limits, and you won't make a mistake. Understand the ramifications of taking a risk; you need to be prepared. Tonight: Indulge a loved one.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * You might want to share more of your thoughts, especially if everyone else is being very talkative. Let more

people seethe realyou. As aresult, you are likely to find that you have many invitations heading your way. Tonight: Go with the flow.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * You could be more in touch with what is going on with an older relative than you had thought possible. Be willing to take a risk in order to grow and move in a new direction. You are changing, and your choices will reflect the new you. Tonight: Get into a fun project.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Y our playfulness and lightheartedness will add to the moment and to the day. A child or loved one seems to delight in your humor and fun attitude. Be aware of the affect you have on others. Tonight: Allow the lively spirit of the day to continue.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * A personal matter could be stressing you out. Your ability to move forward will be suppressed until you find a solution to at least one part of the problem. You might want to take note of the fact that you seem to be changing. Tonight: Think, then evaluate. © King Features Syndicate

I

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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m.on FOOD, "Rachael vs. Guy KidsCook-Off" — In the season's penultimate new episode, called "Plenty of Fish in the Sea," chef Robert Irvine visits to mentor the young chefs for a team challenge in which they must unscramble a recipe in which the order of steps and exact measures of the various ingredients have been jumbled up. Melissa d'Arabian serves as a guest judge for the main challenge, in which the kids select

from a diversearray of oceanic delights and prepare an appealing dish. 9 p.m. on 6, "Unforgettable" — The mystery series wraps up its season with back-to-back episodes. In "Moving On," Carrie and Al (Poppy Montgomery, Dylan Walsh) get an inside view of show business — and those who follow it faithfully — while investigating the murder of a popular television actor. Then, "DOA" pays heed to the classic

suspense movieofthesame name, as Al races time to save Carrie after she's administered a deadly poison. 9 p.m. on10, "American Dad" —The animated comedy launches its10th season with the hourlong episode"Roger Passes the Bar/A Boy Named Michael," the bar in this case being the one Roger (voice of Seth MacFarlane) owns. His heart attack necessitates his sale of the business to a restaurant chain. An alluring new neighbor (voice of guest star Jane Krakowski) makes Steve (voice of Scott Grimes) and his pals an offer he might not be able to refuse. 9 p.m.on FOOD, "The Great Food Truck Race" — In the new episode "Beat Me in St. Louis," Tyler Florence meets the final four teams in the Missouri city of the title for a challenge that illustrates how a premium prod-

uct is as goodasmoneyin the

bank. The truck-stop challenge carries a major reward: The winning team will see its week's till doubled. 10 p.m. on FX, "The Strain"Eph (Corey Stoll) has a hard time processing what he discovers as he investigates Kelly's (Natalie Brown) disappearance. Elsewhere, Dutch (Ruta Gedmintas) implements her plan to retaliate against Palmer (Jonathan Hyde), while Fitzwilliam (Roger R. Cross) makes a surprising choice in a new episode called "Loved Ones." o zap2it

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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

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Scoreboard, D2 M LB, D3 Golf, D5 Sports in brief, D2 College football, Motor sports, D5 MLS, D2 D4 Preps, D6

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

TOP 25 No. 3 Alabama Southern Miss

12

No. 4 Oklahoma Tennessee

10

PREP CROSS-COUNTRY

01'm

No. 24 S.Carolin 3 No. 6 Georgia 35 No. exas A&M Rice

10

No.10L U

31

swee

Louisiana-Monroe 0 No. 1Nore ame 14 Purdue No. 14 Mississippi 5 Louisiana 15

• After 'a bit of a hangover' following their big win againstMichiganState, the No. 2 Ducks trailed at theendof the first quarter before coming backto blow out Wyoming

East Carolina No.17Virginia Tech 21

Bulletin staff report

No. 20 Missouri 3 UCF

MONMOUTH — Beneath

sunny skies and with temperatures pushing 80 degrees, the Summit girls and boys each placed three runners in

10

irginia N o. 21 Louisville 2 1 o. 0

ree the top five of their respective

i o t a te

cross-country races Saturday as the Storm posted matching

Kent State

scores of 31 points to sweep

top honors at the Ash Creek

PAC-12 Wyoming

XC InvitationaL

Kaely Gordon and Olivia Brooks went 2-3 to pace the Summit girls, as the duo finished behind only overall winner Olivia Powell of Marist

14

Boston College 3 No. 9 Southern Cal 31 Texas

17

Army

0

over the 5,000-meter course. Hannah Tobiason took fifth

for the Storm, who bested distant runner-up Corvallis by 71 points.

See X-Country/D6 No. 16 Arizona Stat 38 Colorado 24 ashington lllinois

PREP BOYS SOCCER

44 19

ashington State 5 Portland State

21

rizona Nevada

35 28

Storm score

5 2nd-half goals, beat N. Medford

Inside • Backup QB leadsUCLA past Texas late. Pac-12 roundup,04 • No. 24 South Carolina gets late stop to upset No. 6 Georgia. Top25 roundup,04

Bulletin staff report Ron Kidder will concede

that his squad was out of sync

BOXING Mayweather wins via decision LAS VEGAS — Floyd Mayweather Jr. refused to allow Marcos Maidana to turn their rematch into a brawl, boxing masterfully to win a12-round unanimous decision Saturday night in their welterweight title fight. Mayweather remained unbeaten in 47 pro fights, drawing upon his 18years of experience andfrustrating Maidana theentire night. The fight was a marked contrast to their first bout in May,when Maidana roughedMayweather up in aclose fight.

Two ringside judges scored it 116-111for Mayweather, while the third had it115-112. The

Associated Press hadit 117-110.

The fight was held up momentarily in the eighth round whenMayweather complained that Maidana bit him on the wrist while the two were tied up. Maidanawas penalized for tripping Mayweather in the10th round.

in the first half. But, the Summit coach Photosby Steve Dykes iTheAssociated Press

quickly added, that second

Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota gets flipped in the air as hescores a touchdown during the second quarter against Wyoming

half was the Storm's "best soc-

on Saturday in Eugene. "I hope he never does that ever again. Pretty sure all our coaches don't want to see him do that again," said Oregon receiver Keanon Lowe, blocking for Mariota on the play. "I'd rather see him run out of bounds at the 2. That being said, it was

cer of the year."

an awesome play."

ing for two goals after the

With Alex Bowlin explodintermission to finish with a

hat trick for the game, SumEUGENEt was hard to tell which team

t

was which in the early portions of the not highly anticipated Oregon-Wyoming matchup on a sun-splashed Saturday at Autzen

MARK ',~) MORICAL

victory over Michigan State last

mit reeled off five second-half

week? Probably so. These are 18-

scores to blow past visiting

to 21-year-old kids, after all, and

North Medford 6-1 in nonconference boys soccer action on

the Autzen energy for a game that started at 11 a.m. was about half that of the previous week.

Nextup

frich. "It was a bit of a hangover situation." But it didn't matter. Oregon found its rhythm in the second

Oregonat Washington State When: 7:30 p.m., Sept. 20

That team driving the ball methodically down the field, convert-

"We were a little sluggish in have to play better in future games, the beginning in every phase," and how their defense looked said Oregon coach Mark Hel-

ing five of its first six third downs,

shaky at times, consider this:

Stadium.

and taking an early 7-0 lead'? Yeah, The game still was over before that was Wyoming. halftime. The unheralded Cowboys out-

gained the No. 2-ranked Ducks in the first quarter, 143 yards to 128. But before this becomes another

column about how the Ducks will

After a slow start, Oregon

cruised to a 48-14 victory and improved to 3-0. So, was there a hangover from

the Ducks' enormous

quarter and finally shook free of the pesky Cowboys by rolling to a 27-7 lead by halftime. SeeDucks/D4

TV:ESPN

Radio: KBND 1110-AM

Saturdayafternoon. "If you look at our goals of late, we've had very few that

havebeen in the run of play," Kidder said, noting how most

of his team's goals have been second-chance scores. "I'm glad the boys really got to create those opportunities. To see how easy it is to create goal-scoring opportunities when they play together, when itbecomes possession-oriented and team-oriented soccer, it

Anothergame,anotherTD(ei twe) Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota has thrown for a touchdown in each of his 29 career games. If hecontinues this streak through the end of this season, hewill break the NCAA record for consecutive games with a TD pass — if another QB doesn't get there first.

MARCUS MARIOTA Oregon

RAKEEM. :RUSSELLWILSON CATQ N.C.State/ Wisconsin Marshall :

29»,—.

35 38

2012-Pres.

2011-Pres.

2009 - 12

really opens things up for guys who ultimately have a shot. It was great to watch today." SeeStorm /D6

Inside • Lava Bears come backto beat Corvallis. Prep roundup,06

GOLF

Williams laying it up after hisHall induction

— The Associated Pess

CORRECTION By Karen Crouse A listing of prep football scores that appeared in Saturday's Bulletin on pageC1 included an incorrect result for the Summit-Franklin game. Summit defeated Franklin, 52-6.

The Bulletin regrets the error.

he would give a golfer who questioned his yardages. "It's

and 13 of his major titles.

ATLANTA — The newest

Steve," Williams, a part-time

member of golf's Caddie Hall

Sunriver resident, said to the assembled crowd at the Cherry Hills Country Club outside Denver. "Stevie's what Tiger used to call me,

Woods, was the rare instance when Williams was

New York Times News Service

of Fame is Steve Williams — or as his presenter at last Jon Super/The Associated Press

Steve Williams, right, works with Adam Scott during practice for the British Open in July. Wiliiams, the newest member of the Caddie Hall of Fame, will be spending more time with his family in New Zealand.

week's ceremony, Steve Sands of the Golf Channel, called him, Stevie. Settling in at the lectern

for his speech, Williams gave Sands the same look

so that's what everybody

calls me. I hate that name." Williams was Tiger Woods' caddie for 13 years

Their divorce, initiated by caught unaware in a career that is winding down after

36 years. Sometime after today's final round of the Tour Cham-

pionship, Williams, 50, will sit down with Adam Scott. SeeWilliams /D5

Inside • Horschel, Mcllroy tied going into the

final round of FedEx Cup finale. Roundup, 05


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

ON THE AIR

COHKBOARD

TODAY SOCCER England, Manchester United vs. QPR Women's College, Vjllanova at Princeton Men's College, Gonzagaat California Women's College, SantaClara atCalifornia Men's College, CalPoly at UCLA

Time TV/Radio 8 a.m. NBCSN 1 p.m. ESPNU Pac-12 1 p.m. Pac-12 3:30 p.m. Pac-12 5:30 p.m.

GOLF

PGA Tour,TourChampionship PGA Tour,TourChampionship Web.comTour,NCH Championship

9 a.m.

Golf

10:30 a.m.

NBC

1 0:30 a.m.

Gol f

10 a.m. 1 p.m.

CBS Fox,

FOOTBALL

NFL,New EnglandatMinnesota NFL, Seattle at SanDiego

KWLZ-FM 96.5,KRCD-AM 690, 96.-FM

NFL, KansasCity at Denver NFL, Chicago atSan Francisco

1:25 p.m. 5:20 p.m.

CBS NBC

BASEBALL

MLB, Cleveland atDetroit MLB, Oakland at Seattle

MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Baltimore

10 a.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m.

TBS Root ESPN

11 a.m.

ESPN

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Chicago BASKETBALL

World Cup, final, United States vs. Serbia HORCERACING JockeyClubRacingTour,Woodbine

noon

ESPN2

2 p.m.

FS1

4 p.m.

MLB

7 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB

4 p.m.

ESPN2

MONDAY BASEBALL

MLB, Washington at Atlanta or New YorkYankeesat Tampa Bay MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels or Philadelphia at SanDiego MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels

Root

BASKETBALL

Women's, Canadavs.UnitedStates FOOTBALL

NFL, Philadelphia at Indianapolis SOCCER England, Hull City vs. West HamUnited

5 :15 p.m. noon

ES P N NBCSN

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL Valenti, fOrmer OSU COaCh, dieS at 94 — PaulValentj, who coached men's basketball at OregonState from1964 to1970, died Friday of natural causes, the university announcedSaturday. A former Beaver, Valentj served as anassistant coach under the legendary Slats Gill for18 years before being promoted to headcoach whenGil became athletic director at OSU in1964. Valenti's teams were 91-82 over six seasons before heretired from coaching before the1970-71 season. Hewent on to serve in athletic department administration at DSU for manyyears. Valenti has beeninducted into the Oregon State Sports Hall of Fame,theState of OregonSports Hall of Fame,andthe Pacific-12 ConferenceHall of Honor.

HaWkS aPOIOgiZefOr raCially Charged COmmentS —The Atlanta Hawks havereleased anopen letter of apology to the team, fans and city of Atlanta, saying the organization "did not do the right thing" to correct racially inflammatory words and innuendos. The apology, signedbyCEO SteveKoonin,was releasedonSaturday, one day after the teamannounced general manager DannyFerry was taking an indefinite leave of absencefollowing his racially charged commentsaboutLuolDeng.

FOOTBALL Welker, SCandriCk remain OR SuSPended liSt —Denver Broncos wide receiverWesWelker won't be suiting up today. Neither will Dallas Cowboyscornerback OrlandoScandrick. Despite the union's approval, the NFLdidn't sign off on a newdrug policy before Saturday's roster deadline, meaning players potentially eligible for reinstatement remained onthe reserve/suspended list. That includes Welker andScandrick, who are both serving four-game punishments. The NFLPlayers Association approved anew policy Friday that would introduce HGH testing and significantly increase thethreshold for positive marijuana tests. Other changescould result in suspended players seeing their punishments reduced or rescinded. Despite the union's DK, the NFLdidn't approve the newpolicy by the1 p.m. PDTdeadline for the 53-man rosters to beset for Sunday's games.

TENNIS Bryan drotherS ClinChDaViSCOPmatChuP fOr U.S.Americans Boband Mike Bryan capped aremarkable weekwith another celebratory chest bump onSaturday. Six days after winning the U.S. Openfor their100th career tournament title, the world's topranked doubles teamrolled to an easythree-set victory that clinched the United States' Davis Cupmeeting against Slovakia in Hoffman Estates, lllinois. Controlling the net with their quick handsand short-angled volleys, the Bryans brokeserve seventimes and routed Norbert Gombos and LukasLacko6-1, 6-2, 6-1 in just 76 minutes.

PROBA BLE; DTGeno Atkins (feet), CBDarqueze Dennard(hip), DECarlos Dunlap (hamstring), WR A.J. Green (foot), DEMargus Hunt(ribs), G Mike Monday NFL Poffak(knee),TAndreSmith (shoulder), WRJames Boyssoccer.CulveratRedmondJV,4p.m.;Damas Wright(concussion). cus ChristianatCentral Christian,4 p.m. NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE DETROITLIONS atCAROLINA PANTHERSVolleyball:CentralChristianatChiloquin, 4p.m. AH TimesPDT LIONS:OUT: S DonCarey(hamstring), T LaAdrian Waddl e(calf). DOUBTFUL: SJamesIhedigbo(neck). Tuesday AMERICAN CONFERENCE PROBA BLE: RBReggie Bush(knee), TE Brandon Boyssoccer:Redmond atHermiston,3:30 p.m.; East (foot). PANT HERS: QUESTIONABLE: RB Liberly atSummit, 4 p.m.;WestAlbany at Bend, W L T Pc t PF PA Pettigrew DeAngelWi o liams(thigh), TGarry Wiliams (hip), LB 4p.mcTheDallesat Ridgeview,4 p.m.; LaPineat Miami 1 0 0 1. 00033 20 J ason Wi l i a ms (thi g h). PRO BABLE: DEGreg Hardy CentralLinn,4:30p.m. N .Y. Jets 1 0 0 1.0 0 0 19 14 not injury related),QBCamNewton (ribs), TEGreg Girls soccer.RidgeviewatTheDalles, 4p,mcBendat B uffalo 1 0 0 1.00 0 23 20 IIsen ( (notinjuryrelated). West Albany,4p.m.;RedmondatLaPine,4p.m. N ew England 0 1 0 .00 0 20 33 ST.LOUIS RAMS atTAMPA BAY BUCCAVolleyball: Ridgeview atBurns,6 p.mcTheDallesat South NEERS — RAMS:OUT:CB Trumaine Johnson Redmond, 6:30p.m.;SweetHomeatSisters,6:45 W L T Pc t PF PA knee), CBarrett Jones(back). QUESTIONABLE: QB p.m.; Madrasat CrookCounty, 6 p.m.; Irrigonat Tennessee 1 0 0 1. 00026 10 haunHill (thigh), SLamarcus Joyner(back). BUCCulver,6:15p.m.;Central Christianat Trinity Lu- Houston 1 0 0 1. 00017 6 CANEE RS: OU T: DEMichael Johnson(ankle), CB theran,4:30p.mJChiloquin atGilchrist, 4 p.m. Jacksonvile 0 1 0 .00 0 17 34 Rashaan Melvin (ankle),TEAustin Seferian-Jenkins Indianapolis 0 1 0 .00 0 24 31 (ankl e).QUESTIONABLE:DE Da'QuanBowers(abThursday North Wiliam Gholston (shoulder), GLogan Boyssoccer. Summit at HoodRiver Valley,4:30 p.m.; W L T Pc t PF PA domen), DE Mankins (knee), RBDoug Martin (knee),S Bradley Barlowat Redmond,4 p.mcRidgeviewat Sandy, 1 0 0 1. 00023 16 McDougal d (knee).PROBABLE:T DemarDotson 6p.mcGrantsPassatBend, 430 p.mcSistersat 1 1 0 .50 0 42 29 (hamstring). Sweet Home,4:30p.mcMadrasatTheDaff es,4 1 1 0 .50 0 36 53 SEATTLESEAHAWKS atSAN DIEGO CHARp.m.; CrookCountyatLaPine,4p.m. 0 1 0 .00 0 27 30 GERS — SEAHAWKS: OUT: RBChristine Michael Girls soccer.Sandyat Ridgeview, 4:30 p.mcGrants Wesl (hamstri g), LB Kevin Pierre-Louis (hamstring), CB PassatBend,3p.m.;BensonatRedmond,4p.m.; W L T Pc t PF PA TharoldSinm on(knee).DOUBTFUL:TECooper Helfet HoodRiverValey atSummit, 4 p.m.; Sweet Home D enver 1 0 0 1.00 0 31 24 (knee).CHAR GERS: OUT: SJahleel Addae(hamat Sisters,4:30p.m.;TheDalles atMadras,4 p.m. S an Diego 0 1 0 .00 0 17 18 string), CBChris Davis (ankle). QUESTIONABLE: CB Volleyball: Redmond at Summit, 6:30p.mc Rid- Oakland 0 1 0 .00 0 14 19 B randon Fl o wers (groin), LB Melvin Ingram(hamgevie w atBend,6:30p.m.;CrookCountyatMo- K ansas City 0 1 0 .00 0 10 26 string). PRO BABLE: WRKeenanAllen (ribs), T D.J. lalla,6 p.m.; ElmiraatSisters, 6:45p.m.; Madrasat NATIONALCONFERENCE Fluker(knee,ankle), TEAntonio Gates(hamstring), Corbett,6:15p.m.; LaPineatJefferson, 5:30p.m.; East Sean Lissemore(ankle), DECoreyLiuget(ankle). Dufur atCulver,5p.m. W L T Pc t PF PA DTHOUSTON TEXANS atOAKIAND RAIDERSPhiladelphia 1 0 0 1. 00034 17 EXANS:OUT: LBJadeveonClowney(knee), TEC.J. Friday Washington 0 1 0 .00 0 6 1 7 T Fiedorowicz(foot), S Shiloh Keo(calf). PRO BABLE: FoelbaH:EaglePoint atBend,7 p.mcMountain View Dallas 0 1 0 .00 0 17 28 CB A.J.Bouye(shoulder), T TysonClabo(ankle), at Crater,7p.m.; AshlandatSummit, 7 p.mcHood N.Y.Giants 0 1 0 .00 0 14 35 LB Brian Cu shi n g (ankl e ), RB Ar i a n F o ster (ri b s), TE River Valleyat Ridgeview,7 p.m.; TheDalles at South Redmond, 7p.mcCrookCounty at Sisters, 7p.m.; W L T Pc t PF PA GarrettGraham(back), DETimJamison(groin), WR AndreJohnson(ankle), CBJohnathanJoseph(foot), Staytonat Madras,7 p,mcLaPine at Lakeview,7 Carolina 1 0 0 1. 00020 14 CB ElbertMack(foot), LB Mike Mohamed (quadrip.mJCulveratSantiam, 7p.m. Atlanta 1 0 0 1. 00037 34 ceps), CChris Myers(foot), T Derek Newton(elbow, Volleyball: Triad at Central Christian, 6 p.m.; Paisley NewOrleans 0 1 0 .00 0 34 37 illness), NTLouis Nix ffl (wrist), RBJay Prosch at Gilchrist, 4p.m.;NorthLakeat Trinity Lutheran, TampaBay 0 1 0 .00 0 14 20 (hand), G Xavier Su'a-Filo (back), DEJ.J. Wat (an5:30p.m. North RAIDER S:OUT:CBTaiwanJones(foot). Boyswaterpolo: BendatTualatin Hills Tournament, W L T Pc t PF PA kle, illness). Q UESTION ABLE :RBMauriceJones-Drew(hand),LB TBD 1 0 0 1. 00034 6 Kaluka Mai a va (i f fness), TMatt Mccants(knee),LB Girls walerpolo: Bendat ParkroseTournament, TBD 1 0 0 1. 00035 14 NickRoach(concussion).PROBABLE;CB Chimdi 0 1 0 .00 0 20 23 Chekwa(knee). Saturday 0 1 0 .00 0 16 36 NEW YORKJETSatGREEN BAYPACKERSBoyssoccer.MountainViewatLebanon,2p.mcRivWest STIONerside atCulver,1 p.m. W L T Pc t PF PA JETS:OUT:LBA.J. Edds(hamstring). QUE ABLE: SJoshBush(quadriceps). PROBABLE:GWillie Girls soccer:Lebanonat MountainView,2p.m. S eattle 1 0 0 1.00 0 36 16 Colon(calf), TEJeff Cumberland(not injury related), Volleyball: Bend,MountainView, CrookCounty at SanFrancisco 1 0 0 1. 00028 17 DE Ikeme funa Enemkpali (foot), CBDeeMiliner (anRogueValley Classic in Medford, 8 a.mcMadras, A rizona 1 0 0 1.0 0 0 18 17 PACK ERS: OUT: LB Brad Jones (quadriceps). Sisters atSisters Invitational, 9 a.mcRedmondat St. Louis 0 1 0 .00 0 6 34 kle). QUESTI ONABLE:TBryanBulaga(knee).PROBABLE: WilsonviffeTournament, TBD;CulveratRegisTourTE BrandonBostick (fibula), CBDemetri Goodson ney,12:30p.m. Today'sGames (concussion),RBEddieLacy(concussion). Cross-coun try:Bend, Mountain View,CrookCounty, DallasatTennessee,10 a.m. KANSASCITYCHIEFSatDENVERBRONCOSMadras,Sisters, LaPineat ThreeCourseChallenge NewEnglandat Minnesota,10 a.m. CHIEFS:OU T: RBDe'AnthonyThomas(hamstring). in Seaside, 9:15a.m.;Ridgeview,Summit atNorth- Miami atBuffalo,10a.m. PROB ABLE: S Husain Abduffah(quadriceps), S Eric westClassicinEugene, TBD Jacksonvilleat Washington,10 a.m. Berry (heel quadri , ceps),WRDwayneBowe(quadriBoys waterpolo: BendatTualatin Hills Tournam ent, Arizonaat N.Y.Giants,10 a.m. ceps), CB Marcus Cooper (ankle), LBTambaHali (anTBD NewOrleansat Cleyeland,10am. kle, knee),WRFrankie Hammond Jr. (shoulder), WR Girls walerpolo: Bendat ParkroseTournament,TBD AtlantaatCincinnati, 10a.m. Junior Heminwa gy(hip), C EricKush(shoulder), LB Detroitat Carolina,10a.m. JoshMartin (quadriceps),WRAlbert Wilson(ankle). Seattleat SanDiego,1:05p.m. MOTOR SPORTS BRONC O S: O U T :LBDannyTrevathan(knee). DOUBTSt. LouisatTampaBay,1:05 p.m. FUL: G BenGarland(ankle). QUESTIONABLE:SDavid HoustonatOakland,1:25 p.m. Bruton Jr. (shoulder). PROBABLE:TRyanClady(foot), NASCAR Sprint Cup KansasCityat Denver, 1:25p.m. CB ChrisHarrisJr,(knee), LBNate Irving (knee), C N.Y.Jetsat GreenBay,1:25 p.m. MyAFibStory.com455Lineup Manny Ramirez(back), DEDeMarcusWare(thigh), CB Chicag oatSanFrancisco,5:30p.m. Friday qualifying ccd.; racetoday Kayvon Webster (ankle). Monday'sGame At ChicagolandSpeedway,Joliet, IH. CHICAGOBEARS alSAN FRANCISCO 49ERS PhiladelphiaatIndianapolis, 5:30p.m. (Car numberin parentheses) — BEARS: OUT:QBDavid Fales(right shoulder), RB Lineup basedonFriday practice times TonyFiammetta (hamstring), CRoberto Garza(ankle), Injury Reporl 1. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota. 2.(31) RyanNewman, MattSlauson(ankle).DOUBTFUL:WRJoshMorgan NEWYOR K — The updated National Football G Chevrolet. 3.(99)CarlEdwards, Ford. 4. (17)Ricky League (groin). QUE STIONABLE: WRAlshonJefery (haminjury report,asprovidedbytheleague: Stenhouse Jr., Ford. 5. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota. 6. string), WR BrandonMarshall (ankle). 49ERS:OUT: C MIAMI DOLPHINSatBUFFALOBILLS— DOL- MarcusMarti (15) ClintBow yer, Toyota. 7. (48)JimmieJohnson, PHINS: n(knee). QUESTIONABLE; CBTramaine OUT:DETerrenceFede(knee),CMikePouncChevrolet. 8.(24) JeffGordon,Chevrolet.9. (27)Paul (toe),CBChris Culiver (concussion,stinger),T ey (hip), LBJordanTripp(chest). DOUBTFUL: LBKoa Brock Menard,Chevrolet.10. (42)KyleLarson, Chevrolet. Davis(hamstring). PROBABLE: PAndy Lee e), TBilly Turner(foot). PROBABLE: SWalt Anthony 11. (1)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet.12. (4)Kevin Misi (ankl knee),DTJustin Smith(not injury related). (hand), TECharles Clay (knee), LBChris Mc- (right Harvick,Chevrolet.13. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chey- Aikens PHILADEL PHIA EAGLES at INDIANAPOLIS (illness),RBKnowshon Moreno (shoulder), DE rolet.14. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet.15. (3) Austin Cain — EAGLES:DNP:WRJoshHuf(shoulder),T errickShelby(knee), TEDionSims(neck), DTRandy COLTS Dillon, Chevrolet.16.(55)BrianVickers,Toyota.17. D Matt Tobin(ankle). FULL:RBChris Polk(hamstring), (toe),WRMikeWallace (hamstring), LBPhilip (47) AJ Affmen dinger, Chevrolet. 18. (10)Danica Starks WR BradSmith (groin), CBJaylen Wa tkins (hamWheele(thum r b). BILLS:OUT;LBKeith Rivers(groin). Patrick, Chevrolet.19. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet. string).COL TS: DNP: LBJerrell Freeman(hamstring), DOUBTFUL: S J o n a t h a n Me e k s ( n e c k ) , T E L e e S mi t h 20. (16)GregBiffle, Ford. Arthur Jones(shoulder), GJoeReitz(ankle). LIMPROBABLE:WRChris Hogan (groin), WRSam- DE 21. (9) MarcosAmbrose, Ford. 22. (14) Tony (toe). ITED: NT JoshChapman (ankle), C Khaled Holmes Watkins(ribs), SAaronWilliams(head). Stewart,Chevrolet.23.(43)Aric Almirola, Ford.24. myJACKSONVILL ( ankl e ), CB GregToler (ribs). FULL:RBAhmad BradEJAGUARS atWASHINGTON (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota. 25.(2) BradKeselowski, shaw (not injury related),SSergio Brown(shoulder), REDSKINS — JAGUARS: O U T : S J o h n a t h a n C y Ford. 26. (51)JustinAllgaier, Chevrolet. 27. (78) prien (concussion),TEClay Harbor(calf), RBStorm WRReggieWayne(not injury related). Martin TruexJr., Chevrolet. 28. (22)JoeyLogano, Johnson(ankle), GAustin Pasztor (hand). DOUBTFord.29.(13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet. 30.(38) Da- FUL: WRCecil ShortsIII (hamstring). QUE STIONAmerica's Lin e vid Giffiland,Ford. BLE: CBAlanBall(abdomen).PROBABLE:RBToby 31. (83) RyanTruex,Toyota. 32. (95) Michael A Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog G erhart (ankl e ), CB D w a yne G r a t z (an k l e ), DT Ab ry McDowell, Ford.33. (26) ColeWhitt, Toyota.34. Jones(abdom (Hemeteamin caps) en), WRMarqise Lee(hamstring), TE (98) JoshWise,Chevrolet. 35. (7)MichaelAnnet, Marcedes NFL Lewis(knee). REDSKINS: OUT: LBAkeem Chevrolet. 36. (36)ReedSorenson, Chevrolet. 37. Jordan(knee), Today CBTracyPorter (hamstring), TEJor23) AlexBowman, Toyota. 38.(40) LandonCassil, PANTHERS 2r/~ 2r72 Lions Reed(hamstring). DOUBTFUL: DEKedric Golston Dophins 1 (B) PK 43r/2 hevrolet.39.(34)David Ragan, Ford. 40.(37) Mike dan 4 2r/2 BILLS (groin).QUE STIONABLE: KKai Forbath(right groin), R EDSKINS 6 Bliss, Chevrolet. 6 43'/ x Jaguars DukeIhenacho(ankle), LBBrianOrakpo(ankle), T T ITANS 3 41. (66) JoeNemechek, Toyota. 42.(33) Travis S 3'/a 49 H Cowboys Tyler Polumbus (ankle). PROBABLE:TTrent Wiliams Kvapff,Chevrolet. 43.(32)JoeyGase, Ford. Cardi n als 1 (NY) 2H 42H GIANTS (shoulder). Patriots 3 N 6 48 VIKINGS DALLASCOWBOYS atTENNESSEE TITANSaints 6 6rd 47r / 2 BROW NS COWB OYS: OUT: LBJustinDurant (groin), DELayar S SOCCER 5'/z 5'/x 4 8'/z Falcons Edwards (knee), DEAnthonySpencer (knee), TDarrion BENGALS B UCCAN E E R S3H 6 3 P / r Rams Weems (shoulder).QUESTIONABLE:S C.J.Spiff man S eahawks 5r/~ 6 MLS 44' / 2 CHARG ERS (groin). PRO BABLE: GZack Martin (foot), DTTerrell exans 2r / 3 40 RAIDERS MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER McClain(ankle), QBTony Romo (back), DEGeorge T P ACKERS 8'/z 8 46 Jets AH TimesPDT Selvie (shoulder),WRTerranceWiliams (back). Tl- B RONCOS 13 1 2 51 H Chiefs TANS: OUT:LBZachBrown(shoulder).QUESTION- 49ERS 7 7 48'/z Bears EasternConference ABLE: DTMikeMartin (hamstring). PRO BABLE: RB Monday W L T P l s GF GA JackieBattle(neck), WRJustin Hun ter (knee), QB COLTS 3 3 5 4'/x Eagl es D.C.United 14 9 5 47 42 31 Charlie Whitehurst(right finger), S GeorgeWilson Sporting KansasCity 13 10 6 45 43 34 (foot). N ew England 1 3 1 2 3 4 2 41 39 ARIZONACARDINALS atNEW YORK GIANTS GOLF — CARDINLS: A OU T: LBAlexOkafor (thigh), DE New york 9 8 1 1 3 8 44 41 Columbu s 9 9 1 0 3 7 40 36 FrosteeRucker(calf). QUESTIONABLE: RBAndre PGA Tour Philadelphia 9 9 10 37 45 43 Ellington (foot), QBCarson Palmer (right shoulTorontoFC 9 11 7 3 4 36 43 der), P DaveZastudff (left groin). PROBABLE: G Tour Championship Houston 9 13 5 3 2 33 50 Paul Fanaika (knee), S Rashad Johnson(ankle), S Saturday Chicago 5 7 1 5 3 0 34 40 TyrannMathieu (knee). GIANTS:OU T: WROdeff At East LakeGolf Club Montreal 5 17 6 2 1 32 52 Beckham Jr. (hamstring), T JamesBrewer (back), Atlanta WesternConlerence LB DevonKennard (hamstring), DT Markus Kuhn Purse: SB milion W L T P l s GF GA (ankle).QUE STIONABLE: PSteveWeatherford (anYardage:7,357;Par: 70 Seattle 17 7 3 54 51 37 kle). PRO BABLE: LBJon Beason (foot), T Charles Third Round LosAngele s 1 4 5 8 50 56 29 Brown(shoulder), DTCullen Jenkins (hip), DEJa- Billy Horschel 66-66-69 —201 R ealSLake alt 1 2 6 1 0 4 6 44 35 son Pierre-Paul(neck). 69-65-67 —201 RoryMcllroy FCDallas 13 9 6 4 5 48 37 NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS alMINNESOTA Vl- Jim Furyk 67-69-67 —203 Vancouv er 8 7 1 3 3 7 36 36 KINGS —PATRIOTS: QUESTIONABLE: DEMichael RickieFowler 69-68-67 —204 Portland 8 8 1 2 3 6 49 48 Buchanan (ankle), LBJamieCollins (thigh), DTChris JustinRose 72-66-66—204 Colorado 8 13 7 3 1 39 48 Jones(ankle),DTSealverSiliga (hand), CR yanWen- JasonDay 67-67-70—204 SanJose 6 11 9 2 7 32 38 dell (knee).PR OBABLE: TE Rob Gronkowski (knee). 70-68-67 —205 RusselHenl l ey ChivasUSA 6 16 6 24 23 51 VIKINGS: OUT: RBAdrianPeterson(not injury relat- RyanPalmer 69-67-69—205 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepointfor tie. 66-68-71 —205 ed), LBBrandonWatts (knee).QUESTIONABLE: DT Chris Kirk Sharrif Floyd(shoulder), CBXavier Rhodes (groin), 69-72-65 —206 AdamScott Saturday'sGames WR RodneySmith (hamstring). PROBABLE: T Mike BubbaWatson 67-73-67 —207 Philadelphia 2, NewYork2,tie Harris(shoulder),GCharlie Johnson(ankle), RBZach Matt Kuchar 68-71-69 —208 NewEngland2,Montreal1 Line (ankle),LBMichaelMauti (foot), CBJabari Price GaryWoodland 71-75-63 —209 Chicago1,TorontoFC1,tie 69-71-70—210 (hamstring). SergioGarcia Fc Dallas 2, Vancouver1 NEW ORLEANS SAINTS at CLEVEL AND 68-68-74—210 Cameron Tringale BROWNS — SAINTS: OU T: S MarcusBall (ham- JimmyWalker Houston2,Columbus2, tie 73-69-69 —211 string), RB Erik Lorig(ankle). PROBABLE:CBKeenan KevinNa Colorado 2, Portland2,tie 70-66-75 —211 Today'sGame Lewis(knee),LBCurtis Lofton(shoulder), WRKen- Biff Haas 68-71-73 —212 ny Stills (quadri c eps). BRO W N S: O U T : R B B e n T ate LosAngelesatSanJose, noon HidekiMatsuyama 71-71-71—213 Friday, Sept. 19 (knee).QUESTIONABLE: DEDesmondBryant (wrist), ZachJohnson 68-74-72—214 TE JordanCam eron (shoulder), DE JohnHughes MartinKaym Colorado at RealSalt Lake,10p.m. er 73-69-73 —215 Saturday,Sept. 20 (hamstring),GPaul McQuistan (ankle), LBBarkevious PatrickReed 67-74-74—215 VancouveratPortland, 5p.m. Mingo(shoulder). JohnSenden 72-75-69—216 ATLANTA FALCONS at CINCINNATI BEN- Morgan HoustonatPhiladelphia, 7p.m. Hoff mann 70-73-73—216 GALS —FALCONS: OUT:TJakeMatthews(ankle). NewEnglandatColumbus,7:30p.m. HunterMahan 74-72-71—217 SanJoseatMontreal, 7:30p.m. PROBABLE; WR RoddyWhite(knee).BENGALS: Brendon Todd 70-75-72—217 Seattle FC at NewYork, 7:30 p.m. OUT: WRMarvin Jones (foot). DOUBTFUL: RB WebbSimpson 74-72-72—218 D.c. UnitedatChicago,8:30 p.m. RexBurkhead(knee), LBSean Porter (hamstring). Jordan Spieth 71-70-80—221 FC Dallaat s LosAngeles,10:30p.m. QUESTIO NABLE: LBVontazeBurfict (concussion). GeoffOgilvy 77-77-73 —227

ON DECK

FOOTBALL

LPGA Tour Evian Championship Saturday At Evian ReserlGolf Club Evian-les-Bains, France Purse: 33.25million Yardage: 5,453;Par:71 Third Round a-amateur Hyo JooKim 61-72-72—205 KarrieWe bb 65-71-70—206 Mi JungHur 66-69-72—207 71-67-70—208 AnnaNordqvist MariajoUribe 68-70-70—208 70-72-67—209 Na YeonChoi 70-71-68—209 Ha NaJang 69-68-72—209 LydiaKo 67-65-77—209 BrittanyLincicome InbeePark 69-72-69—210 StacyLewis 70-67-73—210 SuzannPettersen 67-69-74—210 LexiThompson 70-70-71—211 I.K. Kim 69-69-73—211 AyakoUehara 69-73-70—212 PaulaCreamer 69-71-72—212 72-67-73—212 MinjeeLee 69-68-75—212 MoriyaJutanugarn 74-72-67—213 JanePark 68-73-72—213 KarineIcher 70-70-73—213 Shanshan Feng JulietaGranada 68-72-73—213 AmeliaLewis 70-76-68—214 CharleyHull 71-73-70—214 SunYoungYoo 76-68-70—214 CandieKung 69-74-71—214 AzaharaMunoz 70-72-72—214 HeeYoungPark 72-70-72—214 Line Vede l 70-72-72—214 a-JingYan 71-75-69—215 71-74-70—215 MarinaAlex 73-71-71—215 Ji YoungOh LizetteSalas 69-75-71—215 lheeLee 69-74-72—215 MinaHarigae 69-71-75—215 JennyShin 71-76-69—216 Juli Inkster 69-77-70—216 MorganPressel 70-76-70—216 Kris Tam ulis 70-71-75—216 AmyYang 68-70-78—216 69-78-70—217 In Gee Chun 70-76-71—217 LauraDavies 70-73-74—217 CarolineHedwall a-Emily K.Pedersen 69-74-74—217 SakuraYokomine 71-71-75 —217 MikaMiyazato 69-72-76 —217 LauraDiaz 75-72-71 —218 JayeMarieGreen 69-78-71 —218 HaejiKang 74-73-71 —218 SandraGal 72-73-73—218 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 72-72-74—218 JenniferSong 71-73-74—218 71-70-77—218 KatherineKirk 73-74-72—219 PerniffaLindberg 70-77-72—219 KristyMcPherson 71-76-72—219 Sydnee Michaels 69-75-75—219 Se RrPak a-CelineBoutier 71-72-76—219 FlorentynaParker 71-72-76—219 BeatrizRe 72-71-76—219 71-75-74—220 71-74-75—220 71-73-76—220

TENNIS WTA CoupeBanqueNationale Saturday At ClubAvantageMulti-Sperls deQuebec QuebecCity Purse: 3250,005(lntl.) Surtace:Hard-Indoor Singles Semifinals MirjanaLucic-Baroni, Croatia,def.Julia Goerges (5), Germ any,6-4, 5-7,6-2. VenusWiliams(1), UnitedStates,def. Shelby Rogers (4),UnitedStates,6-3, 6-2. TashkentOpen Saturday At ClubAvantageMulti-Sports deQuebec QuebecCity Purse: 3250,000(Intl.) Surtace: Hard-Indoor Singles Semifinals MirjanaLucic-Baroni, Croatia,def.Julia Goerges (5), Germ any,6-4, 5-7,6-2. VenusWiliams(1), United States, def. Shelby Rogers (4),UnitedStates,6-3, 6-2.

HongKongOpen Saturday At Victoria ParkTennis Stadium HongKong Purse: 5250,000(Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals KarolinaPliskova(3), CzechRepublic, def.Alison VanUytvanck,Belgium,6-1,4-6,6-4. SabineLisicki (1),Germany, def. FrancescaSchiavone,Italy,6-3,3-6, 6-2

DEALS Transactions FOOTBAL L National Football League DETROIL TIONS— SignedSNateNess. JACKSONVILL E JAGUARS — Released DE Chris Smith. Signed S Craig Lostonfrom the practice

squad. MINNESOTAVIKINGS — Rel eased FB Zach Line. SignedRBJoe Banyard fromthe practice squad. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— ReleasedLBDarius Fleming.SignedLBDeontaeSkinnerfromthe practice squad. OAKLAND RAIDERS—SignedLBBojayFilmoeatu from thepracticesquad. ST. LOUIS RAMS—SignedDERobert Quinnto a four-yearcontract extension.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedon Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 30,202 4,558 3,858 1,145 The Daffes 15,169 2,214 7,488 2,408 John Day 18,775 2,927 4,717 1,503 McNary 22,647 2,244 3,542 1,064 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd WsHhd Bonneville 789,188 104,897 259,064 111,210

The Daffes493,359 70,240 148,184 65,729

John Day 389,027 57,048 89,783 38,401

McNary 309,682 46,695 78,356 34,202

CYCLING Contador heatSFroometo WinViielta 20th StageAlberto Contador surged past Chris Froome to win the mountainous 20th stage of the Spanish Vuelta in Puerto de Ancares, Spain, on Saturday and increase his lead of the grand tour heading into its final day. Contador stayed close to Froome asthe former Tour de France winners shed the rest of the field on the special-category ascent to the Puerto de Ancares summit. The Tinkoff-Saxo rider then useda final push to power by Froomeand win the demanding 186-kjlometer (115-milej ride starting in Santo Estevo deRibas deSil that included four category climbs. TheSpaniard could not help smiling brightly as he parted the crowd lining the road and left Froome behind, knowing he was closing in on what would be his sixth grand tour victory.

SOCCER U.S. wOmen rOut MexiCO 8-0 — HopeSoloset the U.S.national team record with her 72nd career shutout, and Alex Morgan and Abby Wambacheachscored twice for an 8-0 exhibition victory over Mexico at Rio Tinto Stadium on Saturday night in Sandy, Utah. Sydney Leroux, Heather D'Reilly and Whitney Engenalso scored as the U.S. improved to 28-1-1 against Mexico and extended the women's winning streak to 86 straight games onAmerican soil. — From wire reports

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

Timbers earndraw The Associated Press COMMERCE CITY, Colo.

Portland (8-8-12) scored first in the 43rd minute, as Di-

— Gaston Fernandez scored in ego Valeri's half-volley cleared the 76th minute to lift the Port- Berner for his eighth goal of land Timbers to a 2-2 draw the season. with the Colorado Rapids on The Rapids (8-13-7) tied it at Saturday night. the 48-minute mark. Colorado Maximiliano Urruti made was awarded a penalty kick a nice play to settle a bounc- on a disputed hand-ball call, irtg ball and found Fernartdez

and Dillon Powers converted

cutting in the right side of the the PK for his sixth goal. box. Fernandez then muscled Deshorn B r ow n h e a ded Chris Schnerder /The Associated Press off a defender and finished the home a pass from Marc Burch Colorado Rapids defender Marvell Wynne, left, and Portland great feed past keeper John in the 66th minute to put the Timbers defender Jorge Villafana, right, fight for the ball in the first Berner. Rapids ahead. half of Saturday night's game in Commerce City, Colorado.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN D3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Angels 5,Astros2

cntandings AH TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division

Baltimore Toronto NewYork Tampa Bay Boston Detroit

Kansas City Cleveland Chicago Minnesota Los Angeles Oakland Seattle Houston Texas

ANAHEIM, Calif.— David Freese

W L 88 60 77 70 76 71 71 78 65 84

Pct GB .595 .524 10'/z

82 66 81 66 76 71 68 80 62 86

.554 .551 'Ir .517 5'/z .459 14 .419 20

CentralDivision W L

West Division W L 93 55 82 66 80 67 65 83 56 92

517 11'/r .477 17'Ir .436 23'/z

Pct GB

Pct GB .628 .554 11 .544 12'/z .439 28 .378 37

Saturday'sGames Texas 3, Atlanta2 N.Y.Yankees3, Baltimore2 Toronto6,TampaBay3 ChicagoWhiteSox5, Minnesota1, 1stgame Detroit 5,Cleveland4 Kansas City7, Boston1 Chicag oWhiteSox7,Minnesota6,2ndgame LA. Angel5, s Houston 2 Oakland 3, Seatle 2,10innings Today'sGam es Tampa Bay(Archer 9-8) atToronto(Buehrle 12-9), 10:07a.m. Cleveland(Bauer5-8) at Detroit (Verlander13-12), 10:08a.m.

Boston(J.Kelly 1-2)at KansasCity (J.vargas11-8), 11:10a.m. Minnesota(May2-4) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Noesi 8-9),11:10a.m. Atlanta(Minor6-10)atTexas(Lewis 9-13),12:05 p.m. Houston(Keuchel 10-9)at LA. Angels(H.Santiago 5-7),12:35p.m. Oakland(Lester 14-10) at Seattle (C.Young12-7), 1:10 p.m.

N.Y.Yankees (Kuroda10-9) at Baltimore (Tigman125),5 p.m. Monday'sGames TorontoatBaltimore, 5:05p.m. N.Y.YankeesatTampaBay,5:10 p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxat Kansas City, 5:10p.m. ClevelandatHouston, 5:10 p.m. Detroit atMinnesota,5:10 p.m. Seattle at L.A.Angels, 7:05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L 84 63 75 73 72 77 71 76 69 79

DODGERS RETALIATE

hit a two-run homerand MikeTrout had an RBItriple during Los Angeles' seven-run fifth inning, andthe Angels beat Houston for their ninth consecutive victory. KoleCalhoun had a tiebreaking, two-run single in the fifth for the major league-leading Angels (92-55), who began their final homestand byreducing their magic number to five for their first AL West title since 2009.They lead spiraling Oakland,which lost 4-2 in Seattle, by11 gameswith15 to play. Houston

LosAngeles

ab r hbi ab r hbi Grssmnlf 4 0 1 1 Calhonrf 4 1 0 0 A ltuve2b 4 0 2 1 Troutcf 3 3 3 2

i0

Carterdh 4 0 1 0 Puiolslb 3 0 1 1 Jcastroc 4 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 2 1 Presleycf 3 0 0 0 Aybarss 4 0 1 1 Mrsnckrf 3 0 1 0 Freesedh 4 0 1 0 MGnzlzss 4 1 1 0 GBckh3b 4 0 1 0 Singltnlb 4 0 0 0 Congerc 3 0 1 0 G.Petit3b 2 0 0 0 Cowgilllf 3 1 1 0 Fowlerph 1 1 1 0 MDmn3b 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 2 7 2 Totals 3 2 5 11 5 Houston 0 01 000 010 — 2 LosAngeles 101 000 30x — 6 DP —Houstonl.LOB— Houston6,LosAngeles8. 28 — Altuve (42), Fowler (18), Trout(39), Aybar(29). HR — Trout 2(34). SB—Ma.Gonzalez(2), Cowgig(4). CS — Conger (2). S—Marisnick, Conger. IP H R E R BBSO Houslon FeldmanL,8-11 6 8 2 2 1 5 Foltynewicz 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 D.Downs 0 0 2 2 2 0 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Veras K.chapm an 1 1 0 0 0 2 Tony Avelar /The Associated Press LosAngeles WeaverW,17-8 7 4 1 1 1 12 The Los Angeles Dodgers' Zack Greinke rounds the bases after Jepsen 1 2 1 1 0 2 run against San Francisco during the sixth StreetS,14-16 1 1 0 0 0 1 hitting a two-run home D.Downspitchedto 2batters inthe 7th. inning of Saturday night's game in San Francisco. After falling to WP — D.Downs. the Giants 9-0 on Friday, the Dodgers took a 17 win on Saturday. T—3:19. A—38,041(45,483). ,t V'

Tigers 5, Indians4 Pct GB .571

of 22 games. DETROIT —Alex Avila hit a twoBoston KansasCity out, two-run homer in the eighth ab r hbi inning and Detroit kept its slim AL Betts2b 4ab1r0hbi 0 AEscorss 4 1 2 0 Central lead, beating Cleveland. B ogartsss 4 0 1 0 Aokidh 4 1 2 1 D .Ortizdh 4 0 2 0 L.cainrf 3 2 1 0 The Tigers remained ahalf-game Cespdslf 3 0 0 1 AGordnlf 4 2 2 1 ahead of KansasCity, which Navarf 3 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 1 1 1 Craigph 1 0 1 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 topped Boston 7-1.Avila sent a 4 0 0 0 Infante2b 4 0 3 2 full-count pitch from reliever Bry- Napolilb BrdlyJrcf 3 0 0 0 Mostks3b 4 0 1 0 an Shaw (5-4) into the right-field Mdlrks 3b 2 0 0 0 JDyson cf 4 0 0 0 Vazquzc 3 0 0 0 stands for his 11th homerun. Totals 31 1 4 1 Totals 3 5 7 125

White Sox7, Twins6 (2ndGame)

GPolncph 1 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 Morelph 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 6 10 5 Totals 34 4 8 4 Chicago 0 03 000 210 — 6 P ittsburgh 0 0 0 0 0 0 031 — 4 E—J.Baez (7), N.W alker (5). DP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB —Chicago9, Pittsburgh7. 28—Valbuena(30), Olt(7),Szczur(1), Mercer(25),RMartin(18). HR —J. Baez(9), Szczur (1), Snider (11). SB—Alcantara(8). S—RM . artin. SF—Castilo. IP H R E R BBBO Chicago DoubrontW,2-1 6 4 0 0 1 1 Straily 11-3 3 3 3 2 0 StropH,17 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 H.RondonS,24-28 1 1 1 1 0 1 Pittsburgh LockeL,7-5 51-3 6 3 3 3 5 11-3 2 2 2 1 2 (4), Grandal(13).SB—Inciarte 2 (16), Pollock(12). Cumpton CS — Pollock (2). S—C.Anderson. 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 J.Gomez IP H R E R BBSO Ju.Wilson 1 1 1 1 0 1 San Diego Axford 1 0 0 0 1 1 Cumpton. TRossL,13-14 3 5 6 4 2 4 WP — Wieland 12-3 3 1 1 0 1 T—3:27. A—38,024(38,362). 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Garces R.Alvarez 1 0 0 0 1 2 3 Campos 1 3 3 3 1 0 Nationals10, Mets A.Torres 1 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona NEW YORK — Bryce Harper C.AndersonW,9-6 5 4 2 2 3 5 homered, lan Desmond drovein D.Hudson 1 2 1 1 0 2 O.Perez 1 1 1 1 0 2 three runs andWashington moved EMarshag 1 1 0 0 0 0 a step closer to its second NLEast Stites 1 0 0 0 0 1 title in three years with a victory WP—T.Ross, Campos2. T—3:13.A—32,429 (48,633). over the NewYork Mets. Anthony Grandllb 4 1 1 1 A.Hill3b Riverac 2 2 1 0 C.Rossrf RLirianrf 4 0 1 0 Gswschc Maybincf 3 0 0 0 Gregrsss Amarstss 4 0 2 2 CAndrsp T.Rossp 1 0 0 0 DHdsnp Spngnr ph 1 0 0 0 AIMart ph Wielndp 0 0 0 0OPerezp Garcesp 0 0 0 0 Pachecph Goeertph 1 0 0 0 EMrshlp RAlvrzp 0 0 0 0 Strtesp Campsp 0 0 0 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Medicaph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 4 8 4 Totals 3 510118 S an Diego 0 0 0 2 0 1 100 — 4 Arizona 330 010 30x — 10 E—Rivera(9), Amarista(9). DP—San Diego 1, Arizona1. LOB —SanDiego6, Arizona 6. 2B—Inciarte (14),Trumbo(14). 38—Rivera(1). HR —Solarte

Cardinals 5, Rockies4 ST. LOUIS —Matt Holliday homered in the first inning for the second straight night and Shelby Miller pitched six solid innings and had anRBIdouble, leading St. Louis to a victory over Colorado. Matt Carpenter added atwo-run homer in the second for the NL Central leaders, who havewon 12 in a row at home in the final month of the season dating to last Sept.14. Of their10runs in the first two games of this series, seven havecome in the first two innings.

Rendon added to his hugeseries with four hits as Washington reduced its magic number to six for clinching the division. Denard Span had atwo-run homer in the ninth inning and scored three times. Washington NewYork ab r hbi ab r hbi S pancf 5 3 1 2 EYonglf 4 0 0 0 MchlAcf 0 0 0 0Blackp 0 0 0 0 Rendon3b 5 1 4 0 DAlvrzp 0 0 0 0 Werthrf 5 2 1 2 Goeddlp 0 0 0 0 SouzJrph-rf 1 0 0 0 Lagarscf 4 1 3 0 LaRochlb 5 0 0 0 DnMrp3b 4 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 2 3 3 Duda1b 3 0 0 0 Harperlf 4 1 3 2 TdArndc 4 0 0 0 Acarer2b 4 1 1 0 Grndrsrf 2 1 2 1 Loatonc 5 0 2 0 Satinph 1 0 0 0 Fister p 3 0 0 0 Flores ss 4 1 1 2 Schrhltph 1 0 0 0 DHerrr2b 4 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 ZaWhlrp 1 0 0 0 Detwilrp 0 0 0 0 Germnp 0 0 0 0 Hairstn ph 1 0 0 0 BAreu ph 1 0 0 0 Xcedenp 0 0 0 0 Carlylep 0 0 0 0 E dginp 0 0 0 0 Niwnhsph-If 1 0 0 0 Totals 43 10159 Totals 3 3 3 6 3 Washington 02 0 1 3 1 012 — 10 N ew york 000 0 2 1 000 — 8 E—Desm ond (23), Laga res (5), T.d'Arnaud(8), Flores(4), D.Herrera(4). DP—Washington 1, New York l. LOB —Washington 11, NewYork5. 2B—Desmond(22), A.cabrera(7), Granderson (24). HR Span(5), Harper(13), Flores(4). SB—Span(31), Desmond 2 (21).

Colorado St. Louis Minnesota Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Blckmncf 4 0 0 0 Mcrpnt3b 4112 .483 13 JSchafrcf-If 4 0 1 0 Semien2b 5 1 2 0 Cuddyrrf 4 1 3 0 Grichkrf 4 0 0 0 .483 13 Dozier2b 3 1 0 0 AIRmrzss 5 0 0 0 CDckrslf 3 0 0 0 Hollidylf 2 1 1 1 466 15'/2 Mauerdh 3 1 0 0 JAreudh 3 3 2 1 Stubbsph 0 1 0 0 JhPerltss 4 0 1 0 CentralDivision Kvargslb 4 0 0 0 JrDnkspr 0 0 0 0 Arenad3b 4 0 0 0 MAdmslb 4 0 0 0 W L Pct GB DaSntncf 0 0 0 0 AGarcirf 4 2 2 3 P aulsn1b 3 0 1 1 YMolinc 4 1 2 0 St. Louis 82 67 .550 Plouffe3b 4 2 2 2 Viciedo1b 4 1 2 2 M cBridph 1 1 1 0 Jaycf 4010 Pittsburgh 78 70 .527 3'/r A rciarf 4 1 2 3 MTaylrlf 3 0 2 0 Rosarioc 4 1 1 1 Kozma2b 3 1 1 0 Milwaukee 77 72 .517 5 A.Hicks pr-rf 0 1 0 0 Sierra cf 3 0 0 0 Rutledgss 3 0 1 1 SMigerp 2 1 Cincinnati 71 78 .477 11 Nunezss 3 0 1 0 Gillaspi ph-3b1 0 1 1 LeMahi2b 3 0 1 0 Taversph 1 10 1 11 Chicago 65 83 ,439 16'/r Parmellf-1b 4 0 1 0 Pheglyc 4 0 0 0 McKnrph 1 0 1 1 CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 West Division Fryer c 3 0 1 0 LeGarc 3b-cf 4 0 0 0 Culersnpr 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Boston 0 01 000 000 — 1 KSuzuk W L Pct GB ph-c 1 0 1 1 Cleveland Detroit FMorlsp 1 0 0 0 Descalsph 1 0 0 0 — 7 Kansas Ciiy 2 0 0 3 00 02x IP H R E R BBSO Los Angeles 84 64 .568 Totals 33 6 9 6 Totals 3 6 7 11 7 ab r hbi ab r hbi KParkrph 1 0 0 0 SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 E—Vazquez (5), Moustakas(16). LOB —Boston M innesota Washington SanFrancisco 82 66 .554 2 4 0 0 0 0 1 001 — 0 5, Kansas City 5. 2B—A.Escobar (31), L.cain (27), Chicago FisterW,14-6 6 5 3 2 1 3 SanDiego 68 79 ,463 15'/r Bourncf 4 1 1 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 1 1 3 00 010 102 — 7 Kahnlep 0 0 0 0 Neshekp 0 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 (30), S.Perez(27).SB—L.cain(25). CSR.Soriano 1 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona 60 88 .405 24 A vilesss-rf 2 0 1 2 TrHntrrf 3 0 0 1 A.Gordon Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. Shuckph-rf 1 0 0 0 Micarr1b 3 0 0 0 Nicasi o p 0 0 0 0 Infante(3). SF—Cespedes. Detwiler 1 1 0 0 0 0 E—Dozier (14). LOB —Minnesota 4, Chicago9. BBarns Colorado 59 89 .399 25 Brantlylf 4 1 2 2 Carrerpr-cf 0 1 0 0 ph 1 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBBO 28 — X.cedeno 1 0 0 0 0 2 Parmelee (11), Fryer(4), K.Suzuki (28), Semien BBrwn p 0 0 0 0 CSantndh 4 0 1 0 VMrtnzdh 4 1 1 1 Boston New york Saturday'sGames (9). 38 — N une z (4). HR — P louff e (13), Arci a (17), Ynoa ph 1 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 1 0 JMrtnzlf 3 0 0 0 R.DeLaRosaL,4-7 4 6 5 5 0 2 J.Abreu r 4 7 6 6 2 4 Texas 3, Atlanta2 (34), A.Garcia(5), Viciedo(21).SB—A.Garcia Totals 3 4 4 9 4 Totals 3 35 9 5 Za.WheeleL,10-10 Kipnis2b 3 0 0 0 D.Kellylb 0 0 0 0 SWright 3 3 0 0 0 2 (3). CS Germen 1 1 0 0 2 3 Chicago Cubs6, Pittsburgh4 —J.Schafer(2). S—Nunez. C olorado 000 1 0 0 003 — 4 R aburnrf 0 0 0 0 Avilac 3 1 1 2 M.Barnes 1 3 2 2 1 3 Carlyle 1 2-3 31 0 0 0 Philadelphi2, a Miami1 IP H R E R BBSO St. Louis 130 0 0 1 Ogx— 6 T.Holtrf 1 0 0 0 Cstllns3b 4 0 2 0 KansasCity Edgin 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati 5,Milwaukee1 Minnesota DP — St . Loui s 1. LOB — C olorado 5, St. Loui s 7. JRmrzph-ss 1 0 1 0 HPerez3b 0 0 0 0 GuthrieW,11-11 8 3 1 0 1 2 Darnell Black 1 1 1 1 0 0 4 1-3 7 4 3 2 5 Washington10,N.Y.Mets3 28 — Cuddyer(9), McBride (1), McKenry(8), S.Miler D.Alvarez Chsnhll3b 4 1 1 0 AnRmnss 3 1 1 0 Finnegan 1 1 0 0 0 2 Pressly 2-3 3 2 2 0 1 12-3 1 0 0 1 0 St. Louis5,Colorado4 Aguilarlb 3 1 1 0 RDaviscf-If 2 1 2 0 ( 5). HR — M .carp en ter (8), Hol l i d ay (18). SF — R utW P — S .W ri g ht, Gu t h ri e . Bal k — R .D e La R os a. Goeddel 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona10,SanDiego4 BurtonBS,1-3 1 2 1 1 0 1 DvMrpph 1 0 0 0 T—2:48.A—26,627(37,903). Za.Wheelepirtchedto 3batters inthe5th. LA. Dodgers 17,SanFrancisco0 Fien 1 0 0 0 0 1 ledge. Totals 3 2 4 9 4 Totals 2 95 8 5 IP H R E R BBSO HBP —by Fister (Granderson), by Black(Rendon). Today'sGam es PerkinsL,3-3BS,6-39 1-3 1 2 2 1 0 leveland 200 0 2 0 000 — 4 Colorado WP—Black. Chicago Washington(Zfmmermann 11-5) at N.Y.Mets (Niese C — 6 Blue Jays 6, Rays 3 F .Morales L,6-8 4 5 4 4 2 2 Detroit 002 100 02x T — 3: 32. A—28,849(41,922). 8-10),10:10a.m. Carroll 5 4 4 4 2 2 DP — Detroit2. LOB—Cleveland 5,Detroit5. 2B12-3 2 1 1 0 1 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 2 Kahnle ChicagoCubs(Ja.Turner5-9) at Pittsburgh(Volquez Bourn D.Webb 1 -3 1 0 0 0 0 (14),Aviles(14), Casteganos(31). HR—Brant- TORONTO 11-7), 10:35a.m. — Adam Lind hit a Surkamp 12-3 1 1 1 0 4 Brothers —Brantley 1 0 0 0 1 0 Phillies 2, Marlins1 Miami (Koehler9-9) at Philadelphia (D.Buchanan ley (19),V.Martinez(31), Avila (11). SB PetrickaW,1-4 1 2 0 0 0 1 Nicasio tiebreaking two-run home run in B.Brown 1 1 0 0 0 1 (20), C.Sa t a n na ( 4), C ar re ra(7). S — A viles, J. R a m ire z , Surkamp pitchedto 1batterin the9th. 6-7),10:35a.m. . St. Louis the seventh inning, Edwin EncarPHILADELPHIA —Marlon Byrd HBP —byBurton (Viciedo), byCarroll (Dozier). Cincinnati (Leake 11-11) at Milwaukee(Garza7-8), R.Davis.SF—Tor HunterIP H R E R BBSO S.MillerW,10-9 6 5 1 1 0 5 11:10a.m. nacion also went deepandToronto T—3:34. A—20,106(40,615). hit an RBI double andthrew out 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Cleveland C.Marti n ez Colorado(Lyles 6-2) at St. Louis (Gonzla es 2-2), Salazar 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 a runner at the plate, leading 52-3 6 3 3 1 7 beatTampa Bay.Lindconnected Choate 11:15a.m. 1-3 1 2 2 1 0 zepczynski 0 0 0 0 1 0 off Brad Boxberger (5-2j for his S.Freem an National Lea ue Atlanta(Minor6-10) atTexas(Lewis 9-13),12 05pm. R Kyle Kendrick and Philadelphia tchisonH,12 1 1 - 3 1 0 0 0 2 NeshekS,6-9 23- 2 1 1 0 0 L.A.Dodgers(Kershaw18-3) atSanFrancisco (Y.Petit A first homer since June 23 agai n st W P — B .Br own , S .M i g er. Bal k — F M or ales . over Miami. Miami lost its fourth S haw L,5-4 BS, 6 -8 1 1 2 2 1 1 Dodgers17, Giants0 5-3),1:05p.m. T—3:24.A—45,552 (45,399). the New YorkYankees. Hefinished straight game. Byrd androokie San Diego (Despaigne3-6) at Arizona(Cahil 3-11), Detroit Lobstein 5 6 4 4 1 2 1:10 p.m. SAN FRANCISCO — Zack Gr ei nke 2 for 3 with a walk and three RBl s . Maikel Franco drove in runs in the Alburquerque 1 0 0 0 0 1 Monday'sGames Soria pitched six scoreless innings and Reds 5, Brewers1 1 1 0 0 0 1 first inning. Miami atN.Y.Mets,4;10 p.m. ChamberlainW,2-5 1 2 0 0 0 1 TampaBay Toronto hit his fourth career homerun, and MILWAUKEE WashingtonatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi — David Holmberg NathanS,31-37 1 0 0 0 1 1 Cincinnatiat ChicagoCubs, 5:05p.m. Miami Philadelphia the Los Angeles Dodgers romped pitched six effective innings, Zobrist2b 3 1 2 0 Reyesss 4 1 1 0 Rzepczynskipitchedto1batter in the6th. LA. Dodgers atColorado,5:40p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi T — 3: 1 4. A — 41,1 90 (41,681). DeJessdh 2 0 0 0 Bautistrf 2 1 1 1 past San Francisco to build on SanFranciscoatArizona, 6:40p.m. Yelichlf 4 0 1 0 Reverecf 4 1 2 0 Billy Hamilton hit a two-run triple S Rdrgzph-dh0 0 0 0 Lindlb 3 1 2 3 Philadelphiaat SanDiego,7:10p.m. Solano2b 3 0 0 0 Francolb 3 1 1 1 their lead in the NLWest. Oneday Longori3b 4 1 2 2 Encrncdh 3 1 1 1 and Cincinnati beat Milwaukee, McGeh3b 4 0 10 utley2b 3 0 0 0 Yankees 3,Orioles2 Loney1b 4 0 0 0 Valenci3b 4 0 1 0 after being held to three hits in a Wild Card zunacf 3 0 1 0 Byrdrf 301 1 M yersrf 4 0 0 0 Tholec 4 0 0 0 9-0 loss, the Dodgers doubled that snapping the Brewers' three-game O AMERICANLEAGUE G Jonesrf 4 1 1 1 Ruflf 2000 J oycelf 4 0 0 0 Pillarlf 3 0 0 0 BALTIMORE — Chris Young stole winning streak. Holmberg (1-1 j W L Pct GB Bourlb 4 0 1 0 DBrwnph-If 1 0 0 0 YEscorss 4 0 1 0 Goins2b 4 1 0 0 output in the first inning against Oakland 82 66 .554 home in his latest surprising allowed two hits, including Aramis Hchvrrss 4 0 1 0 Asche3b 3 0 0 0 K iermrcf 4 1 1 0 Gosecf 4 1 1 0 Kansas City 81 66 .551 Giants starter Tim Hudson then Mathis c 3 0 1 0 Nieves c 3 0 0 0 September performance, and JMolinc 3 0 0 0 Ramirez's fourth-inning homer. Seattle 80 67 .544 1 Vldspn ph 1 0 0 0 Galvisss 3 0 0 0 coasted behind Greinke' s 15th win Totals 3 2 3 6 2 Totals 3 1 6 7 5 Toronto 77 70 .524 4 the New YorkYankees beat AL The left-hander has yielded one Hand p 1 0 0 0 Kndrck p 2 0 0 0 T ampa Bay 1 0 1 0 0 1 000 — 3 this season. Cleveland 76 71 .517 5 RJhnsn ph 1 0 1 0 Diekmn p 0 0 0 0 East-leading Baltimore, ending earned run in12N innings over Toronto 003 000 30x — 6 NewYork 76 71 .517 5 SDyson p 0 0 0 0 Giles p 0 0 0 0 E—Hellickson (1). DP—Toronto 1. LOB—Tampa LosAngeles the Orioles' longest winning three September appearances. San Francisco Howard ph 1 0 0 0 Bay 5,Toronto6. 2B—Zobrist (32), Longoria(24), NATIONALLEAGUE ab r hbi ab r hbi Papelnp 0 0 0 0 streak of the season at six. New Lind (23). HR — L ongori a (21), Li n d (5), Enc arn aci o n W L PctGB DGordn2b 7 3 2 1 Pagancf 2 0 1 0 Cincinnati Milwaukee Totals 3 2 1 8 1 Totals 2 82 4 2 York stayed on the fringe of the (31). CS —Valencia(1). SanFrancisco 82 66 .554 YGarcip 0 0 0 0 J.Perezcf-rf 2 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Miami 010 000 000 — 1 IP H R E R BBSO Puigcf 5 3 3 0 Panik2b 4 0 0 0 BHmltncf 5 0 1 2 CGomzcf 2 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 78 70 .527 wild-card race while Baltimore's TampaBay Philadelphia 20 0 000 ggx— 2 Milwaukee 77 72 .51 7 1'/r LOB —Miami 7, Philadelphia2. 2B—Byrd (26). E lbertp 0 0 0 0 Poseyc 1 0 1 0 B .Penalb 5 1 1 0 Braunrf 3 0 0 0 magic number for clinching the Hellickson 6 4 3 2 4 8 C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 Quirozc 3 0 0 0 Atlanta 7 5 73 .507 3 HR—G.Jones (15). CS—Yelich(7). S—Hand. Frazier3b 4 2 3 0 Lucroy1b 4 0 0 0 BoxbergerL,5-2 1-3 1 2 2 1 1 Barneyph-2b1 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 2 0 0 0 division remained at five. Cut by Mesorcc 3 0 1 1 ArRmr3b 3 1 1 1 IP H R E R BBSO 2 3 2 1 1 0 1 AdGnzl1b 5 1 1 1 Kickhmp 0 0 0 0 Phillips2b 3 0 1 1 KDavislf 4 0 0 0 Miami the Mets earlier this year, Young Geltz American League B.Gomes 1 0 0 0 0 2 V nSlyklb 2 1 1 2 Bochyp 0 0 0 0 Brucerf 3 0 0 1 RWeks2b 3 0 0 0 HandL,3-7 6 4 2 2 0 4 has seemed to deliver for the Yan- Toronto Kemprf 4 2 3 3 Duvagph-3b 2 0 0 0 Ludwcklf 4 1 1 0 Maldndc 2 0 0 0 S.Dyson 2 0 0 0 0 2 Athletics 3,Mariners2(10 inns.) kees on a daily basis this week. DickeyW,13-12 7 4 3 3 2 5 P edrsnrf-cf 1 1 0 0 Pencerf 2 0 0 0 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 HGomzss 3 0 1 0 Philadelphia Cecil H,23 1 1 0 0 1 1 HRmrzss 5 1 4 2 GBrwncf 1 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 0 1 0 Gallardp 2 0 0 0 K .Kendrick W ,9-12 61-3 71 1 1 6 He doubled during a three-run Janssen Sr23-28 1 1 0 0 0 SEATTLE —Jed Lowrie drew a Arrrrnss 2 0 0 0 GBlanclf 3 0 1 0 H olmrgp 1 0 0 0 Dukep 0 0 0 0 DiekmanH,18 2 - 3 1 0 0 0 1 W P — H ell i c kson 2, Di c ke y . Crwfrdlf 4 1 2 3 Cordierp 0 0 0 0 Bourgsph 1 1 1 0 JNelsnp 0 0 0 0 GilesH,11 1 0 0 0 1 1 bases-loaded walk with two outs second off Miguel Gonzalez (9-8) T—2:40.A—31,368 (49,282). Guerrrlf 1 0 1 0 Hestonp 0 0 0 0 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Gennettph 1 0 0 0 PapelbonS,37-40 1 0 0 0 0 1 in the 10th inning to force in the and swiped home aspart of a uribe3b 4 1 2 2 Ishikaw1b 3 0 1 0 Heiseyph-If 1 0 0 0 Grzlnyp 0 0 0 0 WP — Hand2. double steal. Roias3b 1 0 1 0 Bcrwfrss 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 5 105 Totals 2 7 1 2 1 T — 2: 3 3. A — 26,1 63 (43, 6 51). White Sox 5, Twins1 (1st Game) tiebreaking run and lift Oakland A.Egisc 5 1 2 1 MDuffyss 1 0 0 0 C incinnati 000 2 0 0 210 — 6 to a victory over Seattle. MariFdrwczc 1 0 0 0 THudsnp 0 0 0 0 M ilwaukee 0 0 0 1 0 0 000 — 1 Newyork Baltimore CHICAGO — Dayan Vi c iedo hit a Interleague Greinkp 3 2 2 2 Linccmp 1 0 0 0 E — H .G om e z (1). DP —Cincinnati 2, Milwaukee ners reliever Fernando Rodney ab r hbi ab r hbi two-run homer in the ninth inning Berndnph-rf 0 0 0 0 CDmng3b-If 2 0 0 0 2. LOB — C inc i n nati 6, Milwaukee 4. 2B—Frazier Ellsurydh 4 0 0 0 Markksrf 5 1 2 0 (1-6) came on in the10th and Rangers 3,Braves2 Totals 5 1 172417 Totals 3 1 0 5 0 Jeterss 3 0 0 0 DeAzalf 4 0 0 0 (21). 38 —B.Hamilton (8). HR —Ar.Ramirez(15). Sto lift the ChicagoWhite Soxto walked Coco Crisp to open the Los Angeles 44 1 2 0 4 200 — 17 Holmberg.SF—Bruce. Gardnrcf 3 0 0 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 2 0 a 7-6 win over Minnesota anda San Francisco 000 000 000 — 0 IP H R E R BBSO ARLINGTON, Texas— Rougned Prado2b 4 0 1 0 N.cruzdh 4 0 1 1 inning. After Crisp advanced to E—Arruebarrena(2), Panik(7), M.Duffy(2). DPCincinnati BMccnc 3 1 1 1 Pearcelb 4 1 2 1 sweep of their doubleheader. In Odor's go-ahead double gave second on a sacrifice, Rodney LosAngeles1.LOB— LosAngeles15,SanFrancisco HolmbergW,1-1 6 2 1 1 2 4 Teixeirlb 2 1 0 0 JHardyss 4 0 0 0 the first game, JoseQuintana 4. 2B —Puig(34), Kemp2 (36), H.Ramirez(31),Gre- LecureH,15 2 0 0 0 1 1 fellow rookie Lisalverto Bonilla a intentionally walked Josh DonCYounglf 4 1 1 0 Pareds3b 4 0 2 0 inke(5),Pagan(21), J.Perez(7). HR—VanSlyke(11), Ju.Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 2 win in his first major-league start, Rchrdsrf 3 0 1 1 Flahrly2b 1 0 0 0 struck out a career-high13 and aldson and then Alberto Callaspo ISuzukirf 1 0 0 0 CJosph c 2 0 0 0 uribe (9),Greinke(1). SB—D.Gordon (60). SF —C. Milwaukee Alexei Ramirez homered to lead Crawford. drew another walk to load the GallardoL,8-10 6 4 2 2 2 4 and last-place Texasbeat Atlanta, ZeWhlr3b 4 0 0 0 DYongph 1 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Duke 1 3 2 2 0 1 the White Sox to a5-1 victory. Totals 3 1 3 4 2 Totals 3 3 2 9 2 handing the Bravesanother setbases. Los Angeles J.Nelson 1 3 1 1 0 1 N ew york 030 0 0 0 000 — 3 back in their push for an NL wildG reinke W, 1 5-8 6 4 0 0 0 5 Gorzel a nny 1 0 0 0 0 2 B altimore 001 0 0 1 000 — 2 Minnesota Chicago Oakland Seattle Elbert 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP —byHolmberg (C.Gomez, Ar.Ramirez). DP — NewYorkl. LOB —NewYork6, Baltimore8. card spot. Atlanta's Julio Teheran ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:56.A—45,205 (41,900). 2B — C.Young (4), A.Jones(29), Pearce(24), Pare- D aSntncf 4 0 0 0 Eatoncf 4 0 0 0 C.Perez (13-12) took a no-hitter into the Crispcf 4 1 1 0 AJcksncf 4 0 0 0 YGarcia 1 0 0 0 0 1 (4). HR —B.Mccann (19), Pearce(17). SB—C. Dozier2b 4 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 4 2 2 2 Fuldlf 4 0 0 0 Enchvzlf 4 0 1 0 des San Francisco sixth inning before aone-out sinY oung (1), Ri c hardson (3), Pa r ede s (3). S — F lahe rty , Mauer1b 4 0 1 0 JAreudh 3 1 2 0 Cnbs 6, Pirates 4 Dnldsn3b 3 1 1 1 Cano2b 4 1 1 1 THudsonL,9-11 1 8 6 6 0 2 C.Joseph. gle from Luis Sardinas. KVargsdh 4 0 0 0 Gigaspi3b 3 0 0 0 A.Dunndh 3 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 3 0 0 0 3 7 5 5 1 1 IP H R E R BBBO Plouffe3b 3 0 0 0 Semienph-3b1 0 1 1 Lincecum JGoms ph-dh1 0 0 0 Seager 3b 4 0 0 0 Kickham 1 2-3 64 4 1 1 PITTSBURGH — Rookies Javier New york rf 3 0 1 0 AGarci rf 3 0 0 0 Atlanta Texas Callaspph-dh0 0 0 0 Morrsnlb 2 0 0 0 Bochy 1 1-3 1 2 2 1 1 reeneW,5-3 5 1 -3 7 2 2 1 9 Arcia ed, 2 1 1 0 JrDnkslf 2 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi M oss lb 4 0 1 0 Hartph 1 0 0 0 G Cordier 1 2 0 0 0 2 Baezand MattSzczurhomer E.RogersH,3 1 0 0 0 1 1 KSuzukc EdEscrss 3 0 0 0 Viciedoph 1 0 0 0 Bonifaccf 3 1 1 0 LMartncf 410 0 Lowriess 4 0 0 1 Zuninoc 4 0 0 0 Heston 1 0 0 0 1 2 and the ChicagoCubs snapped a OutmanH,2 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 A .Hickslf 2 0 0 0 Sierralf 0 0 0 0 Gossel3b n 4 1 1 1 Andrus ss 3 1 1 1 Reddckrl 5 1 1 0 J.Jonesrf 3 1 2 0 THudson pitchedto2 batters inthe2nd. KelleyH,ll 1 1 0 0 0 0 Parmelph-If 1 0 1 1 Flowrsc 3 0 0 1 FFrmnlb 3 0 1 1 Odor2b 3 0 1 2 DeNrrsc 4 0 1 0 CTaylrss 3 0 1 1 HBP —byCordier(Bernadina)rbyLincecum(Puig), by seven-game losing streak with a D av.Robertson S, 3 6-391 1 0 0 0 0 Wilkinslb 4 0 1 1 J.uptonlf 4 0 0 0 ABeltredh 3 0 0 0 Sogard2b 4 0 3 1 victory over Pittsburgh. BaezconBochy(Bernadina).WP—Greinke. Baltimore CSnchz 2b 3 1 0 0 H eywrdrf 3 0 0 0 Rualf 3000 Totals 3 6 3 8 3 Totals 3 22 5 2 M.GonzaleL, T—3:15. A—41,533(41,915). z 9 -8 6 3 3 3 3 1 nected for a two-run shot in Chi c aTotals 30 1 4 1 Totals 3 1 5 7 5 Oakland 000 0 01 100 1 — 3 R.Webb B thncrtc 4 0 1 0 Telisc 3000 1 0 0 0 0 1 M innesota go's three-run third, and Szczur hit 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 — 1 LaStelldh 2 0 0 0 Rosaleslb 2 0 0 0 Seattle 001 000 100 0 — 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 Diamondbacks10, Padres4 E—Gray (3). DP—Oakland 3. LOB—Oakland McFarland Chicago 002 000 12x — 5 1 0 0 0 Sardins3b 3 1 1 0 a leadoff drive in the eighth for his CJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 1 0 E—Mauer (2). DP—Minnesota l. LOB —MinneASmnsss 4 0 1 0 Choicerf 3 0 0 0 10, Seattle 2. 2B —Reddick (14). 38—J.Jones (5). Meek first career homer. HR — Donaldson(27), Cano(14). SB—Sogard (11). T—3:28. A—44,231(45,971). sota 4, Chicago 6. 2B—Parmelee (10), AI.Ramirez PHOENIX —Mark Trumbo had R.Pena2b 3 0 1 0 CS — Sogard (3). S—Fuld. (31), J.Abreu 2(35),Semien(8),JorDanks(2).HRTotals 3 1 2 6 2 Totals 2 73 3 3 three hits and three RBls, leading Chicago AI.Ramirez(15). IP H R E R BBSO Royals 7, Red Pittsburgh Atlanta 002 000 000 — 2 Sox1 IP H R E R BBSO the Arizona Diamondbacks to a Oakland ab r hbi ab r hbi Texas 000 003 ggx — 3 Minnesota E—J.upton (8). DP—Atlanta 1, Texas2. LOBGray 8 5 2 2 2 7 Alcantrcf 5 2 2 0 JHrrsn 3b 5 1 1 0 PHughes L,15-10 7 6 5 3 1 11 win over sloppy SanDiego. The GregersonW,5-4 1 0 0 0 0 1 KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Jeremy J.Baezss 5 1 1 2 Mercerss 4 1 1 0 Atlanta 6,Texas1. 28—F.Freeman (40), Odor(10). A.Thompson 0 1 0 0 1 0 Diamondbacks took control early, SB — Bonifacio (22),Andrus(26). Doolittle S,21-24 1 0 0 0 0 1 Guthrie retired the final 17 batters Valuen 3b 3 2 1 0 AMcctcf 4 0 1 0 Seattle Tonkin 1 0 0 0 0 1 scoring six runs off All-Star Tyson Castillo c 3 0 1 1 NWalkr2b 3 1 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO he faced, Omar Infante had three F.Hernande z 7 7 2 2 0 8 Chicago Valaika2b 5 0 1 0 RMartnc 3 0 2 3 Atlanta Ross in the first two innings. Beimel 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 hits and drove in two runs, and QuintanaWB-10 7 3 1 1 2 13 Oll lb 4 0 1 1 Tabatarf 2 0 0 0 TeheranL,13-12 8 3 3 0 1 6 Wilhelmsen 0 0 0 0 1 0 Kansas City beat Boston. Manager PutnamH,15 1 1 0 0 0 2 LakeIf 3 0 0 0 Lamboph-rf 2 0 0 0 Texas 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Furbush Guerra 1 0 0 0 0 2 San Diego Arizona Straily p 0 0 0 0 GSnchzlb 3 0 1 0 BonigaW,1-0 6 4 2 2 4 3 Ned Yost overhauled his batting Farquhar 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Quintana pitchedto 1batter inthe8th. ab r hbi ab r hbi Strop p 0 0 0 0 I.Davisph-1b 1 0 0 0 MendezH,7 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 RodneyL,1-6 1 0 1 1 4 1 order and got immediate results. PHughes pitchedto 2batters inthe 8th. Solarte3b 4 1 2 1 Inciadlf 3 2 1 0 HRndn p 0 0 0 0 S niderlf 3 1 2 1 KirkmanH,l 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Wilhelmsen pitchedto 1batter inthe8th. A.Thompson pitchedto 2 batters inthe8th. AMoore ph 1 0 0 0 Owings2b 5 1 1 1 Szczurrf 4 1 2 1 Locke p 2 0 0 0 S.PattonH,l 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 The Royals scored sevenruns for HBP —by PHughes(J.Abreu), byTonkin (Flowers). WP—F.Hernandez2. S.SmithIf 4 0 0 0 Pogockcf 4 1 0 1 Dourntp 3 0 1 0 Cumptnp 0 0 0 0 CottsS,1-8 1 1 0 0 0 1 T—3:20.A—43,913 (47,476). the first time since Aug.19, aspan T—2:38.A—0(40,615). Gyorko2b 4 0 1 0 Trumolb 5 2 3 3 CoghlnIf 1 0 0 0 JGomzp 0 0 0 0 T—2:25. A—31,595(48,114). Washington Atlanta NewYork Miami Philadelphia

507 91/2


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

OLLEGE FOOTBALL TOP 25 ROUNDUP

SCOREBOARD Pac-12 AU TimesPDT

Nerlh Division Conf. 0 veraU W L W L PF PA 0 0 3 0 156 54

Oregon Washington 0 0 3 California 0 0 2 Oregon St. 0 0 2 WashingtonSt. 0 0 1 Stanford 0 1 2 SouthDivision W 1 1 0 0 0 0

ArizonaSt. SouthernCal UCLA Arizona Utah Colorado

L 0 0 0 0 0 1

W 3 2 3 3 2 1

0 0 0 2 1

120 82 86 38 67 44 110 86 90 13

L PF PA 0 141 61 1 96 60 0 90 72 0 119 64 0 115 41 2 82 107

Saturday'sGames Oregon 48,Wyoming 14 Washington 44, llinois19 Stanford 35, Army0 UCLA20,Texas17 BostonCollege37,Southern Cal31

Washington St.59, Portland St.21 ArizonaSt.38,Colorado24 Arizona35,Nevada28 Saturday,Sept.20 Hawaii atColorado,11a.m. Utah atMichigan,12:30p.m. Georgia St.at Washington,3 p.m. CaliforniaatArizona, 7p.m. Oregon atWashington St., 7:30p.m. SanDiegoSt,at OregonSt., 7;30p.m.

Saturday'sSummary

No.2 Oregon48,Wyoming 14 Wyoming

Oregon

7 0 0 7 — 14 0 27 14 7 — 48

First Ouarter Wyo —Gentry 18 passfrom Kirkegaard (Wiliams kick), 1:02. SecondGuarler Ore —Mariota15 run(Wogankick),14:55. Ore —Marshall 30run(kick failed),10:45. Ore —Mariota19 run(Wogankick),6:43. Ore —D.Agen16 passfromMariota (Wogankick), 1:34. Third Ouarler Ore —Freeman12 run(Wogankick),1319. Ore —Loyd 5 passfrom Mariota(Wogan kick), 9:59. FourthGuarter Wyo —May 12 pass from Kirkegaard(Wiliams kick), 14:03. Ore—Benoit1 run(Wogankick), 830. A—56,533.

W yo O r e

First downs Rushes-yards

SOUTH AbileneChristian38,Troy35 Air Force 48,GeorgiaSt.38 Duke41,Kansas3 FAU50,Tulsa 21 GeorgiaTech42, GeorgiaSouthern38 Marshal44, l Ohio14 Miami(Fla.)41,ArkansasSt. 20 MiddleTennessee50, Western Kentucky47,30T MississippiSt.35,SouthAlabama3 N.C.State49, SouthFlorida17 Old Dominion17,E.Michigan3 Pittsburgh42,FIU25 Tulane 35, SELouisiana 20 UAB41,AlabamaA&M14 Vanderbilt34,UMass31 WestVirginia40, Maryland37 Florida36,Kentucky30(4OT) MIDWEST BowlingGreen45, Indiana42 IndianaSt. 27,Ball St.20 lowaSt.20,lowa17 Michigan34,Miami(Ohio)10 Syracuse 40, Central Michigan3 SOUTHWE ST Arkansas49,TexasTech28 Navy35,TexasSt.21 Oklah omaSt.43,UTSA13 TCU30,Minnesota7 UTEP42,NewMexico St.24 FARWES T ColoradoSt.49,UCDavis 21 Northernlginois 48,UNLV34 UtahSt.36,WakeForest 24 Washington 44, lginois19 Washington St.59, Portland St.21 WesternMichigan45,Idaho33 Nebraska 55, FresnoSt.19 Arizona35,Nevada28 Northernlowaat Hawaii, late

g

«r' 1)=

P Steve Dykes / The Associated Press

Oregon running backRoyceFreeman scores a touchdown during the third quarter Saturday afternoon inEugene. The Ducks beat Wyoming 48-14.

o. uc s overcome s ows a in owou

FCS BIG SKY

Saturday'sGames Colorado St. 49,UCDavis21 IdahoSt.39,ChadronSt.34 MissouriSt.38, NorthDakota0 Montan a28,SouthDakota20 MontanaSt.43,Central Arkansas33 NorthernArizona62,NewMexico Highlands 23 NorthernColorado28,HoustonBaptist 20 Sacramento St.42, Weber St. 31 SouthDakotaSt.26,SouthernUtah6 Washington St.59, PortlandSt.21 Saturday,Sept.20 EasternWashington atMontanaSt., noon NorthernArizonaatSouthDakota, 1p.m. MontanaatNorth DakotaSt.,1:30 p.m. NorthernColoradoatNorthern lowa,3p.m. PortlandSt.atCalPoly, 5p.m. WeberSt.at StephenF.Austin, 5p.m. Menloat SacramentoSt., 5p.m. StonyBrook(N.Y.)at North Dakota, 5p.m. SouthernUtahat FresnoSt., 6p.m.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —Wyoming: Wick16-122, May8-42,

Hill 8-14,Krig0-10, Claiborne1-0, Rufran1-(minus 5), Kirkegaard 7-(minus28). Oregon: Marshall6-80, Mariota 5-71,Tyner11-58, Freeman5-22, Lockie 1-13, Roseberry2-9, Benoit 4-6, Jones1-2, Basse t 2-2. PASSING —Wyoming: Kirkegaard19-33-2-284. Oregon: Mariota19-23-0-221,Lockie6-8-0-72. RECEIVING —Wyoming: Claiborne 5-53, May 4-101, Rufran3-37, Gentry2-35, Maulhardt2-32, Ellis1-12,Wick1-12,Norman1-2. Oregon:PBrown 4-46, Lowe 4-41, D.AUen3-42, Carrington 3-38,Bassett 2-36, Stanford2-26, Nelson2-19, Tyner2-16, Marshal1-16, l Benoit1-8, Loyd1-5.

FBS TOP 25

No.2Oregon48,Wyoming14 No. 3Alabama52,SouthernMiss12 No. 4Oklahom a34,Tennessee10 No. 24SouthCarolina 38, Georgia35 No. 7TexasA&M38,Rice 10 BostonCollege37, No.9SouthernCal31 No.10LSU31, Louisiana-Monroe0 No.11 NotreDame30, Purdue14 No.12 UCLA20, Texas17 No.14Mississippi56,Louisiana15 No.15Stanford35,Army0 No.16Arizona State38, Colorado24 EastCarolina28,No.17Virginia Tech21 No. 20Missouri38, UCF10 Virginia23,No.21Louisville 21 No. 22OhioState66, Kent State0 EAST BoiseSt.38, UConn21 PennSt.13, Rutgers10

By Nick Daschel The Associated Press

EUGENE —

O n e w e ek

after a season-defining win over then-No. 7 Michigan State, No. 2 Oregon spent the first quarter Saturday trying to regain its footing against upset-minded Wyoming. Quarterback Marcus Mariota didn't let that happen,

leading the Ducks on six consecutive scoring drives to lift Oregon to a 48-14 win over

the Cowboys.

HumboldSt. t 30,AzusaPacific10 Saturday,Sept.20

Mariota became the fourth

CentralWashingtonatWesternOregon,1 p.m. Wis.-RiverFalls atSouth DakotaMines,6p.m. SimonFraserat AzusaPacific, 6p.m. HumboldSt. t at DixieSt.,6 p.m.

Oregon quarterback to pass for more than 7,000 yards. The Ducks junior completed 19 of 23 passes with two

Division III

touchdowns. He also rushed

NORTHWE ST

five times for 71 yards, in-

Saturday'sGames Claremont-M-S36,Lewis&Clark14 La Verne 47, GeorgeFox33 Linfield21,Chapman14 Occid ental34,PugetSound32 PacificLutheran35, CalLutheran28

cluding touchdown runs of 15 and 19 yards. M ariota ha s

t h r ow n a

school-record 71 touchdown passes, and he has thrown for

Whitworth30,Whittier17

Wigamette 34, Trinity (Texas)10

at least one touchdown in all

of his 29 games as a Duck. Oregon (3-0) had a rare

Saturday,Sept.20 Lewis 8ClarkatWhittier, noon Willamette at CalLutheran,noon WhitworthatLaVerne,12:30 p.m. Pacific atDubuque,4 p.m. Linfield atRedlands,7p.m.

scorelessfirst quarter and found itself trailing 7-0 head-

NAIA FRONTIER

Saturday'sGames RockyMountain 32,MontanaSt.-Northern18 Collegeof Idaho31,MontanaWestern 38 Carroll 38,MontanaTech10 SouthernOregon35,EasternOregon31 Saturday,Sept.20 Carroll atRockyMountain,1 p.m. EasternOregonat MontanaTech, 1p.m. Collegeof IdahoatSouthernOregon,2 p.m. MontanaSt.-Northernat MontanaWestern, 2p.m.

PAC-12 ROUNDUP

NeuheiselleadsUCLAto win after Hundleyinjury ARLINGTON, T exas UCLA backup q u arterback J erry Neuheisel threw t w o

Cajuste caught a career-high three touchdowns and finished with 52 yards receiving, and Ty Montgomeryhad two

touchdown passes, including TDs for Stanford. a 33-yarder to Jordan Payton No. 16 Arizona State 38, Colwith 3 minutes left, and the

orado 24: BOULDER, Colo.

-

No. 12 Bruins avoided an up- Arizona State's Taylor Kelly set with a 20-17 win over Tex-

threw for three touchdowns

as on Saturday night. The go-ahead score for the Bruins (3-0) came on the first play after Ishmael Adams' 58yard punt return when he was helped by a crushing openfield block. Neuheisel completed 23 of

and ran 50 yards for another score before leaving with a right foot injury. Washington St 59, Portland

30 passes for 178 yards after

passes for 227 yards and three

Brett Hundley injured his left

touchdowns for Washington State. Kieran McDonagh led

elbow in the first quarter.

St 21: PULLMAN, Wash. Connor Halliday threw for 544 -

yards and six touchdowns, and Isiah Myers caught 11

Texas (1-2), which started Portland State with 269 passthe game with a big blunder, ing yards and a touchdown. had gone ahead when 7yrone Alex Toureen caught seven Swoopes hit John Harris for passes for 100 yards. an 8-yard TD with 5:13 left. Washington 44, Illinois 19: The Longhorns then forced a SEATTLE Linebacker fumble, but went three-and-

Shaq Thompson returned an

out before punting the ball to

interception 36 yards for a touchdown,picked up a fumbleand rumbled 52 yards for another score, and Washington improved to 3-0 under

Adams.

Also on Saturday: Boston College 37, No. 9 Southern California31: BOSTON — Boston College quar- Chris Petersen. terback Tyler Murphy rushed Arizona 35, Nevada 28: for 191 yards, breaking free TUCSON, Ariz. — Anu Solfor a 66-yard touchdown with

omon threw for 278 y ards

3:30 to play. and three touchdowns, Nick No. 15 Stanford 35, Army 0: Wilson ran for 171 yards and STANFORD, Calif. — Kev-

The Associated Press S . C.

Dylan Thompson threw for three touchdowns and No.

24 South Carolina's maligned defense stood strong on a fourth-quarter goal line stand to topple No. 6 Georgia 38-35 on Saturday night. The Bulldogs (1-1, 0-1 Southeastern Conference) had a first-and-goal on the Gamecocks' 4 down three points with 5:24 remaining. But

H u tson M ason

was called for intentional grounding to set Georgia back and the usually reliable Marshall Morgan missed a 28-yard field goal. "When they missed the

field goal, that's the loud-

ing into the second quarter. Mariota paced Oregon by leading the Ducks on four second-quarter scoring drives. He ran for two scores

and threw a 16-yard touchdown pass to Devon Allen that gave Oregon a 27-7 halftime lead.

"I don't know if anyone

in this room has a vote for

the Heisman Trophy, but I encourage you to take a

The Associated Press

S. Carolina stands tall to upset Georgia C OLUMBIA,

• zg

24 32 41-155 37-263 2 84 293 Division II 19-33-2 25-31-0 GREATNORTHWEST 0 33 Saturday'sGames 3-39.0 1-50.0 Western Oregon38, SimonFraser14 2-1 0-0 B lack Hi l l s 42, South DakotaMines30 5 -48 4 - 30 CentralWashington48, DixieSt.14 37:38 22:22

Passing Comp-Att-Int ReturnYards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

w' e

~r

Arizona held off Nevada. Ari-

in Hogan threw for 216 yards zona (3-0) rolled up 507 yards and four touchdowns, Devon offense against the Wolfpack.

ming coach Craig Bohl said, yards. referring to Mariota. "He's Wyoming, a 43-point una tremendous player and I derdog to Oregon, had some thought he played extremely moments but could not stop well." the Ducks offense after the Highlighting Ma r i ota's firstquarter. p erformance wa s a se c The Cowboys (2-1) had 439 ond-quarter tou chdown, yards, including 282 during scoring on a play on which the first half. But they allowed the junior f r o m H o nolulu Oregon to score on six congave Ducks fans a thrill and a secutive possessions, three set scare at the same time. up by Wyoming turnovers. Scrambling to avoid a pass The loss ended a personal rush, Mariota rolled to his 26-game winning streak for right and ran 19 yards for Bohl, the first-year Cowboys a touchdown, finishing the coach who won three conplay by diving headfirst over secutive FCS national titles at Wyoming tacklers to reach North Dakota State (2011-13). "We knew it was going to the pylon. Mariota b o unced o ff be an uphill challenge and the ground and ran to the we were going to have to play sideline. error-free. We certainly didn't Oregon coach Mark Hel- do that," Bohl said. "I'm not frich said the play was Mari- sayingeverything was beautiota being Mariota. ful out there, but by and large, "He can't sit t h ere and I felt like our guys stayed in think, don't do this, don't do it, kept on trucking, kept on that," Helfrich said. "The way believing." he plays, that's one of his bigWyoming stunned Oregon gest strengths." early, stopping the Ducks' Byron Marshall ran six first drive on fourth down at times for 80yards and a the Cowboys 2-yard line. Wytouchdown to lead Oregon's oming rewarded its defense running game. Freshman by driving 98 yards for the Royce Freeman had a 12- game's first score, an 18-yard y ard touchdown r un. T h e touchdown pass from KirkegDucks had 556 yards, includ- aard to Tanner Gentry. ing 263 on the ground. The Ducks ended WyoOregon safety Erick Dar- ming's upset hopes with a gan had two interceptions, 27-point second quarter. "It's good to go through a both in the first half. Wyoming q u a rterback little adversity," Mariota said. Colby Kirkegaard completed "You have to fight through 19 of 33 passes for 284 yards some things. It wasn't a factor and two touchdowns. Cow-

that we weren't moving the

look at your ballot there for

boys running back Shaun

(this) quarterback," Wyo-

Wick ran 16 times for 122

ball. For us, it's punching it in and finishing."

est it's been in a long time,"

Thompson said. Todd Gurley ran for 131 yards and a

t o uchdown,

yet the Gamecocks (2-1, 1-1 Southeastern Conference) kept the Bulldogs' star from making a bigger impact. The victory was South C arolina c o ac h St e v e Spurrier's 201st as a SEC

coach, tying him for second all-time with Georgia great Vince Dooley. It put the Gamecocksback in the SEC East race. S outh C a rolina

w a it-

ed out a few moments of drama on its last series in

the weekend's lone game between ranked teams. Thompson's s n ea k on f ourth-and-short at m i d -

field just reached the firstdown marker with 1:22 left.

Georgia coach Mark Richt challenged the spot, but his appeal was turned down.

Also on Saturday: No. 3 Alabama 52, Southem Miss 12: TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Blake Sims

passed for two touchdowns and rushed for a third in three quarters.

No. 4 Oklahoma 34, Tennessee 10: NO RMAN, Okla. — Trevor Knight passed for 308 yards, threw a touchdown pass and ran for another score for

Oklahoma. No. 7 Texas A&M 38, Rice 10: COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Kenny Hill threw

for 300 yards and four touchdowns. Hill became

the first player in school history to throw for 1,000 yards in the first three games of a

Ducks

Said wide receiver Keanon

career touchdown pass, a

Lowe, who was blocking on Continued from D1 the play: "I'd rather see him With the game tied 7-7, By- run out of bounds at the 2 ron Marshall patiently waited (-yard line). That being said, it for a wall of blockers and hit was an awesome play." the hole at just the right time Dargan's second intercepto scurry nearly untouched tion was also highlight-reel into the end zone and give worthy, as he tipped the ball Oregon a 13-7 lead with 10:45 to himself to halt yet another left in the second quarter. drive by the Cowboys deep But what about Oregon's into Duck territory. "That's been exactly how defense, which gave up 283 yards of offense in the first he practices," Helfrich said of half? Well, the defense still Dargan's interceptions. "He's made several big plays, in- had a ton of picks in practice. cluding Erick Dargan's two He had a couple huge, huge interceptions in t h e s ec- field-flipping plays today." ond quarter that both led to On Oregon's ensuing postouchdowns. session following the second "We had to get back to Dargan pick, Mariota had playing to our standards and a 24-yard run, then found bringing our energy," said Devon Allen for a 16-yard Dargan, a senior free safety. touchdown pass and a 27-7

5-yarder from Mariota, for a 41-7 lead early in the third

After Dargan's first inter-

lead with I:34 left in the first

ception, Mariota decided to half. run on a broken pass play. The game was over at that He doveand fl ipped spectac- point. So say what you will ularly into the end zone for a about slow starts and porous 19-yard touchdown to give defenses, by halftime, the Oregon some breathing room outcome was no longer in with a 2 0-7 lead m idway doubt. through the second quarter. And th e D u cks p oured "I figured I w a s close it on in the second half, as enough to the goal line that I that "shaky"defense came would try jumping," Mariota up with yet another big play sald. when linebacker Torrodney But coaches and team- Prevot sacked Wyoming mates were holding their quarterback Colby Kirkegbreath in fear that the star aard and forced a fumble that quarterback would get in- was recovered by Oregon's jured on such a play. Christian French. "(Helfrich) told me right Then former Oregon basafter I got to the sidelines to ketball point guard Johnanever do that again," Mariota said with a smile.

than Loyd even got in on the

onslaught, catching his first

season. No. 10 LSU 31, Louisiana-Monroe 0: BATON ROUGE, La. — Darrel Wil-

quarter.

liams ran for two touch-

"Once I realized where I was on the field, emotions

downs, and fellow freshman L eonard F ournette

took over and I just started screaming," said Loyd, who sported an Oregon basketball T-shirt in the postgame me-

added another for LSU. No.11 Notre Dame30, Pur-

dia room. Mariota, who was 19-of-

due 14:INDIANAPOLISEverett Golson threw two touchdown passes and ran

23 passing for 221 yards and

for another score. No. 14 Mississippi 56, Lou-

spread the ball around to sev-

isiana 15: OXFORD, Miss.

en diffe rent receivers, then got to rest most of the second half, replaced by Jeff Lockie midway through the third quarter.

— Mississippi's Bo Wallace threw for 316 yards and four touchdowns, including two

jacked for this game as they were for Michigan State, and

to Vince Sanders. East Carolina 28, No. 17 Virginia Tech 21:BLACKSBURG, Va. — East Carolina quarterback Shane

the outcome was about as ex-

Carden threw three touch-

pected, but Wyoming might

down passes and scored a rushing touchdown with 16

Fans were certainly not as

have been a better team than

most thought. The Cowboys came into the game with the best scoring defense in the Mountain West Conference,

allowing just 12.5 points per game. And after a slow start, the

Ducks put up 48 on the Cowboys. Are there things to im-

prove on? Certainly. "Our guys did a decent job of shaking the hangover, but we're nowhere near where

we need to be for the long term," Helfrich said.

But Oregon appears perfectly prepared for its Pac-12 opener next Saturday night at Washington State. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com

seconds left.

No. 20 Missouri 38, UCF 10: COLUMBIA, M o. M aty Mauk t h rew f o u r

touchdown passes, two each to Jimmie Hunt and Bud Sasser, and passed for

144 yards to lead Missouri. Virginia 23, No. 21 Louisville 21: CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Greyson L ambert t hrew f o r o n e touchdown and ran for an-

other and Ian Frye kicked a 42-yard field goal with 3:41 remaining. No. 22 Ohio St. 66, Kent St. 0: COLUMBUS, Ohio J.T. Barrett m atched

a school record with six touchdown passes.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

GOLF ROUNDUP

D5

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Mcllroy, Horschel tied for PGAlead Gordon covetsfifth The Associated Press

Rory Mcllroy

ATLANTA — Already es-

tablished as the best player in golf, Rory McIlroy approached t he FedEx Cu p

f i n al e a s

though he had nothing to lose. Except now he has so much to gain. McIlroy was plodding along Saturday in the Tour Championship, frustrated by a pair of three-putt bogeys and a round

watches his tee shot on the second

pionship to have any chance of joining Tiger Woods as the only multiple winners of the FedEx Cup.

hole during

Another shot behind were

the third

round of play in the Tour Championship on Saturday in Atlanta. Mcllroy is tied with Billy

that "wasn't much to look at out there" when his prospects

Horschel for

changed quiddy. He fired a 5-ironfrom 209 yards up the

the lead at 9-under.

hill to 25 feet on the par-5 15th

John Bazemore /The Associated Press

and holed it for eagle to tie Billy Horschel for the lead. McIlroy

Rickie Fowler (67), Justin Rose (66) and Jason Day (70). Also on Saturday: Kim leads Webb by 1 shot at Evian after 3 rounds:EVIA N-LES-BAINS, France Hyo-Joo Kim of South Ko-

rea goes into the final round of the Evian Championship with a one-shot lead over veteran Karrie Webb. Con-

tenders struggled for form in an error-strewn third round,

with Kim hitting four bogeys

title as Chasebegins By Jenna Fryer

race car driver. Those mo-

The Associated Press

ments come where the team

JOLIET, Ill. — Jeff Gor-

don hopped off a plane, his typical polished self, ready for a full day of appearances to championship race. Then he g l anced

won

n polo and saw for the Gordo first time the thick, white streaks of N eX t llP deodorant that had 0h'cag soiled his shi~. 400M' "What a

r o o k ie

on the front nine before re-

covering for a 1-over 72. Her remarkable 61 on Thursday

move!" he crowed Wh before he bee-lined

was the lowest score in major

for

history. Casey narrowly misses 59

bathroom.

had to settle for a 69, still his 11th straight round in the 60s

in KLM Open: ZANDVOORT,

during the FedEx Cup, and

Netherlands — Paul Casey narrowly missed an eagle at-

still in great position to leave Atlanta with the biggest Sun-

day payoff in golf. They were at 9-under 201.

as perhaps the most enticing finish in the eight-year history

tempt on the final hole of his third round at the KLM Open

captured the FedEx Cup four years ago, had a 67 and was that would have given him the two shots behind. He would firstever 59 on the European

And they had plenty of com- of the FedEx Cup. pany in what was shaping up Jim Furyk, winless since he have to win the Tour Cham-

Tour'.

'You know,

lead to

11

there's some things that

day

Gordon h ad been rushed that morning. His

wife, Ingrid, had been in

sider in the first half of his ca-

New York City at Fashion Rocks, and the NASCAR

reer. He won nearly 60 races before his 30th birthday, and

cl o s e st

PN

superstar was home alone really could do no wrong. He with his two small children. It made for a frenElla and Leo up and out the door to school, while

also getting himself ready for a whirlwind media tour through Toronto.

moved to Florida with his first

wife and lived far away from the Hendrick Motorsports crew doing the grunt work on his race car. "When you are winning all the time, you can get away

shirt stained with deodor-

with a lot of stuff," Gordon said. "When I moved to Florida, I'd come to the shop every

ant streaks on a driver known for an aplomb that

couple of weeks, and people hardly ever saw me. As long

m ade him the f i rst N A SCAR star to dazzle the suits on Madison Avenue.

as we won one every fifth

The end result was a

s:

of 'W h at could I have done to help? What ca n t he team do?' all these things, and some of those conversations

I can do that would improve my commitment to the team.' " These weren't the kind of problems Gordon had to con-

t he

zied morning of getting

' P.

c h ampionships,

we've had conversations

down at hi s b lack

grass behind the 18th green to geys on the back nine and

Ingrrd is like 'OK, you do what you have to do.' "When we haven't

promote NASCAR's

finished with a chip out of thick save par for a 3-under 67. H orschel made t w o b o -

schedules a test and you'd be all, 'Oh, well we had this scheduled is there any way you can move that'?' But

race, I don't care if I don't see you again for a year."

The height of his sucGordon joked at the start cess was almost 20 years of the year that if he were to ago, when a young Gordon win the title, he'd immediatecollected 40 wins in four ly retire and go be a full-time seasons and won champi- family man. He laughs now at onships in 1995, 1997 and all the attention that comment 1998. By the time he added garnered, but doesn't regret his fourth championship, making the statement. "My whole reason was for in 2001, Gordon could do no wrong. saying that was because I reBut life has changed so ally want to win a Sprint Cup. much in the 13 years since. Gordon went t h rough a

That's how much I want to win one," he said. "If somebody

public divorce, eventually

told me right now, today, you

remarried and started a family. And on the track,

can win the Sprint Cup but in

your acceptance speech you well, the wins were no have to say 'This is it for me,' I longer so easy. Now, at would do it. I would do it." 43 years old, his passion Also on Saturday: for racing and winning Harvick wins again for JR has been r evived. Gor- Motorsports: JOLIET, Ill. don wants nothing more Kevin Harvick gained valuthan to win his fifth series able track position with an title — the Chase for the aggressive pit road call that Sprint Cup championship pushed him to yet another win begins Sunday at Chicago- for JR Motorsports. Harvick land Speedway — and he earned his fourth Nationwide has the full support of his Series win of the seasonfamily in chasing his goal. giving JR Motorsports nine on When Ingrid, who didn't the year — with his victory at know Gordon when he was Chicagoland Speedway. an annual threat for the DeJoria, Enders-Stevens championship, asked him top NHRA qualifying: CON-

Kevin Liles/New York Times NewsService

Steve Williams, the latest inductee in the Caddie Hall of Fame and who now caddies for Adam Scott afterparting ways with Tiger Woods,

says he intends to spendmore time with his wife and son at home in NewZealand.

Williams

side Denver, Williams opened the extent of their communicahis induction speech by ask- tion, Williams said. "It's disappointing," he said. Continued from 01 ing for a moment of silence for "I caddied for the guy for 13 Scott, whom he has guided Bennett and his family. "Look, it's a tragic story," years, put my heart and soul to two of golf's highest peaks, the 2013 Masters champi- Williams said, "and it just re- into it, and there's been no coronship and the world No. 1 affirms how life can change in respondence at all." ranking, and Williams will an instant." It is weird to Williams' wife talk about a downshift in his Williams'life changedwhen to consider that the very qualschedule. Williams' plan is he was 13 and his father, a fine ities that endeared him to her to skip some less prestigious amateur golfer, arranged for — his loyalty and, as she deearly events and work from him to caddie for the Austra- scribed it in an email, "dedicaMarch through September lian star Peter Thomson in the tion in all he does right to the only, so he can spend more New Zealand Open. Thomson end" —couldmake him come time in his native New Zea- finished third. across in public as aloof or "From that week on," Willand with his wife, Kirsty, and mean. "He is a loyal and trust8-year-old son, Jett. liams said, "I knew I wanted to "I'm definitely not going to be a professional caddie." worthy man," said Kirsty, who caddie full t i me," W i lliams In 1982, Williams was hired had no trouble summoning said in an interview last week. by Greg Norman, the first of her husband's least endearing "I've100 percent made my his four great partnerships. quality. "He can't relax," she mind up on that. At some point After Norman let him go, he said. "He's always on the move in time, there are more import- partnered w i t h Ra y m ond doing something. It's really ant things." Floyd from 1989 to 1999 be- frustrating having a husband Scott, who lost his top rank- fore teaming with Woods to that will never sit still." ing recently to Rory McIlroy, become golf's most famous She added:"He has promised has made 17 starts worldwide sidekick. to get better at relaxing when this calendar year. Asked Williams has a forthright- he retires. I think pigs might fly about W i l liams' i n tentions, ness that gives his personality before that happens, though." Scott said: "We've talked a saw-toothed edge. During In addition to being one of about it and he'll caddie every h is time w i t h W o o ds, h e the most successfulcaddies, tournament on the PGA Tour gained a reputation for cutting Williams is a champion race for me. I don't know if that's down to size spectators and car driver in New Z ealand. part time." photographers whose careless He competes in super saloon Williams set a r etirement actions threatened the tranand saloon cars, known as late date once before. "In 1999," he quility of the golfers' work- model in North America. When said, "I had already decided place. He once chucked a pho- he steps from behind the golf 2000 was going to be my last tographer's camera into a wa- bag and into the car, Williams, year." ter hazard at a tournament af- who has done a good bit of racThen he heard from Woods, ter the shutter clicked during ingatCentralOregon'sMadras who was on the market for a Woods' swing. Williams, as if Speedway, acknowledges he is caddie after jettisoning Mike reprising his childhood role as merely trading one competitive Cowan. Williams put retire- an aggressive forward in rug- addiction for another. "To be fair, I wish I didn't ment in his back pocket and by, became the enforcer. "Look, I guess to be fair," race," Williams said. "It's so adforgot about it until after Scott won th e M a s ters. W i t h in Williams said, "when Tiger's dictive, it takes up somuch time months, Williams told Scott playing, there are a lot more and energy and it's so much he wanted to scale back his people inside the ropes, out- work building and maintaining schedule. side the ropes; there's a lot race cars. The good thing about Recent events have made more distractions. As much it as opposed to out here is my him more resolute about his as anything, I wanted to try to wife and son are in the pits with decision. Williams was shak- make the other players in the me." en by the recent sudden death group feel like they're playing Williams awoke the Sunday of Angela Bennett shortly af- under the same conditions as of the PGA Championship to ter her caddie husband, Lance, everyone else in the field." the news that Kevin Ward Jr. arrived in Boston for the secHis split with Woods, Wilhad been fatally struck by Tony ond FedExCup playoffevent. liams said, caught him by sur- Stewart, one of Williams' favorThe next week, at the Hall of Fame ceremony on theeve of the BMW Championship out-

prise. Since then, they have

exchangedpleasantrieson the golf course, but that has been

ite drivers, at a dirt track in upstate New York. After contact with Stewart took Ward out of

the race, Ward walked onto the track to confront him and was hit by Stewart's race car.

The news made Williams queasy. He said he had twice gotten out of his car to confront

a driver who he thought had wronged him. In 2012, Williams said, he threw his helmet

at a racer who had taken him

what it would take to win

out in a collision. "There'd be very few dirt

in an interview with The

track racers who haven't at

a fine line between bal-

some time done that," Williams

ancing that out and being a good parent and a good

said, adding, "Obviously it's not the right thing to do, but racing's a very adrenaline-filled sport and when there's some kind of contact that you know should have been avoided, it's like the adrenaline takes over."

Williams said he was a different,less aggressive driver since becoming a father. "I know for sure since I had a child I don't drive as recklessly as I used to," he said. Williams' softer side became apparent when he start-

ed talking about his wife and son. The old-fashioned flip phone in his hand might as well have been a dagger when Jett, during one of their regular

CORD, N.C.— Alexis De Joria

a title, Gordon explained topped Funny Car qualifying t hat i t n e eded hi s f u l l and Erica Enders-Stevens commitment. led in Pro Stock in the Count"Meetings and testing down-opening NHRA Caroliand being well rested, try- na Nationals. ing not to have too many distractions," Gordon said Associated Press. "There's

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

PREP ROUNDUP

NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE

airo ae

oaSra ieS

BVcl BcIFS c IS OW B I S

4

Bulletin staff report score in the waning minutes. of Klamath Falls. The visiting Hornets Five of Bend High's six losses last seaU matilla 10, Culver 0: UMATILLA scored in the 12th minute for a 1-0 lead, son were decided by a single goal. The host Vikings pulled away in a Class but Stewart answered off a free kick late That is what made Saturday's victory

3A/2A/1A Special District 4 match that

even sweeter for Lava Bears coach Nils Eriksson. After squandering a 1-0 halftime lead and falling behind 2-1 midway through the second half, Bend netted two goals in

was scoreless until midway through the first half. "No one gave up," said Culver

the closing minutes to rally past Corvallis

We had a couple of breakaways with the

3-2in nonconference boys soccer action at 15th Street Field. "That was a nicecomeback for us,"

ball, but their keeper kept everything out." The Bulldogs dropped to 1-2 overall and 0-2 in league play.

Eriksson said, noting how the Bears were without three players Saturday due to in-

GIRLS SOCCER

P

' rr; y r

in the half for a 1-1 halftime tie. With about 15 minutes left in the match, Molly

Boyle scored with an assist from Stewart for Sisters (1-2). Outlaws coach Audrey at halftime. "We did have shots on goal; Tehan credited center back M.J. Murphy it wasn't that we were completely denied. with leading the Sisters defense. coach Tom Kirk, whose team trailed 4-0

VOLLEYBALL

Ravens second at North Marion: AURORA — Hours after defeating Valley

Catholic in pool play, Ridgeview faced off against the Valiants in the North Marion

Mountain View 4, Crescent Valley 0: Tournament championship. Despite takwe had the grit and determination." CORVALLIS — Riley Dickinson netted ing the first set, the Ravens wound up the ChanceFlammang opened up thescor- a pair of goals to lead the Cougars past runners-up as Valley Catholic took the ing midway through the first half with a the Raiders in a nonconference victory. next two sets in a 19-25, 25-14, 15-7 win. goal off a Bryant Jolma assist, allowing In the second half, Abby Nopp found Ridgeview, which placed first in its pool Bend (2-2) to take a 1-0lead into the break. Dickinson for the game's first goal in the and defeated Grant Union (25-15, 25-21) Shortly after the intermission, Corval- 43rd minute, and 14 minutes later Mon- and Sutherlin (25-14, 25-19) to reach the filis scored on a one-time shot from outside et Iams connected with Dickinson for a nal, was led by Katrina Johnson's 12 kills. the box. And 17 minutes later, the Spar- score to give the Cougs (2-2) a 2-0 lead. Maddi Remick chipped in with four kills tans grabbed a 2-1 lead. Taryn Poole scored on a penalty kick in for the Ravens. In the 78th minute, Justin Roberts' cor- the72nd minute,Rosali eMendez scored Bulldogs take tourney title: REEDner kick found Flammang, whose one- off an Aspen Crew assist in the 75th, and SPORT — With wins over Oakridge (25touch shot was enough to beat the keeper goalkeeper Sarah Bailey finished with 12, 25-20), East Linn (25-22, 25-16) and and even things up 2-2. Then, in stoppage 11saves. North Douglas (25-14, 22-25, 15-9), Culver time and off a Roberts free kick, Scott Bend 7, Corvallis 0: CORVALLIScruised through the Reedsport TournaBracci challenged the Corvallis keeper, Amidee Colleknon scored two first-half ment bracket to win the eight-team chamallowing the ball to get behind the two goals and five other Lava Bears scored pionship. In the first match, Shealene Litplayers. Max Farrens was waiting there, as well in Bend's nonconference romp. tle logged nine kills, Lynze Schonneker and hepunched in what proved tobethe Colleknon's goals were sandwiched be- had four aces, and Margie Beeler totaled game-winning goal. tween scores by Maile Kilmer and Lacey 13 assists while Emma Hoke logged six In other Saturday action: Ayde as the Bears rolled up a 4-0 half- digs and three aces. Against East Linn, BOYS SOCCER time lead. Meagan Bakker, Tayla Wheel- Little finished with 14 kills while BeelMountain View 2, Crescent Valley 2: er and Meagan Laszlo each scored a goal er dished out 19 assists. In the final, LitLuke Johnson cleared the ball off the in the second half for Bend (3-0-1), and tle racked up 11 kills, nine digs and five jury. "It was nice to come back and show

Scott Eklund i The Associated Press

Seattle wide receiver Ricardo Lockette celebrates after his touchdown against Green Bay in Seattle during the season opener.

Lockette emerges as a contributer in

Seahawks' WR corps By Curtis Crabtree

tration one day i n

The Associated Press

and wasreleased offthepractice squad that September.

RENTON, Wash. — Grow-

ing up Ricardo Lockette just wanted an opportunity to play

p r actice

Lockette signed to the 49ers

practice squad and spent the rest of 2012 there.

in the NFL.

He never thought he'd win a S u per

San Francisco cut L ockette f r o m it s

Bowl. He never be-

lieved he'd catch the first touchdown of an

practice squad the following S e ptember. He landed for a

N FL season for hi s

month with the Chi-

Cougars to salvage a draw against the sists apiece. Lava Bears goalkeeper Aw- digs and three aces.Hoke contributed Raiders from Corvallis. Taylor Willman brie Elle Kinkade had five saves for the with seven digs, while Schonneker, Jenny

team. He just hoped PseXt to be able to don a jer- Seattle sey once and take the a t San Diego field as a professional. Whes Now 28 years old, 105 p m Lockette has a Super today Bowl ring and has TV Fpx become a key mem-

scored on a 20th-minute penalty kick

Vega and Andrea Retano each had five

ber of

kills. Trinity Lutheran 3, South Wasco County 0; Trinity Lutheran 3, Country Christian 0:

Seahawks.

L ockette's conf i dence. He knew he

After rolling past South Wasco 25-10, 25-

said. "It's an opportu-

18, 25-16, the Saints of Bend powered to a

nity to play on the best team in the NFL and be a contributor."

goal line in the 75th minute to allow the

Ayde and Bakker finished with two as-

aces,and Beeler posted 24 assists,seven

shutout.

to give Mountain View (1-2-1) a 1-0 lead. North Medford 5, Summit 3: MEDFORD Crescent Valley responded with a goal 10 — The Storm slugged it out with North minutes later, then grabbed the lead with Medford before falling in a nonconfera 59th-minute score. On the ensuingkick- ence road match. The Black Tornado off, Zach Emerson sprinted upfield and scored in the opening minutes, but Sumfound Mario Torres for the equalizer. mit (1-2-1) countered with goals by MeHenley3, Sisters1: KLAMATHFALLS gan Cornett and Briana Katter, assisted

25-20, 25-21, 25-20 victory over Country Christian, was No. 3 in the RPI heading

to a2-0 lead and scored a late goal to hold on for a nonconference victory. Playing

into the contest. Against South Wasco, Katie Murphy posted 15 kills, six digs got even with a goal just moments before and three aces for Trinity, while sister halftime, then scored twice in the first 15 Mariah Murphy logged nine kills. Allis

without three starters, the Outlaws al-

minutes of the second half to go up 4-2.

— In a rematch of the 2013 Class 4A state championship, the Hornets jumped out

by Shae Davis and Cristina Edwards, respectively, for a 2-1lead. North Medford

Jorge dished out 32 assists for the Saints,

lowed a pair of goals within a four-min- An Edwards goal dosed the margin to ute span in the first half. In the 49th min- 4-3, and the hosts tacked on a dinching ute, however, Malachy Sundstrom's shot

was deflected, and Colton Mannhalter punched in the rebound to bring Sisters (1-2) to within a goal at 2-1. As the Outlaws pushed an extra man forward late in the contest, Henley cashed in with a

X-Country Continued from 01

and Megan Clift finished with nine digs. Katie Murphy came back with eight kills goal in the last minute. and 12 digs against Country Christian, Sisters 2, Henley 1: SISTERS — Liz and Mariah Murphy added nine kills. Stewart scored the first goal for Sisters Jorgeracked up 21 assists and five aces, and assisted on the other as the Outlaws and Taylor McCabe served up 11 straight notched their first win of the season with points to help the Saints rally from a20-14 the nonconference decision over Henley first-set deficit.

enth as a team. Shea Bolton was 39th to lead Redmond, which was ninth in the 16-

Edmonds-Woodway (Wash.). place showing. Gabe Wyllie Erick Fykerud and Alex Mar- was 11th for the Cougars, and tin finished within a second Christian VanSise finished of each other to go 4-5 for 14th in the 166-runner field.

M ountain V i ew , w h i c h team standings with 240 was third as a team with 108 points, and Andrea Broyles the Storm, whose 31 points points, was led by Tia Hatton's (47th), Makenna C onley topped runner-up Marist

seventh-place finish, while (48th) and Jimena Pineda Madison Leapaldt placed 12th (50th) all finished in the top

by 75 points in the 23-team standings. in the 123-runner field. 50 for the Panthers. Dakota Thornton placed Maddi Boettner paced SisFor the boys, Summit's Ty- sixth overall, edging Sumters with a 33rd-place show- ler Jones completed the 5K mit's Thomas Schoderbek by ing, and Macadia Calavan course in 15 minutes, 48.04 a little more than a second, took 41st as the Outlaws tal- seconds to take second over- to help Mountain View finish lied 223 points to place sev- all behind Miler Haller of with 113 points and a fourth-

Storm

ond half, Bowlin scored ute, North Medford evened twice to help the Storm (3Continued from 01 things up 1-1, where the 0) begin to pull away. Dane B owlin k i c ked o f f th e score would stand for the Kiger scored off a corner scoring with a goal off a C.J. rest of the half. kick in the 60th minute, m inutes. In the 20th m i n -

Fritz assist in the opening

Ten minutes into the sec-

O~ y .

Tanner A b bott

Redmond, which was 13th

as a team with 363 points, was led by a 47th-place finish by Clayton Aas, while Remington Williams placed 49th for the Panthers. Shea Krevi was the top Sisters runner,

placing 50th overall to lead the Outlaws to 415 points and

a 15th-place finish.

with Cameron Ficher eight m inutes l a ter, a n d Ra l f N euschmied r o unded o u t

the scoring with a goal in the 72nd minute off a Ficher

c o nnected cross.

returning to Seattle

in October 2013. Three pra c tice squads

in

was improving and was eventually going

KWLZ 9

to get his shot.

"If you're in this locker room, it's a blessing," Lock-

Lockette hauled in a33-yard ette said. "I never ever felt like I was never going to play Wilson to give the Seahawks a in the league or like it was 10-7 lead in the second quarter almost over. I never felt like of their 36-16 season opening that. I know what I can do. I win against the Green Bay know what the coaches were Packers last week. telling me. A lot of stuff hapOnce a raw product with en- pens and sometimes it has ticing sprinter speed, Lockette nothing to do with you. It just has developed into a trusted happens. It's the way life goes receiver and key special teams and you have to roll with the player for the Seahawks. punches." "Amazing," offensive coorLockette again was signed touchdown pass from Russell

dinator Darrell Bevell said.

to Seattle's active roster and

out of NCAA Division II Fort Valley State in 2011. The Seahawks kept him on the prac-

roster out of training camp

"He's come so far from where began to turn heads on spehe was. His understanding of cial teams. His blazing speed the game and what we're try- has proved to be key in covering to do is huge from where ing kicks. He's also shown an he was. He's not even the same ability to lay crunching hits guy. He's a completely differ- on opponents. "He's come a million miles," ent player." Lockette flashed his poten- head coachPete Carrollsaid. tial as an undrafted free agent "He is a big factor." Lockette firmly made the this season a t a po s i tion stocked with talent in Seat-

tice squad to start the year

tle. After a strong preseason, he caught two passes He showed his big-play po- for 38 yards and a touchtential right away. Lockette down against Green Bay, the caught a 44-yard pass in his first multi-catch game of his first game against San Fran- career. cisco and followed it up with Lockette still isn't satisfied. a 61-yard touchdown catch "It was something that just against Arizona the following kind of happened over time and I'm still developing right week. before hewas elevated to the active roster late in the season.

Expectations were elevat-

now. It wasn't just like a eu-

ed during training camp the reka moment," Lockette said. following year but the results "I'm doing better. I'm not at didn't follow. Lockette spiked my best but it's going to conhis helmet off the turf in frus- tinue to get better."

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Central Oregon Ranch Supply in Redmond and Madras.

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Parade of Champions,20I4 Grand 8< Reserve Champions "COW PIE BINGO" fundraiser for Crook County Cowgirls Basketball Team

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Ritchie Waterers Agrilahs BAR CKCattle Co.

Duwet Muck Boots

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GreenCattleCompany Western VideoMarket V-Tex Central Oregon Uvestock Auction NortonCattleCompany Purina DiamondDoeFood Bayer Taste of the Wlld Vitalix DoSFood

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We will again feature Painted Hills BBQ each day, live music, Cowpie Bingo and an Ice Cream Social! Please take time to stop by from your bu sy schedule to grab a bite to eat, shop a little and visit with your f r i e n ds, neighbors and maybe win a trip to the NFR!

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It is again time for us to invite all of you, our valued customers to our 13th annual RoundUp and Trade Show September 19 - 20 at the ranch in Powell Butte. There will be two full days of Bar-B-Ques, promotions and a great opportunity to visit and catch up with your contemporaries in our industry. We will also be hosting every major animal health manufacturer that will be competing for your buying dollars. We are proud again to host the Million Penny Round-Up... a fantastic fund raiser for local FFA. We will also be contributing to the Powell Butte Community Charter School.

Don't miss the Cow Pie Bingo, Ice Cream Social, Painted Hills Beef or any of the fun activities you have grown to expect and enjoy. One lucky customer will be drawn for an expense paid trip to Las Vegas for the National Finals Rodeo held from December 4-13l Airfare, food, tickets and lodging is all provided by our greatTrade Show vendors.Please mark your calendar for September 19-20...It willbe our

pleasure to see you then!See you at the Ranch in Ppwell Butte on September 19 & 20!

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© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

Bourbon boom

A new way to travel in cities, college campuses

driving

Missouri barrel sales By Lisa Brown

By Dana Hull

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

San Jose Mercury News

CUBA, Mo. — Don McGinnis traces his fin-

FREMONT, Calif. Electric scooters are all

ger along the top edge of a wooden barrel on the

the rage in China, but they have yet to take off in the

factory floor while a sea

United States.

of workers around him cut planks of oak, position

tric motorized two-wheeler

-

Enter GenZe, an all-elecbeing marketed to college students and urban dwellers as a fun, clean way to zip around campus or city streets at a top speed of 30 miles per hour. And zip it does. During

staves to form a circle and

char the insides of the liquid-tight containers. As he and family members have done for decades, McGinnis' inspection of the 600 wooden barrels

that are produced daily at the facility is a critical part

Rick Anderson, of Bend, heat-shrinks the water-tight seal on the Insanity Adjustable paddle in the Kialoa workshop in Bend on

of the quality control pro-

Wednesday.

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

cess that's made McGinnis Wood Products a highly sought-after supplier of wooden barrels for alcohol producers worldwide.

going much faster. I've neverdriven am otorcycle or moped, and was apprehensive about operating the GenZe. But it was easy to drive and intuitive

"The barrels we're put-

ting on the trailers today will be full of whiskey

to understand. It had the open, airy feeling of being on a bicycle. The vehicle weighs about 200 pounds

tomorrow," said McGinnis,

the company's president. The seemingly unquenchable thirst for bourbon and other spirits in the U.S. and worldwide is leading to a boom in business for the company McGinnis'

and has a cast-aluminum exoskeleton; it's solid with-

out feeling clunky. I made turns with ease and even though there is both a front •

and rear brake, most times

father, Leroy, founded in 1968 as a stave milL

I just let up on the throttle to come to a full stop.

McGinnis Wood Products began making bourbon barrels in 1987 and has grown to be among the largestcooperagesinthe country, producing more

The GenZe name is a double entendre — it refers

to both future generations as well as zero emission vehicles. It's manufactured in

Deschutes County2013exports

than 150,000 barrels annually. Its annual revenue, history, and it's on track

80 miles southwest of St.

xports from the Bend-Redmond

McGinnis Wood Products makesbarrels for

and 2013 for a record total of $119

Bourbon and Tennessee whiskey are undergoing a resurgence, with U.S. sales growing nearly 20 percentfrom 2008 to2013,

according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the

million worth of merchandise, the U.S. Department of Commerce reported recently. Oregon indemand around the world:paddles,

"Europe is our largest market overseas, although we're seeing a bit more trac-

politan Statistical Area

tion in South America right

other MSAs dwarf it with

ter cases of bourbon and

the Bend-based paddle mak-

distillers, according to the

group. See Bourbon /E5

$ 23s938s555 2 0 . 1% Computer and electronic product manufacturing (power components, integrated circuits)

er. "We build everything in Bend. We kind of have a rep-

registered record export sales in the millions in 2013, sales in the billions. The total exports from the largest 387 U.S. metro areas totaled $1.4

trillion. Locally, export-driven firms face challenges

utation in these countries of

ahead as they compete with

a higher quality product that costs more."

overseas firms that produce

While the Bend Metro-

the same products at lower cost.

Michigan; sales and distribution are overseen from a vast warehouse in Fremont,

California, where I took my test drive in the parking lot. It has a range of roughly 30 miles per charge. "Electric two-wheelers are at the nexus of next

Chemical manufacturing

All others

23.4% $27 866,108

generation mobility," said Alex Boyce, GenZe's brand manager, in an interview. eYou don't have to worry

about oil changes or smog Fabricated etal product

18.8X.

$22,396,092

5 .9'

(machine shops, hardwaremakers, ammunition makers, metal coating, plumbing equipment)

$7,013,611 Source: U.S. Commerce Department International Trade Administration

of the type used for stand-up paddleboarding.

now," said Shain Logeais, sales manager for Kialoa,

sold domestically, totaling $2.4 billion in revenue for

.8%

High on the list of goods made in Central

United States. Last year, more than 18 million 9-liTennessee whiskey were

22%

By Joseph Ditzler• The Bulletin

area rose 27 percent between 2012

Spain, Scotland and other locales worldwide.

$11,692,251

$26,140,165

Louis. some of the country's top-selling bourbons, including Evan Williams, a Kentucky bourbon that's barrel aged for as long as 10 years. McGinnis also ships barrels to Japan,

(material handling and pumping equipment)

Transportation equipment manufacturing (vehicles, vehicle parts)

about $26 million, is the highest in the company's to reach $30 million next year. The company employs about 150people at its base in Cuba, Missouri, about

my test drive, I never went more than 10 miles an hour, but it felt like I was

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

"We respond by working with engineers, new prod-

facture with oversight some

ucts and new materials, with

elsewhere.

of its paddles in China or

checks, or the traditional

hassles of car ownership like parking." China accounts for 98 percent of worldwide sales of electric motorcycles

and electric scooters, according to a recent report from Navigant Research.

But rising gasoline prices, congested city streets and parking issues have caused more consumers elsewhere to rethink the car and look toward two-wheel vehicles — known in the indus-

a goal of creating a product that functions like a high-

"China is one option, Korea, Vietnam. China seems

try as "PTW" for power

end product that lasts long

to be the first adopter of the

and is affordable," Logeais sard.

engineeringand machinery for making the paddles," Logeais said. "By 2016, we may have a little better grasp and may be on the road to doing that." See Exports /E3

ble solution. Navigant Research forecasts that global

Overseas sales have pla-

teaued this year, and Kialoa, faced with competition from Asian manufacturers, is

considering a move to manu-

two-wheeler — as a possi-

annual salesofe-scooters

will grow from 4.1 million in 2014 to 4.6 million in 2023 as the consumer mar-

kets increase. See GenZe/E3

Uncertaina out irin,mm aniest 'test By Sarah Max

business, and high turnover

New York Times News Service

seems inevitable.

Hiring and retaining employees is a struggle for all sorts of companies, but at smaller ones, the stakes can be

especially high. "One bad seed can really have an impact on your culture," said Mona Bijoor, founder and chief executive of Joor, a company based in New York that created a wholesale marketplace to connect retailers

It may sound extreme, but

this arrangement is becoming "For everythree hires, only more common, especially at one was working out," Bijoor small, fast-growing companies said of her company's first cou- where turnover can be high. "If you are 1,000 employees, a ple of years. Then, early last year, Joor's bad hire isn't a big deal," said

logistical questions. For example, what if the prospects already have jobs? Assuming contract work does not violate their current

work agreements, Bischke said, prospective hires at Ente-

director of operations brought

Jon Bischke, founder and chief

in sevenpeople to workin data operations on a trial basis.

executive of Entelo, a recruiting software company that is

They started on the same day,

based in San Francisco and

got two days of training and did 30 days of contract work.

has about 20 employees. "But

lo are given part-time projects to work on at night or over the weekend. They are paid, he said, a"solid consulting rate" for this work, and the trial pe-

if you are a 10-person team, it

riod can last two to four weeks.

At the end of the trial, three

About half of the 30people who have been asked to work

and brands. Trouble is, the traditional

were hired as full-time workers, Bijoor said: "And they're

can kill the company." Bischke began his trial program soon after starting

hiring process — resumes,

all rock stars."

the company in 2011. In three

into full-time jobs, he said. In

interviews, references — offers

The trial was so successful, in fact, that the company

years, he said, he has had to fire only one employee.

some cases it didn't work out because the candidates had a

only a cursoryview of job candidates, she said, particularly those who are early in their ca-

reers. Add to this the fast pace, the long hours and the highs and lows of a startup or a small

formalized a"temp-to-perm"

While the benefits of dating

FIVBS

+

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on a trial basis have moved

Chester Higgins Jr./The New YorkTimes

change of heart. In others, he

After a successful experience converting trial workers to full-tim-

ers, Mona Bijoor, the founder of Joor, has formalized the "tempto-perm" hiring process — an arrangement quickly becoming more common at small, fast-growing companies where turnover can be high.

hiring process. Roughly half ofJoor's50 currentemploy-

before marriage may seem

said, "Let's just say that had we

obvious, setting up a test-drive

ees started on a temporary contract.

program does require some thought. First, there are some

hired them, we probably would have had to fire them." See Hiring /E5


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

Qt/KsrloN: Wehavebeentold that aslongasweredeposit an IRAcheckwithin 60 daysofhavingtaken themoney out we wouldnot payanytaxes on that withdrawal. ANswER:The IRS recently said beginning 2015, a

person can only do one indirectIRA rollover once a year, from 1st withdrawal date to 365 days later. Not calendar year! It means no matter how many IRAs a person has only one IRA can be taken out and Barbara red e posited within the 60 day time limit. This affects tax payers who might need money on a short term basis and redeposit their IRAs back into theirIRA account within the 60 days. This also affects taxpayers who wish to move their IRA accounts to a new financial institution by having the first institution cut a check to them which they deposit into their bank account; then rewrite a check for the IRA to the new company. Any additional indirect IRA rollovers will be taxed fully and have a 10%early withdrawal penalty if the person is under 59'/i. Most people complete IRA rollovers directly from 1 financial institution to another institution (trustee to trustee transfer) and never "touch" the money. The law allows as many direct rollovers you want a year. Every situation is different. Be sure to speak with a financial retirement specialist to make sure you will not have to pay additional taxes and possible early withdrawal penalties. Source: IRC 408 (d) (B); IRS announcement 2014-2013 Representative is registered with and ofl'ers only securities and advisory services tbrough PlanMember Securities Corporation, a registered broker/dealer, investment advisor and member FINRA/SIPC. 6187 Carpinteria Ave, Carpinteria, CA. 93013, (800) 874-6910. Cornerstone Financial Planning Group LLC and PlanMember Securities Corporation are independently owned and operated. PlanMember is not responsible or liable for ancillary products or services oirered by Cornerstone Financial Planning Group or tbis representative.

CFPG

Cornerstone Financial PlanningGroupLLC www. CornerstoneFinancialBend.com 5 4 1-388-1708

QUEsTIONI I have health insurance but what

happens if I have extremely high medical expensesor expensive prescriptions? ANswER:Health insurance policies that are subject to the new Affordable Care Act (ACA) rules limit the amount you will have to pay in any calendar year for any expenses Patrick cove r ed by your policy. In 2014 the limit is $6350 for an individual and $12,700 for a family. This limit includes deductibles, copays, coinsurance and prescriptions. These limits generally only apply to expenses incurred when using your policy's network of providers so you want to make sure you stay in-network whenever possible. While these limits may seem high they are a finite amount that allow you to plan for a worst case scenario. However youmay have a plan that is not yet required to meet the new ACA maximum out of pocket rules. In this case there may still be ways to limit your expenses. Consult with your doctor and pharmacist to make sure you understand your health care and prescription options. Your agent and insurance company can help you understand your policy so you can make informed decisions and get the most out of your policy. Being an informed consumer is the best defense against unnecessarily high medical expenses.

QUEsTIQN: How will the required health insurancecoverage for2014 impact me? ANswER:Beginning in 2014, the individual s hared responsibility provision o f t h e Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires you and each member of your family to have qualifying health insurance called minimum Greg esse n tial c overage (Coverage), have an Fowler exemption, or pay a shared responsibility CPA, CFP' pe n alty with your 2014 individual income tax return. You have Coverage if you have employer-sponsored coverage, coverage obtained through a Marketplace, or coverage through a g overnmentsponsored program. Anyone without Coverage or an exemption, owes a shared responsibility penalty. For 2014, the annual shared responsibility penalty is the greater of: • 1% of your Household Income that is above your tax return filing threshold, or • Your family's flat dollar amount, which is $95 per adult and $47.50 per child, limited to a family maximum of $285 for 2014. The maximum penalty in 2014 is equal to the cost of the national average premium for a bronze level health plan available through the Marketplace. In 2014, that maximum is $204 for each month the individual was not covered.

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QUEsrioN: How do I know if I'm getting the "right" mortgage for me? I didn't know I had a choice?

ANswER: Hom e buyers a re o v e rpaying by millions each year because they don't understand how t o p r o perly shop f o r, compare and choosethe right mortgage for their individual needs. The tendency is to go Karen down to their local bank and take the first SimpsonHankins option presented, because the confusing and NMLS¹272837 often frustrating world of home mortgage State Lic.¹272837 lending can leave any potential home buyer feelinglost and out of control! Bu ers end up relying on the bank or loan officer to make their financial decisions for them without building any kind of relationship or doing any research! It's also important to note that a loan officer can't tell you what you can afford, they can only tell you what a lender is willing to lend. When you are talking about one of the biggest purchases that you will ever make in your lifetime that can be pretty scary! Start your home buying journey by understanding your options. Learn how your credit score affects your buying power. Ask questions and learn how to balance your mortgage with your lifestyle, income, and other financial goals. By doing a little homework before you go shopping, you'll save time, money, and stress and insure that your "Right Fit Mortgage™' fits comfortably into your lifestyle. Knowledge is power! For more information on how to conquer your closing, please contact me today.

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Qt/EsrloNI My family has had a number of hard years, and we'vehad both a bankruptcy and a foreclosure. How long must wewait to begin shopping for a home? ANSWER:We have helped many in your position

purchase a home successfully. There is a waiting period, however, and the waiting time depends upon the type of loan. With FHA loans, you need two years from a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, and 3 years from a foreclosure, short sale, deed in lieu or loan modification if your payments were late at the time of that action, and less time if your pay ents were st t L. N878 550MO all current. Conventional loans require a 4-year wait after a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, 7 years from a foreclosure, and 4 years from a short sale, deed in lieu of foreclosure, or loan charge off. Loan modification waiting time varies, but new credit must be established. If a home is included in a bankruptcy and you want to go conventional, we may use the waiting period of 4 years if we can document that the mortgage was discharged in the bankruptcy. Otherwise the greater of the two waiting periods (4 or 7 years) will NMLs¹201036 S~~~e Lic ¹2¹t036 be required. Sometimes, the transfer of the deed to a new owner can take several years after a bankruptcy occurs, delaying eligibility. We would like to offer you a free consultation in our Bend office to address your specific questions. We have lots of experience in this area and arehappy tohelpyou find yourway to a new home.

www. KarenSimpsonHankins.com 541-420-5736

QUESTIONI How aggressiveshould I be when I

invest for retirement? ANswER: Itdepends on a number of key factors. These include your income and assets, your appetite for risk, the age which you plan to retire and your projected expenses during retirement. Traditional wisdom has been to invest aggressively when you areyoung and then move gradually The Johns- toward a more conservative approach. However, Hakala the retirement landscape has changed in the past 20 years. As a result, many assumptions about retirement Planning have changed. Group The decreasing number of traditional pension plans as well as concerns about Social Security has led people to take greater responsibility for their own retirement. Investing more aggressi vely overthe long-term has become more common as people realize they need to build the largest retirement nest egg they can. People tend to retire younger, live longer and do more during retirement than they used to. It may be a good idea to invest more aggressively for retirement than previous generations did as many people will have well over 30 years of retirement activity to fund. Many financial advisors suggest that you keep a balanced portfolio including stocks, bonds and alternative investments after you retire. As you plan for retirement the advice of an investment professional can prove to be invaluable. /

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QUESTIONI I'm about to retire in 2015, should I be doinganything to prepare?

ANswER:Absolutely. The first real question is whether you can afford to retire yet, not just short-term, but also long-term. Retirement should be more of a question of crunching your numbers, and making sure that you're David able t o cover your living expenses now, and with inflation. One of the scariest things about retirement is that what might feel like decent cash flow now, might become quite meager after a number of years. Obviously keeping one's spending to a minimum is recommended, but let's face it, retirement is supposed to also be about enjoying life. One of the best approaches to preparing for this is to try to create a portfolio that will not only keep up with your spending, but also with inflation. Cover your bases, and remember that unexpected things DO indeed happen in life. No plan will ever be perfect, but understanding things like the impact of inflation, and working that into one's projections, will make a substantial difference over the long-term. Tax Laws are complex and subject to change. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC ("Morgan Stanley"), its afliliates and Morgan Stanley Financial Advisors and Private Wealth Advisors do not provide tax or legal advice and are not *liduciaries* (under ERISA, the Internal Revenue Code or otherwise) with respect to the services or activities described herein except as otherwise pmvided in a written agreement with Morgan Stanley. This material was not intended or written to be used for the purpose of avoiding tax penalties that may be imposed on the taxpayer. Individuals are encourages to consult their tas and legal advisors (a) before establishing a retirement plan or account, and (b) regarding any potential tax, ERISA and related consequences of any investments made under such plan or account. 02014 Morgan Stanley Smith BarneyLLC. Member SIPC.

Morgan Stanley david.thieleOmorganstanley.com 541-617-6038

Qt/KsTION: What is open enrollment for health insurance and howdoes it apply to me? ANswKR:With the paSSing Of the AffOrdable HealthAct we haveexperienced many changes in the health insurance market; one of the biggest changes is the way we are able to buy individual health insurance coverage. Kristine ln the past, if we needed to buy health Akenson insurance we were able to submit an application to the health insurance companies at any time throughout the year, but the companies could deny your application based on pre-existing conditions. With the new law in place, pre-existing conditions are no longer considered, but this change comes with a catch. Now all individual health insurance policies, whether they are purchased through the Exchange ordirectly through a company, must be purchased during the open enrollment periods unless a person experiences a qualifying event. Qualifying events can be: loss of health insurance due to a job loss, marriage, divorce, birth or adoption of a child, or moving outside of your current coverage area. Remember, don't wait until you get sick or need to see the doctor to try to get health insurance as these are not qualifying events. Instead, take the time to meet with a qualified agent during open enrollment to discuss your options. This year open enrollment runs from November 15th, 2014 through February 15th, 2015.

QLEsTIONI Why do insurance companies use my credit score to decide how much my insurancecosts?It doesn'tseem fair.

ANswER:T he Insurance Division of t h e Oregon Department of C o nsumer and Business Services must pre-approve any rating factors used by insurance companies Karen to determine premium. Oregon, like most Brannon states allows credit information to be a ratingf a ctor because there is a stron g statistical correlation between a good insurance score and the likelihood of a claim. However, the State of Oregon has put some important safeguards in place that help protect consumers. Credit information can't be used to increase premiums or nonrenew an existing policy, and it can't be the only factor used when making a decision to issue a policy. Consumers also have the right to request a new insurance score once a year to improve the price of an existing policy and the new score can only be applied if it will improve the price. While almost all insurance companies use some type of credit/insurance scoring, they don't all use it in the same way. It's important for consumers to get competitive quotes to determine which carrier uses credit information in a way that will result in the most cost effective quality coverage for them.

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B USI1VESS MONDAY You Can Have a Rewarding 8 Profitable Career in Real Estate: Principal Broker Jim Mazziotti leads this career discovery event; register by email; free; 6-7 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 NE Greenwood Ave., Suite 100; 541-480-8835 or soarwithexitO gmail.com.

E1 V D AR

Small Business Counseling: Receive confidential business planning with a SCORE volunteer; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7050.

Buying or Selling a Business: Learn how to successfully buy, sell or invest in a business; registration required; $49; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.

TUESDAY Membership 101 — Driving Your Membership: Connect with Bend Chamber members new and old; RSVP required; free; 10-11 a.m.; Bend ChamberofCommerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541-3823221 or shelley©bendchamber.

WEDNESDAY

Laborand Employment Law Update: Presentation on state and federal legislative changes to labor laws, hosted by Human Resource Association of Central Oregon; registration required; or'g. $30 HRACO members, $45 Business After Hours and Ridbon nonmembers; 7:30-11 a.m.; Shilo Inn Suites Hotel, 3105 O.B. Riley Cutting: To celebrate the new Road, Bend; 541-389-9600 or RedmondTechnologyEducation Center; 4:30-6 p.m.; Central Oregon www.hrcentraloregon.org. Community College, Redmond Deschutes Property campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Owners meeting: County Redmond; 541-383-7599. representatives will speak

E3

Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.

about efforts to promote brownfield redevelopment and how to evaluate a property's environmental condition; free; 6-8 p.m.; Deschutes County administration building, 1300 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-385-1709, peter.gutowsky©deschutes.org or www.deschutes.org. What's Hot in Franchising: Interactive workshop will cover trends and best industries in 201415; learn how to choose, finance

and enjoy a business franchise;

$29; 6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290.

THURSDAY Project Management lnformation Meeting: Learn about project management skills and how you might benefit from certification; registration required; free; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. RibbonCutting and Open House: 5:30-7:30 p.m.; St. Charles Center

for Women's Health, 340 NW Fifth St., Redmond. Business Startup Workshop: Learn all the basic steps needed to open a business; preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-383-7290.

FRIDAY Construction Contractor Course: Two-day test preparation course to become a licensed contractor in Oregon; Sept. 19 and 20;

prepayment required; $305

includes Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual;8:30 a.m .-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;541-383-7290,ccb©cocc. edu or www.cocc.edu/ccb.

MONDAY Sept. 22 Capturing the Value of Big Data: Learn about data science and how

to apply it to your business; $499; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; FoundersPad, 777 SW Mill View Way, Bend; founderspad.com/workshops.

online; $25 Bend Chamber members, $30 community members; 5 p.m.; Arbor Mortgage Group, 209 NE Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3823221 or www.bendchamber.org. TUESDAY Deschutes Property Owners meeting: County Sept. 23 representatives will speak The Business of Social Mediaabout efforts to promote More Than Chatter: Learn how brownfield redevelopment and to use social marketing to grow how to evaluate a property's your business; register online; $25 Bend Chamber members, $30 environmental condition; free; community members; 11:30 a.m.; 6-8 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 716 SW Evergreen Ave.; 541Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 385-1709, peter.gutowskyO or www.bendchamber.org. deschutes.org or www. Small Business Counseling: deschutes.org. Receive confidential business Search Engine Strategies I: planning with a SCOREvolunteer; A professional search engine free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall marketer will lead this class on the do's and don'ts of search St.; 541-617-7050. engine optimization; registration required; Wednesdays, Sept. 24-Oct.8;$99;6-8 p.m.;COCC WEDNESDAY Chandler Building, 1027 NW Sept. 24 Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383Business After Hours: Register 7270.

DEEDS Deschutes County • John R. andSusanB. Russell to William D.andMargaret A. Anderson, River CanyonEstates,Lot69,$394,000 • Susan A. Wittwer, who acquired title as Susan B.Russell, to Melissaand Christopher Jacobs, Myrtlewoods Acres, Lot 2, Block 2,$196,000 • Joshua D.and Michelle Walker to Michael D.Hinton, Windsong, Lot 22, $215,000 • Aundria E. Bennett Bailey, trustee of the Aundria E.Bennett Bailey Trust, James A.andKathleen B.Jones, trustees of theJamesA. and Kathleen B. JonesRevocable Living Trust, to Michael E.and Nanette M. Twist, trustees of theMichael andNanette Twist Joint Trust, River Village 3, Lot 14, Block14, $425,000 • Sweit LLC to FishBarrell LLC, Partition Plat1999-41, Parcel 3, $1,200,000 • Jeremy J. Steento Tara D.Rogers, Taylors Addition to Redmond,Lots 7 and 8, Block19, $155,050 • Jack W. andJulie K. Underwood to Dennis R.Wheeler Jr., Fairhaven Phases 7, 8and 9, Lot12, $179,000 • Derron and Melanie Moreland to J.W. and Dixie E.Wyllie, Deschutes River Crossing North, Lot10, $300,100 • Paula Head and Philip Callahan to

Exports Continued from E1 Central Oregon is home to

several manufacturers who ship products overseas, from aircraft, to recreational vehi-

cles, to electronics. Roger Lee, executive director ofEconomic Development for Central Ore-

Richard G.and Elizabeth A. Darnall, Township18, Range12, Section 26, $251,000 •GeorgeW .and SusanL.Boehlert, trustees of theBoehlert Family Trust, to Daniel J. andCatherine L. Lowell, Oregon WaterWonderland, Unit 2, Lot 9, Block 21,$285,000 • Toni F. McCleskeyto Allen R. Hubbard and Sheryl A. Simpson,Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Unit 8, Part2, Lot8, Block109,$170,000 • JD Neel Construction Inc. to Richard A. Ray, HiddenHills, Phase1, Lot 24, $318,000 • Gary F. and BrendaJ. Mossotti to Peirson F.and Kristin Tone, Porter James, Lot 7,$288,500 • Austin W. andCarol A. Croweto G. and C. Alden, trustees of theCharles and Ginger AldenTrust, BrokenTop, Lot 77, $469,000 • Warner L. andDonnaL. Dallas to Donald R.andBrenda G.Ashcraft, Hockman Subdivision, Lots1 and 2, Block 2, $239,500 • Thomas R. Yahraes to Herschel M. Smith, TetherowCrossing, Phase4, Lot 21, Block1, $320,000 • Jeff R. Carter andSheri Moritz-Carter to Steve andShirley Palmer, Sterling Pointe, Phase1, Lot 9,$269,000 • John H. andLinda H.Salzerto Neil

D. and Marilyn T.Rivenburg, trustees of the Neil D.and Marilyn T. Rivenburg Family Trust, FairwayPoint Village, Phase 4,Lot19, Block18, $739,900 • Elizabeth A. Ryanto Cedar& Adams LLC, McCaffery's First Addition to the Townsite of Sisters, Lots 7-10,Block 2, $172,200 • Jeremy J. andKarenE.Lind to Eric and AthenaBurnett, Bridges at Shadow Glen, Phase1, Lot 74,$335,000 •DavidG.Seamanto ScottR.andJean M. Bury, DeschutesRiver Woods, Lot 13, Block FFF, $162,000 •Julie M.and LawrenceW .Stephenson to Michael C.Oneil III and EmileeS. Oneil, Northwest Crossing, Phases7 and11, Lot 551,$500,200 • Edwin and Jo-Ellen Lee to Mowich Lake Investment LLC,Miller Heights, Phase1, Lot 24, $565,000 • RES-ORTwo LLCto Wood Hil Homes Inc., Ironstone, Lots13-23, $327,608.80 • River's EdgeProperty Development LLC to Pahlisch HomesInc., Rivers Edge Village, Phase15, Lot19-21, $346,500 •AlexanderandAnnaM.Higgins to Christopher andBarbara Darling, Gallatin, Phase1 and 2,Lot 7,$410,000 • Jane McDonell, Richard B. andEllen M. Eisman toBrian J. andSandra G.

"I think certainly that with enough economic

recovery occurring globally that participation for higherincome economies (are) beginning to spend on higher-quality goods. What we see out of Bend is some technology, but also highend sporting goods." — Scott Goddin, director of the U.S. Commercial Service,

a branch of the Commerce Department, in Portland gon, said even bottled water is shippedto China by EartH20, of Culver. No company official by Dent and other makers, he care for the rain there. Bend was available for comment last sard. presented an alternative, plus "We'renot picky," he said. its location and weather proweek. EartH20 is "taking advan- "We'll sell to anybody that vide a good place for product tage of empty shipping con- wants to buy. Western nations testing, Gillies said. "Customers like coming tainers otherwise going back are the biggest target (marempty," Lee said Thursday. "It's kets); Canada is our biggest here; they love to come here; it's another example of our local corporate t r ading p a r tner; sucha beautiful place," he said. companies being innovative in Australia is No.2. We alsodo a "They have a wonderful expeentering overseas markets and fair amount of business in Sin- rience. There's a bit of remotedoing it economically." gapore and the Netherlands ..." nessto it, but that's one of the Doing business from Bend About 60 percent of Central strengths." as an export m anufacturer Oregon firms export products, The company setup shop in presents challenges, business said Scott Goddin, director of Central Oregon and has sold executives said. the U.S. Commercial Service, one vehicle so far; it has or"The two biggest issues we a branch of the Commerce De- ders for 15 next year, he said. face are marketing presence. partment, in Portland. Firms in EarthCruisers serve not only ... Just having a marketing the Bend MSA accounted for as high-end expedition vehipresencein Kuwait orIndone- six-tenths of all exports from cles for world travelers looksia when you're a small com- Oregon in 2013, according to ing to get off the grid, but also pany in the High Desert is dif- a Commerce Department re- as remote outposts for mining ficult," said Christopher Dent, port. As much as half of those companies and mobile mediowner and president of Dent exports wind up in Europe, cal units for nongovernmental Instruments in B e nd. "The according to the Commerce agencies. It's a complicated second is competition within Department. product,he said. "I think certainly that with the countries we're trying to Gillies said the U.S., overall, penetrate." enough economic recovery is a great place to operate. The Dent specializes in electron- occurring globally that partici- regulatory environment is fair ics that measure and regulate pation for higher-income econ- and the workforce is educated power and energy, for example omies (are) beginning to spend and enthusiastic. "The U.S. is devices that collect data about on higher-quality goods,"God- the land of opportunity, it reand regulate temperature. din said. "What we see out of ally is. This place, it's just an They are used to regulate pow- Bend is some technology, but amazing place." er in energy-efficient buildings also high-end sportinggoods." Starting out in Central Oreand monitor the fuel consumed While Central Oregon ex- gon proved a tough go at first, by diesel generators used by portsa wide range ofproducts, Gillies said. Expectations of military overseas, amongother they tend to come from a large a return on investments are applications. Dent instruments number of small firms rather high, but the support he gets are at work on all seven conti- than one or two large firms from the entrepreneurial comnents, he said. that producea large quantity munity is remarkable, he said. Dent competes against of the sameproducts, he said. In an email, Gillies wrote: home-based technology firms That means "excitement over "In effect, when we export a in many other developedna- innovation" usually takes pre- manufactured product, w e tions, he said. For example, cedencelocally over the com- are representing skills and try selling a product in Poland fort of a large, local employer, talents of our company made when three Polish firms are he said. up of the people of our local biddingagainst you, he said. EarthCruiser CEO Lance community." Selling high-tech devices in Gillies relocated the headquar— Reporter: 541-617-7815, emerging markets presents ters of his Australian-born firm jditzler@bendbulletirLcom its own challenges, Dent said. to Bend this year. Thecompa-

Griffin, Magdalen, Lots1-3, $900,000 • James A. andJennifer L. Bergevin, Nels B. andCathleen A. Ericson, John R. and SuzanneW. Lautze, andDavid J. and Bonnie A.Nieuwstraten to JohnH. Goebel, trustee of theJohn and Persees Goebel Family Trust, Mountain Village East 4, Lot19, Block 31,$355,000 • Zachary Goodmanto Susan Chapelle, Fairhaven, Phase3, Lot 3, $ l87000 • Dana K. Johnson to Darrin Kelleher, trustee of theKelco Inc. Retirement Plan, Rolling Hills, Lot 24, Block2, $168,000 • Julia A. Tom,trustee of the Tom Trust, to Sandra L Gell, trustee ofthe Jack Gell Marital Trust, South Meadow Homesite Section, Third Addition, Lot 154, $460,000 • Bonnie L. Newson, trustee of the Bonnie L. Newson2003 Trust, to Torrey Richards, Woodriver Village, Lot 2I, Block 6, $239,900 • B&C Building LLC to Timothy W. and Shellie Heggenberger,NorthWest Crossing, Phase17,Lot 767,$464,900 • Thomas E.and Julie A. Clarke, trustees of theClarke Family Trust, to Gregoire Klees-JohnsonandKristine Klees, Township16, Range11,Section 34, $451,001 •TeAmo RapidoLLCto HaydenHomes LLC, Gleneden 2,Lots19, 20and 23,

GenZe m any areas, t h e

use ofe-motorcycles and e-scooters is permitted on roads and on paths des-

ignated for bicycles and scooters, broadening their appeal for younger motorists," said John Gartner of Navigant.

The Genze has three m ain features t hat

the

company likes to highlight: a storage bay where you can easily fit items like a laptop, groceries or gym bag; a removable l ithium-ion b attery

t h at

can be charged from any 110v socket, and a 7-inch

touch-screen display that, eventually, will integrate navigation functions and

a host of other apps. When you park t h e G e nze, you can take the battery, which is the size of a small briefcase, with you and charge it at work, in class or while sitting at a coffee shop. The company stresses that the Genze is engineered, rigorously tested

the company manager, wanted tobe closerto her parents in Portland. But Gillies didn't

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OenO W ebCA M

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And w hat ab o ut t h e key, or concerns about the

Genze getting stolen? The touch screen is the key: drivers need to log on with

a four-digit passcodein order to operate it.

ny website describes the Earthpose high tariffs on imports Cruiser a s a cu s tom-built, all-terrain expedition vehicle. in order to protect their own burgeoning m anufacturers. Gillies' wife, Michelle Boltz, some markets cannot afford the technology in instruments

T eBu

GenZe:Refers to both future generations andzero emission vehicles Speed:Upto 30 miles per hour Distance:Roughly 30 miles on a full charge Designed, engineeredand assembled:AnnArbor, Michigan Introductory price:$2,999 For more information, go to:www.genze.com

and manufactured in the

Some countries, like India, im-

Pricing is another barrier;

• Kelley B. PurdyandLisa M. Carroll to John H. andLinda H.Salzer, Deer Park 1, Lot 7, Block 3, $375,000 • Rebecca L Seim to Darrin F.and Susan A.Wittwer, Wishing Well, Phases 5and 6, Lot 2, $243,000 •JoelE.and LynnM.Lissonto Matthew D.and Vanessa R. Kercher, North Pilot Butte First Addition, Lot1, Block 3, $158,000 • Elaine L. Luttrull to Larry G. and Jeannine M.Kuhn, Julina Park, Lot 68, $168,900 • Tetherow Glen 58 LLCto Nicholas W. and Tiffany L Misischia, Tetherow Phase 2, Lot64, $201,373 • Wade andAngela L. Rogers to Ryan E. and Fiona R.Fox, Traditions East, Lot 14, $247,000 • Dale E. Grantto Amyand Steven Draheim, Starwood, Lot3, Block 5, $312,000 • Jean P. and Melissa D. Vandenbroucke toLanceJ. and Monika E. Piatt, Township17, Range13, Section 28, $375,000 • Secretary of Housing andUrban Development ofWashington, D.C.,to Gene R.Wiggins Jr. andJacqueline S. Wiggins, NottinghamSquare, First Addition, Lot 28, Block 7,$189,600

Find Your Dream Home

The GenZe

Continued from E1 "In

$172,500 • FC FundLLCto Hayden HomesLLC, Gleneden 2,Lots 33-36, $252,720 • Pacwest II LLC, doing business as MonteVista Homes, toJason K.and Kristi Winebarger, EaglesLanding, Lot 56, $344,542 • Nancy Lumpkin to Bobbye G.Rotello, River Glen,Lot 6,$507,000 • Michael L. McCluhan, trustee of the William R. andMolly L McCluhan RevocableFamilyTrust, to John T. and Christopher M.Ramsey,Tillicum Village, Lot14, Block 3,$239,000 •W oodsonE.Bennettto BruceW yka andEileen Sarames-Wyka,ElkaiWoods Townhomes,Phase5, Lot 81, $389,900 • Gerald W. Ward andAlison R. Ward, who acquired title asAlison R. Meyer, to Tim Buccola,Township18, Range 12, Section 24,$360,000 • Roland S. Woodruff Jr. to RogerB. and Jennith E.Hoyt, Timber Creek2, Phase 5, Lot73, $409,000 • Lance J. andMonika E.Piatt, trustees of the Piatt Living Trust, to Michael J. Geisen, TollgateSeventh Addition, Lot 330, $350,000 • Hayden Homes LLCto PaulA. and Kathleen G. Twelker, trustees of the Paul A. andKathleen G.Twelker Living Trust, Village atColdSprings, Phase4, Lot115, $264,648

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Bourbon

Ginnis-producedbarrels held 53 gallons for bourbon and Continued from E1 about 60 gallons for wine. But McGinnis Wood Products a growing number of distillalsomakes barrels for winer- eries kept requesting barrels ies, including Rambauer Vine- they could use for smaller yards in California's Napa Val- batches, and about a y e ar ley and Chateau Ste. Michelle ago, McGinnis began making in Woodinville, Washington. 15-gallon barrels. As more d i stilleries and The company now makes winemakers are turningtobar- up to 100 15-gallon barrels a rel aging their beverages, Mc- week, at the same price as the Ginnis is increasing capacity to largerbarrels:about $150 for keep up with demand. It recent- bourbon barrels and $200 for ly opened a facility in Pierce wine barrels. City, Missouri, that employs 25

Hiring

er of Weebly,a company based in San Francisco that

Continued from E1

creates and hosts websites.

"I've had people saythey can't ployees are hired on a tem- imagine accepting a job just a porary contractfor three couple of hours after meeting months, over which time they someone." are given 30-day milestones. For Weebly, the idea started Iftheyreachthosemilestones, in 2008 when Rusenko and they stay on. "If we realize it's his co-founders were hiring not a good fit, we'll end the re- their first outside employlationship before that," Bijoor ee, a graphic designer. They said, noting that candidates asked each candidate to do a are generally eager to test the project so the work could be waters before committing to assessed. They used the same a job and that they are treat- approach for their next hire, ed legally as employees even andso on. "Now we're at about 150 during the trial period. "We find people who are in employees, and just about jobs wheretheyareunhappy," every single one of them has she said. "They are willing to gone through a trial week," take the risk because they be- Rusenko said."It's turned into lieve in what we are doing or a cornerstone of our culture." see themselves working for a The very fact that job canstartup. It's not conveyed as a didates are willing to take a one-way benefit for Joor. We temporary position is pretty want to make sure Joor is the telling in itself, Bijoor said. right fit for them, too." Meanwhile, she said, much It is far easier for both the of the emotion and unceremployee and the boss to tainty has been taken out of back out of a temporary ar- the interview process. "It's At Joor, prospective em-

bg'+

-

Last year, St. Louis ortho-

people producing oak staves pedic surgeon Dr. Bill Schroer for barrel production. And, it's was chatting with Ovia Ma-

E5

Robert Cohen/St. Louis Post-Dispatch

White oak barrels are moved for finishing at McGinnis Wood Prod-

rie McGinnis about her knee ucts in Cuba, Missouri. Strips of wood, planed to a curve, make up cility in a neighboring state to replacement when the talk the 53-gallon spirit barrels. keep up with rising sales. The turned to alcohol, and she company is on track to sell be- mentioned her family's busitween 10,000 and 15,000 more ness. Schroer's ears perked wooden barrels to age Goose and Scotch, had prompted barrels than it did in 2013. up. In his spare time in 2012, Island Bourbon County Stout, the company founded by his "It hasn't let up since the late he and two friends started St. a seasonal product released great-grandfather to add em1980s," said Leroy McGinnis, Louis Distillery, a craft vodka the day after Thanksgiving ployees and make acquisi85, who continues to oversee distillery, but they found they that typically sells out within a tions. Independent recently operations. "It's just gotten could produce far more Cardi- day of release. expanded by acquiring the asstronger ever since." nal Sin Vodka than the upstart The booming interest in bar- sets of Ohio Stave Company of could sell. rel aging by alcohol producers Zanesville, Ohio. Barrel production "Our wives like to say this also has led to a rise in sales Brown spirits l ost f a vor Situated along the famed is our midlife crisis," Schro- at Lebanon, Missouri-based with alcohol drinkers from the Route 66, McGinnis Wood er said of th e d istillery he Independent Stave Co., the 1970s to 2000, Boswell said, Products' Cuba headquarters co-founded with Steve Heber- world's largest wooden bar- but there's been a resurgence, and production facilities are holt and Greg Deters. The dis- rel maker. Founded in 1912, particularly in the past two to sprawled across 56 acres. Doz- tillery produces about 1,000 Independent doesn't disclose three years. "People's palates are becomens of stacks of Missouri oak cases of Cardinal Sin Vodka revenue or production figures. logs line the property, ready a year for sale at retailers and It has three manufacturing fa- ing more sophisticated, and to be de-barked and split into restaurants in Missouri, Illi- cilities in Missouri. that lends itself to brown spirstaves. nois and Georgia. Brad Boswell, president at its," Boswell said. "As brown After they're cut, wood that After hearing about McGin- Independent, said the rise in spirits have risen in populariwill be made into wine barrels nis' barrels, Schroer and his popularity of "brown spirits," ty, the cooperage industry has is air-dried outdoors in neatly partners began developing a including bourbon, whiskey benefited." stackedpiles for three years. barrel-aged vodka, convinced Wood that will be made into a barrel would add depth and bourbon barrels are dried in a flavor. kiln. W hile r esearching t h e Inside the main barrel fac- product, Schroer found some tory, beginning each day at 6 barrel-aged vodka made in a.m., workersplacetogetherbe- Poland, Russia and Lithuania, on the lookout for another fa-

rangement than to terminate employment. "We've found it actually helps with recruit-

that whole idea of ' show, don't tell,'" she said. "We're

giving job candidates the ing," said David Rusenko, opportunity to show us what chief executive and co-found- they've got."

1Talle-iiilioiir emillL locallii-soiircell

I

laser cartridgeald geta

tween 30 and 32 oak staves to

but he could find no similar

create a single barrel. The bar- products made in the U.S. The rels are transported on a line distillery recently launched through a steam tunnel that Cardinal Sin Starka, aged for heats the barrels as high as 200 six months in McGinnis bardegrees Fahrenheit, to make rels. The Starka has the colthem more pliable for steel

anl

or and character of a smooth

rings to be added. At one sta- bourbon or scotch. tion, an air pressure machine is Beer makers also are inused to test the barrel for leaks. creasingly turning to barrel A bourbon barrel's interior aging for added aroma, flavor surface ischarred with flames. and color. Those beer makers "The barrel char filters out include St. Louis' largest craft impurities and creates wood brewery, The St. Louis Brewsugar, which accounts for 60 ery, maker of Schlafly beer. percent of th e fl avor," Don Goose Island's brewery in McGinnis said. Wine barrels Chicago buys used bourbon are toasted inside for varying barrels from Evan Williams' amounts of time, based on the parent company, Heaven Hill type of wine. Distilleries, that were made by

from

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Call Dan Steelhammer, Broker 541-389-4212 5 4 1 - 585-2446

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McGinnis Wood Products.

Branching out

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Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS COMPANY

T ICKER

Sprint Corp S Yahoo Inc YHOO Puma Bio technology PBYI M otorola Solutions MSI Liberty Global A LBTYA Bank of America BAC IntercontinentalExch I C E CME Group CME Best Buy Co BBY Liberty Global C LBTYK Pharmacyclics PCYC Boston Scientific BSX Universal Hlth Svc UHS Zimmer Holdings ZMH Pilgrims Pride P PC

FRIDAY C LOS E

15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO

7.00

1.11

18.8

23.0

42 . 8 8

3.29

8.3

17.6

6.6 5.1 5.0 4.8 4.7 4.4 4.4 4.4 4.3 4.1 3.9 3.8 3 .7

7.2 0.9 0.3 10.3 3.8 8.1 15.2 -0.4 1.4 0.3 1.9 7.7 1.7

2 7 0.83 1 6.79 61.54 2.99 4 3 .91 2.09 16.79 0.77 194. 6 8 8.66 79. 3 3 3.35 33.62 1.42 4 2 .0 7 1.78 1 2 3 .9 5 5.07 12.50 0.49 111. 7 1 4.16 104. 9 4 3.87 30.89 1.10

% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y

TICKER

0.0 Net Element lnc NETE 41.3 Sinocoking SCOK 376.4 Flexion Therapeutics F LX N 9.2 Annies Inc B NNY -43.8 GFI Group Inc GFIG 13.7 Stemline Therapeutic STML 5.9 NeoPhotonics Corp NPTN 12.8 On Track Innovations OTIV -12.4 Bank of Kentucky Fin B KYF 13.3 Endocyte Inc ECYT 4.6 Senomyx Inc SNMX 5.2 China Natural Rescs CHNR 61.1 Silver Spring Netwks SSNI 31.2 Energous Corp WAlT 93.4 Threshold Pharmaceut THLD

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS seadrill Ltd Valero Energy Holly Frontier Corp Contl Resources Hlth Care REIT HCP Inc salix pharma Ltd Tractor Supply Avalonsay Cmts Equity Residential

Globalmarkets

FRIDAY C L OS E

INDEX

$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

5.70

4.09

2 54.0

25 1 .9

-45.2

6.37

3.61

1 30.4

1 7 8 .2

336.8

19. 9 9 46. 0 0 6.02 14. 0 5 3.38 3.80 47. 2 1 8.58 9.89 4.16 12.13 12.45 4.91

5.93

42.2

47. 6

0.0

12.1 1

35.7

56. 2

-1.0

1.47

32.3

32. 9

47.6

3.42

32.2

23. 6

0.82

32.0

25. 7

0.91

3 1.5

58. 3

10.9 6

30.2

35. 8

1.98

30.0

26. 4

2.06

26.3

27. 4

0.85

25.7

16. 2

2.39

24.5

23. 3

2.44

24.4

4.1

0.95

24.0

17. 5

10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

S DRL

30. 8 7

-3.88

-11.2

-16.8

VLO

48.4 2

-4.59

-8.7

-7.3

H FC

45.8 5

-4.12

-8.2

-5.9

CLR

72.88

-6.25

-79

0.9

H CN

63.2 5

-5.07

40.55

-3.18

SLXP

143 . 43

-11.08

-z4 -z3 -z2

-3.2

HCP

T SCO

61. 0 5

-4.77

-72

-0.4

A VB

144 . 9 7

-10.89

-70

E QR

62.6 4

-4.62

-6.9

-23.8 CAMAC Energy 41.0 E20pen Inc 18.3 Quicksilver Res 4 9.1 ChinaHGSRealESt 12.7 MaxLinear Inc 7.6 Synthetic Biologics 122.7 Walter Energy

Title: CEO of First Insight

His insight: Understanding how retailers determine what price to charge

Greg Petro

SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA

-59.0 B uenos Aires Merval 1 1 027.91 + 6 1.39 45799.70 +127.10 -59.6 Mexico City Bolsa sao paolo Bovespa 56977.62 -1359.67 95.8 -2.74 Toronto s&p/Tsx 15531.58 73.3 /AFRICA -42.2 EUROPE

+ 0 .56% X X

4

+104. 56%

+ 0 .28% V -2.33% T -0.02% V

4 4 L

+7.19% +10.6 2 % +14.02 %

185.3 Amsterdam -3.5 Brussels Madrid -26.5 Zurich 0.0 Milan 10.8 Johannesburg Stockholm

-0.05% -0 08'/ +0.03% -0.37% -0.10% T +0.03% +0.42%

417.80 3172.76 1110.31 8795.93 21071.12 51247.72 1388.59

-0.21 -2.66 +0.35 -33.08 -21.12 +1 6.82 +5.74

4 4 A

3 98%

+s 51'/

L L

+9.72% +7.23% i16.56%

+1 0.79% +4.17%

ASIA

-28.7

-1 7.7

EOPM

11.20

-3.98

-26.2

-27.7

KWK

0.91

-0.27

-22.9

-22.2

H G SH

6.37

-1.64

-20.5

78.4

MXL

7.07

-1.73

-19.7

-26.1

SYN

2.11

-0.50

-19.2

16.6

49.4

WLT

4.15

-0.96

-18.8

-34.6

-72.3

Quotable

CRRS

1.36

-0.30

-18.1

-34.6

-70.6

-4.0

-4.6 corp Resourcesvcs 18.5 Loxo Oncology Inc

LOXO

12.79

-2.77

-17.8

-2.2

0.0

"Obviously all the sponsors are incredibly worried, but it's hard for a sponsor to disconnect from the entire NFL. It's so important to business."

-4.6

21.5 Alderon Iron Ore

AXX

0.87

-0.18

-17.1

-29.3

-33.8

75.2

Seoul Composite 2041.86 +7.70 + 0 .38% T Singapore Straits Times 3345.55 -1.73 -0.05% -39.8 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 5 32.00 15.00 -0.27% V -15.7 Taipei Taiex -99.77 -1.07% V 9223.18 -20.0 Shanghai Composite 2 3 3 1.95 +20.27 + 0.88% -49.7

Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product Ofthe current stock price andtotal shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).

I s'der

FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD -0.60% +7.42% L -0 41'/ +1.04% +0.11% +0.86% 0 27% 5 53% +0.02% T +3.39% -2.11% +0.25%

-0.21

2.8

The price

LAST FRI. CHG 1985.54 -11.91 9651.13 -40.15 6806.96 +7.34 -67.32 24595.32 4441.70 +0.80 15948.29 +39.09

0.51

-3.2

CAK

s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong KongHangseng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225

Figuhng out what to sell and at what price Is crucial for marketers of a consumer product, whether it's clothing or makeup. Pricing too low can cheapen the perception of the product, and pricing higher than what shoppers want to pay for it leads to lots of markdowns. Most retailers end Up guessing or using historical data. Their collective mistakes result in a new product failure rate of more than 50 percent. That translates to more than $800 billion in annual losses due to excess inventory and missed opportunities, according to industry estimates. Greg Petro founded the analytics firm First Insight in 2007 to help companies make informed decisions based on consumer feedback — well before the items hit the shelves. FIrst Insight

plays online games with consumers designed to gather information about their preferences in pricing and design. Atypical game shows a product's image and players are asked to answer multiple choice questions. First Insight, which works with a diverse client list — which includes Abercrombie 8 Fitch, Avon and David's Bridal — guarantees a gross margin improvement anywhere from 3 percent to 9 percent. How does your process work? The First Insight solution predicts new product performance up to 18 months before these products hIt the stores. This empowers product developers to make design changes early in the process to improve performance. It also lets

T V

+1.52% +5.62% 3 34% +7 10% +10.21%

— Laura Ries, an Atlanta-based marketing consultant, referring to the Ray Rice domestic violence case

designers and merchants know the price a new product will ultimately bear In the market, so they can forecast margins and possibly eliminate a product, which would otherwise need to be marked down. It is fast and scalable: retailers get results in 24-72 hours and can test thousands of products per week. It Is also fun, as we Use online consumer games to collect input. Most importantly, It Is accurate. We Use predictive analytic models, which filter and weight the data. In a number of situations, our retail partners have doubled their number of winning products. The system continues to learn and get smarter. Eleven percent of products we test could bear a higher price without slowing down the "velocity" Or sellthrough of the product (the percentage

of a product that is actually sold). With one in10 products being underpriced, this is an enormous missed opportunity. What kind of insights have you learned? We just ran our analytics on the next wave of wearable technology devices. One interesting finding was that fitness wristbands are expected to do very well in the Midwest, indicating that a mainstream market may be developing. Also, we found that women are willing to pay more than men for most wearable tech devices. This can help a manufacturer or retailer focus its feature set and target its marketing toward the right audience. Interviewed byAnne D'Innocenzio Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, September 12, 2014

+

I6,98~.5I

N ASDaa ~ 4,567.60

1 53 Q

"'"' + - 22.1 1,985.54

RUSSELL20DO I,I60.6I

N

I

+ -228.89

21,041.43


E6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

UNDAY D

an

R

i ~ 00

no

Parasitic load issue

fixable byinspection

By Barry Spyker The Miami Herald

By Brad Bergholdt

Admittedly, the wife w as

• I bought a brand new six weeks while parked to be• 2010 Hyundai Tuc- come a problem. Perhaps it's son. Since it was new, if I do occurring intermittently or not run the car every day, doesn't reappear right away the battery goes dead in after a battery disconnection/ about a week. The Hyund- reconnection. A clamp-on ai garage has tried several ammeter is less accurate but things to fix it. They cannot would allow more convenient/ find the problem. Is there a frequent checks and eliminate common problem with this disconnection. cal'? This problem should be solv— Gabbie able, possibly by a different • Gabbie, your Tucson shop and/or with your own de• appears to be suffer- tective work. ing from what's called a parasitic load. Something, • I bought my 2013 Hyunsomewhere, is slowly steal• dai new, and soon a popi ng electricity f ro m t h e ping noise would occur after battery and converting it the car was driven and then

rolet Tahoe. She complained

every time she had to step up and into the cabin. She never likes to "hoist" herself up into

a vehicle. So there's your fair warning: If a big, full-size SUVone you could pull a house with — isn't what you seek, you're reading

REVIEW the wrong column. But if you want a full-size SUV that can haul that 30-

Q

foot boat — or a small house — and you want the kind of

interior refinement and technology usually found in luxury cars, then read on.

Already a dominant pres-

2015 Chevrolet Tahoe

this year with thunder. The engines have more horses — and advanced technology that squeezes out more miles per gallon. And it rides on an all-new platform derived from the Chevy Silverado pickup. All Tahoes are equipped with a 5.3-1iter V-8 that gen-

erates 356 horses and 383 tor q ue . A

smooth-shifting s i x -speed transmission sends power to the rear wheels or all four

with the four-wheel drive version getting a two-speed

Base price: $46,000 As tested: $71,375 Type: Full-sized SUV, four-wheel drive (with twowheel drIve option) Engine: 5.3-liter V-8 that generates 356 horses and 383 pound-feet of torque Mlleage:16 (2WD), 15 (4WD) mpg city, 23 (2WD), 22 (4WD)mpg highway

Those things are standard on the top-line LTZ, which also adds

this makes it difficult for

Tahoe. to accommodate both back Overall, the interior is sig- rows. A luxury package adds nificantly improved over the front parking sensors, powprevious generation. Refined, er-folding third row and blindluxurious even. spot monitoring with rear The materials have a rich

feel. Instruments are easy to see and read, and an optional 8-inch infotainment display offersclear graphics that can be changed to suit your tastes. Seats up front are comfort-

able and reasonably supportive. Leg room and head and shoulder space are plentifuL Eight-way power with lumbar

cross-traffi c alerts. 2 0 -inch w h eels

and Magnetic Ride Control suspension. ture is an alert if someone tries to steal the wheels, plus an interior motion sensor. De-

of aweek.

cent deal for $395. Other safety features in-

this big boy; looks bigger

Testing for a parasitic spending time beneath the car. load involves connecting a It sounds like you are describsensitive ammeter between ing a single pop, as opposed to the battery and vehicle, a repetitive ticking, which is typically by disconnecting the typical exhaust heat shield the negative cable. With all cooling-down noise. My hunch doors, rear hatch and hood would be a fuel tank-venting closed, and all electronic issue, which should not be of modules given a chance large concern but needs to to go to sleep (perhaps re- be identified and fixed. How quiring up to 30 minutes), about asking the Hyundai

even than its Yukon cousin.

the meter will indicate ei-

serve.

ther normal or excessive noise for you in another identibattery drain. All vehicles cal car? If they are unable to do burn a small quantity of so, I'd make Hyundai customer electricity — about 50 mil- service 800-633-5151 aware of liamps or so — to keep your displeasure.

An optional security fea-

ensures a comfortable ride.

Second row is good, too, and clude the usual ABS, frontside passengers there get overhead air bags and full-length side mpg city, 23 highway for the air conditioning vents and curtain air bags and traction Mileage is EPA-rated at 16

2WD; 15-22 for the 4WD. Al-

their own controls.

Third-row seats are tight though EPA figures often are generous, my figures were — i.e., no leg room or foot room — for average adults close with an empty truck. It won't always be empty, of and should be reserved mostcourse, and when time comes ly for the kids. But, frankly, to load up you'll have no trou- even with l i t tle ones back ble finding the space. there, you'll find a loss of rear brute when called upon, on New this year is a raised visibility. Chevy has made great the highway it i s well-be- floor behind the third-row strides in technology offerhaved. Its ride is smooth and seats to enable a flat cargo nearly as quiet as that of a lux- area when the third row is ings, too. Even the base Tahoe ury sedan. And Tahoe's elec- folded down. Yes, I said folded LS has rear parking sensors, tric-assisted power steering is down: Third-row seats no lon- remote engine start, rear-view camera, six-speaker sound surprisingly responsive. ger have to be removed. Bumps are managed nicely, Also, raising the floor didn't system with satellite radio and thanks to its Magnetic Ride subtract from cargo spac; Bluetooth phone and audio Control, an adaptive suspen- folded seats are now in a con- connectivity. sion system that adjusts the venient and secure storage Step up to the LT and get nine-speaker Bose sound, stiffness of the shocks within area beneaththe floor. milliseconds. And corners are handled without excitement or concern. A cceleration, t h ough, i s

With the t h ird ro w f o ld- power l i f t g a t e , s t andard Driver Alert package and ed, there is 51.5 cubic feet

of space; fold down the second-row seats and it expands

rear l o cking

somewhat sluggish. That is,

to 94 cubic feet. In most cases, that should be more than

are optional. A Luxury option package ($2,705) adds sunroof, navigation and a rear-entertainment s y stem

the acceleratorseems to hes-

itate a brief moment before enough. But know that this powering up. is a bit less than the previous

pening shortly after I start the

the charging system to re- car. Service says if it gets loudplenish energy lost continu- er to let them know. I just want ously by the demon — and I to be sure it is safe. — Georgia McMarlin could see how things might go downhill over the course • This is a tough one with-

gearing. Maximum tow rating for pounds; 8,400 for the fourwheel. All Tahoes are prewired for towing and get a 2-inch receiver hitch. Optional is a MAX Trailering package that gets its own gearing and trailer brake controller. Although the Tahoe is a

parked for about two to five

sound. The cause could be minutes. It came fromthe right something as simple as an rear of the car (exhaust manaccidentally activated car- ifold I am told) and sounded go lamp or as complicated like a gas can vacuum bubble. as a network module failing I've never owned a car that did to go to sleep, when the car this, and this is my third Hyunis parked. Your statement dai (unfortunately, also the one that you need to drive it I like the least). I have spoken every day confuses me a with the service department, bit. Do you drive only short and they say it is nothing to distanceseach day? If so, worry about, but now it is hap-

transfer case with low range the two-wheel drive is 8,600

into light, heat, motion or

Courtesy Chevrolet/ McClatchy-Tribune News Service

If a large, full-sized SUV Is what you seek, the 2015 Chevrolet Tahoe will not disappoint.

ence in the full-size SUV market, the Tahoe comes back

p ound-feet o f

module memories alive. This tiny drain might take five to

McClatchy-Trlbune News Service

not enamored by the beefy, tough, redesigned 2015 Chev-

and stability control. The sta-

bility includes trailer-sway control to help keep the boat behind you on the road. There is a lot of SUV with

If you're the type who thinks good things — and vehicles — come in big packages, the 2015 Chevy Tahoe is ready to

A

• out hearing the noise and

dealer folks to duplicate the

• •

d i fferential.

Second-row captain's chairs

Class A Office with Premium Finishes

Resolvingbrakerotor warping issues By Paul Brand Star Tribune(Minneapolis)

• I have a 2 005 Jeep • Grand Cherokee with 160,000 miles on it. The prob-

lem is with the brake rotors warping. Every time I've had the brakes worked on, they

start to pulsate again after a few thousand miles. Last

time, the dealer installed new pads and rotors, but the same thing happened. Are there certaintypes ofrotorsorpads I can use to prevent this?

A • primary causes of brake rotor warping — excessive • F irst, let's review t h e

heat or m a nufacturing de-

fect. It seems unlikely you and the many other Jeep owners who've complained about the

same problem would continually get faulty replacement rotors.

and rotors may not be able just cruise along at the speed to dissipate heat fast enough limit, allowing the brakes to during aggressive braking cool back to normal temperato prevent eventual warping. ture. This process "beds" the Better-quality r e placement brakes, making the pad and rotors and pads may help this rotor surfaces "happy" with type of issue. If a mechanical each other. Once properly or hydraulic issue is prevent- bedded, the b rakes should ing the brake proportioning perform well for their full servalve or rear brakes from vice life. doing their share, the front brakes can b e o v erworked • I need some advice for and overheated in "normal" • my daughter and her driving. husband. They bought a 2006 Sticky caliper pistons and/ Nissan 350Z — smart folks, or binding caliper slider pins 'cause they won't let me drive are aprimary cause of rotor it. There are no problems with warpage and uneven rotor it, but a headlight quit workwear. An often overlooked ing. The Nissan dealer wants causeforwarped rotors isim - $1,300 to replace it. Any comproper or uneven torque on ment or suggestions? This the wheel lugs. Always — ev- seems sortofexcessive. • I'd suggest that you offer ery single time — make sure the wheels are tightened in a • a much less expensive symmetrical order in stages fix in exchange for driving to the proper torque specifica- privileges! According to my

r

I

e

e

• e

e

e

A

Thus, focus on excess heat. If a driver consistently brakes tion. Similarly, rust or corrolate and hard fo r stops or sion between the hub face and drags the brakes while driv- rotor can lead to uneven brake ing, the heat buildup in the wear. rotors can eventually cause Remember, you will feel a vidistortion, uneven wear and bration in the pedal or steering warping. Always brake early wheel when rotors have much and brake lightly whenever more than two-thousandths of possible. And here's a little an inch of lateral run-out. tip: Once stopped for a light, A f i na l t h ought: Proper letthe car rolla footor so for- rotor and pad "bedding" or ward to move the pads off the break-in when new can sig"hot spot" on the rotor. During nificantly affect brake pera long stop, do this a couple of formance and life expectantimes — safely, of course. This cy. Here's how I do it: Find a reduces "heat soak" in the ro- lightly traveled 45- to 50-mph tors where one section is sig- road. With no vehicles behind nificantly hotter than the rest of the rotor.

ALLDATA automotive database, this Nissan is fitted with

xenon HID headlamps. Nissan service bulletin NTB10061A dated June 2010 sug-

gests that a failed headlamp bulb, about $180, or HID control unit, $400 to $500, is the

most likely cause of an inoperative headlight. Even with an hour or so of labor, that's a far

cry from $1,300 to replace the entire headlight assembly. There's a very good chance you can solve the problem, save them money and, most

important, end up with drivyou, accelerate to 45 mph, ing privileges! Remember, I'm then brake very firmly down an instructor for the Skip Bar-

Design, manufacturing and to rolling speed. Repeat this a mechanical issues can cer- few times until you smell the tainly contribute to warped tinge of brake heat or feel the rotors.Undersized calipers beginningofbrake fade.Then

ber Racing School — you'd have lots of fun learning how to properly drive that performance car!

r, i'rc

"'Contact Us today — this'won't last, long!

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

JOHN COSTA

IIe

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Nosa e aven

Yw

you missed President Obama's

Wednesday address, it's likely you have read or heard about his message.

ir

The United States, thepresident an-

4

nounced, will significantly increase its role in combating the Sunni extremist

A

group known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, commonly referred to as ISIS.

Obama said we will attackthem fromthe air where they are, induding their Syrian sanctuaries, organize the

support of our allies in Europe andthe Middle East, substantially train local ground forces to fight these fanatics

and dispatch American advisers to guide the effort. He also asked Congress for $500 million in funds and, in a policy switch on Thursday, told our military, according to The Washington Post,

to kill the ISIS leaders whereverthey are found. In one of the most foreboding as-

sertions, Obama said, "This is a core principle of mypresidency: If you threaten America, you will find no

The Bulletin file photo

Bend's Mirror Pond exists because of a dam on the Deschufss River. For years, local officials have discussed the pond's future, in part because sediment has been building up behind the dam and creating mud flats. The issue became more immediate when PacffiCorp, the utility that owns the dam, announced it planned to drcommfssfon it or transfer ownership. A committee of city and park district officials and members of the public was tas~ with deciding its future, and the panel is in negotiations to acquire the century-old structure or replace it. Other opinions have included scrapping the dam and letting the pondbecome a natural-flowing river.

safe haven." That is a mouthful fraught with

complicating questions, but it is the rightpolicy. And it should be supported.

8 S OLl

At times, the president is his own

worst enemy, ironically in the arena of his self-prodaimed expertise — framing and communicatingissues. W hether intended ornot,hehas

8

8 L1L 1 IB O

warbled a fecklessness or unserious-

ness about a deadly serious, deadly world. There was the "reset" with Putin and Russia, the"line inthe sand" with Syria and the characterization of ISIS — which now he says is our mortal enemy — as the"JV.e

Candidatesfor BendCity Council state their opinions

You cansense peoplemusing,"God forbid we should ever have to confront the varsity."

Consequently, he has given his

Editor'snote: The Bulletin editorial board asked the candidates running for three Bend City Council positions up for election in November two questions to help give voters a better idea of the differences among them. We asked candidatesto limit their responses to 100words. Here are their answers to the first question. Answers to the second question will follow next Sunday.

critics more I-told-you-so ammunition

thanthey can ever use. All of which pales to insignificance compared with what we confront

Question1: Should Mirror Pond be preserved, or what should happen to it?

today.And what we havetodogoing forward. That's where our focus should be.

Though the president might recoil

at the comparison, there is an eerie similaritybetween his policy and that

of President George W. Bush, who believed that we should deal with terrorists abroad rather then when they

gethere. Now that he has set the goal of "no

safe haven," the question of the day becomes, what do we do if this level of involvement fails?

Though scholars argue about his leeway under the War Powers Act,

Ron Boozeff:I love Mirror Pond. However, the Deschutes River isa thousand-year icon. The Deschutes River is beau-

tiful. Nature is presently taking down the dam. No charge. Literally, Bend wants its river back. I will not spend public

is a segment of our community that would like to see the dam removed and the pond returned to the river. I

Capelf

believe there is a compromise worthy of exploring that will allow the pond to remain, the dam removed, and the

Boozell

m oney to restore the dam that serves the pond. There are creative plans on the table. It's time for rational and frugal and

practical solutions.

river allowed to function more like a natural system. I be-

lieve this can be done without raising taxes but through public/private partnerships. In the end we all win with this approach.

Obama would be wise to secure a vote

on his policy — not just money from Congress. One thing is sure. The presidenthas created and captured a moment, just as Bush did

Casey Roats:I support preserving Mirror Pond, but not at any cost. If a cost-effective method of retaining that water level can be achieved, I'm in support. I would like to see provisions for fish passage incorporated into the design. Preserving the recreational amenities the pond affords for paddle-

Nathan Boddie, challenger:Mirror Pond is a jewel in the middle of Bend drawing residents and visitors alike

to its beauty and history. However, leaving things as they are is not an option. If we do nothing, the pond will fill in

on 9/ll, the anniversary of which

we markedthe day after Obama's address. Thursday, he received support from all shades of the political spectrum, including strong backing from Republican House Speaker John Boehner. On 9/ll Bush was equally cheered, but growing numbers deserted him as his wars dragged on.

Mark Capeff, incumbent:The City Council and the Park District Board, including me, voted unanimously to try to save Mirror Pond. That said, I understand there

Roats

boarding and floating is important. I'm confident solutions

can be found. Perhaps a public/private partnership is possible to share the expenses.

with sediment. Dredging to prevent this would cost taxBoddie

payers many millions and wouldn't fix the problem for long anyway. Most of all the taxpayers of Bend must not

Photo not provided

Richard Robertson:We would like to keep Mirror Pond the same, because it is a centerpiece of Bend.

assume the financial burden of the dam from its owner,

PacifiCorp. That would mean a catastrophic tax burden for our town. We would already have more details about

shouldbepreserved in some capacity.However,Idon'tbelieve

the project if my opponent hadn't tried to hide informa-

maintaining the dam as it currently exists is the best solution

tion from the public. I favor a hybrid approach working with the current owners to live up to their financial re-

economically or environmentally. Based on my education and career in collaborative water management, I am confident we

What will Obama do with this mo-

sponsibility and leaving Mirror Pond at about the same

can find a creative solution that preserves our iconic pond, in-

ment, and what will he do if the going gets reallytough, if our allies are more show than go'?

water level but perhaps with even more areas to float and enjoy.

Lisa Seafes:As a historic icon in Bend, I think Mirror Pond

Seafes

cludes fish passage and restoration of the river's ecology, and won't cost the city millions in continuing maintenance.

Will he lead his followers and the

Republicans to move beyond sequestration and renew investment in our

soldiers, who willbearthe flesh-andblood burden'? To pay for it, will he sacrifice investmentsin domesticprograms orask for new taxes'? And how do we handle

Scott Ramsay, incumbent:Mirror Pond is an iconic element in Bend's landscape and identiiy. I support any option that keeps

U.S. citizens who are with ISIS in the Mideast, or at home?

Mirror Pond with a water level that resembles what we have to-

Those questions summon a balance

day. I am flexible on the details that get us to thatpoint. Whether

only the great have struck in the past.

But one thingis certain. We are at war with a group that

lives on the subjugation and blood ofthe enslaved,them assacred and beheaded. No haven should be safe for them,

and the presidenthas made the right start. — John Costa is editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta@bendbulletin.com

Barb Campbell, challenger:After years of expensive kicking the silt-filled can down the road, I would support a hybrid with advantages for everyone. I envision a rock and earth structure that forms

we keep a dam, in substantially the form it exists in today, would

Ramsay

depend on the cost to the community and taxpayers when compared to other options presented, including dam removal, repair,

a pond preserving the character of our beautiful

ment with other elements, and who would be responsible for the financial impact of any or all of these options. Ultimately I

Drake Park and surrounding neighborhood, and allows the wildly popular floating the river and the ColoradoDam Safe Passage project upstream. I want this hybrid to create improved fish habitat by allowing for their safe passage and reducing water

would prefer a mixed-use solution that maintains similar water

temperature, and to include riverbank and riparian

levels in thepond, combined with a lower section of free-flowing water over rock obstructions, but I am not yet convinced we can get there with fiscal sense applied. My hope would be to form a diverse shared-cost partnership with Bend Park & Recreation,

area restoration. Having the unsightly and defunct dam and pow-

PaciTic Power, private funds and the city of Bend.

in town.

reconstruction of the habitat, long-term maintenance, or replace-

Campbell

erhouse out of the way could lead to redevelopment

of an area that should be one of the most beautiful


F2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

o ie arram or commissioner

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eschutes County should not be permitted to languish when it should surge. The Deschutes County

ranaes <@@

Commission does not have the power to ordain the outcome, but it can set the right tone. The right leadership can propel the county forward. That is why we endorse Jodie Barram, a Democrat, for Deschutes County commissioner. Incumbent Tony DeBone, a Republican, isaffableand personable. Incumbency,though, should never be a guarantee of re-election. The question is what did DeBone accomplish and what can he bring to another term? When we asked him about that, he talked about working as part of a team with the other commissioners. DeBone, 47, spoke with pride about how when he walks through county departments people are smiling. Morale, he says, is good. His vision of his futLue on the commission was more of the same. But watching him on the county commission is in many cases watching him watch what the other two commissioners do. We want more from a leader. Watching Barram, 41, is watching Barram lead. She has led as deputy mayor on the Bend City Council. No one person among the seven on the council can claim sole credit for any decision, but she does guide it to decisions. She does ask incisive questions. She does bind together the input from her colleagues and recommend a way for the council to move forward. On the city of Bend's water project, she did listen to the heartfelt objections but then stuck to her policy decision of maintaining

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Bend's dual-source water supply. Barram alsocalls for one ofthe most important changes that should happen in governance in Deschutes County. She wants more representation for a growing county to better serve its diversity of communities. She would like to see the commission grow in size to perhaps five members. And Barram would like to see the commission elections be nonpartisan. Different philosophies of government may continue to guide the decisions of commissioners, but there's no need to enhance partisanship on the commission by keepingthe elections partisan.

VJ

M 1Vickel's Worth Support Buehler for representative

We do not agree with Barram about everything. For instance, she would support requiring all members of a countyunion topay for representation if that's what a majority of the eligible membership wanted. We believe no county employee shouldbe forced to pay forrepresentation that he or she doesn't want. Our disagreements are no reason not toendorse her leadership and potential over DeBone and the third candidate in the race, Jack Stillwell, 69, a Libertarian from La Pine. With the coming of Oregon State U niversity-Cascades, now is t h e time to capitalize on the impressive human talent pool drawn here by the naturalbeauty. Deschutes County need more leaders like Barram. Barram is strongly endorsed.

I'm supporting Dr. Knute Buehler forstate representative because he

he would be isolated and unable to live independently. He controls the device with his eyes. Other patients who depend on the devices indude those with cerebral palsy, Rett syndrome, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's disease.

The extra costs for set-up and Internet services are paid by the patients, but the devices must have the capacityto make the connections. The likely issue is whether the connectivity can b e c onsidered medically necessary. One advocate said he thinks CMS may be concerned by the increasing sophistication of the devices, worrying the public may think they're handing out computers. The controversy has generated attention from Congress, with CMS extending its review of SGD devices to allow more time to address concerns. A final decision must consider the full impact of any ruling — on Asbury uses his SGD to access patients and on the taxpayers'billemail, control his environment and and effectively justify any change in manage his health care. Without it, what hasbeen commonpractice.

Bend

is the best candidate to advance

public policies that will help local students receive a world-class

Redmond

Conservative right wing The modernmidden takes over GOP As a cohort in this year's De-

I'm a registered Republican and My family has two students in a lifelong Oregonian, as were my Bend-La Pine Schools and I've seen parents. My family was proud to firsthand how lucky we are to have be Republican, specifically, modsuch greatteachers and adminis- erate Republicans, in the spirit of trators. That doesn't just happen. It Mark Hatfield, Tom McCall, Bob education.

schutes County College, I recently had the privilege to visit and learn about the Knott Landfill. I was very

favorably impressed. My recollection from trips to "the dump" as a child is of trash-stmvn, stinky and generally Packwood, Norma Paulus and Vic disgusting sacrificial lands that were A tiyeh. Unfortunately, the u l t r a swarmedbygulls. conservatives now calling the shots After recent trips to Nepal, which

requires excellent management, the

CMS mustjustify any cbange on speech-generating devices A recent notice from the Centers for Medicare8 Medicaid Services has patients worried they may lose access to technology that allows them to communicate when they've lost the abilityto speak. Advocates say the CMS wouldn't save money by enforcing the notice. If CMS has agood reason for the action, it hasn't made it clear, and it should do so promptly. The issue involves speech-generating devices, or SGDs, used by patients such as Bend resident Glenn Asbury, who has lost most movement to the disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, known as ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease. As Bulletin reporter Tara Bannow wrote Thursday, CMS sent a notice this year saying it would not pay for devices that generate speech if they also serve other purposes, such as accessing email or controlling things such as lights or doors. A CMS spokesman said it's not a change, even though patients say it's news to them.

tinue to advocate for COCC and the it appears the party leaders don't OSU-Cascades campus expansion. give a rip. Bill Robie Mike Schiel

leadership of elected officials who appropriate the money, and taxpayers who support bond measures in the party have left little room for has neither the laws nor the inframe in "their" party. I doubt if any structure to even begin to adequatefunding capital improvements. Buehler's commitment to all lev- of the outstanding Oregon leaders ly address garbage disposal, I came els of education is clear. He serves listed above could win their paraway extremely grateful for both in on the Bend-La Pine School Board ty's primary in this current nar- America. However, that appreciaBudget Committee and the Ford row-minded environment. tion was abstract until I had a tour of Family Foundation, which supWhen those hardcore conser- Knott Landfill. ports Stand for Children. He also vative and mean-spirited voices There I had a taste of the magnihas served on the OSU-Cascades attacked the late Ben Westlund, tude and complexity of the task of board. calling him a RINO (Republican In safely disposing of our community's We have excellent schools in Name Only) for working with Dem- waste. I was struckbyhowlittletrash Bend and B u ehler u n derstands ocratsto govern rather than shove was exposed at the time of our visit, that we can make them into worldultra right-wing positions down the and that there was little to no odor. class schools that become a model throats of all Oregonians, his efforts Also noteworthy is the prodigious for our state. He will work to ensure that we continue to attract

were met w ith

t hat sophomoric, effort made to recycle and compost, and that safety of staff and patrons is

name-calling cheap shot. I'm embarand employ high quality teachers; rassed that I didn't speak out then. that parents have a variety of opThese days I am disgusted and tions to meet their child's individual fed up with the incessant negative needs; that we support home envi- ads attacking Sen. Jeff Merkley ronments to ensure kids come to and paid for by the Koch brothers. school each day ready and able to In fact, those ads are leading me learn; and that higher education is to take the exact opposite action of not only available, it is also afford-

their intention. If our Republican

clearly a high priority. I would like to thank the public servants who work at the landfill, and

who ensure that we as a community are able to safely and hygienically dispose of the waste that we produce. In particular, I would like to call out the director of the Department of

able for every high school graduate. leaders in Oregon and nationally Solid Waste, Timm Schimke. As we Buehler will work closely with said no to these despicable ads and go about our daily lives, and produce our l ocal

t e achers, administra- held fast to that position, I think

tors, school board members and students to champion stronger funding for schools and to make thoughtful reforms to boost student achievement. And, he'll con-

trash in the process, I'm grateful that

they could prevail. And, if not, at he is watching out for us and for futhe very least, they should vocifer- turegenerations. Thanks, Timm, and ously denounce these super slick all the Knott Landfill crew. and deceptive ads. That hasn't hapGail Snyder pened and sadly, it won't because Bend

Letters policy

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We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phone number and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereand those appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to oneletter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

T imetoputt e a u ts in c arge o marijuana By Inge Fryklund Today in Oregon, kids are buying readily available marijuana from unknown, unregulated sources. The supply chain may go all the way back to some Mexican cartel, and it's guaranteed that all the profits will go to

over and over again and expecting dif-

criminals. No one knows the potency

availableand in demand. We have left all decisions about source, distribution, sale, potency and purity up to criminals. Instead of proactivelyworkingto prevent or reduceproblems with

or purity of the substance being sold, or how much pesticide contamination there might be. People undoubtedly are driving while high — as they do with alcohol — but unlike with labeled

With

our

cu r r ent e n force- responsible adults and elected repre-

ment-based system, the responsible adults in the community have abdicat-

ed their responsibility to control marijuana, a substance that is both widely

the distribution and sale of marijua-

na, we have been reactive, getting inof knowing what potency they have volved only after the sales to kids have ingested before getting behind the alreadyoccurred when police make wheel. arrestsfor drug off enses.We spend Clearly, marijuana is a problematic our tax dollars on police, prosecution substance — like alcohol, cigarettes and prisons. Convictions in turn lead and prescription drugs — with posi- to broken families and reduced emtives and negatives. Prohibition has ployability, cycling defendants back not addressed these negatives, let into the drug economy. We all bear the alone solved them. As Albert Einstein resultingsocial costs. said, insanity"is doing the same thing How to change the equation so that beer or wine, consumers have no way

IN MY VIEW

ferentresults." sentatives can regulate and control

marijuana? Something that is illegal cannot be managed. Has any public official ever said, "We need to do a better job of managing armed robbery?" It sounds silly. Only if something is legal is it possible for the community to manage and control it. During the prohibition of alcohol (1920-1933), drinking didn't stop and

Has any public official ever said, "We need to do a better job of managing armed robbery?" It sounds silly. Only tf something ts legal is it possible for the community to manage and control t t. The day Prohibition was repealed, Consumers know exactly what they state alcohol control commissions are getting. No seller wants to risk loscould regulate purity, require labeling, ing his license by selling to minors. license distributors and sellers, and

It is time to take on board the les-

enact and enforce penalties for selling to minors. Beer distributors with

sons of the prohibition of alcohol. Take decisions about potency, purity, dis-

there weretremendous downsides to

contract disputes filed cases in court

tribution and sale out of the hands of

relying on the criminal justice system to control alcohol. Supply was in the hands of criminals, and any dealer prosecuted was simply replaced by another. Remember Al Capone? And gangs fighting over turf? There was no quality control, and hundreds of people died of drinking adulterated alcohol.

instead of shooting each other. When was the last time Bud Light and Coors Light engaged in a shootout over store shelfspace'? We see the role of alcohol regulation at every one of Oregon's liquor stores, w ineries and microbreweries.Every beer is labeled in terms of alcohol by volume (ABV).

criminals and put these decisions in the hands of responsible adults. Let's

use Oregon's regulatory powers to manage marijuanaproactively. Measure 91 establishes that regulatory framework Vote Yes on 91. — IngeFryklund isaspeakerforLaw Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP). She livesin Bend.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

Nagivating t e maze in Mi e East ry figuring out the maze of

T

enemies, allies and neutrals in the Middle East. In 2012, the Obama administra-

tion was on the verge of bombing the forces of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. For a few weeks he was public enemy No. 1 because he had used chemical weapons on his own people and because he was responsible for many of the deaths in the Syr-

ian civil war, with a casualty count that is now close to 200,000. After Obama's red lines turned

pink, we forgot about Syria. Then the Islamic State showed up with beheadings, crucifixions, rapes and mass murders through a huge swath of Iraq and Syria. Now the United States is bomb-

ing the Islamic State. Sometimes Obama says that he is still seeking a strategy against the jihadist group. Sometimes he wants to reduce it to a manageableproblem. And sometimes he says that he wants to de-

grade or even destroy it. The Islamic State is still trying to overthrow Assad. If the Obama

administration is now bombing the Islamic State, is it then helping As-

sad? Or when America did not bomb Assad, did it help the Islamic State'? Which of the two should Obama bomb — or both, or neither?

Iran is steadily on the way to acquiring a nuclear bomb. Yet for now it is arming the Kurds, dependable U.S. allies in the region who are

VICTOR

DAVIS HANSON

ed adversary, Israel. Both Sunni mon- men before it was for them, and for archies and the Jewish state in near Islamists before it was against them. President Obama and 'Ibrkish lockstep oppose the radical Iran/Syria/Hezbollah/Muslim Brotherhood/ Prime Minister Tayyip Recep ErdoHamas axis. ganwere said to have a special friendBut don't look for understandable ship. But based on what? Erdogan is Shiite-Sunni Muslim fault lines. In strangling democracy in Turkey. He this anti-Saudi alliance, the Iranians is a big supporter of Hamas and at

fighting for their lives against the Islamic State and need American help. As Iran aids the Kurds, Syrians and Hezbollah are Shiites. Yet their and Iraqis in the battle against the allies, the Muslim Brotherhood and evil Islamic State, is Tehran becom- Hamas, are Sunnis. The Syrian goving a friend, enemy or neither? Will ernment is neither, being Alawite. Iran's temporary help mean that it They all say they are against the will delay or hasten its efforts to get Sunni extremist Islamic State. So if a bomb? Just as Iran sent help to the they are enemies of the Sunni monKurds, it missed yet another U.N. archies and enemies of the Islamic deadline to come clean on nuclear State, is the Islamic State then a friend enrichment. to these Gulf shiekdoms? Hamas just lost a war in Gaza Then there is Qatar, a Sunni Gulf against Israel. Then it began exe- monarchy at odds with all the other cuting and maiming a number of its neighboring Sunni monarchies. It own people, some of them affiliated is sort of friendly with the Iranians, with Fatah, the ruling clique of the Muslim Brotherhood, Hezbollah and Palestinian Authority. During the Hamas — all adversaries of the U.S. war, Mahmoud Abbas, president of Why, then, is Qatar the host of CENTthe Palestinian state, stayed neutral COM, the biggest American military and called for calm. Did he wish base in the entire Middle East? Israel to destroy his rival, Hamas? Is Egypt any simpler'? During the Or did he wish Hamas to hurt his Arab Spring, the Obama administration helped to ease former president archenemy, Israel? Both? Neither? What about the Gulf sheikdoms? and kleptocrat Hosni Mubarak out In the old days, America was enraged of power. Then it supported both the that some of the Saudis slyly funneled democratic elections and the radical cash to al-Qaida and yet relieved that Muslim Brotherhood that won them. the Saudigovernment was deemed Later, the administration said little moderate and pro-Western. But as when a military junta displaced the Iran gets doser to its nuclear holy radical Muslim Brotherhood, which grail, the Gulf kingdoms now seem to was subverting the new constitution. be in a de facto alliance with their hat- America was against military strong-

times a fan of Iran. A NATO ally, Ibr-

key recently refused to let U.S. rescue

East except Israel. Yet the Obama

to Brandon Busteed, the executive di-

administration has grown ever more distant from the Jewish state over the

two things stand out. Successful stu-

— m Syrta.

Ostensibly, America supports moderate pro-Western consensual governments that protect human rights

and hold elections, or at least do not

last six years. What is the U.S. to do? Leave the Middle East alone, allowing terrorists

to build a petrol-fueled staging base for another 9/11'? About the best choice is to support

without qualification the only two pro-American an d

c o n stitutional

groups in the Middle East, the Israelis and Kurds. Otherwise, in such a tribal quagmire, apparently there are only transitory interests that come and go. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

the existing balance. As a result,

potentially substantial savings, and

Bloomberg News

they could make reasonable judgments about which homeowners were unable to refinance (because of their economic circumstances)

yet 84 percent of recipients didn't

and which would benefit from do-

33 percent planned to call the loan officer but never did so.

government adopted a policy that cost American homeowners $5.4 billion. Or that the nation's banks

C

/z

adopted a policy that had exactly

ing so. Of the many who stood to save

the same effect. You'd probably be

tens of thousands of dollars by re-

outraged. Fortunately, that didn't quite happen, but something similar did. Whether or not it's out-

rageous, we should do something about it. For manypeople,buying a home is the most i m portant f i nancial

decision they ever make. Interest rates rise and fall, and when they

fall, many homeowners have an opportunity to refinance and to save a lot of money. From 2010 to 2012,

rates dropped significantly. In late 2012, they reached an all-time low, falling well below 4 percent. Someone whose original loan came with a rate of 6.5 percent could, by refi-

nancing, save more than $100,000 over the life of the loan. The standard economic assumption is that homeowners consider

such benefits and make rational decisions about whether and when to refinance. But behavioral econo-

Some procrastinate, t h i n king

respond. A follow-up survey found that 25 percent of the nonresponders didn't even open the letter, and Obviously, we can't blame banks

for people'spoor decisi ons. Yet financing, 20 percent sat on their there are many ways that banks hands. Nationwide, the research- could help to promote refinancing ers concluded from these findings, — for instance by making it easier Americans mortgage-holders who or even automatic (when rates deneglected to refinance passed up cline by a certain amount), or by a total of $5.4 billion in savingsproviding clear, simple, accessible and that is a conservative estimate. information. And with approprithat they will refinance tomorrow What happened to that 20 per- ate incentives, government policy — and tomorrow never comes. cent bylate December 2012, when could encourage banks to do these Some focus on the upfront expense interest rates bottomed out'? Two in things. of refinancing and the inconve- five of them had still neglected to If one of our goals is to help strugnience of the process, discount- refinance, even though their poten- gling homeowners, we could do a ing the long-term economic gains. tial savings grew. great deal, certainly in the future (This is known as "present bias.") The homeowners who failed to but even now, by encouraging and Anecdotal evidence supports this refinance tended to be th e ones simplifying refinancing. A number speculation, but there has been a with relatively less wealth and of homeowners continue to have lack of systemic research. less education. In other words, mortgages with rates significantly Until now. Economists Benjamin the people most in need of saving above those now available (which Keys and Devin Pope of the Univer- money were the least likely to do recently dropped to a low for the sity of Chicago, along with Jaren so. It follows that poor refinanc- year). And the new research raisPope of Brigham Young University, ing decisions exacerbate economic es an intriguing question: In what studied a nationally representative inequality. other contexts are low take-up rates sample of about 1 million residenKeys and his colleagues went leading people to leave a lot of montial mortgages that were active in a step further. Working w it h a ey on the table'? — Cass Sunstein, the former December 2010. Keys and his col- nonprofit corporation, they wrote

mists suspect this isn't what really happens — that lots of people fail to leagues were able to obtain a lot refinance even when they stand to of information about these loans, save many thousands of dollars. including the interest rate, the payment history, any second liens and

letters to mortgage holders in low-

er-income communities offering to refinance their loans at a lower rate. These preapproved offers promised

It takes a mentor

oppress their own. But there are almost no such nations in the Middle

cue mission of American hostages — two of them eventually beheaded

By Cass Sunsteln Suppose you learned that during

FRIEDMAN

With millions of students returning to school, this is a good time to review the intriguing results of some research that Gallup did over the past year, exploring the linkages between education and long-term success in the workplace. That is: What are the things that happen at a college or technical school that, more than anything else, produce "engaged" employees on a fulfilling career track'? According

teams use its territory to stage a res-

Not refinancing meant missed billions the recent recession the national

THOMAS

administrator of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, is a professor at Harvard Law School and a Bloomberg columnist.

Obamacare's premiums are a magical mystery

rector of Gallup's education division, dents had one or more teachers who were mentors and took a real interest in their aspirations, and they had an

internship related to what they were learning in school. "We think it's a big deal" where we go to college, Busteed explained to me. "But we found no difference in terms of type of institution you went

to ... in long-term outcomes. How you got your college education mattered most."

Graduates who told Gallup that they had a professor or professors "who cared about them as a person — or had a mentor ... and/or had an internship where they applied what they were learning — were twice as likely to be engaged with their work and thriving in their overall well-being," Busteed said. Alas, though, 22 percent of college graduates surveyed said they had such a mentor, and 29 percent had an internship where they applied what they were learning. Gallup's data were compiled from polls of parents of fifth- through 12th-graders, business leaders and interviews with teachers, superinten-

dents, college presidents, principals, collegegraduates,Americans ages 18 to 34 and students in grades 5 through 12. All told, "We collected the voices of close to 1 million Americans in

the past year alone," said Busteed, who added that he found the results "alarming" — not only because too few students are getting exposed to the most important drivers of workplace engagement but because there is also a huge disconnect in perceptions of the problem. Busteed said that 96 percent of the

college provosts Gallup surveyed believed their schools were successfully

preparing young people for the workplace. "When you ask recent college grads in the workforce whether they

felt prepared, only 14 percent say'yes,' " he added. And then when you ask business leaders whether they're get-

ting enough college graduates with the skills they need, "only 11 percent strongly agree." Conduded Busteed: "This not just a skills gap. It is an understanding gap." This comes at a time our country

faces creative destruction on steroids thanks tothe dynamism of technology and growing evidence that climbing the ladderofjob successrequiresconstant learning and relearning. Some help may be on the way from Washington. Last year, President Barack Obama quietly asked Vice PresidentJoe Biden to oversee an

overhaul of the government's education-to-workprograms. As they dived into the problem, said

By Megan McArdle Bloomberg News

ast week, we finally learned the prices for the new benchmark plans for Obamacare. The good news: Prices are falling slightly. The bad news: Contrary

L

to optimistic early r eports, that

doesn't mean that everyone's costs are falling; consumers will have to be attentive to make sure that their

costs don't go up. The worse news: We won't actually know what effect the Affordable Care Act is having

on insurance prices until 2017, when a bunch of temporary subsidies for insurers expire.

The important thing to keep in mind is that when the "benchmark rate" goes down, that doesn't mean

istration has planned to auto-renew and likely now eager to increase anyone who doesn't go onto the exm arketshare,decreased their rates changesand selecta new plan.Givand has become the 2015 baseline en these realities, consumers would plan. The second company was be foolish to take that option; they able to decrease their rates without need to go onto the exchanges and much fear because the Obamacare select a new plan, or at least decide '3Rs' reinsurance scheme virtual- whether they're willing to pay more ly protects them from any material for what they have. losses." What about the rest of us, who are So, this headline about the base- watching but not buying? Should line plans decreasing their rates we take cheer from this news? in so many markets is more about Actually, I don't think we know the carriers who sold the most in much of anything yet. No, that's not the first year increasing their rates quite right — we know that rates while the plans that sold very little aren't rising disastrously this year, business, and able to fall back on the which is great. But I don't think we Obamacare reinsurance scheme, can draw conclusions about the fucut their rates in a no-lose attempt to ture path of insurance prices, for gain business. two reasons. ny, who didn't write much business

that the cost of the old benchmark plan has fallen. It just means that

OK, why does that matter? That's market competition for you. whatever plan i s n o w t h e s e cYes, but. We don't know what ond-cheapest "silver" plan on the those new plans look like. Are the exchanges is cheaper than whatever networks narrow? How easy will it was the second-cheapest plan last be to get an appointment for a docyear. Industry expert Bob Laszews- tor? And remember thatthe benchki writes: mark plans are used to calculate the "The new 2015 Silver baseline subsidies, which means the subsi-

The first is that these prices are

not being set based on much claims

various reinsurance provisions in Obamacare. Those provisions ex-

pire in 2016, and if a Republican takes the White House that year, insurers can also probably forget about getting favorable regulatory rulings. Right now, it's just not very risky to write a policy that loses a bunch of money, because your losses are capped at a few percent. Starting in 2017, all that changes. Insurers are going to need to price policies with the expectation of making money and the fear of losing it. What we want to know is what

happens when they're actually in a competitive market. I can tell a story where the exchanges create trans-

parency and competitive pressure that drive prices down; I can tell a story where the subsidies and var-

ious regulations drive prices even panies began setting these rates just higher. I can tell a story where the a few months after open enrollment insurers conclude that this m arclosed, and because so many people ket isn't worth the tsuris and leave bought in the last few weeks, that it to Blue Cross/Blue Shield, with means they had little meaningful all sorts of fascinating results. We data. As Laszewski points out, com-

idea of what their expenses would

won't know which story is true until

be. The companies that are coming 2017 or beyond. So if you're planning to buy the than the 2014 Silver baseline plan. is right, and the costs of the most in are looking to gain market share, benchmark silver plan this year, But that is almost always because popular plans are rising substantial- not make a profit. the insurance company that held ly while the cost of undersubscribed The other reason that we cannot whatever it is, you can safely rethat slot in 2014, and almost always plans is falling, that means that peo- learn much from these data is that joice. Everyone else should exercise got the largest share of business, ple who want to stick with their old right now, and for the next year, caution. — Megan McArdle is a Bloomberg View significantly increased their rates plans may have to pay substantially insurers are operating under the for 2015. more as the subsidy falls while their expectation of large subsidies from columnist who writes on economics, "Then another insurance compa- premium rises. The Obama admin- the Obama administration via the business and public policy. plan may have alower premium

dies are going down. If Laszewski

Byron Auguste, a White House deputy national economic adviser, they found thatthe success stories shared

a lot of the same attributes that Gallup found to be differentiating. The key now is to scale those in-

sights. The Labor Deparlment has awarded $1.5 billion in the last three

years to more than 700 community colleges to develop employer-validated training programs for new careers such as natural gas field work and cybersecurity. This month, another $500 million

is to be awarded as part of a kind of race-to-the-top for whoever can build the best community college-industry group partnerships where new industries are finding gaps in the kind of workers they need.

Employers used to take generalists and train them into specialists for their industry. But fewer employers want to

dothat todayor can affordtoin aglobally competitive economy, especially when they fear they'll train someone

who will then leave for a competitor. So everyone wants employees out of college or technical schools who are as ready to plug and play as possible. That's why government has a role in fosteringmore and more employer-educator partnerships — this is the new, new thing — which businesses, small and large, can benefit from, as well as all would-be employees. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

aesu en's romisin u ure com ee WI ar ersi e "The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace: A Brilliant Young Man Who Left Newark for the Ivy League" by Jeff Hobbs (Scribner, 406pages., $27) By Janet IIIiaslin New York Times News Service

Jeff Hobbs and Robert Peace were roommates throughout their four years

at Yale, class of 2002. Their friendship got off to a slightly bumpy start. Hobbs, a wealthy, second-generation Yalie who grew up in a house with a pool, had the impression that his future roommate

came from a similar background, perhaps because Rob Peace had gone to a prep school and played water polo. But Rob was ablackkid from a ghetto called IHtown, just outside Newark, New Jer-

sey. And when they compared their fathers'occupations,Jeffsaid "surgeon." Rob said "inmate," tactfully leaving out "convicted murderer." Rob started out in this world with no

advantages except for good looks, tremendous intelligence, a c harismatic

father and a tirelessly self-sacriTicing mother, Jackie,wh o devoted every day of her life to trying to give her son a better one. In 'The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace," a haunting work of nonfiction with a title that is all too self-ex-

planatory, Hobbs movingly captures Jackie Peace's unwavering devotion to

herboy. Thiswasnotacaseof athwartedadult trying to fulfill her dreams through her child. Jackie was strong-willed to begin with, and she knew enough not to marry Skeet Douglas, Rob's father. Skeet

trafficked in drugs, and Jackie knew it would be damaging to have her son grow up in that atmosphere. But when

Skeet went to prison for the gruesome murders of two women — convicted by evidence that seemed incondusive at

best, even to the judge — she made sure was alien to him, and he made it more so Hobbs, who kept in touch but didn't stay Rob and Skeet saw each other weekly. by wearingdreadlocks and ame nacing dose enough to know much about his Depriving aboyofhis father wouldhave nylon cap, a look about as anti-prep as p ostcollege experiences ~ d, s i m hurt himbadly, too. he could get. He also began commuting ply lays out the circumstantial evidence This book is full of unanswerable to Newark to buy marijuana to sell on of what began to happen. Piecingtogether interviews with Jackquestions about why Rob Peace's life campus and spent a good part of his coltook the path it did, lege career stoned ie, other relatives and the many, many and whether anyand partying. Still, friends of the gregarious Rob, Hobbs thing could have he had a real love writes in a forthright but not florid way T HE S H O R T A N D been done to save for subjects such about a heartbreaking story. He caphim. He was a suT RA G I C L I F E as molecular bio- tures the ways in which doors began pernova at an early physics and bio- to dose for Rob and making money O F ROB ERT P E AC E chemistry. A friend became lessa pastime than an urgent age, already nicknamed "the profesfrom Newark also obsession. When Rob got a job with sor" as a 3-year-old at Yale wondered Continental Airlines that brought him in day care. When why Rob stayed dose to the baggage-handling process, Jackie found out so quiet about his put him on a friendly basis with securiwhat public school academic success ty personnel and let him fly standby at was like in E ast but made so much off hours, he was in a perfect posNon Orange, New Jernoise about his to start smuggling in a major way. Yet sey, where they drug exploits. those Yale friends who knew he worked lived, she scrimped As a member of for Continental just assumed he was sitenough to get him Elihu, one of Yale's tingbehind a desk somewhere. secret s o c ieties, Had Rob re-entered a comfort zone, a Catholic school Roh shocked his the one he had known Skeet to inhabit education. He was such a br i l l iant fellow members when he was a little boy? (Rob was only student, and such just before college 7 when Skeet was incarcerated from an exemplar of ended. He told a the family) Had he lost confidence in four-hour version himself for some other reason? Had the fine character, that Charles Cawley, of his father's ter- drugs become such a temptation that a wealthy banker who heard his key- rible story, which was just one big thing they sapped him of all ambition? Hobbs note address as a high school senior, about Rob that none of them had ever does a fascinating job of raising these approached him to say, "You can go to known. They left school realizing what questions, even though he cannot possian unknown quantity he was and hav- bly answer them. college wherever you want." Rob was never so far gone that he forRob badly wanted to go to Johns Hop- ing no idea what kind of future plans he kins. But his mother, who worked in a had. He spoke vaguely about wanting to got to repay his debt to Jackie; he took hospital cafeteria, was penalized and go to Rio de Janeiro, but what kind of ca- care of his elderly grandparents after he made toworklate for wearingthe wrong reer goal was that'? What none of them left college, so that she could have some .On theotherhand,when he drove hairnet on the daythat applications were realizedwas thathe had amassed more relief due. She got to the post office 10 minutes than $100,000 in drug money during past Jackie's house at night and saw that another man in the family was there to after midnight, missed Johns Hopkins' those college years. He did go to Rio and enjoyed its sunny watch over her, his car didn't stop. He deadline, and destined her boy to go to Yale instead. hedonism for a while. But the arc of his just checked on her and drove away. Would the choice of school have made lifehad changed course,andhe knew it. Shame? Fear'? Other business to attend any diff erence?Maybe: Rob liked Johns His days as a rising star were over. Now, to'? That other business was very danHopkins' Baltimore location, because in the absence of another bright idea, gerous. It's the reason he'll never be it felt more like home. The Yale campus he had nowhere to go but down. And able to explain.

'The Half HasNever BeenTold' looks at theeconomicsot slavery "The Half Has Never Bee Told: Slaveryand the Making of American Capitalism" by Edward E. Baptist (Basic, 528 pages., $35)

all. Plantations ("slave labor camps," he calls them) were

19th century fueled a land grab For example,he argues that the United States had a "near-monopoly" in the cotton trade ries that would become Missis- by 1820, even though his own sippi, Alabama and Louisiana). charts show that the U.S. share To pick all that cotton, land- of global cotton production was owners in the old southwest then less than 30 percent. purchased and t r a nsported These are the understandlargenumbers of slaves from able, minor excesses and errors Virginia and Maryland, Bap- of a writer who feels compelled tist writes. Chained together in to shed lightonamassive crime "coffles," groups of newly pur- of history. Eventually, the overchased slaves walked hundreds whelming power of the stories of miles to their new workplac- that Baptist recounts and the es. These forced marches were plantation-level statistics he's a common sight in the first half compiled give his book the of the 19th century. Baptist's power of truth and revelation. Most convincingly, Baptist description of them is harrowing andbased on testimonies of paints a picture of the plantation as a kind of factory that slaves themselves. Word quicklyspread among used "torture" and a speed-up the slaves that punishing "pushing" system to increase working conditions awaited the amount of cotton slaves them, Baptist writes. "A man picked. "Every single day, calor woman who discovered he ibrated pain, regular as a turnwas being taken south might ing gear,challenged enslaved be desperate enough to do any- people toexceed the previous thing," Baptist writes. "Some day's gains inproduction," Bapran. Some fought like tigers. tist writes. Between 1820 and William Grimes tried to break 1860, the productivity of cotton-pickers doubled. his own leg with an axe." Baptist writes also of religion Perhaps the most important contribution of "The Half and the impact of slavery and Has Never Been Told" to the the southwestern cotton boom on American politics, touchliterature on slavery is Baptist's ability to convey the size ing on everything from music

run with the ruthless efficien-

and scope of the slave econo-

By Hector Tobar Los Angeles Times

The image of the genteel, benevolent Southern slave owner was the creation of early 20th

century artists and writers such as DW. Griffith and Mar-

garet Mitchell. Life on the antebellum plantation, they led us to believe, was as languid as a slow-moving river winding through magnolia trees. At about the same time,

American historians were writing the first analyses of slave-centered Southern soci-

ety. Slavery was an economically inefficient institution, they argued. For slave owners, profit was a secondary concern. Being lord of the manor was its own reward.

In"The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism," Cor-

nell professor Edward E. Baptistmakes a persuasive case that slavery wasn't like that at

is just another chapter in the

rise of the global economy. The cotton boom that start-

ed just after 1800 changed the American economy, Baptist argues. Before then, slavery was in decline. But with the

spread of the Industrial Revolution, cotton became the world's most traded commodity. "The

returns from cotton monopoly powered the modernization of the rest of the American economy," Baptist writes. "In fact,

Publishers Weekly ranks the best sellers for the weekthat ended Sept. 7. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. "Personal" by LeeChild (Delacort) 2. "SomewhereSafewith Somebody Good" by Jan Karon (Putnam) 3. "The Eye ofHeaven" by Cussler/Blake (Putnam) 4. "The BoneClocks" by David Mitchell (RandomHouse) 5. "Dark Blood" by Christine Feehan (Berkley) 6. "The Secret Place" by Tana French (Viking) 7. "Angels Walking" by Karen Kingsbury (S8S/Howard) 8. "Mean Streak" by Sandra Brown (GrandCentral) 9. "Son of NoOne" by Sherrilyn Kenyon (St. Martin's) 10. "Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage" by Haruki Murakami (Knopf)

HARDCOVERNONFICTION 1. "What If?" by Randall Munroe (HMH) 2. "Unphilterede by Phil

Robertson (S8S/Howard) 3. "What I Know for Sure" by Oprah Winfrey (Flatiron)

4. eChasers of the Light" by

Tyler Knott Gregson (Perigee) 5. "One Nation" by BenCarson (Penguin/Sentinel) 6. "America" by Dinesh D'Souza (Regnery) 7. "100 Days of RealFood" by Lisa Leake(Morrow) 8. "Diary of a MadDiva" by Joan Rivers (Berkley) 9. "Dungeons 8 Dragons: Player's Handbook, 5th Ed." by Wizards RPGTeam (Wizards of the Coast) 10. "Indulge" by Kathy Wakile (St. Martin's Griffin)

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to the Nat Turner rebellion. At

times it feels as if he's taken on toomuch.

But overall, "The Half Has Never Been Told" is a fresh if flawed take on a history we

thoughtweknewtoowell — the es became a slave market, history of a people who were and Baptist describes the city victimized by a medieval brand through the eyes of one woman of capitalismbut survived. "When the survivors began transportedthere for sale.The auctioneer"brought down the to die off, they could pass on hammer," Baptist writes. "The to their descendants very little last heartbeat of Rachel's old in the way of material wealth," life trickled out of its chamber. Baptist writes of the decades Her past and her future had after emancipation. "But Afrijust been killed for the profit of can-Americans had a story that others. William Fitz won her at made them a people." In "The Half Has Never Been about $800." As that passage suggests, Told," Baptist adds many new, Baptist's writing can be a bit stark and essential elements to

rr

boom. One of its coffeehous-

slavery's expansion shaped everycrucialaspectofthe econ- stilted. He's also prone to using omy and politics of the new odd abstractions and clunky nation..." metaphors to make his arguThe growing demand for ments, and h e o ccasionally cotton in the first decades of the engages in blatant hyperbole.

that story. His most important achievement is to show us how

the"dismal science" of economics served to make the lot of slaves even grimmer.

cr I

e /,

"I

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F5

noe oaos Famousart eaer's escen ant —ear-o son etais ami s acein isto By Rachel Donadio

New Yorh Times News Service

"Gabriel: A Poem" by Edward Hirsch (Alfred A. Knopf, 78 pgs., $26.95)

PARIS — A smallportrait of

By David L. Ulin Los Angeles Times

First, a few facts: Edward Hirsch's son, Gabriel, died on Aug. 27, 2011, at age 22.

Hurricane Irene was making l andfall in N e w

/ A I I;ill I',IAVAIIII lllllS{:II

Y o rk. T h e

previous evening, he went to a party in New Jersey, where he took GHB (known in the vernacular as Grievous Bodily Harm). He had a seizure and went into cardiac arrest. It took Hirsch and his ex-wife four days to find out what had happened to their son.

Anne Sinclair as a blue-eyed little girl hangs in her impressive townhouse on the Place des Vosges. Nearby, there's a late Picasso watercolor of a figure in a wide-brimmed black hat. A

replica of a Picasso still lifethe original is in a vault — has pride of place above the living-room fireplace. The artwork is a legacy of Sinclair's maternal grandfather, Paul Rosenberg, the art dealer of Picasso, Braque, Matisse and others, who amassed

a vast collection of French art — and a fortune — before his a s e quence of

business was confiscated by

That is the back story, the bare-bones context for Hirsch's book-length poem "Gabriel," which is as raw, as relentless in its inconsolability, as anything I've read. But the real point here is that

three-line stanzas, it is deep-

the Vichy government. The family survived, but more

sational: a poem stripped of poetic language, as if Hirsch couldn't bear such fripperies. It is also profoundly, deeply unsentimental, a set of lines

than 400 paintings were lost,

facts, that context, offer no comfort. What we most want

about living in the aftermath

trying to recover it.

— for things to work out dif-

Written a s

ly narrative, even c onver-

of hope. "Now the sun wants to rise

so brightly," Hirsch writes, quoting Riickert (by way of "I wish I c ould believe Mahler), "As if nothing terriin the o t herworld," Hirsch ble had happened overnight / writes. "I wish I could believe The tragedy happened to me in a place / Of reunions out- alone." Life goes on, in other words, but it can never go side of memory." And then this, describing on; the loss is irredeemable, a dream in which Gabriel making grief a condition, a ferently — is what we cannot have.

comes back to him: "Excitement overwhelmed me / And

I stared at him so intensely

state of being, not something

to be gotten over but something through which to exist.

/ I almost lit up his face // ...

I'm reminded of C.S. Lew-

heard me over the music // It

peats. The exact same thing

was so familiar to see him / Sitting across from me again / In the early morning light // It was as simple as daylight / Dawning between us / I could

is that we have no choice but

You're my only son / I ven- is, who cautions in "A Grief tured but I couldn't tell / If he Observed," "Reality never re-

still speak to him."

I could still speak to him: If "Gabriel" has an animating spirit, it may be this, which

is never taken away and given back." What he's saying to confront loss on its own terms, with neither reassurance nor false pieties. "Grief broke down i n p h r ases," Hirsch declares, "And extrapolated lines / From me with-

reverberates throughout. The out myself." The poet, in othbook is a father's lament, an er words, has been severed attempt to make sense of the from everything he knows. The challenge, of course, insensible, to come to terms with that for which there is no coming to terms.

Gabriel,we learn, was a challenging child. Adopted as an infant, he had devel-

opmental issues — on the spectrum, as we now say. He

couldbe mercurial,irresponsible; "Some nights I could not tell," Hirsch recalls, "If

is how to build to resolution when there is no resolution,

when there is no avoiding or c ircumventing the awful f i nality of death. For Hirsch,

the key is a relentless revelation, the willingness (it seems) to say anything. He closes with a description of Gabriel's funeral, in

w h i ch

he was the wrecking ball / Or kissing his son goodbye is "like kissing a corpse." the building it crashed into." At times, he could be caAgain, no poetic language, sually hurtful, as when he'd no metaphor, just the unacvisit his father's office (an ceptable reality he has no award-winning poet and au- choice but to accept. "I started thor of 13 previous books, keening and wailing," he tells Hirsch is also president of us. "A sob came out of my the Guggenheim Foundation) body / A sound I have never looking for cash: "You only heard before." The result is a new sort of drop by when you want your money / I said but he protested It's not like that Dad / He didn't want to think of himself that way."

And yet, for all the resonance of these memories, they remain only details, the

detritus of a life. Try as he might to resurrect his son,

confession, one that doesn't,

can't, lead to catharsis, that acknowledges the futility of thegestureeven asitengages in it anyway. "What else are there but rituals," the poet asks, "to

cover up th e emptiness?"

What else, indeed? This is the H irsch m ust r e c kon c o n - existential plaint, clarified in stantly with the hard truth grief and anger, of every parof his death. "Lord of Mis- ent who has ever had a kid in adventure," he admits, "I'm trouble: "I will not forgive you

scared of rounding him up /

/ Sun of emptiness / Sky of

And turning him into a sto-

blank clouds," Hirsch insists.

ry // God of Scribbles and "I will not forgive you / IndifErasures / I hope he shines ferent God / Until you give me through / Like a Giacometti back my son." portrait // I keep scraping the canvas / And painting him over again / But he keeps slipping away." This is the conundrum: that in invoking Gabri-

Nicola Lo Calzo/The New York Times

Anne Sinclair, the French journalist and granddaughter of Paul Rosenberg, the art dealer of Picasso, Matisse and others, at her home in Paris in August. Sinclair's new book, "My Grandfather's Gallery: A Family Memoir of Art and War," is a comeback for one of France's best-known television journalists and provides details about her family's place in art history.

of which 60 are still missing. Last fall, a Matisse emerged in the Munich apartment of Cor-

nelius Gurlitt, andthe familyis Paul Rosenberg is the subject of Sinclair's new book, "My Grandfather's Gallery: A Family Memoir of Art and

War," which is being published in the United States this week,

two yearsafter its release in France. Thebook issom ething of a comeback for Sinclair, one of France's best-known televi-

sion journalists and now the editorial director of Le Huffington Post, the site's French

incarnation, after years in which she was perhaps best known as the wife of Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

Theladyreappears Hers is a life with powerful themes — art, Nazis, Jews,

money, power, sex — and several next acts. In a wide-ranging conversation last month that touched on art (inspiring), the media (racing to the bottom), anti-Semitism in France (worrisome, but not unduly), French politics (depressing) and the Mideast (even more depressing), Sindair, 66, came across as friendly, approachable and warm. Her face was topped by dark bangs. She wore a black-and-white silk blouse, black slacks and pink lipstick, and her red-painted nails were visible through peep-toe heels. But she didn't reveal much

about her inner life. Nor would she talk much about "the incident," as she called it. "What

happened three years ago was not the brightest side of my life, but I can't be summarized

the male-dominated world of cubism, the muse to poet Guil-

bers of her family, they "just suffered materially," she said. laume Apollinaire and the first in 2006, prompts a backward "Of course, the artworks were artist to sign with Rosenberg's look. Paul Rosenberg, who looted but, well, they didn't gallery, in 1913. "She always died in 1959, when Sinclair dle. made black eyes," Sinclair was 11, inherited the gallery Sindair said the family was said, pointing to another small from his father, a former grain in touch from 1923 with GerLaurencin portrait hanging merchant who had switched to man and Swiss authorities above hers. "And when she dealing in Impressionist art. In about "SeatedWoman," the painted me, I said, 'Please, I 1910, Paul set out on his own, Matisse painting found last have blue eyes.' " opening a large gallery in the fall in the Gurlitt collection. Of Even as a child, Sinclair fancy Eighth Arrondissement the more than 400 paintings knew how to look after her of Paris. "If visitors were un- recovered from Paul Rosenimage. Over the years, she sure about Braque or Leger, berg's original c ollection, has honed those skills. With Paul invited them upstairs to Sinclair has kept four major media savvy, excellent timing see softer-contoured works by works, inherited from her and one of the best Rolodexes Edgar Degas, Pierre-Auguste mother, but dedined to reveal in France, she pulled off a sig- Renoir or Auguste Rodin," Sin- what they were or if they innificant feat: emerging from clair writes. cluded the Picasso above her a grotesque scandal with her Rosenberg sold works by fireplace. In France, there is a popular dignity largely intact. She Gericault, Ingres, Delacroix, stood by Strauss-Kahn when Cezanne, M a net, M o n et, perception that Sinclair must his libertine tendencies were Renoir, Gauguin, Bonnard and have sold some art to finance revealed to the entire globe Modigliani, among others. But Strauss-Kahn's legal bills, but and bailed him out of jail, and he was particularly close to she said that wasn't the case. after the headlines faded, the Picasso. After they met in the Still, in 2007, she sold Macouple quietly divorced in south of France in 1918, Picas- tisse's "L'Odalisque, Harmo2012. so gave Rosenberg the right of nie Bleue," inherited from her By the time her memoir first refusal on his paintings. mother, which fetched $33.6 appeared in France in 2012, it In 1919, Picasso's first ex- million at Christie's. was seenas partof Sinclair's hibition at Rosenberg's galBack then, it looked as if rehabilitation project. Had it lery introduced his postcubist Strauss-Kahn stood a chance come out in 2011, as planned, work. Over the years, the artist of becoming president of it would have explained her and dealer exchanged many France. Now, Sinclair professf amily fortune — b uilt o n letters, now in the archives of es, somewhat unconvincingly, culture, that most precious the Musee Picasso in Paris, that she wasn't hoping for that. French commodity — to po- which is reopening this fall af- "I've seen the political scene tential Socialist voters f or ter a long renovation. so closely for years that I nevStrauss-Kahn. Throughout the 1930s, with er dreamt to be part of it," she Beforehis fallfrom grace, war onthehorizon, Rosenberg said. "But as I've said to my he had been expected to an- had the good sense to send children and as I said to my nouncehiscandidacy forlead- works abroad and lend others husband: 'Well, if it is your life, ership of that party. (Until she to museums, induding the na- your feeling. If you want to go, paid $1 million to bail her hus- scent Museum of Modern Art, I'll follow. But I'm against it.'" band out of jail, most people, whose first director, Alfred even in France, had little idea Barr, was a closefriend.After Her new image ofherbackground.) war was declared in Europe Today, Sindair seems con"The book was basically on Sept. 3, 1939, Rosenberg tent. She enjoys working with written for the election cam- moved his family to New York. Le Huffington Post. "She's paign, then the news changed They arrived in 1940 and truly exceeded all my expecthat," said Christophe Barbier, stayed until 1945. Paul opened tations," said Arianna Huffthe editor in chief of L'Express, a New York gallery, which his ington, adding that Sindair, a French weekly. The more son, Alexandre, Sindair's un- "a natural" on TV, was helping left-wing currents in the So- cle, kept until the 1980s. the site expand its Web video about her French bona fides. That, and her mother's death

to that," Sinclair said in fluent English, sitting in a low swivel chair at a small glass table in her high-ceiling study. "All this has been very painful, but it's far behind now." She said cialist party were not enthused Sindair writes that when she started writing the book about the couple's wealth. Ra- Rosenberg, a World War I in 2010, when she was living phaelle Bacque, a journalist veteran and patriot who was in Washington with Strauss- for Le Monde and an author hazy on the grim reality back Kahn, then the managing of "The Strauss-Kahns," said, in France, was informed in director of the International "There's a big part of the left 1942 that his family had been Monetary Fund, and wrote the that contested her as 'gauche "denationalized," he sent a final pages while living with caviar,' " roughly, a limousine fruitless telegram to the leadhim under lockdown in a Tri- liberal. ers of Vichy, stating: "I am beca apartment, hounded by learning of my denationalizatabloid reporters, during the The newbook tion by order of 23 February months between his arrest The book begins when 1942. Protest energetically and in New York in May 2011 on Sinclair — who writes that have strong reservations. Letcharges of assaulting a hotel she once posed for a statue of ter follows." maid, and that July, when the Marianne, the embodiment of But "My Grandfather's charges were dropped. France displayed in govern- Gallery" isn't an angry book The portrait of Sindair as ment offices — goes to renew Sindair says that in general, a little girl was done by Marie an identity document and France has owned up to its Laurencin, a rare woman in a bureaucrat questions her wartime sins. As for mem-

operation. This fall, Sindair will start a r adio interview

program. She is now together w ith Pierre Nora, a French his-

torian and publisher. Questions linger. What goes through a woman's mind when she chooses to stay with a husband like Strauss-Kahn? What would she say to the

hotel maid, Nafissatou Diallo, if she met her'? Perhaps if Sinclair had been interviewing herself, she would have asked these questions. "Yes," Sinclair

said, standing beside the Picasso watercolor. She smiled. "And I wouldn't

have answered them."

el, Hirsch both preserves and

eulogizes him, framing what is, in essence, a portrait of his grief. As if to make the point ex-

plicit, Hirsch refers to a number of other poets and artists

who have lost children and written about the experience. These i n c lude M a l l a rme, Mahler and Friedrich Riick-

ert, who "wrote 425 poems / After his two youngest children / Died from scarlet fever // Within sixteen days of each

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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014

o soriessa e a es eare ina i,an o er u iouscas "The Emerald Light in the Air"

or ice. These tent poles are "An

By Donald Antrim (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 158 pgs.,

Actor Prepares" and "Another Manhattan," a reference, it

$22)

seems, toboth the cocktail and

afford psychoanalysis and death lingers not so far away. whiskey. Whereas all we get is " Another M a nhattan" i s sermons and sour wine. This about two couples meeting for is manifestly unfair. I protest, dinner in a good restaurant. silently." The story is to some degree a The narrator of "An Actor sexfarce. Eachwife is sleeping ~p ares" is Reginald Barry, with the other's husband. The story slips into a kind of a dean and a drama professor at a two-bit college who's pre- sophisticated fairy tale when one of the men, Jim, decides paring to direct and star in, on the college green, a racy to buy flowers for his wife. He student production of "A Mid- finds the much younger girl summer Night's Dream." How behind the counter so fetching racy? Two years earlier, he'd that she becomes "a proxy to mounted an "all-male, all-nude get himself worked up for sex

the island.

"An Actor Prepares" contains everything that's great

By Dwight Garner New Yorh Times News Service

Donald Antrim

i s , a f t er about what I will call Early Thomas Pynchon, American Antrim condensed into bite-

literature's presiding weirdo. size form. It is hilarious, filthy, He's atrickster.His books are cerebral, sad, a blend of high short, vivid, drastic and sur- andlow cultural awareness. "Another Manhattan," on the other hand, is thrilling because it points in the direction

real, so much so that reading

them is like driving 90 mph while in third gear, in the back

'Taming of the Shrew.' " About

Antrim seems to be heading. stolen, while he disposes of his It's a sophisticated portrait drugs by throwing them out of a marriage in extremis, the window. glimpsed through the subtlest Antrim has lately begun to of funhouse mirrors, one that downshift. After delivering is tragicomic yet devastating three very fine and very antic in its emotional impact It's worth setting these two novels — one is about a psychoanalyst who levitates to s tories in t h e the ceiling of a pancake house, context of this another about 100 brothers collection. Anpacked into a room — he pub- trim's characlished "The Afterlife" (2006), a ters throughout tender memoir about his moth- tend to be failed er, an eccentric and volatile artists of some alcoholic. sort, many the His new book, "The Emer- survivors of ald Light in the Air," is his first blinkered childseat of a jalopy the author has

later that night." He may even

that show, he deposes, "People decide to ask her out. said it increased their appreciWanting to impress the girl, ation for the radical potentials he has her slowly assemble a in Elizabethan drama." bouquet so large that it eventuBarry, who will play Ly- ally costs hundreds of dollars. sander,describes himself as When his credit cards are de"a skinny, balding, unmar- clined, he steals the huge thing ried, childless — it resembles "insane trees 46-ye a r- old towering above some insane Lysander — a world" — and staggers down

TAe Emerald

Ph.D. with hair

Light . In the Ar

Danald

his first book since winning a MacArthur fellowship — I

recently heard one of these referred to as a Big Mac — in

Antrun

2013. Here, too, the mood is a bit more restrained, as if a

yoga instructor had begun to teach Antrim how to breathe. I will not accuse him of mellow-

ing. If his plotting is less berserk, his prose is as exacting as ever. The bad news about "The Emerald Light in the Air" is that it's decidedly hit and miss. We read about one of them, in Middling stories outnumber a store: "A beautiful jacket in keepers. Antrim's lesser sto- blue worsted wool was makries noodle around for many ing him feel sad." This book traffics in bepages, then drift off rather thanend. spoke despair. It put me in The good news about "The mind of something that DonEmerald Light in the Air" is ald Barthelme, a writer Antthat it contains two master- rim can resemble, had to say piecesofthe shortstory form, in his collection "Amateurs" stories I hope are anthologized about the other side of status: until anthologizing ends in fire "The privileged classes can

ton and Humbert Humbert, Barry shouts at his students about the life that awaits them:

brings global voice to World War I "No Man's Lend: Fiction From a World at War — 1914-1918"

edited byPeteAyrton (Pegasus, 572 pgs., $15.95)

enormous amount of d ark-

ness in Antrim's work, below the strange and busy surfac"You won't ever stop being de- es. One man in these stories pressed! No matter how much seems to speak for many of sexyou have!" this author's characters when Antrim keeps all these de- he thinks, "What was the use tails in fine balance. By the in telling her how bleak he end, his actors have begun felt when people found him to seem like the circus per- funny?" Few writers are more formers in Bergman's "The adept at examining, as Antrim Seventh Seal" — frolicking as put it in "The Hundred Broth-

that likely will be new to English-speaking readers. Omer Seyfettin, a Turkish reformist, vividly describes life in a dying, corrupt empire in "Why Didn't He Get Rich?"

By Chris Foran Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mulk Raj Anand, an Indian One hundred years ago last activist, paints a vivid portrait week, British and French forc- of soldiers from India, landing es defeated the German army in France to fight for a country during World War I in the Battle of the Marne. More than 2

that doesn't respect them in

the war ended in 1918. Much of the fiction written

tells the story of an officer in the Austrian army who is sent to

"Marseille," an excerpt from his million soldiers fought in the 1939 novel "Across the Black battle, which set the tone for Waters." In two excerpts, Rofour years of carnage before manian writer Liviu Rebreanu

during and after World War I the front to fight against Romacentered on that carnage and nia, his homeland. its cost, physically, morally, poThere also are more womlitically. But for the most part, en's voices induded than in a the voices we've heard have typical collection of wartime been English, or its American fiction. Writings by Vera Britvariant, with occasional French

and German accents thrown

the shmt with it. The thorns

on his back." cause him to bleed; his fine He's decided dothes are torn. to costume his He lugs the "great confaeries and gob- crescence of blooms" into the lins in pasties restaurant, where a concerned and G-strmgs. man says to him, 'You look The absurd- like you've been in a fight with h oods. T h e i r p arents w e r e ist details pile some squirrels or something." up. Barry gets Chaos ensues. drunks and so, To say more would be givvery likely, are stoned with his ing too much away. Suffice it they. s tudents; h e dresses some to say that this story explores These men like power lift- marriage and masculinity a nd wo m e n tend to be deers; the produc- and humanneed and financial pressed if not suicidal, to be tion winds up taking place in paranoia with a grace and inon antidepressants if not an- a pit in the ground, one that is sight that reminded me of the tipsychotics. Most live in New vomited into. One of the lead best of John Cheever, while York City. An odd touch is that actors is blind. Sex is simu- remaining so offbeat that no so many of the men are dan- lated, and perhaps more than one except Antrim could have composed it. dies, not the unshaven slobs in simulated, onstage. Equal parts James LipThere's always been an tracksuits one might expect.

collection of short stories and

'No Man's Land'

"No Man's Land: Fiction From a World at War — 1914-

tain and Mary Borden, who served as nurses on the West-

ern front during the worst of the fighting, bristle with clarity and depict, in sharp tones, the

1918" is a valuable, if at times way horror becomes part of evrepetitive, corrective. eryday life during war. Editor Pete Ayrton — a London-basedtranslatorof French and Italian, who focuses on

If there's a

d o wnside to

Ayrton's collection, it's that, in whatever language, war is

publishing fiction in transla- hell, and cruel, and pointlessand, taken together, "No Man's

tion — set out to capture the "world" voice of the First World

War. He emphasized works that haven't been translated into English and written before the Second World War, to limit the altered perspective World War II would bring to writers'

Land" makes for an unrelent-

ingly sobering read. Among the few exceptions are two excerpts from "The

Good Soldier Svejk" by Czech writer Jaroslav Hasek. Svejk, the book's hero, is sort of

remembrances.

a cross between Sgt.Bilko and Bill Murray's character in familiar names among the con- "Stripes"; he will do anything That's not to say there aren't

tributors in"No Man's Land." In addition to such usual suspects

to avoid military duty and the

as Siegfried Sassoon and Erich MarieRemarque arepop-

ble turns the absurdity of the

fighting, and whenever possi-

situation against his superiors, making himself a hero in the Cather and William Faulkner, process. The book is among as well as lightning rods such the most beloved in all Czech as French neo-fascist novelist literature, even though Hasek Louis-Ferdinand Celine and fu- died after finishing three of six ture Hollywoodblacklist victim planned volumes; its indusion ular authors as varied as Willa

in "No Man's Land" shows that

Dalton Trumbo.

But the standouts — as much life during wartime is so surfor their novelty as their fresh- real that, sometimes, you just ness — are the many voices have to laugh.

PEN FRIQAY 10-7 AT UN10-6 M N 10-7

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FU RNI TU RE


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Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to 242 yard care, it's all here Exercise Equipment in The Bulletin's Lifestyler Cardio-Fit, "Call A Service total body motion, $30 Professional" Directory obo. 541-977-2735

• New, never fired Weatherby VanguardS2, synthetic stock, cal 30-06.$550. • New, never fired Howa,wood stock, cal .300 Win Mag.$725 Must pass background check. Please call 541.389.3694, leave message.

DirectTV 2 Year SavWeatherby Mark V Ac- ings Event! Over 140 cumark, customized channels only $29.99 30-378, plus custom a month. O nly Diammo and Talley recTV gives you 2 s cope base. W I N YEARS of s a vings Model 70-300, WIN and a FREE Genie Call magnum and ammo. upgrade! WIN Model 100-284, 1-800-259-5140. W IN a n d Am m o. (PNDC) 541-420-8689, leave msg will call back. Find exactly what Win .308 180gr Failsafe, you are looking for in the 140 rds, $150.. CLASSIFIEDS 541-306-3268 247

Sporting Goods - Misc.

Ruger mini 14 rancher, Cabelas 90x36 6lb 4oz Baretta M1A 308, Colt sleeping bag, $45. SP1 223, Parker sxs 541-382-3487

DISH T V

Ret a i ler. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed I nternet starting a t $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now!

12 ga., WIN 22 250 ACK, S&W 25-2 44 Fishing pole 13' custom Oregon Premier 1-800-308-1563 acp, Colt 1911, Sig $50. 541-771-2885 (PNDC) 220. H & H Firearms& Tack Inflatable mat t ressREDUCE YOUR 541-382-9352 9 0x36 a n d pu m p CABLE BILL!* Get a $50. 541-382-3487 whole-home Satellite

Sage Rodw/Tioga reef, $225. Custom TFO rodwith Redington reel, $200. Slmms 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

system installed at NO COST and proramming starting at 1 9.99/mo. FRE E HD/DVR Upgrade to new callers, SO CALL NOW

Like new Necky Es'I -800-87'I -2983. kia 16' kayak with (PNDC) rudder. B ulkheads water tight. Seat like 255 new. Hatches, deck lines and grab loops Computers all in perfect condition. Orig i nally 21n flat screen computer $1450, asking $700 monitor, never used, $95 obo. P lease c a l l obo. 541-546-1313 541-312-2435. T HE B ULLETIN r e quires computer ad248 Tempur-Pedic x-long twin vertisers with multiple adj matt with air chamHealth & ad schedules or those ber, remotes; T.P. pillow; selling multiple sysBeauty Items linens, in perfect cond, tems/ software, to dis$2500. 541-548-6642 Lowest P r ices on close the name of the business or the term Health & Dental InPeople Lookfor Information surance. We have the "dealer" in their ads. About Products and Private party advertisbest rates from top Services Every Daythrough companies! Call Now! ers are defined as those who sell one The Bulletin Classineds 877-649-6195. computer. (PNDC) Thompson Contender istol w/2 barrels: 44 em Mag/Gen1 w/Bushnell scope & carry case; and 22 LR match with Bushnell scope & carry case, $850. Ruger Model 10/22 LR, stainless steel, w/Bushnell scope & case, $200. Savage Mod. 116 .300 280 286 Win Mag, stainless steel w/scope & case, $550. Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend Mossberg 300A 12Ga with 2 barrels: one 22" Fri-Sat-Sun., 7am-1pm, GRANDMOTHER'S modified; & one 181/2", ESTATE SALE 1998 NE Jackson Ave. $250. C opper p edal ca r Lots of quality itemsBackground check Crank telephone Nat. furniture, camping equip, required. Please call cash. reg. ¹2 Tin toys inflatable kayak, art pcs. 541.389.3694, leave msg. Lg coffee mills Burl 288 wood tables Old adv. Wanted: Collector seeks signs Bixt time clock Sales Southeast Bend high quality fishing items Bear skin fur rug Har& upscale bamboo fly rison Fisher painting Snowmobile Trailer w/ rods. Call 541-678-5753, Neon beer signs Mu- gear, 3-wheelers, washer/ or 503-351-2746 sic boxes Primitives. dryer, refdlg, freezer, twin Sept. 18-21, 145586 mat/bxsp, TV, EntertainL anewood Dri v e , Cntr, lamps, clothing, FIND YOUR FUTURE Pool table stx, balls & Sunforest, La Pine HOME INTHE BULLETIN classic lamp, tools, Stihl 286 auger, 500-gal fuel tanks Your future is just apage Fri-Sat-Sun, 10-4, away. Whetheryou're looking Sales Northeast Bend 20903 Knott Road. for a hal or a place Iohangil, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. ** FREE ** USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Every daythousandsof Garage Sale Kit Door-to-door selling with Place an ad in The buyers andsellers of goods fast results! It's the easiest Bulletin for your gaand services dobuslnessin way in the world to sell. rage sale and rethese pages.They know ceive a Garage Sale you can't beatThe Bulletin The Bulletin Classified Classified Section for Kit FREE! 541-385-5809 selection and convenience KIT INCLUDES: - every item isjust a phone • 4 Garage Sale Slgns call away. 290 • $2.00 Off Coupon To The Classified Sectionis Use Toward Your Sales Redmond Area easy to use. Evely item Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage 2 Houses Full! Lots of is categorizedandevery Sale Success!" cartegoIy is indexedonthe glassware, small kitchen items, lots of misc. Frisection's front page. Sat-Sun, 9-5, 2447 SW Whether youarelooking for PICK UP YOUR Mariposa Loop (Aspen a home orneeda service, GARAGE SALE KIT at Creek Mobile Home Park) your future is inthe pagesof 1777 SW Chandler The Bulletin Classifled. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 YARD SALE 2945 SW Deschutes Dr., RedThe Bulletin mond Sat., from 9-4, The Bulletin Serving Cencref Oregonsince lggs SavingCentral Oregonsince reig Sun., from 9-1


G2 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED •541-385-5809

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1 Loaded, in Lyon 6 Hosiery hue 11 Eagles, Falcons and Cardinals 16 Last place 17 "No lie!" 18 Move out 20 Some politicians' trips 21 Cub Scout leader 22 Salt away 24 Shrinks' org. 25 What discoveries may yield 27 "Right you !" 28 Abbr. not found on most smartphones 29 JFK alternative in N.Y.C.

30Nasty storm, e.g. 33 Film director who said, "I think an artist has always to be out of step with his time" 36 " be praised" 37 Paradoxical figure? 38 Fraternity member or muscle, briefly 39 Mary who introduced the miniskirt 40 Outs, in away 42 "Law & Order" spinoff, informally 43 "Yes" Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 4,000past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords

($39.95 a year).

44 Ornery sorts

97 Former Mrs. Trump 45 Didn't take it lying down, say 98 Southern farm concern 47 chil d (playful side) 100 "No need to worry" 48 Ayatollah predecessor 102 "Die Meistersinger" 49 Indiana Jones menace soprano 103 Brio 52 Lathered (up) 54 Game with falling 104 lamp popularity? 106 On 56 Native Oklahoman 107 Wyo. neighbor 59 Hit from behind 108 Kind of scan 61 "Eh, any one 110 HBO comedy/ is fine" dramcl 63 Fan of pop's One 112 Way to storm off Direction, maybe 114 Begins, as work 64 Veered off course 115 Marketing news 65 Many Winslow magazine Homer works 116 Rattle off, say 70 Some holiday 117 Dutch Golden Age greenery painter 74 The dark side 118 Actress Brandt of 75 Kidnapping, e.g. "Breaking Bad" 77 Island in Pacific 119 Them, with "the" W.W. II fighting 78 "The cautious DOWN seldom Confucius I He walked away with Blaine 7$ Stone of 'The Help" in "Casablanca" 80 Atomic clock part 2 Type 81 Flog 3 Kicks everyone out, 83 Hightails it say 86 Figure on 4 Yoga variety Argentina's flag 5 Synthetic 87 Charge Maria 89 Period of inactivity 6 7 Get several views $3 Last Oldsmobile 8 Big name in auto 94 Took after racing 95 Org. that 9 Trendy food regimen implemented the Food Stamp Act 10 Long span

11 Expensive Super Bowl purchase 12 Polished off 13 Cousin of a zucchini 14 Boca Del Fla. 15 Certain bar orders, informally 16 Rounded roof 19 West Coast city where Nike had itsstart 20 Aladdin's adversary 23 Times gone by 26 " Mine," 1984 Steve Perry hit 28 Winter Olympics site after St. Moritz 31 Bonny miss 32 Like lottery winners, typically 34 Gerrymandered, e.g. 35 Verdant 41 Bright light 44 In vogue 46 X or Y supplier 48Mister, in Mumbai 49 Creative, in a way 50 Karate instructor 51 Joyous song 53 Smallflycatcher 55 " Satanic Majesties Request" (Rolling Stones album) 56 Eggy'? 57 Stretching muscle 58 Court cry 60 E.R. figures

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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place 5photo inyour private party sd for only$15.00 perweek.

OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour adfor accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewil gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject anyadat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 25s Photography

2so Misc. Items

251

• Medical Equipment

265

259

Heating & Stoves

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Broken Power Wheel10 Americans or 158 chair or Scooter? We million U.S. A d ults will repair your power r ead content f r om wheelchair on s i te. n ewspaper m e d i a Call for Repair, Maineach week? Discover tenance or Sales for Kodak Instamatic 20 the Power of the Pa- assistance with your orig box, manual, cific Northwest News- scooter. flash cubes & expaper Advertising. For 877-787-4839 tender. 19703. $25. a free brochure call (PNDC) 541-419-6408 916-288-6011 or Electric lift chair, like email 257 new condition, $400 cecelia©cnpa.com Musical Instruments obo. 541-213-3297 (PNDC)

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, INSTANT GREEN 1991, advertising for McPheeters Turf used woodstoves has Lawn Fertilizer been limited to models which have been certified by the Or54Z-389-9663 egon Department of Environmental Qual- John Deere 21e rotary ity (DEQ) and the fed- mower, runs great. eral E n v ironmental Protection A g e ncy $75. 541-617-9365. PromptDelivery (EPA) as having met smoke emission stan- Rock, Sand 8 Gravel 253 dards. A cer t ified Multiple Colors, Sizes Tools w oodstove may b e Instant Landscaping Co. 541-389-9663 identified by its certifiBlack and Decker cir- cation label, which is 270 cular saw, 7 1/4", $20, permanently attached Lost & Found 541-385-4790 to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowCabover ladder rack, ingly accept advertis- If you purchased a colheavy duty with 6' tool ing for the sale of lector plate at an esbox each side, $295. uncertified tate sale on Nelson 541-416-9686 Road in NE Bend in woodstoves. t he last c ouple o f Craftsman 10e contrac257 months, I found the tors table saw w/stand, certificates of authenFuel & Wood $295. 541-306-3268 tication for "The Eik" & "The Bighorn Sheep." TURN THE PAGE by Artist, Paul Krapf. WHEN BUYING 541-419-6408 For More Ads FIREWOOD... The Bulletin Lost Labrador, dark choc To avoid fraud, fem last seen SE 2nd St The Bulletin in Prineville 9/9 with Craftsman I n d ustrial recommends paypurple collar. Reward! ment for Firewood Jigsaw, speed torq. 541-604-1711 $25, 541-385-4790 only upon delivery and inspection. MISSING: female cat Craftsman I n d ustrial • A cord is 128 cu. ft. fluffy muted gray, or4' x 4' x 8' Wormsaw, 7 1/4n $40. ange & white in Red 541-385-4790 • Receipts should Hawk sub. Redmond, include name, Substantial Reward, Craftsman Skill saw, 1 phone, price and Any info call 3/4" HP, 5800 rmps, kind of wood 541-504-0652 $25, 541-385-4790 purchased. Look at: • Firewood ads MUST include Bsndhomas.com species & cost per for Complete Listings of cord to better serve Area Real Estate for Sale our customers. •

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Hay, Grain & Feed

Schools & Training

1st & 2nd cutting orchard grass mix, small bales $235/ton. Madras, OR. 541-420-9736

IITR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS OurGrads GetJobs! 1-888-438-2235

47S

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

AVON - Earn extra in- Caregiver come with a new ca- Prineville Senior care reer! Sell from home, home looking for fullw ork, onhne. $ 1 5 time Caregiver. Must startup. For informa- pass criminal backtion, call: ground check. 877-751-0285 Call 541-447-5773 (PNDC) Certified Medical Assistant- Fa ll Creek Internal Medicine has an immediate opening for a Looking for your next CMA. 40 hours per 4-day work week in busy pracemployee? Current CMA liPlace a Bulletin help tice. with recent expewanted ad today and cense rience as CMA. required. reach over 60,000 Experience with EMR, readers each week. e neral nursing a nd Your classified ad ealthcare tasks, includwill also appear on ing triage, vital signs and bendbulletin.com assisting physician with which currently procedures and exams. receives over 1.5 Great benefits package. million page views Please fax cover letter, every month at and resume including no extra cost. professional references, Bulletin Classifieds to: 541-389-2662. Get Results! FIND ITr Call 385-5809 or place gUY ITf your ad on-line at SELL IT! bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Clsssifiads

Back to School SALE! How to avoid scam 25% - 35% OFF and fraud attempts sll music equipment. YBe aware of internaBend Pawn 8 Trading Co tional fraud. Deal lo61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend cally whenever pos541-317-5099 sible. 260 Y Watch for buyers Misc. Items who offer more than your asking price and 275 Gallon Like New who ask to have Plastic Totes, Overmoney wired or stock Sale: $109. for handed back to them. one tote, 2 to 5 totes Fake cashier checks a t $99.95/ea., 6 o r and money orders more at $89.95 ea. are common. GioryBae Foods YNever give out perEugene, OR. sonal financial infor541-689-0913 or mation. I -800-456-7923 VTrust your instincts (2) Cowboy belt buckles, and be wary of someone using an silver/onyx, large, $75 escrow service or both. 541-389-9877 agent to pick up your Are you in BIG trouble merchandise. with the IRS? Stop wage 8 bank levies, The Bulletin Sernng Cenrral Oregon snce 1903 liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll is- Large oil painting, outsues, 8 resolve tax door scene, very pretty. debt FAST. Seen on $45. 541-923-1595 CNN. A B BB. Call 1-800-989-1278. Moving boxes, 10 @ (PNDC) $1.00 each, SE Bend. Call 760-486-6860 Buyfng Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Reduce Your Past Tax Saxon's Fine Jewelers Bill by as much as 75 541-389-6655 Percent. Stop Levies, Liens and Wage GarSarvlne Ceneal Oregon slnceSaea Check out the Shopsmith REMEMBER:If you nishments. Call The classifieds online with bandsaw, have lost an animal, Tax DR Now to see if www.bendbufletin.com you Aff Year Dependable don't forget to check excellent condition. Qualify Customized extras. Firewood: Seasoned; Updated daily The Humane Society 1-800-791-2099. Lodgepole, split, del, Retired shop Bend (PNDC) BUYING teacher; B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 541-382-3537 Lionel/American Flyer Rolling clothes rack w/ don't need anymore! or 2 for $365. Call for Redmond trains, accessories. Pictures available. multi-cord discounts! 541-923-0882 4 adj. arms, white. $35 541-408-2191. 541-420-3484. 3475. Madras obo 541-317-9319 BVYING a SE L LING Call 541-598-6466 541-475-6889 All gold jewelry, silver Call The Bulletin At Prineville Pine & Juniper Split and gold coins, bars, 541-447-7178 544 -385-5809 255 rounds, wedding sets, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail or Craft Cats PROMPT DELIVERY class rings, sterling sil541-389-8420. • Building Materials 542-389-9ees At: www.bendbulletin.com ver, coin collect, vin275 tage watches, dental Bend Habitat pottery gar269 gold. Bill Fl e ming,Stoneware Auction Sales RESTORE lic roaster new, $15 541-382-9419. Building Supply Resale Gardening Supplies obo. 541-317-9319 Quality at LOW Chalkboard, 6'x4', never & Equipment A UCT I O N used, mounts on wall, PRICES Tony a Jann Lsaich The Bulletin Offers $39 obo. 541-385-7761 740 NE 1st Retirement Auction Free Private Party Ads 541-312-6709 BarkTurfSoil.com lines - 3 days Sst., Sept. 20, 10 sm C ollapsible Mos a i c •• 3 Open to the public. 30040Weaver Springs Private Party Only table tray, $15 obo. • Total Lane Burns, OR of items adverPROMPT DELIVERY 541-317-9319 Rolling Afock, Tools, tised must equal $200 BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS 541-389-9663 Antiques/Collectibles, CRYPT at Deschutes or Less Search the area's most Authentic Native AmeriMemorial G a rden FOR DETAILS or to comprehensive listing of can Decor, Sporting Meadow Pond space PLACE AN AD, classified advertising... For newspaper Goods, Furniture 4D4 - dbl depth lawn Call 541-385-5809 real estate to automotive, delivery, call the View Items Online: crypt, full grave for 2. Fax 541-395-5802 merchandise to sporting Circulation Dept. at www.'ohnsonauction B uyer w il l ne e d 541-385-5800 goods. Bulletin Classifieds c~om an .com granite 8 bronze dbl Wanted- paying cash appear every day in the To place an ad, call Johnson Auction Co. interment m a r k er for Hi-fi audio & stu541-385-5809 print or on line. 206-74t -4305 plus interment costs. dio equip. Mclntosh, or email Brad Johnson, Auctioneer Call 541-385-5609 $1500. For more info JBL, Marantz, Dyclassifiedabendbulletin.oom Cash or Banking Check c all K e llie A l l e n naco, Heathkit, San- www.bandbullatin.com No Buyer Premium The Bulletin 541-382-5592 or sui, Carver, NAD, etc. No Credit Cards Sarvine Central Oregon since f9t8 The Bulletin Call 541-261-1808 Serving Central oregon since sate seller, 207-582-0732 Sold as is, where Is.

The Bulle6n

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WWW.IITILBDU

1st Quality mixed grass The Bulletin hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton To Subscribe call Call 541-549-3831 541-385-5800 or go to Patterson Ranch, Sisters www.bendbulletin.com Alfalfa seed, corn and 475 grass seed. Save Employment money. We deliver. Ray Oder m ott Opportunities 208-465-5280 or 800-910-4101. Add your web address to your ad and readNeed help fixing stuff? ers onThe Bulletin's Call A ServiceProfessional web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be find the help you need. able to click through www.bendbulletin.com automatically to your website. Quality Orchard/Mixed Grass hay, between Bend & Redmond. $230/ton, small bales. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 341

Horses & Equipment

2001 Silversdo 3-horse trailer 5th wheel, 29'xs', deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO

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541-420-3277

Horseshoeing Tools

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I ICI Shilo Bumper Pull 3-Horse Trailer with tack room, like new, more extras, $5500. 541-923-9758 383

Produce & Food Grass fattened natural beef, cut&wrapped $3.50/Ib. 541-480-8185

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JHM t t0-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. 541-430-4449

54 'I 385 5809

2n' I

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bold headline and Price. Somereslriciions app/y

Your ad will also appearin:

• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace

• The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbullefin.tom

'Private parly merchandiseonly

'a



G4 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

)

e

I •

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

fe •

e

II!otorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

HD FXSBI 2006 new cond., low miles, Stage I download, extras, bags. $7900 obo. 541-447-0687

860

Motorcycles & Accessories

~

HD Softtail Deuce 2002, broken back forces sale, only 200 mi. on 2002 Harley Fat Boy new motor from Har14,000 original miles. ley, new trans case Excellentcond. Vance and p arts, s p o ke & Hines exhaust, 5 wheels, new brakes, spoke HD rims, wind n early all o f b i k e vest, 12" rise handle brand new. Has proof bars, detachable lugof all work done. Regage rack w/ back movable windshield, rest, hwy pegs & many T-bags, black and all chrome accents. Must chromed out with a see to appreciate! willy skeleton theme $10,500. In CRR area on all caps and covcall 530-957-1865 ers. Lots o f w o rk, heart and love went into all aspects. All done at professional shops, call for info. Must sell quickly due to m e d ical bi l l s, 2005 HD Heritage Soft$8250. Call Jack at Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of 54'I -279-9536. extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt cond., $9750 firm 541-318-8668

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, 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. $12,500 541-81 5-2523

18.5' Sea Ray 2000 4.3L Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/ CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond, $9500. 707-484-3518

(Bend)

746

Enjoy NW Shevlin P ark, 1 9186

713

Real Estate Wanted

CHECK YOUR AD

Seeking small piece of land w/hookups avail. for my new mfd 1200 s q.ft. h o me . C a l l 631-840-0301 (Bend)

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809

TheBulletin Classified

Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 541-316-0450 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Call for Speciais!

Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 & 3 bdrms w/d hookups, patios or decks. Mountain Glen 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

Advertise your car! Add A Pfcture!

Reach thousands ofreaders!

Call 541.385.5809 The BulletinClassifieds 648

Houses for Rent General PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

Mt.

Shasta Dr. B end N ew 4 bdr m s . m aster on m a i n level, 2. 5 b a t hs, 2560 sq. ft., bonus room, 3 car garage, l ow H O A fee s

632

541-419-0661

744

Open Houses Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

OPEN

Sat. & Sun. 2839 NE Forum Drive 3 bdrm, 2~/~ bath, large master suite, great room, loft, family area, Lovely home $249,700. Call Steve I 541-550-0333

Open 12-3 20227 Murphy Rd. Beautiful Home On Golf Course Jim Tennant, Broker 541-610-71 57

TheGarnerGroup.com

P cEKg Open 12-3 21380 Pelican Dr. Single Level On Bright Corner Lot CarolDonohoe, Broker 541-410-1773 TheGarnerGroup.com

865

Recreational Homes & Property •

Cabin on Paulina LakeRare opportunity! Fully furnished, ready for winter & summer recreation. Lake front 3 bdrm, upraded water sys, full itchen, all electric, land line, wood stove. Attached wood/tool shed. $300,000. 541-363-1885

H onda Big R e d UTV. Like new with just over 40 hours use. Includes winch, 5-foot snow blade, hard roof, half windshield. L ists over $14,000; will sell for b est o ffe r ov e r $11,000. Call

REDUCED!

Harley D a vidson 2006, FXDLI Dyna 541-575-4267 Low Rider, Mustang seat w/b a ckrest, new battery, windshield, forward controis, lots of chrome, Screamin' Eagle exhaust, 11K mi. Sen ior owned, w e ll Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' maintained! $7950 bed, with ramps. $700 LaPine (928)581-9190 obo. 541-549-4834 or

541-566-0068 Yamaha '06 Rhino 660 exc. cond, winch, hard roof w/lights and radio, custom wheels. $6950 541-447-3702.

Call a Pro

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 $18,000or best offer. 541-318-6049

Harley Davidson 883 Sportster

Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541 -385-5809 870

Boats & Accessories

1998, 20,200 miles,

exc. cond.,

$3,800.

gl eiiiiEI '

19' Pioneer ski boat, 1963, vm tandem trailer, V6. Fun & fast! $5800 obo. 541-815-0936.

ATVs

541-516-8684

3 bdrm 2.5 bath custom home on 1.48 ac in Terrebonne. 2450 SF, Mtn views, canal, shop, with bonus room. By owner, $379,000. 541-923-4995

12:30 - 4:30

FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 86, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance& Hines fuel management

HONDA SCOOTER 60cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. cond., $975 obo. (541) 593-9710 or 350-6711

system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today

DE Rink Const. Realtors Welcome

• WE BUY HOMES•

Any conditionClose in 7 days. Scott L. Williams Real Estate - 800-545-6431

880

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

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Northwest Bend Homes

Apt./lylultiplex General

880

Motorhomes •5

BM R@Raas

880

870

541-548-2872.

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%46-1804

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

Servin Central Ore on since 1903

875

Watercraft

Ads published in "Wa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 670. 541-365-5609

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

880

Motorhomes 1997 Bounder 34' w/slide. $17,900. Excellent condition, must see! Ford 460 w/Banks, new tires, dual A/C, rear camera, triple axle, Onan gen, 63k miles. 541-306-9697

Providence 2005 Winnebago C 22' Fully loaded, 35,000 2002 - $30,500 miles, 350 Cat, Very Big engine, heavy clean, non-smoker, duty, many extras, 3 slides, side-by-side 21,000 miles, like refrigerator with ice new. Please call for maker, Washer/Dryer, details Flat screen TV's, In 541-280-3251 motion satellite. $95,000 541-460-2019 Winnebago Sightseer 27' 2002. workhorse gas motor, Class A, RV 6' slide living rm/diCONSIGNMENTS nette, new tires. spare WANTED tire carrier, HD trailer We Do The Work ... hitch, water heater, You Keep The Cash! micro/oven, generaOn-site credit tor, furn/AC, outside approval team, Allegro 32' 2007, like web shower, carbon dioxsite presence. new, only 12,600 miles. We Take Trade-Ins! ide & smoke detector, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 fiberglas ext., elect. transmission, dual exstep cruise control haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- BIG COUNTRY RV CB radio, 60k miles, eling system, 5kw gen, Bend: 541-330-2495 awning, TV antenna w Redmond: power mirrors w/defrost, booster, flat screen 541-548-5254 2 slide-outs with aw23" TV. AM/FM/CD nings, rear c a mera, stereo. $2 3 ,995. trailer hitch, driyer door 541-548-2554 w/power window, cruise, Tioga 24' Class C exhaust brake, central Motorhome Call The Bulletin At vac, satellite sys. Asking Bought new in 2000, 541 -385-5809 $67,500. 503-781-8812 currently under 20K Place Your Ad Or E-Mail miles, excellent At: www.bendbulletin.com shape, new tires, professionally winterized every year, cut881 off switch to battery, Travel Trailers plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning seldom used; Beaver Marquis, just add water and it's 1993 ready to go! 40-ft, Brunswick $22,000 obo. Serious 2007 Jayco Jay Flight floor plan. Many inquiries, please. extras, well mainFBS with slide out & Stored in Terrebonne. 29 awning - Turn-key ready tained, fire sup541 -548-51 74 to use, less than 50 topression behind tal days used by current refrig, Stow Master owner. Never smoked in, 5000 tow bar, no indoor pets, excellent $22,995. cond., very clean. Lots of 541-383-3503 bonus items; many have never been used. Price now reduced to $18,500 Ready to makememories! which is lower range of Top-selling Winnebago Kelly Blue Book. Call 31 J, original owners, non- Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r smokers, garaged, only more info / more photos. 18,800 miles, auto-levelFleetwood D i scovery ing jacks, (2) slides, upDutchman Denali 40' 2003, diesel, w/all graded queen bed, bunk 32' 2011 travel options - 3 slide outs, beds, micro, (3) TVs, trailer. 2 slides Evsatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, sleeps 10! Lots of storerything goes, all age, maintained, very etc., 32,000 miles. clean! kitchen ware, linens $67,995! ExWintered in h e ated tendedOnly etc. Hitch, sway and/or fishop. $82,000 O.B.O. nancingwarranty avail to qualified bars, water & sewer 541-447-8664 hoses. List price buyersi 541388-7179 $34,500 - asking $26,800Loaded. Check out the Q fa Must see to appreciclassifieds online Redmond, OR. www.hendbuffetin.com ate. 541-604-5993 Updated daily Gulfstream 24' BT Cruiser, 2004,2nd owner, 25K miles. Industnal V-10, 4-spd transmission with overdrive. 35 hrs • , t on gen.; stove & oven l i have never been used. New micro, new LED TV, BlueRay/DVD, all new tires, back-up camera, new awnings. Excellent! Unable to travel anymore due to health. $35,000. 541-548-3595 EEOICPA CLAIM DE- Meet singles right now! NIED? Di a gnosed No paid o perators, with cancer or a n- just real people like other illness working you. Browse greetf or DO E i n U. S . ings, exchange mesNuclear W e a pons sages and connect Program? You may live. Try it free. Call HOLIDAY RAMBLER be ent i tle d to now: 6 77-955-5505. VACATIONER 2003 to (PNDC) 8.1L V6 Gas, 340 hp, $150,000 $400,000. Call Attorworkhorse, Allison 1000 ney Hugh Stephens 5 speed trans., 39K, Tick, Tock NEW TIRES, 2 slides, 866-914-6965. 2495 Onan 5.5w gen., ABS Main St., Suite 442, Tick, Tock... brakes, steel cage cock- Buffalo, NY. (PNDC) ...don't let time get pit, washer/dryer, fire- If you or a loved one lace, mw/conv. oven, suffered a away. Hire a s t r oke, ree standing dinette, heart attack or died professional out was $121,060 new; now, after using testosterof The Buuetin's $35,900. 541-536-1008 one supplements you "Call A Service may be entitled to ITASCA 1989 34, 91k monetary damages. Professional" miles. Asking $9,900 Call 8 6 6 -520-3904! Directory today! 541-610-7259

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.

All real estate adverFSBO - 16178 Hawks tising in this newspa16' West Coast Lair Rd., La Pine, OR. per is subject to the Aluminum, $3950, Open 12-3 1 acre lot w/ grandfaF air H o using A c t 2007 Tioga Class C 30' 65 hp Mercury, t hered septic a p which makes it illegal 2321 NE Acorn Ct. motorhome, 17,000+ Shoreline Trailer, Elegant Home proval. Close to Bend, to a d vertise "any miles, excellent cond., 2014 Stickers, Fish Sunriver Resort, Mt. In Oak Tree preference, limitation professionally winterized Finder. skiing. HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low Bachelor or disc r imination Kerri Standerurick, every year. $35,000 obo. 541-596-5111 $35,000. Call Sandra Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 & 541-604-9352 based on race, color, Broker (PNDC) 541-695-3515. 541-325-2534 2 Vance & Hines pipes, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, rheGamerGroup.com $12,500. 541-306-0166 marital status or national origin, or an inHDFatBo 7996 tention to make any such pre f erence, 5.17 acres. 65694 Old limitation or discrimiBend/Redmond Hwy. nation." Familial staMtn view, power, waColl 54! 3855809 to promote yourservice • Advertise for 28 daysstarting ot 'I40 Itust easp caageevxawei<e onor wasiie tus includes children People Lookfor Information ter, septic approved. About Products and under the age of 18 $174,000 O.B.O. Call living with parents or Services Every Daythrough Brad 5 41-419-1725, Completely legal cus t odians, The Bvlletin Classiffeds or Deb 541-460-3956. Adoption Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Painting/Wall Covering Rebuilt/Customized pregnant women, and debraIbendbroad 2012/2013 Award people securing cusband.com 745 PREGNANT? CON NOTICE: Oregon LandWinner tody of children under SIDERING AD O P I DO THAT! scape Contractors Law Showroom Condition Homes for Sale 16. This newspaper TION? Call us first. (ORS 671) requires all All American Many Extras will not knowingly acbusinesses that adLiving exp e nses, Low Miles. Fainting cept any advertising SERVING CENTRAL OREGON vertise t o pe r form housing, medical, and $75,000 since 2003 for real estate which is Landscape Construc- • Interior and Exterior continued support af 541-546-4607 Residential & Commercial in violation of the law. tion which includes: teiwards. Ch o o se • Famuy owned New Dream Special O ur r e aders a r e l anting, deck s , a doptive family o f Sprinkler 3 bdrm, 2 bath • Residential R hereby informed that ences, arbors, your choice. Call 24/7. $50,900 finished Find exactly what Handyman/Remodeling Activstion/Repair Commercial all dwellings adver- Entertainer's Dream! water-features, and in855-970-2106 on your site. Residenuiel/Commerciet Back Flow Testing you are looking for in the (PNDC) tised in this newspa- Custom home w/open • 40 years experience stallation, repair of irJ and M Homes per are available on floor plan and outdoor CLASSIFIEDS rigation systems to be Snudl Jobs to • Senior Discounts 541-548-5511 NAIh1Tlh1AjtjCI an equal opportunity living space perfect for l icensed w it h th e Eetire Roow Remodels • 5-year Warranties • Summer Clean Up Landscape Contracbasis. To complain of gatherings. 2625 sq. ft., Garage Organixation Building/Contracting Ask about oer d iscrimination ca l l 3 bed, 3 bath, master tors Board. This 4-digit Home tnsPectioe RePairs • Weekly Mowing number is to be inHUD t o l l-free at on main, bonus room, SUMMER SPZCMLr NOTICE: Oregon state Quaily, Honest Work 5 Edgtng cluded in all adver1-800-677-0246. The solid wood f loors & law requires anyone 6149 • BI4ytonthty8 tisements which indi- Call 541.337 toll f ree t e lephonequartz counters. Cov541-317.9768 who con t racts for oennis rcse193960 ccBp151573BolutM/Insared cate the business has number for the hear- ered patio, 2 d e cks, MonthlyMaintenance construction work to a bond,insurance and ing i m paired is firepit & CANAL view. be licensed with the • Bark, Rock, Etc. workers compensa1-800-927-9275. 876 sq. ft. garage. Construction Contraction for their employ$499,900 tors Board (CCB). An LAMlSGLPIM ees. For your protec675 Dana Furlan, Principal active license • Landscape tion call 503-376-5909 RV Parking Broker 541-771-8761 means the contractor ln print and online with or use our website: Construction Bend Premier is bonded 8 insured. www.lcbistate.or.us to The Bulletin'6 Classifieds RV space for rent, NE Real Estate Verify the contractor's • Water Feature check license status CCB l i c ense at Redmond, $350/mo., Installation/tytaint. European before contracting with Motivated FSBO www.hirealicensedi ncludes water & the business. Persons • Pavers seeking Motivated Buyer contractor.com sewer. 541-419-1917 doing lan d scape Professional for new move-in ready, or call 503-376-4621. • Renovations maintenance do not 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sqft. Painter The Bulletin recomFIND YOUR FUTURE require an L CB • Irrigations Quality home at a quality mends checking with cense. HOME INTHE BULLETIN Repaint Installation price. 541-279-8783 the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Specialist! Your future is just apage Senior Discounts Some other t rades Just bought anewboat? Oregon License NOTICE away. Whetheryou're looking also req u ire addiBonded and Insured All real estate adverfor a hal or a place tohangit, Sell youroldoneinthe tional licenses and e186147 LLC tised here in is sub54&51&445$ CIBSSifiedS!ASkabOutOur The Bulletin Classified is certifications. ject to th e Federal GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,we LCIÃ s759 your best source. 541-815-2888 F air Housing A c t , SuperSellerrates! are three adorable, loving puppies Every daythousandsof which makes it illegal looking for a caring home. Please 541485-5809 Parking Lot Maintenanc buyers andsellers ofgoods to advertise any prefDebris Removal call right away. $500 Get your and services dobusinessin erence, limitation or The Bulletin is your these pages.Theyknow discrimination based >"" "+o ~ you can't beatThe Bulletin business Employment on race, color, reliCOLLINS Classified Section for ion, sex, handicap, selection andconvenience amilial status or naMarketplace - every item isjust a phone tional origin, or intenI call away. Special private party rates apply to merchandiseand Aeratlon/Ilethatchlng tion to make any such Call automotiv ecategories. Will Haul Away preferences, l i mitaAsk aboutFREEadded The Classified Section is tions or discrimination. services with seasonal AB PARKING LOT easy to use.Everyitem ""> FREE g 541-385-5809 We will not knowingly contract! With an ad in is categorizedandevery MAINTENANCE For Salvage-v:"I accept any adveitis• Spring Clean-up caitegoiy is indexed onthe For auyour parklnu lot/ ing for real estate • Mowteg 'Edging to advertise. section's front page. Any Locatton. The Bulletin'8 drlvewayneeds. www.bendbuuetin.com which is in violation of • Pruning 'Weedeating .ARemoval • Commerclal Sweeper Whether youarelookingfor this law. All persons • F rtiTizing +Hauling To place your photo ad,visit Lis online at • CrackFul • Seal Coat Aleo Cleanupe g, "Call A Service www .bendbulletin.com • Gmunds Keeping a home orneeda service, are hereby informed • Strlplnd • DustControl 4& Cleanouts"~ One4ee or awNyseruicesoPttos your future is inthe pagesof that all dwellings adw wtlww.bendbulletin.c o m • De-Iclnd The Bulletin Classified. Professional" FREE ESTIMATES vertised are available or call with questions, Call now to scbedukl Call Scott Mays on an equal opportu5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 541%16-2882 nity basis. The Bullej41-4$0The Bulletin Directory ServingCentral Oregon since 19N $714 ServingCeneal Otegon s>met9D3 BONDED a IN URED ccs ¹2033ss tin Classified

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 14 2014 G5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 881

882

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

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908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

1/3 interestin Financing available.

541-548-5254

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882

Fifth Wheels I

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5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition,

Sell for $3500. OR For Hire Call for quote Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293

CHECK YOUR AD

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options - reduced by $3500 to $31,500. 541-420-3250

Sport Utility Vehicles

to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds 5 4 1 »385-5809

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 885

Canopies & Campers 1995 Lance Camper, 11.3 ft., sleeps 6, self contained, very lightly used, exc. cond., TV, VCR, micro, oven, fridge, 3 burner stove, q ueen over c a b , $8000. 541-389-6256

Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003,1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 80W solar panel, walkaround queen+ sofa/bed, loads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., brand new tires licensed 2015. Must see!$13,700. 541-389-9214

There's a whole pile of "treasure" here!

Classifieds Thousandsof adsdaily in prlnt andonline. •

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975

Automobiles

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CHECKYOUR AD on the first day of publication. If a n e rror (photo for illustration only) occur in your ad, Toyota Sienna 201 1, may lease contact u s LE model, 7 passen- p we will be happy ger, stow-n-go seat- and to fix it as soon as we ing, alloy wheels. can. Deadlines are: (exp. 9/1 4/1 4) Weekdays 12:00 noon Vin ¹019106. f or next da y S a t . Stock ¹43981A 11:00 a.m. for Sun$23,979 day; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. S UBA Rll »uu»uuuuuuu uuu 541-385-5809 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. The Bulletin Classified 877-266-3821

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Dlr¹0354

Chevy Cavalier

940

Honda CRV EX 2007, AWD, 4x4, l eather,

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Vin ¹097452 Stock ¹44639A

Automobiles

2000 Inspected 8 Ready to Go!! ¹239718 $3,977

Ford Focus2010

ROBBERSON

Vans (photo for illustration only)

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very

CHEVELLE MALIBU 1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $15,000. 541-788-0427

moonroof. (exp. 9/14/14)

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541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 9/30/1 4

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 pricing god thru 09/30/14 Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154827 $11,977

Hyundai Tucson, 2011 l oaded, i m maculate, 39k mi., prem. pkg, bronze, panoramic sunroof, heated seats, Navigation, B l uetooth, AWD. great mileage, h andles great i n snow. Wa r ranty, One owner, nonsmokers, clear title. $19,500 (under Blue Book) Call (805)610-6415 in Terrebonne

ROBBERSON~ 541-312-3986

DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 09/30/14 Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonsmoker,. Ioaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds Acura CL 2002 silver, available. $4 , 950. one owner, 74k miles, Call Mike, (541) 815always garaged. 8176 after 3:30 p.m. "perfect" $6,900 obo. 541-389-1966 Camaro 2011

2005

Chrysler 200 LX 2012, pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. (exp. 9/1 4/1 4) VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014

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2009 hard top

18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt &

cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged. $22,500. 541-419-5980

Leather, Loaded and AWD. 76k miles ¹044698 $18,977 ROBBERSON u »»»»» ~

Convertible.End of Season Special! vin ¹213931 $23,977 ROBBERSON

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good thru 09/30/14

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Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014

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Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

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2011 Loaded and Super Clean 4x4. $23,977 Vin¹463850 ROBBERSON »Illc»»ll ~

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Ford F250 4x4 1996, x-cab, long wheel base, FIND YOUR FUTURE brush guard, tool box, $3000. 541-771-1667 or HOME INTHE BULLETIN 541-633-3607 Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking Peterbilt 359 p otable for a hat or aplace to hangit, water truck, 1 990, Honda Ridgeline RTL Crew Cab The Bulletin Classified is 3200 gal. tank, 5hp » your best source. p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, camlocks, $ 25,000. Every daythousandsof 541-820-3724 buyers andsellers ofgoods and services dobusinessin 931 these pages.Theyknow Automotive Parts you can't beat TheBulletin Extra nice 4x4, Service 8 Accessories 2007 Classified Sectionfor great mpg. ¹541238 selection andconvenience $19,977 4 mounted studded tires - every item isjust a phone 2 05/70R15 Wi n t e r call away. ROBBERSON'L Tracks, on S u baru mama The Classified Section is wheels. multi-fit 5 on ~ ~ easy to use.Everyitem 100 & 5 on 115. $175. 541-312-3986 is categorizedandevery Call between 3 8 5 Dlr ¹0205 pricing cartegory is indexed onthe p.m. 541-385-8022 good thru 08/31/14 section's front page. WANTED Whether youarelooking for older Dodge Ram Toyota 1988, 48k on a home orneeda service, Cummins turbo diesel replaced engine, 5 your future is inthepagesof pickup, 4WD 5spd, spd, 4 cyl, rear wheel any condition, farm drive, r un s g r e at, The Bulletin Classified. truck okay. Private good tires, body in The Bulletin buyer, CASH Dan, good cond., $1300. s»»u»g central or uu» uuc»luu 971-231-4241 541-385-4790.

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18 SAlLSOAT Vlth trailer, V-berth, works great. Sell or trade. $2900 OBO. 541 000-000

Item Priced af: Your Total Ad Costonl . • Under $500....................................................................... $29 • $500 to $999...................................................................$3ty • $1000 to $2499.............................................................. $49 • $2500 and over............................................................... $59 Includes: 2 ia length,with border, full talar photo, baldheadlineaad price. 'Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)

The Bulletin Serving Central Orugan since i903

Yourad will a/so appear in: • The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace

'Pr!vatepariy merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, airplanes, and garage sale categories.

EDIE DELAY

541-420-2cp50 R E A L T 0

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$200,000s. Brand new homes |a Bend with the quality

Two master suites on main

level. Large bedroom, loft) 1ty445 Ironwood Circle bonus area on second level. Hardwood floors, vaulted Directions:iuount Washington lo great room ceiling with gas Broken TopDrive fireplace, granite counters. JUST REDUCED Enclosed patio, large 2-car garage.

LYNDA WALSH Broker 541-410-1359

I

Homes starting in the Iow

Spacious 2703 sq. fi. townhome in g a ted B r o ken Top. versatile floor plan, 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths.

Hosted 6 Listed by:

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THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM

$527,900

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Principal Broker

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SAT. 4 SUN. 1PM - 5PM

Homes Starting Mld-$200s

• The Central Oregon Nickel Ads u bendbulletin.com

Some restrictions apply

Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SE Golden GatePlace,Bend of walking trails. Tour a DfractiottaiFrom theparkuay, euf variety of single level and on Reed Narlet,southon 15th,then 2 story plans. follonr sigfu.

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Trucks & Heavy Equipment

TEAM DELAY

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

MetchanChS g eQ ) QS

XLT 4x4, 460. Only 81K miles! Manual w/overdrive, A/C, X-cab, always garaged, excellent condition, $5750. 541-977-3120.

HOSted 6 LiSted byr

$13,979

Get i j 'I <s.fast without spenctInj h.,lof-,of cysh.

Ford F-250 1994

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Chevy Malibu 2012, Lots of options; sunroof, 6 speed trans with manual option, bluetooth, o n Star, Sirius satelite, heated seats, pw, pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech engine, 20 MPG city, 35 MPG hwy, USB port, Ipod r eady, $14,900 OBO. 541-504-6974

JEEP WRANGLER

front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

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2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake con-

u»p

975

Chevy Express Cargo clean; loaded - coid $23,999 Van 2011, 2500. CD, weather pkg, premium pkg& technology pkg. A/C, ps, with ladder Suaaall uuu»uuuuuuuu.uuu Keyless access, sunrack. (exp. 9/1 4/1 4) roof, navigation, satel- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Vin ¹126159 lite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier Dlr ¹0354 Stock ¹44535A not included.)$22,500. $22,979

541-447-5184.

S S

AUTOS& TRANSPORTATION 908- Aircraft, Parts snd Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

Vans

®

, •

You know what they say about "one man's trash".

935

(photo for illustration only)

Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Automatic, 6-cylinder, tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyless entry, 69K miles. Excellent condition; tires have 90% tread. 541-480-7930 Chevy 2007 Silverado $11,995. Z-71, loaded, 1 owner, Call 541-598-5111 HANGAR FOR SALE. $19,500. 541-379-3530 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. & oM4e r / Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546 Chevg Silverado 2004 I(, LS, 2 D, V8, 57k miles, Hangar for saleat Chev Trailblazer LS includes bedliner, hard Redmond Airport - not tonneau cover. Asking 2004, AWD, 6 cyl, remote a T Hangar - $38,000. $10,750. entry, clean title, 541-588-0131 541-420-0626 12/15 tags,$5995. Ford F250 1984 4x4 Kin~ 541-61 0-6150 Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shi kit, 90% tires, good wood truck! $2000 or best ofChev E uinox fer. 541-279-8023

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at

Sport Utility Vehicles

2 0 07, 99K

call 541-475-6302

Upgrades include, T-6 lighting, skylights, windows, 14' side RV door, infra-red heating, and bathroom, $155,000, Call Bill

ROBBERSON ~

Nissan Murano 2012, AWD, auto, cloth, CD, miles, premium packpw, pdl. age, heated lumbar supported seats, pan(exp. 9/1 4/1 4) oramic moo n roof, Vin ¹229346 Suburban 1997, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- GMC Stock ¹83013 loaded, daily driver, non headlights, tan & fully extra clean, $2650. 1997 $15,979 black leather interior, n ew front & re a r Chevy Astro, runs good, SUBA R Ll uuu»uuuuuuuuuuu brakes © 76K miles, $1300. 541-410-4596 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. one owner, all records, 877-266-3821 very clean, $16,900. Dlr ¹0354 541-388-4360

BMW X3

In Madras, 3300 sq.ft. Hangar Prineville Airport 60'wide by 55' deep with 16' bi-fold door.

Vin ¹ 520014 7.977

Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/14

hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

~

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & afford541-91 5-9170 able flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007 Jeepster Commando 1968 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, comCwdillac Esc>mlde pletely restored. $12,000 ~-+ T obo. 808-430-5133 or 541-382-6300 Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent 2005. All the good1974 Bellanca condition, always ga1730A raged. 155K m i les, ies. Must see only $11,500. 541-549-6407 $18,998 Vin ¹192111 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 933 180 mph, excellent ROBBERSON Pickups condition, always

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,

I

1 9 7 8 V-8 ,

Lockers, new soft top, power steering, oversized h e ater, BOATS 8 RVs many extras. $6,000 805 - Misc. Items obo. 541-519-1627 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs Dod e Nitro 2011 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882- Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 4x4 Looks as good as Its name! 890 - RVs for Rent

(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)

Cessna 150 LLC

King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566

C J5

a l ~ I

541-312-3986

Complete restoration, $32,900.

1/5th interest in 1973

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $19,995

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

935

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com

541-419-3301

Where buyers meet sellers

s u a aau Dreams do come true! © Pampered from day one! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 17K original miles. 877-266-3821 Photosathemmings.com Dlr ¹0354 $19,900. 541 323-1898

Chevelle Malibu 1966

Just too many collectibles? on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. »Spellcheck» and Sell them in human errors do oc- The Bulletin Classifieds cur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that 541-385-5809 corrections and any adjustments can be Alaska 8 ' Ca b over made to your ad. Camper 1998, many 541-385-5809 extras, Stable-Lift jack The Bulletin Classified system. $10 , 500. 541-549-9461.

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

Sport Utility Vehicles

8150,000

541-288-3333

Laredo 30'2009

Lance cabover camper 1991, 18' over cab, 8' in p/up bed. under cover since new, immaculate! $4,100 obo 541-548-5069 SNUGTOP pickup canopy for Ford F250 short bed, white, like new, $400. 541-416-9686

Pickups

Say ugoodbuyu

(located © Bend)

$25,500

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

Antique & Classic Autos

$22,979

Kit Companion '94 26', 1 slide, new stove/fridge, comes with gen. Reduced to $4000. 541-389-5788

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

935

Buick Skylark 1972

Columbia 400,

KeystoneLaredo 31' RV 20 06 w i th 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-4947-4805

933

(2) 1959 1/2-ton Chevy pickups: 1 is 4x4 with ower take off winch & arn hubs; other's 2WD, extra parts. Also 1941 1-ton Ford cab & chassis. Toyota Tacoma 2012, Titles for all. 541-989-6191 5 spd, xcab, pw, pd, bed liner. (exp. 9/14/14) Vin ¹014333 Stock ¹83077

aa Heartland P r owler Keystone Raptor, 2007 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 37 toy hauler,2 slides, like new, 2 slides-liv- generator, A/C, 2 TVs, i ng area & la r ge satellite system w/auto closet, 15' power aw- seek, in/out sound sysning, power hitch 8 tem,sleeps 6,m any exs tabilizers, 18 g a l . tras. $29,999. In Madras, call541-771-9607or water heater, full size 541-475-6265 queen bed , l a r ge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $25,000 or makeoffer. 541-999-2571

932

Pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters ieven in baths) with

20781 NE Comet Lane

under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention Directfohs:North on Boyd Acres,

given io allow for tons o( Right on Sierra, Le f( on Black Potlider, natural light a much more. Right on Cometlane.Lookfor signs. Come by the model home for starting in the low more information and plans.

Hosted & Listed by:

$200,000s

RHIANNA KUNKLER Broker

541-306-0939

R E A t. 7 0

R S


G6 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 2014 • THE BULLETIN 975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

DID YOU KNOW 144 million U.S. A dults read a N e wspaper print copy each week? Discover the Power of PRINT N e wspaper Advertising in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, OrCountryman AWD egon, U t a h and Loaded - Get there Washington with just in style! ¹H99552 one phone call. For a $24,977 FREE ad v e rtising network brochure call ROBBERSON y 916-288-6011 or \I II c 0 4 N ~ I M RDB email ceceliaocnpa.com 541-312-3986 (PNDC) Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

fice box address set paving. CORDING. The Trust forth in this notice. Deed was recorded ant to Oregon ReStatutes Due to potential con- Contract Documents as follows: Date Re- vlsed flicts with federal law, may be examined at corded: February 12, 8 6.752(3). The d e persons having no the following loca- 2008. Recordinq No. fault for which foreclom ade i s record legal or equi- tions: 2008-06414. Ogfficial s ure i s c ertain trust d e ed table interest in the •City of Redmond EnR ecords o f Des - grantor breach of the made by M ichael subject property will gineering Department chutes County, Or- terms and conditions Frizzell and Stephanie only receive informa- 243 NE Antler Av- egon. 4.DEFAULT. of the obligation seJanssen, not as Ten- tion concerning the enue, Redmond, Or- The Grantor or any cured by the deed of ants in Common but lender's estimated or egon. other person o b li- trust. The event of with right of survivor- actual bid. Lender bid .www.ciplist.com gated on the Trust default under the note Garage Sales ship, as grantor, to i nformation is a l s o Deed and Promissory and deed o f t r ust, First American Title available a t the Digital copies of the Note secured thereby pursuant to Section Insurance Company, Garage Sales trustee's web s ite, plans, specifications, is in default and the 9(a)(i) of the Deed of as trustee, in favor of www.northwestand bid proposal, in- Beneficiary seeks to Trust, which provides Dodge Avenger 2013, Garage Sales Mortgage Electronic trustee.com. Notice is cluding any future ad- foreclose the T rust that, "Lender may repw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. Registration Systems, further given that any denda or revisions to Deed for failure to quire immediate pay(exp. 9/14/14) Find them Inc., as nominee for person named in ORS the bid d ocuments, pay: A p artial pay- ment in full of all sums Vin ¹535474 Stearns Lending, Inc., 86.778 has the right, are available by go- ment due September secured by this Secuin Stock ¹83015 it's successors and at any time prior to ing to www.ciplist.com 1, 2013, in the amount rity Instrument i f... The Bulletin $13,979 assigns, as b enefi- five days before the and signing up, by of $588.00; p l us .Borrower dies and/or ciary, dated 10/19/09, date last set for the going to the Member monthly payments in the Property is not the Classifieds S UBA R U . recorded 10/28/09, in s ale, to h av e t h is Login (It's f r ee). the am o un t of principal residence of the mortgage records foreclosure proceed- General Contractors $1,174r00 each, due at least one surviving 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-385-5809 of DESC H UTES ing dismissed and the who plan to bid on this t he first o f ea c h Borrower.". The De877-266-3821 date of County, Oregon, as trust deed reinstated project are required to month, for the months fault Dlr ¹0354 I Ne e d to sell a 2009-45940 and sub- by payment to t he r egister for a n a c - o f O c tober 2 0 1 3 03/22/2014 and pay Vehicle? sequently assigned to beneficiary of the en- count on through June 2014; the following sums: Ford Fusion 2012 Call The Bulletin Lakeview Loan Ser- tire amount then due www.ciplist.com to be plus late charges and principal balance of and place an ad vicing, LLC by As(other than such por- included in the Plan advances; plus any $257,114.68 with actoday! signment recorded as tion of the principal as Holder's list and to re- unpaid real property crued interest from Ask about our 2014-22900, covering would not then be due ceive email updates of taxes or liens, plus 02/22/2014; together "Whee/ Deal"! t he f o llowing d e - had no default oc- any addenda or revi- interest. 5.AMOUNT with title e x pense, for private party scribed real property curred) and by curing sions t o t h e bid DUE. T h e a m ount costs, trustee's fees advertisers situated in said county any o ther d e fault documents. No Pro- due on the Note which and attorney's fees Dual power heated and state, to wit: LOT complained of herein posal will be consid- i s secured by t h e i ncurred herein b y leather seats for only 49, THE MEADOWS that is capable of be- ered from a General Trust Deed referred to reason of said default; $1 9,977 PHASE 1, CITY OF ing cured by tender- Contractor to whom herein is: P r i ncipal any further sums adVin¹248502 R EDMOND, DE S - ing the performance a proposal form has balance in the amount vanced by the benefiCHUTES COUNTY, required under t he ROBBERSON not been issued by of $159,563.99; plus ciary for the protecO REGON . P R O P - o bligation o r tr u st the City of Redmond interest at the rate of tion of t h e a b o ve LINCOIII ~ II IBRDB ERTY AD D R ESS: deed, and in addition to registered bidders 5.125% per a nnum described real prop842 NW MAPLE CT to paying said sums from www.ciplist.com. from August 1, 2013; erty and its interest 541-312-3986 REDMOND, OR or tendering the perDlr ¹0205. Pricing plus late charges of therein; and prepay97756 Both the ben- formance necessary $ 553.82; plus a d - ment penalties/premigood thru 9/30/1 4 PUBLISH: eficiary a n d the to cure the default, by vances and foreclo- ums, if applicable. By Daily Journal of Subaru Outback 2012 trustee have elected paying all costs and sure attorney fees and reason of said default, CommerceNeed help fixing stuff? 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, to sell the real prop- expenses actually incosts. 6.SALE OF the beneficiary has September 15, 2014 auto. trans., AWD, Call A Service Professional erty to satisfy the obli- curred in enforcing the PROPERTY. The d eclared al l s u m s leather heated seats, find the help you need. secured by obligation and t rust Trustee hereby states owing on the obligaBend BulletinAWD, power moon gations www.bendbulletin.com the trust deed and a deed, together with September 14, 2014 that the property will tion secured by said r oof, a n d mor e ! notice of default has trustee's and be sold to satisfy the trust deed i mmedi25,600 miles. Below been recorded pursu- attorney's fees not LEGAL NOTICE obligations secured by ately due and payKB @ $ 2 6,500 NOTICE OF PUBLIC ant to Oregon Re- exceeding the t he Trust Deed. A able, said sums being 541-344-5325 HEARING vised Statutes amounts provided by the following, to wit: Trustee's Notice of annie2657Oyahoo.com 86.752(3); the default said OR S 8 6 .778. The Desc h utes Default and Election $257,114.68 with infor which the foreclo- Requests from per- County Hearings Of- to Sell Under Terms terest thereon at the s ure i s m a d e i s sons named in ORS ficer will hold a Public of Trust Deed has rate of 6.06 percent grantor's failure to pay 86.778 for reinstate- Hearing on October 7, been recorded in the per annum beginning Hyundai Accent GL 2014, at 6:30 p.m. in when due the follow- ment quotes received 02/22/2014; plus adOfficial Records of 1999, auto, CD. ing sums m o nthly less than six days the Barnes and Saw- Deschutes C o unty, vances of $19,009.41; (exp. 9/1 4/1 4) yer Rooms of the Deof together with title expayments prior to the date set Oregon. 7. TIME OF VIN ¹584982 Ser v ices SALE. Date:Novem$1,242.96 beginning for the trustee's sale schutes pense, costs, trustee's Stock ¹44383B VOLVO XC90 2007 08/01/1 3, $1,241.50 will be honored only at Center, 1300 NW Wall ber 13, 2014. Time: fees and a ttorneys $3,979 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, beginning 11/1/13 and the discretion of the St., Bend, to consider 11:00 a.m. Place: De- fees incurred herein power everything, $1,31 2.13 beginning b eneficiary or if r e - the following request: s chutes SuaWau Coun t y by reason of said degrey on grey, leather SUMRUOPSEHD OOM NUMBE R : Courthouse, 1164 NW fault; any further sums 1 /1/14; p l u s lat e quired by the terms of F ILE heated lumbar seats, 247-14-000238-PS/27 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. charges of $ 4 9.72 the loan documents. Bond Street, Bend, advanced by the ben3rd row seat, moon877-266-3821 each month begin- In construing this no- 4-A. SUBJECT:ApOregon. 8.RIGHT TO eficiary for the protecroof, new tires, alpeal of L and Use Dlr ¹0354 ning 08/16/13; plus tice, the singular inREINSTATE. Any tion of the above deways garaged, all Compatibility S t ate- person named in ORS scribed property and prior accrued l a te cludes the plural, the maintenance up to Good classified ads tell ment s i gn-off to 86.778 has the right, its interest therein; charges of $2.64; plus word "grantor" indate, excellent cond. the essential facts in an pla c e at any time that is not and prepayment penadvances of $56.00; cludes any successor t ransfer i n A STEAL AT $13,900. interesting Manner.Write together with title ex- i n i nterest t o th e 108-acre feet of Tu- later than five days a lties/premiums, if 541-223-2218 from the readers view - not pense, costs, trustee's grantor as well as any malo Creek w a ter before the T rustee applicable. WHEREfrom Tumalo Reserthe seller's. Convert the fees and attorney's other person owing an conducts the sale, to FORE, notice hereby The Bulletin facts into benefits. Show fees incurred herein obligation, the perfor- voir to Klippel Acres have this foreclosure is given that the unMining Pit. A P PLITo Subscribe call the reader how the item will by reason of said de- mance of which is sed ismissed and t h e dersigned trustee will fault; any further sums cured by said trust CANT/S: Tumalo Irri- Trust Deed reinstated o n D ecember 1 0 , help them insomeway. 541-385-5800 or go to District. advanced by the bengation 2014 at the hour of This deed, and the words by payment to t he www.bendbulletin.com eficiary for the protec- "trustee" and "benefi- OWNER/S:KC Devel- Beneficiary of the en- 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in advertising tip WHEN YOU SEE THIS tion of the above de- ciary" include their re- opment Group, LLC. tire amount then due, accord with the stanbrought to you by scribed real property spective successors APPELLANT: Thoother than such por- dard of time estabDorb i na tion of the principal as lished and i ts inte r est in interest, if any. The m as & by ORS The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregonsince f9t8 Bishop, Trustees of therein; and prepay- trustee's rules of aucwould not then be due 187.110, at the folment penalties/premi- tion may be accessed the Bishop Family had no default oclowing place: inside On a classified ad L O C ATION: curred, by curing any the main lobby of the ums, if applicable. By at w w w .northwest- Trust. go to reason of said default Deschutes C o u nty and are 63560 Johnson Road, other default that is www.bendbulletin.com the beneficiary has trustee.com incorporated by this Bend; Tax Lots 828 & c apable o f be i n g Courthouse, 1164 NW to view additional d eclared all s u ms reference. You may 824 on A ssessor's cured by tendering the Bond, in the City of photos of the item. owing on the obliga- also access sale sta- Map 17-11-13. STAFF performance required Bend, County of DEfphoto for t¹ustrstion only) tion secured by the tus a t ww w .north- CONTACT:Anthony under the obligation or SCHUTES, State of Hyundai Elantra 2011, trust deed i mmedi- westtrustee.com and Raguine, anthonyra- Trust Deed and by Oregon, sell at public Looking for your Touring, leather, auto, guineodeschutes.org ately due and pay- www. USA-Foreclonext employee? paying all costs and auction to the highest . Copies of the staff CD, pw, pdl. able, said sums being Place a Bulletin help sure.com. For further expenses actually in- bidder for cash the (exp. 9/14/14) the following, to wit: information, p l ease report, application, all curred in enforcing the i nterest in t h e d e wanted ad today and Vin ¹090677 $172,967.92 with inreach over 60,000 contact: Kathy Tag- documents and evi- obligation and Trust scribed real property Stock ¹82995 terest thereon at the gart readers each week. Northwest dence submitted by or Deed, together with which the grantor had rate of 5 percent per Trustee Services, Inc. on behalf of the appli- t he t r ustee's a n d or had power to conYour classified ad $12,979 annum be g inning P.O. Box 997 Belle- cant and applicable a ttorney's fees n ot vey at the time of the will also appear on S UBA R U 0 7/01/13; plus l a t e vue, WA 98009-0997 criteria are available exceedingthe amount execution by grantor bendbulletin.com charges of $ 4 9.72 425-586-1900 FRIZ- for inspection at the provided i n which currently reORS of the trust deed, to2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. each month begin- ZELL, MICHAEL and Planning Division at ceives over 1.5 mil8 6.778. Yo u ma y gether with any inter877-266-3821 no cost and can be ning 08/16/13 until JANSSEN, lion page views reach the O r egon est which the grantor Dlr ¹0354 fo r 25 State Bar's Lawyer or grantor's succespaid; plus prior acevery month at STEPHANIE (TS¹ purchased cents a page. The Referral Service at sors in interest accrued late charges of 7699.20718) no extra cost. Bullestaff report should be 503-684-3763 Get your $2.64; plus advances 1002.271538-File No. tin Classifieds or quired after the exm ade avail able 7 days toll-free in Oregon at ecution of the trust of $56.00; together Get Results! Call business LEGAL NOTICE prior to the date set with title e x pense, 385-5809 or place 800-452-7636 or you deed, to satisfy the for t h e hea r ing. may visit its website foregoing obligations costs, trustee's fees INVITATION TO BID your ad on-line at Documents are also and attorneys fees in(AS PUBLISHED) bendbulletin.com at: w w w .osbar.org. thereby secured and e ROW I N G a vailable online a t curred herein by reaLegalassistance may t he costs and e x son of said default; Sealed bids for the www.deschutes.org. penses of sale, inbe available if y ou with an ad in any further sums ad- c onstruction of t h e Deschutes C o u nty have a low income cluding a reasonable The Bulletin recoml R e d mond, encourages persons and meet federal pov- charge by the trustee. The Bulletin's mends extra caution i vanced by the benefi- City o f St o r mwater w ith d isabilities t o Notice is further given "Call A Service when p u r chasing • ciary for the protec- 2014 erty guidelines. For Improvement Project participate in all pro- more information and that for payoff quotes i products or services tion of t h e a b o ve SW 14-01, addressed Professional" grams and activities. described real propfrom out of the area. a directory of legal aid requested pursuant to event/location is programs, g o Directory to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d i S ending c ash , erty and its interest to the City Recorder, This accessible to people therein; and prepayCity of Redmond, Or86.789 must be timely I checks, or credit inhttp://www.oregondisabilities. If you lawhelp.org. Any c ommunicated in a I formation may be I ment penalties/premi- egon will be received with ums, if a p plicable. until 2:00 PM l ocal need a c commoda- questions regarding written request that i subject toFRAUD. t ime a t t h e Ci t y tions to make partici- this matter should be c omplies with t h a t W HEREFORE, n o For more informaoffice, City pation poss i ble, directed to Lisa Sum- statute addressed to i tion about an adver- tice hereby is given Recorder's Hall, 716 SW Ever- please call the ADA mers, Paralegal, (541) the trustee's "Urgent • tiser, you may call • that the undersigned Coordinator at (541) 686-0344 trustee will on D egreen Avenue, Red(TS Request Desk" either I the Oregon State I 330-4640. by personal delivery Infiniti l30 2001 ¹7754.30551). Attorney General's g cember 9, 2014 at the mond, Oregon, on hour of 10:00 o'clock, October 9, 2014 and great condition/ Office C o nsumer D ATED: J u n e 2 0 , to the trustee's physiLEGAL NOTICE in accord with then publicly opened well maintained, 2014. /s/ Nancy K. cal offices (call for adi Protection hotline at A.M. the standard of time and read at 2:00 PM PUBLIC AUCTION 1-877-877-9392. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, dress) or b y f i r st 127k miles. established by ORS in Conference Room To be held Saturday, Successor T rustee, class, certified mail, $5,900 obo. 187.110, at the f olA, City Hall, RedHun t er, r eturn r eceipt r e 541-420-3277 20, 2014 Hershner Serving Centra/ Oregon since l903 lowing place: inside mond, Oregon. First September addressed to 8:30 A.M., at Jami- LLP, P.O. Box 1475, quested, the main lobby of the tier subcontractor list at the trustee's post ofStreet Self Stor- Eugene, OR 97440. Deschutes C o u nty is required to be sub- son fice box address set 63177 Jamison Courthouse, 1164 NW mitted by 4:00 PM, age, LEGAL NOTICE forth in this notice. Street, Bend, Oregon Bond, in the City of same day (Note: The 97701. TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Due to potential conOF SALE File No. flicts with federal law, Bend, County of DE- first tier subcontractor SCHUTES, State of list may also be sub- (Unit B-017, Queen) 7827.20645 Re f e r- persons having no Oregon, sell at public mitted with the sealed ence is made to that record legal or equiauction to the highest bid a t c o n tractor's LEGAL NOTICE c ertain t rust d e e d table interest in the Check p reference). Bid s TRUSTEE'S NOTICE bidder for cash the made by Ernest R. subject property will The Bulletin Classified i nterest in t h e d e - shall be clearly laOF SA L E . The Oller, Trustee of the only receive informascribed real property beled: 2014 Storm- T rustee under t h e Ernest R. Oller Living tion concerning the which the grantor had water Improvement terms of t h e T rust Trust, UTD Decem- lender's estimated or or had power to con- Project SW 14-01. Deed desc r ibed b er 06, 2 007, a s actual bid. Lender bid vey at the time of the herein, at the direc- g rantors, t o Fir s t i nformation is a l s o execution by grantor No mandatory pre-bid tion of the Beneficiary, American Title Insur- available a t the of the trust deed, tomeeting will be held. hereby elects to sell ance Company of Or- trustee's web s ite, gether with any inter- N o bid will be a c - t he p r operty d e - egon, as trustee, in www.northwestest which the grantor cepted by a general scribed in the Trust favor of Bank of Cas- trustee.com. A r ight or grantor's succes- contractor who is not Deed to satisfy the cades, as beneficiary, exists, or may exist sors in interest acon the plan holders obligations secured dated 03/12/08, reunder ORS 86.778 to list. thereby. Pursuant to corded 03/17/08, in have the proceeding quired after the execution of the trust ORS 86.771, the fol- the mortgage records d ismissed and t h e deed, to satisfy the This is a Public Works lowing information is of DESCHUTES, Or- trust deed reinstated foregoing obligations Contract and subject provided: 1. PARTIES: egon, as 2008-11737 by paying the entire thereby secured and to the Oregon Bureau Grantor: SHANNON and subsequently as- amount then due, tot he costs an d e x - of Labor and Indus- M. LUCAS. Trustee: signed to O neWest gether wit h c o sts, Bank N.A. by Assign- trustee's fees and atpenses of sale, in- tries (BOLI) Wage A MERITITLE. S u c cluding a reasonable Rates, dated July 1, cessor Trus t ee: m ent recorded a s torney fees, and/or by charge by the trustee. 2014 an d a m e nd- N ANCY K . C A R Y. 2014-18217, covering curing any other deNotice is further given ments for region 10 as Beneficiary:ORt he f o llowing d e - fault complained of in that for reinstatement defined under ORS EGON HO US ING scribed real property the notice of default, or payoff quotes re- 279C.800 to AND C O M M U N ITY situated in said county at any time that is not SERVICES DE- and state, to wit: Lot later than five days quested pursuant to 279C.870. O RS 8 6 .786 a n d PARTMENT, AS- 36 of RIDGEWATER before the date last 86.789 must be timely Scope of Work: Im- SIGNEE OF BANK I I, P.U.D., City o f set for the sale In c ommunicated in a provements generally OF THE CASCADES Bend, Des c hutes construing this notice, written request that include repair or re- M ORTGAGE C E N - County, Ore g on. the singular includes c omplies with t h at construction of 14 City TER. 2.DESCRIPPROPERTY AD- the plural, the word statute addressed to of Redmond storm T ION O F P R O P - DRESS: 61155 Ridge "grantor" includes any the trustee's "Urgent water catch basins, E RTY: The re a l Falls Place Bend, OR successor in interest Request Desk" either c onstruction of 1 3 property is described 97702 Both the ben- to the grantor as well www.bendbulletin.com by personal delivery new catch basins, 6 as follows: Lot Two eficiary a n d the as any other person to the trustee's physi- sedimentation man- (2), Block One (1), trustee have elected owing an obligation, cal offices (call for ad- holes, 5 type B dry- FORKED HORN ES- to sell the real prop- the performance of dress) or b y f i r st wells, storm pipe in- TATES, recorded No- erty to satisfy the obli- which is secured by class, certified mail, stallation, curb a nd vember 18, 1968, in gations secured by said trust deed, and r eturn r eceipt r e - sidewalk replacement, Cabinet A, Page 175, the trust deed and a the words "trustee" quested, addressed to ADA ramp construc- Deschutes C o unty, notice of default has and "beneficiary" inthe trustee's post of- tion, a n d as p halt Oregon. 3. REbeen recorded pursu- clude their respective LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7699.20718 R e f e rence is made to that

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successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be a c cessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status a t ww w .northwesttrustee.com and www. USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information, p lease contact: Bre a n on Miller Nort h west Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 425-586-1900 Oller, E rnest R . (TS¹ 7827.20645) 1002.271666-File No. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE File No. 7 023.102436 R e f e r ence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d

that for reinstatement or payoff quotes re quested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely communicated in a written request that c omplies with t h a t statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physi cal offices (call for ad d ress) or b y fi r st class, certified mail, r eturn r e ceipt r e quested, addressed to the trustee's post of fice box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential con flicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equi table interest in the subject property wi

made by Metyas R Perez and Sonya A Perez, husband and wife, as grantor, to Fi delity National Title Ins Co, as trustee, in favor of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as benefi ciary, dated 07/08/09, recorded 07/10/09, in

the mortgage records of DESC H UTES County, Oregon, as 2009-29361 , cover ing the following de scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot Seven (7), Emily Es tates, recorded No vember 20, 2006, in Cabinet H, Page 127, Deschutes C o unty, Oregon. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 640 Northwest Green For est Circle Redmond, OR 97756 Both the

beneficiary and t he trustee have elected to sell the real prop erty to satisfy the obli gations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursu ant to Oregon Re vised Statutes 86.752(3); the default for which the foreclo s ure i s m a d e i s grantor's failure to pay when due the follow ing sums: monthly of payments $1,010.91 beginning 05/01/12 and $1,012.21 beginning 04/01/2013; plus late charges of $ 3 3 .14 each month b egin ning 05/1 6/1 2; plus prior accrued l ate charges of $0.00; plus advances of $1,110.50 that repre sent property inspec tions and attorney's fees and costs; to gether with title ex pense, costs, trustee's fees and a ttorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said de fault; any further sums advanced by the ben eficiary for the protec tion of the above de scribed real property and i st inte r est therein; and prepay ment penalties/premi ums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums ow ing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the follow ing, to wit: $142,184.41 with in terest thereon at the rate of 5.375 percent per annum beginning 04/01/12; plus l a te charges of $ 3 3.14 each month begin ning 05/1 6/1 2 until

paid; plus prior ac crued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $1,110.50 that rep

r esent property i n spections and attorney's fees and costs; together with title expense, costs, PUBLIC NOTICE trustee's fees and at T he Bend Park & torneys fees incurred Recreation D i s trict herein by reason of Board of Directors will said default; any fur meet in a work sesther sums advanced sion at 5 :3 0 p . m., by the beneficiary for Tuesday, September the protection of the 16, 2014, at the disabove described real t rict office 799 S W property and its inter Columbia, Bend, Orest therein; and pre egon. Agenda topics payment include an update on penalties/premiums, if the Shevlin Park pubapplicable. WHERE lic input process, preFORE, notice hereby sentation of a Sumis given that the un mer Recr e ation dersigned trustee will Report, an update on o n D ecember 1 6 , the district's nature 2014 at the hour of education p rogram, 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in and a discussion reaccord with the stan garding Senior Cendard of t ime estab ter renovation options. lished by ORS The board will meet in 187.110, at the follow a regular business ing place: inside the meeting at 7:00 p.m. main lobby of the De to consider approval s chutes Coun t y of contracts related to Courthouse, 1164 NW the Colorado Dam Safe Passage Project, Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DE budget allocation for a SCHUTES, State of pickleball court project Oregon, sell at public at the Pine Nursery auction to the highest and assignment of the bidder for cash the in Bend Elk s L e a se terest i n t h e de A greement. At t h e scribed real property conclusion o f th e which the grantor had regular meeting the or had power to con board will conduct an vey at the time of the executive se s sion execution by grantor pursuant t o OR S of the trust deed, to 192.660(2)(i) for the gether with any inter purpose of reviewing est which the grantor and evaluating the job or grantor's succes performance of public sors in i nterest ac officers and employquired after the execu ees. tion of the trust deed, to satisfy the forego T he a genda a n d ing oblig a tions s upplementary r e thereby secured and ports are posted on t he costs and e x the district's website, penses of sale, includ www.bendparksaning a re a sonable drec.org. For more charge by the trustee. information call Notice is further given 541-389-7275.


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