Bulletin Daily Paper 10-14-2013

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $

MONDAY October t4,20t3

easnns o orunnin in eco

Cat clinic

SPORTS• B1

LOCAL• A7

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

FALL BALLOT

Voters to

Medical credit cards

decide on

— Some doctors offer older patients a wayto payfor costly procedures, but the plans' interest rates can strain finances.A4

room tax

Athletic memoradiiia-

measures

Manystarswhocashinmay not need the money, but they figure they have the memories,

which is enough.B1

By Hillary Borrud and Shelby R. King The Bulletin

Chemical risk —Study looks at BPA and fertility.A6

investing — Why

• Depends. Sciencesaysit's unlikely.Thebirds andthe bees,however ... well, maybestock upon blankets andfirewood, just to be safe.

many men may benefitfrom

listening to women.A3

D.C. standoff —Adeal remains elusive with a possible

default on government obligations just days away.A2

And a Web exclusiveWhat polls say about the GOP

as the partial government

percent beginning July 1.

+s

shutdown continues.

The idea behind the Bend tourism tax measure, 9-94, is to raise additional money to spend on tourism marketing campaigns in Seattle and northern California, in an effort to bring more visitors to Bend in the slower seasons of fall, winter and spring. According to supporters, the tax increase would raise an additional $300,000 annually for this marketing plan. SeeRoom taxes/A4

denddulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

From start,

signs of trouble at health portal

Rob Kerr /The Bulletin

Frost clings to rocks and vegetation on the shore of Sparks Lake at sunrise last week. Science and tradition rely on many clues to predict the coming winter weather conditions.

By Robert Pear, Sharon Lafraniere and lan Austen

By Dylan J. Darling •The Bulletin

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — In March, Henry Chao, the chief digital architect for the Obama administration's new online insurance marketplace, told industry executives that he was deeply worried about the website's debut. "Let's just make sure it's not a third-world experience," he told them. Two weeks after the rollout, few would say his hopes were realized. For the past 12 days, a system costing more than $400 million and billed as a one-stop, clickand-go hub for citizens seeking health insurance has thwarted the efforts of millions to simply log in. The growing national outcry has deeply embarrassed the White House, which has refused to say how many people have enrolled through the federal

exchange.

s an exterminator, Keith Bacon says insects this fall are indicating it could be a cold winter ahead in Central Oregon. Yellow jackets have given off the strongest signal, he

The Washington Post

clo. "Like they know that it is going to be colder outside, and they are movCourtesy Ron Kikel

ing in farther," said Bacon, owner of Bend Pest Control. He's been in the Tough oreasywinter? Yellow jackets' verdict:Better hunker clown.

business here for 20 years. Yellow jacket nesting is one of a number of signs, rooted in Western lore, that people use to gauge whether winter will be harsh or harmless. They range from the actions of insects and activity of squirrels to the migration of geese and thenumber of cones on pine trees or berries on juniper bushes. While some people swear by the methods, meteorologists stick more to science and data. "I would think that stuff like that is more of a response to what has happened or is happening rather than an indication of what is going to happen," said Pete Parsons, meteorologist with the Oregon Department of Forestry.

A story headlined "Revenue

up along with value of homes," which appearedSaturday, Oct. 12, on Page Af, provided the incorrect amounts of total

assessed value onhomes in Deschutes County and the city of Bend. The total assessed

valueon homes inDeschutes County for fiscal year 2013-14 is $17.7 billion, up 4.1 percent

Study:Warm water, more mercury found in fish By Darryl Fears

said, nesting deeper into holes and within buildings than they normally

Like many inthe weather-forecasting world, Parsons relies on climate patterns in the Pacific Ocean near the equator to predict what could be coming for Oregon. His latest long-rangeforecast for the season, which he produced last month, calls for late fall and early winter to be about average for temperature and a little above average for precipitation in Central Oregon. Only the results of winter will prove which is correctthe insects or the climate charts. In the meantime, there are plenty of other signs to study around Central Oregon, if you believe them. SeeWinter /A5

See Exchanges/A5

Correction

Voters in Deschutes County and Bend are being asked to increase transient lodging taxes in two measures on the November ballot, with supporters saying much of the money raised will pay for more marketing to increase tourism in the area. inSlde Measure 9-94would in- • More on the fall crease the city of Bendtourbal l ot, A7 ism tax from the currentrateof9 percent to 10.4 percent by 2016. Measure 9-96 would increase the transient room tax on overnight lodging units located outside city limits from 7 to 8

Under the watchful eyes of scientists, a little forage fish that lives off the coast of Maine developed a strangely large appetite. Killifish are not usually big eaters. But in warmer waters, at temperatures projected for the future by climate scientists, their metabolism — and appetitesgo up, which is bad if there are toxins in their food. In a lab experiment, researchersadjusted temperatures in tanks, tainted the killifish's food with traces of methylmercury and watched as the fish stored high concentrations of the metal in their tissue. SeeMercury/A4

10years later, aninfamousCubsfan remains invisible By Ben Strauss New York Times News Service

CHICAGO — Steve Bartman sat in the first row down the left-field line for Game 6 of the National League Championship Series between the Chicago Cubs and the Florida

Marlins at Wrigley Field on Oct. 14, 2003. He wore a green turtleneck and had headphones over his Cubs cap. By the end of the night, he was the most infamous fan, perhaps, in the history of American sports. The Cubs were ahead, 3-0,

in the eighth inning, five outs from their first World Series appearance in 58 years, when Bartman reached for and deflected a foul ball that left fielder Moises Alou had leapt for and appeared ready to catch. The Marlins went on to

score eight runs in the inning, win the game and then win the series the next night. In the 10 years since, Bartman, 36, has all but disappeared, turning down more than 200 news media requests, including "Today"

and"Dr. Phil," and has not returnedtoWrigley, as faras anyone knows. Bartman still ltves m the Chicago area and works for a financial services consulting firm. See Bartman/A6

from last year's total of $16.9 billion. Additionally, total as-

sessedvalueofhomesin Bend for fiscal year 2013-14was $8.3 billion, up 5.5 percent from the 2012-13 assessed

value of $7.9 billion. The Bulletin regrets the error.

INDEX

TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 56, Low 27

page B10

Calendar A8 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Puzzles C3-4 Horoscope

C4 Local/State A 7- 8 Sports Monday Bf -f 0 A9 Movies A9 Tee to Green B7-9 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

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NATION 4% ORLD GOVERNMENT STALEMATE

en in is ute eaves a enate ea eusive By Jonathan Weisman New Yorh Times News Service

WASHINGTON — With a possible default on government obligations just days away, Senate Democratic leaders — believing they have a political advantage in the continuing fiscal impasse — refused Sunday to sign on to any deal that reopens the government but locks in more budget cuts for next year. The disagreement extended the stalemate that has kept much of the government shuttered for two weeks and threatens toforce a federaldefault. The core of the dispute is about spending, and how long a stopgap measure that would reopen the government should last. Democrats want acrossthe-board cuts known as sequestration to last only through mid-November; R epublicans want them to last as long as possible.The Democrats' demand shows a newfound aggressiveness. Previously, they had favored a so-called clean bill that would reopen the government and lift the debt ceiling without any policy changes attached. With Republicans on the defensive, it remains unclear whether the Democrats are using a negotiating ploy to raise the likelihood that any final deal will include their priorities as well as the Republicans'. Democrats said that Sens. Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader — who spoke only

U.S. topic dominates international talks

Syrla addUC'tlOn —Gunmenabducted six Red Cross workers and a Syrian RedCrescent volunteer after stopping their convoy early Sunday in northwestern Syria, a spokesman said, in the latest high-profile kidnapping in the country's civil war. Simon Schorno,

a spokesman for the International Committee of the RedCross in Damascus, said the assailants snatched the seven aid workers from their convoy near the town of Saraqeb in Idlib province as the team

was returning to Damascus. India CyCIOne —Mass evacuations spared India the widespread deaths many hadfeared from a powerful weekend cyclone, officials said, as people picked upbelongings and started repairing flooded towns, tangled power lines and tens of thousands of destroyed thatch

homes. Cyclone Phailin, the strongest tropical storm to hit India

Leaders at World Bank and International Monetary Fund meet-

in more than a decade, destroyed hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of crops, but a day after it made landfall in Orissa state on the

ings Sundaypleaded,warned andcajoled: TheUnited States must raise its debt ceiling andreopenits government or risk"massive

country's east coast, authorities said they knew of only17 fatalities.

disruption the world over," as Christine Lagarde, the IMF's managing director, put it.

The final toll is expected to climb as officials reach areas of the cyclone-battered coast that remain isolated by downed communication

The fiscal problems ofthe United Statesovershadowedthe official

links and blocked roads, but the evacuation of nearly1 million people appeared tohavesavedmanylives.

agendas for the meetings, with representatives from dozens of coun-

tries — including two ofWashington's most important economic partners, SaudiArabiaand China— publicly expressing worries

NeW YOrk gIIII ShOW —A smiling Gabrielle Giffords toured rows

about what was happening on Capitol Hill and in the White House. The leaders came to Washington to talk about the international

of tables loaded with rifles and handguns Sunday in her first visit to a gun show since surviving a 2011 shooting, and pleaded afterward

recovery, Lagarde said in aninterview on the NBCNews program

for people to cometogether to stop gun violence. The former Arizona

"Meet the Press." "Then they found out that the debt ceiling was the issue," she said. "They found out that the government had

congresswoman visited the Saratoga Springs Arms Fair with her astronaut husband, Mark Kelly. and New York Attorney General Eric

shut down andthat there was no remedy in sight."

Schneiderman to highlight a voluntary agreement that closely moni-

With only three days left before a potential default, Senate

tors gun show sales in New York. The trio mixed with a gun show crowd that was mostly welcoming — with a few hostile undertones

leaders failed Sunday to reachagreement on aplan to reopen the government and raise thedebt limit.

— before calling for people to build on the cooperative effort.

Many leaders at the World Bank and IMF meetings said they believed the impasse would be resolved before Thursday, when

Blizzard aftermath —Western South Dakota ranchers are reeling from the loss of tens of thousands of cattle in last weekend's

the government would be atsevere risk of not having enough money to pay all its bills on any given day going forward. — New York TimesNews Service

blizzard, and many will dispose of carcasses in pits set to open today. Rancher Heath Ferguson said the storm killed 96 percent of his herd

of100 black Angusand Limousin cattle, a hit worth about $250,000. briefly by telephone on Sunday — were inching forward and that a breakthrough was possible before the default deadline on Thursday. "They had a good conversation," Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, the No. 3 Democrat, said Sunday. "They are moving closer together, and I'm hopeful the Senate can save the day." Republicans accused Democrats of accepting nothing short of capitulation without offering anything in return. "The Democrats keep moving the goal posts," said Sen. Susan Collins

He said total losses topped more than1,000 head, as six other herds were roaming the family's16,000 acres east of Sturgis. Up to 4 feet

of Maine, one of the lead Republican negotiators. "Decisions within the Democratic conference are constantly changing." A rally on the National Mall, led by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and former Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska, was intended to show that Tea Party activists — supporters of the House Republicans who forced the shutdown over their opposition to the health care law — were in no mood to givein. Some waved Confederate flags and called for President Barack Obama to be impeached.

of snow fell in the Black Hills area last weekend,and reports of 20 or more inches of snowwerecommon. Power grld atlacks —The federal authorities arrested an Arkansas man over the weekend in connection with a series of attacks on the power grid east of Little Rock. The authorities said the man,

Jason Woodring, 37, wascharged with destruction of an energy facility after he acknowledged to FBI agents that he was responsible for the attacks, which began in August. Woodring, who the authorities

said was aself-employed pool maintenance worker, was arrested Saturday after an explosion occurred near his home in Jacksonville, Ark., on Friday, officials said.

U.S. death in Egypt —A U.s. citizen who hadbeendetained by the Egyptian authorities for more than six weeks was found dead in a

police station Sunday inwhat someU.S. officials said appeared to bea suicide. Egyptian officials gave more detail, saying that the American, James Lunn, had hanged himself at the station in the Suez Canal city

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of Ismailia after being detained during asecurity sweep in late August. The death of Lunn could raise further concerns about the safety of foreigners held in Egypt's jails, where rights groups and former inmates

say beatings, crowding andunsanitary conditions are common. GaZa tunnel —The Israeli military announced Sundaythat it had discovered anunderground tunnel leading from Gazainto Israel that it said could have been used for an attack against Israeli soldiers or civilians. In response, the military said it had suspended the flow of

building materials to the private sector in Gaza.Military officials said the tunnel, discovered last week, was about a mile long and was built at a depth of nearly 60 feet. They added that it had probably been

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India stampede —The death toll from a stampede near atemple in central India rose to 109 after many of the injured succumbed, an official said early today. Thousands of Hindu pilgrims were crossing they panicked at rumors the bridge would collapse, triggering a stampede. The district medical officer R.S. Gupta said that autopsies had

x

been carried out on109 bodies by late Sunday. — From wire reports

John Minchillo/The Associated Press

The Statue of Liberty looms over visitors Sunday as they mill about Liberty Island in New York Harbor. The Statue of Liberty reopened to the public after the state of New York agreed to shoulder the costs of running the site during the partial federal government shutdown.

• R,ePcrirs

• Remodeling • Additions

Al- aida reviving oldfears in Iraq By Adam Schreck

Al-Qaida has come roaring back in Iraq since U.S. troops BAGHDAD — First came left in late 2011 and now looks the fireball, then the screams stronger than it has in years. of the victims. The suicide The terror group has shown bombing just outside a Bagh- it is capable of carrying out dad graveyard knocked Nass- mass-casualty attacks several er Waleed Ali over and pep- times a month, driving the pered his back with shrapnel. death toll in Iraq to the highest Ali was one of the lucky level in half a decade. It sees ones. At least 51 died in the each attack as a way to cultiOct. 5 attack, many of them vate an atmosphere of chaos Shiite pilgrims walking by on that weakens the Shiite-led their way to a shrine. No one government's authority. has claimed responsibility, but Recent prison breaks have there is little doubt al-Qaida's bolstered al-Qaida's ranks, local franchise is to blame. while feelings of Sunni marS uicide bombers an d c a r ginalization and t h e c h aos bombs are its calling cards, c aused by the civil wa r i n Shiite civilians among its fa- neighboring Syria are fueling vorite targets. its comeback. The Associated Press

• New Construction • Green Builder

"Nobody is able to control this situation," said Ali, who watches over a Sunni graveyard that sprang up next to the hallowed Abu Hanifa mosque in 2006, when sectarian fighting threatened to engulf Iraq in all-out civil war.

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String of attacks kills at least 42 A string of bombings Sundayacross Iraq, many in Shiite-majority cities, killed at least 42 peopleandwounded dozens, officials said, a grim reminder of the government's failure to stem the uptick in violence that is feeding sectarian tensions in the country.

There was noimmediate claim of responsibility for the latest attacks, but waves ofbombings arefrequently used by al-Qaida's Iraq

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branch.

The Sunni militant group andother Sunni extremists often targets Shiite civilians in an effort to undermine the Shiite-led government. Al-Qaida's extremist ideology considers Shiites heretics.

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Medical officials confirmed thecasualties. Thepolice and hospital officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

I

HIGR'

More than 5,000people havebeenkilled in Iraq since attacks began accelerating in April following a deadly security crackdown

against a Sunni protest camp inthe northern town of Hawija. With today's death toll, at least 267 people werekilled so far in October. — The Associated Press

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013•THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Monday, Oct.14, the 287th day of 2013. There are 78 days left in the year.

RESEARCH

RESEARCH

HAPPENINGS

women ma inves e ei

COlumduS Day —The hollday celebrates the anniversary of Christopher Columbus' arrival in the Americas. See a list of what will be closed and open onAl.

Behavioral economics tries to figure out why people consistently make irrational financial decisions.

BPA —Results of a study

And a load of research in this field suggests that a man's portfolio and pocketbook would be a lot better

of the chemical's effects on fertility are presented in Boston.A6

off if he listened more to a woman.

Scientists

theorize on galactic diamonds By Amina Khan

By Robert Carden

HISTORY Highlight:In 1912, former

President Theodore Roosevelt, campaigning for the White

House asthe Progressive candidate, was shot in the chest in Milwaukee by New York

saloonkeeperJohn Schrank. Despite the wound, Roosevelt went ahead with a scheduled

speech, declaring, "It takes more than onebullet to kill a bull moose." In1066, Normans under William the Conqueror defeated the English at the Battle of Hastings.

In1586,Mary, Queenof Scots, went on trial in England,accused of committing treason against Queen Elizabeth I.

(Mary was beheaded inFebruary1587.) In1890, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th president of the United

States, was born inDenison, Texas. In1908,the E.M. Forster novel "A Room With a View" was first published by Edward Arnold of

London. In1939, a Germ an U-boat torpedoed and sank the HMS Royal Oak, a British battleship

anchored at ScapaFlowin Scotland's Orkney Islands; 833 of the more than1,200 men aboard were killed. In1944, German Field Marshal

Erwin Rommelcommitted suicide rather than face execution

for allegedly conspiring against Adolf Hitler. In1947, Air Force test pilot

Charles E ("Chuck"j Yeager broke the sound barrier as he flew the experimental Bell XS-1

(later X-1j rocket planeover Muroc Dry Lake in California. In1960, Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy

suggested theideaofaPeace Corps while addressing an audience of students at the

University of Michigan inAnn Arbor. In1961, the Frank Loesser

musical "How toSucceedin Business Without Really Trying," starring Robert Morse as J. Pierrepont Finch, opened on

Broadway. In1964, civil rights leader Mar-

tin Luther King Jr.was named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. In1987, a 58-hour drama

beganinMidland,Texas,as 18-month-old Jessica McClure slid 22feetdown an abandoned

well at a private daycare center; she was rescued onOct.16. Tenyearsago: InGame6of the National League Champion-

ship Series, aCubsfan inadvertently deflected afoul ball away from the outstretched glove of Chicago outfielder Moises Alou;

the Florida Marlins, down3-0at the time, rallied to win the game

and went on towin Game7and advance to theWorld Series, where they beat the New York

Yankees. Five yearsago:A grand jury in Orlando, Fla. returned charges of first-degree murder,aggravated child abuseandaggravated manslaughter against Casey Anthony in the death of her 2-

year-old daughter, Caylee.(She was acquitted in July 2011.) One yearago:Daredevil skydiver Felix Baumgartner became the first man to shatter the sound barrier without traveling

in a jet or aspacecraft, jumping from a balloon 24 miles above the New Mexico desert.

BIRTHDAYS Fashion designer Ralph

Lauren is 74. MLBmanager Joe Girardi is 49. Actor Steve Coogan is 48. Country singer Natalie Maines (The Dixie

Chicks) is 39. Singer Usher is 35. — From wire reports

Special to The Washington Post.

It's happy hour at Hanaro in Bethesda, Md., and I'm with my wife. We're there about an hour,

gobbling plates of half-price tuna rolls and washing them down with $3.50 Blue Moons. Have to hurry, happy hour ends soon. My wife slows down and cautions me to do the same. I don't listen. Keep 'em coming, right up to 7 o'clock. Then I get the bill: $75. Yikes, how did that happen? I thought this stuff was half price! Call this stupid male tricks — or behavioral economics. Behavioral economics tries to figure out why we make irrational f i nancial d e cisions — like paying $75 to jam 15 orders of sushi down your throat in an hour. Happy hour embodies two classic ploys that cause irrational choices: scarcity, get it now before it's gone; and the idea of getting something for nothing, buy two pairs, get the third free. "If you think something is going away, it can lead to excessive and desperate consumption," says George Loewenstein, a professor of economics and

psychology at Carnegie Mellon

Thinkstock

University in Pittsburgh. Legitimate marketers, con artistsand stockbrokers make lots of money off our irrational behavior. I didn't need that last plate of sushi, and I absolutely didn't need that last drink. My wife told me to slow down, and I didn't listen — and while that's not an altogether uncommon occurrence, this time I really should have because I overate, overdrank and overspent. And a load of research in behavioral economics suggests that a man's portfolio and pocketbook would be a lot better off if we listened more to women. Terry Odean, a University of California professor, has studied stock picking by gender for more than two decades. A seven-year study found single female investors outperformed singlemen by 2.3 percent,female investment groups outperformed male counterparts by 4.6 percent and women overall outperformed by 1.4 percent. Why? The short answer is overconfidence. Men trade more, and the more you trade, typically the more you lose — not to mention running up transaction costs. "In our research,male investorstraded 45 percent more than female investors," Odean says. "Men are just making a lot more bad decisions than women. More trading leads to lower performance." Stock picking with men is too often about one-upmanship

A seven-year study found single female investors outperformed single men by 2.3 percent, female investment groups outperformed male counterparts by 4.6 percent and women overall outperformed by1.4 percent.

and bragging, says LouAnn

looks at how our physiology

Lofton, author o f " W a r ren Buffet Invests Like a Girl: And Why You Should, Too." "With men, too often investing is all about keeping score. It's a macho thing," Lofton says. "They're looking for hot stock tips to get the quick win and then talk about it." Additionally, men hold onto their losers a lot longer than women. They're sure the stock will come roaring back — even as it sinks. Academics call it confirmation bias; investment advisers call it boneheaded. "Women aremore lossaverse than men, more emotionally unattachedand are far quicker to unload losers. Whereas men with their bravado, they don't want to admit they're wrong," says Anthony Zalesky, a certified financial planner who advises individual investors and small businesses. Bad financial decisions often can be traced back to unwarranted optimism, or the "positivity illusion" that things are going to turn out just right. On paper it sounds good — better to be hopeful right? Not so fast. This tendency clouds critical thinking.

affects decision making and affects risks — h e s t udies things like cortisol and testosterone levels in stock traders. He says, in a bubble market, men become more emboldened and take more risks, while doing less homework, so they get creamed in the inevitable crash. It's called the "winner effect" and contributes to market meltdowns. W omen producejust10 percent the testosterone of men, so they are less likely to be swept away in risky gambles. Women probably won't make as much on the way up — but will lose a lot less on the way down. "When it comes to trading, men are more hormonal than women," Coates says. Take that, Paul Tudor Jones. Last summer, Jones, a billionaire hedge fund guy, stirred the gender pot when he said "you'll never see as many great woman investors ortradersasmen." Jones attributed this to child birth and said a woman loses focus when she has a child. Coates, in his nicest acrossthe-pond parlance, says Jones is full of it. "I think he's mixing up is-

All this leads to less of a gambling mentality among women and makes men more vulnerable to a fraud pitch. OK, so now w h at? Men, it seems, are wired to piddle away money on good sushi and bad stocks. "Ask and check," Walsh says. "Develop a plan. Stickto it. And ask questions." She adds that men are more impulsive investors — so having a plan makes it easier to dial back on emotional investing. Lofton's remedies are more challenging to certain men, because they involve listening. And not the kind of "yes, dear" head nodding while watching SportsCenter's top 10 plays. "If the man is lucky enough to have a wife or girlfriend, bring them into the discussion, share the decision making with them. Women will tamp down some of the crazier risk," she says. Legendary Fidelity fund manager "Peter Lynch involved his wife and daughters in a lot of decision making, and he did pretty well," she says. On the i n stitutional side, Coateshaslots of ideas — among them, financial organizations should hire more women and

older (low T) men. He argues

this would lead to less overtrading of accounts, more long-term planning and less volatility. And important people are listening. Britain's Parliamentary Com"I like confident clients, but sues, any important event, like mission on Banking Standards not overconfident ones. I like having a child or going through (which studied the 2008 crash) clients who are secure in a long- a divorce will affect perforrecommended a number of term strategy. They won't react mance in men or women," he Coates's ideas, including gender to every bit of short-term news. says. "On the contrary, when diversity in banking and stringThey won't listen to the guys women return to t h e w o rk ing out bonuses over longer pescreaming loudest on TV," says force, they are so eager to work riods of time. Jordan Smyth, managing di- I find them more focused. AnyOdean and lots of academrectorof Edgemoor Investment one can have an opinion, but ics say i n vestors shouldn't Advisors in Bethesda. "Once that doesn't matter; data mat- even bother trading individual you get caught up in the emo- ters. And if you look at broker- stocks. It's a loser's game. "Trading underperforms a tions of investing, you're going age records and hedge fund to buy high and sell low. There's performance over th e l o ng buy and hold strategy," Odean probably a lot of testosterone in term, women managers gener- says. "My advice is to find a some ofthese decisions." ally outperform men." good, broad-based diversified Ah, the T word. Con artists love men, particu- mutual fund that has low fees. "Rising levels of testosterone larly well-educated, optimistic, There are lots out there." can lead to irrational levels of overconfident ones who think When I'm not pigging out at exuberance," says John Coates, they're too smart to be taken. happy hour, I like to bet horses. a neuroscientist at Cambridge These guys are the easiest But I found I am no better at and the author of the book, mark for the crook, according handling trifectas than I am "The Hour Between Dog and to the FINRA Investor Educa- at resisting bargain sushi and Wolf: Risk Taking, Gut Feel- tion Foundation. Gerri Walsh, Belgian ales. I've lost a lot more ings, and the Biology of Boom its president, is an expert on in- than I've won. Yet, I still go and and Bust." vestment fraud and behavior. handicap because I just know I "Studies show men tend to be am going to beat the pros and Coates is a f o r mer W all Street trader who began study- overconfident and less likely to my big payday is just around ing the brain and biological seek another opinion," Walsh the bend. It's dumb, emotional, implications of trading while says. Women, she adds are positively delusional — I guess working at Goldman Sachs. He "less excited" about investing. I'll never learn. performed — in his own words "an act of irrational exuberance

Los Angeles Times

Diamonds are f orever, unless you're on Saturn or Jupiter. Loads of the super-hard stones may b e f l o ating among the gas giants' fluid layers and melted into liquid further into their depths, a pair of planetary scientists proposed this past week. The research sprang from very humble beginningssoot in Saturn's atmosphere, said Kevin Baines, a planetary scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Baines wa s s t u dying thick yellowish ammonia clouds in Saturn's atmosphere when h e n o ticed otherextremely dark clouds

cropping up as welL

"It's almost like clockwork in the southern hemis phere, where w e w e r e studying t hese t h understorms," said Baines, who is part of the science team for NASA's Cassini mission and also works at Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Canada Flintridge in California. The dark stuff turned out to be soot, bits of pure carbon with no internal structure trapped in frozen ammonia, he said. "So we have this reservoir of carbon dust," Baines said. "The natural question is, what happens to the carbon dust eventually? Eventually it's going to drift on down." The researchers think that as the soot particles fall, they start to find one another and glom together. By the time the soot particles have floated several hundred miles within the planet's atmosphere, the heat and pressure crush the carbon into graphite, with atoms arranged into t wo-dimensional st r u c tures layered on top of one another. Then about 3,700 miles down — roughly the distance from Earth's surface to its core — the pressure rises to 100,000 times that of Earth at sea leveL It's so powerful that i t c r u shes the graphite into carbon's three-dimensional crystalline form, diamond. These diamonds grow into large pebbles as they bob around in the planet's fluid layers, Baines said.

by walking away from a highpaying managing directorship on Wall Street for the minimum

wage of science." But the investing public is better off for it. Coates' book

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013

IN FOCUS:MEDICAL BILLING

Room taxes

cru in rows as more oc ors o er cre i services o a ien s By Jessica Siiver-Greenberg New Yorh Times News Service

The dentist set to work, tapping and probing, then put down his tools and delivered the news. His patient, Patricia Gannon, needed a partial denture. The cost: more than $5,700. Gannon, 78, was staggered. She said she could not afford it. And her insurance would pay only a small portion. But she w as barely out of the chair,her mouth still sore, when her dentist's office held out a solution: a special line of credit to help cover her bill. Before she knew it, Gannon recall ed,the offi ce m anager was taking down her financial details. But what seemed like the perfect answer — seemed, in fact, like just what the doctor ordered — has turned into a quagmire. Her new loan ensured that the dentist, Dr. Da n K n ellinger, wouldbepaid in full upfront. But forGannon, the price was steep: an annual interest rate of about 23 percent, with a 33 percent penalty rate kicking in if she missed a payment. She said that Knellinger's office subsequently suggested another form of financing, a medical credit card, to pay for more work. Now, her minimum monthly dental bill, roughly $214 all told, is eatingup a third of her Social Security check. If she is late, she faces a penalty of about

$50. "I am worried that I will be paying for this until I die," says Gannon, who lives in Dunedin, Fla. Knellinger, who works out of Palm Harbor, Fla., did not respond to requestsforcomment. In dentists' and doctors' offices,hearing aid centers and pain clinics, U.S. health care is forging a lucrative alliance with U.S. finance. A growing number of health care professionals are urging patients to pay for treatment not covered by their insurance plans with credit cards and lines of credit that can be arranged quickly in the provider's office.

Some practitioners worry The American Medical Association and the A merican Dental Association have no formal policy on the cards, but some practitioners refuse to use them, saying they threaten to exploit the traditional relationship between provider and patient. Doctors, dentists and oth-

Mercury

j

4

r

"I am worried that I will I die."

ers have a financial incentive to recommend the financing because it encourages patients to opt forprocedures andproducts that they might otherwise forgo because they are not covered by insurance.It also ensures that providers get paid upfront — a fact that financial services companies promote in marketing material to providers. One ofthe financing companies, iCare Financial of Atlanta, which offers financing plans through providers' offices, asks providers on its website: "How much money are you losing everyday by not offering iCare to your patients'?" During the last three years, the company's enrollmenthas grown 320 percent. Another company posted a video online that shows patients suddenly vanishing outside a medicaloffice because they cannot afford treatment. The company offers a financing plan as a remedy, with the scene on the video shifting to a smiling doctor with dollar signs headed toward him.

Attractive deals A review by The New York Times of dozens of customer contracts for a variety of medical cards and lines of credit, as well as hundreds of court filings in connection with civil lawsuits brought by state authorities and

scientists say. The study, "Experimental Continued from A1 a nd Natural W a r ming E l In a f i eld experiment in evates Mercury C oncentranearby salt pools, they ob- tions in Estuarine Fish," was served as killifish in warmer published in the journal PLOS pools ate their natural food One in A p r il, and o f ficials and stored metal in even high- at Dartmouth called attener concentrations, like some tion to it ahead of last week's toxic condiment for larger fish M inamata C o nvention o n that would later prey on them. Mercury in Japan. The observation was part of Delegates from 130 nations a study showing how killifish at the three-day convention at the bottom of the food chain that ended Friday met to sign will probably absorb higher a treaty that seeks to greatly levels of m ethylmercury i n limit emissions from coal-fired an era of global warming and power plants from industrial pass it on to larger predator nations, mining operations in fish, such as the tuna stacked Africa and other sources that in shiny little cans in the cup- pollute oceans. boards of Americans and othEvery U.S. state has issued er people the world over. fish consumption advisories " The implication i s t h i s for mercury,and there is a could play out in larger fish ... particular concern among because their metabolic rate states bordering the Gulf of is also increasing," said Celia Mexico over health risks relatChen, a professor at D a rt- ed to eating seafood containmouth College in New Hamp- ing mercury. shire and one of six authors In spite of these concerns, of the study. "Methylmercury there was no U.S. delegation isn't easily excreted, so it stays. in Japan. A small U.S. continIt suggests that there will be gent rushed therebefore the higher methylmercury con- convention but was recalled centrations in the fish humans to the United States when eat as well." the federal government shut Methylmercury is linked to down, according to a report by high blood pressure, kidney Scientific American. "No one from the U.S. is disease and heart attacks in adults and slow neuro-behav- here and no one from the U.S. ioral development in children. government will walk to the A thousand tons of the con- front of the room and sign the taminant drops onto oceans treaty in front of the global every year from power plant community," Joseph DiGangi, emissions,and more than 250 an adviser at the International tons pour from the land into POPs Elimination Network, various watersas a result of a group devoted to reducing deforestation. toxic chemicals, or "persistent organic pollutants," was quotMore in predators ed as saying. Top predators on land and A 2007 World Health Orgasea have higher levels of mer- nization report warned that cury because of their prey. It "eating contaminated fish and is hard for any organism to shellfish is the main source release the metal, causing it to of methylmercury exposure" accumulate, or biomagnify, as and that the metal cannot be

Patricia Gannon received a line of credit from First Health Funding at an annual 23 percent interest rate for dental work, with a 33 percent penalty rate kicking in if she missed a payment. Her monthly dental bill is now a third of her Social Security check.

consumer credit is difficult to quantify because data on medical credit cards specifically, as opposed to credit cards generally, is unavailable. But credit cards of all types are playing a growing role in financing medical care. In 2010, people in the U.S. charged about $45 billion in health care costs on credit cards, i]' according to the consulting firm McKinsey & Co. "When the economy got ) w orse, our business got better," said Katie Kessing, an iCare spokeswoman. In 2010, a little I more than a thousand dentists offered the iCare finance plana program that requires patients to pay 30 percent down as well as a fee of 15 percent of the total Chip Litherland New York Times procedure cost. The number of News Service participatingproviders has since risen to 4,200. But state authorities and care be paying for this until advocates in California, Florida, Illinois, Michigan and elsewhere say that older people — many of — Patricia Gannon them grappling with dwindling savings and mounting debt — are running into trouble with others, shows how perilous such medical credit cards and loans. financial arrangements can be Minnesota's attorney general, for patients — and how advanta- Lori Swanson, is investigating geousthey canbe forhealth care the use of medical credit cards, providers. which she said could come with Many of these cards initially "hidden tripwires and other charge nointerestfor a promoperils." tional period, typically six to 18 Interviews w it h p a t ients, months, an attractive feature for along with the review of conpeople worried about whether tracts and lawsuits, show just they can afford care. But if the how significant those perils can debt is not paid in full when that be. time is up, costly rates — usuCarl Dorsey, 74, recalled his ally 25-30 percent — kick in, the experience at Aspen Dental review by The Times found. If Management, a na t ionwide payments are late, patients face chain that has come under scruadditional fees and, in most cas- tiny for its practices. Dorsey said es, their rates increase automati- that after a dentist at Aspen's cally. The higher rates are often office in Seekonk, Mass., told retroactive, meaning that they him that he needed dentures, at are applied to patients' origi- a cost of $2,634, he was urged to nal balances, rather than to the take out a medical credit card. amount they still owe. He was charged the full cost While medical credit cards re- upfront, financial statements resemble other credit cards, there viewedby The Times show. is a critical difference: They are Dorsey, who made about $800 usuallymarketed by caregivers a month working as a used-car to patients, often at vulnerable salesman, in addition to receivtimes, such as when those pa- ing Social Security, has since tients are in pain or when their fallen behind on his payments. providers have recommended The lapse set off a penalty incare they cannot readily afford. terest rate of nearly 30 percent. In addition to companies like Dorsey said he was being purGeneral Electric, large banks sued by debt collectors. "This whole ordeal has been like Wells Fargo and Citibank, as well as several specialized fi- devastating," said Dorsey, who nancial services companies, of- along with other patients is part fer credit through practitioners' of a civil lawsuit filed against Asoffices. pen in a federal court in upstate The growth of this form of New York.

cooked out. The WHO recommended that mercury should be "eliminated w h e rever possible" and that exposure should be reduced. But the killifish study suggested a future of fish with higher levels of mercury in a warming world, not less.

measure outdoor t e mperatures in the pristine salt pools where killifish dwell in Maine and set temperatures in lab tanks at the research reserve that matched air and marine warming projections by the world's top climate scientists. They found six salt pools of about the same size in wetMore mercury sources lands of the Little River estuThe list of sources that place ary along the Gulf of Maine mercury in the air and water that had higher temperatures is long. In addition to power at different elevations. plants and deforestation, there Killifish in the field ate what are industrial boilers, tooth they normally eat. In the lab fillings, car batteries, cosmet- they ate feed tainted with ics, medical tools, vaccines methylmercury. In both cases, and even some soaps. they fed greedily in warmer "The study is the first of its water. Because of their higher kind to demonstrate, in both metabolism, killifish did not field and l aboratory condi- gain weight, but they gained tions, t ha t m e t hylmercury more metal than usual. concentrations i n ki ll i f i sh To determine that, the scienincrease with t emperature," tists collected the fish from the said the study's lead author, wild and labs using nets, then Jennifer Dijkstra, a University severed their little spines to of New Hampshire professor euthanize them for tests. who was a researcher for the Methylmercury accumulaWells National Estuarine Re- tion in killifish in a salt pool search Reserve in Maine when where thewater temperature the killifish were observed be- reached 71 degrees was 400 tween July2009 and Septem- percent higher than killifish ber 2010. in a pool with cooler water, "This increase can be propa- 64 degrees, over four months gated up through the food web of study ending in October to fish that are consumed by 2010. humans, resulting in greater In the lab, methylmercury human exposure to methyl- accumulation in k i l l ifish in mercury," she said. tanks with the water temperaT he other authors of t h e ture set at 80 degrees was 30 study were Kate Buckman of percent higher than those in Dartmouth; Michele Dionne water set at 59 degrees. But of theWells research reserve; that study was shorter, 30 David Evans, a researcher for days each in March and May the National Oceanic and At- 2011. "What it suggests is with mospheric A d m i nistration's Center for Coastal Fisheries i ncreased temperature t h e and Habitat Research in Beau- uptake of methylmercury is fort, N.C.; and Darren Ward, going to be higher.... You can a researcher for the Depart- have higher contamination of ment of Fisheries Biology at fish tissue," Chen said. "One Humboldt State University in of the m ost i m portant efArcata, Calif. fects will be the temperature The scientists decided to effect."

Continued from A1 Visit Bend CEO Doug La Placa said a majority of the advertising would be on radio and television stations in those markets, and Visit Bend would also use ads on those media companies' websites to drive traffic to the Visit Bend website. This would help correct what La Placa recently called "an unhealthy seasonality curve in Bend's tourism season." The area is currently busiest in the summer. The proposed taxincrease would also raise an estimated $200,000 annually for the city's police and fire departments, and $150,000 annually to market local cultural resources to tourists. An initial proposal in January from Visit Bend and a group of tourism businesses to raise the tax 2 percentage points, from 9 to 11 percent, ran into stiff opposition from other tourism businesses

participated in the compromise talks earlier this year, and said one of the problems with the tax measure is that officials threw their support behind it without examining alternative options to boost tourism in the shoulder season. "Here the dialogue started with a solution someone wanted that wasn't necessarily tied to the real problem," White said. White said that increasing support for the arts is also a good goal, but he does not believe a tax increase is the correct way to achieve it. Meanwhile, Measure 9-96 would amend county code to increase transient room tax on overnight lodging units outside city limits from the current rate of 7percent to 8 percentbe gin-

ning July 1.

If passed, the increase is expected to g enerate about $527,000 in additional revenue each year, according to Deschutes County C o mmission Chairman Alan Unger. State law requires70 percent of the revenue be used to promote and lodging operators. In tourism in Deschutes County. June, the groups worked The remaining30percentwould out a compromise during a be used to fund other county seriesof closed-door meet- functions, such as public safety, ings: a I percentage point health and human services and increase in the tax in June county infrastructure. "It is estimated that the events 2015, and an increase of 0.4 percentage points in June and activities at the Fair 8 Expo 2016. That compromise, for Center generated $30 million a total increase of 1.4 per- in economic impact for Central centage points, is what was Oregon in 2012," wrote Unger approved to send to voters as in the explanatory statement measure 9-94. The current included in the voters pamphlet. tourism tax rate is 9 percent. "This economic impact consists Five of the seven city of the amounts spent by visitors councilors co-wrote a state- on lodging, meals, transportament in support of the mea- tion, retail and recreation." sure for the voters pamphlet. All three commissioners sup"This measure provides an port the increase in the room tax opportunity to ensure Bend's and voted unanimously in Augrowing population of tour- gust to include it on the Novemists pay their fair share of the ber ballot. Commissioner Tony police and fire services they DeBone said that, compared use," the councilors wrote. to other areas in the state, DesThe two city councilors chutes County has a relatively who did not sign the state- lowtransient room tax rate. ment, Victor Chudowsky County Administrator Tom and Scott Ramsay, alsovoted Anderson said voters first apin July against a resolution to proved a 5 percenttransient referthe measure to voters. room tax in 1975. In 1980 the Ramsay said at the time that rate was raised to 6 percent. In voters do not have a stake in 1988, voters approved another the proposed tax increase increase to 7percent. because local residents will Deschutes County Fair generally not pay a hotel Expo Center Director Dan Destax. Chudowsky said that potopulos said his 2013 budget before he could support such for marketingis about $50,000, a measure, he would like to which isn't enough for such a see a change in governance large facility with so much to of Visit Bend, to include a offer. "There is so much activity out broader range of local tourism businesses. there," he said."We need tobuild On Friday, Chudowsky a development fund to be able to saida recent report revealed attract large events and groups. that tourism increased and Once people come here, they that boosted tax revenue. love the place, but we need to get Revenue increased more the word out that we're here." than 10 percent over the preDespotopulos said the Fair & vious year for the fiscal year Expo Center has more square that ended in June, accord- footage available than all the ingto the report. The city col- other event centers in Deschutes lected a total of $3.9 million County combined. "We need to get out there and in tourism tax revenue. "I would want people to pound on some more doors," he know that even if we did said. "We need to update amenothing, the amount of tour- nities and get our website up to ism and what we're collect- date. With an extra $375,000 a ing fromthis tax is goingup," yearthere is so much we could Chudowsky said. "There's do." no shortage." Mike Schiel wrote an arguAs of Friday, the politi- ment in favor of thetax increase cal action committee for the to be included in the voters Bend Tourism, Arts, and pamphlet. He pointed out the Public Safety Initiative had tax would be paid by tourists raised more than $14,000 and shouldn't affect residents and spent nearly $11,000, ac- of Deschutes County. "The facility has been pumpcording to state campaign finance records. The commit- ing money into the economy tee spent nearly $6,000 on since it opened in 1999," he television advertising, $1,000 wrote. "It brings more visitors on yard signs, $1,000 on ad- to the county and puts more vertising in The Bulletin and 'heads in beds,'more diners in more than $800 on Facebook restaurants,more shoppers in ads. So far, contributors to stores and motorists in gas stathe campaign include 10 tions, etc., than any other facilBarrel Brewing Company, ity in the county." Brooks Resources Corp. There has been no organized CEO Mike Hollern, Cascade opposition to the measure. Publications Inc. CEO Pa— Reporter: 541-617-7829, mela Andrews, and La Placa hborrud@bendbulletin.com and Director of Sales and — Reporter: 541-383-0376, Sports Development Kevney shing@bendbulletin.com Dugan. There is no organized opposition to measure 9-94, but retired engineer and city budget committee member David White has argued publicly against it. White

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013•THE BULLETIN AS

Winter Continued from A1

The Associated Press file photo

Tough or easy winter? Squirrels' verdict: Hmmm ... how much

food does asquirrel normally stockpile? The story goes that squirrels show a cold winter is on its way whenthey are storingmore nuts than they usually do. At least that's what Doug Stott's grandpa used to tell him. The trouble is knowing how many nuts a squirrel normally collects. "I don't know who is counti ng," said Stott, o wner o f Redmond Greenhouse, a plant

Another sign is an early flight south for geese or other migratory birds. But t h ere c ould be d i f f iculty i n d e termining that as well, said Marty St . L o u is, m anager at the state's Summer Lake Wildlife Area southeast of Bend. There isn'ta mass migration. Instead, bands of birds head south at different times, said St. Louis, who has been at the refuge for 27 years. "Everyyear is different," he said, "and to try to attribute

have a lot of cones, then it will be a hard winter," said Toni S tephan, h o rticulture a n d small farms instructor at the Oregon State University Extension Service for Deschutes County in Redmond. Stephan said she heard this often from guests when she worked at Eagle Crest Resort for 13years. So she tested the theory, keeping an eye on the pine cone production and seeing what the winter was like. "I didn't notice any truth to it," she said.

ALMOST INVISIBLE!

(migration) to the upcoming winter, I don't know if that is possible." St. Loui s s ai d w e a ther elsewhere, winds aloft and current weather here could all be triggers for the birds to move.

.k' rs

These are NOT your Parent's hearing aids!

- J'

The Bulletin file photo

verdict: A lot of berries is rumored

to mean acold winter to come.

the sign possibly put off by juniper.

"I've always heard that if there are a lot of juniper berries on the trees, you might want to go out and start chopAlong with animals, there ping extra wood," he said. is lore linked to plants around But, like the number of nuts Central Oregon and what they in a squirrel's stash, he said he might foretell about winter, hasn't had time to go check on p articularly th e p i nes a n d juniper berry production this junipers. fall. "One thing that people will — Reporter: 541-617-7812, say is that if the pine trees ddarling@bendbugetin.com trees' verdict: Could be either, but

a lot of cones doesn't necessarily mean it will be cold.

The Bulletin file photo

Tough or easy winter? Canada geese's verdict: No mass migration, so it's tough to tell.

The Complimentary Exams May Show: • Excessive Wax Build-up in Your Ear Canal

Adults with hearing loss are significantly more likely than adults with normal hearing to develop dementia, according to a n ew study out today from researchers at Johns Hopkins and the National lnstitute on Aging. The study — which finds that the greater the hearing loss, the higher the risk — may open a new avenue ofresearch into dementia and Alzheimer's disease. —February 14, 2011

Stott, the garden shop owner in R edmond, mentioned Thinkstock

• Have Difficulty Hearing On The Telephone

Hearing Loss Linked to Dementia - Even a mild hearing loss doubles the risk

Someone needs to start counting.

Tough or easy winter? Pine

• Often Ask Others To Repeat Themselves

— New Study By Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the National lnstitute on Aging.

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operating properly, but t h at predictions varied on when the Continued from A1 remaining 30 percent would be Even some supporters of the done. "I've heard as little as two Affordable Care Act w o r ry weeks or as much as a couple that the flaws in the system, if of months," that person said. not quickly fixed, could threat- Others warned that the fixes en the fiscal health of the insur- themselveswere creating new ance initiative, which depends problems, and said that the full on throngs of customers to extent of the problems might spread the risk and keep prices not be known because so many low. consumers had been stymied at "These are no t g l itches," the first step in the application said an insurance executive process. who has participated in many Confidential progress reports conferencecalls on the federal from the Health and Human exchange. Like many people Services Department s how interviewed for this article, the that senior oNcials repeatedly executive spoke on the condi- expresseddoubts that the comtion of anonymity, saying he puter systems for the federal exdid not wish to alienate federal change wouldbe ready on time, officials with whom he works. blaming delayed regulations, "The extent of the problems is a lack of resources and other pretty enormous. At the end of factors. our calls, people say, 'It's awful, Deadline after deadline was just awful."' missed. The biggest contractor, CGI Federal, was awarded its String of trouble $94 million contract in DecemInterviews with two dozen ber 2011. But the government contractors, current and former was so slow in issuing specificagovernment officials, insurance tions that the firm did not start executives and consumer ad- miting software code until this vocates, as well as examination spring, according to people faof confidential administration miliar with the process. As late documents, point to a series of as the last week of September, missteps — financial, technical, officials were still changing managerial — that led to the features of the website, healthtroubles. care.gov, and debating whether Politics made things worse. consumers should be required To avoid giving ammunition to register an d create passwordto Republicans opposed to the protected accounts before they project, the administration put could shop for health plans. off issuing several major rules One highly unusual decision, until after l ast N ovember's reached early in the project, elections. The Republican-con- proved critical: The Medicare trolled House blocked funds. and Medicaidagency assumed M ore than 30 states refused to the role of project quarterback, set up their own exchanges, re- responsiblefor making sure quiring the federal government each separately designed dato vastly expand its project in tabase and piece ofsoftware unexpected ways. worked with the others, instead The stakes rose even higher of assigning that task to a lead when congressional opponents contractor. forced a government shutdown in the latest fight over the health 'Major risk' care law, which will require Some people intimately inmost Americans to have health volved in the project seriously insurance. Administration of- doubtedthe agency had the inficials dug in their heels, repeat- house capability to handle such edly insisting that the project a mammoth technical task. An was on track,despite evidence internalgovernment progress to the contrary. report in September 2011 idenDr. Donald Berwick, the ad- tified a lack of employees "to ministrator of the federal Centers manage the multiple activities for Medicareand Medicaid Ser- and contractors happening convices in 2010 and 2011, said the currently" as a "major risk" to time and budgetarypressures the whole project. were a constant worry."The staff W hile some branches of the was heroic and dedicated, but we military have large software endid not have enough money and gineering departments capable we all knew that," he said in an of acting as the so-called system interview Friday. integrator, often on medium-size Administration officials have weapons projects, the rest of the said there is plenty of time to re- federal government typically solvethe problems before the does not, said Stan Soloway, mid-December deadline to sign the president and chief execuup for coverage that begins Jan. I tive of the Professional Services and a March 31 deadline for cov- Council,which represents 350 erage that starts later. A round- government contractors. CGI the-clock effort is underway, with officials have publicly said that the government leaning more while their company created heavily on the major contractors, the system's overall software induding the U.S. subsidiary of framework, the Medicare and the Montreal-based CGI Group Medicaid agency was responand Booz Allen Hamilton. sible for integrating and testing One person familiar with the all the combined components. system's development said that By early this year, people inthe project was now roughly side and outside the federal bu70 percent of the way toward reaucracywererais ingred flags.

"We foresee a train wreck," an insurance executive working on information technology said in a February interview. "We don't have the IT specifications. The level of angst in health plans is growing by leaps and bounds. The political people in the administration do not understand how far behind they are." The Government Accountability Office, an investigative arm of Congress, warned in June that many challenges had to be overcome before the Oct. 1 rollout. "So much testing of the new system wasso farbehind schedule, I was not confident it would work well," Richard Foster, who retired in January as chief actuary of the Medicare program, said last week. Marilyn Tavenner, the administrator of the Centers for Medicareand Medicaid Services, and Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, both insisted in July that the project was not in trouble. Last month, Gary Cohen, the federal official in charge of health insurance exchanges, promised federal legislators that Oct. 1, "consumers will be able to go online, they'll be able to get a determination of what tax subsidies they are eligible for, they'll be able to see the premium net of subsidy" and they will be able to sign up. But just a trickle of the 14.6 million people who have visited the federalexchange so farhave managed to enroll in insurance plans, accordingto executives of majorinsurancecompanieswho receive enroiiment fiies from the government. And some of those enrollments are marred by mistakes. Insurance executives said the government had sent some enrollment files to the wrong insurer, confusing companies that have similar names but are in different states. The serious technical problems threaten to obscure what some see as a nationwide demonstration of a desire for more affordable health insurance. The government has been heavily promoting the heathcare.gov site as the best source of information on health insurance. An August governmentemailsaid:"35 days to open enrollment." A September email followed: "5 days to open enrollment. Don't wait another minute." The response was huge. Insurance companies report much higher traffic on their websites and many more callers to their phone lines than predicted. That made thefl awed opening all the more disappointing to supporters of the health plan, including Timothy Jost, a law professor and a consumer representative to the National Association of I n surance Commissioners. "Even if a fix happens quickly, I remain very disappointed that the Department of Health and Human Services was not better prepared for the rollout," he said.

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A6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013

IN FOCUS:PLASTIC

Bartman

Study ties chemical BPA to possible miscarriage risk By Marilynn Marchione

ductive endocrinologist. With a federal grant, she BOSTON — New research and other researchers studied suggests that high levels of 115 newly pregnant women BPA, a chemical in many with a history of infertility plastics and canned food lin- or miscarriage; 68 wound up ings, might raise the risk of having miscarriages and 47 miscarriage in women prone had live births. to that problem or having Researchers ana l y zed trouble getting pregnant. blood samples from when the The work i s no t n early women were discovered to enough to prove be pregnant and a link, but it adds d ivided the m to "the biological "It may be into four groups plausibility" that that women b ased on B PA BPA might affect levels. W o men fertility and other with higher in the top quaraspects of health, BPA levels do t er had a n 8 0 s aid Dr . L i n d a have other risk percent greater Giudice, a Calirisk of miscarfornia biochemist factors." riage compared who is president — Dr. Ruth Lathi, to those in the o f th e A m e r i gr o u p reproductive b ottom can Society for endocrinologist, even though they R eprod u c t i v e Stanford University were similar in M edicine. T h e age and o t her study was to be f actors. Ho w presented today ever, because the at the group's annual confer- study is relatively small, there ence in Boston. Last month, was a big range of possible ASRM and an obstetricians risk — from only slightly elgroup urged more attention evated to as much as 10 times to environmental chemicals higher. "It may be that women with and their potential hazards for pregnant women. higher BPA levels do have BPA, short for bisphenol-A, other risk factors" for miscarand certain other environ- riage that might be amplified mental chemicals can have by BPA, Lathi said. very weak, hormone-like efThe study is not cause for fects. Tests show BPA in near- alarm, but "it's far from reaslyeveryone's urine, thoughthe suring that BPA is safe" for chemical has been removed such women, she said. from baby bottles and many To minimize BPA exporeusable drink containers in sure, avoid cooking or warmrecent years. The federal Food ing food in plastic because and D ru g A d m i nistration heat helps the chemical leak says BPA is safe as used now out, she said. Don't leave wain other food containers. ter bottles in the sun, limit use Most miscarriagesare due of canned foods and avoid to egg or chromosome prob- handling cash register relems, and a study in mice sug- ceipts, which often are coated gested BPA might influence with resins that contain BPA. "It's impossible to avoid it that risk, said Dr. Ruth Lathi, a Stanford University repro- completely," Lathi said. The Associated Press

bury this thing and change our luck." Continued from A1 s X+ siw While the opinions of Bart"He's happy and healthy, m an are disparate, he clearly and he's still a Cubs fan," said ,. J" remains a fascination of Cubs Frank Murtha, a l o n gtime fans. friend and spokesman. "He Grant DePorter, the chief exvalues his privacy." ecutive of Harry Caray's Res+' Through Murtha, Bartman taurant Group, paid $114,000 r, «'sr' declined to be interviewed for for the Bartman ball and, in a this article. well-publicized ceremony, had As Bartman became the it destroyed to try to lift the symbol of the 2003 Cubs' playcurse on the Cubs. The remoff collapse, the organization nants were used in a spaghetti contacted him to say he was sauce. always welcome at Wrigley. ESPN broadcast a d ocu' '/ "I never wanted there to be m entary o n B a r t man t w o any lingering animosity," Jim years ago,directed by the OsHendry, then the Cubs' gencar winner Alex Gibney. The eral manager and now a memlocal Chicago Comcast station ber of the New York Yankees' will show an anniversary spefront office, said last week. The Associated Press file photo cialdocumentary on the 2003 Bartman rebuffed the over- The Marlins gained a reprieve when Cubs fan Steve Bartman, in Cubs, "5 Outs." tures, Murtha said, to avoid headphones, deflected a foul ball that outfielder Moises Alou apKaplan said Bartman "was the notoriety and the inevita- peared ready to catch in the eighth inning of Game 6 of the 2003 done in by the machine, by the ble uproar afterward. He has National League Championship Series. The Marlins would rally to media." "The more we talk about also turned down financial op- win the game and the series, denying Chicago its first World Series portunities in the hundreds of appearance in 58 years. him, the more forgiving he has thousands of dollars, Murtha to do," he said. said. Although a 10-year exile For a p arallel, the Cubs is a long time for Bartman, the fateful eighth inning. The Mar- the Interruption," found the could look to the Boston Red Cubs said there were no plans lins clubbed four hits after the idea incredible. Sox and Bill Buckner, whose "A Steve Bartman night? error in Game 6 of the 1986 to invite him back to Wrigley foul ball, and shortstop Alex next spring. Gonzalez booted a potential Are you kidding me'?" Wilbon World Series took o n e p ic But the Cubs have not won inning-ending dou b le-play asked. "What does the organi- proportions in Boston. After a playoff game since 2003 ball. zation have to gain by that? I'll playing for two other teams, " He didn't cost u s a n y - tell you: nothing." and have now lost 197 games he finished his career with the past two seasons. Their thing," said the former Cubs If the goal is to move past the the Red Sox in 1990 and remind-boggling championship pitcher Mark Prior, who was game, said Doug Glanville, an turned to Fenway for a cerdrought stands at 105 years. on the mound when Bartman outfielder with the Cubs dur- emonial first pitch and r eMight enough be enough, deflected the ball. ing 2003 who lived in Chicago ceived a standing ovation in finally? Could a moment beThe comedian Jeff Garlin, a for many years, then any pub- 2008. tween Bartman and Cubs fans Cubs fan, said, "I want to find lic event detracts from that. By then, the Red Sox had "You can't minimize it by heal his wounds and, as silly Bartman and give him a hug ended their 86-year drought as it sounds, chase whatever and tell him, 'It's OK.'" calling more attention to it," he with not one but two World supernatural juju seems emStill, whether a public ap- said. Series titles. "I think welcoming Steve bedded in the Wrigley bricks? pearance at W r i gley could George Will, a Cubs fan and After all, nothing else has help release Bartman from Washington Post columnist would b e m o r e a p p ropriworked. his moment of infamy, and the who attended the Bartman ate after we win," said Pat "It would certainly be a nice Cubs from their own history, game, said that for everything Hughes, a longtime Cubs ragesture," said Scott Turow, an remains in q uestion. David Bartman had endured, the dio broadcaster. "You almost author and a lifelong Cubs fan. Kaplan, a radio and television question was not what Bart- have to wait until you enjoy "Whether it would work, who host in Chicago, said a Bartman could do for the Cubs, the pinnacle and then it's like, knows?" man appearance at the stadi- but what the team could do for let's forgive this poor guy." He Among Cubs fans, players um would be strange. Bartman. added, "I'll be the first person "It would be like a sideshow, and Chicagoans who were inWill said he would have had sitting next to him during the terviewed, most feel tremen- the same kind o f p u blicity Bartman throw out the first parade." dous sympathy for Bartman. stunt he's been avoiding for pitch at Wrigley on opening But that w il l r equire the He was hidden inside the sta- years," Kaplan said day of the 2004 season. Cubs to do something they "It would b e j u stice," he have not done in more than a dium during the remainder of The C hicago S un-Times Game 6 afterhe became the columnist Rick Telander said said. century, and raises the questarget of abusive fans. He was of Cubs fans: "They'd rip him Garlin added: "They should tion that Cubs fans have been dressed in a disguise to leave apart. He can't just waltz in give him season tickets for asking for generations: What Wrigley and hustled to a safe when the Cubs are still losers life. When the next Cub gets if they never win'? "I hope it happens in my lifeplace after the game. and expect to be cheered." inducted into the Hall of Fame, Most agree that Bartman's Michael Wilbon, a Cubs fan Bartman s hould i n t r oduce time," Turow said. "For Bartplay was a small part of that and a host of ESPN's "Pardon him. That's a better way to man and for me." t

J,

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013• THE BULLETIN

A7

LOCAL 4 T A TE CLOSURES Today is ColumbusDay,a federal holiday.

However, manyfederal offices are already closed due to the ongoing government shutdown. The U.S. Post Office, which is not affected by the shut-

down, will be closed today. However, city, county and state offices will be open for

business, as usual, including local libraries. Today will be a

regular school day. Most banks andcredit unions will close, except Chase Bank. Garbageand recyclables collection will proceed as scheduled. Liquor stores will be open.

ras i s semi- ruc river Bulletin staff report The westbound lane of U.S. Highway 20 near Millican was blocked for several hours Sunday after a fatal commercial truck crash, according to a news release from Oregon State Police Lt. Gregg Hastings. At approximately 2:50 p.m., the driver of a semi-truck registered to Wurdinger Recycling Inc., towing two trailers loaded with recycled car parts, lost control of his vehicle. The truck and first trailer rolled over, coming to rest on their tops off

the highway. The second trailer came to rest partially blocking the westbound lane. The vehicle parts spilled from the trailers. The driver was pronounced dead at the scene,according to the news release. He was wearing a seatbelt. The victim's name will be released today following notification of next of kin. O SP troopers were assisted at the scene by Deschutes County sheriff's deputies, fire and rescue personnel from Bend and Redmond and Or-

egon Department of Transportation personnel. OSP troopers continue to investigate the cause of the crash. It was the second fatal accident in Central Oregon over the weekend. Around 11:50 a.m. Saturday, Sisters residents 23-year-old Austin Jacob McNelis and 18year-old Kayla Marie Basham were killed when the 1984 Toyota Celica they were in collided with a 2012 Dodge pickup driven by 30-year-old Andrew Smolich.

According to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, the accident took place on U.S. Highway 20 a mile west of Sisters. McNelis was heading east on the highway when a deer crossed the highway and he attempted to avoid the deer by swerving around it. He lost control of the car, according to the Sheriff's Office, and it slid on the wet highway into the path of Smolich's westbound pickup. McNelis's car was hit in the driver's side. That crash also remains under investigation.

growth. Brian Rankin will give the hisboundary. Attorney Paul Dewey of Central Oregon LandWatch,

per $1,000 assessed property

attorney BruceWhite and Bend

value.

Mayor Jim Clinton will discuss issues facing city growth.

Jefferson County

The forum is scheduled

• Measure 16-70: Levy a

for 5:30-7 p.m. in the Brooks Room ofthe Downtown Bend

five-year jail operations tax of $1.24 per $1,000 assessed property value. • Measure16-71: Approve $8

Public Library.

Bend Park &Recreation

4j)

District — The park board will meet at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday at the district office building at 700 S.W. Columbia St. The board is expected to ap-

—jttjjtI it

million in bonds for repairs

and improvements to schools in the Culver School District.

~

prove adevelopment agreement for Discovery Park inNorthwest Crossing. Theagreement includes a12-acre purchase

Read ourstories Coverage leading up

t

to the election is at

dendbulletin.com/ election2013

by the park district, with West Bend Property Co. donating 22

died. Portland police say15year-old Abukar Madeydied early Sunday at a Portland

hospital, and they're now investigating his death as a homicide. An autopsy by the

Oregon State Medical Examiner on Sunday found the teen

died from a gunshot wound to the head. The other victim, 22-year-old Lucio Alejandro Ramirez-Navarro, remains in

a Portland hospital recovering from his injuries.

Timder payments — A surprise extension of afederal subsidy to timber counties will

prevent jail shutdownsand

Photos by Joe Knne /The Bulletin

Certified veterinarian technician Beth Palmer prepares a female cat for a spay surgery during the Central Oregon Cat Alliance feral cat spay and neuter clinic Sunday at the Bend Spay and Neuter Project's facility. Approximately 66 cats trapped across Deschutes County were spayed or neutered during the event.

• Sponsored by Central Oregon CatAlliance, Sunday'sclinic rounds up66 strays

than good. The federal payout will bring about $100 million to

the state. Somehas beenearmarked for schools androads, and for parts of western Oregon some is available for lawenforcement. But by comparison, the state got about $250 million

in timber funds in2008. Curry County Sheriff John Bishop,

meanwhile, sayshe's afraid voters maythink the county's funding problemsaresolved and turn down a levy to fund law

enforcement this November. — From wire reports More state news and event calendar on AS

The Bulletin

By Shelby R. King

Deschutes......... 541-353-0376 Crook................. 541-383-0367 Jefferson...........541-383-0367 State projects....541-410-9207 Salem .................541-554-1162 D.c.....................202-662-7456 Business ...........541-383-0360 Education...........541-633-2160 Health..................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety........ 541-383-03e7 Special projects... 541-617-7831

Sudmissinns: • Letters and opinions:

Veterinarian Byron Maas performs a surgery to spay a female stray cat during the Central Oregon Cat Alliance feral cat spay and neuter clinic Sunday at the Bend Spay and Neuter Project's facility. "So far I've done a dozen or so (sterilizations) and one tail amputation," Maas said. he said. "The prep work takes longer than theprocedures for males. They're only about 30 seconds to do. The females take about five minutes." Megan Wellinghoff, executive director of Bend Spay and Neuter Project, estimates there are at least 10,000 feral cats living in Deschutes County. See Cats/A8

Information TheBendSpayandNeuter Project

school, I decided, why not actually deliver?" When Kathy Woodford Woodford movedto Bend was interviewed to be the in Jan u ary from Colorado next music teacher at Jewell w ith her three children — ages Elementary School in 5,7and9 — andher Reiate" husband after he got a Bend, she was asked how she would contrib- ' Read the new job in Redmond. Iyrics,AB She had taught music ute to fostering school spirit. for seven years but has "I paused and then I said, takenthelasteightyears off to 'How about a school song?'" foc u s on her kids. "I like the creative side Woodford said. "When I was thinking about how to spend of t e aching, and I'm always the first few weeks before looki n g for ways to keep it

• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@bendbttlletin.cem, with"Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include contact a name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School news andnotes:

round. For information or assistance

Email news items and notices of general interest to news@bendbulletin.cem. Email announcementsof teens' academicachievements to youth@bendbttlletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

with feral or stray cats, visit www .coca2020.org or call 541-617-1010.

• Obituaries, Death Notices:

eac er ens new sc oo s irit son The Bulletin

Maii: My Nickei's Worth or in MyVlew P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Detatls on theEdltonais page inside. Contact: 541-383-035e, bulletin@bendbulletin.cem

takes feral cats for sterilization year-

jEWELL ELEMENTARY IN BEND

By Tyler Leeds

Redmond ...........541-548-21ee Sunriver.............541-383-0367

The Bulletin

Volunteerstrapped and delivered 66 feral cats to the Bend Spay and Neuter Project on Sunday for the first ever highvolume spay and neuter clinic sponsored by the Central Oregon Cat Alliance. The cats came from around Deschutes County, with many brought in from La Pine and Redmond, according to Betsy Henshaw with the Bend Spay and Neuter Project. "Today we've got 17 cats from the Cody Road area, and we had five from the same areabrought in lastw eek,"she said. "We think there are at least 30 living out there." The cats brought in are given a rabies vaccination, dewormed and sterilized. The cats also have the tip of one ear clipped so they're identifiable in the future as having already been fixed. Volunteers like Marsha Curths and Harold Shay, both from La Pine, pick up traps from the clinic and set them out the night before a clinic. Curths and Shay brought five cats to Sunday's clinic for sterilization. "People bait the traps with food; something smelly is good," Henshaw said. "One girl swears by KFC Original Recipe." Dr. Byron Maas, owner of the Bend Veterinary Clinic, volunteered his time Sunday and performed all the procedures. "So far I've done a dozen or so (sterilizations) and one tail amputation,"

Bend ...................541-617-7829 Sisters ................541-548-2186 La Pine...............541-383-0367

local Oregonofficials say the money is afraction of what they need, and inonecash-strapped fears that it could domore harm

Have astoryidea or sudmission? Contactus!

Call a reporter:

keep deputies on the road, but

county the infusion has sparked

to10 percent, then to 10.4 percent.

ations levy for Crooked River Ranch Rural Fire Protection District at a rate of 69 cents

tory of Bend's urbangrowth

Portland transit station has

temporary lodging rate from 9

Deschutes and Jefferson counties • Measure 16-69: Renewoper-

City senior plannerDamian Syrnykand principal planner

people who wereshot in a

City of Bend • Measure 9-94: Increase the

manent taxing district at a rate of $1.75 per $1,000 assessed property value.

front will take part in a Tuesday forum about the city's

Teen shot —Oneof two

ON THE BALLOT

• Measure 9-95: Form Alfalfa Fire District and create a per-

— City of Bend planners and activists on the development

Portland

• Where te register:County elections offices, Oregon secretary of state's office DMV, www.oregonvotes.gov

Deschutes and Crookcounties

League of Women Voters of DeschutesCounty

STATE NEWS

• Ballots mailed:Oct. 18 • Election Day:Nov. 5

transient room tax outside incorporated areas by 1 percentage point, from 7 to 8 percent.

TUESDAY

Contact:541-383-0354, news@bendbulletin.cem. In emails, please write"Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include acontact nameandnumber.Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noonThursday.

Tuesday (21days before the election)

• Measure 9-96: Increase the

CIVIC CALENDAR

— Bulletin staff report

• Last day to register tn vote:

Deschutes County

— Bulletin staff report

acres andbeing reimbursedfor park developmentthrough system developmentcharges.

NOV. 5 ELECTION

fresh for me," Woodford said. "This song helped with that,

especially as I was feeling like a first-year teacher again after all this time." While Woodford wrote the lyrics to Jewell's new school song, the music is borrowed from a piece by the Somali-Canadian recording artist K'naan entitled "Wavin' Flag." The song became an international hit as the promotional anthem for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. "It was a song my family

would listen to while cleaning the house," Woodford said. "It has a good beat, so the kids like it, and they would always request it. I think it has a good message too, which I liked." K'Naan grew up in Mogadishu, Somalia's capital and largest city, but his family fled to Canada when a civil war erupted between the nation's military government and various clan-based groups in 1991. See Jewell IA8

Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits©bendbttlletin.com

• Community events: Email event information to commttnitylife@bend bulletin.cem or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Details: Thecalendarappears inside this section. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: The Milestones page publishesSundayin Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358


A8

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013

E VENT

AL E N D A R

with Nell Robinson; $25-$38 in advance,$30-$43 atthe door, plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 PUMPKIN PATCHANDMARKET: p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall Picka pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. randompresents.com. Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. CELTICHOUSE CONCERT: Featuring WEDNESDAY "Songs from Scotland," Celtic songs PUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKET: and ballads; $15-$20 per person, Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; reservation requested; 6:30 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Bend location; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. 541-306-0048 or windance2011@ Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504gmail.com. 1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. MARC COHN: The pop singerAUTHORPRESENTATION:Craig songwriter performs, with special guests; $28 at Newport Market, $68 Johnson presents his book, "The Spirit of Steamboat"; refreshments (dinner and show) at the Athletic Club of Bend; 6:30 p.m., doors open and prize drawings; free, reservations 6 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 requested; 5:30-7 p.m.; Sunriver Athletic Club Drive; 541-385-3062 Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation or www.c3events.com. Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541593-2525 or www.sunriverbooks. com/event/craig-johnson-spiritsteamboat. TUESDAY "DON QUIXOTE": A screening of the ballet about the bumbling knight and PUMPKIN PATCHAND MARKET: his faithful squire; part of the Royal Picka pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Opera House Ballet Series; $15; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. Bend; 541-312-2901. RAMBLIN'JACK ELLIOTT:The WHITEWATER RAMBLE: The New Yorkfolk musician performs, Colorado-bred bluegrass quintet

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

TODAY

cv

Submitted photo

The pop singer-songwriter Marc Cohn will perform tonight at the Athletic Club of Bend. "MOONSHINE8tMA SON JARS": The Distiller's Choice Dinner features Southern style cuisine paired with "moonshine" cocktails and live music; $75, $60 for members, reservation requested; 5:30 p.m.; Oregon Spirit Distillers, THURSDAY 490 N.E. Butler Market Road, Ste. 120, Bend; 541-382-0002 or www. PUMPKIN PATCHAND MARKET: oregonspiritdistillers.com. Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central KNOW CULTURA:MAKING Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. MOLE:Learn how to make mole Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504at home; free; 6 p.m.; East Bend 1414 or www.pumpkinco.com. Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

Jewell Elementary Schoolsong Lyrics by Kathy I/I/oodford Give you friendship

Give you kindness Givecompassion

Road; 541-312-1034 or tinad© deschuteslibrary.org. SUSTAINABLERESOURCE LECTURE SERIES: Former archaeologist and Sierra Club activist, Courtney White, talks about building economic and ecological resilience on working landscapes; free, reservation requested; 6 p.m.; HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. LIVEPODCAST COMEDY SHOW: Featuring the newly married comedy duo of Doug and Teresa Wyckoff; $5; 6:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-999-5207. TONY SMILEY:The Washingtonbased alternative-loop ninja singer performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. "DOUBT: APARABLE": A staged reading of John Patrick Shanley's play featuring Derek Sitter as Father Flynn; $5;7:30 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. PUKE 'N RALLYAND NEUTRALBOY: The California and Washington rock bands perform, with The Hooligans and The

Beerslayers; $3; 8 p.m.; Big T's, 413 S.W. Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3864 or www.revernation. com/venue/bigts. "TRANSITION2:'CROSS THE POND":A screening of the cyclocross film for Central Oregon Trail Alliance Movie Night; $5 cash only; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

FRIDAY COMMUNITY RUMMAGESALE: Featuring gently-used items, door prizes, face painting, live radio broadcastand more;proceeds benefit Beulah's Place; free admission; 7 a.m.-7 p.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 S.W. Highland Ave., Redmond; 541-548-4161. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH:An eight-acre corn maze with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5 and younger for corn maze; $2.50 for most other activities; noon-7 p.m., pumpkin patch open until 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co., 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.com.

OREGON

Survivor recalls houseblaze in Pendleton that killed 5

Take me higher

By Kathy Aney

the world now We're the future

Make you feel proud

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Jewell Elementary School music teacher Kathy Woodford leads students in singing the school song at a monthly assembly at the school last week in Bend.

Jewell

has also taught the students

Continued from A7 "The lyrics are pretty deep, though they only used little snippetsforthe soccer promotions," Woodford said. "When I changed the words, I looked at his a lot, as they are pretty strong. We were doing a chara cter week, t eaching k i d s about rules and how to be a good friend and I tried to put that in. I also put in classroom and hallway behavior goals because I wanted to talk about c omponents o f t h e i r o w n world." Woodford said that teaching the students a school song has been a good way to "sucker them in to a new teacher." She

basic dance moves to go along with the song. "I didn't want people to just sit and sing, I wanted it to be active," Woodford said. "Not everyone is a singer, but most kids can move, and I think it will help engage English learners or those who can't yet memorize." At the end of a school-wide performance ofthe song, the whole student body performs the wave. "We actually forgot it today," Woodford said Oct. 4. "I went over to the principal and told her, 'I think I know why every-

American Sign Language and

one is beingso noisy.'" — Reporter:541-633-2160, tleedsC<bendbulletin.com

Cats

Caregivers are i nstructed to stop feeding the cats two to Continued from A7 three days before setting out "A lot of these cats at one the traps, so they're hungry time were probably indoor and will take the food baiting pets," volunteer Debbie Graf- the traps. Once the cats are ton said. "A lot of cats were sterilized, they're kept in capabandoned during the hous- tivity for one day in order to ing crisis." recover and then are let go. Though sterilizing the cats The Central Oregon Cat won't create an i m mediate Alliance received an $8,000 change in the overall popula- grant from the county, enough tion, Henshaw said the hope to buy 50 new traps and hold is Deschutes County might three high-volume spay and see fewer feral cats in 10 to 15 neuter clinics. Sunday's clinic years. In additiontothe 66adult cats, Wellinghoff found and brought in a litter of feral kittens. They are too small to be sterilized, but Wellinghoff said she thinks

when they h e ard E v an's urgent shouts and smelled P ENDLETON — D a v i d smoke. The couple looked out Eickstaedt's skin and lungs the window and saw flames are healing, but memories of shooting to the roof. They the smoke, flame and terror ran to the hallway to find a will likely linger. wall of intense heat. Below, Eickstaedt an d a n other they could hear cracking and survivor jumped out second- popping as the fire consumed floor windows to escape a wood floors and walls and the fast-moving Sept. 22 house home's contents. "It sounded like firecrackfire that killed two adults and three children. The Pendleton ers," he said. "I felt the heat man saidhe jerked awake ear- on my forehead, eyes and ly that morning to the sound ears. My arm started melting ofpounding on asecond-floor away." bedroom door down the hall. Rushing into another bed" Mom, the house is on room, Eickstaedt could see fire," yelled six-year-old Evan Kay below in the backyard, Williams. looking anxiously up at the Insidethe room slept Evan's window. Jumping seemed mother, Kay Williams, and the only way out. Eickstaedt Kristopher Morton. The little and Philpott disagreed about boy yelled three more times, searching for the boys. PhilEickstaedt said, before Kay pott wanted to try. Eickstaedt yanked open the door. In a said he knew it was too late. "Somebody needs to save short time, the ferocious blaze would take her three children those kids," he remembers (Evan, Rowan Harvey, 2, and her saying. Anabelle Harvey, 5 months), She turned back. EicksMorton, 29, and Eickstaedt's taedt jumped. He landed on fiance, Treasa Philpott, 46. his side and thinks he went Eickstaedt, 49, and Wi lunconsciousfora shorttime. l iams, 27, would jump t o When he came to and realsafety. ized Philpott and M o rton Reflecting on t h e f i e ry hadn't followed, he knewthey nightmare at 1220 S.E. Court were gone. Place, Eickstaedt removed his Pendleton firefighters arjacketto reveal burned arms rived about that time, after and shoulders, bright pink getting the call about 6 a.m. with healing skin. His eyes and getting to the scene about grew moist ashe described two minutes later to find the the terror and chaos. home fully engulfed. PendleHe and Philpott had gotten ton Police Chief Stuart Robdrunk before falling asleep erts said emergency persontogether, Eickstaedt admit- nel rushed around back and ted. They sobered up quickly heard a scratching sound at East Oregonian

We're the champions, of

In our classrooms, weare learning Gaining knowledge, understanding In our hallways, weare smiling We are happy, give high fives now

Singing forever young, singing songs underneath the sun Let's rejoice in the beautiful

day And together at the end of the day

We all say We are the Jaguars, weare so strong now We will work harder, right

here at Jewell School At Jewell School At Jewell School At Jewell School

was the first. Wellinghoff said the group will wait until spring to hold the second and third high-volume clinics. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbufletin.com

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the back door. When a police officer kicked in the door, a dog rushed out. "They contemplated entering the house, but the ceiling was already falling in," Roberts said. After f i r efighters e x t i nguished the blaze, they found remains of Philpott, Morton and the tvvo boys on the second floor and the baby downstairs. Determining the fire's cause may never happen, Roberts said. Investigators pinpointed the origin as the front porch, but don't know why it ignited there.There are at least a couple of possibilities. "We know from neighbors that at least one of the boys was outside at about 5:30 a.m.," he said. "We've also been told there was a c i g arette butt can on the porch and a lot of cardboard." Some people questioned by fire investigators said Evan had a history of starting little fires. Roberts said an early rumor hypothesized that a meth lab caused the blaze. However, investigators scoured the burned house for meth-cooking tools and other remnants and found nothing. A search dog found n o a c c elerants that could have been used in arson.

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they're young enough to be

tamed and adopted as pets. She said she plans to work with the humane society to get them adopted to new homes. The adult cats are sterilized and returned to the area in which they were trapped. "Most of the ones we got in today are really healthy," Wellinghoff said. " A lot o f them have caregivers who feed them."

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013•THE BULLETIN

A9

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

'Rizzoi Ises'sta in, ut ro ucerisn't TV SPOTLIGHT

Studios — which furnished the show to its related networkwanted to keep it going, since it generated notable profits on the international front over the course of its run. It's generally thought that fact is what earned it a third season to begin with.

By Jay Bobbin © Zap2it

Q

• I read that the producer • of "Rizzoli & I s les" is leaving. Does that mean the show is ending? — Gary Curtis, Boca Raton, Fla. • In fact, TNT already has • renewed the Angie Harmon-Sasha Alexander show — one ofbasic cable'smost successful original drama series to date — for its fifth season next year, though that happened before executiveproducer Janet Tamaro announced her decision to step down. (She will remain a consulting producer on

there will be more episodes soon. — Janet Woj nowski, Milwaukee . There will be more, but . we'll let you decide on your definition of "soon," since the likely return of the Robert Taylor-starring ARE Network

len's series "Last Man Standing" on DVD? — Leonard Budny, Depew, NY. • There isn't, at least not as • of this writing. And we must add that on several fronts, it's surprising that there isn't. The ABC comedy is now in its third season, whichindicates enough people are watching; the show is produced by 20th Century Fox, which has been a leaderin home video releases of television series; and Allen is a proven DVD commodity as demonstrated by "Home Improvement," which even got a complete series release on disc. Perhaps his current series will get similar treatment eventually, but for the time being, not yet.

Courtesy Newscom

Angie Harmon, left, and Sasha Alexander will return to TNT's "Rizzoli & Isles" for a fifth season. "Body of Proof"'? — Marie Cleary, Sanford, N.C. . If"sisterstation"refersto . ABC Family, the answer is "no." After ABC decided not to renew the Dana Delanystarring mystery series following its third season, there was some talk of the show being picked up by a cable network, Is there any c h ance but that ultimately didn't come . that ABC or its sister to anything. It's no surprise that ABC station will or can bring back series should be around Memorial Day ... which was when its first two seasons started. Along w it h " B ates M otel," "Longmire" clearly is the face of originaldrama series for the network now, especially since "The Glades" was canceledafterfour seasons.

Dear Abby: I am upset with myself for getting my granddaughter the cellphoneshe begged me for.I wish the phone companies would put restrictions on them. I wondered why she was feeling tired in the mornings until I c a ught her on t h e p h one at 4 a.m. She can't g et dressed in t h e DEAR morning be c ause ABBY she's texting every two minutes. When her friend, who she was always very active with, came over, the girl wound up watching a movie with me because my granddaughter would not stop texting in her bedroom. She wasn't like this until she got this new boyfriend, and he must have no life at all. Should I talk to his parents? It is consuming her life, morning, noon and night. I have told her she can't have the p hone until h e r h o m ework i s done. — Frustrated Grandma in North Carolina Dear Grandma: You shouldn't expect thephone company to de-

cide what is acceptable in your home. As the adult in your household, it's up to you to assert control. If your granddaughter lives with you, by all means talk to the boyfriend's parents about this. But equally important, enforce c ellphone limits. I f you think she can't be trusted not to use it after lights-out, see that she gives you her phone at bedtime. In the morning, return it to her once she's dressed and ready for school. And when she invites friends over, make sure she understands it is HER responsibility — not yours — to entertain them, because what she did was rude. Dear Abby:I have met a darling man I'm compatible with in every way. We have similar tastes in just about everything from decorating and landscaping to entertainment. My problem is his past. From what he says, he has never had a monogamous relationship, even d uring his m arriage. After t h e divorce h e p u r sued a n y t hing female.

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, OCT. 14, 2013:This year your imagination goes wild playing out solutions, ideas and emotional situations. Romance will emerge because of your ability to fantasize and create wonderful Stars showthe kind scenarios. A boss of dayyou'll have or an associate ** * * * D ynamic loves your ideas. ** * * P ositive Y o u will excel ** * A verage at w o rk, but be ** So-so cautious around * Difficult an older woman or man, as this person does not have your best interests in mind. Make sure you give everything 110 percent. If you are single, make sure that the feelings between you and a potential sweetie are mutual before you unleash your romantic being. If you are attached, the two of you enjoy a period of unusual closeness. Your day-to-day life improves because of your ability to see different paths. PISCESencourages you to live your dreams.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Y ou have the ability to stay calm, cool and collected, even in difficult situations. Whether you yell at someone or scream within, your ire will bubble up to the forefront. IJse your strong feelings to deal with a key situation. Tonight: Schedule some downtime.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * You tend to meet others' demands in a matter-of-fact way. This attitude might be great for many people, including a boss, but it does take a toll. Today you become overwhelmed by what you must do, and you might lose your cool. Tonight: Have a long-overdue dlscusslon. ** * *

W hile others seem to be

quite get going. The Keller character also was a factor in the 1992 TV m ovie sequel "Back to t h e Streets of San Francisco," in which his disappearance was being investigated by Stone, but Douglas was seen only in archival material.

Q

. I've always wondered, . whose is the voice heard at the opening of each "Law & Order" episode? — Sue Butler, Shelbyville, lnd. • His n a me i s St e v en • Zirnkilton, and his voice also has been heard on "Family Guy" and in "The Rugrats Movie," as well as in announcing the Kennedy Center Honors. Be listening when CBS airs the next . I h a ppened t o c o m e ceremony Dec. 29; chances . across an episode of are good you'll hear him start "The Streets of San Francisco" the show by announcing the with Michael Douglas. How names of such 2013 honorees long did he do the show'? as Billy Joel, Shirley MacLaine — John Quinn, and Herbie Hancock. Lancaster, Calif. — Send questionsofgeneral

A

A• Douglas played Inspec-

interest via email to tvpipeline@ tribune.com. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.

• tor Steve Keller, relative novice partner of D etective Lt. Mike Stone (Karl Malden),

Limit cellphoneuseto curb obsession

GEMINI (May 21-June20)

Richard Hatch joined the show in the final season as Douglas departed to take care of other career matters in the wake of winning his first Oscar for producing the 1975 movie "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" ... which his father, Kirk, had long had the film rights to but could never

A

it going forward.)

I am addicted to "LongQ . .mire." Please tell m e

(1972-77).

any news about Q •• Isthethere release of Tim Al-

A

Tamaro said the recent suicide of co-star Lee Thompson Young was a factor in her decision, in the sense that it prompted her to decide what she wanted to do professionally. She has said that she has hopes of staying in business with both TNT and "Rizzoli" studio Warner Horizon Television with her forthcoming projects in some fashion.

for the first four seasons of the ABC mystery's five-year run

When we are outat a club or a concert, I c o nstantly encounter women he has been with. He tells me he is happy for the first time in his life and he would never cheat on me. I have never been thejealous type, and I'm really not now. I just don't want to be the woman everyone is laughing at because they know his history. As I said, we are content and happy, but I need to move past this or move on,

I guess. — The Current Woman Dear Current Woman: You say this "darling" man has never had a monogamous relationship — before, during or after his marriage. Therefore,the odds aren't great that he'll have one with you. It's time to ask yourself (not me) if you would be willing to tolerate his fooling around if you were his wife. Some women — the wives of attractive or powerful men — are open-minded about it if their husbands are discreet. The real question is, are you? — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

I

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-13) 12:05, 1:30, 3:10, 4:35, 6:15, 8, 9:20 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 23-0 (PG) 12:20, 2:40 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)I:05, 3:40, 6:05, 9:05 • DON JON (R) 12:40 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) 12:55, 4, 6:20, 9 • GRACEUNPLUGGED (PG)1:20,3:55,6:55,9:30 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) 12:25, 7:30 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13) 2:45,5:05, 4:20, 6:45, 9:15, 9:50 • GRAVITY IMAX3-D(PG-13) Noon, 2:30,4:50, 7:10, 9:30 • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) 1:25, 4:05, 7:40, 10:15 • INSTRUCTIONS NOTINCLUDED (PG-13) 12:15, 3:05, 6:30, 9:25 • MACHETE KILLS (R) 1:10, 3:50, 7:20, 10 • PRISONERS (R) 6, 9:25 • ROMEO &JULIET (PG-13)12:30,3:30,6:40,9:40 • RUNNER RUNNER(R) I2:35, 2:55, 6:50, 9:15 • RUSH(R)12:50, 3:45, 7, 9:55 • WE'RE THE MILLERS (R) 1, 3:55, 7:25, 10:10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I

• Oue to Monday Night Football, no movies will screen today. • After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 2f may attend screenings before 7 pm. if accompanied bya legal guardian.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

• No films are scheduled to screen today.

hotbeds of emotion, you detach, look at the bigger picture and askyourself what is going on. Once you gain a more workable perspective, you can bypass emotions and a difficult situation. Others ask a lot from you. Tonight: Up late.

** * * G etting going could take a major effort this morning, but once the afternoon sets in, you will like where you are, whatyou are doing and the people who are around you. Anger still might bubble up when dealing with a boss ora higher-up. Tonight: Tap intoyour creativity.

Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)5,7 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 5:30, 7:30 • MACHETE KILLS (R) 4: I5, 6:30 • RUNNER RUNNER(R) 5:15, 7:15

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

** * * A partner plays a strategic role in your financial well-being. You might wonder if there is a better way. Independence in this area could be beneficial in creating greater peace. Checkinwithsomeone who has a greater understanding of the problem. Tonight: Allow your mind to wander.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * * S omeone's assertiveness will make a difference. A strong reaction might not be surprising to you, but you'll discover that this attitude is best in the long run, as it takes some of the responsibility off your shoulders. Tonight: Visit with one of the special people in your life.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * You might not realize how much anger could be driving you, especially as youhave atendencyto suppressthat emotion. Getting a grasp on someone else's suggestion might involve asking some questi ons.Tonight:Do some shopping on the way home.

** * * Y ou tend to come off as being quite self-assured, though you might not feel that way. You easily could hear news that forces you to regroup. If you feel pressured, you might want to rethink your reaction to this news. Tonight: Mosey on home.

8p.m. onHH, "The Voice" — The competition moves to its next phase — thebattle rounds — in this new episode.Coaches Adam Levine, BlakeShelton, Christina Aguilera andCeeLo Green get help from, respectively, RyanTedder, Cher, EdSheeran and Miguel in preparing their contestants. After two membersofeachcoach' s team face off in duets, the coaches pick their strongest contenders and have theoption of stealing losing artists from the others in "The Battles Premiere." 8p.m. on f3, "How I Met Your Mother" —Lily (Alyson Hannigan) counsels Barney (Neil Patrick Harris) on howto handle a dispute between his mother (guest star Frances Conroy) and Robin (Cobie Smulders). Tedand Marshall (Josh Radnor, Jason Segel) argue over wedding presents and thank-you notes in the new episode "The Poker Game." Sherri Shepherd and Wayne Brady also guest star. 9 p.m. on HBO,"Mondays at Racine" —A tripleheader of films nominated for the best documentary short Oscar opens with this moving tale of a beauty salon on NewYork's Long Island. One Monday each month,the two sisters who own the salon offer free services to women with cancer. Director Cynthia Wadefocuses on two customers: Cambria Russell, a young mother facing a difficult choice, and Linda Hart, an older woman who's beenbattling cancerfor 17 years. 9:40 p.m. on HBO,"Redemption" —The showcase for best documentary short Oscar nominees continues with Jon Alpert and Matthew O'Neill's film about New Yorkers who support themselves by collecting and redeeming cans and bottles for the nickel deposit. About a dozen people are featured, including two who find common ground despite a language barrier. ©Zep2it

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Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 3:45, 6:30 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)4 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) 4:30, 6:45 • PRISONERS (R) 6 • RUNNINGWILD:THE STORY OF DAYTON 0.HYDE (no MPAA rating) 4, 6:15

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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * Y ou could be taken aback by a trusted person's reaction. You need to detach, sit back and observe. You will gain more insight into what is ailing him or her. Afternoon talks will tend to bring resolutions more easily. Tonight: Get feedback from a loved one.

aauaRiuS(Jan. 20-Fed.18) ** * * Y ou inadvertently could trigger someone way beyond his or her tolerance level. Ask fewer questions, and be more forthright in what you decide to do. Your finances will determine your choices more than you might realize. Tonight: Do something just for you!

Madras Cinema 5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)4:45,7 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 4:50 • GRAVITY3-0(PG- I3) 7:10 • MACHETE KILLS (R) 5, 7:20 • PRISONERS (R) 6:25 • RUNNER RUNNER(R) 5:10, 7: I5 •

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5:25 p.m. on ESPN,"NFL Footdall" —Two AFCteams moving in opposite directions clash tonight at Qualcomm Stadium, where Philip Rivers and the San Diego Chargers play host to Andrew Luck and the Indianapolis Colts. The Chargers, losers of two of their first three in 2013, are in their first year under head coach Mike McCoy and have struggled defensively. The Colts, 2-1 through Week3, recently added ex-Brown Trent Richardson, the No. 3 overall pick in 2012, to a productive corps of runners.

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** * * * Y ou understand much more of what is going on behind the scenes. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) By the afternoon, you might feel the ** * * * M e etings in the morning hold need to take an active stand. Follow your a special significance. You could be tired instincts. Later in the day, your sense of of someone who continues to talk and humor will come out. Share an unusual steal the stage. If ever there was a time idea. Tonight: Dream on. to say something, it would be today. Be careful, as you don't want to humiliate ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

O

Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's

pz.

0 G O! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at benddulletin.com/movies

541-728-0838 2762 NW Crossing Dr., ¹101


A10

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013

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IN THE BACI4: WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 NFL, B4-B5

Community Sports, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013

A rundown of games and events to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:

Thursday

Friday

Prep girls soccer, Cottage Groveat Sisters, 4:30 p.m.:TheOutlaws own a perfect 6-0 record in Sky-EmLeague 2010. Sisters (9-0 overall) hosts the

Prep footdall, Cleveland at Ridgeview, College footdali, WashingtonState at 7 p.m.: TheRavenshavestrungtogether Oregon, 7 p.m. (FoxSports1); Oregon six straight wins and have jumped to No. State at Cal, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN2): Two 5 in the OSAA Class 4A state rankings. easy wins could be ontap for the Ducks They will put their 6-1 record on the line and the Beavers. OSUjust routed Wazzu when they host 2-5 Cleveland from the on Saturday, so hopesfor a Cougar

Lions, who sit in second place in the

5A Portland Interscholastic League.

play and have won 35 of their past 36

conference matchups dating back to

Saturday

Sky-Em and fell to the Outlaws 6-0 on Sept. 26.

Sunday

Running,SuperDave's DownandDirty Half,ga.m.:The fall version ofthe

NFL, Denver at Indianapolis, 5:30 p.m. (NBC):Thehype machine will be in high

bigger Dirty Half in the spring starts and finishes at Seventh Mountain Resort

gear for this one, as Peyton Manning

southwest of Bend.Thecourse is almost

takes his Broncos to his old stomping grounds in Indy. Beyondthat, this is a

entirely on dirt, between forest service roads and singletrack, with about1,000

big game in the AFC pecking order, as Denver is undefeated, while the Andrew

that has beaten only Portland State this

is also offered. For more information:

over Seattle.

season.

www.superfitproductions.com.

upset of the Ducks will not be high. The

Beavers take on aGolden Bearteam

TEE TQGREEN:

Sunday

feet of elevation gain. A10-kilometer race Luck-led Colts are 4-1, including a win

• Jimmy Walker takesPGA'sFall Seriesopener,B8 • Scoreboard,B9

oavidMcLayriId, thefamedarchitect

INSIDEQN88-89

NFL Cowboys 31 Packers 19 Redskins 16 Ravens 17 B engals 27 Rams 3 8 Bills 2 4 T e xans 13

Lions 31 B roncos 35 Browns 17 Jaguars 19

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Chiefs 24 Seahawks 20 R aiders 7 T i tans 1 3

UO continues

Panthers 35 Patriots 30 Vikings 10 Saints 27 S teelers 19 49ers 3 2 Jets 6 Car dinals 20

decade of dominance

Eagles 31 Bucs 20

Coverage,B4-B5

r

• As the weather gets colder,usethese tips to keepmoving andstay motivated

over UW

By Beau Eastes

By Tim Booth The Associated Press

The Bulletin

SEATTLE — Nick Aliotti has hung around Eugene long enough to remember when the idea of dominating Washington was preposterous and not the way it's been the past 10 years

Inside

MLB

Daylight is growing shorter, the weather is . (r

r;, ~'ps ..'~;,, r'.Rob Ke<l Jligsulretindi+~,,',

for Oregon.

"When I think back to the days when some of you weren't born, it really feels good," said Aliotti, Oregon's defensive coordinator. "There was a time when Washington absolutely dominated us. But mostly, humbly, I'll say I'm very pleased to be where we are." The second-ranked Ducks (6-0, 3-0 Pac-12) continued a decade of surprising supremacy over Washington with their 45-24 win over the Huskies on Saturday thanks largely to one of the more completeperformances of quarterback Marcus Mariota's career. See Ducks/B7

colder, and oftentimes the last thing you want to do is lace up those running shoes and pump out

• OSU notebook,B7

4'

' ~r';:;,-

. ,

the mileage you so carefully calculated the day before.

-

= - -

-- SuperDavesayi

=

Some advice on running in the

fall and winterfrom area race director DaveThomason:

"lf you've got 25 minutes of daylight, get on it and hit up Pilot Butte. With limited amounts of time, do highintensity workouts."

"It's a fresh season. Go get a different feel, do something different. Get far

enough away and people won't even know if you walk."

Ni -e ff~

• For a look at Central

Oregon running groups and upcoming races, see Elaine Thompson i TheAssociated Press

Oregon's Byron Marshall rushes against Washington in the Ducks' victory over the Huskies in Seattle on Saturday.

Community Sports calendar,B7

Boston's David Ortiz,

right, celebrates his grand slam with Dustin

Pedroia on Sunday.

Sox walk off After digging a big hole, Boston rallies to beat Detroit in the ALCS,B3

Don't feel bad, we all hit that point sometimes. COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Heading into fall and winter, I polled several local experts about how to stay mentally motivated to keep running when temperatures

We all know that multiple layers of clothing are necessary and that traction via Yaktrax or even screws drilled into old running shoes can help keep runners moving when conditions are at their worst. But what about when you need a kick in the pants on those cold, rainy or snowy days? Hereare some tipsto

keep runners moving during even the worst conditions this fall and winter: Christina Stavro, a 24year-old Bend runner, makes sure she has all her running clothes laid out the previous evening before she hits the trails in the morning.

SEG gets record8 teams in APpoll The Southeastern Conference seta record

drop and snow falls.

Prep the night before

Inside

Rt

sti „,. Q ext

"That way there's no excuses," offers Stavro, who says she runs five times a week. "It's all ready to go as soon as you wake up. "Get that run in the books and know that the rest of

the day you're going to feel

for most schools in The

Associated Press college football poll with eight ranked teams.

The Top 25was shaken Sunday after seven ranked teams lost,

including five to teams

good," Stavro says. Stavro, adds that rewarding yourself with a hot, calorie-rich breakfast can help you get out of bed and onto some of Central Oregon's hundreds of miles of singletrack.

that were unranked or lower ranked. Stanford

whatever, as long as it's warm," she says. "And if you run in the mornings, when it's dark, getting to see the sunrise is pretty cool." See Running /B6

No. 2 is Oregon, fol-

"Eggs, waffles, pancakes,

dropped eight spots and Michigan fell from the poll.

The top four was unchanged, with No. 1 Alabama receiving 55

of 60 first-place votes. lowed by Clemsonand Ohio State. Florida State moved up to No. 5 to set

up a top-five matchup at Clemson next week. Stanford lost 27-20 at Utah and is now No.

13, becoming the first top-10 team this season

to lose to an unranked team. Michigan drops

Legends selling relics?Forsome athletes, that old glove is truly gold By Richard Sandomir New Yorh Times News Service

There comes a time when a sports legend must decide whether to hang on to this championship ring and that game-worn jersey, or to cash in on the memorabilia market, which can fetch stunning sums for rare and historic artifacts. Bill Mazeroski, the former Pittsburgh Pirates second baseman best known for his World Series-winning home run against the New York Yankees in 1960, was the latest to choose to purge his house of decades-old keepsakes. This summer, as the Pirates were heading to the playoffs for the first time in 21 years, he received an offer from the Hunt Auctions company to sell the

uniform and many other items cluttering his basement. "My wife, Milene, goes along with me, that we might as well get rid of it," Mazeroski said by telephone. "One of our sons said, 'Ah, it's hard to get rid of,' and the other said, 'OK, get rid of it.'" The Mazeroski auction heads into a memorabilia market in which Chris Chambliss recently received a combined $121,874 for the home run bat he swung, and the ball he hit, to win the 1976 American League Championship Series for the Yankees, and in which Mike Eruzione, the captain of the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team, sold the "Miracle on Ice" uniform he wore during the defeat of the Soviet team

for $657,250. Golfer Sam Snead's family sold the claret jug he received for winning the 1946 British Open for $262,900. And the son of Angelo Dundee, the boxing trainer who diedlastyear,received $385,848 for the boxing gloves Muhammad Ali wore when he beat Sonny Liston in 1964. Dan Imler, a vice president at SCP Auctions, said that some former athletes regard their gameused wares with sentimentality. "But to a lesser extent than most people think," he said. "It's not that they don't value the memories or the accomplishments. They just don't equate the objects to their achievements." See Relics/B7

out after losing 43-40 in four overtimes at Penn State. No. 24 Auburn moved into the rankings for the

first time this season

,P)g,ATE

to Ioln No. 6 LSU, No. 7TexasABM, No.11

South Carolina, No. 14 Missouri, No. 15 Georgia and No. 22 Florida. —TheAssociated Press

PREP SPORTS

Look for prep slideshowonline

O 0

Hunt Auctions via The New York Times

The uniform that was worn by Bill Mazeroski as he hit a title-winning home run. Mazeroski, the former Pittsburgh Pirates second baseman best known for his World Series-winning home run against the New York Yankees in 1960, has agreed to sell his uniform, a glove and other personal artifacts.

The Bulletin

ta kes a look back

at the week in Central Oregon sports, in pictures. Visit the Bulletin's website at www.bendbulletin.com/

preppics.


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 20'l3

SPORTS ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY BASEBALL M LB, NLCS, L.A. Dodgers atSt.Louis HOCKEY NHL, Minnesota at Buffalo FOOTBALL

Time

TV/ Radio

4 :30 p.m.

NBC S N

NFL, Indianapolis at SanDiego

5:25 p.m.

ESPN

5 p.m. TBS, 940-AM

BOXING

Jermell Charlo vs. JoseAngel Rodriguez BASKETBALL NBA, preseason, San Antonio at Denver SOCCER

6 p.m. Fox Sports1 6 p.m.

NBA

Men's college, OregonState atWashington 7 p.m.

Pac-12

TUESDAY BASKETBALL Time NBA, preseason, Golden Statevs.L.A.Lakers4:30 a.m .

NBA, preseason, Miami at Washington 4

TV/Radio NBA NBA

p . m.

SOCCER

World Cup, qualifying, whip-around coverage11:30a.m ESPN2 World Cup, qualifying, England vs. Poland noon Fox Sports1 BASEBALL 1 p.m. MLB, ALCS, Boston at Detroit MLB, NLCS, St.LouisatL.A.Dodgers 5 p.m. GOLF

Fox TBS

PGA GrandSlam of Golf (same-day tape) 4 p.m.

TNT

FOOTBALL College, Louisiana-Lafayette at W. Kentucky 5 p.m. HOCKEY NHL, San Jose at St. Louis 5 p.m.

ESPN2 NBCSN

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The 73ufletfnis not responsible for late changesmade by TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER

of titles at the China Open in Bei-

jing and the Shanghai Masters

Timders shut down rival SOUlldSI'S —Kalif Alhassan

for the second straight year. He's now won seven titles overall in

scored late in the first half and

China — the most he's won in

the Portland Timbers held on for

any country. Djokovic had to

a1-0 victory over CascadiaCup rival Seattle on Sundaynight in

overcome astrong challenge from del Potro, who fendedoff

Portland, denying the Sound-

two match points late in the third

ers a chance to clinch a playoff berth. The Timbers (13-5-14)

set, but couldn't put any pressure on Djokovic's serve down

ON DECK Tuesday Boyssoccer:SummitatBend,4:30p.m.;Ridgeview at MountainView,4:30 p.m.;Junction Cityat Sisters, 4 p.m.;Madrasat Gladstone,6 p.m2Elmira atLaPine,4.30p.m.,CrookCountyatRedmond, 4:30 p.m. Girls soccer: Ridgeview at Mountain View,3 p.m.; Sisters at JunctionCity, 4:30p.m.; Gladstoneat Madras,4:30p.mzLaPine at Elmira 4 p.m.;Summit at Bend, 3 p.m.; CrookCounty at Redmond,3 p.m. VoHeyball: SummitatRidgeview 630p m.;Elmiraat Sisters,6:45p.m.;North Marlonat Madras, 6p.m.; CottageGroveat LaPine,6:45 p.m.; CrookCounty at Bend,6:30p.m.;Trinity Lutheranat Gilchrist, 5 pm4MountainViewat Redmond, 6:30p.m. Boys water polo: MountainViewat Ridgeview,TBA

person and aneven better player

spot with two games left. Portland has not lost in six straight

on the court," Djokovic said to del Potro during the trophy

overall matches, andhasn't lost

presentation. "I'm sorry you lost

at home in 14 straight. With the

today. You deserve this trophy

Seattle loss, Vancouver claimed equally." It was atough loss for the supporters-created Cascadia del Potro, who wastrying to Cup, an annual three-way com- win his first Masters title in his petition between the Sounders,

third attempt. He was coming

Whitecaps andTimbers.

off a big win over top-ranked Rafael Nadal in the semifinals,

MOTOR SPORTS Vettel wins JapaneseGP — Red Bull driver Sebastian

overpowering the Spaniard so completely that Nadal later said: "Very few times I played against a player with a level like today."

Vettel won the JapaneseGrand

Friday Football: Bend atEagle Point, 7p.m.,MountainView at Redmond, 7 p.m.; CrookCountyat Summit, 7 pm.; Clevelandat Ridgeview, 7 p.m.; Cottage Grove atSisters, 7p.m.; LaPineat Elmira, 7 p.m.; Kennedy at Culver, 7p.m2North LakeatGilchrist, 4 p.m. Boys soccer:Culverat Riverside,1 p.m. Volleyball: Regis atCulver,6 p.m2Summit at Nike Tournament ofChampionsin Phoenix, Ariz., 8a.m.; North Lake atGilchrist, 6 p.m. Boys water polo: Bendvs. MountainView,TBA; Bend vsSummit,TBA Girls water polo: Bendvs. Summit, TBA,Bend vs. MountainView,TBA

Saturday Football: Gladstone at Madras, 1p.m. Girls soccer: NorthMedfordatSummit, 3 p.m. Volleyball: Ridgeview,LaPine atPhilomath Tournament,9 a.m4 Culver atCorbettTourney,TBA; Summit at Nike Tournamentof Champions in Phoenix, Ariz., 8 a.m.;TrinityLutheranat NorthLake,215 p.m.; Crook County atWest Linn Toumament, TBA; Gilchrist atPaisley,2:30p.m. Boys water polo: RidgeviewatMountainView,TBA; Ridge view atBend,5:30p.m. Girls water polo: RldgeviewatBend,4:30pm.

BASEBALL MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

PostseasonGlance All Times PDT

LEAGUECHAMPIONSHIP SERIES

(Besf-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All games televised byFox Detroif 1, Goston1 Saturday,Oct.12: Detroit1, Boston0 Sunday,Oct.13:Boston6, Detrolt 5 Tuesday,Oct. 15:Boston(Lackey 10-13) at Detroit (Verlander13-12), 1:07p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 16: Boston(Peavy12-5) at Detroit (Fister14-9),5:07p.m. Thursday, Oct. 17:BostonatDetroit, 5:07p.m. x-Saturday, Oct.19. Detroitat Boston,1:37p.m. x-Sunday, Oct.20: Detroit atBoston,5:07 p.m. National League AH games televisedby TGS Sf. Louis 2, LosAngeles 0 Friday,Oct.11:St. Louis3, LosAngeles2,13 innings Saturday,Oct.12: St.Louis1, LosAngees 0 Today,Oct. 14:St. Louis(Wainwright 19-9) at Los Angeles(Ryu14-8), 5:07p.m. Tuesday,Oct.15. St. Louis fLynn15-10) at LosAngeles,5:07p.m. x-Wednesday, Oct.16: St Louis at LosAngeles,107

TOP-Seed Kerder WinS

a fourth-straight Formula One title as nearest rival Fernando Alonso finished fourth. Vettel

ber won her first WTA title of the season and third overall by defeating two-time champion

surged into the lead onthe 41st

Ana Ivanovic 6-4, 7-6 (6) at the

x-Friday,Oct.18:LosAngelesatSt. Louis,5:37 p.m. x-Saturday,Oct. 19: LosAngelesat St. Louis, 5.37 pm.

lap and led a Red Bull one-two ahead of teammate Mark Web-

Generali Ladies on Sunday in Linz, Austria. The 10th-ranked

Goxscores Sunday's Game

ber by 7.1seconds. Webber,

German used three breaksto

who started from pole position,

w intheopening setand saved four set points for Ivanovic in

passedLotus'RomainGrosjean on the penultimate lap. Grosjean the second. Kerber reachedher led much of the race but could not take his maiden F1 victory and finished third. It was Vettel's fourth win in the past five races at Suzuka and his ninth win of n the season. We had agreat car and were fast again this year," Vettel said. "Being able to finish

third final of the year. She lost to Petra Kvitova of Czech Republic

in Tokyo two weeksago.

StoSur takeS title —Samantha Stosur of Australia rallied from a set down to beat

Canadian teenagerEugenie

on the podium and to win four

Bouchard 3-6, 7-5, 6-2 on Suntimes here is incredible. The fans day and win her secondJapan here are incredible, they really Open title in Osaka, Japan. respect us.n Vettel managed the Third-seeded Stosur, who won rare feat of a fifth-straight race this tournament in 2009, could win and leads the championship only convert seven of her 15

by 90 points from Alonso with

break-point opportunities but

four races remaining. The last driver to win five races in a row

eventually won in two hours and 13 minutes at Utsubo Tennis Center. It was the17th tour final for the 29-year-old Stosur but the first of Bouchard's career.

was Michael Schumacher in 2004.

RUNNING KenyaRSWin ChiCagO Mai'atllOR —Just a fewyears

CYCLING German takes Paris-Tours

ago, Dennis Kimetto was a farmer, tending corn and cattle

ClaSSiC —German rider John

in Kenya. Now,he's shattering

of Denmark andArnaud Demare

marathon records. Six weeks removed from a bout of malaria,

of France in a mass sprint to win the Paris-Tours classic in

Kimetto broke the course mark

France on Sunday.Degenkolb

Sunday in capturing the Chicago Marathon. Compatriot Rita Jep-

completed the146 miles from Authon-du-Perche to Tours in 5

too was the women's winner in

hours, 29 minutes, 19 seconds.

the first major marathon in the United States since the Boston

Morkov took second and Demare third.

bombings. Kimetto finished

Degenkolb beat Michael Morkov

Frenchmanwinsagain

in 2 hours, 3 minutes, 45 seconds, leading a1-2-3 finish for

— Nacer Bouhanni of France

Kenyan men. Hebeat the mark

won for the second straight day,

of 2:04:38 set by Ethiopia's Tse-

clinching the third stage of the

gaye Kebedelastyear.

Tour of Beijing on Sundayto maintain his overall lead. Bou-

TENNIS

hanni, riding for the Francaise

DjokoviC deatS del Potro

des Jeux team, clocked 4hours, 8 minutes, 15 seconds onthe

— Novak Djokovic maintained his dominance in China by hold-

109-mile course from Yanqing to Qianjiadian. Meanwhile, first-

ing off Juan Martin del Potro 6-1, 3-6, 7-6 (3) on Sundayto capture a secondShanghai

stage winner Thor Hushovdof Norway, who wasalso second

Masters title and extend his winning streak in the country to 20

withdrew from the competition because of afamily illness. The race endsTuesday.

consecuti vematches.TheSerb completed aback-to-backsweep

overall after the second stage,

— From wire reports

ro/Itf

BASKETBALL NBA National Basketball Association

PreseasonGlance All Times PDT

Saturday's LateGame Houston 107,lndiana98 Sunday'sGames NewOrleans105,Atlanta73 Phoenix106, SanAntonio 99 Today's Games Brooklynat Philadephia,4p.m. Orlando atDallas, 5:30p.m. SanAntonioat Denver,6p.m. L.A. ClippersatSacramento,7 p.m.

Tuesday'sGames

GoldenStatevs. L.A. Lakersat Beijing, China,4.30

a.m.

Miami atWa shington, 4 p.m.

Thursday Boys soccer: Bend JVat Redmond,4:30p.m.; Crook Countyat Ridgeview,4:30p.m., Sisters atCotage Grove, 4p.m.; LaPineatJunction City,4:30p.mx MountainViewatSummit, 4:30p.m. Girls soccer: CrookCountyat Ridgeview,3 p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 4 p.m.;Junction Cityat La Pine,4p.m.; MountainViewat Summit, 3p.m., Bend atRedmond,3 p.m. Volleyball: Ridgeview at Mountain View,6:30 p.m.; La PineatSisters, 6:45p.m.; Madrasat LaSale, 6 p.m.; Redm ondatCrookCounty, 6:30p.m. Boys water polo: Summiat t Madras, TBA Girls water polo: Summiat t Madras,TBA

Prix on Sunday in Suzuka, Japan, but will have to wait to seal

— Top-seededAngelique Ker-

In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Unwersal Ucrick www.gocomics.com/inthebreachers

Wednesday Cross-country: Bend, Mountain View, Summit, Redmond,Crook County, Ridgeview, La Pine, Madras atC.O.Relaysat Pine Nursery, 3 p.m.; Sisters at CountryFair Classic at Country Fair Grounds in Veneta,3:45p.m. Volleyball:CulveratEast Linn,6p.m.

moved into first place in the MLS the stretch and appeared to fade Western Conference, pulling in the tiebreaker. "You're a great

them closer to the postseason

TorontoFCatChicago 530 pm RealSaltLakeat Portland, 7:30p.m. Sunday,Ocf.20 NewYorkatHouston,2 p.m. SanJoseat LosAngeles,6p.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

p.m.

Red Sox 6, Tigers 5 Detroit

Boston

ab r hbi ab r hbi A Jcksncf 5 0 0 0 Ellsurycf 2 I 0 0 T rHntrrf 5 0 0 0 Victornrf 3 1 1 0 Micarr 3b 4 1 1 1 Pedroia 2b 4 1 2 1 Fielder1b 4 1 1 0 D.Ortizdh 3 1 1 4 V Mrtnzdh 3 2 2 I Carplb 3000 JhPerltss 4 0 1 0 Napoliph-1b 1 0 0 0

Charlottevs.ClevelandatCanton,Ohio, 4 p.m. BostonatBrooklyn, 4:30p.m. Milwaukee atMemphis, 5p.m.

g tt-

L.A. ClippersatPhoenix, 7p.m.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH Times PDT

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division

USA TodayTop25 Poll The USA TodayTop 25football coachespoll, with first-place votesinparentheses, recordsthroughOct. 12, total points basedon 25 points for lirst place throughonepoint for25th, andprevious ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Alabama (58) 6 -0 1,545 1 2. Oregon(3l 6 -0 1,485 2 3. OhioState 6 -0 1,406 3 4. Clemson (1) 6 -0 1,365 4 5. FloridaState 5 -0 1,293 6 6. Louisvile 6 -0 1,166 8 7. Texas ABM 5 -1 1,156 9 8. LSU 6 -1 1,098 1 1 9. SouthCarolina 5 -1 1,024 1 2 10. UCLA 5-0 9 9 9 13 11. Miami(Fla. ) 5-0 905 14 12. Baylor 5-0 8 9 0 15 13. Stanford 5-1 857 5 6-0 617 N R 14. Missouri 6-0 5 8 7 21 15. Texas Tech 4-2 16. Georgia 5 46 7 17 Oklahoma State 4-1 493 20 18. Oklahom a 5-1 4 8 2 10 19. FresnoState 5-0 4 1 9 22 6-1 2 9 7 25 20. VirginiaTech 21. Nebraska 5-1 2 7 8 24 22. Florida 42 2 4 0 17 23. Northernllinois 6-0 224 23 24. Michigan 5-1 1 7 8 16 4-2 1 3 7 19 25. Washington Othersreceivingvotes.Wisconsin124 Michigan State83;Auburn67; Notre Dame60; OregonState23, Texas23; Central Florida22; Northwestern 19; Utah 18; ArizonaState13; Houston6; Boise State3; Mississippi2. Statistics NCAAFootball Bowl Subdivision

Baylor Oregon

FloridaSt.

TexasA8M FresnoSt. Ohio St. UCLA Missouri Miami(FL) ArizonaSt. OregonSt Nebraska TexasTech Indiana LSU Louisville BoiseSt. Clemson Houston NorthernIII. Ball St.

Michigan Alabama La -Lafayette Oklahoma St. Wyoming Georgia Wisconsin

ulal NewMexico

College

5 6 5 6 5 6 5 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 7 6 6 6 5 6 7 6 6 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 6 6 6 5 6 7 6 6 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 6 5 6 7

Alabama FloridaSt. Florida Wisconsin Oregon VirginiaTech MichiganSt. Miami(FL) Clemson

ucF

7 5 6 G

7 5 6

Oklahoma lowa BowlingGreen TexasTech BYU Cincinnati Baylor UCLA Marshall Aubum Arizona Houston Ohio St. Washington OklahomaSt. Memphis NorthCarolina Navy

Tcu

UtahSt.

Maryland Ohio

7 6

WakeForest

6

Lsu

0 133 222 1 134 223 0 134 22.3 0 136 22.7 0 136 22.7 1 137 22.8 0 138 230 0 138 230 0 140 233 1 141 23.5 1 142 23.7 0 143 238 0 143 238 0 145 242 0 171 244 0 147 24.5 0 148 24.7 1 150 25.0 0 150 25.0 0 151 252 1 177 25.3

Pac-12 Standings All Times PDT North

Oregon Oregon State Stanford Washington State Washington California

South

Conf. 3-0 3-0 3-1 2-2 1-2 0-3

Overall 6-0

Conf.

Overall

2-0 2-1 1-2 1-2 0-2

UCLA ArizonaState

usc

Utah Arizona

5-1 5-1 4-3 4-2 1-5

Colorado

5-0 4-2 4-2 4-2 3-2 2-3

GP W L OT PtsGF GA 6 5 1 0 10 23 15 4 3 1 0 6 10 5 5 3 2 0 6 17 10 5 3 2 0 6 13 13 5 3 2 0 6 18 14 5 I 2 2 4 11 16 6 2 4 0 4 13 24 6 0 5 I I 6 16 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Pittsburgh 5 4 1 0 8 20 13 Carolina 6 2 2 2 6 13 18 N.Y.Islanders 5 2 2 I 5 16 13 Columbus 4 2 2 0 4 11 10 NewJersey 6 0 3 3 3 11 21 N.Y.Rangers 5 1 4 0 2 9 25 Washington 5 I 4 0 2 13 20 Philadelphia 6 1 5 0 2 8 17

Toronto Boston Montreal Detroit TampaBay Ottawa Florida Buffalo

Western Conference Central Division Colorado St. I.ouis Chicago Minnesota Winnipeg Dallas Nashville

PtsGF GA 10 18 4 8 19 7 7 15 13 6 14 12 6 17 16 2 0 4 9 11 3 0 4 9 15

GP 5 4 5 5 6

W L 5 0 4 0 3 1 2 1 3 3

4

2

5

2

OT 0 0 1 2 0

Pacific Division

GP W L OT PfsGF GA San Jose 5 5 0 0 10 24 7 Anaheim 5 4 I 0 8 18 12 Calgary 5 3 0 2 8 18 17 Phoenix 6 4 2 0 8 17 17 Los Angeles 6 4 2 0 8 16 14 Vancouver 6 3 3 0 6 17 20 Edmonton 5 1 3 I 3 17 25 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint lor overtime

loss

Sunday'sGames

Phoeni5, x Carolina3 Los Angele3,s Florida0 Winnipeg 3, NewJersey0 Anaheim4,Otawa1 Today's Games Detroit atBoston,10a.m. Edmonton atWashington, 4 p.m. Minnesota atBufalo, 430p.m

4 3 4 1 56.8 Utah27,Stanford21 Tuesday'sGames 7 2 6 8 53.6 Arizona St. 54,Colorado13 MinnesotaatToronto, 4p.m. 6 2 8 7 47.8 Oregon State52, Washington State24 Buffalo atNY.Islanders, 4 p.m. 6 2 3 7474 UCLA 37,California10 Vancouver at Philadelphia,4p.m. 5 2 8 1 468 Saturday,Oct. 19 ChicagoatCarolina, 4p.m. 9 2 2 9 45.8 CharlestonSouthematColorado,11 a.m. Edmonton atPittsburgh, 4p.m. 6 2 7 4 45.7 UCLAatStanford,12:30 p.m. Los Angeleat s TampaBay,4.30p.m. 3 2 2 6 45.2 WashingtonatArizonaState, 3p.m. Columbus at Detroit, 5 p.m. 1 1 265 44.2 USCatNot reDame,4:30p.m. SanJoseatSt.Louis,5p.m. 7 2 6 0 43.3 Utah atArizona,7 p.m. FloridaatNashvile, 5 pm. 4 2 5 6 427 WashingtonStateatOregon,7p.m. MontrealatWinnipeg, 5p.m. 1 3 251 41 8 Oregon Stateat Cal, 7:30p.m. Dallas atCoiorado,6pm. 3 2 5 0 41.7 Ottawa at Phoenix, 7p.m. 8 2 9 0 41.4 Betting line 1 0 246 41 0 8 2 4 5 408 NFL MOTOR SPORTS 5 2 4 5 408 (Home teamsin CAPS) 1 0 199 39.8 Favorite Opening Current underdog 1 2 238 39.7 Formula One Today 9 2 7 5 39.3 Colts 1 2 CHARGERS JapaneseGrandPrix 8 2 3 4 39.0 Sunday 7 2 3 3 388 At Suzuka International Racing Coursecircuit TENNIS 4 1 9 4 388 Suzuka,Japan 5 1 9 0 38.0 Lap length: 3.61miles I 22 6 37.7 Professional 1. SebastianVettel, Germany,RedBull, 53 laps, 1 0 225 37.5 Shanghai Masters 1:26:49.301,132.031mph. 5 2 2 3 37.2 Sunday 2. MarkWebber,Australia, RedBull,53,1:26:56430. 1 1 222 370 AI QizhongTennis Center 3. RomainGrosjean, France,Lotus,53,1:26:59.211. 4 2 2 1 368 Shanghai, Chi n a 4. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 53,I:27:34.906. 9 2 1 7 36.2 Purse: $3.86 million (Masters 1000) 5. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Lotus,53,1:27:36.626. 7 2 1 7 36.2 Surface: Hard-Outdoor 6. Nico Hu kenberg, Germany, Sauber, 53, 5 1 8 0 36.0 Singles 1:27:40.91 6. 2 2 1 5 35.8 Championship 7. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexlco, Sauber,53,1:28:00.931. 5 2 1 1 352 NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia, def.JuanMartin del 8. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 53, 5 2 1 0 35.0 Potro(6),Argentina,6-1, 3-6,7-6(3) 1;28:01.324. 5 1 7 5 35.0 9. JensonButon, England, McLaren,53,1:28.10.122. 6 2 0 7 34.5 Japan Open 10. Felipe Massa,Brazil, Ferrari,53,1:2818.564 6 2 4 1 34.4 Sunday 11. Paul di Resta Scotland, Force India, 53, 8 2 0 6 34.3 At UtsboTennisCenter 1:28:27.873. 1 0 205 34.2 Osaka, Japan 12. Jean-EriVergne, c France,ToroRosso,52, +I lap. 8 2 3 9 34.1 Purse: $235,000 (Intl.) 13. DanieRi l cciardo,Australia,ToroRosso, 52,+1lap. 4 2 0 2 33.7 Surface: Hard-Outdoor 14. AdrianSutil, Germany, ForceIndia, 52,+1lap. 1 1 201 33.5 Singles 15. Sergio Perez, Mexico, McLaren,52, +1lap. 7 2 0 0 33.3 Championship 16. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Wiliams, 52,+I 1 1 200 33.3 Samantha Stosur (3), Austral i a, def. Eugeni e lap. 8 1 9 8 33.0 Bouchard (5), Canada, 3-6, 7-5, 6-2. 17 ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wil iams,52,+1lap. 3 1 9 7 32 8 18. CharlesPic,France,Caterham,52, +1lap. 5 1 9 6 32.7 Generali Ladies 19. MaxChilton,England,Marussia, 52,+1 lap 6 1 5 9 31.8 Sunday Nof Classfied 5 1 9 0 31.7 Aflntersport ArenaLinz 20. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes, 7, Retired. 5 1 8 8 31.3 Linz, Austria 21. Giedo van der Garde, Netherlands, Caterham,0, 5 1 8 7 31 2 Purse: $236000(Intl.) Retired. 7 1 8 7 31.2 Surface: Hard-Indoor 22. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia, 0,Retired. 4 1 8 7 31.2 Singles 9 1 8 6 31.0 Championship Drivers Standings 1 2 186 31.0 AngeliqueKerber(1), Germany, def. AnaIvanovic lAfter 15 of 19races) 1 0 183 30.5 , 7-6(6). 1.Sebastian Vetel, Germany, Red Bull,297 polnts. 6 1 8 3 30.5 (3), Serbia6-4, 2.Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,207. 6 1 8 3 305 3. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Lotus,177. 8 2 1 2 30.3 SOCCER 4.LewisHamilton,England Mercedes,161. 5 1 8 1 30.2 5 MarkWebher,Australia, RedBull,148. 6 1 5 0 30.0 MLS 6.NicoRosberg,Germany,Mercedes,126. 1 0 180 30.0 7. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari, 90. 9 2 0 9 29.9 MAJORLEAGUESOCCER 8. RomainGrosjean,France,Lotus,87. AH TimesPDT

Team cSoring DefenseLeaders Saf Pts Avg

Louisville

Stanford Nebraska GeorgiaTech SouthCarolina NorthTexas Southern Califomia MississippiSt. Missouri Michigan Texas St. PennSt. WesternKy BoiseSt. Minnesota Ball St. Syracuse Duke EastCarolina Wyoming Toledo Washington St.

0-3 Saturday'sGames 3 3 1 7 63.4 Oregon 45,Washington24

TeamScoring OffenseLeaders G FG Pts Avg

Stanford Marshall lllinois Iglesiasss 0 0 0 0 JGomslf 4 1 1 0 Duke A vilac 3 1 2 3 Sltlmchc 4 0 1 1 I nfante2b 4 0 I 0 Drewss 3 0 0 0 Washington Rutgers D .Kellylf 3 0 0 0 Mdlrks3b 3 I 1 0 Arizona T otals 3 5 5 8 5 Totals 3 06 7 6 Detroit 0 10 004 000 — 5 SouthCarolina Boston 0 00 001 041 — 6 Troy Auburn No outswhenwlnning runscored. EastCarolina E—Iglesias(1), Drew(1). DP—Detroit 1, BosSt. ton 1. LOB —Detroit 6, Boston4. 2B—Fielder (1), Utah Vanderbilt V.Martinez 2 (2), Pedroia (1), Middlehrooks(1) Northwestern HR — Mi.cabrera (1),Avila (1), DOrtiz (1). Detroit IP H I I E R GB SOUNLV Scherzer 7 2 1 1 2 13 PennSt. Veras 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 Texas Smyly 0 0 1 1 1 0 Cincinnati AlburquerqueH,2 1-3 I 1 1 0 1 GeorgiaTech UCF Benoit BS,1-2 1 3- I I I 0 I Porcello L,0-1 0 2 1 0 0 0 Tennessee Syracuse Boston Buchholz 52-3 8 5 5 0 6 WesternKy Workman 1 0 0 0 1 0 Minnesota Doubront 1130 0 0 1 0 UTEP UeharaW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 ArkansasSt. Maryland Smylypitchedto1batter in the8th. MichiganSt. Porcel opitchedto2 baters inthe9th. HBP —by Scherzer (Victorino), by Buchholz Nevada MississippiSt. (V.Martinez).WP —Porcello, Buchholz. BowingGreen T—3.28.A—38,029(37,499). KansasSt. SouthAla. ColoradoSt. FOOTBALL Washington St Polls The APTop25 The Top 25teamsinTheAssociated Presscollege football poll, withfirst-placevotesinparentheses, records through Oct.12, total pointsbasedon25 points fora first-place votethroughonepointlor a 25th-place vote, and previousranking: R ecord Pts P v 6 -0 1,495 I 1. Alabama (55) 6 -0 1,438 2 2. Oregon (5l 6 -0 1,352 3 3. Clemson 6 -0 1 ,330 4 4. OhioSt 5 -0 1,242 6 5. FloridaSt. 6 -1 1,137 1 0 6. LSU 5 -1 1,105 9 7. Texas ABM 6 -0 1,077 8 8. Louisville 5-0 1,01 7 11 9. UCLA 5-0 9 1 2 13 10. Miami 5-1 8 9 6 14 11. South Carolina 5-0 8 4 9 15 12. Baylor 5-1 824 5 13. Stanlord 6-0 7 4 9 25 14. Missouri 4-2 615 7 I 5. Georgia 6-0 5 9 0 20 16. Texas Tech 5-0 3 8 3 21 17. FresnoSt. 5-1 3 8 0 12 18. Oklahom a 6-1 3 5 2 24 19. VirginiaTech 4-2 3 0 9 16 20. Washington 4-1 2 6 4 22 21. Oklahoma St. 4-2 2 4 9 17 22. Florida 23. N. Illinois 6-0 1 8 5 23 5-1 156 N R 24. Auburn 4-2 1 5 3 NR 25. Wisconsin Others receivingvotes: Michigan118, Nebraska 94, MichiganSt. 69,Utah47,Notre Dame 39, Oregon St. 21,UCF19,Texas16, ArizonaSt 7, Northwestern 7, Houston 3, Rutgers l.

DenveratOklahomaCity, 5 p.m.

~v

0 44 7 3 0 6 8 113 0 6 0 12.0 0 7 8 13.0 0 7 9 132 0 8 3 13.8 0 105 150 0 95 158 0 8 0 16.0 0 9 7 162 0 8 3 16.6 0 101 168 0 101 168 0 120 17 1 0 104 17 3 1 104 17 3 0 107 178 0 9 0 180 0 9 1 182 0 110 183 0 113 188 1 95 19.0 0 9 5 190 0 115 192 0 119 198 0 100 20.0 0 101 20.2 0 127 21.2 I 106 21.2 0 128 21 3 0 150 214 0 130 21.7 0 130 21.7 0 154 22.0 1 132 22.0

EasternConference

W L T P t sGF GA x-NewYork 15 9 8 5 3 50 39 x-Sporting KansasCity 15 10 7 52 44 29 1 3 10 9 4 8 39 37 Houston 1 3 11 7 4 6 48 46 Montreal 1 3 12 7 4 6 44 47 Chicago P hiladelphia 12 10 1 0 4 6 40 40 N ew England 1 2 1 1 9 4 5 45 36 Columbus 1 2 15 5 4 1 40 42 5 16 11 26 29 46 TorontoFC D.C. 3 22 7 1 6 21 56

WesternConference W L T P t sGF GA

Porlland R eal SaltLake 1 5 Seattle Los Angeles Colorado

13 5 14 53 49 33 1 0 7 5 2 55 40 1 5 11 6 5 1 41 39 1 4 11 6 48 51 37 1 3 10 9 4 8 42 33 1 3 11 8 4 7 33 41 1 2 11 9 45 48 42 10 11 11 41 45 50 6 18 8 2 6 29 60

SanJose Vancouver FC Dallas ChivasUSA NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. x- clinched playoff berth Sunday'sGame

Podland1,SeattleFC0

Wednesday'sGame Montrealat LosAngeles,7:30p.m. Friday's Games D.C. United atSporting KansasCity, 5 p.m. Saturday's Games PhiladelphiaatMontreal, 11a.m. Seattle FC at FCDallas,11:30 a.m. VancouveratColorado, 3p.m. ColumbusatNewEngland,430pm.

9.JensonButton,England,McLaren,60. 10. NlcoHulkenberg,Germany,Sauber,39. Constructors Sfandings 1. RedBul, 445polnts. 2. Ferrari,297. 3. Mercedes,287. 4. Lotus,264. 5. McLaren,83 6. ForceIndia,62. 7. Sauber,45. 8.ToroRosso,31. 9. Williams,1.

DEALS Transactions HOCKEY

National HockeyLeague MINNES OTAWILD—Reassigned GDarcyKuemper tolowa(AHL).

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumhiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd McNary 2 ,589 2 8 6 988 308 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadandwild Fridayatselected ColumbiaRiverdams astupdatedonSaturday Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsflhd Bonneville 1,098863 166,633 230,476 97,864 The Dalles 724,181 135,854 185,782 78,605 John Day 541,312 132,711 145,416 61,405 McNary 551,078 87,835 138,161 53,421


MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013• THE BULLETIN

MLB: AMERICAN LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES

B3

NHL

The sciencebehind the call to makehockeysafer

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and down he goes," said Blaine Hoshizaki, director of research at ROCHESTER, Minn. — The the university's Neurotrauma Immessage from researchers last pact Science Laboratory. "And lo week for a M ayo Clinic confer- and behold, we found that the hook ence on concussions in hockey was delivered more than twice the rotaclear: The game as it is played now tional acceleration than anything causes too much brain trauma, and else. It's the most effective way to it must change fundamentally. give someone a concussion." Injuries to George Parros, RoResults like that are behind the man Josi and Rick Nash — all side- researchers'callforjuniorhockey lined by concussions in the NHL to adopt the same prohibitions season's first eight days — under- against fighting as youth hockey scored the scientists' call for signif- and the NCAA have, whereby a icant modifications in body check- single fight results in immediate ing and an end to fighting in the ejection and p ossible long-term NHL, minor professional leagues suspension. They also want the and junior hockey. NHL to go to immediate ejections "We don't want for hockey what for fighting, for players' safety and we're seeing in football: parents not because the league is the role modputting their kids in the sport be- el for the rest of hockey. cause offear of concussions," said According to Dr. Michael Stuart, Dr. Charles Burke, a former team another conferenceorganizer,the doctor for the Pittsburgh Penguins, old argument that fighting deters and the developer and former di- m ore dangerouson-ice behavior is rector of the NHL's concussion shot down by the results of the Otcommittee. tawa study. The kind of blow delivS uch demands for r eform i n ered in a hockey fight, he said, is as body checking and fighting may dangerous to a brain as it gets. seem unrealistic. Yet researchers Stuart's support for a fighting made similarly ambitious recom- ban carries weight. Besides being mendations after the first Mayo the chief medical officer for USA Clinic hockey concussion confer- Hockey, he has three sons and a ence, in 2010, and leagues across son-in-law who have played in the North America adopted many of NHL. them. The researchers also said that The NHL b arred all t argeted in-game concussion protocols must contact with the head and adopted be followed more strictly. a stricter, "quiet room" protocol Mark Aubry, the chief medifor in-game evaluation of players cal officer of the International Ice believed to have sustained concus- Hockey Federationand team docsions. USA Hockey and Hockey tor for the Ottawa Senators, told the Canada increased the minimum conference that the latest findings age for body checking to 13 in re- "reiterate the need to take players sponse to a University of Calgary off for evaluation at the first sign study showing alarming injury of possible concussion instead of rates for 11- and 12-year-old play- allowing them to stay on the ice or ers in Alberta, where body check- the bench." ing was allowed. But the night before in San Jose, At the Mayo Clinic last week, Calif., the New York Rangers' Nash researchers presented new find- continued to play after being stagings suggesting more strongly than gered by an elbow to his jaw from ever that repeated hits to the heads Sharks defenseman Brad Stuart of hockey players can cause seri- (no relation to the Mayo doctor). ous harm. And although there still Nash struggled to the bench in the is no conclusive evidence that fight- game's third minute but skated the ing specifically leads to brain dam- rest of the first period before leavage — a justification the NHL has ing the game for good. He is now used for tolerating it — researchers out with what is officially termed a like Aynsley Smith want to keep head injury. pressing. Under the NHL's concussion pro"My concern is we can't wait for tocol, Nash should have been taken the data that tell us all the neurons to an examination room immedithat died with each head impact be- ately. And although some might fore we stop unnecessary fighting," criticize the Rangers for not seemsaid Smith, a Mayo Clinic sports ing to follow that protocol strictly, psychologist and an organizer of they did keep Nash out of the last the conference. "We need to take two periods — a big change from action now." what NHL teams would have done, One example of the latest find- say, five years ago. ings comes from the University of Aubry, a member of the NHL's Ottawa, where researchers simulat- c oncussion subcommittee, w i l l ed the hits that commonly caused brief Commissioner Gary Bettman concussions in hockey players — a and other league officials about the head-on check to the head; a fall to Mayo conference atthe subcomthe ice; and a left or right hook to mittee's next meeting in early Nothe jaw as thrown in a hockey fight vember. Presumably, they will hear — and measured the forces they about researchers' calls for stricter delivered to a helmet rigged with concussion protocol compliance, sensors. curbs on injurious body checking They found that the left or right and an end to fighting. hooks were by far the most likely to Whether the NHL, the minors cause concussions, because of the and junior hockey heed those calls sharp rotational forces they deliver remains to be seen. But if the trend to the brain. of the last few years continues, un"Boxers and fighters in hockey der the scientists' influence, hockey know that the way to knock some- will become a less dangerous game one out is to catch him with a hook, to play. By Jeff Z.KleIn

New Yorh Times News Service 4%iia

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Boston's DavId OrtIz hIts a grand slam In the eighth InnIng durIng Game 2 of the American League championship series against Detroit on Sunday night in Boston. The home run tied the game at 5-5.

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I eI'S By JImmy Golen The Associated Press

BOSTON — D avid O r tiz's line drive sailed just beyond Torii Hunter's reach and into the Boston bullpen, sending the Tigers right fielder flopping headfirst over the wall after it. With one swing, the Red Sox slugger turned everything upside-down. O rtiz's grand s la m e r ased a n eighth-inning deficit and ended Detroit's unprecedented run of p itching dominance, and Jonny Gomes scampered around the bases with the game-winning run in the ninth Sunday night to give Boston a 6-5 victory Elise Amendola/The Associated Press over Detroit and knot the AL champi- Boston's Jarrod Saltalamacchia reacts onshipseriesatone game apiece. after hIttIng the game-winning single In "That's what he does. He's an amaz- the ninth InnIng on Sunday nIght. ing hitter," said Max Scherzer, who took a no-hitter and a 5-0 lead into the sixth inning but could only watch The fans waited until the trainas the Detroit relievers blew it. "He's ers verified that Hunter was OK to an amazing postseason hitter. He's start chanting, "Papi!" and call Ortiz clutch. Any given moment, a swing of out of the dugout for a curtain call. It the bat he can always take you deep." was thefirstcareer postseason grand One night after Anibal Sanchez slam for a star of the 2004 playoff run and four relievers came within two that ended in Boston's first World Seouts of the first combined postseason ries title in 86 years. no-hitter in baseball history, Scherzer "The guy's an actor at work," Red struck out 13 and held Boston hitless Sox outfielder Shane Victorino said. for 5'/s innings. But the Red Sox load- "It's fun to watch. It's great to see. He's ed the bases against three relievers always upbeat and always positive. in the eighth and then closer Joaquin He always likes to go up and swing Benoit came in to face Ortiz. the bat. That's what he always wants The Red Sox d esignated hitter to do." lined the first pitch into the glove of Koji Uehara pitched a perfect ninth the Red Sox bullpen catcher. Hunter for the win. went down hard and came outonly Rick Porcello gave up a leadoff inafter his teammates had waved for field single that left Gomes at second the Detroit medical staff to come out when shortstop Jose Iglesias threw and help him. the ball into the Boston dugout. Jar"I jumped up. I thought I had abead rod Saltalamacchia hit a foul popup on it," said Hunter, who came up in that glanced off first baseman Prince the Minnesota Twins organization Fielder's glove when he got tangled up with Ortiz and remains friends with with a fan. the Red Sox slugger. "Next thing, I Gomes moved to third on a wild know I'm falling over the fence." pitch, and then Saltalamacchia hit

one through the drawn-in infield to drive in the game-winner. "It's playoff baseball," Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. "Looked like we had one in hand and we let one get away, there's no question about that. But there have been two great games." Boston's comeback came a f ew hours after Tom Brady threw a touchdown pass with 5 seconds left to complete the New England Patriots' comeback over the New Orleans Saints. The score was greeted with cheers by Red Sox fans waiting for the baseball game to start. Game 3 of the ALCS is in Detroit 3 on Tuesday, when Justin Verlander will face Boston's John Lackey. "We need it, man. We need start some momentum going on," Ortiz said. "The whole regular season, you haven't seen a team shutting us down for 14, 15 straight innings like they have the past couple of days. If you look at the way they've been pitching, (it's) unbelievable. It's up to us make an adjustment." Miguel Cabrera and Alex Avila homered off Clay Buchholz as Detroit scored four in the sixth inning to open a 5-0lead. The Red Sox got one in the bottom half but were four outs from falling behind 0-2 in the series when Ortiz tied it. Scherzer, who led the majors with 21 wins, did not allow a hit until Victorino singled to left with two outs in the sixth. It was an unprecedented third consecutive playoff game in which a Tigers starter took a no-hit bid into the sixth inning. That had never been done even twice in a row before this year's Detroit staff, which boasts the AL ERA leader, the major league leader in wins and the 2011 AL Cy Young winner and MVP.

Dodgersplacehopeson Puig's shakyshoulders By Billy Witz New York Times News Service

LOS ANGELES — In hi s b rief, mercurial career, Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig has handled any obstacle thrown in front of him in muchthe same manner. Ifhe is onthe bases, he will try harder to run home. If he is in the field, he will throw the ball farther. If he is at the plate, he will swing with more might. As the demands of a game grow, so does the appetite of Puig to do more to satisfy them. Now would appear to be one of those times when the Dodgers must call on Puig. They are behind, two games to none, to the St. Louis Cardinals in the NL championship series. The Dodgers are back home for Game 3 today, but they have already expended their top two pitchers, Clayton Kershaw and Zack Greinke, and must face the Cardinals' ace, Adam Wainwright. Adding to their degree of difficulty, the Dodgers may be without their most feared hitter, shortstop Hanley Ramirez, whose injured ribs may keep him on the bench for a second consecutive game. Also missing from the lineup could be outfielder Andre Ethier, whose injured ankle has limited him to one start since mid-September. "Every kind of move, you feel it," said Ramirez, who sustained the injury when he was hit with a Joe Kelly fastball in the series opener. He had a CT scan Sunday to see whether the ribs were broken, but the results were not made available when the Dodg-

ers' clubhouse was opened to reporters after their workout. "But we'll see. One day extra, ice every 20 minutes.

Hopefully." An offense that is crippled and has gone 19 consecutive innings without scoring may be screaming out for more, especially from Puig, who is 0 for 10 in the series with six strikeouts. Most disconcerting is how f l ustered Puig look while striking out four times in Game 2 as the Cardinals eagerly pitched around Adrian Gonzalez to pick on him. Puig shook his head at umpires' calls and chased pitches that were not close. He took enormous swings followed by meek, halfhearted ones. Mark McGwire, the Dodgers' hitting coach, said he believed the way to get more out of Puig was to ask him to do less. It was the topic of a conversation they had Sunday when they worked out in the batting cages. McGwire said that no matter how dynamic a player Puig had been since his arrival in June, it was important to remember that he was 22 and had never seen amajor league game on television until he left Cuba 17 months

ago. "When you're in situations, especially the playoffs, there's tension; and when there's tension, you do things out of the ordinary," McGwire said. "The thing people tend to forget when they are in stressful situations is to breathe. And what happens when they don't breathe? They tense up. And what happens when they tense up? They tend to do things harder."

McGwire was one of the few people who were not willing to give the Cardinals' pitchers too much credit for muting the Dodgers' offense. "They're not executing their pitches, they're missing a lot of spots," McGwire said. "But we're going out of the zone and not staying with our plan. When you help pitchers out, it tends to go against you." Puigpreferred to keep any thoughts about his struggles to himself, telling a group of reporters in Spanish that he did not want to speak with them. But his teammates hoped that a return home would invigorate Puig and reveal the player who was 8 for 17 against Atlanta and delivered an eighth-inning double t hat r o used the crowd and set the stage for Juan Uribe's home run that clinched the series in Game 4. It was one of many moments this season in which Puig's effort and enthusiasm on the field seemed to be infectious. Ramirez may havebeen the engine driving the offense, Gonzalez may be the professional run producer who bolstered it, and Kershaw and Greinke may have been one of baseball's best starting tandems. But it is no coincidence that the Dodgers' turnaround this season began when they summoned Puig from the minors. "It's no secret we wouldn't be here without him," Dodgers catcher A.J. Ellis said. "He plays with a lot of energy and a lot of passion, and he's somebody we need to continue to be that guy."

NHL ROUNDUP

Ducks defeat Senators 4-1 to win fourth straight The Associated Press ANAHEIM, Calif. — The eggp lant-and-teal jerseys took t h e Anaheim Ducks back to their fran-

many pucks on the net as possible. Good things happen when you do that. If we start like that, we're going to be successful. We're going to

chise's founding year.

play that quick game, we're going

The r e cord-setting o f f ensive performance suggestedthe Ducks' mightiest days could be right in front of them. Corey Perry scored two goals, Jonas Hiller made 30 saves, and the Ducks beat the Ottawa Senators 4-1 Sunday night for t heir fourth straight victory. Captain Ryan Getzlaf and Nick Bonino also scored for the Ducks, w ho were M i ghty a gain o n a throwback night celebrating the 20th anniversaryof the franchise's 1993 debut. Wearing their colorful original jerseys, the Ducks racked up a f r anchise-record 56 shots against the Senators, who lost their fourth straight. Anaheim has fielded its share of eye-catching teams over the past two decades, but these Ducks are confident they could be as good as any of them after outscoring their past four opponents 17-6. "That's the way we want to play," Perry said. "We want to put as

to forecheck,and get better every

single game." Rookie defenseman H ampus Lindholm had two assists for his first NHL points for the Ducks, who followed up their 6-0 embarrassment of the New York Rangers last Thursday with another demolition of an Eastern Conference team. Also on Sunday: Kings 3, Panthers 0: SUNRISE, Fla.— Ben Scrivens made 20 saves for his third career shutout, leading Los Angeles to its third consecutive win. Jordan Nolan had a goal and an assist. Jets 3, Devils 0: WI NNIPEG, Manitoba — Al Montoya made 24 saves for his fourth NHL shutout and Evander Kane scored twice for Wmmpeg. Coyotes 5, Hurricanes 3: RALEIGH, N.C. — Rob Klinkhammer scored his second goal of the game 22 seconds into the third period to help Phoenix get the victory.


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 'l4, 2013

Broncoshave no reason to apologize after win over Jags • Heavy favorite Denver wasn't perfect, but it didn't haveto be against winlessJacksonvile By Tim Dahlberg

NFL COMMENTARY

The Associated Press

acksonville wa s n e v er going to be too much of a problem, except for those who love favorites and bet on the Denver Broncos against the biggest underdog in NFL history. The bookies in Vegas were always a bi t u n comfortable about the 2 7-point spread, though even they w ouldn't have given odds that the Broncos would be reduced to pulling off a fake punt in the third quarter to get separation from a team that was supposed to have been blown off the field by halftime. The problem with expectations is that they sometimes get too high to meet, even if you're Peyton Manning and seemingly can do no wrong. O n Sunday, he d i d a lo t wrong, fumbling twice and throwing a pick-6 that helped the winless Jaguars remain competitive even if they were never in any danger of actu-

ally winning.

The end result was a 35-19 victory that satisfied neither Denver'sfans nor the bettors who have profited so far this year on the Broncos' bandwagon. It should also give pause to those so caught up in Manning's big start that they were beginning to look deep into the schedule to see what teams might be in the way of an undefeated season. They don't need to look far. The Broncos travel to Indianapolis next weekend to face Manning's old team in a game that will tell us a lot more about Denver than anything that happened Sunday in Denver. "People tell me it looks easy. There's nothing about it that's easy," Denver coach J ohn Fox said. "There is resistance out there. It's called the other team." The bookies still e x pect Denver to win, making the Broncos a 5'/z-point favorite against the Colts. They should

Jack Dempsey/The AssociatedPress

Denver wide receiver Wes Welker, left, gets a high five from running back Knowshon Moreno after scoring a touchdown against Jacksonville in the first quarter of Sunday's game in Denver. also be favored in all their remaining g ames, especially with Von Miller, the key to theirdefense, coming back off suspension against Indy. But the odds are they're not going to run the table. There will be times when they struggle, even if their fans have such high expectations that some actually booed the Broncos as they left the field with a

14-12 halftime lead.

"We've got high expec-

tations, too," r eceiver Wes Welker said about the boos. "We understand it. We almost appreciate it. We've got to get into gear." Indeed, the Broncos are victims somewhat of a remarkable start in which they averaged 46 points a game and topped 50 points their past two

games before Sunday. The fact that they had to apologize for beating a fellow NFL team by more than two touchdowns was almost laughable, though apologize they did. "It was good enough today but it's not good enough to win games down the road," said Knowshon Moreno, who had three second-half touchdown runs. It won't be good enough to win at Indianapolis, that's for sure. Manning's return to the city he once owned will be the story line, but the Colts are a surprisingly good team with wins over the Seahawks and 49ers this season. But while the Broncos were far from impressive against the Jags, it's hard to fault a team forscoring 35 points and winning by 16. They may have set the bar too high, but coming off a tremendous shootout against Dallas last week and with Indianapolis up next, this was a game where they didn't have to be razor sharp. Don't forget, too, that while the Broncos are favored to win the Super Bowl, this was the Super Bowl for Jacksonville.

Yes,they may have been a tad overconfident against the hapless Jags. But it's a good bet they won't make the same mistake when it really counts. "Three turnovers was tough and then had some things that just didn't execute as well," Manning said. "But some good things as well that we can learn from." Manning called the win a good one over a team that isn't as bad as everyone thought. He said all the talk about the huge point spread motivated Jacksonville, and that he and his teammates didn't execute well most of the game. The Broncos have gone an entire year without losing a regular-season game, dating to Oct. 7, 2012. That the streak could end at any time is something Manning understands better than most. "It's not that easy to win football games," he said. "I learned early to never take winning for granted." Not in the NFL. Not even against Jacksonville. A win is a win, and Manning and the Broncos have nothing to apologize about.

NFL SCOREBOARD Summaries

East

49ers 32, Cardinals 20 Arizona 7 7 6 0 — 20 SanFranctsco 6 16 0 1 0 — 32 First Quarler SF — FGDawson35, 9:37. SF — FGDawson26, 4:31. Ari — Fitzgerald 75passfromPalmer(Feefy kick), 3:06.

SecondQuarter

SF — Lemonier safety, 9:22. SF — V.Davis 61 passfrom Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 8:31. Ari Effington15run(Feefykick), 7:03.

W L T P c t PF

PA

Ho m e A way A F C N FC D i u

5 3 3 2

1 2 3 4

0 0 0 0

833 .6 0 0 .5 0 0 .3 3 3

12 5 114 104 136

97 117 13 5 15 7

300 1- 1- 0 2- 1- 0 2- 2- 0

2-1 - 0 2 - 1- 0 1 - 2-0 0 - 2-0

2 - 1 -0 2 - 1-0 1 - 3-0 1 - 4-0

W Indianapolis 4 Tennesse e 3 Houston 2 Jacksonvile 0

L 1 3 4 6

T 0 0 0 0

Pct .8 0 0 .5 0 0 .3 3 3 .0 0 0

PF PA 139 7 9 1 2 8 11 5 1 0 6 17 7 70 1 9 8

Ho m e 2-1 - 0 2- 1- 0 1- 2- 0 0- 2 - 0

A w ay 2 - 0-0 1 - 2-0 1 - 2-0 0 - 4-0

AFC NF C Di u 2-1-0 2-0-0 1-0-0 3-2-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 2-1-0 0 3-0 1-0-0 0-4-0 0-2-0 0-1-0

Cincinnati Baltimore Cleveland Pittsburgh

W 4 3 3 1

L 2 3 3 4

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .6 6 7 .5 0 0 .5 0 0 .2 0 0

PF PA 121 111 134 129 118 125 88 116

H o m e A way 3 - 0-0 1 - 2-0 2 - 1-0 1 - 2-0 2 - 2-0 1 - 1-0 0 - 2-0 1 -2-0

A FC NF C Di u 3-1-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 3-2-0 0-1-0 1-0-0 2-2-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 0-2-0 0-1-0

KansasCity Denver SanDiego Oakland

W 6 6 2 2

L 0 0 3 4

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t PF PA 10 0 0 1 52 65 1. 000 265 158 .4 0 0 125 129 .3 3 3 105 132

NewEngland Miami

N.Y.Jets Buffalo

SF — Y.savis 35passfromKaepernick (Dawson Third Quarter Ari — Floyd 10passfrom Palmer(pass tailed),

8:12.

Fourth Quarter SF — Hunter 6run (Dawson kick), 6:35. SF — FGDawson44, 4:15. A—69,732. Ari 16 4 03

North

West SF 20 38 7

21-109 38-149 294 238 3-18 1-7 2 -42 5 - 87 1 -0 2 - 64 25-41-2 16-29-1 1 -4 2 - 14 5-43.6 6-48 0 3-2 2-1

First Quarler

NE —FG Gostkowski35,9:54.

NO — Cadet 3passfromBreesfHartfey kick), 1:46. SecondQuarter NE Ridley1run(Gostkowskikick),13r00. NE — Ridley4 run(Gostkowski kick), 7:36. Third Quarter NO — FGHartley 28,11.27.

NO — K.Robinson3run (Hartfey kick),619. NE —FG Gostkowski54,136

Fourth Quarter NE —FG Gostkowski23,8:34.

NO — Stils 34 pass fromBrees (Hartfey kick), 3:29. NO — FGHartley39, 224. NE — Thompkins 17passfromBradyiGostkowski kick),.05. A—68,756.

First downs TotalNetYards

Rushes-yards Passing PuntRetums KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Iot Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

NQ NE 20 26 3 61 37 6 26-131 35-141 2 30 23 5 3-20 3-9 3 -53 2 - 51 1-0 1-5 17-36-1 25-43-1 1 -6 5- 3 4 6-44.7 4-52.5 1-1 0-0 7 -56 4 - 33 28'09 3 1'51

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —New Orleans: K.Robinson 7-53, Thomas11-51, Sproles5-15, Rrees2-11, Collins1-1. New England: Ridley20-96, Bolden5 19,Brady216, Blount7-9,Amendola1-1. PASSING —New Orleans: 8rees 17-36-1-236. New England:Brady25-43-1-269. RECEIVING —New Orleans: Sproles 6-58, Stills 3-64,Watson3-61, Thomas1-29, Cofston 111, Toon1-7,Cadet1-3, Coffios 1-3.NewEngland: Dobson6-63,Edelmao 5-57,Hoomanawanui4-57, Thompkins3-45, Collie2-24, Bolden2-9, Amendola 2-0, Ridley1-14. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Broncos 35, Jaguars19 Jacksonville Denver

0 12 7 0 — 1 9 1 4 0 14 7 — 3 5

First Quarler Den —J.Thomas 3 pass trom Manning(Prater kick), 12:09. Den—Wefker 20 passfromManning(Prater kick), 2:44.

SecondQuarter Jax — FGScobee50, 13:18. Jax — FGScobee30, 5:43. Jax — Posfuszoy 59 interception return (pass failed),:36. Third Quarter Den —Moreno1run (Praterkick), 12:16. Jax — Jones-Drew5run (Scobeekick), 7:43. Den —Moreno8 run(Prater kick), 4:02. Fourth Quarter Den —Moreno3 run(Prater krck), 9:09.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntRetums KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet.

J ax

30 -0 2 - 0-0 1 - 2-0 0 - 3-0

3-0-0 3-0-0 0-3-0 2-3-0

3-0 0 3-0-0 2-0-0 0-1-0

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .50 0 .500 .20 0 .00 0

PF PA 166 179 1 83 152 107 143 103 209

H o m e A way 0 - 2-0 3 - 1-0 31 0 02-0 0 - 2-0 1 - 2-0 0 - 2-0 0 - 4-0

Di u 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 1-2-0

NFC AFC Di u 3-0-0 0-3-0 2-0-0 3-0 0 0-3 0 2-0-0 0-4-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 0-4-0 0-2-0 0-2-0

South L 1 3 4 5

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .8 3 3 .4 0 0 .2 0 0 .0 0 0

PF PA 161 103 109 68 122 134 64 101

L 2 2 2 4

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .6 6 7 .6 6 7 .6 0 0 .2 0 0

PF PA

H ome Away N FC AFC

162 140 172 161 137 114 125 158

2 - 0-0 3 - 1-0 2 - 0-0 1 - 2-0

W L Seattle 5 1 S an Francisco 4 2 St. Louis 3 3 Arizona 3 3

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .8 3 3 .6 6 7 .50 0 .500

H o m e A way 3 - 0-0 2 - 1-0 1- 1 - 0 1 - 2-0 1 - 2-0 0 - 2-0 0 - 3- 0 0 2-0

NFC AFC Di u 4-0-0 1-1-0 2-0-0 2-2-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 1-1-0 0-3-0 0-1-0 0-3 0 0 2 0 0-1-0

North 2 - 2-0 1 - 1-0 1 - 2-0 0 - 2-0

Qi u 1-0-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 0-2-0

3-2-0 2-2-0 2-1-0 0-3-0

West P F PA 157 94 145 118 141 154 111 127

Thursday'sGame Chicago27,N.YGiants 21 Sunday's Games Carolina35, Minnesota10 Kansas City24,Oakland7 St. Louis38, Houston13 GreenBay19, Baltimore17 Philadelphia31,TampaRay20

H o m e A way 3- 0 - 0 2 - 1-0 3 - 1-0 1 - 1-0 2 - 1-0 1 - 2-0

N FC 2 - 0-0 3 - 1-0 1 - 3-0 2 - 0- 0 1 - 3-0 3 - 3-0

Diu AFC 3-1-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-2-0

Thursday,Qct. 17 Seattle atArizona,5 25pm Sunday, Qct.20 TampaBayatAtlanta, 10a.m. ChicagoatWashington, 10a.m. Dallas atPhiladelphia,10a.m. NewEnglandatNYJets, 10a.m. Buffalo atMiami,10a.m. St. LouisatCarolina, 10a.m. Cincinnati atDetroit,10 a.m. San Diego atJacksonvile,10a m. SanFranciscoatTennessee,1:05 p.m. HoustonatKansasCity,1:25 p.m. ClevelandatGreenRay,1:25 pm. Baltimoreat Pittsburgh,1:25p.m. Denverat Indianapolis, 5:30p.m. Open:NewOrleans, Oakland Monday, Qct. 21 Minnesotaat N.Y.Giants, 540 p.m.

Pittsburgh19,N.Y.Jets6 Cincinnati27,Buffalo24, OT Detroit 31,Cleveland17

Seattle20,Tennessee13 Denver35,Jacksonvile19 SanFrancisco32,Arizona20 NewEngland30, NewOrleans27 Dallas31, Washington16 Open:Atlanta,Miami Today's Game Indianapoliat s SanDiego,5:40 pm.

Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Puots Fumbles-Lost

Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

5-(minus7). PASSING — Jacksonville:Henne 27-42-2-303. Denver: Manning28-42-1-295. RECEIVING —Jacksonville: J Rlackmon 14 190, Brown 4-49, Forsett 3-18, Harbor2-29, JonesDrew 2-3, Sanders 1-9, Ta'ufo'ou 1-5. Denver: Moreno7-62, Wefker6-63, Decker5-50, J.Thomas 4-22, 0 Thomas 3-78, Hilman2-16, Dreessen14. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.

Tennessee Seattle

3 7 0 3 — 13 0 7 3 1 0 — 20 First Quarter Ten—FG Bironas38,5.16.

SecondQuarter Sea—Lynch1 run(Hauschkakick), 2:41. Ten—McCourty tumblerecoveryin endzone(Bironaskick),:00. Third Quarter Sea—FGHauschka31,4:27 Fourth Quarter Sea—FGHauschka29, 11:23. Sea—Lynch3run (Hauschkakick), 7:33. Ten—FGBironas25,218 A—68,127.

D e n Rushes-yards 20 26 Passing 3 62 40 7 PuntReturns 27-71 29-112 KickoffReturns 2 91 29 5 InterceptionsRet. 2-2 1-1 Comp-Att-Int 0-0 0-0 Sacked-YardsLost 1 -59 2 - 1 0 Puots

BetlgalS 27, BillS 24 (OT) Cincinnati Buffalo

10 7 7 0 3 — 27 7 3 0 14 0 — 24 First Quarter Cin FG Nugent46, 12:14. Rut—Lewis3run(Carpenter kick),10:01. Cin — Green 18 passfrom Dalton (Nugentkick), 5:26. SecondQuarter Cin — Bernard 20 passirom Dalton (Nugeotkick), 8.34. Ruf — FGCarpenter 51, 4.14 Third Quarter Cin — M.Jooes10passfromDalton (Nugentkick), 10.49. Fourth Quarter Ruf — Chandler 22 passfrom Lewis (Carpenter kick), 10:13. Ruf — Goodwin 40 passfrom Lewis (Carpenter kick), 1:08. Overtime Cin — FGNugent 43,6:44. A—67,739.

First downs Total NetYards

Rushes-yards Passing PuntRetums KickoffReturns InterceptioosRet. Gomp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Lions 31, BrQwns17 7 0 7 17 — 3 1 0 17 0 0 — 1 7

3:27.

SecondQuarter Cfe — Ogbonnaya 4 passfrom Weeden (Cuodiff kick), 12:52. Cle — Little 2 pass from Weeden (Cundiff kick), 1:16. Cfe — FGCundiff40 08 Third Quarter

T en

Det — Bush 18 passfrom Stafford (Akers kick), Fourth Quarter Det — Fauria 23 passfrom Stafford fhkerskick),

10:35. Det — FGAkers51,6:04.

Det — Fauria 10 passfrom Stafford (Akerskick),

Sea

13 24 2 23 40 4 20-66 33-151 1 57 25 3 0 -0 2 - 15 4 -121 3 - 95 0-0 2-0 17-29-2 23-31-0 3-14 2-4 4-35.0 3-48.7

First downs Total Net Yards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost

Q et 24 3 66 28-118 2 48

0 7 0 0 — 7 0 7 7 10 — 2 4

Qak

Passing PuntRetums KickoffReturns InterceptioosRet. Gomp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

KC

18 16 2 74 21 6 27-125 27-111 149 10 5 3 -34 6 - 32

1-18

0-0

0-0

3-1

0 -0 3 - 65 18-34-3 14-31-0 1 0 67 3 2 3 8-51.8 8-49.0 1 1-68 4 - 20 34;00 26:00

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Oakland: Pryor 6-60, McFadden 16-52,Jennings4-12, Ford1-1. Kansas City: Charles22-78,A.Smith4-29, Mc0fuster1-4. PASSING —Oakland: Pryor18-34-3-216. Kansas City: ASmith14-31-0-128 RECEIVING —Oakland:Q.Moore5-82, Streater346, McFaddeo 3-31, Rivera2-10, Mastrud1-13, Ford 1-11, Jennings1-9, Reece1-9, Butler 1-5. Kansas City: Charles5-50, Bowe3-46, Avery2-6, McCluster 1-10, Brock1-9,Hemingway1-8, Davis 1-(mious 1). MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Oakland: Janikowski

51 (SH).

8:57.

2:01. A—71,513.

26 20 4 83 32 2 41-165 32-130 318 192 3 -34 2 - 10 4-103 5-101 0 -0 1 - 41 26-40-1 19-32-0 3 -19 524 5-41.2 5-48.8 0-0 1-1 8 -78 4 - 27 42:52 25:24

SecondQuarter Oak —D.Moore 39 passfrom Pryor (Janikowski kick), 8:40. KC — Charles7 run(Succopkick), 1:06. Third Quarter 80 Charles 2ruo(Succopkick), 2:01. Fourth Quarter KC — FGSuccop33,2.09. KC — Abdugah 44 interception retum (Succop kick), 1:35.

21-77, Wifson10-61,Turbin1-13,Maragos1-0 PASSING —Tennessee: Fitzpatrick 17-29-2171. Seattle: Wilson23-31-0-257. RECEIVING —Tennessee: Wright 5-69, Walker 4-29, C.Johnson 3-21, Wiliams2 22, Washington 115, Hunter1-8, Rritt 1-7.Seattle: Tate5-33, Lynch 4-78, Baldwin4-48, Kearse3-17, Rice2-35, Turbio 2-23, Wiffson 2-17, Coleman1-6. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None

Cleveland

Bu f

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Cincinnati: Green-Ellis 18-86, M.Jones1-34,Bernard15-28,Dalton7-17 Buffalo: Spiller 10-55,Jackson10-35, Choice4-24, Lewis717, Goodwin1-(minus1). PASSING —Cincinnati: Dalton 26-40-1-337 Buffalo: Lewis19-32-0-216. RECEIVING —Cincinnati: Green6-103, Bernard 6-72, Sanu 5-44, M.Jones3-71, Eifert 2-13,Gresham 2-5, Sanzenbcaher1-23, Tate1-6. Buffalo: Graham 4-74, Jackson4-13, Goodwin2-51 Chandler 2-47, Spiller 2-11,Choice2-9, Woods2-9, Hogan1-2. MISSEDFIELD GOALS—Cincinnati: Nugent

Oakland KansasCity

patrick6-33,Kern1-0,Reynaud1-0. Seattle: Lynch

Detroit

Cin

Chiefs 24, Raiders 7

First Quarter Det—Fauria 1 passfromStafford fAkers kick),

Seahawks20, Titans13

Total NetYards

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Detroit: Bush 17-78, Bell 7-25, Leshoure2-9,Stafford 2-6.Cleveland: Benjamin1-45, McGahee 10-37,Ogbonoaya5-24,Weeden2-10,Gray 1-10,Gordoo1-0,Rainey1-0. PASSING —Detroit: Stafford 25-43-1-248 Cleveland: Weeden 26-43-2-292. RECEIVING —Detroit: Durham8-83, Bush5-57, Pettigrew4-36, Fauria3-34, Johnson3-25, Bel 1-8, Ogletree1-5.Cleveland: Gordon7-126, Ogbonnaya 7-61, Cameron 5 64,Bess2-21, Little 2-12,Rarnidge 2-6, McGahe1-2. e MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

A—76,394. 3-0 5-2 27-42-2 28-42-1 Fumbles-Lost 7 -44 6 - 65 2-12 0-0 Penalties-Yards 3-45.0 3-43.0 Time ofPossession 26:38 33:22 First downs 2-0 3-2 Total NetYards 7 -62 4 - 31 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 31:15 28:45 RUSHING — Tennessee:C.Johnson12-33,Fi tz- Rushes-yards

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Jacksonville: Jones-Drew 21-71, Robinson1-2, Ta'uto'ou 1-1, Anger1-0, Forsett 1-0 Heone2-(minus 3).Denver: Moreno15-42, 8ruton 1-35, Hillman4-20, Baii 3-15, Caldwell1-7, Manning

5-45.8 6-47.3 0-0 1-0 8 -65 9 - 8 7 First downs 33:29 26:31 TotalNetYards

34 (WR).

All Times PDT

First downs

A—76,862.

300 4 - 0-0 1 - 1-0 2 - 1-0

East L 3 3 4 6

Patriots 30, Saints 27 7 0 10 10 — 27 3 14 3 1 0— 3 0

H ome Away A FC NFC

National Conference

W P hiladelphia 3 6 -38 4 - 35 Dallas 3 25;41 3 4:19 W ashington 1 N .Y. Giants 0 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Arizona: Effingtoo 7-56, Mendenhall10-40,Taylor2-7, Fitzgerafd1-4,Smith1-2. San W Francisco: Gore25-101, KaepernIck 4-18, Hunter NewOrleans 5 3-11 Moore1-9,Miler 2-6,Dixon3-4. Carolina 2 PASSING —Arizona: Palmer25-41-2-298. San Atlanta 1 Francisco: Kaepernick16-29-1-252. TampaBay 0 RECEIVING —Arizona: Fitzgerald 6-117, Floyd 5-44, Ellington 5-36, Housfer4-32 Golden 1-53, Brown1-5, Roberts1-5, Dray 1-4, Mendenhall 1-2. San Francisco: V.Davis 8-180, Boldin W 3-28, K.Wilfiams 1-14, Miller 1-11, Baldwin 1-9, Detroit 4 VMcDonald1-7,Dixon1-3. Chicago 4 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. GreenBay 3 Minnesota 1

New Qrleans N ewEngland

3-0-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 2-0-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 0-2-0

South

kick), 1:55.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Iot Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

American Conference

Panthers 35, Vikings 10 Carolina Minnesota

7 7 14 7 — 3 5 0 3 0 7 — 10

First Quarter Car—S.Smith 2 passfrom Newton (Gaoo kick),

2:03.

SecondQuarter Car—Tolbert 10passfrom Newton (Gano kick),

3.43. Min FG Walsh22, 14 Cte 23 Third Quarter Car—LaFell 79 passfromNewton (Gaookick), 39 5 21-126 13:56. Car—Newton7run (Ganokick), 6:10. 26 9

5-22 3-(-10)

Fourth Quarter

0 -0 1 - 21 Car—Tolbert1 run(Ganokick), 7:40. 2 -0 1 - 35 Min — Rudolph23 passfrom Cassel (Wafsh kick), 25-43-1 26-43-2 1:00. 1 -0 2 - 23 A—63,963

Car

M ni

22

17

SecondQuarter

Pit —FGSuisham46,12.07. Pit —FGSuisham33,5:25. Pit — FGSuisham48,:45. NYJ—FGFolk 39,:02. Third Quarter Pit Sanders 55passfrom Roethlisberger(Suishamkick), 12:30.

3 67 29 0 39-131 13-75 2 36 21 5 3-22 0-0 2 31 0-0 2-62 0-0 Fourth Quarler 20-26-0 32-44-2 Pit—FG Suisham32,12:09. 1 -6 3- 2 6 A—76,957 3-33.0 4-49.8 0-0 1-0 P it NY J 6 -40 5 - 5 5 First downs 16 18 Total Net Yards 3 28 26 7 36:27 23:33 Rushes-yards 26-73 2 0-83 Passing 2 55 18 4 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS PuntReturns 2 -11 4 - 45 RUSHING —Carolina: D.Wiffiams 17-64, Kickoff Returns 2 -28 3 - 71 Newton9-30, Tolbert 8-27, LaFell 1-9, A.Smith1-5, Ret. 2-36 0-0 Anderson 2-(minus1), GinnJr. 1-(minus3). Minne- Interceptions Comp-Att-Int 24-31 0 19 34-2 sota: Peterson10-62,Cassef 2-7, Gerhart1-6. 4 -24 3 - 17 PASSING —Carolina: Newton 20-26-0-242. Sacked-YardsLost 6-45.5 7-44.6 Minnesota: Cassef 32-44-2-241. Puots 1-0 1-0 RECEIVING —Carolina: D.Wiffiams 5-53, Fumbles-Lost 7 -49 5 - 60 S.Smith5-21, LaFell 4-107 GinnJr. 2-22, Tolbert2- Penalties-Yards 20,Olseo2-19.Minnesota:Rudolph9-97,Jennings Time ofPossession 35:49 24:11 6-34,Simpson 4-30,Jo.Webb 3-24,Peterson3-21, Carfson 2-12,Wright 2-10, Patterson2-3, Gerhart INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 1-10. RUSHING —Pittsburgh: Bell 16-34, FJooes 5-18, Roethlisberger2-11, Dwyer3-10. N.Y. Jets. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Powell9-30, Goodson4-29, Ivory4-16, Smith3-8. PASSING —Pittsburgh: Roethlisberger 23-30Packers19, Ravens17 0-264, A.Brown1-1-0-15 N.Y. Jets: Smith 19-342-201. Green Bay 3 3 10 3 — 1 9 RECEIVING —Pittsburgh: A Brown 9-86, Baltimore 0 0 3 1 4 — 17 Miller 6-84,Sanders3-70, Bell3-22, W.Johnson2-2, First Quarler FJones1-15.N.Y.Jets: Gates5-36, Cumberland 4GB — FGCrosby45,13:11. 59, Hill 3-46,Powell3-20,Kerfey2-19, Nelson1-11, SecondQuarter Goodson1-10 GB — FGCrosby31,:00. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None. Third Quarter GB — FGCrosby50,6 06 COWbOyS 31, RedSkitTS 16 Ral — FGTucker 23, 4:34.

Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Iot Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

GB — Nelson64passfromRodgers(Crosbykick)

3 3 10 0 — 16 7 7 7 1 0 — 31 First Quarter Daf — Murray4run (Bailey kick), 8:52. 11:52. Was —FGForbath20,1:38. GB—FG Crosby31,4:17. SecondQuarter Ral—Clark 18passfrom Flacco(Tucker kick) Daf Harris 86puntreturn(Baifey kick), 2:26 2:04. Was —FGForbath32, 00. A—71,319. Third Quarter Was —FGForbath33,10:03. QB Ba t Daf — Williams 15 passfrom Romo (Bailey kick), First downs 15 15 TotalNetYards 4 38 36 0 9:03. Was — Morris 45run(Forbath kick), 3.43. 30-140 22-47 Rushes-yards Fourth Quarter Passing 298 313 Daf — FGBailey30, 10:36. 6 -68 2 - 38 PuntReturns Daf — Randle 1run(Bailey kick), 849. 1-19 4 -102 KickoffReturns A—90,239. 0-0 1-0 InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Iot 17-32-1 20-34-0 W as Qal Sacked-Yards Lost 3 -17 5 - 29 First downs 25 18 Punts 6-54.8 9-41.7 3-1 2-1 Total NetYards 433 213 Fumbles-Lost 33-216 19-48 Rushes-yards Penalties-Yards 8 -55 6 - 40 Passing 217 165 Time ofPossession 31:22 28:38 5-17 2 -109 PuntReturns 2-29 2 113 KickoffReturns INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 1-4 1-0 RUSHING —Green Ray: Lacy23-120 Rodgers InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int 19-39-1 18-30-1 5-21, Kuhn1-2, Franklin 1-(minus3). Baltimore: Sacked-YardsLost 3-29 1-5 Rice 14-34,Pierce6-9, Flacco1-6, M.Rrownt-(miPuots 3-47.0 5-45.2 nus 2). 2 -1 0-0 Fumbl e s-Lost PASSING —Green Bay: Rodgers 17-32-1-315. Penalties-Yards 1 2-104 7 - 80 Baltimore: Flacco 20-34-0-342. 34;32 2 5:28 RECEIVING—GreenBay: Nelson4-113,Cobb Time ofPossession 4-53, Finley3-75, Kuhn2-9,Roykin1-43, J.Jones1INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 10, Franklin 1-7,Lacy1-5. Baltimore: Doss4-99, RUSHING —Washington: Morris 16-81, Griffin Clark 4-81, MBrown3-71, Rice3-15, J.Jones2-42, I I 9 77,HefuJr 6 42, Young1-19, Moss1-(mInus 3). Pierce2-22,TSmith1-12, tajema1-0. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Green Bay:Crosby Dallas: Murray7-29, Randle11-17, Tanner1-2. PASSING —Washington: Griffio III 19-39-144 (WR). 246. Dallas: Romo18-30-1-170. RECEIVING — Washington:Garcon 6-69,Reed Eagles 31, Buccatleers 20 4-58, HefuJr. 4-35, Moss2-42, Hankerson2-36, Morgao1-6rDallas: Bryant5-36, Beasley 4-44, WitPhiladelphia 7 7 7 1 0 — 31 ten 3-27,Wiliams2-27, Murray2-21, Randle 2-15. TampaBay 3 14 0 3 — 2 0 MISSED FIELDGOALS—Washington: ForFirst Quarter bath 49(WL). Phi — Foles 4run (Heoerykick),11:46. TB — FGLindeff 38,6:30. RamS 38, TexatTS13 SecondQuarter TB — Jackson24passfromGlennon(Lindell kick) St. Louis 7 10 21 0 — 38 14:46 0 6 0 7 — 13 Houston Phi — Jackson 12passtrom Foles (Henery kick) First Quarter 7:05. StL — Harkey 2passfromBradford (Zuerlein kick), TR — Jackson1 passfromGlennon(LindeI kick) 5.59. 1:02. SecondQuarter Third Quarter StL — FGZuerleio 42, 13:22. Phi — Cooper 47 pass tromFoles (Henery kick) Hou — F G B ull o ck20, 8:21. 11.41. StL Kendricks 2 passfromBradford (Zuerfein Fourth Quarter kick), 2:43. TB — FGLindell 27, 10:48. Hou — FGBullock35,:49. Phi — Jackson36 passfrom Foles (Henery kick) Third Quarter 9;32. StL — Quick 4 passfrom Bradford (Zuerfein kick), Phi — FGHenery24,2:34. 7:42. A—62,505. StL — Batesfumblerecovery inendzone(Zuerfein Phi TB kick), 7:36. First downs 21 19 StL — Ogletree 98 interception return (Zuerfein TotalNetYards 425 351 kick),:36. Rushes-yards 33-138 21-94 Fou rthQuarter 287 257 Passing Hou—Tate 1run(Bulockkick), 3:15. 2 -15 2 - 45 PuntRetums A—71,104. 2 -45 2 - 54 KickoffReturns S IL Hou 1-5 0-0 InterceptionsRet. First downs 15 27 Comp-Att-Iot 22-31-0 26-43-1 Total Net Ya rds 216 420 1 -9 2 - 16 Sacked-Yards Lost Rushes-yards 25-99 30-153 5-49.8 5 46.0 Punts Passing 117 267 1-1 1-0 Fumbles-Lost Punt Returns 0-0 2-6 3 -31 8 - 72 Penalties-Yards Kickoff Returns 3 -64 4 - 97 Time ofPossession 26;14 3 3:46 InterceptionsRet. 2-103 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 12 16-0 27-38 2 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Sacked-YardsLost 0 -0 5 - 17 RUSHING —Philadelphia: McCoy 25-116, Puots 3-45.0 2-39.0 Brown5-20, Foles3-2. TampaBay: Martin 16-67, Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-2 Glennoo3-20 James2-7 9 -74 7 - 95 Penalties-Yards PASSING —Philadelphia: Foles 22-31-0-296. Time of Possessi o n 24:50 35:10 Tampa Bay:Glennon26-43-1-273. RECEIVING —Philadelphia: Jackson 6-64, INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Cooper4-120, Avant4-21, Ertz3-13, McCoy2-55, RUSHING —St. Louis: Stacy 18-79, CunnrogCefek1-10,D.Johnson1-8, Maehl1-5. TampaBay: ham 3-11,Richardson3-5, Bradford1-4. Houston: Jackson9-114, Wright 7-91, Martin 4-24, Owusu3Foster 20-141, Tate10-12r 28, Demps 2-13, Leonard1-3. PASSING —St. Louis: Bradford 12-16-0-117. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Houston: Schaubt5-21-0-186, Yates 12-17-2-98. RECEIVING — St.Louis:Cook2-45,Givens 2Steelers 19, Jets 6 20, Stacy2-11, Richardson1-18, Pettis1-12, Quick 1-4, Austin1-3,Harkey1-2, Kendricks 1-2.Houston: 0 9 7 3 — 1 9 Johnson7-88,Foster 4-57,Hopkins3-47,Tate3-16, Pittsburgh 3 3 0 0 — 6 N.Y. Jets Graham2-25, Griffin 2-18,Jean2-14, Martin 2-12, First Quarter GJones1-4,Posey1-3 NYJ—FGFolk 25,3:25. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None. 2:12.

Fourth Quarter Ral J.Jooes 11passfrom Flacco(Tuckerkick)

Washington Dallas


MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013• THE BULLETIN

NFL ROUNDUP

NFL COMMENTARY

Redskins' owner clings to wrong side of history

a s s un ain s wi a e The Associated Press FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Too bad all those Patriots fans who left Gillette Stadium in disgust when their team was down didn't wait a minute. Because that's all Tom Brady needed. Fans left in a half-empty stadium roared when the two-time NFL MVP threw the winning touchdown pass with 5 seconds left. They beat the traffic while the Patriots were beating the Saints, 30-27. Coming off one of his worst games, Brady threw the decisive 17-yard pass to rookie free agent Kenbrell Thompkins, knocking New Orleans from the unbeaten ranks Sunday. "Guys made big-time catches," Brady said. "It was just a great game." Slowly but steadily, new pass catchers have made their mark after the Patriots lost their top five receivers from last season's highest-scoring NFL team. Now he's throwing to Thompkins, Aaron Dobson, Danny Amendola and Austin Collie. "I have confidence in t hose guys," Brady said. "We're certainly not perfect out there. We're definitely just grinding." Many fans had abandoned hope and left Gillette Stadium by the time the Patriots it out. But at Fenway Park, some 30 miles away, a big cheer went up at Game 2 ofthe AL championship seriesbetween the Boston Red Sox and Detroit Tigers when Thompkins jumped for the winning

BS

By William C. Rhoden

In addition to sounding like Wallace, Snyder is aligning n Jan. 14, 1963, Gov. himself philosophically with George C. Wallace of George Preston Marshall, the Alabama delivered an original owner of the Washinaugural address in which ington franchise. he declared his unwavering By the 1961 season, Marallegiance to "segregation shall's was the only NFL team now, segregation tomorrow not to have a black player on and segregation forever." the roster. In October 1961, Those words became an Stewart Udall, the secretary anthem of intolerance and a of the interior, said he would rallying cry for those who op- not attend a W a shington posed civil rights, equal rights game as long as the NAACP and human r ights. Those was picketing. Udall warned words d e fined W a l lace's Marshall that his team would legacy. be prohibited from using the Fifty years later, Daniel new federally owned stadium S nyder, the owner of t h e in the capital the next season NFL's Washington franchise, unless it hired a black player. is making an equally strident Political pressure has a stand against civility that will way of getting the attention define his legacy as an owner of even wealthy team owners. and as a citizen. In the next draft, Washington Snyder is facing a firestorm chosetwoblackplayers:Ernie of pressure to change the Davis, the Heisman Trophy team's nickname, which has winner from Syracuse, at No. been attacked as out of date, I, and Ron Hatcher, a fullback out of touch, offensive and from Michigan State, in the racist. eighth round. He has responded to critics Washington was the benby tossing out polls that show eficiary of an unearned and support for the nickname. He tragic break. Davis was tradhas also trotted out American ed to Cleveland for Bobby Indians who say that they are Mitchell, but Davis was found not offended, ignoring voices to have leukemia and died, who say they are. In the face never playing a down in the of mounting criticism, Sny- NFL. Mitchell had a Hall of der remains defiant. In a May Fame career in Washington interview with USA Today, and was one of a long line of Snyder insisted: "We'll never outstanding black players for change the name. It's that the franchise. simple. NEVER — you can In the 1987 season, Washuse caps." ington's D o u g W il l i ams Snyder is as misguided on became the first black quarthis issue as he was in 1999, terback to lead his team to a when hebought the team and Super Bowl victory. thought that the way to win Marshall and Wallace were was to load his roster with on the wrong side of history. stars. He was wrong then Wallace created an atmoand he is wrong now. The sphere offear,hatred and didifference was that then he visiveness. Marshall barred offended only Washington p layers wh o c o ul d h a v e fans; now he is offending a helped his franchise avoid significant part of the nation. mediocrity during the 1950s Criticism is coming from the and 1960s. White House as well. S nyder might o bject t o In a recent interview with being placed alongside WalThe Associated Press, Presi- l ace and Marshall. By hi s dent Barack Obama said that insistence on using a term "if I were the owner of the that offends even one person, team and I knew that there however, he contributes to an was a name of my teamatmosphere of i n t olerance even if it had a storied history and bigotry. Snyder has an — that was offending a siz- opportunity to get on the right able group of people, I'd think side of history, though I don't about changing it." expect someone as vain as he He added that he wasn't appears to be to change his convinced that an " attach- team's nickname voluntarily. ment to a particular name His refusal to change an ofshould override the real, le- fensive name is emblematic gitimate concerns that people of our society's tendency to have." wrap ourselvesin the armor Obama is preoccupied at of self-interest regardless of moment, but the administra- who might be wounded or tion is almost certain to circle offended. back to Snyder and the nickSports has historicallybeen name issue. a vehicle to bring us together. This is not the first time Increasingly, the enterprise groups have objected to the is becoming one more tool of nickname. divisiveness. I covered my firstSuper Those of us who are apB owl in J anuary 1992 pealing to Snyder's sense of Washington versus Buffalo, in ethics and morals are barking Minneapolis — and attended up the wrong tree. If this were two protestssponsored by the about morality, Snyder would American Indian Movement, not need surveys and handa civil rights group. One was picked American Indians to at the University of Minneso- validate his point. He would ta, objecting to the University stand alone on principle. of Illinois' use of an Indian Snyder's fight is an ecomascot. On Super Bowl Sun- nomic is s ue , re v o lving day, the group demonstrated around licensing, marketing in front of the Metrodome. and branding. His stridency is This time, protesters have a based in money, not morality, sympathetic ear in the White and so he may be headed toHouse, perhaps because the ward a tarnished legacy. president is a member of a miWhen you f o llow y o ur nority group that is all too fa- wallet and ignore your conmiliar with the deleterious ef- science, you're headed for fectof stereotypes and slurs. moral bankruptcy. New Yorlz Times News Service

I

I-'

Stephan Savoha/The Assochated Press

New England Patriots wide receiver Kenbrell Thompkins (85) catches the winning touchdown pass against New Orleans Saints cornerback Jabari Greer in the fourth quarter of Sunday'sgame inFoxborough, Mass. The Patriots won 30-27.

by kicked four field goals and Green Bay held on to beat Baltimore. Eddie Lacy rushed for120 yards to fuel the Packers' firstroad win of the season. Green Bay pass. (3-2) took a 16-3 lead into the fourth quar"Coach Bill said that it might come ter and was up 19-10 with 4 minutes left, down to the final seconds," Thompkins but the Ravens (3-3) kept coming back. said. "You had to stick with the system. After Baltimore closed to 19-17 on an 18We just had to go out there and fight to the yard touchdown pass from Joe Flacco to finish." Dallas Clark with 2:04 remaining, RodgThe Saints (5-1) had taken a 24-23 lead ers clinched the victory with a 52-yard with 3:29 remaining on Drew Brees' 34- completion to Jermichael Finley on a yard touchdown pass to Kenny Stills and third-and-3. the extra point, but couldn't put away Broncos 35, Jaguars 19: DENVER New England. — Peyton Manning threw for two scores The Patriots (5-1) survived an intercep- and Knowshon Moreno ran for three to tion by Keenan Lewis on their first snap lead Denver toa tougher-than-expected after Garrett Hartley's 39-yard field goal victory over winless Jacksonville. The made it 27-23. Broncos (6-0) came in as 27-point favorBrady started the w i n ning 70-yard ites, and much of the pregame hype cendrive, with no timeouts, with completions tered onwhether they'd cover the spread of 23 yards to Julian Edelman, 15 to Col- and when Manning wouldcome outofthe lie and 6 to Dobson for a first down at the game. Neither happened. Manning finSaints 26. But he threw two incompletions ished 28 for 42 for 295 yards, but lost two before connecting with Collie for a 9-yard fumbles and threw a pick-6 — a 59-yard gain on fourth down and a first down at interception return by Paul Posluszny the 17. that pulled the Jaguars (0-6) within 14-12 He spiked the ball to stop the clock, at halftime. It was a two-point game late then senthis receivers deep. in thethird quarter, before Moreno scored "We had everybody going tothe end his last touchdown, an 8-yard run, for a zone and (Thompkins) kind of snuck into 28-19 lead. the corner and I put it up there for him and Chiefs 24, Raiders 7: KANSAS CITY, he came down and made agreat catch," Mo. — Jamaal Charles ran for two touchBrady said. downs, the Kansas City defense harassed Thompkins o u t f ought c o r n erback Oakland quarterback Terrelle Pryor into Jabari Greer in the left side of the end throwing three second-half interceptions zone. and the Chiefs remained unbeaten. After "That's something that you'll replay in winning just twice last season, Kansas your mind for a long time," Greer said. City (6-0) continued the second-best start "We fought hard, we're resilient, and it in franchise history. The Chiefs piled up happens like that. For it to happen to me, 10 sacks while ending a three-game skid I'll just have to bear the burden for this to the Raiders (2-4), and a six-game losweek." ing streak against them at Arrowhead Brady completed 25 of43 passes for269 Stadium. yards with one touchdown and one inter49ers 32, Cardinals 20:SAN FRANCISception. It was the 38th time he'd led the CO — Vernon Davis caught touchdown Patriots to victory after trailing or being passes of61 and 35 yards and finished tied in the fourth quarter. One week ear- with a career-best 180 yards receiving, lier, he was just 18 for 38 for 197 yards and leading San Francisco to its third straight a passer rating of 52.2. victory. Colin Kaepernick threw for 252 Also on Sunday: yards and Frank Gore ran for 101 yards Seahawks 20, Titans 13: SEATTLE on 25 carries.Kendall Hunter ran for a — Marshawn Lynch ran for two touch- 6-yard touchdown that sealed it for the downs and had 155 all-purpose yards, 49ers (4-2) with 6:35 remaining. Rookie Richard Sherman came up with his third safety Eric Reid made his team-leading interception of the season, and Seattle fi- third interception and also recovered a nally shook Tennessee in the fourth quar- fumble to stop an Arizona drive deep in ter. Seattle (5-1) won its 11th straight at 49ers territory in the third quarter. San home despite a long list of mistakes that Francisco forced four turnovers for the allowed the Titans (3-3) to hang around second straight game. into the fourth. There was a careless Cowboys 31, Redskins 16: ARLINGturnover, missed defensive assignments TON, Texas — Dwayne Harris returned and a comical muffed field goal attempt a punt 86 yards for a touchdown and set that led to the Titans' only touchdown up another score with a 90-yard kickoff on the final play of the first half. But the return as Dallas handed Robert Griffin Seahawks made enough plays thanks to III his first loss in his home state with a Lynch, quarterback Russell Wilson and victory against Washington. Tony Romo Sherman's interception to remain on top had just170 yards passing a week after of the NFC West. Lynch had TD runs of 3 getting 506 in a wild 51-48 loss to Denver. That'sbecause Harris had 222 total reyards and I yard. Packers 19, Ravens 17: BALTIMORE turn yards and Kyle Wilber forced and re— Aaron Rodgers threw a 64-yard touch- covered a fumble on a sack of Griffin that down pass to Jordy Nelson, Mason Cros- left the Cowboys needing just 3 yards for

a clinching score in the fourth quarter. Steelers 19, Jets 6: EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Ben Roethlisberger threw a 55-yard touchdown pass to Emmanuel Sanders, Shaun Suisham kicked four field goals, and Pittsburgh won its first game of the season. The Steelers (1-4) were off to their worst start since 1968. Pittsburgh was coming off a bye-week break and appeared quite a bit sharper than New York (3-3), which had a short week to prepare after a 30-28 win at Atlanta last Monday night. Geno Smith was intercepted twice by a Steelers defense that entered the game as the only team in the league without a takeaway. Panthers 35, Vikings 10: MINNEAPOLIS — Cam Newton threw three touchdown passes and ran for another score, and Carolina romped past Adrian Peterson and Minnesota. Peterson finished with 62 yards on 10 carries and 21 yards on three receptions, but the Vikings (1-4) trailed the whole game and didn't have much use after halftime for Peterson. The NFL MVP learned Friday that a 2year-old son of his died in South Dakota of injuries from alleged abuse. Matt Cassel threw two interceptions, both to Mike Mitchell, and the Panthers (2-3) responded each time with a touchdown. Rams 38, Texans13:HOUSTON — Sam Bradford threw three touchdown passes, St. Louis added a score on defense and special teams and the Rams stunned mistake-prone Houston. The Rams (3-3) were up 24-6 early in the third quarter before rookie Daren Bates returned Keshawn Martin's fumble on a kickoff return for a touchdown. Alec Ogletree pushed the lead to 38-6 when he took an interception by T.J. Yates back 98 yards for a touchdown. Yates was in after Matt Schaub sustained an apparent right ankle injury. Bengals 27, Bills 24:ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Mike Nugent hit a 43-yard field goal with 6:44 left in overtime. Brandon Tate's 29-yard punt return to the Bills 33 set up the decisive score. Andy Dalton went 26 of40 for 337 yards, with three touchdowns and an interception. Lions 31, Browns 17: CLEVELAND — Matthew Stafford threw three of his four touchdown passes in the second half, rallying Detroit. The Lions (4-2) outscored the Browns 24-0 in the second half, sealing their win when Stafford hooked up with tight end Joseph Fauria with 2:01 left. Fauriacaught three TD passes for the Lions, who played like a completely different team in the second half after being dominated up front and trailing 17-7 at the half. Eagles 31, Buccaneers 20:TAMPA, Fla. — Nick Foles threw three touchdown passes and ran for a fourth, leading Philadelphia over winless Tampa Bay. Foles finished a long first-quarter scoring drive with a 4-yard run and threw TD passes of 12 and 36 yards to DeSean Jackson. With the injured Michael Vick active but not playing,Foles made his seventh career start and beat the Bucs (0-5) for the second time.

Young players stepping upfor U.S. in run to World Cup By Dave Skretta The Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — The moment that Graham Zusi trotted onto the pitch at Sporting Park and basked in the roar of a sellout crowd for a World Cup qualifier against Jamaica, nobody seemed to care who he had replaced. True, the Sporting KC midfielder was playing in his home stadium Friday night. That was a big reason he was showered with love. But the other, more noteworthy reason was that Zusi immediately gave the Americans a spark, scoring the first goal in what turned into a 2-0 victory. It was only after he scored in the 77th minute to help the U.S. clinch first place in its group for the third straight cycle that anybody seemed to notice Landon Donovan sitting on the bench. U.S. coach Jurgen K l i nsmann said he made the substitution for

SOCCER "performance-based" reasons, and it was hard to argue. Donovan had struggled in the first half. But it also was evidence that a new, young generation of players is ready to take over the mantle from the previous bunch of standard bearers. "There's great depth in this team, and we're pushing each other in each game and in each practice as well," Zusi said. "And that competition is needed for a team to do well." Zusi's goal was just the second of his international career, while Donovan holds the U.S. career record for both goals and assists. And it's not as if Donovan is washed up, either. He has eight goals and eight assists this

year, surpassing the single-year point record of 22 he set in 2007. But the change at halftime Friday was at least a glimpse into a future

changing of the guard, and the team that Klinsmann fielded gave several youngstersa chance to impress. Aron Johannsson, who played for Iceland's under-21 team and made his U.S. debut in August, got his first international start. Johannsson was helped along on the field by veteran Jozy Altidore, with whom he played briefly for AZ Alkmaar in the Netherlands. Johannsson missed on a couple of good looks at the goal, but he consistently found himself in the right place at the right time, and that left Klinsmann feeling good about his future. "With Aron, it's simply, Get out there and get connected. Be part of this team going forward," Klinsmann said."He missed his chances, but he was there, and that's good to see. The second half he ran out of gas a little bit, and that's why we subbed him out of there." Johannsson, who got the start be-

cause of an injury to Eddie Johnson in training, said his shortcomings were simply a matter of growing accustomed to his teammates. Other young players who got into the mix included Alejandro Bedoya, who recently joined French club Nantes. It was his crossing pass to Zusi behind the Jamaican defense that resulted in the goal that sent a crowd of 18,467 into a frenzy and the U.S. on to victory Friday. Another star for Sporting KC, defender Matt Besler, earned his 12th cap. He was instrumental in helping the Americans finish 8-0 without allowing a goal in home qualifiers this

cycle. Then there was Mix Diskerud, who earned his first cap with the national team in 2010 but seemed to have fallen out of favor before Klinsmann's arrival. The midfielder for Norwegian club Rosenborg BK was active against Jamaica throughout the night, getting

several good looks at the goal. "Great group of guys, and on the field it's easy to play with them," Diskerud said. "When we get the ball going and we use each other, we can play. That happened in the second half." All the young players got a chance in part because of injuries to more familiar names. Along with Johnson going down, Michael Bradley, Clint Dempsey and Fabian Johnson were unavailable because of a variety of ailments, and DaMarcus Beasley hurt his hamstring against Jamaica. That left a bunch of fresh faces trying to make their case for a spot in Brazil. "We've done that pretty well over the last two years to build depth," Klinsmann said. "A lot of options are on the table, and in May, it's down to us coaches to say, 'These 23 guys have the belief and trust to play a really good tournament.'"


B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013

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P OR TS

at the shop at 5 p.m.); meet Pine Mountain Sports in Bend; 541-385-8080; www. pinemountainsports.com. WORKINGWOMEN'S ROADRIDE: Casualpaced road bike ride for women, 90 minutes2 hours;5:30 p.m.,M ondays;meetat Sunnyside Sports in Bend; 541-382-8018. EUROSPORTS RIDE: Group road bike ride starting in Sisters from Eurosports; Saturdays, Tuesdays, Thursdays; check with the shop for start time; all riders welcome; 541-549-2471; www.eurosports. us. HUTCH'SNOON RIDE:Group road bike ride starting in Bend from Hutch's Bicycles east-side location, at noon on Mondays, W ednesdays, Fridays;and from Hutch's west-side location at noon on Tuesdays, Thursdays; pace varies; 541-382-6248 or www.hutchsbicycles.com. HUTCH'S SATURDAY RIDE: Group road bike ride begins at10 a.m. Saturdays in Bend from Hutch's Bicycles east-side location in Bend; approximately 40 miles; vigorous pace; 541-382-6248; www.hutchsbicycles. com.

consistent program and achieve goals; $75; 541-317-3568; footzonebend.com. ANABELLE'S ANGEL GLOW 5K/2K:Glowin-the dark run that benefits Anabelle Wilson, a Bendyouthwho has been diagnosedwith noncurable metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD); all participants receive a glow necklace; brightcolors encouraged; Oct.18; PADDLING 6:15 p.m.; Bend's Old Mill; $25 adults, $15 KAYAK ROLLSESSIONS: Sundays; 4:15kids; www.angelglow.org. 6 p.m.; Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, YOUTH CROSS-COUNTRY:CORK crossBend; sessions limited to12 boats, advance country program for grades 2-8; Mon., Tues., registration recommended; boats must be Wed.,4 p.m.; Oct. 28-Dec.14;at Drake Park; clean, andpaddlesm ustbe padded and contact Max King at cork.youth.running© taped; no instruction provided; $12 per boat gmail.com or at 541-420-1401. for park district residents, $16 otherwise; CORK CROSS-COUNTRYRACES: Cross541-389-7275; bendparksandrec.org. country races at River's EdgeGolf Course, KAYAKING: For all ages; weekly classes and Oct.15and Oct.29;signupsatrace5-5:30 open pool; equipment provided to those p.m.; races start at 5:35 p.m.; $5 for CORK who preregister, first come, first served members, $10 for non-members; contact otherwise; Sundays, 4-6 p.m., Cascade centraloregonrunningklub@gmail.com for Swim Center, Redmond; $3; 541-548-7275; more information. iapid.org. HAPPY DIRTYGIRLS:Nov.1;8 a.m .;race begins at FivePine Lodge 8 Conference Center in Sisters; registration open for PICKLEBALL half marathon and 5K trail runs; $25-$80; happygirlsrun.com/dirtygirls. BEND PICKLEBALLCLUB: MondaysLORD'S ACRE10K/SK: Tenth annual church Fridays, 10 a.m.-noon (approximately), DISC GOLF fundraiser; at Powell Butte Christian Church Larkspur Park in Bend; weather permitting; on Highway126 between Redmond and rsss@bendbroadband.com; Saturdays, 8WOMEN'S LEAGUE:Freeleague at Bend Prineville; Nov. 2, 9 a.m.; pickhardt5@ 10 a.m., Mountain View High School tennis Pine Nursery every Thursday at 6 p.m. No yahoo.com. courts, $3-5 donation requested; Monday, registration is needed. For more information, call 541-550-8541 or go to www.codgc.com. Wednesday, Friday, 9-11 a.m., Summit High JINGLEBELL RUN/WALK FOR ARTHRITIS: School tennis courts, weather permitting; Dec. 7;11 a.m.; Brandis Square, downtown Mondays, 12:45-2:45 p.m., Wednesdays, Bend; 5K run/walk, 1-mile walk and kids' 8-10 a.m., and Saturdays, 8-11 a.m.; Athletic fun run; proceeds benefit the Arthritis HORSES Club of Bend (indoors), $15 drop-in fee Foundation; $20 adults, $10 kids; (includes full club usage), 541-385-3062; registration requested; 888-391-9823; www. ROLLING RANCH IN SISTERS: Openfor Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays,9bendjinglebellrun.org. trail-course practice and shows; ongoing; 11 a.m., Valley View tennis courts, 3660 $10 per horse; 69516 Hinkle Butte Dr., REDMOND OREGON RUNNINGKLUB S.W. Reservoir Drive, Redmond, weather Sisters; Shari, 541-549-6962. (RORK): Weekly run/walk; Saturdays permitting, jsmck@hotmail.com; Mondays at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for and Wednesdays, 4-6 p.m.,indoorcourts more information and to be added to a at Sage Springs Club 8 Spa, Sunriver, $7.50 weekly email list, email Dan Edwards at NORDIC SKI drop-in fee (includes full club usage), call rundanorun19©yahoo.com; follow Redmond 541-593-7890 i n advanc e t o si gn up; weekl y STRENGTH ANDCONDITIONING: Through Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. play schedules also available at The Racquet Nov. 15; 10-week preseason conditioning REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP: Weekly Shoppe in Bend; www.bendpickleballclub. camp;Wednesdays1 to 4:15 p.m.or runson Tuesdays at6:30 p.m.;meetat314 com; bendpickleballclub©hotmail.com. Fridays 3 to 5:30 p.m.; one-day a week, S.W. Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of $150 or two-day a week for $280; www. 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; piaO bendenduranceacademy.org. runaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. ROLLER SPORTS DRYLAND TRAINING: MBSEF'sfall training MOVE IT MONDAYS:Mondays at 5:30 program; through November; www.mbsef. ADULT OPENPLAY ROLLERHOCKEY: p.m.; carpool from FootZone to trailhead org. Sundays,6:30-8 p.m.;$5;CascadeIndoor when scheduled (first and third Mondays of NORDIC FALLLADIES: Eight-week fall Sports, Bend; www.cascadeindoorsports. each month); all other runs start and finish nordic training session for women; through com; 541-330-1183. at FootZone, downtown Bend; 3-5 miles; Oct. 29, every Tuesday from 9 to 11:45 a.m; OPEN ROLLERSKATING: For all ages and paces 7-12 minutes per mile; melanie@ $120; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. ability levels; $5 per skater (includes skate COMPETITIVE NORDIC PROGRAM: rental), children under 5 are free; Tuesdays, PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30 Through May1; for athletes14 and 12:30-3:30 p.m.; Wednesdays, 1-4 p.m.; p.m. on Tuesdays; with Max King; locations over; five or six days a week; $2,200; Fridays, 2-5 p.m.and 6-9 p.m.;Saturdays, vary; interval-based; all ability levels; max@ or $1,500 from Nov. 19-May1; www. 1-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.; Sundays, 1-4 p.m.; footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. bendenduranceacademy.org. 541-330-1183; callie@cascadeindoorsoccer. ASK THEEXPERTS: Tuesdays; 6 p.m.; at com; www.cascadeindoorsports.com. HIGH SCHOOLNORDIC TEAM: Nov.20FootZone, downtown Bend; informal, drop-in March19; additional training for nordic Q-and-A session with a physical therapist; athletes who are still involved with high teague©footzonebend. com; 541-317-3568. school skiing; one to three days aweek, RUNNING NOON TACO RUN: Wednesdays at noon; Wednesday through Sunday; starts at $375; meet at FootZone, downtown Bend; order HALF MARATHON TRAININGPROGRAM: www.bendenduranceacademy.org. a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and Eight-week program on Saturdays YOUTH PROGRAM:MBSEFStevenson it will be ready upon return; teagueO which started on Sept. 7; 8 a.m.; with Youth Program; ages 7-11;Dec. 26-March; footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. coaching, clinics, group runs, weekly www.mbsef.org. workout schedules and a mentor for each LEARN TORUN GROUP RUN:Wednesdays, MIDDLESCHOOL PROGRAM: MBSEF 5:30p.m.;meetatFootZone,downtown pace group;$65-$75;541-317-3568; middle school program; ages 11-14; Nov. 12- footzonebend.com. Bend; conversational-paced runs of 2-3 March; www.mbsef.org. miles; beginners and all paces welcome; LEARN TORUN: Four-week program on HIGH SCHOOLPROGRAM: MBSEFhigh 541-317-3568. Mondays and Wednesdays that started Oct. school program; ages14 and older; Nov. 12- 7; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, downtown Bend; WEEKLY RUNS:Wednesdays at 6 p.m.; March; www.mbsef.org. for beginning runners and fitness walkers; Fleet Feet Sports Bend; 3-5 miles; two MASTERSPROGRAM: MBSEFmasters learn to avoid injury, run properly, develop a groups, different paces; 541-389-1601. program; ages 21 and older; Nov. 12-March; www.mbsef.org. HOME-SCHOOLNORDIC: Ages11-18; Jan. 14-Fed. 18, Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m to 2 p.m.; $100; www.bendenduranceacademy.org.

YOGA FORRUNNERS:Wednesdays at 7 p.m.; at Fleet Feet Sports Bend; $5 per session or $50 for12 sessions; focuses on strengthening and lengthening muscles and preventing running injuries; 541-389-1601. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUN: Thursdays; 5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more information. STRENGTH TRAININGFOR RUNNERS: Thursdays; 5:15 p.m.; WillPower Training Studio, 155 S.W. Century Drive, Suite 110, Bend; weekly workouts for runners, triathletes and cyclists; $5; 541-350-3938.

SOCCER SOCCEROPENPLAY (ADULT): Age 14older; no cleats, but shinguards required; $7;Friday nights;coed 7-8:30 p.m.,men 8:30-10 p.m.; Cascade Indoor Soccer, Bend; 541-330-1183; callie@cascadeindoorsoccer. com;cascadeindoorsports.com.

ALPINE SKIING/

SNOWBOARDING MBSEF RACEPROGRAMS: Runs from Nov. 30through March; www.mbsef.org. MBSEF MASTERSPROGRAMS: Runs from Nov. 30through March; www.mbsef.org. DRYLAND TRAINING: MBSEF fall dryland training for freeskiers and snowboarders; through Novemder; www.mbsef.org. DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM: MBSEF development for freeskiers and snowboarders; Dec. 7-March; www.mbsef. Oig.

COMPETITIONPROGRAMS: MBSEF competition programs for freeskiers and snowboarders; Dec. 30-March; www. mbsef.org. FULL-TIME PROGRAM: MBSEF full-time program for freeskiers and snowboarders; Nov. 20-April; www.mbsef.org.

SWIMMING REDMOND AREAPARKAND RECREATION DISTRICT FAMILYSWIM NIGHT:7:25-8:25 p.m., Tuesdays,CascadeSwim Center, Redmond;adultmustaccompany anyone under age 18; $10 per family; 541-548-7275, raprd.org.

TABLE TENNIS BEND TABLETENNIS CLUB: Evening play Mondays; 6-9 p.m. (setup 30 minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost $60; at Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; drop-in fee, $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; club membership available to those who donate $100 or more; Jeff at 541-480-2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean at 267-6146477;bendtabletennis@yahoo.com; www. bendtabletennis.com.

VOLLEYBALL REDMONDCLUBPROGRAM: Juniper Volleyball Club in Redmond is looking for players and coaches; ages 8-18; www. junipervolleyballclub.com; Amy Remick, junipervolleyballclub©gmail.com.

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single tries were added by Rich Miller, Clint Vogelsang and A.J.

Bend Club winS —TheBend

Kinhnarath. DamonArredondo

Rugby Club defeated the 43rd State Lions 36-17 on Saturday in

kicked three conversions to compiete the scoring. Bend improved

Boise, Idaho. It was in club's fourth

its overall record to 5-2. Theclub's

consecutive victory. Mike Gamm led the scoring with three tries;

next match is Saturday at1 p.m. at High Desert Middle School against

Running Continued from B1

Look for the animals Nancy Archer, 56, keeps an eye out for animals she doesn't typically see during the summer. Running the Deschutes River Trail near Meadow Camp, Archer says it is not uncommon in the winter months to see herdsof elk that have relocated from higher elevations. "The animals are different during the winter," says Archer, who runs daily. "You'll see herds of elk near Meadow Camp or otters ... in the water. It's pretty exciting." Archer fully admits that the guilt trip her dog gives her each morning helps her get out of bed and off running. She also runs with a group of friends three days

Portland Rugby Club.

overall at the Region 2 Future Stars

GYMNASTICS LOCal WinS regianal ComPStltlOll —Blaine Davis, a13year-old Central Oregongymnast, won his age group and took third

a week, making it nearly impossible, she says, to take a day off. "You want to be lazy and all cozy in that comforter, but you know people are counting on you," Archer says.

Change things up "If you've got 25 minutes of daylight, get on it and hit Up Pilot Butte," says Bend's Dave Thomason. "With limited amounts of time, do high-intensity workouts." Thomason, who directs multiple races in the area, — including this weekend's Super Dave's Down and Dirty Half (trail half marathon and 10K) — adds that checking out new loops and routes can be liberating. "It's a fresh season," Thomason says. "Go get a different feel, do something different.Get far enough away and people won't even know if you walk."

Gymnastics Competition in Lacey, Wash., on Oct. 4. Davis, anAcrovision gymnast, has qualified for the National Future Stars Competition

Join us for our annual...

in Colorado Springs, Colo., on Nov. 8. — Bulletin staff reports

While some runners shy away from indoor workouts, Thomason fully admits to hitting the gym for CrossFit sessions if the weather is poor. While the local running season is starting to slow down, area competitors still have multiple chances to race throughout the fall and winter. In addition to the Super Dave's races this Sunday at Seventh Mountain Resort, this month's running calendar includes the Monster Dash 5K in Bend on Oct. 27. And if you don't want to race, you can just get out and run for fun. "I've been here for 20 years and I still can't believe how close to the trails we are," Archer says. "I know it's been said, but there's no bad weather, just bad clothes this time of year." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletin.com.

PAR1T Cf COSTUME CONTEIT Thursday • October 31" at Z:00 pm We invite local seniors, their

families S. neighbors to a safe place to trick or treat!

A party for all ages including a costume contest with great prizes! I

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013• THE BULLETIN

Ducks

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Continued from 61 Mariota's passing was on point, throwing for 366 yards, and he t ook off r u nning when it w a s needed, adding another 88 yards rushing. The 454 combined total yards by Mariota were the second most of his career, behind only the 483 total combined yards he had against Tennessee earlier this season. And if his season stats weren't already impressive enough, Mariota now has 25combined touch-

Florida State, Clemsonset for top-five ACC showdown

downs running and passing and

By Pete Iacobeiii The Associated Press

CLEMSON, S.C. — After Clemson's great escape against Boston College, the third-ranked Tigers can finally focus on No. 5 Florida State and the Atlantic Coast Conference's first top-five showdown in

eight years. "It may be the biggest game in ACC history. We don't know," said defensive end Vic Beasley, who had a big scoopand-score TD in the Tigers' 24-14 victory Saturday. "But our goal is to win a national championship." It's the league's first matchup of topfive teams since No. 5 Miami defeated third-ranked Virginia Tech 27-7 in 2005. And Saturday night's winner in Death Valley will have another impressive line on its resume for the hunt for the national title. "Obviously, we know it's a big game, got a lot of national relevance, conference relevance and all that," Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said Sunday. The Seminoles (5-0, 3-0) are well rested and confident, coming off a 63-0 victory over Maryland and then an open date last weekend. Clemson needed a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns to r emain undefeated. Tajh Boyd rushed for a 6-yard score with 13:44 left to put the Tigers (6-0, 4-0) ahead for good. Linebacker Tony Steward sacked Eagles quarterback Chase Rettig, who coughed up the ball into Beasley's waiting arms for a 13-yard touchdown. When the final seconds ticked off, Clemson's players could finally do what many fans have since the Tigers opened with a 38-35 victory over then fifthranked Georgia on Aug. 31 — talk about Florida State. "Last year they got us, but I feel like we should have won. We're looking for payback," said Beasley, who has a careerbest nine sacks so far this season. Clemson was ahead 27-13 in Tallahassee last season in another top-10 matchup when the Seminoles rallied for a 49-37 victory. Florida State hasn't fared well the past decade at Death Valley, where it has not won since 2001 and the third Bowden Bowl matchup between the Seminoles' Bobby Bowden an d h i s T i ger s o n, Tommy. Both Clemson and Florida State have high-powered offenses and relentless defenses. The Seminoles average nearly 54 points a game, about 10 more than the Tigers. Clemson leads the nation with 24 sacks. "I'm trying to get the ACC to give me 13 guys and give me two more linemen so we can block them," Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher said. "I'm serious, they bring pressure." Both clubs feature skilled passers and Heisman Trophy contenders in Boyd and Florida State's Jameis Winston. Despite Clemson's offensive mistakes against Boston College, Boyd threw for 334 yardsfor his 14th career game with more than300 yards passing. He became Clemson'scareer leader in passing yards, moving past Charlie Whitehurst. Winston, a r edshirt f reshman, has taken college football by storm with his strong arm and leadership skills. "He doesn't look l ike any r edshirt freshman I'veever seen," Swinney said with admiration. Winston has thrown for 17 t ouchdowns, two more than Boyd. Winston said he worked hard during the bye week to preparefor Clemson. "They're after our necks," Winston said of the Tigers. "We beat them at our home field last year. They beat us at their home field the year before that. It's just going to be a back-and-forth battle."

Relics Continued from B1 And if they want fans to see their wares, few have the opportunity to put it in a museum of their own, as Yogi Berra dld. Mazeroski, 77, had kept the uniform and the socks he wore when he hit the home run 53 years ago Sunday in a cedar chest at home in Greensburg, Pa. Once, years before he received the offer from Hunt to sell his collection, he opened the chest to see if moths had damaged it. Seeing that the uniform was intact, he closed the chest again. He did not weep over the Champagnestained flannel even though he is a softy; in 2001, he broke down as he tried to deliver his Hall of Fame induction speech. But those tears were ignited by memories, not memorabilia. N ow, with nearly al l h i s trove gone, Mazeroski said, "I won't miss it because it hasn't been a part of my life."

B7

Dean Hare/The Associated Press

Oregon State running back Storm Woods, right, attempts to elude Washington State linebacker Jared Byers (37) during the second half of Saturday's game in Pullman, Wash. Woods carried 12 times for 18 yards and two touchdowns. He also caught five passes for 64 yards. Oregon State won 52-24.

Woo sma esim act or Beaversin irst ame ac OREGON STATE NOTEBOOK

By Steve Grees And Raju Woodward Corvallis Gazette-Times

PULLMAN, Wash.— Before Saturday night's game at Washington State, the last time Oregon State sophomore running back Storm Woods was on the field, he was being taken off in an ambulance after suffering a concussion against Utah on Sept. 14. Woods missed games at San Diego State and at home against Colorado. He returned to practice after the Colorado game and was excited to get back on the field Saturday to help jumpstart a running game that had been nonexistent for the first five games of the season. He definitely made a positive impact in Oregon State's 52-24 Pac-12 victory against Washington State. He had several crucial receptions — a 25-yarder that set up his three-yard touchdown run late in the first half that put the Beavers up 17-10, and a 24-yarder on third down to keep the Beavers' first scoring drive alive. Woods tacked on a 1-yard run in the fourth quarter and finished with 18 yards on 12 carries and caught fivepasses for 64 more yards. "He's a realversatile player," quarterback Sean Mannion said. "When you have him and Terron

(Ward) both healthy we can have fresh legs in at all time. Both are very capable. So I think it's the kind of thing where the more the merrier." Starting streak: Senior left tackle Michael Phillip made his 41st start on Saturday and is now tied with Roddy Thompkins (1996-98) for 13th in school history for most starts. He can move into a tie for 10th next week at California. Line close to full strength:Right guard Grant Enger, who missed the past three games with an injury, was back in the starting lineup on Saturday. Isaac Seumalo, who has played several positions, was back at center with true freshman Sean Harlow filling the right tackle spot. Gavin Andrews, the projected starting right tackle who has been out with mono, played on the punt team. Movin' on up:Trevor Romaine's 20-yard field goal with 31 seconds remaining in the first quarter was his 38th career field goal and moved him into third-place for career field goals in school history. The junior trails

Alexis Serna (80) and Justin Kahut (47).

Stanford falls to No. 13aftel' IQsstQ Utah By Pat Graham The Associated

SALT LAKE CITY — The Stanford Cardinal adamantly insisted their attention was on Utah and only on Utah, not about moving up in the rankings, a grueling upcom-

ing schedule or even growing national title talk. They weren't caught day dreaming, just by surprise as their 13game winning streak was halted. The Utes relied on a steady dose of bubble screens to stun Stanford 27-21 on Saturday and knock the Cardinal from fifth to No. 13 in the latest poll. Now, the Cardinal try to regroup and move on because, "we don't have time to wallow," coach David Shaw said. Especially not with this trifecta of teams looming on the schedule: No. 9 UCLA next week, a trip to Oregon State and then a clash with second-ranked Oregon. Those figured to be the teams to potentially knock off the Cardinal (5-1, 3-1 Pac-12), maybe not so much Utah

(4-2, 1-2). Only, this was a tenacious Utes team, which nearly beat the Bruins the week before. The Cardinal

Although Mazeroski said he didnot need the money, he was thinking of his sons. "I want to see the joy on their faces when the boys get it," he said. Mazeroski's sons could benefit considerably from next month's auction, at the Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory. The uniform alone couldsellfor$250,000 or more, said David Hunt, the president of Hunt Auctions, which displayed the uniform last month at its memorabilia store at PNC Park in Pittsburgh. In all, the auction will include more than 200 Mazeroski items. "It's not like there was a master plan to do this a year ago," Hunt said. "But in June, I got a chance to talk to Bill and I said, 'Do you know what happened to the jersey?' And he told me where it's been. I told him if he wanted to evaluate it, I'd be glad to." In deciding to sell his collection, Mazeroski dealt with some of the personal issues

knew what they were facing and asserted they didn't overlook them. "They're good," S h aw said. "They've always been good. ... They got us. They flat-out got us." Shaw wasn't really in the mood to contemplate what this loss meant for the season, quickly dismissing talk about national championship aspirations possibly being out the window. "I don't care about (that)," he said. "I care about the next game we play.... I don't care what the talking heads say, or where we're ranked, that stuff doesn't matter. We have games to play. At the end of the year, if we earn a bowl game, tell us where to go and we'll go play. It can't be our focus. It has to be on us and on our games." Ty Montgomery had another big game for the Cardinal, returning a kick 100 yards for a score and catching eight passes for 131 yards. It's the second straight week Montgomery has had a kick return for a touchdown. Montgomery was on the sideline on a critical third-down play with the ball near the goal line late in the game. The Cardinal went with their jumbo package with the ball at the 6

and businessforces that other former players and families face. Some need the money or are estate planning. Others want to finance vacations or their grandchildren'seducations, and some no longer want to house the old u n iforms, caps, bats, balls and trophies — sometimes, they do n o t have the room or are moving to smaller quarters. And the costs ofstorage, preservation and insurance can loom large as the artifacts rise in value. Bob Cousy, the Boston Celtics great, kept his memorabilia in a s o mewhat haphazard state in the cellar of the house he has lived in for 50 years in Worcester, Mass. He did not see his collection much except to take people downstairs to visit it. But his daughters, both schoolteachers, needed money, one of them to pay off a mortgage and the other to help with her children's college tuition. S o he sold nearly all o f his collection in 2 003, netting about $160,000 for each

yard line, sending in two tight ends, a fullback and a running back to give the appearance of a run. Instead, Kevin Hogan tried to connect with t i ght end C harlie Hopkins, only to miss his target. On fourth d own, th e C ardinal, a run-oriented team with a top-notch offensive line, tried to throw again, but Hogan — under all kinds of pressure — overthrew Devon Cajuste in the back of the end zone. Any misgivings over those pass

plays? "We trust our plays enough to make those calls at the end of the game, to throw touchdown passes," Shaw explained. "Obviously, it didn't work." Hogan was solid but not spectacular for a second straight week. He finished 15 of 27 for 246 yards and a touchdown. He also had a fumble as he lost for the first time as a starter. H is quarterback's psyche i s hardly a concern for Shaw. "This is a young quarterbackthat has a chance to be extremely good. So I don't worry about his confidence," Shaw said. "He's going to bounce back."

daughter. "That was a much greater p riority t h a n h a n ging o n to it," Cousy said. "It was a

zero turnovers this season. "I don't know when he is planning on going to the NFL, but when he does I think he'll be a top five draft pick," Washington coach Steve Sarkisian said of Mariota. "He's a hell of a player." While Kenny W heaton's interception return for touchdown against the Huskies that clinched a 31-20 win in 1994 and remains one of the most important moments in Oregon history, the current run of success over the Huskies is meaningful in the perspective of Washington's past dominance in the series. Between 1974 and 1993, when the Huskies were regularly winning conference titles and going to Rose Bowls, Washington won 17 of 20 meetingsbetween the schools. The 10 straight over one opponent is the longest continuous win streak for Oregon over any Pac-12 foe. The Ducks were unbeaten in 13 straight against rival Oregon State between 1975 and 1987, but a 0-0 tie in 1983 interrupted the winning streak. Not satisfied, those glad in green and yellow inside Husky Stadium on Saturday started chanting "Ten more years,"as the final seconds ticked away. The trip to Seattle was Oregon's first test of the season, the first time they were pressed into the second half and first time Mariota was asked to take snaps in the fourth quarter. To their credit, the Huskies twice threw punches on the legs of running back Bishop Sankey that pulled Washington within seven points. The f irst came on the opening drive of the second half when Sankey raced for a60-yard TD on fourth-and-l. The second time in the final moments of the third quarter was a 25-yard TD run that cut the Ducks' lead to 31-24. The problem from Washington was everyoverture was met with a rebuttal by Mariota. The first came after Sankey's long run when Mariota perfectly lofted a deep ball that Josh Huff ran under for a 65-yard touchdown to put the Ducks up two scores. But it was the second of the responses that highlighted just why the NFL scouts that flooded the Husky Stadium press box — including Seattle Seahawks general manager John Schneider — are so intrigued by Mariota. He showed off hisspeed, racing for 35 yards on the final play of the third quarter to start the Ducks' drive. On the first play of the fourth quarter, Mariota found Bralon Addison for 30 yards to the Washington 6. Following an incompletion, Mariota kept on a designed quarterback draw to the left that only went for one yard. But the Ducks went with the same play again on third-andgoal, this time to the right, and Mariota maneuvered hisway in for a touchdown. What became the backbreaking score for the Ducks took only 1 minute, 21 seconds. It was Oregon's20th scoring drive ofthe season that took less than 90 seconds. "We responded really well. The resolve of our team is special. The people that we have on this team are special," Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said. "If we are up by some number or down by some number, it doesn't matter."

Fame ringand replica plaque? His 1952 All-Star Game bat? "I told one of my brothers, 'This stuff is fo r c ollectors; they're serious about it and godsend." Robin Roberts, the Hall of they want to display it in their Fame pitcher for the Philadel- houses,'" Roberts said. "I'd phia Phillies, was quite fond of have loved to have kept stuff his collection, and he used the and pass it on to my son, but artifacts to decorate his homes all I would have done is get a in Pennsylvania and, later, giant safe-deposit box for it." Temple Terrace, Fla. But when Ultimately, t h e b r o t hers he died in 2010, his four sons s hared $300,000 f ro m a n were left to wonder what to do auction. with it. Sell it? Divide it in an As the oldest child of WarNFL-style draft? Quickly, they ren Spahn, the w i n ningest realized that they did not want left-hander in baseball history, the responsibility of keeping Greg Spahn inherited a vast it. collection. "I remember hesold a 1957 R oberts' memorabilia i n cluded a ball signed by Babe World Series jersey when I Ruth at the Phillies' spring was in college, and when I training camp in 1948, Rob- found out, I threw a fit," Spahn erts' r o okie s eason. T h at said. "I think he got $1,200 and raised a s e r ious q uestion: gave me the money. But I told "How do you split that ball him, 'This stuff will be worth a four ways'?" Robin Roberts Jr. lot more later.' His attitude was said in an interview. And who that he didn't care — they were would get the oil portrait of just artifacts of his career." their father? His 1952 player Indeed, Spahn created a of the year award? His Hall of personal category of collect-

ibles: He kept one ball from each of his 363 wins. Greg Spahn waited a decade after his father's death in 2003 to sell the memorabilia that had been stored in several places. "I didn't have the time to catalog and preserve it," he said from his ranch in Broken Arrow, Okla. "I have five kids. How would I split a Cy Young Award five ways or four gloves five ways? I would regret turning it over to them and turning it into a big fight. So I just decided that money was more splittable than memorabilia. And I do have three more kids to put through college." Warren Spahn's 1957 Cy Young Award sold for $110,000 i n an auction i n J u ly. H i s Hall of Fame induction ring brought $48,000. "I have no regrets," Greg Spahn said. "I don't have a security problem any longer, and I don't have the fact that the balls and gloves are not being properly stored."


BS THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 'I4, 2013

T EE TO

R EEN GOLF ROUNDUP

PGA TOUR

Jimmy Walker gets first win on

O'Hair, othersgrateful for fresh start in FalSeri l es

PGA Tour, earns trip to Masters

By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press SAN MARTIN, Calif. — Jimmy Walker finally won on the PGA Tour in his eighth year and 188th tournament, and with a little help from Brooks Koepka. Tied for the lead with four holes to play Sunday, Walker rolled in a 6-foot birdie putt on the 15th hole to take the lead for good in the Frys. com Open. Three closing pars for a 5-under 66 turned out to be more than enough for the 34-year-old Texan to take home a trophy and plenty of perks. Walker is going to the Masters for the first time, along with a trip to Maui for the Tournament of Champions. He also cracked the top

50 for the first time in his career. "I think it will sink in after a while," Walker said. "Relief right now. It feels really good. I'm pretty excited." It was a sinking feeling for Koepka, whose journey around the world in a remarkable year nearly ended with a PGA Tour card. Koepka had a four-shot lead with 11 holes to play, and the 23-year-old Floridian looked as poised and confident as he had all week at CordeValle. There was a tiny crack when he missed a 3-foot par putt on the ninth hole, and it really caught up with him at the end. See Walker /B9

The Associated Press

SAN MARTIN, Calif. — The greeting from Frys.com Open President Duke Butler was meant as a joke, even though it had some truth to it. "Happy New Year,"he told players when they arrived at CordeValle Golf Club. That's still months away — except on the PGA Tour calendar. For the first time, it goes to a wraparound 2013-14 season that began Thursday. Sean O'Hair is most likelytotake him at his word. Not only is it a new year, it feels like a new start at the Fall Series. Just over a week ago, O'Hair completed one of the most gratifying months of his career with his best result of the season. It was only a tie for eighth. And it was on the Web.com Tour. But it meant he could keep his job. See Fall /B9

FedExCup Tony Avelar /The Associated Press

Eventual champion Jimmy Walker tees off on the 4th hole during the final round of the Frys.com Open on Sunday in San Martin, Calif.

Photos courtesy of DMK Golf Design lnc.

A look at the 12th green at Gamble Sands in Brewster, Wash. Bend's David McLay Kidd is the architect for the course, which is still under construction.

• Bend's David McLayICdd i hasgone backto what madehimaworld-class golf architect with a coursecalled GambleSandsin Washington ZACK HALL

D

avid McLay Kidd's enthusiasm for his lone U .S. golf p r oject i s

palpable.

"I'm really excited about that one," offers Kidd, who is among the most heralded golf course architects in the world but who mixes well in the casual Bend restaurant in which we are sitting. "I am REALLY excited." That "one" the 45-year-old Bend resident is referring to is Gamble Sands, Kidd's workin-progress in tiny Brewster, Wash., about a s even-hour drive north of Bend and not far from Lake Chelan. I wanted to catch up with the always friendly and en-

gaging Kidd, whose company, DMK Golf Design, is based in a small office in NorthWest Crossing. He speaks about everything from his relationship with Tom Watson, theories on

golf swings, the challenges of family, and international travel from Bend. But Kidd, wh o d esigned Tetherow Golf Club in Bend and is best known for designi ng Bandon Dunes on t h e southern Oregon Coast, has his latest project on his mind. To hear hi m t a l k a b out G amble Sands is to b e r e minded of what Bandon Dunes, which opened in 1999, was before it became a pilgrimage for golfers around the world. "It's not near anywhere," Kidd says of Gamble Sands in his native Scottish accent. "But it's worth getting there." Most wh o h a v e e x p erienced Bandon Dunes would

But for other golfers, Tetherow represents a challenge too steep to climb. "It was important to me to sort of shake the criticism of Tetherow," Kidd says. "People find it really hard, and I do, too." Unlike most of his projects these days — which required him to travel from Bend to Dubai to London just a week ago — Gamble Sands is just a driver and a pitch shot away. The proximity of Tetherow rP ' h as curtailed some of t h e David McLay Kidd poses with pro golfer Tom Watson in London. grueling travel schedule for Kidd, who designs links-style courses, is working on a course in the single Kidd, who shares England with Watson, who is one of the best links golfers in history. custody o f h i s 9 - y ear-old daughter Kidd saw much of his U.S."We were seduced by the based work dry up when redescribe that facility in much the same way. romance of this super-hard, cession gripped the nation in Gamble Sands has other difficult (course)," Kidd says. 2008 and pummeled the golf similarities to Bandon Dunes He built golf courses with development business. The too, Kidd says. The course is an elite player in mind, forget- last time he opened a course designed among rolling sand ting that golf is more enjoy- in this country was in 2009, dunes. The links-style track ablefor average golfers when and Gamble Sands is perhaps features wide fairways that a course is not beating them the last one he will take on for make it " a r e a l c h a llenge over the head. He is remind- the foreseeable future. to lose a golf ball," and it is ed of that whenever he visits He also took a p i ece of meant to e n tertain g olfers Bandon, something he does home to B r ewster, designrather than abuse them. frequently. ing the clubhouse in a way "It's very much like Ban"I can see how much more that is "a very close rip-off" don," Kidd says. "It's soft, roll- fun people have when they of 10 Barrel Brewing's pub ing undulations of sand, and see opportunity," Kidd says. on Bend's Galveston Avenue, the whole golf course is wall- "The language I keep kick- he says. But instead of rollto-wall fescue." ing around with other folks top doors opening to an outMost important, he says, it in the golf design business is door fire pit, he says, Gamble 'Keeping players engaged and Sands opens up to a driving is fun. Gamble Sands - along keeping them hopeful.' range, practice green, first tee "lt is a return back to what and 18th green. with his other recent work in places like Nicaragua, South Bandon Dunes and o t hers All of it is meant to be fun. K orea and Portugal — w i l l were back at the start of my To the few who have seen represent a return to the sim- career." Gamble Sands, Kidd appears ple philosophy that led Kidd Kidd designed Tetherow, to have hit his mark. "There are several great i n his e arliest work w h en which opened in 2008, during it opens to the public next that era of difficult courses. holes, and those that aren't summer. He is proud of hi s w ork great are merely very good," Kidd says that in the midat the Bend course, and he gushes Tony Dear, a f r ee2 000s he, like many in t h e should be. For those who see lance writer based in Seattle, Kidd's intent, the scraggly, who recently was among the small group of his peers, fell in love with the idea of resis- fescue-covered m o o nscape Northwest media to get a pretance to par, and that harder of a golf course can be a thrill view of the course, in Colowas actually better. ride of sorts. rado AvidGolfer magazine.

itgea ~'

"The emphasis is on fun and playability w i t h ge n e rous fairways, and banks that are shaved to ease the ball's path toward the hole or kept long to prevent it f ro m r u n ning into something nasty." Just what Kidd wants to hear. "It's not on anyone's doorstep," Kidd says. "So I need people to go up there and have a RIDICULOUS amount of fun and have it at EXCEEDINGLY good value. And that's how the word of mouth will work. "I would definitely like to

see it on a pilgrimage of the

(elite) Northwest golf courses," he adds. One thing is certain. When Kidd starts speaking about golf courses worthy of a pilgrimage, it is a good idea to listen. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.

I

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686 NW York Drive, Ste.150 Bend, OR i 541-306-3263

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.

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LOW

27 WEST Mostly sunny skies and seasonable conditions today.

As t oria 64/42

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Seasideo 63/45 • Cannon Peach

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McMinnville 64/39

Lmcoln City 65/49

Sa n dy

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Government CamP strdo

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Eugene •

56/33 Unlo~

54/36

46/27

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57/25

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62/38

Coos Bay 67/43 •

Roseburg

64/43

72/35

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68/49 xt

• 71/36

57/31

Rome

Brookings

58/25

• Klamath

• Brookings

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56/28

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Chiloquin

Yesterday's state extremes

51/27

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54/1 9

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Falls 5/vze

74/48

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56/34

53/27

58/28

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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 719 a m Moon phases Sunsettoday.... 6 22 p.m F ull L ast N e w First Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:20 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 6:21 p.m l• Moonrisetoday.... 4:03 p.m Moonsettoday .... 2:33 a.m Oct. 18 Oct. 26 Nov. 3 Nov. 9

• Pl

PLANET WATCH

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....9:38 a.m...... 7:01 p.m. Venus.....11:36 a.m...... 8:11 p.m. Mars.......2:45 a.m......432 p.m. Jupiter.....11;15 pm...... 2 28 p.m. Satum......8:57 a.m...... 7;16 p.m. Uranus.....5:48 p.m...... 6:22 a.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 48/39 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high........ 81 m 1964 Month to date.......... 0.06" Record low......... 14 in 1969 Average month todate... 0.1 7" Average high.............. 63 Year to date............ 4.07" Averagelow ..............33 A verageyeartodate..... 7.35"

Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.22 Record24 hours ...0.39 in1972 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

WATER REPORT

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

Astoria ........62/35/0.00.....64/42/s......67/45/s Baker City......55/33/0.00.....56/27/s......57/30/s Brookings..... 70/45/trace.....74/48/s......74/48/s Burns..........55/22/0.00.....55/24/s......56/27/s Eugene........57/39/0.00.....62/37/s......66/40/s Klamath Falls .. 55/30/000 ....58/26/s ... 61/29/s Lakeview...... 48/34/0.00 ....53/27/s..... 56/29/s La Pine.........48/37/NA.....55/23/s......58/24/s Medford.......63/41/0.00.....71/36/s.....73/39/pc Newport.......57/43/0.00.....66/46/s......69/46/s North Bend...... 59/41INA.....66/44/s......66/46/s Ontario........66/46/0.00.....63/35/s......60/36/s Pendleton......60/40/0.00.....62/34/s......66/37/s Portland .......63/45/0.00.....65/43/s......69/46/s Prineville....... 50/40/0.00.....58/28/s......61/30/s Redmond.......52/41/0.00.....57/25/s......60/29/s Roseburg....... 62/44/0.00..... 68/40/f.....69/41Ipc Salem ....... 62/39/0 00 ....65/39/s ... 71/43/s Sisters.........53/40/0.00.....55/26/s......57/29/s The Dages......66/44/0.00.....66/37/s......68/40/s

Sisters..............................Low La Pine...............................Low Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine..........................Low Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 32,821...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 58,565..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 57,252...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . . 9,915...... 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 82,761..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 218 for solar at n. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 35.0 C rescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . . 9 L OW DI U M HI G H Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 168 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 113 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . . 645 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res..... . . . . . 24 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 72.9 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 2.53 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 168 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

IPOLLEN COUNT

OY,, •

Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......76/63/0 00...76/62/t. 68/54/pc GrandRapids....64/46/0 13..,66/47/s. 68/55/sh RapidCity.......58/33/000...43/32/r.. 45/34/s Savannah.......83/70/0 00..76/63/sh. 77/60/pc Akron ..........69/60/0.02..68/52/pc. 74/56/sh GreenBay.......61/43/0.00..61/48/pc. 58/49/sh Reno...........55/43/0.00... 62/34/s .. 63/36/s Seattle..........59/44/0.00... 60/44/s .. 64/46/s Albany..........69/54/0.00..67/50/pc. 72/50/pc Greensboro......65/61/0.05..70/54/pc. 70/51/pc Richmond.......67/64/0.26 ..71/55/pc.72/58/pc SiouxFalls.......65/28/0.00 .. 52/45/sh. 48/38/sh Albuquerque.....78/52/000...69/42/s. 66/39/pc Harnsburg.......69/57/003..67/49/pc.. 70/51/s Rochester, NY....71/53/0.00 .. 61/51/sh.67/55/pc Spokane........55/27/0.00... 58/33/s. 57/37/pc Anchorage ......49/42/0.32..47/42/sh...49/42/r Hartford,CT .....61/51/0.00...68/48/s.. 71/50/s Sacramento......77/52/000... 79/51/s .. 81/51/s Springfield, MO ..70/53/000 ..69I57/pc...64/47/t Atlanta .........82/60/0.00..76/59/pc.74/58/pc Helena..........52/32/0.00..49/29/pc.. 55/30/s St. Louis.........74/48/000..71/58/pc...71/53/t Tampa..........87/68/000 ..86/69/pc. 87/71Ipc Atlantic City .....66/58/0 00..69/55/pc.. 69/65/s Honolulu........85/72/000..85/72/sh. 86/73/sh Salt Lake City....59/49/005 .. 51/39/sh.51/37/pc Tucson..........89/58/000...86/56/s .. 84/55/s Austin..........77/68/2.77...86/71/t.84167lpc Houston ........76/72/0.28..87/72/pc. 87/72/pc SanAntonio.....79/68/0.71... 88/73/t. 86/69/pc Tulsa...........76/59/0.00... 69/60/t...71/4!/t Baltimore .......65/57/0 10..70/50/pc.. 71/55/s Huntsvige.......84/56/0 00..7559/pc. 76/61lpc SanDiego.......68/63/0.00... 72/59/s.. 78/61/s Washington,DC.66/61/0.02 .. 70/54/pc.. 72/57/s Bigings .........42/33/0.09.. 42/31/rs.48/33/pc Indianapolis.....71/54/0.00...71/53/s. 75/59/sh SanFrancisco....73/51/0.00... 73/52/s.. 75/53/s Wichita.........72/48/0.00... 68/50/t. 61/43/pc Birmingham .. 84/60/0.00 ..82/61/pc. 78/61/pc Jackson,MS.... 85/66/0.00. 85/65/pc 83/65/pc SanJose........73/47/000.. 75/50/s.. 79/50/s Yakima.........64/31/000 64/34/s.. 65/38/s Bismarck........54/26/001 ... 46/37/r. 50/33/pc Jacksonvige......86/60/0 00.. 78/64lsh. 81/64/pc SantaFe........71/45/000...60/32/s. 57/31/pc Yuma...........89/62/000...87/62/s.. 87/61/s Boise...........62/35/0.00...59I34/s.. 58/35/s Juneau..........47/44/0.11... 47/42/r .. 48/37/c INTERNATIONAL Boston..........61/49/000...M/Slls .. 66/52/s Kansas City......70/44/0.00 ..69/56/pc. 60/43/pc BndgeportCT....64/53/000...66/51/s .. 68/55/s Lansing........ 65/46/trace...65/46/s. 70/56/sh Amsterdam......50/46/238 50/47/sh55/47lsh Mecca.........106/81/000 .98/76ls.. 98/77/s Buffalo.........68/57/014 ..64/52/sh. 70/57/pc LasVegas.......76/63/000...73/55/s .. 73/54/s Athens..........77/62/000... 78/62/s .. 76/66/s MexicoCity .....79/55/000 .74/50/pc.. 73/49/s BurlingtonVT....70/47/000..68/48/sh.68/50/pc Lexington.......78/50/001 ..73/57/pc.74/60/sh Auckland........64/55/000 ..68/50/sh.60/50/pc Montreal........68/48/000..66/52/sh. 61/52/pc Caribou,ME.....59/34/0.00...62/41/c.. 59/41/s Lincoln..........69/35/0.00...63/47lt. 56/39/pc Baghdad........91/60/0.00... 95/74/s .. 94/70/s Moscow........54/36/0.00 ..42/30/pc.. 47/37/c Charleston, SC...77/67/000 ..76/62/sh. 77/60/pc Little Rock.......80/64/0.00 ..75/6upc...73/60/t Bangkok........97/82/0.00..92/72/sh...85/72/r Nairobi.........84/59/0.00 ..77/55/sh.. 79/53/s Charlotte........71/63/002..73/55/pc. 73/55/pc LosAngeles......69/61/000...73/61/s..82/61/s Beiyng..........64/57/0.00..64/47/pc .. 56/46/s Nassau.........86/79/0.00... 82/75/t. 82/77/pc Chattanooga.....83/54/000..78/57/pc.78/57/pc Louisvige........78/62/000...74/58/s. 77/63/sh Beirut..........79/66/000... 78/67/s .. 80/68/s New Delhi.......88/75/000 ..94/74/pc .. 96/72/s Cheyenne.......59/33/000 ..45/28/sh.. 40/28/c MadisonWl.....62/39/000..62/47/pc. 60/47/sh Berlin...........54/39/000..54/46lpc. 56/45/sh Osaka..........79/55/000..74/63/pc...69/53/r Chicago...... 64/45/000...63I54/s. 67/55/sh Memphis....... 81/65/000 80/62/pc .. 74/64/t Bogota .........66/52/012...62/50/t...62/47lt Oslo............57/32/000 ..45/4ush .. 47/35/c Cincinnati.......74/53/001...72/56/s. 75/60/sh Miami..........86/72/000..85/73/pc.87//4/pc Budapest........68/45/046 ..61/53/sh.62/49/sh Ottawa.........68/46/000 ..66/45/sh. 64/48/pc Cleveland.......68/58/000 ..65/56/pc. 73/59/pc Milwaukee......62/46/000..59/53/pc. 62/53/sh BuenosAires.....73/61/000 75/57/pc .. .. 80/59/s Paris............57/39/000... 53/44/r. 57/46/pc Colorado Spnngs.64/32/000..61/32/pc. 45/33lpc Minneapolis.....61/39/0.00 ..58/48/pc. 52/43/sh CaboSanLucas ..82/75/6.05... 91/73/t .. 90/67/c Rio de Janeiro....88/70/0.00... 86/70/c. 81/67/pc Columbia,MO...74/47/000 ..70/58/pc...67/46/t Nashvige........82/61/000 ..78/60/pc...76/61/t Cairo...........86/68/000... 87/63/s .. 86/63/s Rome...........77/57/000 ..71/64/pc. 71/62/sh Columbia,SC....75/66/000 ..75/59/pc. 75/56/pc New Orleans.....87/73/0.00..87/69/pc. 84/69/pc Calgaiy.........46/34/000...50/30/s .. 57/37/s Santiago........77/46/000...68/62/s .. 70/61/s Columbus, GA....87/58/0.00..81/62/pc. 79/60/pc New York.......65/56/0.00...70/56/s .. 72/56/s Cancun.........86/75/000..83/74/pc...84/73/t Sao Paulo.......82/63/000 .. 83/63/sh. 75/63/sh ColumbusOH....71/6U000...72/55/s. 76/60/pc Newark Nl......66/55/000...70/53/s.. 73/55/s Dublin..........52/46/002..51/45/sh. 55/49/pc Sapporo ........55/52/011..62/43/pc. 66/39/sh Concord,NH.....58/37/000...68/45/s .. 68/45/s Norfolk VA......72/66/0 05..73/62/sh. 72/60/pc Edinburgh.......55/48/000..51/46/sh.53/45/sh Seoul...........73/48/000..71/47/sh. 54/40/sh Corpus Christi....92/76/0.00..87/76/pc. 86/76/pc Oklahoma City...73/62/0.00... 71/59/t...64/47/t Geneva.........57/43/030..58/47/sh. 50/48/sh Shanghai........81/63/000..77/53/pc.68/55/sh DallasFtWorth...77/68/0.00... 7I67/t...73/56/t Omaha.........70/34/0.00... 63/46/1. 55/40/pc Harare..........91/63/000 ..86/59/sh.83/55/pc Singapore.......90/79/001 ..81l78/sh. 89/78/sh Dayton .........73/54/0.00...Tt/55/s. 75/59/sh Orlando.........87/64/0.00..86/67/pc.87/68/pc HongKong......90/81/0.00 .. 85/68/sh. 71/64/sh Stockholm.......55/34/0.00... 44/40/c. 48/38/pc Denver..........68/35/001 ..58/32/pc. 45/31/pc PalmSprings.... 83/57/0.00. 81/60/s .. 80/60/s Istanbul.........68/59/000 ..63/50/pc. 67/61Ipc Sydney..........95/57/000 ..69/59/pc. 78/48/pc Des Moines......67/39/000..68/52/pc. 60/43/pc Peoria..........68/43/0 00... 68/53/s. 68/48/sh lerusalem.......75/58/000... 75/58/s .. 78/59/s Taipei...........82/75/000 ..80/63/pc. 76/63/sh Detroit..........69/58/000...64I51/s. 66/59/pc Philadelphia.....70/58/0.00 ..70/52/pc.. 71/60/s Johannesburg....84/6ll/0.00...72/48ls .. 74/53/5 Tel Aviv.........81/66/0.00...83/65/s .. 84/65/s Duluth..........57/39/000... 50/46/r...49/43/r Phoenix.........86/62/000... 84/60/s .. 85/60/s Lima...........68/59/0.00... 72/59/s .. 73/59/s Tokyo...........79/64/0.00.. 71/67/pc...72/5ir El Paso..........81/59/000 ..82/57/pc. 79/54/pc Pittsburgh.......71/60/0 00 ..70/52/pc. 74/55/pc Lisbon..........70/57/000 70/60/sh 74/61/pc Toronto.........63/59/009 61/46/s. 63/50/pc Fairbanks........49/38/0.00.. 46/30/rs.. 49/36/c Portland,ME.....58/43/0.00...65/47/s.. 65/49/s London.........54/46/074..49/43/sh.56/43/pc Vancouver.......54/39/000...59/43/s. 55/45/pc Fargo...........59/33/000... 48/42/r.49/37lsh Providence......62/50/0 00...66/49/s ..70/51/s Madrid.........66/45/000 ..70/51Ipc.76/58/pc Vienna..........59/41/000 .. 58/50/pc. 64/46/pc Flagstaff........58/29/000...57/25/s.. 56/27/s Raleigh.........67/62/001..70/55/pc.70/53/pc Manila..........90/77/074 ..81/74/sh.86/74/sh Warsaw.........59/50/000...49/45/c. 58/45/sh

/

59/5

Thunder Bay

• Seattle 60/44

Fraser, Colo.

HIGH LOW

60 32

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m (in the 48 contiguous states):

HIGH LOW

60 33

Legend Wweather,Pcpprecipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze, shshowers,r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

HIGH LOW

59 31

Yesterday Monday Tuesday Bend,westofHwy97.....Low Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastof Hwy.97......Low

Baker City

Sunny and mild

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

C4 MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2013•THE BULLETIN

DAILY B R I D G E

CLU B

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Wiii Sh ortz

M onday,october 14,2013

ACROSS

3e Luster 41 South Korea's onstage capital s Ebony 42 Work of ao What a 4s Rat (on) definition 46 Panda's favorite defines plant 14 Opening for a 4s Gladden coin so 1960 John as The "U" in UHF Updike novel 26 Jai s3 Swiss peak 37 Theater critic s4 Prolonged Walter attack as Wage increase ss Genuine 2o Carpet layer's s7 It may be calculation composed to

Blocked suits

3 Plays a part

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

There is no worse feeling — I know, having experienced it — than gazing at t r i cks yo u c an't t a ke because of a blocked suit. (Your stomach may feel like a load of wet clothes at the bottom of a dryer.) In t o day's d e al , N o r t h-South stopped at 3NT, and when West led the king o f s p ades, South saw nothing better than to take the ace and cash out. But something went wrong: After South took the ace, queen andking of diamonds, he had to win the fourth diamond with his eight. He had no way back to the fifth diamond, and his nine tricks turned into eight.

your left, opens two hearts (weak). Your partner doubles, and the next player passes. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner's double is for takeout. His hand will be worth 16 or more points in support of any suit (or he may have a strong hand with a suit of his own). Bid three spades to try for your most likely game. You must jump to show values; a response of two spades would show none. South dealer E-W vulnerable

DAILY QUESTION

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36 "Observant of you to notice the error!"

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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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23 Dog doc 24 Journalist's credential 26 Wage increase Zs Frightened by shots 29 Golda of Israel 3o Inclined (to) 31 Characteristic 3s Takes home, as

NORTH 4aA632 9 J2 O K 54 3 2 AJ4

3-1 BREAK South would have been safe if diamonds had split 2-2. But in case of a 3-1 break, he must refuse the first spade. If West continues with the queen, dummy plays low again. If West then leads a club — he has no better defense — South wins and cashes the A-Q-K of diamonds. He d iscards his b l o cking e i ght o f diamonds on the ace of spades and takes two more diamonds to assure the contract. This week: unblocking.

22

E L S I N K T E I N T O

RA N I A I N MA J CE A N D S R L A S

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S U E T

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3Pose,as a 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 question 2 Become less 14 15 16 cloudy 3 Flood 17 18 19 4 Cause of gray 20 21 22 23 hair and worry lines, some say 24 25 26 27 s Vehicle that may have a 28 29 farebox 6 Long-necked 30 31 32 33 34 35 animal in a petting zoo 36 37 7 Book of maps 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 6 Betting game with dice 45 46 47 9 Communism theorist Marx 48 49 50 51 52 ao Cry from a nursery 53 54 55 56 aa Best Actor for 58 59 60 61 "Hamlet," 1948 57 22 Makes hand 62 63 64 over fist 13 Ones who've 65 66 67 got something to lose? 26 "Get Y a - YasPUZZLE BY GARY CEE Out!" (Rolling s2 Flat-crowned 44 Ship's unit of Stones album) 3e One way to serve clams or weight cap Za Kutcher of rice "Two and a Half 47 Sicilian volcano ss AOL and MSN Men" 39 Terrific, in slang 49 PC keyfor 24 Links org. 46 Ran out, as problem ss One of the time Zs One who situations Gershwins delights in 42 President starting fires, so Postgame Lincoln ss Before, informally wrap-up poetically 43 Dish of meat 27 Far Eastern wrapped sa Ancient Greek housemaid around a filling marketplace 63 Looking sickly 32 Commercials 33 Skater's surface For answers, call 1-900-285-5856, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. 34 Chinese Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday principle crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. 3s Cream-filled ATIbT users: Text NYTX lo 388 lo download puzzles, or visit pastry nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past 36 Moolah puzzles, nylimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 37 Ernest of the Country Music Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytirne.ccmrn/Iearning/xwdr. Hall of Fame

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INV O K E EYEL I D J u mbles: TRICK G UARD Answer: The man who sold fake tennis equipment online was charged with — RACKETEERING

33 '30s-'40s film d 34 Logger's tool 36 Man and Capr 38 Final triumph a apparent failur 42 Fancy mushro 45 Metric distance Abbr. 46 Roadies' loads 50 Prefix with sex 51 Yale student 54 Kevin Kline's "French Kiss" costar 56 Offensive in the First Gulf War 59 -Caps: candy 60 Bug-killing brand 61 Deer daughter 62 How some stock is sold 64 Sent to the unemployment line 66 Retrace one's steps, and what ends of 17-, 25-, 38- and 56Across can literally have 69 Key in 70 Mine, to Mimi 71 Java Freeze brand 72 Swiped 73 Tree anchor 74 Breakfast, e.g.

DOWN 1 Eyelash appl i cation 2 Stirs to action 30ne Dfa vacat i oning buslo a d 4 Turnpike fee 5 Pres. Dn a dime 6 "Glee" actress Michele 7 Sci-fi invader

39 Angel or Athletic, briefly 40 Rifle range need 41 Laptop operator 42 Confuses 43 Price of bubble

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

audience

9 Gas additive letters 10 See-through 11 Revealing, as a celeb interview 12 "An" or "the" 13 Tends to a lawn's

T A B R I Z S AQ U I NO L J UM B L E E M A S S E M A A F T T A R Z H I E S N L E A N E MO N E S L A R A M I E Z E E Z AS P E N H E S H O M A P S I T S T I G H E L A T E D L Y N O L O N G E R T H E A T E R S xwordeditorieaol.com

bare spot 18 AutoCorrect target 22 JOhn's Yoko 26 Distinctive periods 27 Bagel shop call 28 Itty-bitty branch 30 Fish story 35 Moose relative 37 -Pei: wrinkly C(09 2

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44 Trattoria rice dish 47 Leader in social networking until 2008 48 Cure-all 49 Enjoy coral reefs

8 Karaoke singer's

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62 66

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By C.C. Burnikel (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

10/1 4/1 3


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

: I.

®

ATVs

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 14 2013

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers •

o p g ll

nI e • n ~

882

908

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

I

C5

933

Antique & Classic Autos

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

1$-H r

Snowmobiles

Suzuki powered custom Dune Buggy, twin 650 cc motor, 5-spd, with trailer, $3500. 541-389-3890

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 870 EXT, $1000. Boats & Accessories • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, SOLD! 12' Mirrocraft wide & • Zieman 4-place deep, 15hp Johnson, trlr, trailer, SOLD! $700. 541-388-7598 All in good condition. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.

$25,000.

541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

860

Motorcycles & Accessories 16'9" Larson All American, 1971, V-hull, 120hp I/O, 1 owner, always garaged, w/trlr, exc cond, $2000. 541-788-5456 18' Bass Tracker Tour1 982 H o nd a Si l v er nament Model 1800FS, Wing. S haft d r ive.$8500. 541-389-8786 Very good condition. w/ 2 helmets $1,000. Fairing with s addle b ags a n d tru n k . 360-870-6092

Monaco Windsor, 2001, 40-ft, loaded! (was $234,000 new) Solid-surface counters, convection/micro, 4-dr, fridge, washer/dryer, ceramic tile & carpet, TV, DVD, satellite dish, leveling, 8-airbags, power cord reel, 2 full pass-thru trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Diesel gen set. $74,900 503-799-2950 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755

2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384

Buell 1125R, 2008 15k

miles, reg. s ervice, well cared for. factory Buell optional fairing kit, Michelin 2cc tires, will trade for ie: Enduro DR 650, $5700 obo. 541-536-7924.

PRICFRBUCNi 20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for l ife $ 8900 O B O . 541-379-3530

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces,

wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-abed g chair, all records, no pets or s moking. $28,450.

21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with outdrive. Bimini top

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.

DITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper that fits 6~/2' pickup bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

tl

a ~

.I -

.

appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. 350hp diesel engine, Tow with ~/2-ton. Strong $129,900. 30,900 miles, suspension; can haul great condition! ATVs snowmobiles, Extended warranty, even a small car! Great dishwasher, washer/ price - $8900. dryer, central vac, roof Call 541-593-6266 satellite, aluminum Look at: wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Bendhomes.com Falcon-2 towbar and for Complete Listings of Even-Brake included. Area Real Estate for Sale Call 541-977-4150

Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For I "boats" please see Winnebago Suncruiser34' Class 870. 2004, 35K, loaded, too 541-385-5809 much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243

The Bulletin 880

Motorhomes

T r a vel Trailers •

541-548-4807

Suzuki DRZ400 SM 2007, 14K mi., 4 gal. tank, racks, recent tires, $4200 OBO. 541-383-2847.

EXCELLENT CON-

TIFFIN PHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT

HDFatBo 1996

541-306-8812

batteries, sleeps 4-5,

WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/

$7500 obo. 541-382-2577

The Bulletin

Street Glide 2006 black cherry metal f lake, good extras, 8 ,100 miles, will take some trade of firearms or small ironhead. $14,000.

Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual

& moorage cover,

The Bulletin

$17,000

Monaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps 34 ft.; 3 s lides; im6-8 comfortably, has maculate c o ndition; w/d, dishwasher, many l arge screen TV w / extras, fully l o aded. entertainment center; $29,600 obo. Located reclining chairs; cenin Bend. 682-777-8039 ter kitchen; air; queen bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. $22,900 OBO.

Call 541-771-4800

541-385-5809 Health Forces Sale! 2007 Harley Davidson FLHX Street Glideservmg central oreqon«nce 1903 Too many extras to list! 6-spd, cruise control, stereo, batt. tender, cover. Set-up for long haul road trips. Dealership svc'd. Only 2,000 miles. Tioga 24' Class C PLUS H-D cold weather Beautiful Motorhome h o u seboat, gear, rain gear, packs, Bought new in 2000, $85,000. 541-390-4693 helmets, leathers currently under 20K www.centraloregon & much more. $15,000. miles, excellent houseboat.com. 541-382-3135 after 5pm shape, new tires, GENERATE SOME exprofessionaly wintercitement in your neigized every year, cutborhood. Plan a gaoff switch to battery, rage sale and don't plus new RV batterforget to advertise in ies. Oven, hot water classified! 385-5809. heater & air conditioning have never Harley Davidson Sportbeen used! ster 2 0 01 , 1 2 0 0cc, serving central oregon sincento $24,000 obo. Serious 9,257 miles, $4995. Call inquiries, please. Michael, 541-310-9057 875 Stored in Terrebonne. Watercraft 541-548-5174

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

Monte Carlo 2012 Limited Edition, 2 slides, 2

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

interior =9. New paint bottom half & new roof seal 2012. 300 Turbo CAT, 89K

mi. Engine diagnostic =perfect 9/20/13.

Cougar 33 lt. 2006, 14 ft. slide, awning, easy lift, stability bar, bumper extends for extra cargo, all access. incl., like new condition, stored in RV barn, used less than 10 t imes loc ally, no p ets o r smoking. $20,000 obo. 541-536-2709.

Good batteries, tires. All service done at Beaver Coach, Bend. $42,500,

Chev P/U 1968, custom cab, 350 crate, AT, new paint, chrome, orig int, gas tank under bed, $10,900 obo. 541-788-9648

Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer.

541-815-3636 Recreation by Design Ford Ranchero 1965 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Rhino bedliner cusTop living room 5th tom wheels, 302V-8 wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 a uto. R u n s go o d ' t,~. A/Cs, entertainment $9,995. 541-389-0789 center, fireplace, W/D, ,HHMeHHI garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 Ford F350 2006/ Brush or best offer. Call Peter, Bandit XL 150 wood 307-221-2422, chipper T ruck h a s ( in La Pine ) V-10, 21k miles, HD WILL DELIVER Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 winch w/custom HD engine, power everyfront bumper, air load thing, new paint, 54K o 0 0

00

bags w/12' dump bed. 2006 Chipper w/1 90 hours, 12" feed disc w/110hp Cat diesel. Set-up like new. New o ver $ 90,000, s e l l $59,900 obo. Will separate. 541-350-3393

original m i les r uns great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179

Aircraft, Parts & Service

//o12Y

GMC 2004 16' refrigerated box van, gvw 20,000, 177,800 mi, diesel, 6 spd manual with on-spot automatic tire chains. Thermo-King reefer has 1,635 engine hours. $19,995.

GMC Vi ton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171

541-419-4172.

your ad, please con-

tact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

541-419-8184

matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call

541-382-2577

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct."Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

FORD XLT1992 3/4 ton 4x4

Wntim~~

908

Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition.

Mustang 1966 2 dr. coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 cyl. Over $12,000 invested, asking $9000. All receipts, runs good. 541-420-5011

Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand 541-447-51 84. 928-581-9190 dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + Plymouth B a r racuda extras. $6500 for all. 1966, original car! 300 I nternational Fla t 541-389-7669. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 hp, 360 V8, centerton dually, 4 s p d. I:; i'' " ' IM@'~ a lines, 541-593-2597 trans., great MPG, SuperhavvkMONTANA 3585 2008, PROJECT CARS: Chevy could be exc. wood Only 1 Share exc. cond., 3 slides, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & hauler, runs great, Available king bed, Irg LR, Chevy Coupe 1950 new brakes $1950. Economical flying Arctic insulation, all rolling chassis's $1750 541-419-5480. in your own options $35,000 obo. ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Chevy Wagon 1957, complete car, $ 1949; IFR equipped 541-420-3250 4-dr., complete, Cessna 172/180 HP for Series 61 1950, $7,000 OBO / trades. Cadillac Nuw/a297LK HitcHiker only $13,500! New 2 dr. hard top, complete Sport Utility Vehicles Please call 2007, Out of consignGarmin Touchscreen w /spare f r on t cl i p ., 541-389-6998 ment, 3 slides, 32' awonics center stack! Acura MDX 2010, 56k $3950, 541-382-7391 perfect for snow birds, Exceptionally clean! mi„blue. ¹527133 left kitchen, rear Hangared at BDN. $32,995 lounge, extras. First CaII 541-728-0773 $25,000 buys it. 541-447-5502 days & Oregon 918 541-447-1641 eves. AutoSouroe Trucks & 541-598-3750 Corvette Coupe 1964 VW Bug Sedan, 1969, Heavy Equipment www.aaaoregonauto530 miles since frame fully restored, 2 owners source.com off restoration. Runs with 73,000 total miles, and drives as new. $10,000. 541-382-5127 Satin Silver color with black leather interior, OPEN ROAD 36' mint dash. PS, P B, Pickups 2005 - $28,000 AC, 4 speed. Knock King bed, hide-a-bed 1987 Freightliner COE 3- offs. New tires. Fresh Almost Perfect Chev BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K sofa, 3 slides, glass axle truck, Cummins en- 327 N.O.M. All Cormiles, premium packshower, 10 gal. wa- gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 vette restoration parts S10 long bed, 1988 4.3 V6, professional age, heated lumbar ter heater, 10 cu.ft. obo. 541-419-2713 in & out. Reduced to fridge, central vac, r ebuilt engine, 4 7 k supported seats, pan$59,500. 541-410-2870 since installed, dual oramic moonroof, s atellite dish, 27 " Bluetooth, ski bag, XeTV/stereo syst., front pipes, custom grill, non headlights, tan & front power leveling sunroof, full canopy jacks an d s c issor cab h i gh , C l a rion black leather interior, stabilizer jacks, 16' AM/FM/CD re m o te n ew front g rea r '/ awning. Like new! radio. Looks great, brakes @ 76K miles, 541-419-0566 runs strong, always one owner, all records, Backhoe Ford Model A 1930 garaged. $3,550 firm. very clean, $16,900. 2007 John Deere 541-388-4360 541-504-0663. Coupe, good condition, 310SG, cab 4x4, $16,000. 541-588-6084 4-in-1 bucket Bronco 1982, headers, lift kit, new tires, runs Extendahoe, Say"goodbuy" great. $2000. hydraulic thumb, 541-549-4563. loaded, like new, to that unused 500 hours. The Bulletin Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th item by placing it in New $105,000. wheel, 1 s lide, AC, To Subscribe call Sell $69,900 TV,full awning, excelThe Bulletin Classifieds Chevy 2500 HD 2003 541-385-5800 or go to 541-350-3393 4 WD w o r k t ru c k , lent shape, $23,900. 140,000 miles, $7000 www.bendbulletin.com 541-350-8629 5 41-385-580 9 obo. 541-408-4994. Ford 1965 6-yard Ford Edge SEL Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD dump truck, good 2010, SLT quad cab, short box, paint, recent overLeather, heated auto, AC, high mileage, haul, everything seats, AWD. $12,900. 541-389-7857 works! $3995. Vin¹ B32300

Fifth Wheels •

CHECKYOUR AD

Beaver Monterey 36' 1998, Ig kitchen & sofa slide, perfect leather. W/D, elec. awn, dash computer, 2 TVs. Always covered. Exterior= 8,

Pnce Reduced! Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at

I e~

~

Dodge 2500 extra cab 2001,

long bed, diesel, 4x4, only 80K miles Vin¹717200

Now $24,995 dlr¹267515

541-475-7204

Ford Fusion SE 2011,

dlr¹267515

541-475-7204

Auto, alloy wheels, excellent condition. Vin¹ 261611

Now $14,995 F350 4-dr diesel 2004 pickup, auto, King Ranch, 144K, excellent, extras, $16,995 obo. 541-923-0231

Ford F150 2004, extended cab, V8, long box. Vin¹ C46750

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located O Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo.

Now $21,995

dlr¹267515

541-475-7204 What are you looking for? You'll find it in

The Bulletin Classifieds Now $10,995 GMC Sierra 1977 short bed, e xlnt o r i ginal cond., runs 8 drives 541-385-5809 great. V8, new paint and tires. $4950 obo. Honda CR-V EXL 2012 541-948-2963 541-504-1050 leather, moon, 19k mi.. JCB 2006 214 E diesel ¹029547 • $27,995 backhoe with Hammer Master 360 rock dlr¹267515 hammer 18" dig Oregon 541-475-7204 bucket, quick coupler, Aulosourre backhoe has 380 hrs, 541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonauto1 /3 interest i n w e l l - rock hammer has 80 Want to impress the h ours. Li k e n e w , source.com equipped IFR Beech BoMGA 1959 - $19,999 relatives? Remodel nanza A36, new 10-550/ $ 37,500 obo . C a n Convertible. O r igiHonda Pilot 2004 3.5 lipurchase Kodiak GMC your home with the nal body/motor. No prop, located K BDN. top kick 5 yard dump tre 6 cyl., 4WD, A/C, help of a professional $65,000. 541-419-9510 and 28' trailer for add'I rust. 541-549-3838 PW/PS, S-pass., DVD from The Bulletin's ent. sys., all service $25,000 Need help fixing stuff? Ot-) "Call A Service ~ records, one owner, Call A Service Professional 541-350-3393 mi $7 500 find the help you need. MorePixatBendbuletin,com Professional" Directory 180k 541-408-5447 www.bendbulletin.com

x'

32' 1996, with Triumph Daytona Bounder, awnings, under 18K, 2004, 15K mi l e s , always gara g ed. perfect bike, needs $16,500. 541-923-7707 nothing. Vin ¹201536. $5995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend DreamCarsBend.com Coachman Freelander 541-678-0240 2008 32' Class C, Dlr 3665 M-3150 - pristine with just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, rear qn walkaround bed, sofa/hideabed,caboverbunk, ducted furn/AC, flat screen TV, skylight, pantry, 16' awning. No Victory TC 2002, pets/smkg - a must see! runs great, many $57,900. 541-548-4969

accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-647-4232 ATVs

HUNTERS! Honda Fat Cat 200cc

w/rear rack & receiver hitch carrier, used very little, exlnt cond, $1875 obo. 541-546-3330

Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, MXR Sport quad, dirt & sand tires,runs great, low hrs, $3750 541-647-8931

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft Iong, 2000 Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat

& air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird

ready, Many up-

grade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

Peterbilt 359 p o table water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h o ses, 1/5th interest in 1973 camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Cessna 150 LLC 541-820-3724 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and 931

engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-41 0-6007

I) IM, ~~ u

e

Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories A lmost n e w Mod a wheels, 17x8 & Blizzak 235/65R17 snow tires, $1200 - w o n't l ast! 760-550-1518 (Bend)

I

Toyo tubeless snow tires, 235/55Rx19, $149 ea. KeystoneLaredo 31' Keystone Challenger (new O $299 ea.) RV 20 06 w i th 1 2' 2004 CH34TLB04 34' 1974 Bellanca 541-382-9295 fully S/C, w/d hookups, slide-out. Sleeps 6, 1730A new 18' Dometic awqueen walk-around 932 bed w/storage underning, 4 new tires, new pgg~~ Kubota 7000w marine 2180 TT, 440 SMO, Antique & neath. Tub & shower. diesel generator, 3 180 mph, excellent 2 swivel rockers. TV. Classic Autos Air cond. Gas stove & slides, exc. cond. incondition, always o refrigerator/freezer. s ide & o ut. 27" T V hangared, 1 owner dvd/cd/am/fm entertain for 35 years. $60K. Microwave. Awning. E sho w e r. center. Call for more Fleetwood D i s covery Outside through stordetails. Only used 4 In Madras, 40' 2003, diesel mo- Slide 1921 Model T ge, E a s y Lif t . times total in last 5yi call 541-475-6302 torhome w/all a Delivery Truck $29,000 new; years.. No pets, no options-3 slide outs, Restored & Runs Asking$18,600 smoking. High r etail satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Executive Hangar 541-447-4805 $27,700. Will sell for $9000. etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. $24,000 including slid- at Bend Airport (KBDN) 541-389-8963 Wintered i n h e a ted 60' wide x 50' d eep, i ng hitch that fits i n shop. $84,900 O.B.O. your truck. Call 8 a.m. w/55' wide x 17' high bi541-447-8664 to 10 p.m. for appt to fold dr. Natural gas heat, 1952 Ford Customline offc, bathroom. Adjacent Coupe, project car, flatsee. 541-330-5527. to Frontage Rd; great head V-8, 3 spd extra visibility for aviation busi- parts, & materials, $2000 ness. Financing avail- obo. 541-410-7473 • 'e Layton 27-ft, 2001 able. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock@q.com Buick 1983 Front & rear entry Regal, T-type Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, Transmission rebuilt & G ulfstream S u n doors, bath, shower, Keystone Raptor, 2007 based in Madras, al- 3000 rpm stall converter; sport 30' Class A queen bed, slide-out, ways hangared since 37' toy hauler,2 slides, 1988 ne w f r i dge, oven, microwave, air 750 Holley double new. New annual, auto pumper w/milled air horn conditioning, patio generator, A/C, 2 TVs, TV, solar panel, new pilot, IFR, one piece awning, twin prosatellite system w/auto (flows 850 cfms); turbo refrigerator, wheelwindshield. Fastest Ar- rebuilt. Have receipts for seek, in/out sound syspane tanks, very c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W tem, sleeps 6,many ex- cher around. 1750 to- all 3 items. Plus addinice, great floor plan, g enerator, Goo d tras. $32,500. In Madras, tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500.tional work done. $3300 $8895. condition! $12,500 541-475-6947, ask for obo. Call for addtional 541-316-1388 call 541-771-9607 or obo 541-447-5504 541-475-6265 Rob Berg. info 541-480-5502

Easy, flexible, and affordable ad packages are alSO aVailable On Our Web Site. To PlaCe yOur Bulletin ad With a Photo, ViSit WWW.bendbulletin.COm, CliCk On

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

C6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 14 2013 •THE BULLETIN ~Sport Utility Vehicles

Autom o biles

Automobiles

BMW 525 2002 Luxury Sport Edition, V-6, automatic,

tnfiniti FX35 2012, Platinum silver, 24,000 miles, with

loaded, 18" new tires, 114k miles. $7,900 obo (541) 419-4152

factory wa r ranty, Buick CX Lucerne f ully l o aded, A l l 2006, 82k mi., Wheel Drive, GPS, cream leather, Black sunroof, etc. Beauty - Stunning $37,500. eye appeal, $6900. 541-550-7189 No charge for looking. Call 541-318-9999

Subaru Outback 2.5i wagon 2005, AWD, 2 .5 L , a u t o , a l o y w heels, r oo f r a c k , Vin ¹362964

@®S UBA R U . BUBARUOPBRND COM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Vin ¹178907

$19,488

541-815-9939

g® S UBA R U . HUBARUOPBEND COM

fphoro for illusrrarron only)

Chevy M alibu L TZ 2010, V6, auto w/overdrive, leather, loaded, 21K m i les,

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Toyota Celica Convertible 1993

Vin ¹103070

$18,888

) SUBA R U. SUBARUOPBRND COM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 (photo for illustrationonly) Dlr ¹0354 Jeep Patriot 2010, 4 cyl., 2.4 L, auto, 4WD, R oof r a c k , all o y

G T 2200 4

cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o n vertible around in this price range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. i n side and out. Fun car to d rive, M ust S E E ! $5995. R e dmond.

wheels, privacy glass. Vin ¹522540

$14,488 S UB A R U . B UBAltUOPBEND C O M

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Jeep Wrangler 2006, AWD, low miles, excellent Condition. Vin¹ 768177

CORVETTECOUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra

hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.

LEGAL NOTICE

IN

$9,988

Cadillac El Dorado Find It in 1994 Total Cream Puff! Body, paint, trunk as The Bulletin Classifieds! showroom, blue 541-385-5809 ELK HUNTERS! $1700 wheels Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. leather, Subaru STi 2010, w/snow tires although owner, 87k only 3k on car has not been wet in 16.5K, rack, mats, cust new 258 long block. snow whls, stored, one8 years. On trip to C lutch p kg , W a r n Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., owner, $29K, hubs. Excellent run- $4800. 541-593-4016.s 541.410.6904 ner, very dependable. Northman 6~/2' plow, FIND IT! Warn 6000¹ w i nch. BUY IT! $9500 or best reaSELL IT! sonable offer. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-549-6970 or 541-815-8105. Camaro 2001 V-6 auto, low miles. $7,495. La Toyota Avalon L M T 2007, V6, 3.5 L, auto, Pine. 805-452-5817 F WD, M oo n r o o f , leather, alloy wheels,

Jeep Grand Cherokee 1996 4x4, automatic, 135,000 miles Great shape - very nice interior, $3,900.

Legal Notices •

541-504-1993

THE

CIR C U IT

What are you looking for? You'll find it in

COURT O F THE The Bulletin Classifieds STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF CROOK J UVE541-385-5809 NILE DEPARTMENT. 1000 IN THE MATTER OF COOK, LUCAS, DOB: Legal Notices 07-17-2006, A Child.

CASE

NO.

LEGAL NOTICE 1 3JU00837. SUM - OREGON MONS. TO: SHARDI T RUSTEE'S N O COOK. IN THE NAME T ICE O F SAL E OF THE STATE OF T.S. No: L 543248 O REGON, you a r e OR U nit Code: L directed to a p pear Loan No: before the above en- 34158192/SCHULZ titled court at 300 NE A P ¹ 1: 182 1 3 4 Third Street, Prinev- Title ¹ : 832 6 332 ille, Oregon on Octo- Reference is made ber 28, 2013 at 9:00 to that certain Trust a.m. i n c o n nection Deed m ad e by with the above enCHAD D. SCHULZ titled matter. A hear- as Grantor, to THE ing will be held upon a RURAL HOUSING Petition filed on June S ERVICE OR I T S 5, 2013, concerning SUCCESSOR L ucas Cook. T h i s AGENCY as s ummons i s pu b - Trustee, in favor of lished pursuant to the UNITED S T A T ES order of th e C ircuit O F AMER I C A Judge of the Juvenile ACTING Court. The order diTHROUGH THE rects this summons RURAL HOUSING be published once a S ERVICE, SU C week for three weeks CESSOR I N IN circulation in Prinev- TEREST TO ille, Oregon. You have F MHA UNIT E D a right to be repre- STATES DEPARTsented by counsel at MENT O F A G R I-

e very stage of t h e proceeding. If you are financially unable to retain an attorney, the court will appoint one t o r e present y o u . Telephone (541) 447-6541 if you wish assistance in obtaining a court-appointed attorney. If you have questions about these matters, you should contact an a t torney immediately. Date of first publication: September 30, 2013. Date of second publication: October 7, 2013. Date of third p ublication: O ctober 14 , 2 0 1 3 . DATED this 16th day of September 2013. DAINA A. VITOLINS,

CULTURE as Beneficiary. Dated May 15, 2006, Rec orded Ma y 15 , 2006 as Instr. No. 2006-33483 in Book -- Page of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of DESCHUTES C o unty; O REGO N RE A M ORTIZATION

AGREEMENT D ATED 5/ 1 5 / 10

covering the following described real property situated in s aid c o unty a n d s tate, to wit: L O T 2, BL O C K 12, HAYDEN VILLAGE

PHASE IV, CITY OF Now $17,995 REDMOND, D ESDISTRICT A T T O R- CHUTES COUNTY, T oyota Corolla L E NEY. OREGON. Bot h 2011, Air, w i n d ow, the beneficiary and LEGAL NOTICE locks, cruise, auto. t he t r ustee h a v e NOTICE OF SEIZURE Vin ¹630707 elected to sell the FOR CIVIL said real property to $13,998 Honda Civic LX Sedan FORFEITURE TO ALL satisfy the o bligadlr¹267515 2010, 4 Cyl., a uto., POTENTIAL S UBA R U . t ions secured b y 541-475-7204 F WD, 25/36 M P G . CLAIMANTS AND TO said Trust Deed and V in ¹ 0 86931. N o w 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ALL UNKNOWN $12,788. 877-266-3821 PERSONS READ THIS a Notice of Default has been re CAREFULLY Dlr ¹0354 ) SUBARU. corded pursuant to Re v ised If you have any inter- Oregon 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend est i n t h e s e i zed Statutes 86.735(3); 877-266-3821 the d e f ault for property d e s cribed Dlr ¹0354 below, you must claim which the f orecloJ eep Wrangler 4 . 0 that interest or you will s ure is m ad e i s Sport 2004, 5 s p d , Mercedes Benz automatically lose that Grantor's failure to 4WD, tow pkg., ally E500 4-matic 2004 Toyota Matrix S 2009, interest. If you do not pay when due, the wheels, privacy glass, 86,625 miles, sunFWD, power window, file a c laim for t he following s u ms: 4 wide tires. roof with a shade, p ower locks, A / C . property, the property PYMTS FROM Vin ¹749542. loaded, silver, 2 sets Vin ¹023839 TO may be forfeited even 03/15/11 $15,988 of tires and a set of $13,488 06/15/11 im 764.35 if you are not conchains. $13,500. $3,057.40 13 S UBA RU. victed of any crime. 8UBhRUOPBHHD COM 541-362-5598 S UBA R U . PYMTS FROM To claim an interest, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. TO you must file a written 07/1 5/11 877-266-3821 Mustang GT 1995 red 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. claim with the forfei- 07/15/12 im 766.17 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 133k miles, Boss 302 11 ture counsel named $9,960.21 Dlr ¹0354 motor, custom pipes, FROM below, Th e w r itten PYMTS Lexus RX350 2009 5 s p ee d m a n ual, TO claim must be signed 08/15/12 AWD, Premium plus power windows, cus@ by you, sworn to un- 06/1 5/13 package, 38k miles tom stereo, very fast. 1,280.28 der penalty of perjury ¹108142 • $27,495 $5800. 541-280-7910 before a notary public, $14,083.08 TOTAL and state: (a) Your LATE C H A RGES true name; (b) The $69.99 Sub-Total of Autnsource in address at which you Amounts Toyota Venza 2009 541-598-3750 will a c cept f u t u re Arrears:$27,170.68 One Owneraaaorcgonautosource.com m ailings f ro m th e Together with any Great condition, court and f o rfeiture default in the payPontiac G6 2007, low under 30,000 miles. ment of r e curring f miles, $8900. counsel; and (3) A Extended service/ 541-548-1422 s tatement that y o u obligations as they warranty plan (75,000 due. have an interest in the become miles). Loaded! seized property. Your ALSO, if you have Porsche 911 Leather, panoramic deadline for filing the failed to pay taxes Carrera 993 cou e roof, navigation, JBL Nissan Pathfinder SE p r o perty, claim document with on th e Synthesis Sound 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd forfeiture cou n s el provide i n surance system. $24,500. 4x4, loaded, very good on the property or n amed below is 2 1 Jeff - 541-390-0937 tires, very good cond, pay o t h er senior days from the last day $4800. 503-334-7345 en c u mof publication of this liens o r brances as required notice. Where to file Need to get an ad a claim and for more i n th e n o t e a n d 1996, 73k miles, in ASAP? i nformation: Da i n a T rust D e ed , th e Tiptronic auto. may Vitolins, Crook County beneficiary transmission. Silver, insist that you do so District Attorney Ofblue leather interior, Fax it to 541-322-7253 in order to reinstate fice, 300 N E T h i rd moon/sunroof, new Street, Prineville, OR y our a c count i n Toyota RA V4 2 007, quality tires and The Bulletin Classifieds good standing. The 97754. L imited, V 6 , 3. 5 L , battery, car and seat may Notice of reasons for beneficiary auto, 4WD, leather, covers, many extras. Forfeiture: The prop- require as a condip rivacy glass, t o w Recently fully serre i n stateerty described below tion t o pkg., alloy wheels. Looking for your viced, garaged, was seized for forfei- ment that you proVIN ¹015960 next employee? looks and runs like ture because it: (1) vide reliable written Place a Bulletin help $19,788 new. Excellent conevidence that y ou Constitutes the p rowanted ad today and dition $29,700 S UB A R U . h ave paid a l l s eceeds of the violation reach over 60,000 541-322-9647 of, solicitation to vio- nior liens or encumreaders each week. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. brances, p roperty late, attempt to vioYour classified ad 877-266-3821 late, or conspiracy to taxes, and hazard will also appear on Dlr ¹0354 Porsche 911 Turbo violates, the criminal insurance p r e mibendbulletin.com ums. These relaws of the State of which currently reOregon regarding the quirements for reinceives over 1.5 milVans statement should be manufacture, distribulion page views tion, or possession of confirmed by conevery month at controlled substances tacting the u nderno extra cost. BulleTru s tee. (ORS C h apter475); signed tin Classifieds 2003 6 speed, X50 and/or (2) Was used The street or other Get Results! Call added power pkg., or intended for use in common designa385-5809 or place 530 HP! Under 10k committing or f acili- tion if any, of t he your ad on-line at miles, Arctic silver, tating the violation of, real property deGMC 1995 Safari XT, bendbulletin.com gray leather interior, solicitation to violate, s cribed above i s seats 8, 4.3L V6, new quality t i res, be : studs on rims, $3000 attempt to violate, or purported to and battery, Bose Advertise your car! 34T H obo. 541-312-6960 conspiracy to violate 2 050 S W premium sound steAdd A Picture! STREET, REDcriminal laws of reo, moon/sunroof, Reach thousands of readers~ the the State of Oregon MOND, OR 97756 Call 541-385-5809 car and seat covers. un d ersigned I Au t omobiles The Bulletin Classifieds regarding the manu- The Many extras. Gafacture, distribution or Trustee d i sclaims raged, perfect conp ossession of c o n- any liability for any The Bulletin recoml dition $5 9 ,700. "My little red sub s tances incorrectness of the 541-322-9647 mends extra caution ~ trolled above s t reet or Corvette" Coupe when pu r c hasing I (ORS Chapter 475). other common f products or services IN THE MATTER OF: designation. By Porsche Carrera 911 from out of the area. reason of said de2003 convertible with f S ending c ash , (1)US Currency in the fault, t h e b e n efihardtop. 50K miles, checks, or credit inciary has declared new factory Porsche formation may be I amount of 3,873.00 In all sums owing on motor 6 mos ago with [ subject to FRAUD. US Currency, Case the obligation se18 mo factory warNo 13-59, Seized on 1996, 350 auto, For more i nformacured by said ranty remaining. F ebruary 14, 2 0 1 3 132,000 miles. f tion about an adver$37,500. from Apolanio Olivera. Trust Deed immediNon-ethanol fuel 8 tiser, you may call 541-322-6928 ately due and paysynthetic oil only, I the Oregon Statef able, said sums begaraged, premium g Attorney General's g ing the following, to Bose stereo, I Office C o n sumer I wit: Principal f Protection hotline at $11,000. $194,981.38, to1-877-877-9392. 541-923-1781 gether with interest Get your as provided in the business n ote or o t her i n Servmg Central Oregon smce 1903 2005 Buick LeSabre strument s e cured Custom, 101K, $6500. Scion XA Hatchback from 02/1 5/11, 30+ mpg hwy, full-size 2005, 1 .5L, a uto , G ROWI N G plus subsidy recap4-dr sedan, luxury ride F WD, 27/35 M P G . USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ture in the sum of 8 handling ... V in¹ 089650. N o w Door-to-door selling with with an ad in $4,547.57 and fees Why not drive a Buick? $8,888. fast results! It's the easiest assessed i n the Call Bob, 541-318-9999 The Bulletin's amount of ) SUSUBIUtUOFBEIID BARU . way in the world to sell. "Call A Service COM AUDI 1990 V8 Quat$3,064.80, plus actro. Perfect Ski Car. 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend Professional" crued interest due The Bulletin Classified 877-266-3821 LOW MILES. $3,995 thereon, and such Directory 541-385-5809 obo. 541-480-9200. Dlr ¹0354

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The Bulletin

1000

Legal Notices other costs and fees are due under the note o r o t her instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given t hat t h e und e rsigned trustee will, on November 14, 2013, at t h e hour of 10:00 A.M. in accord with the Standard Time, as est ablished by O R S 1 87.110, INS I D E THE MAIN LOBBY O F T H E DES CHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW B O N D, BEND , County of DESCHUTES, State

of OREGON, (which is the n e w d a t e, time and place set for said sale) sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in interest acquired a f t er t he e x ecution o f said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obli g ations thereby secured and the c o sts and expenses of sale, including a r e asonable charge by the trustee. N o t ice is further given t h at any person named in O.R.S.86.753 has the right, at any time prior to f i v e days before the date last set for the sale, to have this f oreclosure pr o c eeding dismissed and the Trust Deed r e i nstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would notthen be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other d efault complained herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required un d er the obligation o f th e Trust Deed, and in addition to p aying said sums or tendering the p e rfor-

mance necessary to

cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts p rovided by sa i d ORS 86.753. I t w i l l be necessary for you to contact the undersigned prior to the time you tender reinstatement or payoff so that you may be advised of the exact amount, including t r ustee's costs and fees, that y ou will b e r e quired t o pay. Payment must be in the full amount in the form of cashier's or certified c h eck. T he effect o f t h e sale will be to deprive you and a ll those who hold by, through and under you of a l l interest in the property des cribed above. I n construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the f eminine and t h e neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any s uccessor in interest to the grantor as well

as a n y other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is s ecured b y s a i d T rust Deed, a n d the words "trustee"

and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, i f any. The Beneficiary may b e attempting t o collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for th a t purpose. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of m o nies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If a vailable, the e x pected opening bid and/or p o s tponement in f o rmation may be obtained by calling t h e following telephone number(s) on the day b efore th e s a le: (714) 480-5690 or you ma y a c cess sales information at www.tacforeclosures.com/sales DATED: 0 7 / 01/1 3 CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, O SB A ¹ 992526 By CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, ATT O R N EY AT LAW DI -

L e g al Notices

Legal Notices •

RECT I NQUIRIES T O: T.D. S E R VICE C O M PANY FORECLOSURE DEPARTMENT 4000 W. Metropolit an Drive Suit e

incorrectness of the above s t reet or other common designation. By reason of said default, t h e b e n eficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said Trust Deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: Principal $214,492.21, together with interest as prowded in the n ote or o t her i n strument s e cured from 01/ 2 0 / 11, plus subsidy recapture in the sum of $23,014.00 and fees a ssessed i n th e amount of $2,826.51, plus accrued interest due thereon, and such other costs and fees are due under the note or o t her instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given t hat t h e und e r signed trustee will, on November 12, 2013 at t h ehour of 10:00 A.M. in accord with the Standard Time, as est ablished by O R S 1 87.110, IN S I DE THE MAIN LOBBY O F T H E DES CHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW B O N D, BEND , County of DESCHUTES, State of OREGON, (which is the n e w d a t e, time and place set for said sale) sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said descnbed real property which the Grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in interest acquired a f ter t he e xecution o f said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obli g ations thereby secured and the c o sts and expenses of sale, including a r e asonable charge by the trustee. No t ice is further given t h at any person named in O.R.S.86.753 has the right, at any time prior to f i v e days before the date last set for the sale, to have this f oreclosure pro c eeding dismissed and the Trust Deed r e i nstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other d efault complained herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required u n d er the obligation o f th e Trust Deed, and in

400 O r a nge, CA 92868 (800) 8 43-0260 TAC¹ 9 66027 PUB : 09/30/13, 10/07/13, 10/14/13, 10/21/13. LEGAL NOTICE

OREGON T RUSTEE'S N O T ICE O F SAL E T.S. No : L 5 43249 OR U nit Code: L Loan No: 34429999/WAIGHT A P ¹ 1: 17 9 4 7 7 Title ¹ : 832 6 333

Reference is made

to that certain Trust Deed m a d e by SHAWN E. WAIGHT, MICHELLE E. WAIGHT as Grantor, to RURAL H OUSING S ER V ICE OR ITS SUCCESSOR AGENCY as

Trustee, in favor of UNITED S T ATES OF AMERI C A ACTING THROUGH THE RURAL H OUSING SER V ICE OR SUCCESSOR AGENCY, UNITED S T A T ES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE as

Beneficiary. Dated October 20, 2006, Recorded October 20, 2006 as I nstr. No. 2006-70089 in Book -- P a ge of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of D ESCHUTES C o unty; O REGO N RE A M ORTIZATION A GREEMENT E F F ECTIVE JAN U A RY 2 0, 2011

covering the following described real property situated in s aid c ounty a n d s tate, to wit: L O T FIVE (5), B LOCK SIX (6), HAYDEN VILLAGE PHASE II, DESCHUTES COUNTY, ORE GON. B o t ht h e beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to s atisfy the obligations secured by said Trust Deed and a Notice of D e f ault has been recorded pursuant t o Or e gon Revised S t a tutes 86.735(3); the default for w h ich the foreclosure is made is Grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: 6 P YMTS F R OM 02/20/11 TO 07/20/11 @ 987.82 $5,926.92 23 PYMTS FROM 08/20/11 TO 06/20/1 3 @ 1,51 0.27 $34,736.21 TOTAL LATE C H A RGES $130 88 Sub-Total of Amounts in Arrears:$40,794.01 Together with any

default in the payment of r e curring obligations as they become due. ALSO, if you have failed to pay taxes on t h e pr o perty, provide i n surance on the property or pay ot h e r senior liens o r en c u mbrances as required i n th e n o t e a n d T rust D e ed , th e beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to reinstate y our a c count i n good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition t o re i n statement that you provide reliable written evidence that you h ave paid a l l s enior liens or encumbrances, p roperty taxes, and hazard i nsurance pr e m i ums These re quirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the u ndersigned Tru s tee. The street or other common designation if any, of t he real property des cribed above i s purported to be : 3238 SW PUMICE PLACE, REDMOND, OR 9 7756

The un d ersigned Trustee d i s claims any liability for any

addition to

p a y ing

Legal Notices tice, the masculine gender includes the f eminine and t h e neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as a n y other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is s ecured b y sa i d T rust Deed, a n d the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, i f any. The Beneficiary may b e a t tempting t o collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for th a t purpose. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of m o nies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If a vailable, the e x pected opening bid and/or p o s tponement in f o rmation may be obtained by calling t h e following telephone num-

ber(s) on the day b efore th e sa l e : (714) 480-5690 or you may a c cess sales information at www.tacforeclosures.com/sales

DATED: 0 7 / 01/13 CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, OSBA ¹ 992526 By CHRISTOPHER C. D ORR, ATT O R N EY AT LAW D I RECT I N QUIRIES TO: T.D. S E RVICE C O M PANY FORECLOSURE DEPARTMENT 4000 W Metropolit an Dnve Suit e 400 Or a nge, CA 92868 (800) 843-0260 TAC¹ 966026 PUB: 09/30/13, 10/07/13, 10/14/13, 10/21/13. LEGAL NOTICE The following units will be sold at Public Auction on Octob er 21, 2 0 13, a t 11:00 a.m., at Bend Mini Storage, 100 SE 3rd St., Bend O R 9 7 7 02 . U n i t ¹C262 - Richard Giffels, Unit ¹B57 Alexandra H e l ler, Unit ¹C100 - Larrie Lang, Unit ¹C265Joseph M atthews, Unit ¹C112 - Paula R ay, Unit ¹E309 -

Quianna Watson. PUBLIC NOTICE The Bend Park & Recreation District Board of Directors will meet in a work session and r egular meeting o n Tuesday, October 15, 2013, at the District Office, 799 SW Col umbia, Bend, O r egon. The work session will begin at 5:30 p.m. at which time the board will receive a report o n su m mer p ark a c tivity. T h e board will meet in an executive ses s i on f ollowing th e w o r k session pursuant to

said sums or tendering the p e rfor- ORS 192.660(2)(e) for mance necessary to the purpose of discure the default, by cussing real property paying all costs and transactions. A reguexpenses a ctually lar business meeting enincurred in will be conducted beforcing the obligaginning at 7:00 p.m. tion and Trust Deed, Agenda items include together with consideration of aptrustee's and proval of the Annual attorney's fees not Needs-Based Assisexceeding the tance Plan, approval amounts p rovided of an Insurance Agent by sa i d ORS o f Record and a p 86.753. I t w i ll be proval the Discovery necessary for you to Park Deve l oper contact the underAgreement. The signed prior to the agenda and meeting time you tender rereport for the October instatement or 15, 2013, meeting will payoff so that you be p osted F r iday, may be advised of October 12, 2013, on the exact amount, the district's website: including t rustee's www.bendparksancosts and fees, that drec.org. For m o re y ou will b e r e information call 541-706-6100. quired t o pay. Payment must be in the full amount in the form of cashier's Need to get an or certified c h eck. ad in ASAP? T he effect of t h e sale will be to deYou can place it prive you and a ll online at: those who hold by, through and under www.bendbulletin.com you of a l l interest in the property de541-385-5809 s cribed above. I n construing this no-

A RE P U B L I C NOTICES I N P O R TA N T + An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo citizens who want fo know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go fowvvw.bendbullefin.com and click on "Classified Ads"

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