Serving Central Oregon since1903 75
TUESDAY September16, 2014
All-yeargardening AT HOME• D1
bendbulletin.com
LOCAL• B1
OSU-CASCADES
TODAY'S READERBOARD
COVER OREGON
Scottish generation gap
— The young overwhelmingly support independence. But will they actually vote?A2
Changes inchurch —As
• City Council to vote on hearing the case
a whole, in America, religions are opening up gradually to diversity and houses of worship are becoming less formal.A3
By Tyler Leeds
the city of Bend's development
The Bulletin
code,capping alengthy debate over the merits of the plan be-
OSU-Cascades had just two weeks to enjoy a ruling that tween OSU-Cascades and resapproved its planned four-year idents who wished to see the campus,asan appealchalleng- campus moved away from the ing the project was delivered to city's west side. Opponents, the city Monday morning. organized under the limited-liOn Sept. 2, a hearings ofability company Truth In Site, ficer ruled the proposal met were largely concerned with
the impact on traffic, but they
also argued the university is required to complete a master plan, something it had not done. In his decision, hearings officer Ken Helm wrote code did not require the completion
of a master plan, and Truth In Site was given until Monday to file an appeal asking the City Council to weigh in. On Wednesday, the council will vote on whether to con-
sider the appeal, a decision councilors will make without input from interested parties,
according to an agenda of the meeting. If the council dedines
Tax credit error not as widespread as feared
to consider the appeal, Truth In Site will have the option to file with the state Land Use Board
By Taylor W. Anderson
of Appeals, a three-member board appointed by the governor that can review land use
ingerror that gave too much moneyto people receivinga
declslons.
ance premiums affects 775 of the 42,367people getting
See OSU-Cascades/A5
The Bulletin
SALEM — An accountfederal tax credit for insurthe credit, the executive di-
rector of Cover Oregon told lawmakers Monday.
GOlf in 2014 —Growth was slow and steady atCentral Oregon courses: good, but not great.C1
Most customers affected
WELCOME TO REDMOND COCC'S TECHCENTER
were incorrectly given an extra $2 or less per month, but some will owe more
-Qglimi'I!>:,"u
NFL commentaryTeams need toconsider character alongside capability.C1
than $100 for every month they received the credit, Aaron Patnode told House
— -s uI 1a~
and Senate leaders during the first of three days of hearings known as Legislative Days.
::===
n
Odituary —Anti-war activist tried to unionize the U.S.military during Vietnam.B5
The details were the
first since Cover Oregon announced the error two weeks ago and came as somewhat good news, as the error was expected to be larger.
EDITOR'5CHOICE
See State /A4
Resentment after pushto hire veterans
Inside • Update on state's lawsuit,A4
Half of ushave no 'better half'
By Lisa Rein The Washington Post
President Barack
Obama's push to hire
By Rich Miller
military veterans for jobs
Bloomberg News
Single Americans make
acrossthegovernment is fueling resentment in federal offices, as longtime civil servantsand former troops on the other side of the cubicle increasingly question each other's competence and qualifications.
up more than half of the
adult population for the first time since the government began compiling Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Step into the new Technology
With veterans moving
Education Center's lobby, above, and
to the head of the hiring queue in the biggest numbers in a generation, there's
you'll see a state-of-the-art building
growing bitterness on both sides, according to dozens
where Redmond's campus of Central
of interviews with federal
employees.
Oregon Community College will
Those who did not serve in themilitarybristle at times
teach specialized tech classes,
at thepreferential hiringof
beginning Sept. 29.
veterans and accuse them of blind deference to authority.
The vets chafe at what they say is a condescending view of their experience and accuse many nonveterans of lacking a work ethic and sense of mission. See Veterans/A5
such statistics in 1976.
Some 124.6 million Americans were single in August, 50.2 percent of those who were 16 years or older, according to data used by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in its monthly job-market report. That percentage had been hovering just below 50 percent since about the
beginning of 2013 before edging above it in July and August. In 1976, it was
37.4percent and has been trending upward since.
Grandopeningtoday
In a report to clients,
titled "Selfies," economist Edward Yardeni flagged the increase in the proportion of singles to more
When:4:30-5:30 p.m. Where: Redmond'sCOCC campus, off SE Airport Way,west of the airport
than 50 percent, calling it
A Wiz.,".Z"
At left is a tech center computer lab. Seemore photos on our website Qoatv
"remarkable." SeeSingle/A5
Correction In a story headlined "Few limits to campaigncashflow," which appearedSunday,Sept. 14, on PageA1,the slate of candidates for House District 55 was incorrect. Republican Leader Mike McLane ischallenged by Democrat RichardPhayand Libertarian FrankBrannen. The Bulletin regrets the error.
Clarification In a story headlined"Outof the courtroom andfighting for his life," whichappearedSunday, Sept.14, onPageA1,the Reesor family's method offundraising was unclear.Althoughthe family initially planned toacceptfundraising help fromtheNational Foundation for Transplants, the family hassincedecided to fundraise independently.
Nation's future isfound in ever-graying Florida By Mike Schneider The Associated Press
INVERNESS, Fla. — A billboard at the county line
advertises home health care
accountants make house calls like doctors. Elderly residents
stereotype of Florida, where in just 15 years, one in four
get ferried to stores by a fleet
residents will be 65 or older. It's a peek into the not-toodistant future of the nation, where the number will be 1 in 5.
of county minivans. Welcome to Citrus County,
services. Local churches try
Florida, where more than a
to create a feeling of belonging for elderly members who
third of residents are senior citizens, one of the highest
may be disconnected from
rates in the nation.
family up north. Lawyers and
The county isn't simply a
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly sunny High 83, Low47 Page B6
In Citrus County, about 70 miles north of Tampa, health
care dominates the labor
force.Residentsprefertoget their news from a newspaper. Strip malls have an unusually high number of hearing aid businesses. The library offers Medicaid-planning seminars. Voters turn out in large num-
centration of elderly citizens
bers, albeit often by absentee ballot.
clerks and food-service
engaged citizenry with high voter turnout and volunteerism, but also an economy
based on low-skill jobs such as health care aides, retail workers.
Having such a high con-
The Bulletin
INDEX At Home Business Calendar
has its trade-offs. You get an
01-6 Classified Et - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 S oI B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State Bt-6 TV/Movies
B5 C1-4 06
AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 112, No. 259 30 pages, 5 sections
See Seniors /A4
Q i/i/e use recycled newsprint
o
IIIIIIIIIIIIII 8 8 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
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Massive Ehnla effnrt —Underpressureto domoreto confront
irs . . s r i ein ra
the Ebola outbreak sweeping across WestAfrica, President Barack Obama will announcetoday an expansion of military and medical resources to combat the spread of thedeadly virus, administration officials said. The president will go beyond the25-bed portable hospital that Pentagon officials said they would establish in Liberia. Obamais expected to offer help in the construction of five Ebola treatment centers around Monrovia, with about 500 beds. Senior administration officials said Monday night the Department of Defensewould opena joint command operation in Monrovia to coordinate the international effort to combat the disease.Themilitary will also provide engineers to help construct the additional treatment facilities and will send enough people to train up to 500 health care workers aweekto deal with the crisis. Officials said the military expected to send asmany as 3,000 people to Africa to take charge of responding to the Ebola outbreak. U.N. officials estimate the death toll at about 2,400 out of 4,784suspectedand confirmedcases.
The Associated Press WASHINGTON — U.S. officials said Monday the United States has taken the first step
in its planned expanded fight against Islamic State m i li-
tants, going to the aid of Iraqi security forces near Baghdad who were being attacked by enemy fighters. The U.S. said it conducted a strike Monday in support of the Iraqi forces southwest of Baghdad. There was also an airstrike Sunday near Sinjar in northern Iraq. The strike southwest of Baghdad represents the newly broadened mission authorized by President Barack Obama to go on the offensive against the Islamic State group wherever
IIIO ruling Out a rOle fOr lran —Asmorethan two dozen nations pledged Monday to help Iraq fight the Islamic State militants, the United States said it was open to talking to Iran about a role in resolving the crisis, despite Washington's earlier opposition to Tehranevenattending the conference. Secretary of State John Kerry did rule out any military coordination with Iran, which in the end wasnot invited to Paris. "That doesn't mean that weare opposed to the idea of communicating to find out if they will come on board, or under what circumstances, or whether there is the possibility of a change," Kerry told a group of reporters. — The Associated Press
causethey were notauthorized before an almost two-month to discuss the mission publicly recess in preparation for Noby name. The Sinjar strike de- vember's midterm elections. stroyed six vehides belonging The authorization u n der to the Islamic State militants. consideration will likely be included as an amendment to a
In Congress
spending bill Congress must U.S. lawmakers raced Mon- pass to keep the government it is. Previous U.S. airstrikes day to authorize an expanded open until mid-December. The in Iraq were conducted to pro- mission to arm and train mod- measure doesn't authorize U.S. tect U.S. interests and person- erate Syrianrebels, with House combat troops in Iraq or Syria nel, assist Iraqi refugees and Republicans preparing legisla- or explicitly ban them, reflectsecure critical infrastructure. tion backing a central plank of ing a congressional divide beThat strike was in direct sup- Obama's strategy against the tween hawks seeking tougher port of Iraqi forces fighting the Islamic State. The administra- action than that proposed by militants, hitting fighters who tion says the training operation Obama and lawmakers weary were firing on them. is needed to establish credible, from more than a decade of U.S. officials said Iraqi forc- localground forces to accom- U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanes requested assistance when pany U.S. airstrikes. istan. Democrats are reviewthey came under fire from milThe House and Senate are ing the proposal. A vote in the itants. Those officials spoke both on a tight schedule, look- GOP-led House could be held on condition of anonymity be- ing to wrap up work Friday as early as Wednesday.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawnMonday nightare:
f a Qfa QfrQeQ eo goQ The estimated jackpot is now $9.4 million.
Ukraine flaShpnint —Shelling killed six peopleandwounded
HundredS drOWn —Humantraffickers rammed aboat filled with migrants they weresmuggling from North Africa to Europe, making it sink in the opensea and"deliberately drowning" hundreds of the migrants, the International Organization for Migration said Monday. A spokeswomanfor the migration organization, said the traffickers rammed the boat with another vessel off the coast of Malta on Wednesday after an argument broke out betweenthe traffickers and the migrant passengers. Only nine peopleare known to havesurvived the disaster, the group said, out of as many as 500 whowere said to have been onthe boat. AfghanlStan —A police official in Kabul said a suicide car bomber has targeted a foreign convoy just a couple hundredyards from the U.S. Embassy. Also, anAfghan appeals court confirmed death sentences Mondayagainst five of the sevendefendants in a notorious robbery and rapecase, despite their claims their confessions were extracted through torture. For the other two defendants, the court found insufficient evidence to justify the death penalty, so it reduced their sentences to 20years' imprisonment. The seven menwere accused of dressing in police uniforms and stopping acaravan of cars returning from a wedding in the Paghmandistrict, less than half an hour's drive from Kabul; robbing the occupants; and raping four of the women bythe roadside.
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CORRECTIONS
FraCking Study —A study of tainted drinking water in areas where natural gas is produced from shale shows the contamination is most likely due to leakywells rather than hydraulic fracturing. The studylookedatsevencasesinPennsylvaniaandoneinTexaswhere water wells had beencontaminated by methaneand other hydrocarbon gases. Both states haveextensive deposits of gas-bearing shale that have beenexploited in recent years. Some environmental groups have suggested that or fracking could causethe gas to migrate into drinking water aquifers. But in their analysis, the researchers found no evidence that fractured shale led towater contamination. 15 others in the rebel stronghold of Donetsk, the city council said Monday — theworst reported violence since a cease-fire between Russian-backed rebels andUkrainian troops took effect on Sept. 5. Fighting around theeastern city's government-held airport has left its northern neighborhoods in the crossfire. Two northern neighborhoods were shelled heavily Sunday, leading to the casualties and damaging both homesandoffices, the city council said. The Ukrainian government blamedthe militants for the civilian casualties.
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
MedalS Of hOnOr —TwoVietnam War soldiers — one still living, one killed in action — eachreceived the Medal of Honor in aWhite House ceremony Monday,nearly 50 years after they threw themselves into harm's way to protect their brothers in combat. President Barack Obamapraised the soldiers as patriots whose sacrifices had never been fully realized by anation divided over the legacy of the Vietnam War.Army Command Sgt. Maj. Bennie Adkins survived his injuries. Army Spc. Donald Sloat did not. It took anact of Congress to allow each to receive themedal so many decades after the fact. "Over the decades, our Vietnamveterans didn't always receive the thanks andrespecttheydeserved,"Obama said.
The Associated Prese
People rummagethrough hundreds of destroyed housesinLosCabos,Mexico,on Monday.Before moving north late Monday,Odile madelandfall near Cabo SanLucas as apowerful Category 3 hurricane before rapidly weakening. It toppled trees androad signs along the main highway, which at onepoint was flooded by rushing waters. Theweakening tropical storm pushed upMexico's BajaCalifornia Peninsula, dumping heavy rains that could bring dangerous flash floods and mudslides but also apotential boon to the
drought-stricken region. Mexico said late Mondaythat army and commercial planeswouldbesentto LaPazand LosCabos airports to ferry out some of the tens of thousands of tourists stranded in temporary shelters in hotels. Los Cabos international airport was damagedby the storm. About135 people havebeentreated for minor injuries from flying glass or falling objects, but there were noserious injuries or deaths so far. About 30,000 tourists were in temporary shelters.
DetrOit deal —Syncora Guarantee, a bondinsurer that was a major opponent to Detroit's blueprint for shedding debts and remaking city services, announced Monday it had reached asettlement with the city and would nowsupport Detroit's emergence from bankruptcy. But other holdout creditors were unable to reach asettlement, leaving uncertain how quickly the city could emerge from reorganization. They made it clear they intend to continue their objections to the city's reorganization plan, andsought a delay in the city's trial to further prepare their cases. — From wire reports
Visit Central Oregon's
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INDEPENDENCE VOTE
In Scotland,yesvs. no is alsoyoung vs. old By Paul Kelbie
generation. We want to let all
endum. That's an increase of
The Associated Press
our grandparents know that
GLASGOW, Scotland Across Scotland, dinner table
their future is secure in our
300,000compared to registration figures in 2012.
16- and 17-year-olds who will be voting for the first time.
The turnout for Thursday's
Many of these new voters are
hands, and with a 'yes'we can talk is getting heated as fam- build a better future for ourilies argue over how to vote selves and for our children." in Scotland's independence Some polls suggest the referendum.A generation gap "no" camp is trailing in every has opened up, with younger age group except those over voters more inclined to back 60. Opinion surveys indicate independence and their elders more than 63 percent of that tending to say they want to re- age group is expected to vote main in the United Kingdom. in favor of the union. As oldSupport for the status quo er people are more likely to is strongest among the over- be on the electoral roll, there 6 0s, who worry a bout t h e has been a huge drive to get consequences that breaking younger people engaged in the free would have on pensions, "yes" campaign. health care and savings; the Interest in the referendum is pro-independence movement sky high. A total of 4,285,323 is largely being driven by un- people, or 97 percent of the d er-40s. Neck-and-neck i n voting-age population, have the polls, the rival campaigns registered to vote in the referhave called on core supporters
ballot could exceed 85 per-
cent, compared to the just over 50 percent who voted in
ing Scotland's fate are 124,000
minds with their wisdom.
"I was so proud of my grandpa when he told me he was voting 'yes' that I burst
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dom holds that older voters
are more likely to actually cast their ballots, a factor that could percent who turned out for the help the anti-independence "Better Together" campaign. 2010 British p a rliamentary election. Many people in the rest of the last Scottish Parliament elections in 2011, and the 63.8
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of affection for England's northern neighbor. Among the electorate decid-
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into tears," said 23-year-old
Thursday . October 2nd, 2014
Miriam Brett, a campaigner for Generation Yes. "A 'yes'
5:oopM - 7:oopM
vote means so much to my
See us alsofor:
expected to support independence. But conventional wis-
to make a last ditch attempt to
swing the vote by making the debate a family affair. The young have been urged to visit parents and grandparents to explain why they should support separation. The "no" camp has launched a counteroffensive by asking seniors to win young hearts and
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Tuesday, Sept. 16, the 259th day of 2014. Thereare 106 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS EurOPe —Pilots working for major airlines including Air France andLufthansa of Germany are on strike.
HISTORY Highlight:In1974, President Gerald Ford announceda conditional amnesty program for Vietnam war deserters and draft-evaders. In1498, Tomas deTorquemada, notorious for his role in the Spanish Inquisition, died in Avila, Spain. In1810, Mexicans were inspired to begin their successful revolt against Spanish rule by Father Miguel Hidalgo yCostilla and his "Grito de Dolores (Cry of Dolores)." In1893, more than100,000 settlers swarmed onto a section of land in Oklahoma known as the "CherokeeStrip." In1908, General Motors was founded in Flint, Michigan, by William C. Durant. In1914, "Candid Camera" creator Allen Funt wasborn in New York. In1919, the American Legion received a national charter from Congress. In1940, President Franklin Roosevelt signed theSelective Training and Service Act. Samuel Rayburn of Texaswas elected speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. In1953, "The Robe," the first
movie presented in the widescreen process CinemaScope, had its world premiere at the Roxy Theater in NewYork. In1964,the rock-and-roll show"Shindig!" premiered on ABC-TV.
In1982,the massacre of between1,200 and 1,400 Palestinian men,womenand children at the hands of Israeli-allied Christian Phalange militiamen began inwest Beirut's Sabra andShatila refugee camps. In1994, a federal jury in Anchorage, Alaska, ordered Exxon Corp. to pay $5billion in punitive damagesfor the1989 Exxon Valdezoil spill (the U.S. Supreme Court later reduced that amount to $507.5 million). Two astronauts from the space shuttle Discovery went on the first untethered spacewalk in 10 years. In2007,O.J.Simpsonwas arrested in the alleged armed robbery of sports memorabilia collectors in LasVegas. (Simpson was later convicted of kidnapping andarmed robbery and sentenced to nine to 33 years in prison.) Ten yearsngn:Hurricane Ivan plowed into theGulf Coast with 130 mph windand amajor storm surge; Ivanwas blamed for 92 deaths, 25 ofthem in the U.S. Thenumber of foreigners kidnapped during the Iraq insurgency reached atleast100. The National HockeyLeague lockout went into effect. Five years ege:Mary Travers, 72, one part of the folk trio Peter, Paul andMary, died in Danbury, Connecticut. NCAA President Myles Brand,67, died in Indianapolis. One yearngn:Aaron Alexis, a former U.S.Navy reservist, went on ashooting rampageinside the Washington NavyYard, killing 12 victims before being shot dead bypolice.
BIRTHDAYS Actress Janis Paige is92. Blues singer B.B.King is 89. Movie director Jim McBride is73. Actor-comedianLennyClarke is 61. Actor Kurt Fuller is 61. Actor
Christopher Rich is61. Baseball Hall of FamerRobin Yount is 59. Actor MickeyRourke is58. Magician DavidCopperfield is 58. Country singer-songwriter Terry McBride is 56.ActressJennifer Tilly is 56. ActressJayneBrook is 54. Singer RichardMarx is 51. ComedianMolly Shannonis 50. Singer MarcAnthony is 46. Comedian-actress AmyPoehler is 43. SingerMusiq is37.Actor Michael Mosley is36. Rapper Flo Rida is35. Actress Kyla Pratt is 28. Actor DarenKagasoff is 27. Rock singer-musician Nick Jonasis 22. — From wire reports
TRENDING
urc es a ea urn or e inorma The third National Congregations Study shows that more and more Americans worship in places where
ligiousscene, as acceptance of homosexuality and same-
drums areplayed,words orim ages are projected on screens,and praise isexpressed via upstretched hands. sex marriage increases in the broader culture. In the new
Not to mention those congregations that are more and more welcoming to gays and lesbians, too.
results, 48 percent of congre-
gations allow openly gay and lesbian people in committed By Michael Paulson
relationships to be members,
New York Times News Service
ingly secular society that chal-
up from 37percent in 2006, and 27 percent of congregations allow openly gay and lesbian people in committed relationships to serve as volunteer
lenge the culture with views
leaders, up from 18 percent.
and practices that are no longer mainstream.
This easing was not uniform. Acceptance of gays and
Religious institutions often see themselves as countercultural — outposts in an increas-
But inevitably, culture seeps
lesbians in committed rela-
in, affecting how clergy and laypeople dress and pray and
tionships has declined in Roman Catholic churches. The
behave toward one another. A new study — the latest
reason is not clear, but the
version of a regularly conducted survey of A m erican
prompted some Catholic institutions to fire employees who
congregations — finds that houses of worship, like the
marry partners of the same gender.
riseofsame-sex marriage has
broader culture, are becom-
The study also finds that
ing increasingly informal, and increasingly open to gays and
although gays and lesbians
lesbians. More and more con-
are increasingly admitted as members in evangelical Prot-
in c ommitted r elationships
gregations — although still a minority — allow gays to hold
estant churches, they are rare-
ly allowed to serve as leaders — only 4 percent of white, con-
volunteer positions as leaders.
"Congregations are embed-
ded in our culture and our so-
ciety, and they are reflecting both the trends but also the divisions and the conflicts," said Mark Chaves, the director of
Monica Almeida/ New YorkTimes NewsService file photo
A diverse crowdworships at a midweek gathering of the Hillsong Church, a pentecostal megachurch of Australian origins, at a theater in downtown Los Angeles in March. Researchers are seeing an increasingly multicultural and informal cast to America's religious life — with choirs and formal attire
giving way to live music, videos andspontaneous dancing.
the study and a professor of sociology, religion and divini-
growing steadily since the Fifty-nine percent of worshipfirst National Congregations ers now attend services in gregations Study is based on Study was conducted in 1998. congregations where hands data collected in 2012 from in- Forty-six percent of Amer- are raised as an expression of terviews with leaders of 1,331 icans worship in congrega- praise — up from 48 percent in congregations: Ch r i stian, tions where drums are played, 1998. Choir-singing and vestJewish, Muslim, Hindu and up from 25 percent in 1998, ment-wearing are down, while others. while 56 percent are in con- the use of visual projection The informality of congre- gregations where organs are equipment and the practice of gational worship has been played, down from 70 percent. jumping, shouting or dancing ty at Duke University. The third N ational Con-
DISCOVERY
These mammalslived alongsidedinosaurs By Debornh Netburn Los Angeles Times
In rocky outcroppings near a cornfield in northern Chi-
na, paleontologists have unearthed three species of squirrel-like mammals that lived at
the same time as the dinosaurs. Remarkably complete skel-
The population of mammals that lived
servative Protestant churches
said they would allow gays and lesbians in committed relationships to volunteer for
leadership positions. A few other notable trends in congregational life: Diverby worshippers are up. sity is rising, as the number of "Behaviors associated with all-white congregations goes evangelical worship style are down; average congregational ticking up, and there is a shift size is falling, as more Amerof people to large churches icansleave smallercongregawhere this is more common," tions for larger ones; and an Chaves said. increasing number of congreAttitudes toward gays and gations (24 percent) are not lesbians are shifting slowly, affiliated with any religious and unevenly, across the re- denomination.
T he m o s t T A S T E F V L w a y t o encR the s e a s o n
'--'-"'
RHEWEH ' G R E R T
Q OL F
among the dinosaurs was more diverse than previously thought.
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•
etons of the three new spe-
cies-Shenshou lui, Xianshou linglong and Xianshou son- were so weird." gae-werefound in pieces of The structure of the tooth sandstone that date back 160 isn't just different to look at; million years. Their discovery it also meant these animals lends support to the theory chewed food differently than that the population of mam- we do. They probably moved mals that lived among the their jaw back when they were dinosaurs was more diverse eating, grinding the food up than previously thought. against the rows of cusps. "There was this idea that Scientists have been aware mammals were these misera- of Haramiyidas for a long time, ble small little things living in but most of the fossilized rethe shadow of the dinosaurs, mains of these creatures conand that picture has changed sist onlyof a fewscattered teeth quite a lot," said paleontolo- or perhaps a jawbone. With the gist Jin Meng, a curator at the discovery of these new mamAmerican Museum of Natural mals, paleontologists have a lot History in New York. The three new mammals,
all members of the new group Euharamiyida, range in size f rom a h o use mouse to a
squirrel. They had long, thin fingers, tails that were longer
more material to work with.
"Now we have a complete skeleton that shows us the morphology of the skull, arm, leg, foot and hands," Meng said, "and all that morphology
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shows that these animals had
mammalian features." fragile skeletons, which all If Meng is correct and the suggest they lived in the trees Haramiyidas are mammals, of the Jurassicforest.Their that would suggest mammals diet probably consisted of in- started to diversify earlier than sects, nuts and fruit. other research has suggestA paper describing the new- ed. Although the animals he lydiscovered animalswaspub- discovered were 160 million lished in the journal Nature. years old, other Haramiyidas These smallfurry creatures have been found that are more belong to an extinct group than 200 million years old. This c alled Haramiyida that i s means that mammals began to known by the strange shape of diverge 235 million to 201 milits members' molar teeth. Most lion years ago, rather than 176 mammals today are derived million to 161 millionyears ago. "The study presents evifrom an ancient mammal that had molars with three cusps dence that m ammals were arrangedin atriangularshape. quitediverse back then,"M eng The Haramiyidas have two said. "Our study describes anirows of cusps on their molars. mals that live in trees, but we've "This has puzzled paleon- seen ones that swim, glide and tologists for many decades," run on the ground. This gives Meng said. "They didn't know us a new picture of what mamif Haramiyidas were mam- mals looked like when they comals or not because their teeth existed with dinosaurs." than their bodies, and light,
DESCHUTES BREWERY pgn~anl988
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
"It's kind of a Catch-22. We need people to be
Seniors
working in (service) industries, but we can't get them here sometimes because it's primarily an elderly community."
Continued fromA1 Senior citizens who move
into an area generally aren't eager to fund schools, re-
— Tobey Phillips, spokesman for Citrus County, Florida
search shows, whereas those
who remain in the communities where they worked and It has among the oldest pop- cities. ulations in the nation, not to Residents in the younger mention in Florida, which has areas will want state investlong had the highest rate of ments in education, trans-
raised their families tend to
support education and other public spending that doesn't benefit them
d i r ectly. Cit-
rus County voters lived up to that thesis as recently as two years ago when they decisively rejected a referendum to raise property taxes to fund
seniors in the nation, and will
schools.
The county's elderly makeup sometimes has made it difficult to attract workers with
young families to fill those service jobs, said Tobey Phillips, a county spokeswoman. Health care jobs account for almost a third of all jobs in the
John Raoux I The Associated Press
The office manager for the Audibel Hearing Aid Center, Maureen Locher, right, offers homemade
county. cookies to a customer, Maurice Wright, in Homosassa, Florida. Here in Citrus County, more than a "It's kind of a Catch-22," third of the residents are seniors. Phillips said. "We need people to be working in these industries, but we can't get Church has struggled to main- coming crops of seniors will ing of the developments was them here s ometimes b e- tain membership as congre- be more tech-savvy. But at the gearedtoward empty nesters cause it's primarily an elderly gantseither die orm ove back libraryin Citrus County, large- from the Northeast. Boston community." north to spend their last years print books are popular, and Red Sox legend Ted Williams Employers see that every near relatives. Changes that librarystaff ers have become came to Citrus Hills in the late day. Mike Arthur, who runs a might attract younger fami- the de facto tutors on new 1980s and was known to fish staffing service that provides lies for the almost 500-mem- technology. The library offers regularly in the nearby Gulf of health care workers for insti- ber congregation often meet classes on basic software such Mexico. "They came down here tutions and individual homes, resistance. as Microsoft Word and Excel "One term that has been said he looks for workers who and is developing a social me- when they were maybe in are compassionate and patient used for a church like ours is dia class after getting requests their late 50s, and now they're when hiring, given the elderly 'a hospice church,' and that's for it, said Eric Head, director in their 80s and 90s," said Pat makeup of his clientele. Mau- a pretty bleak deal but may- of library services. Coles, who runs county serreen Locher makes sure there be realistic," said Jim Capps, Citrus County became a re- vices for seniors. are plenty of homemade cook- interim pastor. "It's not (a) tirement mecca in the 1980s C itrus County i s o n e o f ies, fresh coffee and cheese bad thing, but the problem with the development of the eight counties s tretching spread at the hearing aid cen- with that is you're facing Beverly Hills and Citrus Hills round the Orlando and Tamter she runs. extinction." housing communities in for- pa metro areas in a band that The local First Presbyterian Baby boomers and other mer citrus groves. Market- might be called the Gray Belt.
portation and infrastructure.
for decades yet. The others in- Not so much for residents in clude Marion, Martin, Indian the Gray Belt, said University River, Highlands, Sarasota, of Florida economist David Charlotte and Sumter coun- Denslow. "Senior citizens aren't going ties, the last of which is home to the largest concentration to care quite as much about of seniors of any county in education. They're not going the nation thanks to the reto care quite as much about tirement community called congestion in r ush h our," The Villages, northwest of Denslow said. "It's going to Orlando. make it harder for local govBy 2030, seniors in these ernments and the state to fund c ounties, which a r e o v e r- things." whelmingly white, will make Since voting power will tilt up anywhere from a third to in favor of the older residents half of the residents. because of their higher votNorth Dakota, Texas and er-participation rates, the key Michigan have pockets of se- to keeping both sides happy niors on par with the Gray Belt is to devolve all kinds of govcounties in Florida. But unlike ernmental decisions on taxes, the Florida counties, which planning and education from have grown from the migra- the state level to the local level tion of new seniors, they have so that residents in areas with gotten grayer as a result of both high and low concentrayounger residents leaving. tions of seniors will feel like The demographic makeup theirvoices are being heard, of these eight Florida coun- Denslow said. "I'd rather have some port ies contrasts starkly w i t h the state's younger and more tions of the state in places that diverse major metro areas, are younger able to set their such as South Florida, Tam- own path and not have it set pa, Orlando and Jacksonville, for them by retirees," Denslow and the interests of Gray Belt said. "It would be good to let residents will diverge political- these cities where the need for ly, socially and economically public spending is greater go from Florida's more youthful their own way."
MORE ABOUT COVER OREGON
State
Qrade exec, atcenter 0 states
Continued fromA1
awsuit, noto icia ysue yet By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
SALEM — A n
e x ecutive
of the technology company in charge of th e state's
failed health insurance websitehasn't been served court papers in
a st a t e l a wsuit
The state, which named Puri more times than any others named in the lawsuit, ac-
the system made it impossible to
named Ravi Puri more times than any others named in the lawsuit, accuses Puri of giving misleading information.
launch the (health insurance exchange) on Feb. 3, 2014," Rosenblum wrote in the lawsuit.
website's failure, the state
Cover Oregon'sbudget
and audit committee will rev iew before sending to t h e
The state says despite not delivering the website on time for its original October launch, Puri "demanded that Cover Oregonpay Oracle more than $24 million for development work."
decided Oregonians would use the federal exchange, H ealthCare.gov, to b u y insurance. Cover Oregon is still studying the r emaining 3,361 individuals and families who received the credit
Patnode also on Monday told the House Interim Com-
Cover Oregon board for a vote in December.
and the state of development of
The state argues the money
was surprised officials weren't further along with budgeting money to the federal gov- for next year after Patnode
DOES EVERVONa
HEARINGAIDS
not new development work, and that Puri knew it.
ernment. In total, the error will cost the 775 already
Connect Hearing
identified about $100,000,
an email. Edmunson added "the pro-
Cover Oregonpaid Oracle $77.1 million for consulting services from June 2013 through June 2014, court documents
cess can take some time."
show. Those invoices include
$55.3 million for consulting servicesthat came after the
The state can ask for an
pay the firm up to $2 million
think of sort of an invitation to the party," said Portland attorney Russell Barnett. "Until
alternative service, where a judge could allow the plaintiff to serve someone who would
you have actually been per- report to Puri. "I think they'll get him sonally served, someone actually hands you the summons served by some means evenand the complaint, you're not tually," Kroll said. "It depends being sued." how critical the attorney gen"It doesn't kick off until eral's office thinks having him someone actually serves you be part of the case would be." with papers," Barnett added. A news release issued Sept. Cover Oregonhired Oracle 2 by an international IT comto develop its health insurpany said Puri is the new ance exchange. Consumers seniorvice president of operwere supposed to be able to ations of Rolta International. use the website to sign up for a The company works with state health care plan under the Af- and federal governments on IT
the other five Oracle executives named in the lawsuit, Robert
C ommittee Chair m a n Mitch Greenlick, D-Portland,
— Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletttt.com
MUMBLE? - "-
if it wants Puri's cooperation in court.
An attorney representing
plans for Cover Oregon next year.
to see how many will owe
to go live. "A summons and complaint in a civil case is one way to
didn'trespond to requests for comment.
mittee on Health Care of his
Puri demanded was for repair work to the broken website,
state's original launch date. The state has hired Portland law firm Markowitz, Herbold, Glade & Mehlhaf, PC, to help with the lawsuit. The state will
change missed its original October 2013 deadline and never launched, despite a price tag of more than $200 million. Puri, who lives in Georgia,
this error," Patnode said.
The state, which
Edward Kroll, a Hillsboro cuses Puri of giving mislead- attorney who is vice president ing information as the state of the Oregon Criminal Descrambled to fix the website fense Lawyers Association, months after it was supposed said the state has other options
fordable Care Act. But the ex-
been appropriately cautious with our evaluation of Cover Oregon's website was supposed to allow people to shop and compare insurance prices before enrolling, all online. After the
against him and the company, the Oregon attorney general's office confirmed Monday. Ravi Puri, who was vice president of government con- questions to Oracle, which desulting for technology giant clined to comment. "The Department of Justice Orade, hasn't received a summons or the complaint from the has attempted to serve (Puri), lawsuit Attorney General Ellen and he has not been available Rosenblum filed Aug. 22, court for service," DOJ spokeswomdocuments show. Five other ex- an Kristina Edmunson said in ecutives have been served.
"I just want t o u nderscore the fact that we've
Kitzhaber said the safest thing said Cover Oregon was planto do was to move Cover Ore- ning to get rid of 72 of its 117 gon's functions to other state employees. "It seems to me to be pretty agencies. Senate P resident Peter Courtney, D-Salem, fol- late to be doing some of the lowed suit and promised legis- things you're talking about lation in 2015. doing," Greenlick said, adding Republicans say that's not that there's a risk that Cover soon enough and have called Oregon's budget wouldn't be for a special session, which approved. Democrats say isn't likely to Cover Oregon is working happen. on its budget, which a finance
* — .
YOUII HEARING PROFESSIONALS
FORMERL Y LEAtsiELD HBIRIN6AID CENTER
Patnode said. The tax credits are avail-
1-888-568-9884
able for essential health benefits for people making up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level.
ssrsrrsurssne'
Patnode's update came
amid calls from both parties that Cover Oregon be dissolved into the Oregon Health Authority next year.
two weeks before Gov. John
"The Oregon Health Authority can handle anything Cover Oregon currently does," said Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, who is on
to fight the case, according to a contract between the state
and the firm signed in May, Kitzhaber asked Rosenblum
the interim Senate health
to file a lawsuit. Oracle is suing the state of
care committee. "I'm hope-
Oregon in federal court, alleging the state owes $23 million
will join in bipartisan legislation to end Cover Oregon as soon as possible." The issue flared up two weeks ago as Gov. John
ful that other legislators
for work on the website. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletitt.com
~!
4 ~@ :::,,-"
's
AHA'.
solutions, the statement says. Cindy Briggs " VeneziaAn/ico"
That announcement came just weeks after the state accused Puri and other Orade ex-
ecutives of recklessly misleading state employees into believingthe website would go live on Feb. 3, four months after it was originally supposed to launch.
bend We UCA M
"At the time Puri made these
statements,hekneworreddessShwarts, said he couldn't com- ly disregarded that Oracle had ment on the case and sent all not resolved all (serious errors)
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Single
Veterans
He argued the increase in single-person households also Continued from A1 is exaggerating income inThe president of Yardeni equality in the U.S. "While they have less Research in New York said the rise has "implications for household earnings t h an our economy, society and married people, they also politics." have fewer expenses, espeSingles, particularly young- cially if there are no children er ones, are more likely to rent
than to own their dwellings. Never-marriedyoung singles are less likely to have children. And previously married older ones, many of whom have adult children, are unlikely to have young kids, Yardeni wrote. That will influence how
Continued from A1 At the Government Print-
ing Office, 6 of 8 electricians who have joined the electrical shop in recent years are
former military members. But Robert Chaney, the
a nonveteran, said some ar- ified for civil service. "I've heard people say, 'I've rived without electrician's licenses. One was hired over applied for a job, but some vetthe phone from Michigan, eran's just going to get it,'" said he said, then quit soon after Mark Butler, 56, a Navy veter-
The percentage of adult Americans who have never married has risen to 30.4 percent from 22.1 percent in 1976, while the proportion that are
divorced, separated or widowed increased to 19.8 percent
starting.
an who investigates fair-hous-
But Laura Barmby was pleasantly surprised when she ran a training session this summer for the Com-
ing violations for the Department of Housing and Urban
m erce Department t h at i ncluded veterans. I n a
role-playing exercise, the eight veterans banded together in reaction to a natu-
Land for afour-year campus Sim s on Ave.
Phase 1: 10.4 acres
Site of old pumice mi 46acres <8 . "g~,
gb
o,
Continued from A1 "We're disappointed, and it does mean one more delay in getting started on a four-year university," said Becky Johnson, an OSU vice president and the leader of the Bend
campus. "But we also respect Oregon's land use process and know that this is what comes
along with it. We feel very strongly that this is the best location, and we believe the de-
velopment code allows for the campus to be there." J ohnson noted t hat
o~'
certain preference,there's
the line when they are con-
Obama began accelerat- the job being advertised to the
dumbfounded. In her view,
she needed something done, so she did what she did in the
military: She got it done. "I swing a mean hammer!" she said. "I told them, 'What
do you mean, I shouldn't lift more, 63, a d r il l i n structor this box'?'" At the Interior Department during the Vietnam War who
offices in Albuquerque, New Mexico, it took a long time for a
set up an affinity group for veterans at HUD.
He said veterans suffer from civilian, Earl Waits, to get used a widespread misconception to young veterans calling him because "most people think if
"sir." At first, it was jarring,
officer but initially settled for an administrative job at HUD
"I understand their l i ves were on the line over in Iraq,
you're a vet, you don't have to said Waits, 65, the chief administrative law judge handling be qualified." Some veterans are also frus- probate issues involving Native trated they are landing jobs American lands. "But I underthat do not reflect their experi- stand that's just part of the culence. Many of them had a lot of ture they came out of," he said. A female manager at the responsibilitywhile still in their 20s, leading units into combat U.S. Forest Service in Milwauin Iraq and Afghanistan. kee said veterans make sexuEbony Rankin supervised ally suggestive comments to 50 sailors as a junior naval her and colleagues. with few supervisory responsi-
but we have a lot of, quite frankly, complaints," said the to move up to a more senior po- manager, who spoke on the sition administering grants to condition of anonymity bethe homeless. cause of the sensitivity of the "I try to tell veterans they've issue. "They're a little rough got to get in at a lower grade with their people skills." But there are corners of the and work your way up," she said, "because the jobs are so g overnment where the t w o specialized." groups are in sync. At HUD's Day to day, the two groups broadcast office, a team of 18 are trying to sort out their cul- young engineers operates an in-house television station and tural differences. bilities. It took her three years
to the bleak employment
continue to receive preferential
as a management analyst in
runs the department's website. A third are veterans who did
consideration when they apply for other government jobs.
HUD's human resources of-
similar jobs in the military, and
that any potential
prospects many service members facedafter coming home from Afghan-
fice, Gwen Colvin, a former master sergeant in the Air
the boss, Bill Amos, is a retired
Army master sergeant. soned employees are welcom- Force, started to move the boxgovernment's most visible ing former service members es she had brought with her effort to reward military as motivated go-getters who so she could unpack them and service since the draft end- bring new energy to places hang her military commendaed in the 1970s. where old-timers seem as if tions and other memorabilia V eterans benefit f r o m they are punching a clock until on her office wall. Her colPlae Well, Retire Well preferential hiring for civ- retirement. But in many oth- leagues told her to wait for the il-service jobs under a law ers, interviews show, ill will is d ating to World War I I , smoldering, and two very difbut the administration has ferent cultures are clashing. ~+ccoolsculpting boosted the extra credit vetThe strains are deepening erans get, giving them an as the Defense Department L EFF EL Dan' t settle far anyone GE N T E R but a plastic surgean for even greater edge in getting cuts spending and sheds Coolsculp6ng' those jobs. The government troops at the same time that 75SW onneWay,Suiie1 • en www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006 541-728 -0321~www.elevationcapitalstraIegies.com has also set hiring goals for federal budget pressures have veterans at each agency, shrunk the hiring of civilians and managers are graded to a five-year low. There are on how many they bring on fewer jobs to go around. "I say to vets, 'When you board, officials said. Last year, veterans made apply for a government job, if up 46 percent of full-time you are qualified, you should 541 382-6447! 2090 NE Wyatt Court ! Suite 101 hires, the Office of Person- get the job,'" said Walter ElBend OR 97701! bendurology.com S~SU r olo nel Management said. They now represent a third of the federal workforce, holding positions well beyond the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments. Their colleagues in the civil service say that while
location could have stirred opposition, saying, "Even Juniper Ridge has neighbors," a reference to a northSite has suggested would be a good fit for the campus.
said Scott Morgan, Truth In
cades has $24 million, but Johnson said, "We didn't ex-
he suspects the city will decide
In some federal offices, sea-
In her first week on the job
i stan and Iraq. It i s t h e
side location Truth In
project. In this case, OSU-Cas-
forward will take away from the campus."
things because that was the protocol. Colvin said she was
Becky Johnson,OSU vice president, noted
any
anything we spend moving
By law, veterans who meet
certain criteria related to where, when and how long they served and whether they were injured go to the head of
ing the hiring of veterans public. And vets who are alfive years ago in response ready in the federal workforce
potential location could have stirred opposition, saying, clude for analysis, what that "Even Juniper Ridge has analysis must show, and what neighbors," a reference to a the required results must be north-side location Truth In are entirely unaddressed" by Site has suggested would be a city code. good fit for the campus. In its appeal, Truth In Site Johnson said i t "h a s n't characterizes the university's been decided yet" how much estimates of how many stuOregon State University as dents will walk and bike to a whole organization, as op- campus as ludicrous, saying in posed to OSU-Cascades, will the appeal, "Baloney does not help cover the added legal cut it." "I don't think many people, costs ofthe extended appeal. 7ypically legal costs are calcu- including the city, buy their lated into the capital costs of a Parking Management Plan,"
pect to spend this much, so
B o ston. "I
think veterans bring so much to the table. The military is not all screaming, yelling (at) people to charge up the hill and kill, kill, kill."
ral disaster, devising a novel response to offer emergency services to the public. "When a group gets a
The Bulletin
OSU-Cascades
Development in
an inclination to say some- sidered for civil-service jobs. how they're less than" oth- Troops with combat injuries or ers, Barmby said. "But they those disabled during their serhave the real-world experi- vice get higher preference. Butence of having challenges ler, for instance, developed bad put in their way they need knees andsuffered from a deto overcome. If they're able generative disk disease during to do the job, what's wrong his 30 years in the Navy, qualiwith helping someone who fying him as disabled. risked their life for their For some open positions, a country'?" veteran can be hired without
gQv
maintenance staff to do those
— Mark Butler, 56, a Navy veteran who now works for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
shop's senior mechanic and
in their households," Yardeni wrote.
much money they spend and from 15.3 percent, according what they buy. to the economist.
U
"I've heard people say, 'I've applied for a job, but some veteran's just going to get it.' I think veterans bring so much to the table. The military is not all screaming."
R
Site's spokesman, who added
W S
«
8
Sek
veterans work hard, they
rarely display independent thinking. "You're getting a very
to hear the appeal. The appeal document argues OSU-Cascades' parking plan relies upon "wholly unre-
D~
conservative worker that's
very narrow-minded," said Bob O'Brien, a technology
The appeal touches on is- liable data which does not consues including how necessary stitute substantial evidence," it is to file a master plan, how adding the university's asfar a driveway must be placed sumptions about the manner from an access road and in which students will comwhether a "university" counts mute to and from school are as a "college" under code. "groundless." The bulk of the appeal, howIn its defense, OSU-Casever,is focused on traffic and cadeshas noted the strategy parking. was drafted by Kittelson & In his decision, Helm crit- Associates, a major traffic icized the code governing a engineering firm with offices college's parking lot, noting across the country. that e v aluating O S U-CasIn concluding the appeal, cades' parking plan "rep- Truth In Site argues the City resents a difficult if not per- Council is better suited to han-
0 P
P
0
specialist for the Office of
Personnel Management. About 90 of the 100 computer experts in his office
in suburban Maryland are veterans, he said.
"In meetings, you can't question anything," O'Brien
4gggtgI
•
complained. The veterans' attitude to their supervisors,
he said, is: "You're my boss. You could be a complete lunatic, but I won't question
you."
verse exercise because there
dle this decision than the Land
Duringthe longest stretch of war in American history,
is no legal standard set forth in the code for determining whether a (parking plan) is adequate." Helm elaborated, "what data a (parking plan) must in-
Use Board of Appeals, as the
many veterans have served
council "knows the lay of the
multiple combat tours. They
land and the affected community quite literally."
say theyhave earned a right to preferential treatment
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbu!Ietin.com
that they are grunts unqual-
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12~NE Division St Bend; OR 9770~! 541) 382-4171 641 NW Fir Ave Redmeed, OR 97756 5~ 5 4 8-7707
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© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
BRIEFING St. Charles adds boardmemders St. Charles Health System announced Monday it added two physician executives to its board of directors. Dr. StevenGordon serves as system vice president of care transformation for PeaceHealth in Vancouver, Washington, where he leads initiatives to improve care through the use of technology, patient engagement, timely information flow and clinical decision support. He's beenwith PeaceHealth since 2007. Before that, he worked for Providence Health and Services for 11 years as afaculty physician and, later, as medical director of quality. Gordon earned his medical degree from Harvard Medical School and his Master of Public Policy from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, and serves on a number of state boards. Dr. Hartwell Lin is the medical director of the emergency department at John Muir Medical Center in Concord, California, where heoversees physician group operations for the ED and serves on aboard that designs strategic initiatives related to physician resources and clinical integration. He has been with the John Muir Medical Center since1998. Lin earned his medical degree from Albany Medical College. The board, chaired by Bend attorney Tom Sayeg, now has13 members. St. Charles announced in March it had addedGregVan Pelt, president of the Oregon Health Leadership Council, a group that works to makehealth care and insurance more affordable, as a director.
LA PINE
'Be d
Bl OWel'e Bl' e Wl
Ol'WOman
By Claire Withycombe
and unlawful use of a weapon
The Bulletin
after allegedly stabbing Victor
cordingto the ruling. Chapman was originally
Evangelista, 52, of La Pine on
booked in Deschutes County
Saturday night. Deschutes Circuit Judge Beth Bagley ruled Mondaythat Chapman be monitored for alcohol
jail Saturday on $360,000bail, according to the Deschutes
A woman charged with stabbing a man in La Pine over
the weekend has had her bail amount decreased by $110,000. Heather Leigh Chapman,26, of La Pine, m ade her firstcourtap-
consumption if she is
able to post 10 percent of the bail amount, which
pearanceby video from the Deschutes County Cha p m an wou l d release her from jail Monday afternoon. county custody. She is scheduled tobe arIf she is released, Chapman raigned on a grand jury indict- is forbidden from drinking ment Sept. 22. alcohol or goingto bars. ChapChapman faces charges man is also not permitted to of attempted murder, assault use or possess weapons, ac-
W HATP/E R
HAppFNFD Tp
~ ~
man p~wqj~1„
S ci I A
and other witnesses identified
County Sheriffs Office.
The Deschutes County Sheriffs Office received areport of an incident on the 51300 block of Riverland Avenue in La Pine
at 6 p.m. Saturday. The stabbing occurred for an unknown reason, and Deschutes County Sheriffs Sgt. Vance Lawrence declined to release any further information on the incident
Monday, saying the investigation was ongoing. Evangelista
cordingto the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Evangelista suffered life-threatening injuries as a result of the stabbing. After receiving treatment on the scene fromthe La Pine Fire
Department, Evangelista was flown to St. Charles Bend by
air ambulance, where he was treated and released Reached by phone Monday, Evangelista declined to comment on the incident. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com
Followi n g up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com.
Roadwork set near PrInevIlle Roadwork planned for early October will likely cause delays along a stretch of Forest Road 42 in theOchoco National Forest east of Prineville. The work is set for Oct. 6 through Oct. 10 along 7 miles of the road, between the Ochoco RangerStation and Big Summit Prairie, according to the Ochoco National Forest. Workers will be filling potholes and resurfacing the road. Traffic will be limited to one lane around the work zone.
FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit
• bttp://inclwnb.nwcg. gov/stnt e/38 • www.nwccwnb.ns/ informntion/firemnp. aspx 1. 36 Pit
• Acres: 2,358 • Containment: 0% • Cause: Humancaused 2. Yellow Point • Acres: 790 • Containment: 85% • Cause: Unknown 3. Deception Complex • Acres: 5,498 • Containment: 75% • Cause: Lightning
DESCHUTES NATIONAL FORESTWELCOME CENTER
ix ears ater, construction is — a most — rea to e n
4. 790 Fire • Acres: 3,036 • Containment: 75% • Cause: Lightning 5. Onion Mountain • Acres: 1,500 • Containment: 0% • Cause: Unknown
STATE NEWS Estacada
t
Grants Pass
r
\
Redmondhosts preparedness fair Prepare! Redmond is hosting a Saturday event in Redmond aimed at teaching people how to be readyfor an emergency. The Emergency Preparedness Fair, which organizers hope will become anannual event, is set for 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at Centennial Park in Redmond. Event goers will learn how to prepare emergency kits, how best to store emergency food and water and how to stay healthy during a disaster. Prepare! Redmond is acommunity-basedcollaborative including the American RedCross, Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, Redmond Fire 8 Rescueandthe city of Redmond, aswell as health care andutility providers and faithbased organizations. The event is free.
,;grgg=e~q: gm
the suspect as Chapman, ac-
U.S. Forest Service / Submitted image
The Deschutes National Forest is nearly ready to begin construction on a welcome center on the Cascade Lakes Highway. This rendering shows the planned facility.
By Scott Hammers
tion of a welcome center
ing nearby trails, and added a planned tunnel beneath the highway nearby to provide safe passage under the road for hikers and bikers. Forest Service spokes-
on the Cascade Lakes Highway.
woman Jean Nelson-Dean said construction bids for
The Bulletin
After nearly six years of planning, the Deschutes National Forest is almost
ready to begin construc-
the project have been sub-
First proposed in late
2008, the project hit a snag when opponents filed an appeal in 2010, questioning whether the proposed building at the southeast corner of the highway and Forest Service Road 41 would provide access to nearby trails. In response to the appeal, in 2012 the Forest Service agreed to add parking for people access-
mitted, and the winning bidder should be selected this falL
Power lines and other utilities are expected to be extended to the site this
fall as well, she said. Funding for the project was provided through an Oregon Department of Transportation program to enhance designated "scenic byways," roads
• Grants Pass:Two wildfires, one here and another near Estncndn,threatened homes and put residents on alertfor evacuations,B6
Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!
The Bulletin where travelers can encounter unique natural
The welcome center initially is likely to be staffed and historic features. only in the summer, NelNelson-Dean said the De- son-Dean said, and will schutes National Forest has be a place where forest wanted to establish a presvisitors can pick up parkence near recreation sites ing permits and maps, and reachableontheCascade ask Forest Service staff Lakes Highway since mov- about weather, trail condiing its headquarters to a site tions and other matters. near Pine Nursery Park. "When our office
Nelson-Dean said the
moved all the way to the northeast side (of Bend), we didn't really have a place like that," she said.
facility will also feature some public rooms where school groups or others can hold educational programs or other events,
"We used to have our of-
and will serve as a base
fice kind of off Century Drive, and it was easy for people to stop in and get
for Forest Service law enforcement offi cers closer to the forests than their
that kind of information
current headquarters.
on their way up the scenic byway."
— Reporter:541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
Call n reporter Bend .......................541-e17-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine..................541-a83-03e7 Sunriver................541-383-0367 Deschutes............54t-a83-0367 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-a83-0367 Salem ...................541-a83-0367 D.C....................... 202-662-7456 Business ..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health ...................54t-a83-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
Submissions • Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Mickei's Worth or In MyView
P.O.Boxe020 Bend, OR 97708
Le isators oo a ea to2015's i issues By Ted Shornck The Bulletin
The Oregon Legislature won't convene until Feb. 2,
but Deschutes County officials are already looking ahead to possible legislation for public safety, mental health, land use and natural resources.
Deschutes County commissioners met Wednesday with department heads and lobbyists with the Public Af-
9-1-1 tax An increase to the 9-1-1
concept, discussed at the
association's public safety
emergency system tax has gained statewide support from county commissioners, sheriffs and other stakeholders. Proposed by the Association of Oregon Counties, the tax would increase from $.75 to $1.25 per month for cell phone users and traditional land lines. The tax could
summits, seeks to modernize the tax to help with county
increase or decrease in sub-
funding of the 9-1-1 system.
M ental health
work on programs to keep people with mental health problems out of the prison
know there's an opportunity to look at alternative uses for
system.
wood biomass..
Wood biomass During the short 2014
DeBone said state agencies
"I think there are a lot of players that are ready to have this discussion," DeBone said.
Some of the other issues up for discussion included
currently being drafted. "This is going to be a pret-
legislative session, a bill that would modify the definition of "green energy technology" to include wood biomass was halted. The bill was co-spon-
A mental health justice
reinvestment program is another legislative concept
a clean diesel standard for
government-contracted vehicles and a water supply
ty hot topic throughout the
sored by state Sen. Tim
development account that
sequent years based on the fairs Council to review issues consumer price index. of interest to the county that Commissioner Tony might be addressed by state DeBone is co-chairman of lawmakers when they get the AOC communications
session," said Justen Rainey, a lobbyist with the Public
Knopp, R-Bend. The county would like the Oregon Legis-
couldbe used forincreasing
Affairs Council, to county
lature to reintroduce the bill,
officials. He said the program would
as promoting water reuse or conservation.
back to work in 2015.
funnel money to counties to
which would allow wood biomass to beredefined forspace heating or water heating.
committee. The tax increase
water use efficiency as well — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
E VENT TODAY THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Running the Rift" by Naomi Benaron; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ eastbend or 541-330-3760. REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. com or 541-550-0066. FALL REPAIRCAFE: Event that connects people with broken things and people that like to fix things; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; The Gear Fix, 345 SW Century Dr., Bend; 541-617-0022. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Jane Kirkpatrick will present her novel "A Light In The Wilderness"; $15 suggesteddonation;6-8 p.m.; Partners in Care, 2075 NEWyatt Court, Bend; 541-382-5882. KNOW WILDERNESS:OUR DESERT WILDERNESS:The Oregon Natural Desert Association will explore life in the high desert; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. "A STREETCARNAMEDDESIRE": A showing of the 2014 Young
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Vic production of the Tennessee Williams play; $18; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16& IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 541-312-2901.
www.deschuteslibrary.org/lapine/ or 541-312-1090. HARMONY4WOMEN SINGER'S KICKOFFPARTY:Women and teens are invited to sing in an annual concert to raise funds for three nonprofits; free, registration requested; 5:30 p.m.; Private residence, 22055 Rickard Road, WEDMESDAY Bend; www.harmony4women.com BEND FARMERSMARKET:3-7 or trixytazzycilive.com. p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW TONY FURTADO:The Portland Frankli n and NW Oregon avenues; roots-rock artist performs, with www.bendfarmersmarket.com. Stephanie Schneiderman; $12 plus AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Author fees in advance, $15 at the door; 7 Beth Baker will speak on her p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., book"With a Little Help from Our Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or Friends: Creating Community as We 541-815-9122. Grow Older"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina WILD & SCENICFILMFESTIVAL: Springs Books, 422 SW Sixth St., Featuring outdoors and Redmond; 541-526-1491. conservation films as part of the "LES MISERABLES":Anew Oregon Natural Desert Association production of the opera about Wilderness Weekend, with food, convict Jean Valjean; SOLDOUT; beverages, a raffle and more; $8 in 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW advance, $10 at the door; 7 p.m., Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. doorsopen at6 p.m.;The Old org or 541-317-0700. Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www.ONDA.org/wild&scenic or 541-330-2638. "FAT, SICK &NEARLYDEAD 2": THURSDAY Documentary about three meat and THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read cheese eaters who adopt a vegan diet for six weeks; $15; 7:30 p.m.; and discuss"The Sense of an Ending" by Julian Barnes; noon; La Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend;
541-312-2901. "LES MISERABLES":A new production of the opera about convict Jean Valjean; SOLDOUT; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. BEND COMEDY SHOWCASE: Featuring Doug Morgan, Last Comedian Standing semi-finalist; $5; 8 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd.; www.bendcomedy.com,
scotti e©cocomedyscene.com or 480-257-6515. "JANAPAR:LOVEONA BIKE": Screening of a film about a 23-year-old who cycles across three continents; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend;
www.mcmenamins.comor
541-382-5174. THE VAM COMMANDERS:The Ashland punk band performs, with Problem Stick; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
FRIDAY SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West
AROUND THE STATE OHSU grallt —Oregon Health & Science University officials say they've raised most of the $500 million they need tosecure a matching gift from Nike co-founder Phil Knight and his wife, Penny. University officials told a state Senatecommittee on Mondaythat they've raised $428 million, including $200 million in tax moneythat will be used to build research facilities. OHSUhas until February 2016 to raise the remaining $72 million it needs to secure Knight's contribution. The university hopes the influx of moneywill help researchers improve early detection of cancer. OSU says the money has come from more than 6,200 donors in 48 states, including 34 peoplewho have contributed $1 million or more. KISS muSeum —The bandKiss shed the makeupand pulled out acoustic guitars to raise moneyfor the renovation of the Oregon Military Museum. TheOregonian reports the $2,500-a-ticket gala Sunday night in LakeOswego raised more than $1 million. The museumis named for the father of lead guitarist TommyThayer. He is Brig. Gen. James B. Thayer, now93, aWorld War II hero who liberated a Nazi death camp. Themuseum is at the Oregon National Guard's Camp Withycombe in Clackamas.Therenovation is expected to cost $15 million, and half has beenraised. An auction Sunday included oneof Kiss member PaulStanley's guitars, fetching $20,000. Thepaper reported the banddid a14-song set, closing with an unpluggedversion of "Rock andRoll All Nite."
Ultimate FriSbee arreSt —Amanwanted for anarmedrobbery in New York eludedauthorities for four years until they caught up with him on Sundaywhile hewas playing at an ultimate Frisbee tournament in Oregon. KVALTVsays police in Eugenearrested 31-year-old JahsonMarryshow around 5p.m.Sunday.Policesay Marryshow was wanted for a 2010armed bank robbery in NewYork's Ulster County. He allegedly stole a carandburned down abarn during his escape. TheU.S. Marshal's Service and local police worked to find out where hewasstaying after getting a tip that he was living in Eugene. Police say hedidn't try to escapefrom police. He's being held in the Lane County Jail. GOvernOr dedate —Another debate hasbeenscheduled in Oregon's campaign for governor. Democratic Gov.John Kitzhaber and Republican state Rep.Dennis Richardson will square off Oct.10at the City Club of Portland. Thecandidates have three other debates scheduled, inPortland,Eugeneand Bend.They'vealsodiscussed debating in Medford, but details havenot beenfinalized.
Cascade Avenue and Ash Street; sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. VFW DINNER:Fish and chips; $6; 3-7 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 NEFourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. BEND OKTOBERFEST:Event includes oompah music, family
area, gamesand awiener dog race; free admission; 5-10p.m. Friday, noon-10 p.m. Saturday, all agesuntil6 p.m .;downtown Bend; www.bendoktoberfest.com or 541-788-3862. MUSIC FORAN AUTUMN EVENING:Dinner and musical fundraiser for scholarships awarded to south Deschutes County students; $40; 6-9 p.m.; Holy Trinity Church, 18143 Cottonwood Road, Sunriver; sunrivercfegmail.com or 541-593-1833. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Author Jane Kirkpatrick will speak on her book "A Light in the Wilderness"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books,422 SW Sixth St.,Redmond; 541-526-1491. NPRA RODEOFINALS:Featuring bareback riding, barrel racing, roping and more; $10, free for children12 and younger; 7 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com or 541-447-6575.
"LES MISERABLES":Anew production of the opera about convict Jean Valjean; SOLDOUT; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. BEND IMPROV GROUP:The
comedy groupperforms; adult themes; $8 in advance, $10 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave.; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. SCREEN ON THE GREEN: A screening of the film "Sunset Boulevard"; bring snacks, chairs and blankets; free, boxed or canned fooddonationsaccepted;7:30 p.m .; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www. jcld.org or 541-475-3351. THE HORDE ANDTHE HAREM: The Seattle indie rock band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. FALL INTO FUNK FIESTA: Featuring Jelly Bread and Elektrapod; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 9:30 p.m., doors open at 8:30 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.p44p.biz or 541-408-4329.
NEWS OF RECORD DUII —Alysha Marie Cox, 27,was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:59 The Bulletin will update items in the a.m. Sept. 14, in the 800 block of NE Police Log whensuch a request GreenwoodAvenue. is received. Anynewinformation, Theft —Atheft was reported at 8 such as the dismissal of charges or a.m. Sept.14, in the 700 blockof NW acquittal, must beverifiable. For more Georgia Avenue. information, call 541-633-2117. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:23 p.m. Sept.14, in the 2600 block of NE BEND POLICE Longfellow Court. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:58 DEPARTMENT p.m. Sept. 14, in the800 block of NW Columbia Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at12:15 p.m. Sept. 2, in the19400 DUII —Gregory Dennis McDonald, 47, block of Charleswood Lane. was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at12:42 p.m. Sept. 3, 9:42 p.m. Sept.11, in the 61200block in the 2500 block of NE Second Street. of S. U.S. Highway 97near milepost 150. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:38 Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:49 a.m. Sept.12, in the 600 block of SE p.m. Sept. 11, in the600 block of SE Third Street. Third Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:12 Theft —A theft was reported at 3:55 a.m. Sept. 12, in thearea ofLangtry p.m. Sept.1I, in the 2600 block of NW Lane andSedalia Loop. High Lakes Loop. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:30 p.m. Sept.12, in the 60200 block of PRINEVILLE POLICE FaugarweeCircle. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was DEPARTMENT reported entered at 8:42a.m. Sept. 12, Criminal mischief —Anact of in the 900 block of NE 27th Street. criminal mischief and aburglary were Theft —Atheft was reported and an reportedat5:01 p.m.Sept.11,inthe arrest madeat4:35 p.m. Sept.12, in areaofNW Lamonta Road. the100 block of NEBendRiver Mall Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was Avenue. reported stolen at 8:30 a.m. Sept. 12, DUII —Patrick Ryan Trass, 26, was in the area of NW10th Street. arrested on suspicion of driving DUII —Jeannett Pedersen, 55, was under the influence of intoxicants at 11:15 p.m. Sept.12, in the area ofSW Century Drive and SW Knoll Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:58 a.m. Sept.13, in the 20100 blockof Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at1:56 p.m. Sept. 13, in 716 SW11tlt St. the100 block of NEBendRiver Mall Redmond 541.923.4732 Avenue.
POLICE LOG
arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:01 p.m. Sept. 12, in the area of NE Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:45 a.m. Sept. 13, in the area of NE Third Street.
OREGON STATE POLICE
DUII —Guillermo Reyes, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:31 a.m. Sept. 13, in thearea of E.U.S. Highway 20 nearmilepost1. JEFFERSON DUII —Mark Aaron Donnell, 46, COUNTY SHERIFF'S was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at OFFICE 6:50p.m. Sept.13, intheareaofPoe Sholes RoadandJamison Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at DUII —Ashley RenneSinyard, 28, 11:58 a.m. Sept. 9, in the areaof was arrested on suspicion of driving Haystack Reservoir. under the influence of intoxicants at 2a.m. Sept.15, in the area of E.U.S. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:22 Highway 20and NEFifth Street. a.m. Sept. 10, in the 700block of SW Waldorf Lane. BEND FIRE RUNS Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:19 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 3600 block of S. Thursday Adams Drive. 5:25a.m. —Brush or brush-and-grass Criminal mischief —Anact of mixture fire, 1310 NE U.S. Highway 20. criminal mischief was reported at 8:11 7:22 a.m.— Natural vegetation fire, a.m. Sept. 11, in thearea of S. U.S. 244 NW Outlook Vista Drive. Highway 97and Iris Lane. 2:35 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, Criminal mischief —Anact of 59984 CheyenneRoad. criminal mischief and atheft were reported at10:53 p.m. Sept. 11, in the 22 —Medical aid calls. 6200 block of N.Adams Drive. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at noonSept.13, in the area of S. U.S. Highway 97andJuniper Butte. Thelt —A theft was reported at 3:34 p.m. Sept. 13, in the15200 block of SW DoveRoad. NADBffOMWW
ONIL
WINDOW TREATS •
•
7%1SW10th • Redmand • (541) 5484616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com
— From wire reports
B•
PUBLIC OFFICIALS CONGRESS • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 DirksenSenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HeodRiver 2182 RayburnHouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON • Gev. John Kitzhaber, D 160 StateCapitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • SecretaryefStateKateBrown,D 136 StateCapitol Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1616 Fax:503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sosIestate.or.us • Treasurer TedWheeler, D 159 OregonState Capitol 900Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state. ocus
Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General EllenResenblum, D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissioner BradAvakian 800 NEOregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
WE'VE MOVED! NEW STORE NOW OPEN — OLD STORE CLOSIN6 •
•
DESCHUTKS COUNTY 1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone:541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
CountyCommission • Tammy Baney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 ErnatTammyBarey©mdeschules. • Alan Unger,0-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email:Alan Unger©co.deschutes. ocus • TonyDeBene,R-LaPine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email :Tony DeBone@o.deschutes. ocus
CROOK COUNTY 300 NEThird St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration@co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us
CountyCourt •MikeMcCabe,CrookCountyjudge Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe©co.crook.or.us • Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgrencico.crook. 0I'.Us
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
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vlHAT, bbM ~ y g y sg g WEAR. VNbER. Hl& K,ILT'9
f you repeat a falsehood often enough — even an accidental one — people will start to believe it's true. The problem is greatly exacerbated in the electronic age, when an error can be multiplied so extensively that even reasonably thorough research can seem to confirm its truth. Once discovered,though, the mistake must be corrected. That couldmean a change for the veterans monument outside the Deschutes County Courthouse. As Bulletin reporter Scott Hammers wrote Monday, George Washington may never have uttered the words attributed to him on the monument, which was dedicated in 2005. Nevertheless, the words have been linked to his name in several books, in the Congressional Record and in campaign speeches by Sen. John McCain. The quote reads: "The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional as to how they perceive the veterans of earlier wars were treated and appreciated by their nation." It was originally suggested for the monument by local veterans who sought clearance to build the monument. Hammers consulted Edward Lengel, a professor at the University of Virginia who has written and
edited books about Washington and is working on preserving all of his writings. Lengel said there's no evidence Washington ever said the words, and it's not clear who did or how they came to be associated with the nation's first president. Deschutes County A d ministrator Tom Anderson said the DeschutesCounty Commission agreed Monday with a staff recommendationto talk withthe veteran's groups before deciding on next steps. If further investigation confirms Lengel's view, the monument will need to be changed, with either the quote or the attribution — or both — replaced. But there's also a cautionary tale here for all of us. Even when we find multiple sources that appear to confirm something, it's possible they all come from a single earlier error, multiplied and multiplied by instant electronic duplication. We have a world of "facts" at our fingertips, but it takes deeper digging to be sure they really are facts.
Seth Crawford for Crook County Court t t's easy to make an endorsement for the Crook County Commissioner Position 2. Our endorsement goes toSeth Crawford, 36, a Republican. He won the Democratic and Republican primaries, though the office technically is becoming nonpartisan. He is the incumbent and has worked in real estate. Let's start by asserting the obvious,Crook County facesmany chal-
lenges, but the big one is jobs. Crook County needs more jobs and to hold ontothe ones it has. Crawford doesn't have all the answers. He had many more specifics than his opponent, Walt Wagner, 73, who is rutuiing as unaffRated. Crawfordwantstolookatways to diversify the county's economy. The datacentersforApple and Facebook were great successes. More data centers or expansions of the existing ones may be coming, but Crawford says the county can't be satisfied with that. He is proud of the workthe county has done to ensure companies, such as Woodgrain Millworks,
which employs more than 100, stays. He's been working with others to develop more bike trails around Prineville. Bike tourists and enthusiasts may not bring a lot of new jobs to town ~ , but t o urists spend money. Once they come to town, they could think of Prineville as a good place to bring their business or raise a family. Crawford said the county has worked to make government more transparent. The court is holding more night meetings and pulting more county documents online. That issue of the transparency is the only one Wagner, a school board member, went into in any depth. Not enough people show up at the county meetings, he said. When he asks people, hesaidtheydon'tknowwhen the countyholds meetings. He would try to do a better job of spreading the wordby settingup email chains. Crawford is active in the community, knowledgeable about its challenges and invests his time in projects to enhancethe county. Crawford is endorsed.
Congress must take action now on Medicare loophole By Nancy Day inpatient hospital requirement for few months after my mother's coverage of skilled nursing facility 95th birthday, she fell at her services under Medicare." home and hit her head, requirAt a July 30 hearing before the ing stitches and blood transfusions. Senate Special Committee on Aging, She hasnot been the same since. U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, She hadto celebrateher20th wed- said in 2014 that Medicare beneficiading anniversary with her husband, ries had more than 600,000 observawho recently died, at a rehabilitation tion stays that lasted three nights or center. She needs 24/7 care and will more. Collins co-sponsored the Sennever go home again. ate version of the bill, S. 569. "Many of these patients find themEven though she is on Medicare, her care center stay is not covered. selves in a kind of twilight zone," she Why? Because the hospital declared said of those who are not officially her first night as "observation." admitted."The financialconsequencShe was admitted at 2:25 a.m., es can be severe." thereby missing the "two midnights" Toby Edelman, senior policy attorrequirement for Medicare to pay for ney for the Center for Medicare Adthe usual next step for seniors after vocacy, said her organization learned
A
discharge: rehabilitation. If a patient is admitted for that minimum, he or
about the rampantuse of observation
people who do not have time to wait.
Sylvia Engler, 83, of Framingham, Massachusetts, testified that her hus-
band Harold, 92,was in good health for most of their 60-year marriage. He returned to work at 87 after triple
bypass surgery, but lastyear he needed another operation. "Complications set in," she told the
senators. He was in and out of a Boston teaching hospital, released eventually even though he was "unable to walk or stand alone." After six weeks
in rehab, that facility said his family could take him home, but not until
they paid $7,859 "immediately," or the entire bill would be sent to a collection agency. All that hospital time
was deemed"observation." Connecticut Democratic U.S. Rep.
status six years ago. The situation Joe Courtney, the measure's chief she is eligible for 100 days of skilled was exacerbated by a misguided sponsor in the House, said, "The exnursingcare.Because my mother solution to fraud instituted last year ternal pressure to change this flaw in was not, we pay out-of-pocket. by the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicare policy is building with each What I initially thought was an Medicaid Services, the "two-mid- family that goes through this nightindividual dilemma is a nationwide night rule." mare." Courtney has more than 150 problem, one under the radar until Dr. Ann Sheehy, chief of the Hospi- co-sponsors in the House, including this mysterious status determina- talMedicine division at the University Wisconsin's conservative Republition results in a rapid drain of family of Wisconsin-Madison, told senators can Jim Sensenbrenner, although resources. about new research. Among the find- most co-sponsors are Democrats. Many Medicare matters are com- ings she cited: The observation rule is Approving this bill would allow plex, but this situation has a simple "in need of broad reform" and "is not senatorsand representativesto show solution: a one-sentence bill with bi- a fix." On hospital rounds, she can't this could be a do-something Conpartisan support — the Improving discern a person's status. "Worse, gress and help seniors. But it won't Access to Medicare Coverage Act of many seniors have neverheard of ob- happen unless constituents let Con2013. More than 30 major organiza- servation," she said. It only becomes gress know we want common-sense tions are in favor, includingthe Amer- dear when the bill is due. cooperation. ican Medical Association and AARP. Of course, government investiga- — A former Fulbright and Niemanfellow, According to the bill's language, it tors and journalists should pursue Nancy DayisaveteranAssociated Press, would amend the Social Security Act Medicare abuse. But the 2013 rule newspaper and magazine journalist based "to count a period of receipt of outpa- that has hospitals running scared in Chicago. She has taught at Boston tient observation services in a hospi- (because of potential government University and Columbia College Chicago. tal toward satisfying the three-day audits) has serious consequences for She wrote this for The Seattle Times.
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Is Scotland's independence vote a sign of what's to come? By Pankaj MIshra ter in the 1980s, Margaret Thatcher, Recriminations have now erupthis week's referendum in Scot- did more for Scottish independence ed in England as financial marland could result in the U.K. with her regime of privatization, de- kets finally register the prospect of losing almost one-third of its regulation and unfair taxation than Scotland's secession. But blaming land mass and 8 percent of its pop- any Scottish nationalist. By some es- Cameron, who fecklessly called the ulation, and, very likely, its present timates, the deindustrialization that referendum and limited it to a binaprime minister. In a summer rich Thatcher presided over had more ry choice, obscures the fact that the with shocks, the breakup of a United devastating effects in Scotland than Scottish mutiny is part of a larger Nations Security Council member in England. worldwide trend. That's why Thatcher's Conservasuddenly seems more likely than the Governments everywhere that long-predicted fracturing of Iraq. tive Party is almost extinct in Scot- are unable to guarantee equitable Most people I spoke with when land, and its current leaders, David growth and social welfare have t raveling t h r ough S c otland l a st Cameron, George Osborne and Bo- suffered a fatal decay of legitimamonth expected the battle for inris Johnson, evoke a visceral hos- cy. This has been registered so far dependence waged by the Scottish tility and scorn. This isn't just class mostly by low voting percentagNationalist Party to have been lost. hatred for privately educated and es, political apathy more broadly, Recent opinion polls, however, show plummy-accented Tories, or for the or drastic upsurge in support for that almost half of Scottish voters axis of Eton College, Rupert Murchallengers to the status quo from hope to break free of their London doch's News International and the nonelite backgrounds, such as Joko masters Thursday. City of London that they embody. Widodo in Indonesia and Marina T heir disaffection was not t h e Many Scots are unhappy, too, with Silva in Brazil. work of a day. It has been in the the Labour Party, which under Tony Events in Scotland outline a more making for at least three decades. Blair, Thatcher's self-proclaimed radical possibility (Iikely to be fulJason Cowley, editor of B r i tain's heir, placed itself in the avant garde filled in Europe itself in a few weeks leading political weekly, the New of marketization, initiating among when Catalonia may vote to secede Statesman, correctly points out that other things the privatization of the from Spain): Disaffected citizens Britain's Conservative prime minis- National Health Service. can move very quickly to reject
T
unrepresentative governments by
minority.
breaking up entire nation-states.
forced capitalism after its most severe crisis in the 1930s into a new
A quick glance at the last wave of self-determination in the early 20th century shows that inept gov-
ernance and loss of sovereignty, as much as foolish wars and economic crises, can be preludes to swift polit-
ical fragmentation. Few people in 1900 expected centuries-old empires — Qing, Hapsburg, Ottoman — to collapse by 1918. Yet they struggled to cope with the energies unleashed by the rapid growth of commerce and communications in the first wave of
W e stern g o v ernments
compact with the rising masses.
That world o f c o hesive nation-states is now passing, more rapidly than we could have imagined. As in the early 20th century, the elemental forces of globalization have unraveled broad solidarities and
loyalties. The world today seems full of ex-
amples of decayed political systems that have frittered away their legitimacy. They are vulnerable to being undermined rapidly by anarchic re-
globalization. volts from within. For almost a century since 1918, Scotland's referendum will hapthe centralized nation-state has been pen at a great remove from the failed the world's default political form. Its or failing states of our time. Whatvarious experiments in industrial- ever its result may be, it has at least ization, urbanization, mass litera-
alerted us to other possible earth-
cy and consumerism have brought more people into public life.
quakes along the political fault lines of today's world.
In the past, the ex traordinary
— Panhaj Mishra is an author, commentator and Bloomberg View columnist.
growth achieved by industrial capitalism had largely enriched a tiny
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
WEST NEWS
In California drought, 'pop-up' wetlands provide bird habitat
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES
Stapp, soldierwhotried
Edward Mantych, of Bend Nov. 8, 1922 - Sept. 12, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Graveside service at Pilot Butte Cemetery, Bend, OR on Sept. 17, 2014 at 11:00 AM.
to unionize the military
Linda Ruth Caffro, of Redmond May 13, 1943 - Sept. 12, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel Please sign our guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: Memorial Service Saturday 10:00 AM September 20, 2014 at Redmond Memorial Chapel, 717 SW 6th Street, Redmond, OR. Contributionsmay be made to:
American Cancer Society at
www.cancer.org/donate
d W
Meyer Liebowitz/The New YorkTimes
Andy Stapp, founder of the American Servicemen's Union, at its headquarters in New York in1971. Stapp, a discharged anti-war activist whose union claimed tens of thousands of members at lts peak in the Vietnam War era, died Sept.3.
By William Yardley
peal, his discharge status was changed from dishonorable to Andy Stapp, who expressed honorable. his opposition to the Vietnam Griswold, from whom Stapp War by joining the Army and had been separated for many proceeding to do a very un- years, said she did not think he military thing — form a union had expectedthe Army to recamong soldiers that demanded, ognizethe servicemen's union. among other things, the right But, she added, "I think he beto elect officers and reject what lieved it would radicalize the they viewed as illegal orderspeople who knew about it." died Sept. 3 in Manhattan. He Andrew Dean Stapp was New York Times News Service
Linda Ruth Overlander Caffro May13, 1943- Sept. 12, 2014 L inda was b or n i n R e d m ond, Oregon, t o E l m a n and L o r n a Ov e r l a n der, their only child. L inda w en t a l l t h r o u g h school here in Central Oregon and g r aduated fr om Redmond High School. On May 8, 1964, she marr ied Donald F . C a f fr o i n S an Di e g o , Cal i f o r n i a . They raised four c h i l dren together, Corrina, D o nna, Louis, and Kaylynn. L inda l o ved h e r f a m i l y a therings, and w a s w e l l nown for herfamous ham
gravy.
Linda was surrounded by h er l ovin g f a m il y a t t h e t ime of he r d e ath. She i s survived by her daughters, C orrina H a n k i ns , D o n n a K endrick, K a y l yn n H or ton (David); and one son, L ouis C a f f ro . L i n d a h a d n ine g r a n d children; o n e g reat-grandchild; and o n e on the w ay . m an y n i eces and nephews and friends. L inda i s p r e c e de d i n d eath b y h er p ar e n t s , Elman & L o r na; husband, Donald; a n d so n - i n -law, Kurk Kendrick. A celebration of l if e w i l l be held Saturday, Septemb er 20, 2014, at 1 0 a . m ., a t R e d m on d M emo r i a l C hapel, 717 S W 6 t h S t . , Redmond. Contribution s c an be m ade t o t h e A me r i c a n Cancer Society. P lease sign ou r o n l i n e g uest boo k a t w ww . r e d m ondmemorial.com. R e d mond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family.
was 70. His wife, Deirdre Griswold,
born March 25, 1944, in Phil-
adelphia, to a military nurse said the cause was complica- who was not married. He spent tions of a lung infection. the first year of his life in an orAt its peak in the early 1970s, phanage before being adopted the union that Stapp formed, by William and Martha Stapp, the American Servicemen's an engineer and a homemaker Union, daimed to have tens of who lived in Merion, a Philadelthousands of members. It is- phia suburb. sued membership cards, pubStapp enrolled at Pennsylvalished a newspaper and helped nia State University in 1963, informchapters atmilitary bases, terested in ancient history and on ships and in Vietnam. largely apolitical. But his studAlthough the Army never ies of the past sharpened his focame close to recognizing the cus on the present, particularly union formally, it certainly rec- the developing war in Vietnam. ognized it as a problem. Stapp He began consuming leftist brought colorful idealism to his literature and getting arrested counterintuitive cause, and the at peace rallies. He dropped Army did what it could to si- out of college. While many of lence him. his fellow anti-war activists In 1967, while stationed at moved to Canada, daimed Fort Sill, in Lawton, Oklahoma, conscientious-objector status Stapp twice faced court-mar- or took other action to avoid tial. The first time was for re- serving, Stapp conduded that fusing an order to open his he could have the most impact footlocker, which served as his in uniform. unit's library of leftist literature. He had burned his draft card He was convicted and served in October 1965, which delayed 45 days of hard labor. The sec- his enlistment. But after conond was based on charges that vincing his local draft board he hadlefthis barracks when that his intentions were good, he was forbidden to do so. He he entered the Army on May was acquitted in late 1967. 13, 1966. The Army dischargedhim Besides Griswold, Stapp's the next spring for engaging survivors indude their daughin what it c alled subversive ter, Katherine Stapp, and a activity. Later, through ap- granddaughter.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
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Denny Miller, 80: Noted UCLA basketball player in the 1950s who dropped the sport to play the title role in
Tony Auth, 72 : P u l i tzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist whose sharp and cre-
ativecommentary appeared in The Philadelphia Inquir-
the 1959 movie "Tarzan the
er for more than 40 years.
Ape Man" and went on to appear in "Wagon Train" and
Died of cancer Sunday in Philadelphia.
numerous other TV shows.
Died Tuesday at home in Las
— From wire reports
E DGA R A W A R D - W I N N I N G A U T H O R
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significant replacement for the hundreds of thousands of wet-
flood their fields in winters to let old, harvested rice stalks
lands that drought has taken rot away — over the years bethe swirling flock of migrat- offline, says Golet who shouts came essential substitute proing shorebirds banking to a back and forth with Avery as viders of wetlands, but water landing in California's Cen- they spot dusters ofbirds."We curtailments have hit hard. tral Valley, a recently flooded would feel helpless. There's Normally, the state's rice rice field is providing a new just no way." farmers would have 250,000 kind of triage station during The flocks wheelinginto the to 300,000 acres flooded in a drought that's drastically re- pop-up wetlands make one of winter; this winter, it may be ducing places where they can the fewbrightspots forwildlife as little as 50,000, said Paul rest ontheir long journeys. in the state this fall. A lush, wet Butner of the California Rice The new arrivals to the field winter in Canada and Alaska Commission. — hundreds of them — are do- made prime breeding condiThe Nature Conservancy's wichers, says conservationist tions for birds, meaning more new program letsfarmers Greg Golet, standing on a dirt birds than usual are coming to submitbids to flood their fields berm and focusinghisbinocu- California wetlands. in key migration periodslars to identify a wading bird At th e C e ntral V a lley's September to October,and that is one of the first to fly Grassland ecologicalarea— a February to March — when south in an annual migration mix of state, federal and duck- water habitat is expected to be that brings 350 species to Cal- club preserves that together especiall y scarce,said Mark ifornia's Sacramento and San make up one of the largest Reynolds, a conservancy sciJoaquin valleys. continuous wetlands in the entist who helped craft the With millions of birds on contiguous U.S. — manager pop-up wetlands effort. their way from the Arctic and Ric Ortega has been able to Designers used bird-tracksubarctic and the drought cut- flood just 5,000 of the 30,000 ing data via Cornell Universiting critical wetlands to as lit- acres he would normally have ty and the Audubon Society tle as one-sixth, the field is one under water this time of year. and geographical data from of the first to come on line this Tens of thousands of birds government satellite photos to fall under a new program of already are crowding into locatepop-up wetlands where "pop-up" habitats. that patch, making disease they would do the most good. Conservationists are tem- outbreaks in stagnant, packed At Montna Farms, 5,000 porarily renting 14,000 acres water a major worry. acres outside the Sacramento from rice farmers and floodWater cutbacks mean his Valley's Yuba City that proing them just long enough to wetlands have received no duce sticky, short-grain rice give the migrating birds the water deliveries this calendar for sushi, manager Jon Mungrestand foodthey needtosur- year, and Ortega is hoping to er was pushing this week to vive their flights. avoid the kind of botulism out- get fields harvested, prepared Within hours of workers break that already has killed and flooded again by the next flooding the field two weeks at least 5,000 ducks at 'Me day for the pop-up wetlands. earlier, hundreds of migrating Lake National Wildlife Refuge Without these fields providbirds appeared. in northern California. ing a rare swath of wetlands, "It was incredible," says biAt the San Luis Nation- the birds "would be looking ologist Simon Avery, a field al Wildlife Refuge near Los to get the weight and feed and monitor for the Nature Con- Banos, the water shortage energytheyneed to keep movservancy, which conceived means refuge manager Kim ing on," he said. "That's what's and operates the pop-up rent- Forrest was unable to irrigate worrisome about this year." ed wetlands, first tested last this year, so birds will find less sprmg. swamp timothy, millet and W ith severe drought cover- other grasses to feed on. ing 95 percent of California, Even before the drought, pop-up wetlands are one of human developmentdid away 541-548-2066 the few tools that conserva- with 95 percent of the state's Adjustablg tionists and others have to wetlands. Rice farmers — who Beds help stave off what wildlife refuge managers are warning could be major bird die-offs changingSmiles Denture & Implant Center this fall and spring as waterYUBA CITY, Calif. — For
WILSONSof Redmond
fowl and shorebirds crowd too
few acres of wetlands. Without the pop-up habitat, "It'd be impossible" to provide
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Harold Anderson 10/2@30 — 9/9/14 Harold "Andy" Leroy Anderson, age83, passed away onTuesday, September 9, 2014 at 10:41 a.m., at the St. Charles Medical Center in Bend, Oregon, from complications following open-heart surgery. The family would liketo commend the medical personnel at St. Charles Medical Center for their valiantefforts to save his life. 'Ihere will be A Celebration of Life Service on Friday, September 19, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. at the Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27thStreet, Bend, Oregon, 97701, (541) 382-5496, with 'Ihe Reverend Virgil Askren officiating. A Memorial and urn Committal Service will be on Wednesday, October29, 2014 at 11 a.m. at the Oak Hill Cemetery Chapel, 1300Chester St., Plymouth, Indiana, 46563 (Entrance off South MichiganStreet acrossfrom Webster School), with Harold's son, 'IheReverend Robert"Bob"Anderson,offi ciating. Harold was born in Larwill, Indiana, onOctober 22, 1930. Hespent most ofhis childhood and young adult years in Plymouth, Indiana, where he graduated at the top ofhisclassfrom Plymouth High School in 1949. Harold owned Plymouth Auto Body until 1959 when he became anauto insurance adjuster with EMMCO Insurance Company, a division ofAssociatesInsurance group, and moved to Cincinnati, Ohio. 'Ihat was the startof many years in the insurance business ashe worked his way up through the corporate ranks. Each promotion meant a moveto a different city and state: Louisville, Kentucky, Anderson and South Bend, Indiana, Niles and Livonia, Michigan, Burnsville, Minnesota, Dallas and Amarillo, Texas, andSeattle, Washington. He purchased a managing general insurance agency, Kenneth I. Tobey, Inc., inSeattle,Washington, in 1985 and began Cascade National Insurance Company, where he served asPresident until his retirement in 2005 when Haroldand hiswife,Ann,m ovedtoBend,Oregon. Even in retirement, Harold was never oneto sit still. He worked full-time as Marketing Manager for Service Master, retiring at age 80-years-old. During that time, he also worked part-time as a marketing consultant for Baird Funeral Home in Bend, Oregon. Harold'sgreatestjoy during his retirement years was his work as a volunteer with the Bend Police Department, theDeschutesCounty codeenforcement, and the Central Oregon Police Chaplaincy. Ifyou received a ticket for a handicap parking violation in Bend, Oregon, in the past few years, Harold probablywrote the ticket. You may haveseenhim directing traffic for parades and special eventsin Bend. He wasalso a past president of the Southeast Bend Neighborhood Association. In 2013, the Mayor of Bend, Iim Clinton, presented Harold with an award, honoring him for his volunteerservice tothe city. Mayor Clinton called Harold, "not just a regular volunteer, but a super volunteer." Besidesbeing anastute business person, Harold was active in his local church wherever he lived. He was a member of theBend Church oftheNazareneand enjoyed attendingBend Mission Church. In Octoberof 2012, Harold was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, which he bravely battled and was pronounced "cancer free" in 2013. However, it was determined that the chemotherapy drugs damagednot only his heart but also his kidney functions, which ledto non-reversible heart failure and severekidney failure. He also suffered astroke at the base of the brain. Life slowed down for Harold. Never one for hobbies or sitting and reading, Harold's beloved dog, Annie, becamehis constant companion. Harold is survived by his wife of thirty years, Ann Cox Anderson of Bend, Oregon, his ex-wife of thirty-two years, Donna Anderson Eichorst of Manteno, Illinois, histhreechildren: Teddie Lynn (Dale) Hill of Manteno, Illinois, Robert Leroy (Marilyn) Anderson of'Ihree Rivers, Michigan, Bruce Allen (Pamela) Anderson of Beaverton, Oregon; twostep-sons, Donald Cox of Bellevue, Washington, and Daniel Cox of Everett, Washington; five grandchildren: Amy (Tim) VanSwol of Manteno, Illinois, I.Scott (Kara) Hill of Burien, Washington, Jennifer(Mark) Walker of Lansing, Michigan, Karen (Jonathon) Bacon of Bourbonnais, Illinois, Brent (Casey) Anderson ofForestGrove, Oregon,; two step-grandchildren Travis and Dakota Cox ofEverett, Washington; eleven great grandchildren:Prestonand Caden VanSwol, Enzo and EsmaeHill, Anderson and Renae Walker, Eamon, Ezra, Eli and Ella Anderson, andsoon to be welcomed into this world, baby Ellie Bacon; and many ofhiscousinswho are the brothers and sisters he never had. Harold was preceded in death by his parents, Virgil Leroy (Nellie May) Anderson of Plymouth, Indiana; his paternal grandparents: Charles W. (Wynona "Nona") Anderson of South Bend, Indiana; his maternal grandparents: Herbert C. (Mina) Power, Sr. of South Bend, Indiana. In lieu of flowers, Harold wished that charitable donations be madeto: Central Oregon Police Chaplaincy, PO Box1898,Redmond, Oregon 97756,www.copchaplain.com orBend Church oftheNazarene,1270 NE 27thStreet,Bend,Oregon 97701,wwwbendnaz.org.Baird FuneralHome ofBend,Oregon,isin chargeof arrangements 541-382-0903 wwwbairdmortuaries.com
B6
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Partly sunny
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city
Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W 89/71/Tr eenon 69/47/Tr 65/43/pc 67/42/0.00 67/44/r 88/62/0.01 80/60/pc 58/50/0.19 58/49/sh 80/65/Tr 83/66/pc
Abilene Akron Meac am Lostl ne 63/54 79/5 • W coa/58 89/53 Enterprlse Albany dl t, 8 2/4 PRECIPITATION he Oaa Albuquerque Tigamo • 87/53 6 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL:Partly to andy • Anchorage 68/52 Mc innviH • 86/56 0.02"in 1963 mostly Joseph Atlanta Record /57 Gove • He ppner Grande • s un n y t od a y . nt • upi o Condon 6/50 51 89 47 Atlantic City 69/50/0.00 Cam u 64 Month to date (normal) Tra ce (0.21 Union ) Partly cloudy tonight. Lincoln o Austin 89/67/0.00 74/ Year to date (normal ) 5.51 " (6.97 ) Sunshine mixing with 65/53 Sale Baltimore 72/51/0.00 • pray Graniteu Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 4" clouds tomorrow. 79/ • /60 Billings 73/42/0.00 'Baker C Newpo 84/49 • 66 54 Birmingham 86n3/0.02 SUN ANDMOON 9/53 64/50 • Mitch 8 88/43 Bismarck 69/31/0.00 0 a m P S h m a n R 6 tI WEST:Amix of 85/52 Today Wed. I\ O r9 U8I Boise 92/56/0.00 83/48 • John uU Sunrise 6:45 a.m. 6 : 4 6 a.m. clouds andsunshine Yach 80/52 Boston 62/53 • Prineville Day 7/48 tario Bridgeport, CT 67/48/0.00 Sunset 7:14 p.m. 7: 1 2 p.m. today. Turning out 70/50/0.00 86/54 • Pa lina 87/ 5 7 9 56 Buffalo 66/51/0.11 Moonrise none 1 2 :42 a.m. mostly cloudy tonight Floren e • Eugene • Se d arothers 8550 Valen 64/54 Burlington, VT 65/37/0.00 A couple showers Moonset 2:5 0 p.m. 3:3 3 p.m. Su iVern 83/47 • 47 92/59 Caribou, ME 59/40/Tr tomorrow. Nysse • s t / 0 • I.a pirle Ham ton MOONPHASES C e Charleston, SC 89n1/1.13 4 unture 92/ 5 5 Grove Oakridge New F i r s t Full Last Charlotte 75/66/Tr • Burns J91/49 OREGON EXTREMES co 80/54 /52 Chattanooga 79/67/Tr 67 3 • Fort Rock Riley 90/42 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 83/49 Cheyenne 70/41/0.00 88/42 80/49 Chicago 62/50/Tr High: 97 aandon R o seburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 71/48/0.23 S ep 23 Oct 1 Oc t8 Oct 1 5 at Medford Jordan V gey 65/54 Beaver Silver 84/48 Frenchglen 83/56 Cleveland 65/45/0.03 Low: 33' 88/59 Marsh Lake 88/50 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 70/54/Tr 80/44 at Meacham 83/48 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 77/57/Tr T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 65/ Columbia, SC 76/68/0.08 • 92/55 Mercury 9:07 a.m. 7: 5 7 p.m. Chiloquin 84/50 56 MedfO d ' st/45 Columbus,GA 87/71/0.00 Gold ach Rome Venus 5:52 a.m. 6 : 5 8 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 73/48/Tr et/ ,88/58 93/53 Mars 12:49 p.m. 9 : 5 4 p.m. Klamath Concord, NH 66/35/0.00 Fields • • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 3:13 a.m. 5 : 4 0 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 90n1/Tr Bro ings 90/56 85/5 82/46 Saturn 11:31 a.m. 9: 3 3 p.m. 64/5 85/42 89/57 Dallas 86/71/0.02 Dayton 71/47/0.1 0 Uranus 7:58 p.m. 8: 4 6 a.m. Denver 73/46/0.00 Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Des Moines 65/58/0.02 city H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W city Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 61/47/0.01 73/46/0.00 68/53/c 69/57/sh L s Grande 91 / 37/0.00 89/47/pc 87/51/s Portland 90/5 3/0.0079/58/pc80/60/ c 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin Duluth 59/40/0.00 Baker City 90/34/0.00 88/43/pc 87/44/s L s Pine 85/33/0.00 81/46/pc 80/48/pc Prineviiis 84/ 4 4/0.0086/54/pc80/52/ s El Paso 79/65/Tr 3 N(~ 5 ~ 5~ N 3 ercckings 60/51/0.00 64/53/pc 64/54/c M e dtcrd 97/5 6 /0.00 88/58/pc 87/56/pc Redmond 87/ 36/0.0086/47/pc 83/48/ pc Fairbanks 69/40/0.01 The highertheAccuWsstbsrxmmIIVIndex number, eums 89/43/0.00 90/42/s 87/44/s Ne wport 55/4 3 /0.00 64/50/c 64/53/sh Rnseburg 94/ 5 7/0.0083/56/pc 83/56/ c Fargo 66/42/0.00 the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin protscgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 91/49/0.00 79/51/pc 79/54/c N o rth Bend 61 / 48/0.00 66/54/pc 66/55/sh Salem 87/50/0.00 79/54/pc 79/57/ c Flagstaff 79/48/0.00 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exlrsms. Klsmnth Falls 87/41/0.00 82/46/s 79/44/s O n tario 90/45/0.00 92/56/s 92/57/s Sisters 84/38/0.00 84/47/pc83/48/ pc Grand Rapids 63/46/0.08 Lskeview 88/36/0.00 85/42/s 83/42/s Pe ndleton 86/ 4 7/0.00 87/55/pc 84/59/s The Dslles 90 / 48/0.0086/56/pc 88/59/ pc Greenesy 61/51/0.11 Greensboro 75/62/Tr Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-psrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shnwers,t-thundsrstcrms,r-rsin, st-snnwflurries, sn-snnwi-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data ssn15 p.m.yesterday Harrisburg 72/47/0.00 G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hsrffcrd, CT 69/45/0.00 Absent Ab s ent Abs e nt Helena 81/39/0.00 Source: OregonAiisrgyAssccistss 541-683-1577 Honolulu 90/75/0.03 ~ f os ~2 09 ~aos ~dos ~50s ~aos ~709 ~aos ~gos ~toos ~ffOs ~ fos ~os ~ o s Houston 92/68/0.03 Huntsville 88/64/0.07 NATIONAL Indianapolis 65/49/0.57 As of 7 n.m.yesterday Jackson, MS 90/69/0.00 Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES Jacksonville 92n2/0.09 YESTERDAY (for the
Cannon
/58
Portland
lington 88/53
•
•
•
•
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•
UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
C rane Prairie 288 4 8 52% 26'yo Wickiup 51326 Crescent Lake 6 1 8 26 71% Ochoco Reservoir 16266 37% Prinevige 95280 64% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 226 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1430 Deschutes R.below Bend 126 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1830 Little Deschutes near LaPine 119 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 2 2 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 215 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 180 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 5
FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver ~ ~ xtrem~e Redmond/Madras ~x tre ~me Sisters ~E xt re~me PrineviHe ~~ xt rem~e La Pine/Gilchrist ~x tre ~ me
74/58/r 91/71/t
e7nO/c
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vsgss Lexington Lincoln
67/45/s 67/46/s 78/60/t 58/48/sh 80/61/pc 74/57/s
Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
eeno/I
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA
72/53/r
72/55/s 65/45/pc 66/49/s
66/48/pc 58/40/pc
87/72/t
87/69/t
85/63/pc 83/62/pc 83/51/s 64/46/s 69/49/s 63/46/pc 82/53/pc 67/50/s 88/67/I 86/67/pc 68/49/s
76/59/pc 79/58/s 82/53/s
OklahomaCity
67/49/s 70/50/s
111/87/0.00 104/84/pc 98/81/t 61/53/0.44 66/46/s 68/49/pc 72/53/0.00 74/56/r 75/58/s 105/87/0.00 98f/4/t 89/76/t Pittsburgh 68/42/0.00 67/43/pc 67/46/s Portland, ME 64/41/0.00 67/47/r 67/47/s Providence 70/48/0.00 72/51/r 73/51/s Raleigh 75/63/Tr 84/65/pc 76/61/1 Rapid City 68/33/0.00 78/49/s 82/54/s Reno 94/56/0.00 91/58/s 89/54/s Richmond 79/63/0.00 82/62/pc 75/60/pc Rochester, NY 69/49/Tr 66/43/pc 68/48/s Sacramento 92/64/0.00 91/58/s 87/61/s St. Louis 78/58/0.05 68/50/s 71/56/I
67/41/r 89/75/t
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Pscrin Philadelphia Phoenix
66/47/s 84/54/pc 68/55/t 84/64/t
86/61/pc 71/50/s 69/41/s
eene/I een2n e7nwpc 67/46/s 84/54/s 67/53/s 65/45/pc 66/45/s 79/65/1 64/41/c 70/46/s 73/48/t 62/42/pc 64/42/s 83/63/pc 73/50/pc 71/46/r 85/52/pc
69/47/s 86/57/s 72/53/pc 67/50/s 62/43/pc 79/66/t 64/40/pc 72/53/s 71/47/t 66/46/s 67/47/pc 72/58/pc 71/53/s 71/46/s 87/53/pc
Salt Lake City Ssn Antonio Ssn Diego Ssn Francisco Ssn Jose
Santa rs
87/72/t een2/I 82/59/pc 79/57/s 66/47/s 67/48/pc
87/67/pc 88/66/pc 84/69/1
87/67/t
•
'•
'
74/58/s 78/65/t 61/50/pc 102/72/s
een7/r
74/55/pc
een7/s
72/57/s 68/48/c 71/52/s 69/52/s 88/73/s 93/73/s 71/49/pc 90/73/pc 64/53/pc 62/55/c 74/58/t 86/56/s 90/82/t 77/66/c 86/64/s 83/58/s 66/58/pc 74/65/I 73/60/pc 75/58/t
een7/I
89/64/Tr 91/66/s 90/68/s 90/69/0.00 92f/6/t 89/74/t eenwo.oo 86n5/s 86/73/pc 78/62/0.00 74/60/pc 74/62/pc 77/60/0.00 77/58/s 78/61/s 85/52/0.02 78/54/pc 77/53/1
Savannah 88/73/0.31 86no/t Seattle 87/54/0.00 77/57/pc Sioux Falls 64/48/0.38 68/52/s Spokane 83/51/0.00 86/56/s Springfield, Mo 86/63/0.01 75/58/pc Tampa eone/o.oo88n5/pc Tucson 97/80/0.00 86/70/t Tulsa 87/68/0.02 81/67/pc Washington, DC 77/59/0.00 79/62/pc Wichita 86/66/0.00 79/65/pc Yskims 87/42/0.00 86/52/pc Yums 108/86/0.00 97f/9/t
eene/s 9One/s
72/54/0.00 73/57/I 86/68/0.01 81/66/pc Auckland 58/51/0.28 60/52/sh 'd d d e 4 Baghdad 106/80/0.00 104/74/s o ol Che n Bangkok 93/77/0.13 92/78/t 47/53 MT 83/5 Co mbuo eeijing 82/60/0.00 77/54/c phuudu(uhia C; Beirut 86n5/0.00 85/75/s Precipitation: 1.92" nn nncisco S a lt Lnko uy yd/sto' O e 44 vt/es Berlin 77/60/0.02 74/56/pc 74/so atMountPleasant,SC i e LnoV no Bogota 66/50/0.03 66/46/1 0/ /42 101 Kansas Qty st Budapest 70/59/0.31 71/53/pc Io ashviile 68/sd L/so BuenosAires 66/50/0.08 68/51/s ss &orlo Los An leo 83/77/4.86 87/73/t Csbn Ssn Lucss xkx • nn4 Cairo 93/75/0.00 97n7/s Phoen J4xhnxneo Albunuo uo klnhomo CI • At Calgary 72/39/0.00 74/45/s • 99/74 ~ 9 L ittle ock • n 0 SO/40 Ss/44 Csncun 90n3/0.20 89/75/t +<ww<<<+oau unenu Dublin 61/55/0.00 64/52/pc so Edinburgh 57/55/0.58 64/50/pc Geneva 77/52/0.00 76/57/pc 'e 'e v. v. , • rinndo Hsrsre 82/55/0.00 85/54/s v. w ' e ' e ' e •• Hong Kong 92/85/1.43 88/82/r Honolulu Istanbul 81/70/0.00 79/68/pc 89/75 81/44 ls nml ~ ~ ~ ~~~ ~v v vv vv ~ ~ ~ ~ S Jerusalem 80/64/0.00 80/64/s Mo 'e'e'e Xv.XWWWWv.v.v.v. v.v.WW'e'e SV/75, d ss/ds w'e 'exxxxwwww>' Johannesburg 82/55/0.00 83/57/s v '+: ~vv 'e'+' '+'+'+vvv> Lima 67/59/0.00 67/58/pc Lisbon 75/68/0.51 74/67/1 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 70/54/0.00 73/59/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 79/59/0.02 84/62/pc Manila 86/75/0.07 89/78/pc •
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 60/48/0.02 60/47/pc 60/49/pc 69/62/0.02 68/56/s 73/58/t 64/46/0.10 62/40/pc 66/45/s 103/79/0.00 101n6/pc 97ne/I 78/50/0.02 71/52/s 72/53/s 67/54/Tr 72/56/s 78/59/pc 78/64/Tr 83/63/pc 84/66/pc 94/73/0.00 een4/s 94/71/pc 74/50/0.02 70/54/s 73/55/pc 58/51/0.17 63/43/s 67/46/s 84/66/0.00 81/60/pc 81/64/s eonefrr 89n5/t 88/75/t 57/52/0.06 62/47/s 66/49/s 62/50/0.06 66/49/s 71/52/s 79/55/Tr 75/55/pc 76/56/s 90/76/1.66 86n4/t eon4/I 71/55/0.00 73/57/r 73/58/s 74/52/0.00 74/54/r 74/55/s 73/63/0.00 79/69/pc 76/68/pc 85/66/0.05 85/66/pc 89/69/pc 65/54/0.02 69/57/s 76/58/pc 92/72/Tr 90ff2/t 83/70/t
65/45/r 58/42/r
•
Source: USDA Forest Service
City
77/55/pc 74/56/s 85/55/s 86/58/pc 87/64/pc 83/60/s 71/43/s 74/52/s 93/64/s 92/65/s 69/54/r 69/54/s
Amsterdam Athens
M ne /49
Yesterday Today Wednesday
Hi/Lo/W
o
48 contiguousstates) National high: 117 at Death Valley,CA National low: 26 at West Yellowstone,
Pleasant with plenty of sunshine
Partly sunny andpleasant
Timesofsun and clouds
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
SATURDAY
' o 9 7 4'
~
Periods of cloudsand sunshine
Partly cloudy
FRIDAY
THU R SDAY
I
83/64/0.02 84/64/pc 66/40/0.00 62/44/s Ottawa 63/41/0.03 64/41/pc Paris 77/55/0.00 78/59/pc Riu de Janeiro 91/70/0.00 79/69/pc Rome 79/59/0.00 79/61/pc Santiago 82/43/0.00 69/47/s Ssn Paulo 90/68/0.02 72/57/c Ssppnrc 69/50/0.05 68/55/r Seoul 79/62/0.00 78/60/pc Shanghai 81/68/0.00 81/73/c Singapore 89/81/0.00 89n9/c Stockholm 68/39/0.00 63/46/c Sydney 67/52/0.06 74/54/I Taipei 96/82/0.00 101/81/I Tei Aviv een4/o.oo 86n5/s Tokyo 79/68/0.00 80/66/pc Toronto 64/50/0.07 64/43/pc Vancouver 80/54/0.00 70/53/c Vienna 68/59/0.00 69/55/pc Warsaw 73/57/0.00 68/49/s
81/62/c 59/43/s 60/40/pc 79/61/pc 76/69/sh 79/62/pc 65/46/pc 70/60/c 64/54/r 77/59/c 82/70/c 89/78/c 63/45/s 70/49/s 96/81/I 93/76/s 76/65/c 67/45/s 68/57/pc 70/56/s 68/48/s
Montreal
Moscow Nairobi Nassau
95n2/o.oo 93n6/pc 94nr/pc
New Delhi
Osaka Oslo
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John Luerding via The Associated Press
An Hir tanker drops fire retardant over 8 wildfire Ht the RogueRiver-Siskiyou National Forest on Sun-
day betweenGrants Pass and CaveJunction. nearly 3 square miles, or about
2,000 acres. Bulldozer crews Several California wildfires started building fire line on the have forced hundreds of resi-
GRANTS PASS — DA /0 neW wildfires that started over the weekend w er e t h r eatening several dozen scattered nt-
northeastern flank to protect
some scattered homes along the Rogue River in the Picket
ral homes in western Oregon, Creek area, where Josephine
An Evening of Elegance
California fires
By Jeff B8rttard Associated Press
A/I you need is love. But a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt. -Charles M. Schuiz
dentS tO eVaCuate aS firefighters contend with hot weather and
steep, dryterrain. The region of Yosemite ¹
where forests are critically dry and the Weather has been hot. In the Mount Hood National Forest about 10 miles east of
COunty has Warned reSidentS
that a human-caused wildfire has burned aCrOSS nearly 4
Vestigation, but there Were no
— the same area where the
reports of lightning over the weekend, making it likely it was human-caused.
Junction fire destroyed at least
Join us for a wine and chocolate night hosted by Chocolate Element in historic downtown Bend. Wines and treats will be available to purchase: additionally, there will be a prize raffle featuring local businesses, and 50/50 raffle tickets on sale. All money raised will benefit the Alzheimer's Association.
tianal Park has been hit PartiC-
tobereadytoleave,firespokes- ularlyhard, with anewwildfire man Scott Blower said. in the area destroying several More crews and equipment homes, authorities said. Estacada, fire spokeswoman were dispatched to fight the The Courtney fire began Carol Connolly said Monday fire. The cause was under in- about 1:40 P.m. near Oakhurst square miles,or nearly 2,500
eight hOmeS in August. Sun-
most urgent evacuation notice Four large air tankers flew for residents of about 40 homes. repeated sorties Sunday on the Several campgrounds and blaze near Grants Pass, particRV parks have already been ularly around the top of Onion
day's flames overtook a ridge line at the Bass Lake Heights community southwest of Yosemite and ripped through the residential community, forcing
evacuated. The City Of EStaCada Was not
about 1,000 people to evacuate. At least 21 buildings have
acres. Authorities issued their
Mountain, where a U.S. Forest
Service lookout and commu-
threatened, but several miles of nications towers are located. State Highway 224 were tem- Forest spokeswoman Virginia porarily dosed. Estacada is Gibbons said the threat has southeast of Portland. diminished. Smoke from the f ire h as Meanwhile, Connolly said spread across the northern more crews and equipment Willamette Valley. were pouring in to fight the fire. Initial reports indicate some- More crews and equipment one target-shooting caused the alsowere headed for the fire fire, Connolly said. outside Estacada. In southwest Oregon, a fire W eather forecastsw arned of on the Rogue River-Siskiyou possible lightning in southwest National Forest about 15 miles Oregon before temperatures west of Grants Pass grew to cool today.
When: September 18 at 6 p.m. Where: Chocolate Element, 916 NW Wall
been destroyed by the fire, which was 20 percent con-
tained, according to the California Department of Forestry
M T.
AC HELOR MRMOIIV C Ro IIINDRNCI
and Fire Protection. About 400 firefighters were
assigned to the fire, which had burned about 320 acres. Crews
I
have been hampered by extreme heat, steep terrain dotted with homes and tinder-dry
vegetation. — The LosAngeles Times contributed to this report.
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90/66/s 85/54/pc 94n7/I 108/83/s 72/55/t 62/44/pc 57/39/pc 81/57/pc 89/75/pc
o vvoo'~
',.s;
78/63/1 81/74/t 81/71/t 89/67/1 76/63/s
108/86/0.00 107/79/s 73/54/0.18 71/56/I 64/41/0.00 63/45/pc 59/45/0.00 58/38/s 81/57/0.02 80/55/c eon7/o,o4 89/75/pc
azest reaten omes •
73/59/pc 73/58/pc 83/58/pc
I
Mecca Mexico City
WESTERN WILDFIRES
in re on, a i ornia
88/68/1
I •
•
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 P reps, C4 Sports in brief, C2 NFL, C4 MLB, C3 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
GOLF C.O. golfers near top of team event SUNRIVER—Three teams with at least one Central Oregon golfer are in the top10 after Monday's first round of the Pacific Northwest Women's Senior Team Championship. Connie Martin, of Culver, and teammate Elaine Edrington, of Gresham, combined to shoot a 4-over-par 76 to land in fourth place after Monday's first round of four-ball stroke play at Sunriver Resort's Woodlands course. They are six shots behind Ginny Burkey, of Fircrest, Washington, and Lisa Smego, of Olympia, Washington, who teamed uptoshoot a 2-under 70. Anita Britton, of Crooked River Ranch, is in a five-way tie for fifth place at 5 over with teammate Linda Pearson, of Seattle. The Bend duo ofNettie Morrison and Nancy Breitenstein, who won the1999 Senior Team Championship together, are in a tie for10th place at 6 over. The field of 35 teams will play a round of Chapman today atSunriver's Meadows course before returning to Woodlands onWednesday for the final round of fourball. Play for the Pacific Northwest Golf Association tournament is scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. today and Wednesday.
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
GOLF
oursesre ort rowt, utsow By Zack Hall
during the meat of the season. So what is the verdict?
The Bulletin
For golf, any growth is good growth. The peak of the golf seasonwhich here in Central Oregon runs roughly from mid-June through mid-September — is rapidly coming to an end for 2014. For most of the region's 30 golf courses, that means an accounting of just how many golfers turned out
As daylight grows shorter and temperatures begin to drop, the
overall opinion of the 2014 golf season seems to be, well, not bad ... but not great, either.
"I think we're going to look back at the season as generally an overall success," says Scott Huntsman, Black Butte Ranch's president and CEO. "We just
Haveyou checked out The Bulletin's reviews of every public and semiprivate course in Central Oregon? If you missed anyof
aren't going to be able to grow rounds like we thought we were going to." Huntsman's response seems to echo the golf-industry consensus. Across Central Oregon, golf courses are reporting an up-anddown season. The good news is
O
them, visit
that, for many, it appears that therewas a touch more up than down. SeeGrowth /C2
bendbnlletin.
corn/poorseg onl The Associated Press file photo
The Minnesota Vikings reinstated running back Adrian
Peterson on Mondayafter suspendinghim onegame
PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK
after his arrest on a child
abuse charge.
Character must be considered with ability Vp
By Bob Condotta The Seattle Times
If the NFL was a team
in its own league, it would have opened the season by allowing a 109-yard kickoff return for a touchdown. And then things would really have gotten out of
hand. Indeed, there were few darker weeks in the
history of the NFL — or any sports league, for that matter — than the one it
just endured (and that was even before Friday's news
— Bulletin staff report
Two fromBendon state USGA team Two Bend golfers have beenselected to play on the three-player Oregon teamwhenthe USGA Men's StateTeam Championship tees off later this month in Indiana. Jesse Heinly, a 22-year-old from Bend, and Justin Kadin, a 24-year-old who lives in Bend, will join HansReimers, the 2013Oregon Open champion from Albany, representing the Beaver State. The Oregon Golf Association announced its selections Monday. The State Team Championship is scheduled for Sept. 30 through Oct. 2 on the Pete DyeCourse at French Lick Resort in French Lick, Indiana. Heinly and Kadin have beentwo of the top amateurs in the state. Heinly, a Summit High School graduate, advanced to the round of 32 at the U.S.Amateur Championship in August. Kadin, who caddies at Tetherow Golf Club, played in July's U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship. — Bulletin staffreport
about the indictment of
one of the league's biggest stars, Adrian Peterson, for
BASKETBALL
alleged child abuse). The details of the Ray
4 •
Rice situation are many
and ugly, and by this point, I assume, uncomfortably familiar to anyone reading this.
Suffice to say the league failed on every level. If it had not seen the
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
From left, Central Christian freshmenSavannah Poole andMandy Strain, and senior Abigail Hannay are playing onthe school's boys
"gate" to this scandal.
• Central ChriStian, tOO Small ta field bath a bOySand girlS SO CCer team, is Playing Caed REDMOND-
he hesitates for a moment, her voice rising as she indecisively
For now, a final resolution likely will wait until
an investigation commissioned by the league is complete. Two owners known to be strong supporters of the commis-
sioner, Roger Goodell — whose future seems
bounces from one word to another, hoping to find the right
bleaker by the minute-
combination for the best response.wr I Three weeks ago, Abigail
will oversee the probe. That has raised some eyebrows. One hopes the league takes that investigation more seriously than
Hannay might have answered differently. Back then, at Central Christian's first soccer practice, amid a sea of testosterone-fueled
tape inside the elevator before levying its initial penalty, it should have, opting for patience and due diligence over rug-sweeping. And if it did, well, attach a
soccer team. The team is pictured on its home field st Umatilla Sports Complex in Redmond.
it appears to have done with its initial look into the Rice incident.
LUCAS l.
teenage boys running alongside her, she was
SeeCharacter /C4
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
the lone female. $ Hannay explains how well she knows her teammates, how she has received no special treatment or extra attention from them, how they do not hold back against her during practices and
COLLEGE
NFL COMMENTARY
scrimmages. She then agrees — perhaps she is now just one Of the guys. SeeCoed /C4
Savannah Poole, left, gives Abigail Hannay a five after making s defensive play together while practicing with their Central Christian teammates in Redmond on Thursday.
Inside
Inside • Caleb Reynolds scores four goals and Bryson Eells scores three inCentral Christian's 9-1 win. Prep roundup,C4
• Vikings reinstate RB Adrian Peterson after arrest; Ravens RB Ray Rice toappeal indefinite suspension. NFL notebook,C4 • Eagles top Colts 30-27 with field goal as time expires,C4
Ducks, Beavers releaseschedules Oregon andOregon State will open and close the Pac-12season with Civil War games. The schools announced
SOCCER
their 2014-15 men's
basketball schedules Monday night. The Ducks and Beavers will open Pac12 play in Eugeneon Saturday, Jan. 3and close conference play in Corvallis at 8 p.m. Wednesday, March 4. For complete schedules, see Scoreboard,C2 — Bulletin staff report
s lkll
en e
To escapefighting, a top teamleaveshome By James Montague New York Times News Service
KIEV, Ukraine — Plumes of thick black smoke and a James Hill/The New YorkTimes
Players from Shakhtar Donetsk train at a former Olympic sporting base outside Kiev, Ukraine, on Sept. 9. Shakhtar, the country's top team, has relocated to Kiev because of fighting in the east.
rapid-fire echo of explosions rose into the afternoon sky. Several hundred people from eastern Ukraine, almost all of them men in black T-shirts and balaclavas, were
singing nationalistic songs as they threw smoke bombs onto the soccer field in front
sunny August day, they were watching the Donetsk derby between Shakhtar and
of them.
Olimpik. But the match, like
They were members of the Shakhtar Ultras, a group of
all of Shakhtar's matches these days, was not taking
hard-core soccer fans who
place in Donetsk, which has
support Ukraine's champions, Shakhtar Donetsk, anywhere they play. On this
been battered by months of shelling. SeeShakhtar/C3
more photos of Shakhtar Donetsk and its fans coping with the move: bsndbngetln .com/siwls
C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY SOCCER Europe, Champions League, Real Madrid (Spain) vs. Basel (Switzerland) Europe, Champions League,Borussia Dortmund (Germany) vs. Arsenal (England) Europe, Champions League,Liverpool (England) vs. Ludogorets (Bulgaria) North America, Champions League, Portland vs. Olimpia (Honduras)
Time T V/Radity
11:30 a.m.
Root
11:30 a.m.
FS1
11:30 a.m.
FS2
7 p.m.
FS1
4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
NBCSN ESPN
7 p.m.
MLB
BASEBALL
Minor League,Triple-A Championship, Pawtucket (RedSox) vs. Omaha(Royals) MLB, Milwaukee atSt. Louis MLB, Seattle at L.A. Angels MLB, Seattle at L.A. Angels or Texas atOakland
Root
WEDNESDAY SOCCER Europe, Champions League, Barcelona (Spain) vs. APOEL (Cyprus) Europe, Champions League,BayernMunich (Germany) vs. Manchester City (England) Europe, Champions League,Chelsea (England) vs. Schalke 04(Germany) Men's College, Georgetown at Princeton North America, Champions League, Montreal vs. NewYork
1 1:30 a.m.
Ro o t
11:30 a.m.
FS1
11:30 a.m. 4 p.m.
FS2 ESP N U
5 p.m.
FS2
BASEBALL
MLB,L.A.DodgersatColoradoOR San Francisco at Arizona MLB, Washington at Atlanta MLB, Seattle at L.A. Angels
3 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. ESPN 7 p.m. ESPN, Root
GOLF
EuropeanTour, Wales Open
2:30 a.m. (Thu.) Golf
Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis notresponsible forlate changesmadeby TIior radio stations.
ON DECK Today Boyssoccer.Redmond atHermiston,3:30 p.m.; Liberly atSummit, 4 p.m.;WestAlbanyat Bend, 4p.mcTheDallesat Ridgeview,4 p.m.; LaPineat CentralLinn,4:30p.m. Girls soccer:Ridgeviewat TheDalles, 4 p.mqBend atWestAlbany,4p.mcRedmondatLaPine,4p.m. Volleyball: Ridgeview atBurns,6 p.mcTheDallesat Redmond, 6:30p.mqSweetHomeatSisters,6:45 p.m.; Madras at CrookCounty, 6 p.m.; Irrigonat Culver,6:15p.m.; Central Christianat Trinity Lutheran,4:30p.m4Chiloquin atGilchrist, 4 p.m.
Thursday Boyssoccer:Summit at HoodRiver Valley, 4:30p.m.; Barlowat Redmond, 4 p.m.; Ridgeviewat Sandy, 6p.mcGrantsPassatBend, 4:30 p.m.; Sistersat Sweet Home,4:30p.msMadrasatTheDages,4 p.m.; CrookCountyatLaPine,4p.m. Girls soccer.Sandyat Ridgeview,4:30 p.m4Grants PassatBend,3p.m.;BensonatRedmond,4p.m.; HoodRiverValey atSummit, 4 p.m.; Sweet Home at Sisters,4:30p.m.;TheDalles atMadras,4 p.m. Volleyball: Redmondat Summ it, 6:30p.mq Ridgevie w atBend,6:30p.m.;CrookCountyatMolaga, p.m.; 6 ElmiraatSisters, 6:45p.m.; Madrasat Corbett,6:15p.m.; LaPineat Jeferson, 5:30p.m.; Dufur atCulver,5p.m. Friday Foolbag:EaglePoint atBend,7 p.mcMountainView at Crater,7p.m4Ashland atSummit, 7 p.m4Hood River Valleyat Ridgeview,7 p.m.; TheDalles at Redmond, 7p.mcCrookCountyat Sisters, 7p.m.; Staytonat Madras,7 p.mqLaPine at Lakeview,7 p.m.;CulveratSantiam, 7p.m. Volleyball: Triadat Central Christian, 6 p.mcPaisley at Gilchrist, 4p.m.;NorthLakeatTrinity Lutheran, 5:30p.m. Boyswaterpolo: BendatTualatin Hils Tournament, TBD Girls waterpolo: Bendat ParkroseTournament, TBD
Saturday Boyssocc er:MountainViewatLebanon,2pmzRiversideat Culver,1 p.m. Girls soccer:Lebanonat MountainView,2p.m. Volleyball: Bend,MountainView, CrookCounty at RogueValley Classic in Medford, 8 a.mcMadras, Sisters atSisters Invitational, 9 a.mqRedmondat WilsonvigeTournament,TBD;Culverat RegisTourney,12:30p.m. Cross-country:Bend,Mountain View,CrookCounty, Madras,Sisters, LaPineat ThreeCourseChallenge in Seaside,9:15a.m.;Ridgeview,Summit atNorthwestClassicinEugene, TBD Boyswaterpolo: BendatTualatin Hils Tournament, TBD Girls waterpolo: Bendat ParkroseTournament, TBD
GOLF Local
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL BeaVerS annOunCe game time Vs. USC —OregonState football fans will haveanother late night coming up. Theschool announced its Sept. 27 gameat Southern California is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. onESPN.It will mark the third game in arowthe Beavers will have a7:30 p.m. PDTstart, including this Saturday's home gameagainst San DiegoState.
GOLF WOOdS SaySStrength daCk, but not Swing — Tiger Woods says he hashis strength back. Thenext task is to find a newswing. Woods has not competed in five weekssince missing the cut at the PGA Championship. With a seasonfull of back troubles, Woods decided to take the rest of the yearoff before he returns to competition Dec. 4-7 at the HeroWorld Challenge. Hesays eventhough he is back to full strength physically, he still has not hit a golf ball.
SOCCER FIFAPreSident to de Challenged — FormerFIFAinternational relations director JeromeChampagnehas confirmed his plan to challenge President SeppBlatter in next year's election. Champagne wrote on his campaign website Mondaythat he informed FIFA's 209 member federations and theelection supervisor, Domenico Scala, of his decision. Blatter, the president since1998, has said heintends to announce his candidacy next week inZurich after meeting FIFA's executive committee.
CYCLING Flesh-colored uniforms worn by a Colombian women's cycling team were "unacceptable," according to the International Cycling Union president. The uniform, with a flesh-colored section between stomachandthighs,waswornbyIDRD-BogotaHumana-San Mateo-Solgar riders at the Tour ofTuscany in Italy over the weekend. UCI President Brian Cookson wrote on hisTwitter account that eit is unacceptable byanystandard of decency." "The UCIwill be sending a letter to the Colombian federation reminding them of their responsibility ... in the control of regional and club teamkits that compete in international events," it said in a statement.
BASKETBALL U.S. WOmen tOPCanada in OXhidition — NnekaOgwumike scored10 points to lead abalanced offense and the U.S. women's basketball team used abig run in the third quarter to beat Canada 76-51 on Mondaynight in anexhibition game at Bridgeport, Connecticut. The Americans led 35-31 at halftime, and thenscored the first13 points of the third. Tina Charles, whowas scoreless in the first half, had sevenpoints during the game-changing spurt. Maya Moore added a nifty reverse layupandthe Americans were off and running. By the time Katherine Plouffe, the former Marquette player, hit a layup 6:30 into the quarter to end the run, the U.S.Ied 48-31. Plouffe had14 points for Canada. — Bulletin wire reports
Continued from C1 But that might not have been the
case. For instance, for much of the year,
TENNIS ATP World Tour
Columbia criticized over 'unacceptadle' uniforms-
Growth
Pacific NorlhwestWomen's Senior Team Championship Monday atSunriver Resort Woodlands Par 72, FourBall Firsl Round Flight1 Ginny Burkey/LisaSmego 70 SandyLuze/Marilyn Olson 75 NancyEglin/RachelWhittington 75 ConnieMartin/ElaineEdrington 76 LindaPearson/Anita Britton 77 Ann Denh art/MegLoDolce 77 PattyMyers/JudiMendoza 77 CarolDick/MaryOD ' onnel 77 JackieNelson/MarySias 77 RobinCole/CindiStewart 78 NettieMorrison/NancyBreitenstein 78 BettyGilmore/AnnHall 79 BethCam pbeg/Claudia Robbs 79 EloiseCarson/KathieMorris 79 CindyAnderson/Linda Robertson 83 RobinMcclymonds/JanMerriman 83 SunDouthit/YeongGray 85 KristineAdams/AnnetteSeydel 87 Flight2 Shawna Myoga/MayhoTanabe 82 BonnieKern/Pat Harrop-Schumacher 82 WandaSynnestvedt/Vicki Handyside 85 AnnetteReno/SandraBrown 85 Sonia Riggins/SunchaTindag 85 Barbara Fortier/DebbieHolbrook 87 EllenGibson/CindyHouser 89 ChrisLyons/SusanCraven 89 LeslieCrawford/RuthLeman 90 EdieCook/DianeKegeher 92 Jeri Stone/Lynne Crandall 92 MelissaKeeter/Kay Feldtman 92 Jan Holt/CarolEberhart 93 BarbKilgore/B.J.Wiliams 96 LaurieEvans/Lois Wusterbarth 101 Jan Gronen thal/AmyHunter 105 Phyllis Fountain/Jane Heuberger 107
Moselle Open Monday atMetz,France First Round Paul-HenriMathieu,France,def.Benjamin Becker Germany, 7-6(2), 7-6(3). Giges Muller, Luxem bourg, def. EdouardRoger-vasselin,France,6-1, 7-6(6).
WTA KoreaOpea Monday atSeoul, SouthKorea First Round VarvaraLepchenko (5), UnitedStates, def. Olivia Rogowska, Australia, 6-1,6-2. ChristinaMcHale,UnitedStates, def. LaraArruabarrena, Spain, 6-2,6-3. Han Na-lae,SouthKorea,def. JangSuJeong, SouthKorea,7-6 (5),4-6, 6-3. Chanege Scheepers, SouthAfrica, def. Irina-CameliaBegu,Romania,6-2,3-6,7-5. Anna-LenaFriedsam,Germany, def. Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan,7-6 (5), 7-5. MonaBarthel,Germany, def. Caroline Garcia (7), France, 7-6(3), 6-2.
fication schedule by a month to accommodate "more business on the
books for September than we did in July,"says head professional Jerrel Grow.
Quail Run Golf Course in La Pine The Old Back Nine at Mountain seemed headed for a down year High experienced a relatively slow compared with 2013. summer, something club manager "Then August really pumped up," Mark Reisinger blames on occasionsays Todd Sickles, the general man- ai thunderstorms and relatively hot ager at Quail Run, who struggles to and smoky conditions in the region. explain the uptick. "For some reason But the south Bend course has also August all of a sudden beat the last seen a boost in business so far in few years. September. "It's so unpredictable. The spring And Z ac h L a m pert, M e adow was good for us. June, July were Lakes Golf Course's head pro and kind of flat, and then August was facility manager, is hopeful that a busy. It was just all of a sudden strong fall season can add to what crazy." has been a fiat year at Prineville's In the end, that means a positive municipal course. "Good weather in the fall can year for Quail Run, Sickies says. And Quail Run is not alone in its quickly make up any shortcomings season-ending flourish. that we may havehad during the Pronghorn Club, which reports a summer," says Lampert. 15 percent increase in golf business Slow growth in the golf industry
FALCON S
Thursday 6
61 / t 44 1/t
Sunday
Buccaneers
Chargers Cowboys Redskins Texans 2'/t 2 '/ t 42 GIANTS SAINTS 9Ht gt/ t 51 Vikings BENGA LS 7 7 431 / 2 Titans Ravens PK P K 4 1 '/t BROWN S LIONS 1'/t 1 52 Packers Colts JAGUAR S PATRIO TS 15 1 5 47 Raiders 49ers CARDIN ALS SEAHAW KS 4'/t 4 ' / t 49 Broncos DOLPHINS 4 4 Chiefs PANTHE RS 3 3 41'/ t Steelers Monday JETS 1 1 45'/ t Bears BILLS RAMS
1
1
44
EAGLE S
BASKETBALL College All TimesPDT
In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomrcs.com/rnthebreachers
GuangzhouInternational Open Monday atGuangzhou,China First Round Maria-TeresaTorro-Flor, Spain,def.AnnikaBeck (8), Germ any,6-4,7-6 (5). AlisonRiske,UnitedStates, def.JohannaLarsson, Sweden, 6-4, 7-6(5). ShaharPeer,lsrael,def.Pauline Parmentier,France, 7-6 (8),6-3. Misaki Doi, Japan,def. KatarzynaPiter, Poland, 5-7,6-4,6-3. Zhu Lin,China,def. RobertaVinci (6), Italy, 6-3,
7-6 (7). AlizeCornet(2), France,def.Yulia Putintseva,Kazakhstan,6-1,6-1. TimeaBacsinszky,Switzerland, def.MagdaLinete, Poland,6-2,4-6,6-4.
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times PDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W 2 1 1
L 0 1 1
T 0 0 0 0
Pcl PF PA 1.000 52 30 .500 43 49 .500 43 45 .500 50 40
South W L T Pct PF PA Houston
Tennesse e Jacksonvile Indianapolis
2 1 0 0
0 1 2 2
0 0 0 0
1.000 47 20 .500 36 36 .000 27 75 .000 51 61
North W L T Pct PF PA 2 0 0 1.000 47 26 1 1 0 .500 42 29 1 1
1 0 .500 36 53 1 0 .500 53 54
West
Denver SanDiego Oakland KansasCity
W 2 1 0 0
Pct PF PA 1.000 55 41 .500 47 39 .000 28 49 .000 27 50 NATIONALCONFERENCE
L 0 1 2 2
East
Philadelphia Washington Dallas N.Y.Giants
Carolina Atlanta NewOrleans TampaBay
W 2 1 1 0
Arizona Seattle SanFrancisco St. Louis
L 0 1 1 2
T 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0
Pcl PF PA 1.000 64 44 .500 47 27 .500 43 38 .000 28 60
South W L T Pct PF PA 2 0 0 1.000 44 21 1 1 0 .500 47 58 0 2 0 .000 58 63 0 2 0 .000 31 39 North W L T Pct PF PA 1 1 1 1
1 1 1 1
0 0 0 0
500 48 43 500 41 36 500 42 38 500 47 60
Wesl W L T Pct PF PA 2 0 0 1.000 43 31 1 1 0 .500 57 46 1 1
Oregonschedule Sun,Nov.9 vs. Western Oregon (ex.) TBA Fri, Nov.14 vs. CoppinSt. 9 p.m. Mon,Nov.17 vs. Detroit 8p.m. Fri, Nov.21 vs Toledo * 4pm Mon,Nov.24 vs. Michigan * 6:30 p.m. Tue,Nov.25 vs. Villanova/TCU TBD Sun,Nov.30 vs. PortlandSt. 5 p.m. vs. Concordi(O are.) 7 p.m. Wed,Dec.3 Sun,Dec.7 vs. Mississippi 1 p.m. Sat, Dec.13 vs. Illinois" TBA o< Wed,Dec.17 vs. CSU-N odhridge 8 p.m. Sat, Dec. 20 vs. Delaware St. noon Mon,Dec.22 vs. UC SantaBarbara 6 p.m. Mon, Dec.29 vs. UC Irvine 8p.m. Sat, Jan.3 vs. Oregon St. TBA Thu, Jan.8 vs. Arizona 7p.m. 2 p.m. Sat, Jan.10 vs. ArizonaSt. St. 8 p . m. Thu,Jan.15 at Washington 5pm Sun,Jan.18 at Washington Thu,Jan.22 vs. Southern Cal 8 p . m. Sat,Jan.24 vs. UCLA 1p.m. Monday'sSummary Wed,Jan.28 at Arizona 7 p.m. Fri,Jan.30 at Arizona St. 5p.m. Eagles 30, Colts 27 Wed,Feb.4 vs. Washington 6 p.m. Sun, Feb. 8 vs. Washington St. 4 p.m. Philadelphia 3 3 14 1 0 — 30 Wed,Feb.11 at SouthernCal 6 p.m. Indianapolis 7 10 3 7 — 2 7 Sat, Feb.14 at UCLA noon 8p.m. First Ouarter Wed,Feb.18 vs. Colorado Sun, Feb. 22 vs. Utah noon Phi — FGParkey31,9:48. 8p.m. Ind — Bradshaw1passfromLuck(Vinatieri kick),5:18. Wed,Feb.25 at California Sun, March1 at Stanford 4p.m. SecondGuarler Wed,March4 at Oregon St. 8p.m. Ind — FGVinatieri 46,13:18. * at New York Phi — FGParkey23,6:36. "at Chi c ago Ind — Doyle 2passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick),1:13. Third Guarfer OregonStateschedule Ind — FGVinatieri 27,6:43. vs. Western Oregon (ex.) 7p.m. Fri, Nov.7 Phi — Mccoy1 run(Parkeykick),4:32. 7p.m. Fri, Nov.14 vs. Rice Phi — Sproles19 run(Parkeykick),2:44. vs. Corban 7p.m. Tue, Nov.18 Fourlh Quarter Nov.21 vs. OralRoberts * 6p.m. Ind — Bradshaw7passfromLuck(Vinatierikick),11:49. Fri, Nov.24 vs.OklahomaSt.* 5:30 p.m. Phi — Maclin 6passfromFoles(Parkeykick),3:25. Mon, Wed, Nov. 26 vs Auburn/Tul s a TBD Phi — FGParkey36,:00. Wed,Dec.3 vs. MississippiValleySt. 9p.m. A—64,871. Sat, Dec. 6 at Portland 7p.m. Sat, Dec.13 vs. MississippiSt. 1p.m. Phi Ind Mon, Dec.15 vs. Grambl i n g St . 7p.m. First downs 24 25 Thu, Dec.18 vs. DePa u l 7p.m. TotalNetYards 4 58 34 1 Sun,Dec.21 at Quinnipiac 28-127 38-169 Rushes-yards vs. UC Sa nt a B ar bar a 6:30 p.m. Tue,Dec.30 Passing 3 31 17 2 at Oregon TBA Jan.3 4 -25 4 - 44 Sat, PuntReturns Thu, Jan.8 vs. ArizonaSt. 6p.m. 1 -21 2 - 54 Sun,Jan.11 vs. Arizona KickoffReturns 7p.m. 1-8 1-0 InterceptionsRet. Thu,Jan. 15 at Washi n gton 6p.m. Comp-Att-Int 21-37-1 20-34-1 Sat,Jan.17 at Washi n gton S t . 6p.m. 0-0 0-0 Sacked-Yards Lost Thu,Jan.22 vs. UCLA 6p.m. Punts 4-53.8 4-55.3 Sat,Jan.24 vs. Southern Cal 3 p.m. 0-0 2-1 Fumbles-Lost Wed,Jan.28 at Arizona St. 5p.m. Penalties-Yards 1 1-90 4 - 70 Fri,Jan.30 at Arizona 7p.m. Timeof Possession 23:45 36:15 Thu,Feb.5 vs. Washington St. 7p.m. vs. Washi n gton 1:30p.m. Sun,Feb.8 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICB Wed,Feb.11 at UCLA 7 p.m. RUSHING —Philadelphia: Mccoy 20-79, Sat, Feb.14 at SouthernCal 2 p.m. Sproles4-26,Foles4-22.Indianapolis: Richardson Thu,Feb.19 vs. Utah 8p.m. 21-79,Bradshaw13-70,Luck4-20. Sat, Feb.21 vs. Colorado 8p.m. PASSING —Philadelphia: Foles 21-37-1-331. Thu,Feb.26 at Stanford 8p.m. Indianapolis: Luck20-34-1-172. Sun,March1 at California noon RECEIVING —Philadelphia: Sproles 7-152, Wed,March4 vs. Oregon 8p.m. Ertz 4-86, Maclin 4-45, Mccoy4-23, J.Matthews * at LasVegas 1-17, Cooper1-8.Indianapolis: Hilton6-65, Bradshaw5-26,Wayne 3-28, Doyle2-12, Moncrief1-16, DEALS Richardson1-16, Fleener1-13, Nicks1-(minus4). MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Philadelphia: Parkey 38(WL). Transactions
skeLXA.
QOULT)/JI.
1 0 .500 48 45 1 0 .500 25 51
Monday'sGame Philadelphia30,Indianapolis 27 Thursday'sGame TampaBayatAtlanta, 5:25p.m. Bunday'sGames Dallas at St. Louis,10a.m. Minnesota at NewOrleans,10a.m. SanDiegoat Buffalo,10 a.m. Washington atPhiladelphia,10a.m. HoustonatN.Y. Giants,10 a.m. Tennesseeat Cincinnati,10am. TorayPanPacific Open BaltimoreatCleveland,10 a.m. Monday atTokyo GreenBayatDetroit,10a m. First Round iat s Jacksonvile, 10a.m. LucieSafarova(7), CzechRepublic, def.Madison Indianapol Oakland at NewEngland,10 a.m. Keys,UnitedStates, 6-7(4), 6-4,6-2. Belinda Bencic, Switzerland, def. Svetlana SanFranciscoatArizona,1:05p.m. DenveratSeatle,1:25 p.m. Kuznetsova,Russia, 6-3,6-0. GarbineMuguruza,Spain, def.AnastasiaPavly- KansasCityat Miami,1:25 p.m. Pittsburghat Carolina, 5;30p.m. uchenkova, Russia,6-3, 7-6(3). Monday,Sep. 22 Elina Svitolina,Ukraine,def. BarboraZahlavova Strycova,CzechRepublic, 6-4, 6-1. Chicag oatN.Y.Jets,5:30p.m.
this year, had to push back its aeri-
NFL
IN THE BLEACHERS
should be no surprise. Nationally, golfhas struggled to recover from economic recession, for varying
BASEBALL
mer ica's Line Favorite
Auburn
OpenCurrent 0/U underdog (Hometeam incaps) College Thursday 8'/t
S. FLORIDA 3'/t
KANSAS ST
8'/t
Friday
Uconn
3'/z
Saturday 17 15 29 27
MISSOU RI PENN ST Marshall 12 PITTSBU RGH 4'/t 91/2 TOLEDO SYRAC USE 1'/t OHIO 131 t/t KANSAS 5 GEORG IA 39 WISCON SIN 22 DUKE 17'/t -1 Army E. CARO LINA 2t/t MICHIGAN 6'/t MICHIGAN ST 45'/t
5'/z
10
1'/t
13'/z
5
391/2 23t/t
17 1 2I/2
6 451/2
S. Carolina 21'/t 21'/t WYOMING 41/2 4 COLOR ADO 71/2 7
MEMPHIS 71/2 10Ht WASHINGTO N 36t/t 351/2 SO MISS 31/2 3'/z S. ALABA MA 2I/2 2I/2 Texas A8M 30'/2 31 51/2 5t/t NAVY ALABAMA 16 15 HOUSTO N 20'/z 20'/t VA TECH 8 8
Oregon
23I/2 23I/2
ARKANS AS NEBRA SKA
71/2
FLORIDA ST 19'/t 20'/z BYU 16t/t 15'/t ILLINOIS 14'/z 14 RICE 10t/t 8 Louisville 26'/z 26'/t CINCINN ATI 29 28 OREGO NST 10 10 91/2 9Ht LSU 14
Indiana UMass
10t/t
14 7 9 11
Oklahoma 12 ARIZON A 12'/t BOISE ST 17 16'/t
AKRON
lowa Ball St Maryland Idaho C. Michigan Troy BowlingGreen Tulane WAKEFO REST N. Carolina Utah E. Michigan Vanderbilt Fla. Atlantic Hawaii Mid TennSt GeorgiaSt AppalachianSt Ga Southern SMU Rutgers Florida Unlv Ga.Tech WASH. ST Clemson Virginia TexasSt Old Dominion FLORIDA INT'L Miami-Ohio SanDiegoSt MississippiSt N. Illinois Miami-Fla W. VIRGIIA N California Louisiana
transient room tax collected in July
and August will be up "roughly 15 to 20 percent over 2013." reasons. Black Butte Ranch has enjoyed sigSo any gain locally should be seen nificant growth in everything from as a success, says Rob Malone, di- room nights and food and beverage rector of golf at Aspen Lakes Golf sales to retail sales. But golf has not Course in Sisters. followed suit. "In general it seems golf nationThe economy aside, Huntsman wide took a little bit of a hit this year, says family commitments and a diso though we'd certainly like to have versity of recreational offerings have even better results, it clearly could limited the t ime v acationers can have been worse," says Malone, add- spend on the golf course. ing that Aspen Lakes is up slightly in Huntsman offers his extended rounds played compared with 2013. family as an example. Visiting for Tepid growth in the golf indus- an eight-day vacation this summer, try has little to do with the overall Huntsman's two golf-crazy cousstrength of the economy anymore, ins managed to play a combined 45 Black Butte Ranch's Huntsman says. holes, far fewer than what they would Indeed, tourism has seemingly have preferred. The cousins spent the made big gains this year locally. rest of their time in the area enjoyThe Central Oregon Visitors Asso- ing some of Central Oregon's other ciation predicts that 2014 will be a popular attractions with their family record-setting year in terms of rev- members, none of whom played golf. enue and occupancy rates, and it Huntsman says that can be overestimates that Deschutes County's come in the long term by fostering
MLB — AnnouncedPhiladelphia Phigies RHP Jonat hanPapelbonwassuspendedforseyen-games and finedan undisclosedamount for makinga lewd gestureSunday. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS— RecalledINFNick AhmedandLHPAndrew Chafin from Reno (PCL). Selectedthecontract of CBobbyWilson. Transferred RHPBronsonArroyoto the60-day COLOR ADOROCKIES— Recalled INFCristhian Adames fromTulsa (Texas). FOOTBALL National Football League CHICAGO BEARS— Placed CBCharles Tilman on injuredreserve.SignedFBTonyFiammetta.Signed QBDavidFalesto thepracticesquad. SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer MLS — FinedD.C. UnitedandcoachBen Olsen undisclosedamounts for violating theleague's mass confrontationpolicy inthe38thminuteof their Sept. 10 game against NewYork. FinedNewYorkMFRoyMiller an undisclosed amount for instigatingandescalatingthe matterand violatingtheleague'spolicy regardinghandsto the face/head of anopponent. FinedD.C. UnitedDSean FranklinandMFDavyArnaudundisclosed amounts for instigatingandescalatingtheconfrontation. TORONTOFC— Signed MFChristopherMannella. COLLEGE IOWASTATE— AnnouncedOLJacobGannonhas rejoined thefootball team.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 37,245 4,386 3,544 9 9 8 The Dalles 24,587 2,598 7,300 2,418 John Day 16,525 2,442 6,948 2,332 McNary 25,635 2,907 4,159 1,141 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 964,858 113,476 266,622 113,312 TheDalles 604,876 75,541 163,944 70,819 John Day 479,575 61,341 102,535 42,731 McNary 411,580 52,909 86,270 36,381
innovations in the golf business, such as offering shorter six- or nine-hole rounds, and finding ways to ensure that golf is accommodating to both women and children. "I think there is a iot of opportu-
nity, but it's a little bit of a paradigm shift on how we approach our marketing," Huntsman says. "We just have to be willing to adapt and grow with it." In the end, Huntsman believes that
Central Oregon golf will continue to gl ow. But that growth might not be as
fast as some would hope.
aWe're just in a real cyclical chal-
ienge with golf in the region," Huntsman says. "But we've got a great product and I have no doubt that golf
is going to be a successful part of both our business operation and the destination as a whole for a very long time." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhaII®bendbulletin.com.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings
Baltimore Toronto NewYork
National League
RECORD START
All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB
Tampa Bay Boston
Detroit Kansas City Cleveland
Chicago Minnesota
90 60 77 72 76 73 73 78 66 84
Central Division W L 84 66 82 67 76 73 68 82 63 87
West Division
W L 94 56 83 66 80 69 67 83 57 92
LosAngeles Oakland Seattle Houston Texas
Wild Card W 83 82 80 77 76 76
Oakland Kansas City Seattle Toronto Cleveland NewYork
L
517 12t/t
.510 13'/t .483 17'/t .440 24
Pct GB .560 .550 1'/t .510 7'/t
Miami
.453 16 .420 21
.557 10'/t .537 13'/t
.447 27 .383 36'/t
Pct G B 2 5 6 6
Monday'sGames
Baltimore 5,Toronto 2 Tampa Bay1, N.Y.Yankees0 Kansas City4, ChicagoWhite Sox3 Houston 3, Cleveland1 Detroit 8,Minnesota6 LA. Angel8, s Seattle1
r,v
+'
Kathy Willens/ rhe Associated Press
New York Mets starter Jacob deGrom tied a major league record by striking out the first eight batters of Monday's game against Miami in New York. He took a shutout into the seventh inning, but the Marlins came back to win 6-5. deGrom matched the feat first done by Jim Deshaies of the Houston Astros against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sept. 23, 1966.
American League
Angels 8, Mariners1
NATIONALLEAGUE
Washington Atlanta Miami NewYork Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati Chicago
East Division W L
86 63 75 75 73 76 72 79 69 81
Central Division W L 83 67 79 70 78 72 71 80 66 84
West Division
LosAngeles SanFrancisco SanDiego Arizona Colorado
W L 86 64 82 68 69 80 62 88 59 91
SanFrancisco Pittsburgh Milwaukee Atlanta
Wild Card W L 82 68 79 70 78 72 75 75
Pct GB
ANAHEIM, Calif.— Los Angeles
.460 17'/t
became the first team in themajor leagues to clinch a playoff spot, with Matt Shoemaker pitching five-hit ball into the eighth inning.
Pct GB
Seattle
.577
500 tfr/t
.490 13 .477 15
.553
530 3'/2
.520 5
.470 12r/t
.440 17
Pct GB .573 .547 4 .463 16'/z
.413 24 .393 27
Pct GB
.547 .530 .520 1'/t .500 4'/2
Monday'sGames
Miami 6,N.Y.Mets 5 Washington 4, Atlanta2 Chicago Cubs1, Cincinnati0 LA. Dodgers11,Colorado3 Arizona 6,SanFrancisco2 SanDiego1,Philadelphia0
Tuesday'sGames Boston(Ranaudo 3-2) at Pittsburgh(Morton5-12), 4:05 p.m. Miami (Eovald6-11) i at N.Y.Mets(B.colon 13-12), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Roark 1310)at Atlanta(Harang11-10), 4;10 p.m. Cincinnati(Cueto 18-8) atChicagoCubs(Arrieta 8-5), 5:05 p.m. Milwaukee(W .Peralta16-10)at St.Louis(Lynn15-9), 5;15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers(Haren13-10) at Colorado(Matzek 5-10), 5:40 p.m. SanFrancisco(Peavy5-4) atArizona(Cogmenter107), 6:40p.m. Philadelphia(A.Burnett 8-16)at SanDiego (Kennedy 10-13),7:10p.m. Wednesday'sGames L.A. DodgersatColorado,12:10p.m. SanFranciscoatArizona,12:40 p.m. Bostonat Pittsburgh,4:05 p.m. Miami atN.Y.Mets,4:10 p.m. WashingtonatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. Cincinnatiat ChicagoCubs, 5:05p.m. Milwaukee atSt.Louis, 5:15p.m. Philadelphiaat SanDiego,7:10p.m.
New York
ab r bbi ab r bbi Yelichlf 5 0 0 0 Lagarscf 4 0 1 0 Solano2b 5 0 1 0 DnMrp3b 5 1 2 1 McGeh3b 5 1 1 0 TdArndc 4 2 2 1 Ozunacf 4 1 1 0 Duda1b 3 1 0 0 Bour1b 3 1 2 0 Floresss 3 0 2 2 Lucaspr-1b 0 1 0 0 Grndrsrf 3 0 0 1 H chvrrss 4 1 2 2 Mejiap 0 0 0 0 Vldspnrf 3 1 1 2 DHerrr2b 4 0 0 0 KHrndzph-rf 1 0 0 0 dnDkkrlf 2 0 0 0 Mathisc 3 0 2 1 Campgph-If 2 1 0 0 Cosartp 2 0 1 0 deGrm p 2 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 0 0 0 1 Satinph 1 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0Familip 0 0 0 0 A Ramsp 0 0 0 0 Edginp 0 0 0 0 SDysonp 0 0 0 0 Niwnhsrf 1 0 0 0 GJonesph 1 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 6 116 Totals 3 4 5 7 5 Miami Ogg Ogg 330 — 6
Pct GB .627
Today'sGames Boston(Ranaudo 3-2) at Pittsburgh(Morton5-12), 4:05 p.m. Toronto(Hutchison10-11)at Baltimore(U.Jimenez 4-9),4:05p.m. N.Y.Yankees(Pineda 3-4) atTampaBay(Odorizzi 1012),4:10p.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Bassitt 0-1) atKansasCity (Hendriks 1-2),5:10p.m. Cleveland(Kluber15-9) at Houston(Tropeano 1-0), 5:10 p.m. Detroit(Porcello15-11)atMinnesota(Nolasco5-11), 5:10 p.m. Seattle(Elias10-12)atL.A.Angels (CorRasmus3-1), 7:05 p.m. Texas(Tepesch 4-10) at Oakland(Kazmir14-8), 7:05 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Bostonat Pittsburgh,4:05 p.m. TorontoatBaltimore, 4:05p.m. N.Y.YankeesatTampaBay,4:10 p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxat Kansas City, 5:10p.m. Cleveland atHouston,5:10 p.m. Detroit atMinnesota,5:10p.m. SeattleatL.A.Angels, 7;05p.m. Texas atOakland,7:05p.m.
DENVER — Pinch hitter Justin
NEW YORK — NewYork's Jacob deGrom struck out his first eight batters to match amajor league record before AdeinyHechavarria hit a two-run single andJeff Mathis put Miami in front with an RBIsingle that capped a three-run eighth.
.600
66 .557 67 .550 6 9 .537 7 2 .517 7 3 .510 7 3 .510
Dodgers11, Rockies 3
Marlins 6, Mets 5
Los Angeles
ab r hbi ab r bbi AJcksncf 3 0 1 0 Calhonrf 5 1 1 0 J .Jonespr-cf 1 0 0 0 Troutcf 2 1 1 0 Ackleylf 3 0 1 0 Puiols1b 2 0 1 3 Romerlf 1 0 0 0 Campnpr-If 3 1 1 2 Cano2b 3 0 1 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 1 1
CTaylrss 1 0 0 0 Aybarss 4 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 1 0 Freese3b 4 1 1 1 KMorlsdh 4 0 00 JMcDnl3b 0 0 0 0 Morrsn1b 3 1 2 0 Boeschdh 4 2 2 1 MSndrsrf 3 0 0 0 Congerc 3 0 0 0 Zuninoc 2 0 0 0 ENavrrlf-1b 3 2 1 0 Quinter c 1 0 0 1 BMillerss-2b 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 1 6 1 Totals 3 48 9 8 Seattle 0 00 000 810 — 1 Los Angeles 00 4 310 ggx— 8 E—Cano(7), Conger(6). DP —LosAngeles 2. LOB —Seattle 4, LosAngeles7. 28—Cano(34), Morrison (16),Puiols(36),H.Kendrick (30). HR —Freese
(9), Boesch (1).
IP H R Seattle Iwakuma L,14-8 3 1-3 6 7 Leone 2-3 1 0 Luetge 1 1 1 E.Ramirez 2 1 0 Medina 1 0 0 Los Angeles ShoemakerW16-4 72-3 5 1 1-3 0 0 Thatcher Pestano 1 1 0 T—2:54. A—36,137(45,483).
Orioles 5, Blue Jays2
Rays 1, Yankees0
Tigers 8, Twins 6
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Ben
MINNEAPOLIS —Torii Hunter and Miguel Cabrera hit back-toback home runs in the ninth to give Detroit its fourth straight victory.
Zobrist hit a game-ending single with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning. New York TampaBay ab r hbi ab r hbi Ellsurycf 4 0 0 0 Zobristcf 5 0 2 1 G ardnrlf 4 0 0 0 Guyerlf 3 0 1 0 Prado2b 4 0 2 0 Longoridh 3 0 0 0 T eixeir1b 3 0 1 0 Myersrf 3 0 0 0 Beltrandh 4 0 1 0 YEscorss 4 0 0 0 Headly3b 2 0 0 0 Forsyth2b 4 1 1 0 Drewph-ss 2 0 0 0 Loney1b 4 0 1 0 ISuzukirf 4 0 1 0 SRdrgz3b 3 0 0 0 JMrphyc 2 0 0 0 DeJessph 1 0 0 0 B.Ryanss 2 0 1 0 Casalic 2 0 0 0 BMccnph 1 0 0 0 Joyceph 0 0 0 0 ZeWhlr3b 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 0 6 0 Totals 3 21 5 1 New York g g g g g g ggg — 0 Tampa Bay g g g g gg gg1 — 1 Two outswhenwinning runscored. E—Gardner (2). DP —Tampa Bay 1. LOB—New York 7,TampaBay10.28—I.Suzuki (11).
Kansas City. Dyson scored on a wild pitch, and Gore on aLorenzo Cain infield single.
Astros 3, indians1
Chicago
tuve had three hits and two RBIS.
KansasCity ab r h bi ab r hbi Eatoncf 5 2 3 0 AEscorss 4000 Toronto Baltimore A IRmrzss 5 1 2 0 Aokirf 4 14 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi J Areu1b 5 0 2 0 Gorepr 0 1 0 0 Reyes ss 5 2 3 0 Markks rf 4 1 1 0 Gigaspi3b 4 0 1 1 L.caincf 4 0 1 1 B autistcf-rf 4 0 1 0 DeAzalf 4 1 1 0 AGarcirf 4 0 2 1 AGordnlf 4 0 1 1 Encrncdh 5 0 2 1 A.Jonescf 4 1 3 1 JrDnkslf 400 0 Valenci1b-3b5 0 1 1 N.cruzdh 4 0 2 1 Viciedodh440011 00 S.Perezc Hosmer1b 3 1 1 0 DNavrrc 4 0 1 0 Pearce1b 2 0 2 0 Flowrsc 4 0 1 0 BButlerdh 3 0 0 0 Mayrryrf-1b 2 0 0 0 JHardyss 4 0 0 0 Semien2b 4 0 0 0 Infante2b 4 0 1 1 Kawskph-2b 1 0 0 0 KJhnsn3b 3 1 0 0 Nix3b 2000 StTllsn3b-2b3 0 2 0 Schoop2b 0 0 0 0 Ibanez ph 0 0 0 0 Lindph-1b 1 0 0 0 Flahrty2b-3b 4 1 1 2 LAdmspr 0 0 0 0 Pillarlf 4 0 1 0 CJosphc 3 0 0 0 Mostks 3b 1 0 1 0 Leaders Goins2b 2 0 0 0 JDyson pr 0 1 0 0 CIRsms ph 1 0 0 0 ThroughMonday'sGames Totals 39 3 132 Totals 3 3 4 9 3 Gosecf 1 0 0 0 Chicago 102 ggg ggg — 3 Totals 38 2 11 2 Totals 3 2 5 10 4 AMERICANLEAGUE Kansas Cii y g g g g gg 112 — 4 Toronto 100 010 ggg — 2 BATTING —Altuve, Houston, .342; VMartinez, Two outswhenwinning runscored. 201 2 0 0 g gx — 5 Detroit, .331;JAbreu,Chicago,.323; Beltre,Texas, Baltimore E—Gigaspie (12). DP—Chicago 2. LOB —ChiDP — Toronto 2. LOB—Toronto 11, Baltimore6. .322; Brantley,Cleveland,.322;Cano, Seattle, .321; 2B — D.Navarro (21), DeAza(21). HR —Flaherty (7). cago 9,KansasCity 9. 28—Eaton (23), Aoki (20) Micabrera,Detroit,.313. Hosmer(30), Moustakas(20). SB—A.Gordon (11) SB — Reyes(27). HOME RUNS —Ncruz, Baltimore, 39; Carter, (34). CS—Eaton(9). IP H R E R BBBD J.Dyson Houst on,36;JAbreu,Chicago,35;Trout,LosAngeles, Toronto IP H R E R 8830 34; Bautista,Toronto, 32;Encarnacion, Toronto,32; StromanL,10-6 6 9 5 5 2 3 Chicago Ortiz,Boston,32. Loup 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Joh.Danks 6 2 0 0 4 6 NATIONALLEAGUE 1 2 1 1 1 0 McGowan 11-3 0 0 0 1 2 GuerraH,7 BATTING —JHarrison,Pitsburgh,.317;Morneau, Baltimore PutnamH,16 2-32 1 0 1 1 Colorado,r315; Posey,San Francisco, .311; AMc- W.chenW,16-4 5 2-3 9 2 2 0 0 2 1 6 PetrickaL,1-5BS,4-17 1 3 2 Cutchen,Pittsburgh,.310;Revere, Philadelphia,.307; BrachH,6 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 KansasCity Lucroy,Milwaukee,.303;Goldschmidt, Arizona,.300. TomrHunterH,9 1 7 103 3 0 6 0 0 0 0 1 Shields HOME RUNS—Stanton, Miami,37; Rizzo,Chica- Z.BrittonS,35-39 1 1 0 0 1 0 K.Herrera 1 2 0 0 0 1 go, 31;Duda,NewYork, 27;Jupton, Atlanta,27; Fra- Brachpitchedto1 batterin the8th. W.DavisW,9-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 zier, Cincinnati,26;Byrd, Philadelphia,25;LaRoche, WP—Stroman. WP — Putnam2, Petricka, Shields. T — 3: 1 2. A — 25,061 (45, 9 71). Washington,24. T—3:18.A—21,390(37,903).
Continued from C1 Instead, the fans traveled hundreds
of miles west to the capital, Kiev. As with most areas of Ukrainian
society, professional soccer hasbeen disfigured by the war in the east. Three teamsinCrimea were absorbed
into the Russian league system, and dubs from Donetsk, Luhansk, Mariupol and beyond have been forced to relocate to Kiev.
Shakhtar, the country's richest and most successful team, is the most pub-
lic example of this disruption. It has won the last five Ukrainian Premier
League titles and regularly competes in the UEFA Champions League, indudingthis season's tournament. Since 2009, Shakhtar has played its home games at the state-of-the-art Donbass Arena, a 50,000-seat sta-
Puigcf 5 2 2 0 Rutledgss 4 0 1 0 AdGnzl1b 5 1 2 3 Mornea1b 3 2 1 0 VnSlyk1b 0 0 0 0 McBridph 1 0 0 0 Kemprf 5 1 1 2 Cuddyrrf 4 0 1 1 B rWlsnp 0 0 0 0 CDckrslf 4 0 1 1
Diamondbacks 6,Giants2
Washington Atlanta ab r hbi ab r hbi Spancf 4 0 1 1 Gosseln2b 4 0 0 0 Rendon3b 4 0 0 0 ASmnsss 4 1 2 0 Werthrf 3 0 1 0 FFrmn1b 3 0 1 0 LaRoch1b 4 0 0 0 Trdslvc1b 1 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 1 0 0 J.Uptonlf 4 1 1 1 Harperlf 1 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 4 0 1 0 Schrhltph-If 2 0 1 1 CJhnsn3b 3 0 1 0 WRamsc 3 2 1 1 Bonifacpr 0 0 0 0 Acarer2b 4 1 1 0 Bthncrtc 4 0 2 1 Strasrgp 1 0 1 1 BUptoncf 4 0 1 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0ESantnp 0 0 0 0 Frndsnph 1 0 0 0 Constnzph 1 0 0 0 R Sorinp 0 0 0 0 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 Jaimep 0 0 0 0 Shrevep 0 0 0 0 Schlssrp 0 0 0 0 Doumitph 1 0 0 0 Russell p 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 4 6 4 Totals 3 3 2 9 2 Washington g g 1 0 1 8 110 — 4 Atlanta Ogg Ogg 002 — 2 E—Strasburg (4). DP—Washington 1. LOBWashington 6, Atlanta 6. 28 —Span (38), Werth (35), A.cabrera (8), A.Simmons2 (17), J.Upton(33). HR — W.Ramos(11). SB—Desmond(22). CS—Schierholtz(5).S—Strasburg, E.Santana.
PHOENIX — Mark Trumbo hit a
grand slam andhadfive RBIS, and Arizona handedSan Francisco its third straight loss. Ban Francisco A r i zona ab r hbi ab r hbi J .Perezcf 5 0 0 0 Inciartlf 4 0 1 0 Panik2b 5 1 2 0 Owings2b 3 1 1 0 Poseyc 4 0 1 1 Pollockcf 3 2 1 1 Pencerl 4 0 1 0 Trumo1b 4 1 2 5 Sandovl3b 4 0 2 0 MMntrc 4 0 1 0 A rias1b 3 1 3 0 A.Hill3b 3 0 1 0 Ishikawph-1b1 0 0 0 C.Rossrf 2 0 0 0 GBlancIf 4 0 1 0 BJcksn pr-rf 1 0 0 0
Bcrwfrss 4 0 1 1 Gregrs ss 4 0 0 0 V glsngp 2 0 0 0 Mileyp 2 1 1 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Pnngtnph 1 1 1 0 MDuffyph 1 0 0 0 Patersnp 0 0 0 0 JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0 EMrshlp 0 0 0 0 Minnesota g g g g 1 3 02g — 6 Cordierp 0 0 0 0 EDLRsp 0 0 0 0 DP — Detroit 2, Minnesota 3. LOB—Detroit 7, Susacph 1 0 0 0 Minnesota 4. 2B —Mi.cabrera (46), V.Martinez 2 Totals 38 2 11 2 Totals 3 1 6 9 6 (31), J.Marti n ez (28), Hol a day (5), An.R o m i n e (6), Ban Francisco 000 000 110 — 2 IP H R E R 8830 K.Suzuki(30).HR — T or.H unt e r (1 6), Mi . cabrera (23 ), Arizona 004 000 20x — 6 New York Arcia(18). SB — D a.S antan a(16), Do zi e r(21). CS — J . SanFrancisco2. LOB—SanFrancisco9, ArIP H R E R BBBO DP — Capuano 6 2 0 0 4 4 Schafer(3). SF—Plouffe. Washington izona5. 2B—Panik(9), Sandoval (26), G.Blanco(15), Warren 2 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBBD StrasburgW,12-11 7 5 0 0 0 7 M.Montero(22). 38—Pollock (5). HR —Trumbo (9). KelleyL,3-6 2-3 3 1 1 Detroit SB — G.Blanco(16). CS—A,Hig(3). Stammen 1 1 0 0 0 0 E R BBBD TampaBay Scherzer 7 7 4 4 1 5 R.Soriano 2-3 2 2 2 1 1 IP H R E R BBBD Colome 62-3 6 0 0 1 4 0 0 2 2 2 0 StorenS,6-9 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 San Francisco 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Chamberlain 7 2 4 Geltz C oke BS,1-2 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Atlanta V ogel s ong L, 8 -11 52-3 64 4 4 5 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 Beliveau 0 1 0 0 0 0 E.SantanaL,14-9 6 3 2 2 2 6 J.Lopez 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Alburqueroue 1 1 0 Yates K.Ryan W2-0 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Avilan 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 J.Gutierrez 1 3 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 SoriaS,18-20 1 0 0 1 Jo.PeraltaW,3-4 1 1 0 0 0 1 Jaime 1-3 0 1 1 1 1 Cordier 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 WP—Capuano,Colome. Minnesota 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona T—3:28.A—16,058 (31,042). Shreve Swarzak 4 1-3 11 6 6 1 2 Schlosser 2 -3 1 0 0 0 0 Miley W,8-11 7 7 1 1 0 4 1 0 5 Achter 2 1-3 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Paterson Pressly 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Russell Royals 4, White Sox 3 E.Marshag 1 2 0 0 0 1 pitchedto1 batterinthe8th. 0 0 0 Fien L,5-6 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 Jaime H BP — by A vil a n (S pan). W P — S tam m en, S tor en. E .DeLaRosa 1 1 0 0 0 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Tonkin T — 3: 0 6. A — 1 8,22 0 ( 49, 5 86). Paterson pi t ched to1batter i n the8th. — Pinch-runKANSAS CITY, Mo. Chamberlainpitchedto 2batters inthe8th. WP — Vogelsong2. Alburquerque pitchedto 1 baterinthe 8th. ners Jarrod DysonandTerrance T—2:59. A—21,731(48,633). WP — Scherzer. Cubs 1, Reds 0 Gore scored in the ninth to rally T—3:15. A—19,700(39,021).
BALTIMORE — Wei-Yin Chen allowed two runs on nine hits over 5'/9 innings to becomethe first Orioles lefty to win16 gamessince Jimmy Key in1997.
Shakhtar
Minnesota ab r bbi ab r hbi Kinsler2b 5 0 0 0 DaSntnss-cf 4 2 2 0 TrHntrrf 5 1 2 1 Dozier2b 2 2 0 0 Micarr1b 5 3 3 1 Mauer1b 4 1 2 4 VMrtnzdh 5 1 2 1 KVarqsdh 4 0 1 0 JMrtnzlf 4 1 3 1 Plourfe3b 3 0 1 1 C arrercf 0 0 0 0 Arciarf 3 1 1 1 Cstgns3b 4 1 1 1 Nunezph-ss 1 0 0 0 D.Kegy3b 0 0 0 0 KSuzukc 4 0 2 0 Holadyc 4 1 2 1 Parmellf-rf 4 0 0 0 AnRmn ss 4 0 3 2 JSchafr cf-If 3 0 1 0 RDaviscf-If 4 0 0 0 Pintoph 1 0 0 0 Totals 40 8 168 Totals 3 3 6 106 Detroit 2gg 318 gg2 — 8
Los Angeles Colorado ab r hbi ab r hbi DGordn2b 6 22 1 Blckmncf 4 0 0 0
Arrrrnss 0 0 0 0 Rosarioc 4 1 3 1 H Rmrzss 4 1 2 1 Ynoa3b 4 0 1 0 PBaezp 0 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 2 0 1 0 Leaguep 0 0 0 0 Adamsph-2b 1 0 0 0 Ethierph-rf 1 0 0 0 Brgmnp 2 0 0 0 Crwfrd lf 2 1 1 1 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 Pedrsnpr-If 0 0 0 0 Massetp 0 0 0 0 Uribe3b 4 1 3 1 KParkrph 1 0 1 0 Buterac 0 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 A.Ellisc 4 1 1 0 BBrwnp 0 0 0 0 C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 Fridrchp 0 0 0 0 RHrndzp 1 0 0 0 Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Paulsnph 1 0 0 0 JWrghtp 0 0 0 0 JuTrnrph 1 1 1 2 Roiasss-3b 2 0 0 0 Totals 4 0 11 1511 Totals 35 3 10 3 Los Angeles 20 0 018 ggg — 11 C olorado 110 0 1 0 ggg — 3 E—Arruebarrena(3). DP—LosAngeles2. LOBs Colorado9. 2B—D.Gordon(21), Puig New York 2 g gg g g 300 — 6 Los Angele9, nzalez (38), H.Ramirez (32), uribe(20), E—McGe hee (7). LOB —Miami 6, NewYork 8. (35), Ad.Go Ju.Turner (17), Cudd yer (10). 38—C.crawford (3), 28—Solano (10), Hechavarria (19), Td'Arnaud(21), LeMahie(5). u HR —Kemp(21),Rosario (11). SB—D. Flores(10).S—Mathis. SF—R.Johnson. IP H R E R BBBO Gordon(62), Puig(9), Blackmon(28). CS—LeMahieu (10). S —R.Hernandez. SF—C.crawford. Miami IP H R E R BBBD Cosart 6 5 2 2 2 5 Los Angel es M.DunnBS,3-4 2- 3 1 2 0 1 1 2 2 2 1 A.Ramos 0 1 1 1 3 0 R.Hernandez 3 2 - 3 6 13 0 0 0 0 0 S.Dyson W3-1 1- 3 0 0 0 0 1 PRodriguez J.Wright W, 5 -4 1 2 1 1 0 0 HatcherH,5 1 0 0 0 0 2 P.Baez 1 1 0 0 0 0 CishekS,36-40 1 0 0 0 0 1 League 1 0 0 0 0 0 New York 1 1 0 0 0 0 deGrom 7 6 3 3 1 13 BrWilson 1 0 0 0 0 3 FamiliaL,2-5 BS,5-10 1-3 4 3 3 0 1 C.Perez Colorado Edgin 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 L,2-4 5 9 6 6 1 7 Me)ia 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Bergman Brothers 0 2 2 2 0 0 A.Ramos pitchedto 4battersinthe 7th. Masset 1 3 3 3 1 1 WP—deGrom. Belisle 1 1 0 0 0 0 T—3:10.A—23,027 (41,922). B.Brown 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Friedrich 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Nationals 4, Braves 2 Ottavino 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bergman pitched to3 batters inthe6th. Brotherspitchedto2 batters inthe6th. ATLANTA — Stephen Strasburg HBP —by League (Rutledge, Morneau), byFriedrich threw seven scoreless innings, (C.crawford),byBergman(C.crawford). T—3:39. A—29,031(50,480). and Wilson Ramoshit his11th
homer in the fifth.
Detroit
Turner ignited aneight-run sixth inning with a tiebreaking two-run double.
dium built to host several matches during the 2012 European Championships, and filled its roster with foreign stars acquired through the patronage
HOUSTON — Houston' sJoseAlCleveland Houston ab r bbi ab r hbi Bourncf 4 1 1 0 Grssmnlf 4 1 1 0 JRmrzss 3 0 0 0 Altuve2b 4 1 3 2 Brantlylf 4 0 2 0 Fowlercf 3 0 0 1 CSantn1b 4 0 1 1 Carterdh 4 0 0 0 Kipnisdh 4 0 1 0 Krauss1b 3 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 0 0 Singltn1b 1 0 0 0 DvMrprf 4 0 1 0 Jcastroc 3 0 2 0 Chsnh03b 4 0 1 0 Mrsnckrf 3 0 1 0 Walters2b 2 0 0 0 MDmn3b 3 0 0 0 Sellers 2b 0 0 0 0 G.Petit ss 3 1 2 0 Avilesph-2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 1 7 1 Totals 3139 3 Cleveland 1 g g g ggOgg — 1 Houston gg2 ggg 01x — 3 E—Krauss(4). LOB—Cleveland 7, Houston5. 28—Brantley(40), Grossma n (13), J.castro(20). 38—Altuve(3). SB—Marisnick (5). CS—Altuve (8). S—J.Ramirez. SF—Fowler. I P H R ER 8830 Cleveland McAllisterL,3-7 6 7 2 2 0 6 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 C.Lee Hagadone 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 2 -3 1 1 1 0 0 Atchison Crockett 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Houston M cHugh W,10-9 62-3 5 1 0 0 7 K.chapman H,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 DedunoH,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 QuallsS,18-23 1 1 0 0 0 1 T—2:45. A—17,403(42,060).
Shakhtar'sstar-studded roster traveled to Spain for its first Champions
CHICAGO— AnthonyRizzo capped his return to the Cubslineup with a walk-off home run. Cincinnati Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi BHmltncf 2 0 0 0 Coghlnlf 4 0 1 0 Negron2b 4 0 0 0 J.Baezss 4 0 0 0 F razier1b 4 0 1 0 Rizzo1b 4 1 2 1 M esorcc 3 0 0 0 Solerrf 3 0 1 0 YRdrgzrf 4 0 1 0 Valuen3b 2 0 0 0 Bourgslf 2 0 0 0 Castilloc 3 0 0 0 RSantg3b 3 0 1 0 Alcantrcf 3 0 1 0 Elmoress 2 0 00 Watkns2b 2 0 1 0 Simonp 1 0 0 0 Valaikaph-2b 1 0 0 0 Lulzph 1 0 0 0 TWoodp 2 0 0 0 M Parrp 0 0 0 0 NRmrzp 0 0 0 0 V igarrlp 0 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 O ltph 0000 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 6 0 3 0 Totals 2 81 6 1
Padras1, Phillies 0
SAN DIEGO — Andrew Cashner pitched a two-hitter for his third career shutout, and SanDiego scored on CodyAsche's fielding error in the second.
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and players like Manchester City's have since rejoined Shakhtar. The Fernandinho and Chelsea's Willian
League game of the season, against both gained European experience Athletic Bilbao on Wednesday. playing for the club. The current of the club's billionaire owner, Rinat These are just the sort of marquee squad includes more than a dozen Akhmetov. games that Akhmetov's money was Brazilians, but five of them — and one According to Forbes, Akhme- supposed to buy. But given the vola- Argentine — initially refused to retov, the son of a coal miner, is worth tile situation in the east — the team's turn to Ukraine in July after a friendly $12.5 billion. He made his money in stadium was damaged last month in in France, citing the deteriorating sesteel, iron ore, and in the region's coal shelling — it is unlikely that Shakhtar curity situation. mines, which are part of the club's will play any of them in its home stadiClub officials were furious. Mircea identity — his club's crest includes two um for the foreseeable future. Lucescu, Shakhtar's Romanian coach "It is a s t r ange situation, and for the past decade, angrily blamed crossedcoalhammers. He was also a former ally of the deposed Ukrainian strange for us," said Shakhtar's cap- the players' agents for trying to engipresident Viktor Yanukovych. tain, the 32-year-old-Croatian de- neer the departures. "Players have contracts that they Since taking over as Shakhtar's fender Darijo Srna. He was sitting in president in the mid-1990s, Akhme- the lobby of an upscale hotel a short have to abide by," Akhmetov told tov and his fortune have allowed distance from Kiev's Independence Shakhtar's official website at the time. Shakhtar to pay wages and transfer Square, the epicenter of Ukraine's "If they do not come, I think, they will fees comparable to Europe's biggest revolution. be the first to suffer." teams, attracting a host of talented Shakhtar is renowned for its sucAll of the players, including the players who might not otherwise cess in scouting South America for highly rated Brazilian Bernard, who move to eastern Ukraine. On Monday, emerging talent, especially in Brazil, played at the World Cup last summer,
Brazilians and their teammates now
can be seen quietly padding through the hotel's lobby in groups of three and four, exiled by language within a team exiled from home. The Donetsk derby in Kiev end-
ed in a rout, with Shakhtar beating Olimpik, 5-0, in a tiny stadium before a few hundred fans. After the final
whistle, Srna and a handful of players ran to salute their fans. They were
quickly mobbed by the Ultras, shaking hands, exchanging hugs and posing for photos. "This was the best day of the season!" said one fan, a 21-year-old finance student named Vladyslav, who
declined to give his last name. He beamed asheleftthestadium. "I don't know how I'll get home,"
he said. "Maybe I'll hitch a ride on a tank."
C4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
NFL NOTEBOOK
Tigers easilyroll past DamascusChristian Q Bulletin staff report
for Central Christian (1-1 Class capped the scoring with a goal on a header, assisted by Jiminez.
REDMOND — Caleb Reynolds 3A/2A/1A Special District 6). scored four goalsto lead the ofAlso on Monday: fense and Caleb Roberts anchored BOYS SOCCER
the defense with 12 saves from his goalie position Monday in Central Christian's 9-1 boys soccer victory over Damascus Christian. "Our defense was phenomenal
today," Central Christian coach Drew Roberts said. The visiting Eagles' lone goal pulled them into a 1-1 tie, but the Tigers scored the next three goals before halftime for a 4-1 advantage. Bryson Eells finished with three goals and Jacob Biever added two
VOLLEYBALL
Chiloquin 3, Central Christian 0: Culver 7, Redmond JV 0: RED- CHILOQUIN — The Tigers gave
MOND — It took the visiting Bull-
the host Panthers all they could
dogs some time to get started, but handle in the third game before they finished strong en route to the falling in the Class IA Mountain nonleague victory. Carlos Marti- Valley League match 25-11, 25-9, nez got Culver (2-2) on the board 25-21. "We're playing some girls in the 20th minute for the lone goal who arepretty new and inexperiof the first half. Martinez added
enced," Central Christian coach
three goals after the break, two on Jen Stevens said. "But they were assists from Ruben Jiminez and scrappy, and that last game was Hector LeaL Jiminez scored twice,
really close, neck and neck most of
including bending in a corner kick for the Bulldogs' fifth goal. Leal
the way." The Tigers dropped to 0-2 in the MVL.
tg s rejgstate Rg
Peterson a er arrest Bulletin wire reports MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota
Vikings reinstated Adrian Peterson on Monday, saying he will play this Sunday at New Orleans.
The star running back was charged late last week on a felony count of in-
juring a child. He was arrested early Saturday morning in Houston after flying there, and was quickly released after posting $15,000 bond. He was deactivated for the Vikings game on Sunday. Peterson issued a statement, saying in part: "I never wanted to be a distraction to the Vikings organization, the Minnesota community or to my team-
mates. I never imagined being in a position where the world is judging my parenting skills or calling me a child abuser because of the discipline I administered to my son."
An NFL spokesman said Monday afternoon that Peterson's case will be reviewed by the league under its Personal Conduct Policy, and that one of those involved will be Lisa Friel, a special advisor just hired to work on do-
mestic abuse cases. According to a letter sent to NFL owners Monday, commissioner Roger Goodell, Friel was the head of the sex crimes protection unit in the New York County District Attorney's office and
is currently a vice president with T&M Protection Services, a New York-based
J68k,
Eagles win onlate FG
Michael Conroy/The Associated Press
Philadelphia's Cody Parkey kicks a 36-yard field goal out as time expires to give the Eagles a 30-27 victory Monday night at Indianapolis. INDIANAPOLIS — Nick Foles
threw a tying touchdown passwith 3:25 to go, andthen set up Cody Parkey for the winning 36-yard field goal as time expired, lifting Philadelphia to a 30-27 win at Indianapolis on Monday night. Darren Sproles hadseven receptions for 152 yards to goalong with a touchdown run for the Eagles (2-0). The Colts led most of the night, including 27-20 late in thegarn. But Luck's late interception led toFoles' tying 6-yard TDpassto Jeremy Maclin, and after another three-and-out by the Colts, Folesdrove the Eagles into position for the winning field goal. — The Associated Press
private security and investigative firm.
"Friel's emphasis will be on the evaluation process of incidents of alleged happened at his house Aug. 31 that led
a
s
e
domestic violence and sexual assault,"
to his arrest on suspicion of domestic
Goddell wrote to owners. "She will advise me and our staff on disciplinary matters involving violations of law or of the Personal Conduct Policy."
abuse. Some observers, including former 49ers quarterback Steve Young and California Lt. Governor Gavin
Abigail Hannay moves the ball down field while practicing with her Central Christian teammates in Redmond on
Newsom have called for the 49ers to In hi s s tatement, Peterson, who sit McDonald while the investigation wrote that he worked with a psychol- continues. ogist to discuss alternate methods of Panthers' Hardy w il l p r actice:
Thursday.
child discipline, was at Winter Park,
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Carolina Pan-
Fla. on Monday.
thers defensive end Greg Hardy will
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
"I have to live with the fact that when
Coed
gave up the sport five years ago they had the potential they had." to avoid playing for traveling Sure, the thought of the physicalContinued from C1 club teams, to settle in and feel ity of a boys game crosses Roberts' "I definitely feel that they trust like they belong. And, as Roberts mind, the image of male opponents me more," says Hannay, who points out, it did not take long who want to lean on or push his feplayedsoccer when she li ved in for the rest of the team to accept male players to gain position. It has New York but has not returned to them as teammates. In short or- to. A coach has to prepare players the sport since moving to Oregon der, Strain, who has been with the for it. six years ago. "Being a girl, they team only for a few practices, will Hannay admits the game's physwere kind of like, 'Um, is she going be as well. ical nature has made her a little "The boys have not only accept- cautious. She is an aggressive to be good? Can we trust her?' But I definitely feel like I have gained the ed those two (Hannay and Poole), player and is already coming off respect and the trust of my fellow but as far as they're concerned, an injury from basketball last seathey're just two more of the guys, son. Poole feels the same way, so teammates." Of the 13 players on Central in a way," Roberts says. "There's much so that she nearly decided Christian's boys soccer roster, an acceptance. There's a 'team' not to come out for soccer. She was three are not boys at all: Hannay, acceptance that happens when fearful that her older — and largfreshman midfielder Savannah you've kind of a rrived, when er — brother mightrun her over Poole, and f reshman defend- you've made it, and the rest of the during practice, or that he would er Mandy Strain. But n one of team goes, 'Oh yeah, this is going worry about his "short and tiny" the three girls is, in any way, an to be great.' And Mandy will get sister, as Poole describes herself, outcast. there too. I don't question that. running around on the soccer field "On a coed team, it's not uncom- Mandy just needs another week with players "four times" her size, mon that the boys, at times, will with the team." Poole says. have less-than-desirable beliefs in Despite what Roberts describes Fortunately, Roberts notes, the the females that are on their team," as a "buzz" generated by the Tigers Tigers are in a classification and observes Central Christian coach after last season — more along the c onference whose officials a r e Drew Roberts, whose team com- lines of how much fun was had well-prepared themselves. petes in Class 3A/2A/1A Special than their win-loss record — the After all, in Class 3A/2A/1A SpeDistrict 6 this season after playing Central Christian coach still need- cial District 6, all 12 schools field last year as an independent. "That ed players for this year. Looking to only boys soccer teams, and nearly makes sense. They understand return to the game they had fallen all of them include girls. "We're going to play teams with they need their support. They need in love with years ago, and without to know that the pass is going to a girls soccer team being offered similar makeups to ours," Roberts get there. They need to know that if at Central Christian, Hannay and says. "The referees are well aware they pass it, they need to feel confi- Poole stepped in, and later, Strain. of that physical nature, and that dent that person can do something Without those three, Roberts says, there are some girls who are gowith it. It's just common psychol- "we'd have 10 players on the ros- ing to play tougher and that there ogy. These girls ... they have ac- ter." And as it takes 11 players to are some other girls that are maytually proven themselves — fully field a complete lineup, "We'd be be just a little smaller and possibly proven themselves — just in the playing a man down, essentially," just a little slower than an equally last three weeks of practice." the coach says. aged boy."
"I Want to Put my heart intO it. I Want to giVe it my all So that I'm not hOlding anything baCk. I WaS a little heSitant at the beginning, but OnCe I got Out Of my
shell, I started feeling more comfortable and got more aggressive. I wanted to ShOW them that I COuld do thiS ... that I COuld Play SOCCer tOO." — Central Christian freshman midfielder Savannah Poole
For Poole, who joined the team shortlyafter preseason practices began a few weeks ago, and Hannay, proving themselves to their teammates was at the top of their to-do list. It was i mportant for
Hannay to prove she was athletic enough tocompete on the same
F ortunately fo r
R o b erts, h e
gained two regular starters in Hannay and Poole and an athletic player in Strain. He gained an attacking midfielder (Hannay) who Roberts is comfortable placing anywhere on the field, confident that she will ex-
There is no special treatment at Central Christian, which won its
first game of the season Monday, a 9-1 victoryover Damascus Christian. There is no exclusion. There
was like, 'Woohoo!' But in the back
of my head there was still a little bit
referringtohisconcerns abouthow the boys might treat the newcomers give it my all so that I'm not hold- and how the girls could be affected ing anything back. I was a little by the game's physicality. "And yet," he continues,"by the hesitant at t h e b e ginning, but once I got out of my shell, I start- end of the first week, I didn't have ed feeling more comfortable and a question. I really didn't. I was just got more aggressive. I wanted to excited to watch these girls who is a senior on the team. "I want to
show them that I could do this ...
that I could play soccer too." It did not take long for Han-
nay and Poole, who temporarily
want to hurt her' or something
like that. They're aggressive with me, and they play as if I'm real competition."
"I don't want to say cautious, because they're not really cautious," Poole says. "They play like they normally would. But they watch out for me, as one of their teammates."
Safe to say, and the lady Tigers agree, that each of these girls has commitment and agreed that they become just one of the guys. wanted to play. I was just excited to — Reporter: 541-383-0307, decided toshow up and made the
watch these girls and realize that
but the select few who participated."
Francisco 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh The seven retired players behind the said he doesn't want to insert himself motion want to depose NFL repreinto the investigation of Ray McDonald
sentatives about matters that include
and declined to comment when asked whether he and the 49ers think McDonald will be cleared of wrong-doing in the case. A report by the NFL Network on Sunday said that the 49ers
whether the league "misled players, coaches, trainers and the public and
believe McDonald's version of what
traumatic encephalopathy.
Character
ban for a first offense, lifetime ban for
Continued from C1 Here is the only silver lining of the week for the NFL: The league once
again drew TV ratings for the opening weekend that remain the envy of everyone in the business.
actively spread disinformation" re-
garding brain injuries and how many players it expects to develop chronic
a second), though doing so only in the wake of the criticism of the initial twogame penalty handed to Rice. The teams need to reinforce the message that they value player behavior as much as they do winning. That is difficult in any competitive endeavor, especially one like the NFL in which so much money is flowing. But at this point, with the dollars getting so large (teams split $6 billion
Seattle's victory over Green Bay, for instance, was the third-highest-rated game in the 13-year history of the Thursday night kickoff game, drawing 26.9 million viewers. in revenue last season) and the auAs Th e S p orting N ew s n o ted, dience so vast, is this not the perfect that was a larger U.S. audience than time to err on the side of integrity over watched the World Cup final, the BCS winning — andmaking more money title game, all but one telecast of the at all costs? Winter Olympics, and the most recent Seahawks coach Pete Carroll apGame 7s of both the NBA Finals and
speed with them." "I want to put my heart into it,"
adds Poole, whose brother Josiah
port: SANTA CLARA, Calif. — San
World Series. (So much, apparently, this week, saying the way he evalufor the theory that the nation's football ates players "will never be the same."
compete with them and be up to
of trepidation there," Roberts says,
Philadelphia on Saturday, the request
to conduct limited discovery described 49ers won't flinch on Mcoonald sup- the negotiations as a "black box to all
respect — as demonstrated during
cally, endurancewise, be able to
"That was one of my main worries, being a girl and not a very large girl," Hannay says. " 'Can I compete'? Can I do this?' It was very important for me to physi-
a team, Rice remains a member of the NFLPA.
is only acceptance, support and
cel. He gained a midfielder (Poole) the Tigers' daily scrimmages. "They don't letup on me when who has developed a shot that her we're playing," Hannay says of freshman teammates wish they had.The emergence of these three her male teammates. "If I'm goplayers, Roberts says, has been "a ing for a ball and they're going pleasant surprise." for a ball, they don't just let me "When those two girls showed have it because, 'Oh, she's a girl. up that first day of practice, at first I Let her have it because I don't
field as her male teammates.
practice this week, but the team has
I disciplined my son the way I was dis- not made a decision on his status for ciplined as a child, I caused an injury this week's game against Pittsburgh or that I never intended or thought would the rest of the season. Panthers coach happen," he wrote. "I am not a perfect Ron Riverasaid generalmanager Dave parent, but I am, without a doubt, not Gettleman is doing "due diligence" on a child abuser. I am someone that dis- Hardy's situation, and Rivera indicatciplined his child and did not intend to ed the team's front office has been in causehim any injury.No one can un- consultation with the league office. derstand the hurt that I feel for my son Rivera said Panthers officials want to and for the harm I caused him. My goal act in the best interests of the team, but is always to teach my son right from added the team does not plan to release wrong and that's what I tried to do that Hardy, who was found guilty in July of day." assaulting and threatening to kill his Union expect to file Rice appeal to- ex-girlfriend. " day: NEW YORK — The NFL players' Ex-players want to depose NFL over union on Tuesday will appeal the in- concussion deal: In the latest dispute definite suspension the league handed over the proposed NFL concussion setto Ray Rice last week. NFL Players tlement, a group of retired players has Associationspokesman George Atal- asked afederal court for permission lah said Monday "we are expecting to question the league about brain into appeal before the deadline on Tues- juries and the negotiations that led to day night." Although he doesn't have the deal. Filed in U.S. District Court in
glucas@bendbulletitt.com.
fans won't watch a Seahawks home
blowout.) And T h ursday's Baltimore-Pitts-
peared to side with that point of view "Unfortunately after such a serious
incident, generally our awareness will grow and we'll be better off because of
burgh game, the first of the new CBS it and we'll all think differently," CarThursday night football package, gave roll said. that network its best prime-time rat-
What that means in practical terms,
ing on a Thursday night since 2006. though, is hard to know. Seattle last In other words, to use a phrase year signed defensive tackle Tony coined to describe another American McDaniel,who served a one-game institution that a few years ago also suspension in 2010 after an arrest could not get out of its own way, the for domestic violence. Will the SeaNFL is now "too big to fail." hawks decline to sign someone with Which the NFL itself would do well McDaniel's background the next time to remember.
around?
At this point, the NFL should stop In a perfect world, maybe everyone worrying about its image and instead learns the lessons from the past week try to do the right thing. and that is a choice they do not have to And it needs to do the right thing make in the future. "Hopefully," Carroll said, "we'll just not only when it seems backed into a corner. That was the case last month do better and we'll be better for it." when it stiffened its penalties for doWords to remember. For the NFL, mestic violence (a six-game unpaid and all of us.
C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
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Better quarter? Adobe Systems has benefited this year from growth in the company's subscription software-based business. The software maker, known for Photoshop, lllustrator and Acrobat, reports its fiscal third-quarter earnings today. Investors will be listening for an update on Adobe's cloud-based software and subscription business,which has displaced sales of physical products, the company's key source of revenue. $70.27
ADBE
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Dividend: none Source: FactSet
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The latest Johnson Redbook retail sales index is due out today. DividendFootnotes:3 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 3 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current The index tracks data on sales annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend at stores open at least a year. announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 3 clcsed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. That's a key indicator of retailer performance, measuring growth at established stores rather than from newly opened ones. The index has registered weekly gains Shares of Molson Coors Brewing shot to a record see more mergers. going back to the week ended high Monday amid expectations that the beer industry The latest industry action is coming from SABMiller, Aug. 1, reflecting an increase in will keep consolidating. the world's second-largest brewer. retail sales. The move means Molson Coors Heineken says that SABMiller stock may look bubbly: It's trading at approached it about an acquisition, but 20 times its earnings per share over Heineken wants to remain independent. the last 12 months, compared with The move mayhave been a defensive an average price-earnings ratio of 15 one: Analysts say SABMiller may be l over the last five years. But some trying to fend off its own takeover uajB analysts say the stock could rise still attempt,one byAnheuser-Busch InBev, higher if the industry does indeed the world's largest brewer.
'::"'"" Bubbling higher
$45.46
Volc6.1m (3.1x avg.) PE: 13 . 2 Mkt.Cap:$3.58 b Yield: 0.6%
75 70
15 J
J A 52-week range
$49.43~
S $7 7.73
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J A 52-week range
$1D.66~
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16.74 -.05 12.49 +5.75 42.55 -.33 198.98 -.15 43.57 -.22 101.63 -.03 74.58 -2.90 114.11 -1.26 8.56 + . 19 49.38 -2.73
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Columbia AcorolotA m VALUE
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B L EN D GR OWTH
Qe %C H G +8 5 .3 +6 7 .4 oDc + 4 5 .1 63 +3 0 . 5 +2 5 .8 Do +21 . 0 +17 . 3 e Fund target represents weighted +12 . 6 Q +1 2 .4 average of stock holdings +12 . 3 • Represents 75% of fuod's stock holdings
L AST NetElem 2.88 RadaElec 2.92 Aquasition 7.07 NPS Phm 27.29 ContraFct n 4.35
P E: .. . Yield: ...
Avanir Pharmaceuticals AVNR Gilead Sciences Close:$12.49L5.75 or 85.3% The drug developer reported positive study results for a potential treatment for agitation in patients with Alzheimer's disease. $15
GILD Close:$100.99T-2.67 or -2.6% The drug developer reached a deal with generic drug companies to produce a cheaper version of its hepatitis C drug Solvadi. $120 100
10
80
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A
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J 52-week range
$3.63~
A
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52-week range $13.D9
Vol.:88.5m (25.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.15 b
60 J
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$11D.64
Volc18.1m (1.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$152.66 b
PE : 2 2.7 Yield : ...
21Vianet Group
VNET NPS Pharmaceuticals NP SP Close:$21.46%1.59 or 8.0% Close:$27.29V-5.42 or -16.6% The Internet data center services An FDA advisory panel voted by a company's CEO issued a letter demargin of eight to five to recomfending it against accusations that mend approval of the drug developer's hormone replacement therapy. the businessis a Ponzischeme. $40 $35 30 20
30 J A 52-week range
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S $33 .34
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J
J A 52-week range
$31.66~
S $3 9.63
Volc6.3m (3.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.91 b
PE: 9 09.5 Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.59 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill . 0 1 .0 1 6-month T-bill . 0 4 .04 52-wk T-bill .08 .08 2-year T-note . 5 4 .5 6 5-year T-note 1.79 1.82 10-year T-note 2.59 2.61 30-year T-bond 3.34 3.35
BONDS
... ...
T
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 62 +5.8 +14.3 +14.8+12.7 A A A CaplncBuA m60.58 +6.0 +12.0 +12.0 +9.7 A A B The price of CpWldGrlA m 47.22 -.11 +5.5 +14.4 +16.5+10.4 8 6 D gold inched EurPacGrA m 49.84 -.16 +1.6 +11.0 +12.3 +7.4 A 6 8 higher. The gain FnlnvA m 54. 6 6 - .07 +6.7 +18.3 +19.1+14.3 C C C was modest, GrthAmA m 46.01 -.26 +7.0 +18.0 +19.9+14.4 C 6 D but it was IncAmerA m 21.76 +.02 +7.0 +14.4 +14.1+12.3 A A A enough to snap InvCoAmA m 39.95 -.02 +9.7 +20.8 +20.4+14.3 A 6 C a five-day NewPerspA m36.72 -.09 +3.1 +13.2 +16.1+11.7 C 6 8 streak of losses. WAMutlnvA m42.17 +.03 +7.9 +18.5 +19.3+15.9 8 C A Crude oil and Dodge &Cox Income 13.8 7 ... +4 . 4 + 6 .7 + 4.6 +5.5 B A B natural gas both IntlStk 46.46 - . 0 5 +8.0 +17.5 +17.6+10.3 A A A Stock 162.6 6 - . 22 +9.4 +22.4 +24.7+16.2 A A A rose for the secFidelity Contra 101. 1 9 - .65 +6.3 +18.7 +18.6+16.0 B C B ond time in ContraK 101 . 19 -.65+6.4 +18.9 +18.7+16.1 B C B three days. LowPriStk d 49.74 -.13 +5.4 +14.9 +19.6+16.3 D D B Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 70.66 -.05 +8.9 +19.9 +20.5+15.9 B 8 A FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 54 .. . + 7 .1 + 13.4 +12.7+11.3 A A A IncomeA m 2. 5 1 ... +7 . 6 + 13.7 +13.2+11.8 A A A Oakmark Intl I 25.82 -.02 -1.9 +3 .6 +18.7+11.5 E A A Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 86 -.01+6.2 +16.0 +16.5+13.3 D E D RisDivB m 16 . 62 -.01+5.5 +15.0 +15.5+12.3 E E E RisDivC m 16 . 51 -.01+5.6 +15.1 +15.6+12.5 E E E SmMidValA m46.83 -.19 +5.9 +15.6 +16.7+13.1 D E E SmMidValB m39.36 -.17 +5.4 +14.7 +15.7+12.1 D E E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.34 + .03 +5.7 +14.7 +19.1+14.0 E C C Exchange GrowStk 54.7 1 - . 56 +4.1 +18.4 +19.8+17.1 C 6 A The dollar was HealthSci 66.4 5 - . 44+18.4 +30.0 +34.9+26.5 B A A mixed against Newlncome 9. 5 1 +.01+4.2 + 5.8 + 3.1 +4.6 C C D other currencies. Vanguard 500Adml 163.84 -.13 +8.9 +19.9 +20.5+15.9 8 6 A It fell modestly 500lnv 163.79 -.13 +8.8 +19.8 +20.3+15.8 8 6 8 against the CapOp 51.79 -.44 +12.1 +21.3 +24.4+16.3 A A B Japanese yen Eqlnc 31.67 +.06 +7.9 +17.2 +20.2+16.5 C C A and Canadian IntlStkldxAdm 26.45 -.04 +3.5 +10.0 +10.8 NA A D dollar, but it StratgcEq 32.84 -.19 +9.5 +23.6 +23.6+19.3 A A A inched higher TgtRe2020 26.65 -.04 +5.7 +12.0 +11.9+10.3 A A A against the euro Tgtet2025 16.66 -.02 +5.9 +12.8 +13.1+11.0 A 6 8 and British TotBdAdml 10.76 +.01 +3.8 +5.0 +2.4 +4.1 D D D pound. Totlntl 17.01 -.02 +3.4 +9.9 +10.7 +6.7 B D C TotStlAdm 50.03 -.13 +8.1 +19.1 +20.5+16.2 C 6 A TotStldx 50.00 -.13 +8.0 +18.9 +20.4+16.0 C 6 A USGro 30.54 -.20 +6.4 +19.5 +19.5+15.2 8 6 C Welltn 40.15 +.03 +7.1 +14.1 +14.8+11.8 A A A FAMILY
h5Q HS
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
.44
~
-0.02 L
L
L
-0.03 L -0.02 L -0.01 L
L L L
L 1.70 T 2.88 T 3.84
~
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
FUELS
METALS
.01 .01 .10
T T
Monday's close:$76.00
CATEGORY Foreign Small/Mid C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * **o o -2.82 -49.5 -.64 -18.0 ASSETS $1,111 million -1.43 -16.8 EXP RATIO Growth -5.42 -16.6 MANAGER 1.29% -.86 -16.5 SINCE P. Egan RETURNS3-MO -3.3 Foreign Markets YTD +0,9 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +9.8 -13.07 -.29 Paris 4,428.63 3-YR ANNL +11.6 London 6,804.21 -2.75 -.04 5-YR-ANNL +10.5 Frankfurt 9,659.63 +8.50 + . 09 Hong Kong24,356.99 -238.33 -.97 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 45,861.84 +62.14 + . 14 2003-05-01 Milan 20,851.72 -219.40 -1.04 1.53 Tokyo 15,948.29 +39.09 + . 25 Coronation FundManagers Ltd 1.14 Stockholm 1,393.22 + 4.63 + . 33 Naspers Ltd Class N Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -57.00 -1.03 Neopost 1.13 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,475.00 Zurich 8,796.41 + .48 + . 01 CCLIndustriesInc 1.09 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar. NAME
S $23.14
Volc10.5m (7.0x avg.) PE: 2 0 .0 Volc3.9m (5.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$12.22 b Yi e ld: 1.9% Mkt. Cap: $1.24 b
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.17 3.18 -0.01 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.45 4.45 . . . L 52-WEEK RANGE PriCe-earningS ratiO:20 TOtal r eturn V T D 3-yr 5-yr * Barclays USAggregate 2.40 2.36 +0.04 L PRIME FED Barclays US $4g 78 ( B ased on trailing 12 month results) TAP 37 7% 2 4 5% 11.9% High Yield 5.71 5.67 +0.04 L RATE FUNDS MoodysAAACorpldx 4.22 4.12+0.10 L AP Tot a l returns through Sept. 15 *annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 2.08 2.08 ... L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.10 3.05 +0.05 L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 Am d FOCtSS SelectedMutualpunds AP
S
RATE Close:$11.92 T-1.90 or -13.7% The financial information company announced the resignation of its chief financial officer as it faces a SEC investigation. $20
Close:$76.00%4.20 or 5.8% The brewer's stock jumped amid news that the family-controlled brewer Heineken rejected a takeover bid by rival SABMiller. $80
J
Retail beliwether
Moison Coors Brewing(TAP)
- . 0011
Molson Coors Brewing TA P Bankrate
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
NAME M
1.2937/
StoryStocks
Alere M
+' . 65
Major stock indexes came to an uneven finish Monday, with technology stocks leading the decline in the Standard & Poor's 500 index. A report showing that U.S. manufacturing output fell in August for the first time in seven months weighed on the market. Small-company stocksslumped, pushing the Russell2000 and the Nasdaq composite lower. The Dow Jones industrial average notched a gain. Investors had their eye on the Federal Reserve, which is expected to give an update Wednesday on when it plans to start raising interest rates. Analysts have warned that the Fed might raise interest rates sooner thanexpected as the economy improves.
"
NorthwestStocks
-0.2
$92.92 /
+.01
$18.56
1,850
0.0
$60
3 70
.
NYSE NASD
eet.
+
$1,233.60
........ Close: 17,031.14 Change: 43.63 (0.3%)
"
16,920" ""' 10 DAYS "
1,900
Producer price index
0.2
17,oso
"
2,000 " 1,950 "
GOLD
02
D ow jones industrials
Close: 1,984.13 Change: -1.41 (-0.1%)
1,960 ' " " " ' 10 DAYS
seasonally adjusted percent change
04
+
SstP 500
2,000
Economists anticipate that the producer price index did not change between July and August, keeping inflation in check. The index measures price changes before they reach the consumer. The July index rose 0.1 percent, following a 0.4 percent gain in June, as falling gasoline costs lowered the prices that U.S. companies received for their goods and services. The Labor Department reports its index for August today.
10 YR TNOTE 2.59%
1,984.13
2,040.
Tuesday, September 16, 201 4
O» To look upindividual stocks, gotc bendbugetin.com/business.Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
L T T L L L T L L L L
T L L
3.66 5.22 2.59 6.28 4.73 1.81 3.53
CLOSE PVS. 92.92 92.27 1.81 1.81 2.74 2.74 3.93 3.86 2.53 2.52
%CH. %YTD +0.70 -5.6 -0.44 -5.1 -0.03 -11.0 -7.1 +1.92 +0.48 -9.2
CLOSE PVS. 1233.60 1229.90 18.56 18.55 1363.50 1370.50 3.08 3.10 836.90 836.05
%CH. %YTD + 0.30 + 2 .6 +0.05 -4.1 -0.51 -0.6 -0.68 -10.5 +0.10 +16.7
CLOSE 1.56
Coffee (Ib) 1.77 Corn (bu) 3.43 Cotton (Ib) 0.68 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 338.60 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.45 Soybeans (bu) 9.90 Wheat(bu) 5.01
PVS. 1.56 1.80 3.39 0.71 348.00 1.46 10.91 4.98
%CH. %YTD +0.05 +1 6.3 -1.31 +60.2 +1.33 -1 8.7 -3.44 -19.5 +0.57 -6.0 - 1.13 + 6 . 1 +0.39 -24.6 -0.35 -17.3 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6228 -.0026 -.16% 1.5879 Canadian Dollar 1.1 0 49 -.0046 -.42% 1.0338 USD per Euro 1.2937 -.0011 -.09% 1.3306 -.12 -.11% 9 9.28 JapaneseYen 107.20 Mexican Peso 13. 2430 -.0025 -.02% 13.0391 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6288 +.0017 +.05% 3.5501 Norwegian Krone 6 . 3962 +.0250 +.39% 5.9261 South African Rand 10.9824 -.0266 -.24% 9.9376 Swedish Krona 7.1 2 10 -.0152 -.21% 6.5542 Swiss Franc .9355 +.0015 +.16% . 9 292 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1077 +.0020 +.18% 1.0810 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1420 +.0080 +.13% 6.1188 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7511 +.0003 +.00% 7.7547 Indian Rupee 61.095 +.287 +.47% 63.500 Singapore Dollar 1.2646 +.001 6 +.13% 1.2691 South KoreanWon 1 038.65 + . 52 +.05% 1086.14 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.17 + . 1 4 +.46% 2 9.72
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
BRIEFING Cascade seeking rate hike Cascade Natural Gas Corp. seeks a rate hike that would increase the average consumer's bill by 37 cents per month,thecompany announced Monday. Cascade Natural Gas filed a purchased gas adjustment with the
Oregon Public Utility Commission due to the increased cost of natural gas, the company stated.If approved, the request would take effect Nov. 1. "Last winter was very cold, which drew down reserves to their lowest levels since 2003. A lot of natural
gas is going back into storage, which has created a slight increase in the demand on natural gas," the company quoted Scott Madison, executive vice president and general manager for Cascade. "The cost of gas makes up the largest segment of a customer's bill and is a pass-through cost to customers." According to Cascade, a residential customer using 55 therms a month can expect an increase of approximately $4.44 over a year. A commercial customer using an average of 230 therms a month can expect an increase of 60 cents per month, or approximately $7.20 over a year. — Bulletin staff reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Buying or Selling a Business: Learn to successfully buy, sell or invest in a business; registration required; $49; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Membership 101 — Driving Your Membership: Connect with Bend Chamber of Commerce members; RSVP required; free;1011 a.m.; Bend Chamber of Commerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541382-3221 or shelley© bendchamber.org. • Business After Hours and Ribbon Cutting: Celebrate the newCentral Oregon Community College - Redmond Technology Education Center; 4:30-6 p.m.; Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7599. WEDNESDAY •Laborand employment law update: Presentation on state and federal legislative changes to labor laws, hosted by Human Resource Association of Central Oregon; registration required; $30 HRACO members, $45 nonmembers; 7:30-11 a.m.; Shilo Inn Suites Hotel, 3105 O.B. Riley Road, Bend; 541389-9600 or www. hrcentraloregon.org. • What's Hot in Franchislng:Interactive workshop willcover trends and best industries in 2014-15; learn how to choose, finance and enjoy franchising; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Brownfield redevelopment: Deschutes County representatives will discuss brownfield redevelopment and evaluating a property's environmental condition; free; 6-8 p.m.; Deschutes County administration building, 1300 NWWall St., Bend; 541-3851709, peter.gutowsky@ deschutes.org or www. deschutes.org. THURSDAY • Business Startup Workshop: Learn the basic steps needed to open a business; preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; La Pine
EXECUTIVE FILE
Ali a a
What: Summit Aircraft LLC What it does: Helps owners of experimental planes assemble their kits; makes carbon-fiber snow skis for light craft Pictored: Mike Custard, with a Titan T-51 Where: Bend Municipal Airport Employees: Two Phone:
j
t /1
si ts on 22B By Michael J. de la Merced New York Times News Service
With demand for the Ali-
541-678-5775 Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
baba Group's stock market debut proving even stronger than expected, the Chinese
is usiness I'e
OO 0 By JOSePh DltZler • The Bulletin
When Mike Custard, at the time a painting instructor for Seattle truck manufacturer Kenworth, applied for a job with Lancair in Redmond in the early 1990s, the employment service tasked with new hires turned him down as unqualified. Not one to take a step backward, Custard, now 53, found work in-
tered getting the Lancair IV certified was swiftly severed with a
stead as a subcontractor helping to
call by Oscar to his father, Custard
build the kit-plane company's latest
recalled."We'd go out forbreakfast or brunch on a Saturday (with the general) and we'd be surrounded by armed guards," he said.
prototype, the Lancair ES. "And we built that plane in 74
days, from basically sketching out some drawings on a napkin to the actual flying," Custard said recently. "And that's (company founder) Lance Neibauer for you." Eventually, Custard parlayed years of experience helping Lancair and other kit plane, or experimental aircraft, buyers into his own business. First called Ad-
vanced Aviation, and now Summit Aircraft LLC, both were located at
the Bend Municipal Airport. Along the way, he gathered stories of worldwide travel worthy of at least
a page of aviation history.
Summit Aircraft, which Custard formed about two years ago
after deciding to downsize from Advanced Aviation, specializes in helping kit-plane owners build their aircraft. Custard estimates he's assisted owners of more than 50 kit planes, many of them Lanc-
airs. Through Summit, he also builds and sells a brand of lightweight aircraft snow skis specially designed by Custard and made of carbon fiber.
Custard, who wanted skis for his own plane, a RANS S-7, decid-
Like the time he built a Lancair IV for the son of a well-known general in the Dominican Republic.
ed aftera search that he'd rather
Years of traveling and assisting
kima, Washington, offers Summit skis as an option for its aircraft.
Lancair owners in Florida, Puerto Rico, Brazil and The Philippines
led to a job helping Oscar Imbert,
build his own. Today, Cub Crafters, another kit-plane maker in Ya-
do you Q •• Where see the business in five years? • It's hard to • say. General aviation isn't as big as it used to be, but ... a lot of people push for it, and a lot of people still fly. With experimental aircraft, there's always somebody coming out with a better mousetrap. When you havethat, that's what really stimulates general aviation. You take Cessna andPiper, Mooney, they don't come out with anything new. They'll have a newmodel with a new paint job and a newaltimeter, but it's really not a new airplane. From the day • the employment service said you weren't qualified, you learned to fly, became anexpert at assembling kit planes andbuilt your own business. Do you ever look back and think, 'What if I had just gone away?' • I don't have • that mentality. One of the biggest reasons I left Kenworth (was) there was not room for me to advance. I needed aplaceto gr'ow.
Q•
A
The skis are also available through Summit.
Internet juggernaut has done the only logical thing: set its fundraising sights even higher. The company raised the price range for its initial public offering to $66 to $68 for each American depositary share, up from $60 to $66, according to a regulatory filing on Monday, pushing up i ts potential haul f rom t h e
stock sale to as much as $21.8 billion. T hat
w o ul d v a l u e th e
e-commerce giant at $165.5 billion at the midpoint of the
new range. The new range was disclosed in an amended prospectus filed with the Securi-
ties and Exchange Commission Monday. But while the order book is
significantly oversubscribed enough that A l ibaba's army of underwriters plans to begin closing order books this afternoon — th e com-
pany and its advisers were conscious of not significantly raising the price range just because they could, according to people briefed on the IPO plans. Potential i n vestors h a ve
been eagerly awaiting the debut of the Chinese online
market operator for months, with more than 800 people showing up at a lunch presentation in New York last week
just to hear directly from the company's executive chair-
man and co-founder, Jack Ma. Purchase orders have been coming in huge portions as investorsplace enormous orders in hopes of receiving even a fraction of the shares
requested. One hedge fund with about $3 billion in assets under m anagement evenput in an order for $3 billion worth of Americandepositary shares, one of these people said.
son of Gen. Antonio Imbert, build the only kit plane in the island
"Maintaining our brand and stature in the market place is very
country, Custard said. Gen. An-
important to us," said John Whit-
Alibaba and its underwrit-
tonio Imbert, told the BBC in May 2011 that he personally shot dicta-
ish, Cub Crafters marketing manager. "If it's on our order form, it's
ers have resisted bumping up the top of the price range to $70, as one news report suggested earlier Monday. Doing so may cost the Chinese Internet giant the bragging rights of having pulled off the biggest IPO of all time-
tor Rafael Trujillo to death during a got to stand up to our standards." coup there in May 1961.
Any red tape Custard encoun-
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
a title that will stay with the
Brewer consolidation adds froth
Agricultural Bank of China, which raised $22.1 billion-
By David Gelles and Stephanie Strom
company is looking out at the long term.
Levit of the Demeter Group, most of the remaining targets, an advisory firm that focus-
like Heineken, are controlled
New York Times News Service
es on the beverages industry. by families that appear reluc"It makes a lot of sense for tant to sell. Despite these chalit had rejected a takeover of- those looking for internation- lenges, however, analysts befer from SABMiller, the sec- al growth, and inevitably will lieveboth Anheuser and SABond-largest beer company happen." Miller will try to forge ahead in the world. And while that Regulators are wary of big with deals in the months and deal may never happen, SAB- companies getting bigger. years ahead. Miller's attempt to expand Anheuser-Busch c u r r ently I nternationally, t h ere i s through a major acquisition controls about 21 percent of still room for the mainstream couldproduce anotherroundof the globalbeer market share. brands to grow, even as they deal-making. Were SABMiller to acquire lose share in the U.S. "It's become a global chess"There is definitely room for Heineken, it too would commore megadeals, " said Marc mand about 21 percent. And board," Thompson said. On Sunday, Heineken said
Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-383-7290. • project Management Information Meeting: Learn about project management skills and howyou might benefit from certification; registration required; free; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • Ribbon Cutting and Open House: 5:30-7:30 p.m.; St. Charles Center for Women's Health, 340 NW Fifth St., Redmond. FRIDAY • Construction Contractor Course: Two-day test preparation
course to become a licensed contractor in Oregon; Sept.19and 20; prepayment required; $305 includes Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7290, ccb©cocc.edu or www. cocc.edu/ccb. MONDAY • Capturing the Value of Big Data: Learn about data science and how to apply it to your business; $499; 9 a.m.4 p.m.;FoundersPad, 777 SW Mill View Way, Bend; founderspad.coml
workshops. TUESDAY • The Business ol Social Media — More than Chatter: Learn to use social marketing to increase your business; register online; $25 Bend Chamber of Commerce members; $30 nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.Bend Golfand Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. SEPT. 24 • Business After Hours: Register online; $25 Bend Chamber of Commerce members; $30 nonmembers; 5
p.m.; Arbor Mortgage Group, 209 NE Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. • Brownfield redevelopment: Deschutes County representatives will discuss brownfield redevelopment and evaluating a property's environmental condition; free; 6-8 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, 716 SW Evergreen Ave. 541-385-1709, peter. gutowsky@deschutes. org or www.deschutes. org. • Search Engine Strategies I: Learn
but is meant to show that the Nor has the company or the
relatively few shareholders who are selling some of their holdings increased the number of shares available forthe IPO. O ne of t h e
p e ople w i th
knowledge of the company's plans said that if the IPO "left a little money on the table,"
or did not raise as much as it could have, that would suit
Alibaba's management fine.
about search engine optimization; registration required; Wednesdays Sept. 24-Oct. 8; $99; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. SEPT. 25 • Guickbooks Seminar: Four-hour training on the basic functions needed to develop accurate accounting records; registration required; $97; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Accurate Accounting and Consulting, 61383 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite A, Bend. • Nonprolit Workshop: Open to Jefferson County
nonprofits, grant writers and fundraisers; lunch provided; free; 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus, 1170 E.Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-382-1170 or cpuddy@oregoncf.org. SEPT. 26 • Build Your Business Website with WordPress: Registration required; Fridaysthrough Oct. 10; $149; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizral
DEEDS Deschotes County • William B. Adams Jr. to Kris A. and Marcie M. Zorza, Ridge at Eagle Crest 47, Lot 48, $250,000 • Cloninger Custom Homes LLC to Evan R. Kapel and Robin L. Garner , NorthWest Crossing, Phase 17, Lot 771, $541,320 • Jim St. John Construction LLC to Daniel P. andAngela K. Brobst Hidden Hills Phase1, Lot12, $279,900 • Jennifer L. Clugston to WalterJ.and Suzanne M. Gundersen, North Ridge, Lot 3, $225,500 • Kimberly Milburn to Linley Bilyeu, Hayden View Estates, Phase1, Lot 17, $152,500 • Brenda Chase, also appearing of record as Brenda Bowman, to Jerry L. and Ada M. Simpson, Hidden Valley Mobile Estates No.1, Lot1, Block 8, $150,000 • Joan Lamirande to Jana Lamirande, Canyon Park First Addition, Lot 7, $200,000 • Kelsey B. Helfrich to Steven P. andJenna M. Bifano, Cullen Estates, Lots 12 and 13, $220,000 • Ray J. Woodmansee, trustee of the Woodmansee Trust, to Briana J. and Jeffrey W. Manfrass, Royal Yeoman, Lot 16, $224,650 • Tallie L. Belitz, who acquired title as Tallie L. Burleigh, to Benjamin and Suzette Van Meter, Obsidian Me adows,Lot 32, $215,500 • William R. Hull to Scott D. and Susan M. Hodson, Samuel K. and Carol D. Briggs, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Inc., Lots 23 and 24, Block 20, $190,000 • Matthew J. Wittmer to Ryan C. andTallie L. Belitz, Majestic Ridge, Phase 3, Lot 57, $351,500 • William F. Root, trustee of the William F. Root Revocable Living Trust, to Richard P. andUrsula Ketchum, Willow Creek at Mountain High, Lot59, $359,900 • Gorilla Capital OR 201 LLC to Ward Wilson , Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Unit 8, Park1, Lot 31, Block 88, $331,000 • Kathryn E. Morrow and Michael M. Ingram to Steve Kensett, Clear Sky Estates, Lot 6, Block 3, $177,000 • John E. and Karen A. Ge>sler, trustees of the John E. and KarenA. Geisler Living Trust, to Brent W. Renison and Dechen HL Dawkins, Indian Ford Ranch Homes, Plat No.1, Lot14, Block3, $317,500 • John C. and Barbara S. Skilesto John R. and Savanna M. Skiles, Sunshine Addition, Lot1, Block 2, $106,849.04 • Matthew M. and Suzanne F. Gadow to Andrew Matthews, Westbrook Meadows PUD,Phase3, Lot 15, $350,000 • Ted and Lynn Wolfe to Guy J. and Linda S. Th>bodeau, Broken Horn, Lot 9, $305,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to Carissa L. Honeycutt , Mountain Park, Lot 7, $227,356 • Albert J. Colombo to Zachry and Jessica Abbott, Tamarack Park East, Phase 5, Lot 5, Block 6, $217,500 • Charles E. Youlden, personal representative of the estate of Charles S. Youlden, to Alice B. Petrie , Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase15, Lot 7, Block16, $204,243 • Van N. and Angela Polglase, trustees of the Polglase Family Trust, to Thomas P. and Julie A. Szambelan, Circle Four Ranch Condominium, Phase 1,Unit 3, $285,000 • Judith A. Shoemaker to Jarrett and Lorie Coiner, Boones Borough2, Lot 28, Block 3, $399,000 • Michael J. and Karen M. Mansker to Frank R. and Faye Y. Ziebert, Crossroads Third Addition, Lot 139, $150,000 • Melinda A. Howell to Linda K. Kelly, Highland Addition, Lot 2, Block 23, $485,000 • Suzanne R. Schibel to Stephen R. and Kimarie L. Marsan, Eagle — Air Estates, Lot 2, $525,000
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/athome
HOME
A touch of luxury in shower curtains By Linda Turner Griepentrog For The Bulletin
If you're decorating a bathroom, there's nothing that adds a more luxurious
look than a fabric shower curtain. You see them in
upscale hotels, and you can have one as well, even if you don't know how to
sew. Fabric curtains can be the focal point for bath
decorating, as there are endless
FOOD
varieties of
Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Margy's Three-Fruited Crisp features peaches, apples and blackberries. Add a scoop of ice cream (below) for
a perfect pairing. Recipe on PageD2.
' SteP-bY- fabrics availstep guide able — from to making lavish silks to your own au naturale curtain cottons hnen DD and hempsoyou can createany mood you like for your morning rinsing. Fabric shower curtains are actually the decorative part of a pairing, as
inside the fabric curtain
an
you'll need a functional
counterpart — a plastic liner to protect the fabric layer from moisture, mold
By Jan Roberts-Dominguez
and mildew. Together this duo provides privacy, dec-
For The Bulletin
oration and a way to keep
ince relocating our recycling bin system a few weeks ago, my husband and I have been con-
templating the potential of the space it formerly occupied. It's a significant amount of square
something wecanall agreeon
Fabric options
footage and we're both eyeing it with gleeful anticipation as to how it could relieve some of our house-
curtains are 72 inches
hold bottlenecks. To give both concerned parties fair
square to fit a 6-foot tub.
consideration, we agreed to each formulate a list and
If you want a larger or smaller curtain, simply
then compare notes. Here's how that meeting began: ME: Since my issues center around a lack of conve-
nient storage for heavy counter-top kitchen appliances, oversizedpots and bowls, and odd-shaped casseroles, I'm visualizing a lovely set of shelves. STEVE: What does any of that have to do with tools? Desserts can be polarizing, too. He likes his choc-
olate chip cookies to be dark and crunchy. I prefer a soft and chewy approach. He leans toward vanilla ice cream with a fine-tuned chocolate
eA<g
yourbathroom fl oordry from over-spray. Most standard shower
add 8 inches to the finished width and 16 inches to
the finished length to cut the rectangle and figure yardage. For a standard shower curtain, you'll need 5
yards of fabric that's either 45 inches or 54 inches wide.
sauce, whereas I'm a Cherry Garcia kind of girl.
Look for home decorating prints that have more
But we're completely aligned on the
body than ordinary cotton
fabrics, as they will hang
topicofcobblersand crisps:We love 'em. And right now, while there's still fruit galore tumbling in from nearby
fieldsand orchards,it'sano-brainer way to inject some fruity sweetness into our lives.
The best thing about fruit cobblers and crisps is that they're so forgiving. The flour and shortening don't have to
be in perfect harmony, and if you use too much fruit, an extra scoop of ice cream will remedy the situation. So when fiddling with
these recipes, don't be afraid to experiment. SeeCrisps/D3
better because of their
weight. If the fabric is a large print, you will need to purchase extra to match the
design patterning, so ask the sales clerk for help in determining the additional
amount needed. Abed sheet offers another fabric alternative and a way to
coordinate bathroom decor with adjacent bedroom fur-
nishings. If you're buying a sheet, a full flat sheet will suffice.
SeeShower/D5
GARDEN
TODAY'S RECIPES
Grow year-round usingcold frames +
By Liz Douvige For The Bulietin
The summer production
of Cobra tomatoes in my greenhouse has waned, which
loved it, and Butter Chard
saladsstarted appearing on menus. Oh, the power of marketing! For winter crops, Cole-
means it's time to switch
gears. I do have gas heat, but since I try to "garden on the
man feels you need 10 hours
of daylight for growth. It will be an interesting experiment,
cheap," I use it only in the
spring for night protection of my many vegetable and flowerseedlings. This fall I'm going to look at the greenhouse as one gigantic cold frame. I'll keep the choices simple and hardy. There are winter salad green mixes available that I will try
and isn't that half the fun of
Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
This cold-frame garden bed uses anold shower door as atop.
and also mix together leftover lettuce seeds. I didn't plant
my Oregon Sugar peas this spring, so I will try a trellis of those. I also want to try some beets and carrots. The list
could go on to Chinese cabbage, kale, Swiss chard, spinach and many other greens.
a tunnel greenhouse, pick it very young and label it "Butter Chard." He says the chefs
given by Eliot Coleman, an avid spokesman of four-season gardening who also markets fresh vegetables to
round using cold frames and tunnel greenhouses. He was having difficulty marketing Swiss chard. Chefs didn't like the large leaves and some-
high-end restaurants. Cole-
what tough stalk. He decided
man gardens in Maine year-
to grow it as a winter crop in
I listened to a short lecture
gardening. A backyard cold frame can be simply constructed using any transparent material for the top: glass, fiberglass, polyethylene or flexible greenhouse coverings. Many people use old window sashes, but remember that old window sashes may
Tarragongoeswith everything:Including easy-to-prepare Grilled or BakedChicken with Dijon Mustard andFresh Tarragon,D2 Also: • Chicken with Bulgur, Tomatoes, Peppers andTarragon • Pork Chops with Mushroom-Tarragon Sauce • Beer-Poached Salmon with Tarragon Mayonnaise All on D2 Crispsnnd cobdlnrs:Margy's Three-Fruited Crisp, Fresh Blueberry Cobbler — with Many-Fruited Variations, Apple-Blackberry Hazlenut Crisp, Apple Crisp, AppleCobbler, PeachCobbler, D3 Ask Martha:Chili peppers: the hot list, DS
have been painted with lead-
based paint. Make sure the wood isn't rotting and that the
glass is secured firmly in the frame. SeeCold frame/D4
Recipe Finder:Skillet No-Bake Cookies, D3
D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
FOOD Chicken with Bulgur, Tomatoes, Peppers and Tarragon Makes 4 servings. 1 chicken 6 TBS unsalted butter fs/4 C finely chopped onions
2 ripe tomatoes, peeled and chopped Salt and pepper
1 C seeded andchopped red and/or green bell peppers
2 C bulgur 3t/z C chicken stock (preferably
3 TBS fresh tarragon leaves
e
eI •
•
homemade)
1 or 2 red or green jalapenos Cut chicken into 8 serving pieces: thighs, legs, each breast cut in half. Melt the butter in a large, heavy pan onmedium heat and cook the onions until they turn almost reddish brown. Removeonions from the pan, add the chicken piecesand saute until golden onall sides. Push thechicken to oneside, addthe peppers andtarragon andcook, stirring, for1 minute. Stir in thetomatoes and reserved onions. Seasonwith salt and pepper.Combineall theingredients, cover and simmerfor 20 minutes. While the chicken mixture is simmering, heat chicken stock until hot. Wash and drain the bulgur. Remove the chicken pieces to a plate; stir in the bulgur, and toss it with the vegetables and sauce for 3 minutes until it is well coated with the sauce. Add the hot chicken stock, let boil 1 minute, replace the chicken pieces — except the breasts — cover, and simmer over low heat for about15 minutes, until all of the liquid is absorbed. Addthe breast pieces to the pan, remove from heat, and keep covered in a warm spot for 10 minutes. Serve with a salad. Nutrition per serving: 885 calories; 42 g fat; 18 gsaturated fat; 180 mg cholesterol; 57 g protein; 71 g carbohydrate; 9 g sugar; 16 g fiber; 435 g sodium; 100 mgcalcium.
Qrilled or Baked Chicken with Dijon Mustard and Aesh
h
Tarragon Makes 4 servings. t/zC Dijon mustard t/4 C dry white wine 1 TBS chopped fresh tarragon
Salt and pepper 2 (3-Ib) chickens, halved i
— Recipe from "Classical Turkish Cooking"by Ayla Algar Photos by Roberto Rodriguez/St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Tarragon, reminiscent of licorice, can take a meal to the next level when paired correctly with the right dishes.
By Daniel Nemane St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Most herbs defy easy description. Trying to discuss the flavor of thyme or oregano leads only to vague adjectives. Calling rosemary "woody" doesn't quite cut it. But tarragon is easy. Tarragon tastes sort of like licorice. It does not taste entirely like licorice; if it did, people would just put licorice in their food and that would be gross. But tarragon is certainly reminiscent of it, in a mild way.
h
h l.
Beer-poached Salmon with Tarragon Mayonnaise Makes 4 servings. t/z C mayonnaise (low-fat is fine) t/4 tsp dried tarragon 1 tsp minced chives
1 tsp chopped green onions 1 tsp minced parsley 12 oz beer 2 TBS lemon juice
1 med onion, chopped 1 rib celery, chopped 1 tspsalt 1 bay leaf
4 whole peppercorns 4 (6-ounce) salmon fillets, 1 inch thick
Combine mayonnaise, tarragon, chives, green onions and parsley in a small bowl. Chill until ready to serve. In a large skillet, combine beer, lemon juice, onion, celery, salt, bay leaf and peppercorns. Bring to a boil, then lower heat and simmer 10 minutes. Add salmon fillets. If the liquid does not cover the fish, add more beer or water to just cover. Lightly simmer 10 minutes or until fish flakes easily with a fork. Serve fish with a dollop of mayonnaise on each. Nutrition per serving: 560 calories; 36 g fat; 5 g saturated fat; 130 mg cholesterol; 44 g protein; 6 g carbohydrate; 1 g sugar; 1 g fiber; 845 g sodium; 40 mg calcium. — Reci peadapted from recipegirl.com.
This is not to say that tar- liamsburg, Virginia, which I often make it in the winter. ragon itself is mild. It is quite used to be great until the chef But it is so deliriously good strong; a little goes a long became famous and then you will want to make it yearway. But when that little bit the quality of the cooking round. Though the flavors are is applied to the right dishes, dropped considerably (I ha- bold, they are light enough to ven't been in years so I don't the result can be divine. make it a perfect meal for the Most frequently, it is used know how it is now). While summer, too. as a bright punctuation to it was still great, they came For a dish with fish, I went c hicken, both i n i t s l a t e r up with a g r illed chicken the salmon-with-mayonnaise form (chicken) and its early dish with Dijon mustard and route. A dollop of mayonone (eggs). Snip a few tarra- tarragon. naise mixed with herbs is a gon leaves over scrambled Here is how easy it is: You delicious way to add elegance eggs and you have instant- take a chicken and coat it to poached salmon, and tarly elevated your breakfast. with a mixture of mustard, ragon goes with mayonnaise Mix a bit into chicken salad wine and tarragon. You wait the way peanut butter goes or egg salad and you have 24 hours. Then you grill it. with jelly. turned lunch from ordinary It is easily among the best Then, I found an additional to grand. grilled chicken you will ever element online that, frankly, Tarragon is also used fre- have. It is certainly among I would not have thought to quently to bring out the best the best grilled chicken I do. I did not poach the salmin seafood. A little tarragon have ever had. And the ge- on in water, stock or wine, or added to shrimp, olive oil, nius of the recipe is you don't any combination of them. I shallots and garlic makes an even have to grill it. It makes poached it in beer. outstanding topping for pas- a great baked chicken or As it turns out, salmon and ta. Most fin fish, too, benefit pan-sauteed chicken. Or you beer go together like, well, by being lightly blessed with could do what I did and com- tarragon and mayonnaise. tarragon. bine each of these methods. I And the creaminess of the And what about the other put the chicken on a hot, cast- tarragon mayo makes a perwhite meat? Pork is paired iron grill pan to get some of fect foil for the flavor of the less frequently with tarragon, the flavor of a grill, flipped it beer. but the herb is an excellent over and then finished it off The tarragon is also part c omplement to it. An d y o u in the oven. of the sauce for the pork can even find respectable recIt was outstanding. dish, Pork Chops With Mushipesfor tarragon sauces to be The other favorite chick- room-Tarragon Sauce. Mushserved with big-flavored beef, en-and-tarragon recipe rooms, tarragon and wine though you won't find them comes from Turkey. What make up one of those classic here. What you will find here makes it so outstanding is gravies that can be paired are two recipes for chick- that the flavors all get trapped with any number of dishes. en, one for pork and one for in bulgur, which adds a nutty In this case, we did it with salmon. taste of its own. pork chops. The mildness The recipes for chicken are Also, there is a lot of butter. of the meaty chops really not just among my favorite The butter helps. The but- allowed the flavor of the tarrecipes for tarragon and not ter also gets trapped in the ragon to come through. And even just among my favorite bulgur. Yum. There, it also also the flavors of the mushrecipes for chicken. They are mixes with onions, tomatoes, rooms and wine. among my favorite recipes, green peppers and chicken Tarragon. It g oes w i th ever. stock. As I said, yum. everything. The first comes from the The bulgur makes the dish T rellis r estaurant i n W il - stick-to-your-ribs filling, so 2 locations inBend
About 24 hours before serving, whisk together the mustard, wine and tarragon in a large stainless-steel bowl. Season with salt and pepper, and combine thoroughly. Coat the chicken halves with the mustard marinade. Individually plastic-wrap them and refrigerate for 24 hours before cooking. If grilling: Season the chicken halves with salt and pepper. Set up the grill for indirect heat. Grill over indirect heat, beginning skin-side down and flipping once, 50 minutes to 1 hour, until done. If grilling on agrill with no cover: Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Grill chicken directly over the coals, flipping frequently to avoid overcharring. When chicken looks like it will soon become too charred, transfer to a baking sheet and finish baking in oven, 30-45 minutes, until done. If baking: Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Season the chicken halves with salt and pepper. Bake about1 hour, until done. If using grill pan: Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Season the chicken halves with salt and pepper. Spray grill pan with nonstick spray and heat on high heat until nearly smoking.Add chicken,skin-side down. Cook until skin hasdark grill marks. Flip chicken and place pan in oven.Bake about55 minutes, until done. Nutrition per serving: 825 calories; 31 g fat; 9 gsaturated fat; 335 mg cholesterol; 118 g protein; 6 g carbohydrate; no sugar; no fiber; 1005 g sodium; 60 mgcalcium. — Recipe adapted from'VheTrellis Cookbook, "by MarceiOesaulniers
Free pipeinstallation estimates
Main Center 2150JJ EStudioRd,Suitet0
Pork Chops with Mushroom-Tarragon Sauce
NWX 2863Nortw hest CrossingDr,suite ttO
Makes 4 servings. 4 pork chops, '/4-inch thick and 6 oz each t/4 tsp garlic salt t/4 tsp freshly cracked black
pepper 2 tsp olive oil, divided
12 oz sliced fresh mushrooms 1 med onion, chopped
541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbrcsdbahd.com
2 garlic cloves, minced
HWY 20E st Dean Swift Rd. (1 block West of Costco)
541-323-3011 • starks.com
/s C white wine, see note 2 TBS all-purpose flour 1 C chicken broth 2 tsp minced fresh tarragon,
see note 2 tsp butter
Note: If you prefer not to cook with wine, use chicken broth. If you do not have fresh tarragon, uset/z teaspoon dried tarragon. Pork chops with Mushroom-Tarragon Sauce. Sprinkle pork chops with garlic salt and pepper. Spray alarge nonstick skillet with cooking spray, heat over medium-high heat, and add 1 teaBatteries • Crystal • Bands spoon oil. Sear the pork chops until brown on both sides. Remove pork and keep warm. Add remaining 1 teaspoon oil, and saute mushrooms and onion until almost tender. Add garlic; cook1 minute longer. Stir in wine. Bring to a boil, and cook until liquid is almost evaporated. Combine flour and broth until smooth in a small bowl. Stir into pan. Bring to a boil; cook and stir 2 minutes or until thickened. Return pork chops to panand addtarragon. Cover andcook 6 to 8 minutes, until done, 145 degrees for medium rare, 150 degrees for medium or 160 degrees for well done. Stir in butter. If cooked until medium rare, allow meat to rest 3 minutes before serving. Nutrition per serving: 350 calories; 18 g fat; 7 g saturated fat; 90 mg 503-887-4241 cholesterol; 32 g protein; 11 g carbohydrate; 3 g sugar; 1 g fiber; 360 g 61383 S.Hwy. 97,BendOR97702 Olrtctb 541.72JL0411 • Cell: 503.887.4241 sodium; 85 mgcalcium.
WATCH BATTERY $800
INFINITY WATCH1KPAIR
— Recipeadapted from Taste ofHome.
Daniel Mitchell, Owner
Stem 0 C r o wns • Movements
•
•
'I
I
PA hhOM
4
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F OO D
Crisps
butterscotch on apple, vanilla
Continued from D1 You can glamorize your cobblers and crisps with different toppings. Match the ice cream or frozen yogurt with the flavor of the fresh fruit, or use the topping as an accent:
to reacquaint yourself with the
point — what tastes good. And it's typically something the It's easy to forget these sim- entire family can get behind. ple, classic desserts, but late Even when they can't agree on summer is one of the best times where to stash the Shop-Vac. or lemon custard on berries.
concept. Which proves, once again, that there's no time limit on good taste — or, more to the
— Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Corvallis food writer, cookbook author and artist. Contact: janrd@ proaxis.com.
No-bakecookies asweet treat no matter what formtheytake By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun
Carlin Lohrey of Kelso, Washington, was in search
Margy's Three-huited Crisp
of a recipe she had lost for a
treat her daughters used to call goodie balls. She said
Makes10 to12 servings (or more). My fri end Margy Buchanan makes this in the summer and it always hits the spot. Apples are the backbone to the recipe, shesays, so no matter what other fruits you decide to use— inthiscase,peachesand blackberries — make sure that a few apples make it into the mix.
that was not the real name,
so she has been stumped trying to locate a recipe. She remembers that it had
a couple of eggs and some sugar, which you cooked for a couple of minutes and then
added dried fruit and coconut. You then formed the
FRUIT FILLING About 4 C peeled, cored and
mixture into balls and rolled
them in more coconut.
sliced apples (choose a fairly
D3
M artha W ar d
RECIPE FINDER The RecipeFinder feature will return. If you are looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request, write Julie Rothman, RecipeFinder, The Baltimore Sun,501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinderOgmail.com. Namesmustaccompany recipes for them tobe published.
of G l en
fore they could be cut with-
out falling apart. The Rice Krispies and nuts gave t h ese n o-bake
cookies a nice crunch and a chewy, granola-barlike texture. However, they were a
tad on the sweet side for my taste. N ext time I
w o uld use
more coconut and cut back on the confectioner's sugar. I also think other dried fruits
could be added along with the dried figs for more texture and flavor.
Requests • C heri Levin o f
M o unt
B urnie, M a ryland, s a w both ways, and both meth- Washington, Maryland, says L ohrey's r e quest an d ods worked about the same. she is a big fan of the Asian thought she might have the The individual balls took a chickensalad served atStone
tart variety that stands up
nicely to baking) 1 to 2 Ig peaches, peeled and sliced 2 C fresh blackberries
recipe, or at least one that
little more time to make but
Mill Bakery i n
comes close to what Lohrey
held together better than
Apple pie spice
described. Ward's aunt sent it to her in the 1980s, and
the sliced cookies. I used a
Maryland. She particularly likes the Asian sesame dress-
1-tablespoon scoop and my even though her recipe calls hands to form the balls and for making one long cookie then rolled them in a mixroll and slicing individual ture of confectioner's sugcookies from the roll, Ward ar and coconut. I then put
TOPPING t/z C old fashioned oats t/sC nonfat dry milk '/s C flour t/z C granulated sugar t/z C firmly packed golden
thought the cookies could be made into individual balls instead. I decided to test her recipe
brown sugar 1 tsp cinnamon t/s tsp nutmeg t/4 tsp salt t/z C softened butter
Fill a 9-by-14-inch baking dish with the prepared fruit. If the fruit isn't very juicy, drizzle in about /s cup of water. Sprinkle the fruit with a generous shaking of the apple pie spice. Bake the fruit in a 350 degree ovenfor about 20 minutes. Meanwhile, prepare the topping by mixing together the oats, dry milk, flour, sugars, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt. Using apastry blender or two forks, cut in the softened butter until the mixture is crumbly. When the fruit has cooked for the initial 20 minutes, remove it from the oven and sprinkle on the prepared topping. Return the dish to the oven and continue baking until the top is golden, about another 30 minutes. Servehot, warm, or at room temperature. Delicious with vanilla ice cream, of course.
Apple-Blackberry Hazelnut Crisp Makes 6 to 8servings. 1 Ib apples, peeled, cored and sliced 1 Ib blackberries t/z C sugar 3 tsp vanilla extract, divided 1t/z tsp cinnamon, divided
1 tsp freshly ground nutmeg, divided t/z C coarsely chopped raw hazelnuts s/s C flour s/sC packed dark brown sugar t/sC rolled oats t/4 tsp salt t/z C cold butter, cut in chunks
ad and would very much like to have the recipe. • Sue Dexter of Baltimore
would love to have the recipe for the chilled cream of
chill and firm up. The sliced tomato soup with crab meat cookies needed s everal served a t t h e B a l t i more hours in the refrigerator be- Country Club.
Jan Roberts-Dominguez/For The Bulletin
Makes 24 cookies
Peach cobbler is an ideal late summerdessert (recipe below).
Peach Cobbler
3 cups Rice Krispies cereal
2 to 4 tablespoons shredded 1 cup sugar
t/z cup chopped nuts 2 to 4 tablespoons
sweetened coconut 2 tablespoons butter
confectioner's sugar
t/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup chopped dates.
2 eggs beaten
Makes 4 to 6servings. 4 C peeled and slicedripe peaches /3 C, plus 3 TBS granulated
sugar 1 tsp grated lemon zest 1 TBS fresh lemon juice t/s tsp almond extract 1t/z C all-purpose flour 1 TBS baking powder
t/z tsp salt /s C vegetable shortening 1 egg, lightly beaten t/4 C milk 1 C heavy cream, chilled 3 to 4 TBS peach brandy or
peach cordial (optional; substitute sugar if desired)
Butter 2-quart baking dish., Arrange peaches in baking dish. Sprinkle with /s cup sugar, lemon zest and juice, and almond extract. Bake for 20 minutes in 400 degreeoven. While peaches are baking, sift the flour, 1 tablespoon sugar, baking powder and salt together into bowl. Cut in shortening until mixture resembles cornmeal. Combine beatenegg and milk and mix into dry ingredients until just combined. After the peaches have baked for the 20 minutes, remove casserole of peaches from oven and quickly drop dough by large spoonfuls over surface. Sprinkle with remaining 2 tablespoons sugar. Return to oven for 15 to 20 minutes, until top is firm and golden brown. When ready to serve, whip cream to soft peaks and flavor with the peach brandy. Servecobbler warm, topped with the whipped cream.
Combine Rice Krispies andnuts. Set aside. Place a large piece of wax paper on the counter or table. Sprinkle with confectioner's sugar and coconut. Set aside. In a large skillet, combine butter, eggs, sugar, salt and dates. Cook on low heat until mixture thickens, about 10 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in Rice Krispies and nut mixture. Pour mixture lengthwise, down the center of the waxpaper. Using theedge of the wax paper, roll the confectioner's sugar and coconut over the mixture, shaping into a log asyou press it to approximately1 t/z inches in diameter and12 to14 inches long. Add more confectioner's sugar andcoconut as needed. Cool in refrigerator for several hours before slicing into 24 cookies, eachabout l/z inch. Store in the refrigerator. To make cookie balls: Follow the above instructions for making dough but instead of rolling dough into a log, allow cookie mixture to cool enough to handle. Then form into1- to 2-inch diameter balls, using hands or small scoop. Combine the confectioner's sugar and coconut on a plate and roll each ball in the mixture to coat. Place balls on waxpaper-lined cookie sheetand cool in refrigerator until firm.
CENTRAL OREGON
h'esh Blueberry Cobbler — With Many-Fi'uited Variations Makes 6 servings. t/z C sugar 1 TBS cornstarch 4 C fresh blueberries
1 TBS baking powder t/z tsp salt 3 TBS shortening t/z C milk
1 tsp lemon juice 1 C all-purpose flour
— "Betty Crocker's Cookbook,"by the editors of GeneralMills
Makes 6 servings. 4 C sliced, peeled tart apples
Apple Cobbler
(about 4 med) Makes 6 servings. 12 TBS butter, divided
t/z C milk
3 C tart apples, peeled and
1 egg
sliced s/4 tsp salt, divided s/4C sugar, divided
1t/zC flour 2 tsp baking powder
Heat oven to 375 degrees. Grease 8-by-8-inch square pan. Place apple slices in pan. Mix remaining ingredients thoroughly and sprinkle over apples. Bake in 375 degree oven for 30 minutes or until topping is golden brown and apples are tender. Servewarm with light cream or ice cream.
Melt 4 tablespoons of the butter and pour into 8-inch square cakepan. Spread evenly andarrange apples over it. Mix'/4 teaspoon salt and'/4 cup sugar and sprinkle evenly over apples; set aside. Melt remaining 8 tablespoons butter in small pan. Removefrom heat, add milk and egg, beat well. Mix flour, baking powder, remainingt/z cup of sugar and remainingt/z teaspoon salt in bowl. Stir in milk and egg mixture and beat until smooth. Pour over apples and bake in 375 degree oven for 30 minutes, or until toothpick comes out clean. Serve from pan in squares, fruit side up. Serve plain or with whipped cream or vanilla ice — "Betty Crocker's Cookbook"by the cream. editors of GeneralMills
ing that is served with the sal-
Skillet No-Bake Cookies
Blend sugar and cornstarch in medium saucepan. Stir in blueberries Butter a 9-by-9-inch baking and lemon juice. Cook, stirring constantly, until mixture thickens and pan; set aside. Combine the sliced boils. Boil and stir1 minute. Pour into ungreased2-quart casserole. Keep apples, berries, sugar, 1 teaspoon fruit mixture hot in ovenwhile preparing biscuit topping. vanilla, t/z teaspoon cinnamon, t/z Measure flour, 1 tablespoon sugar, the baking powder and salt into teaspoon nutmeg. Spoon into the bowl. Add shortening and milk. Cut through shortening six times; mix unbuttered baking pan. til dough forms a ball. Drop dough by 6spoonfuls onto hot fruit. Combine the hazelnuts, flour, Bake in 400 degree oven until biscuit topping is golden brown. Serve brown sugar, oats, salt and the re- warm and, if desired, with cream. maining 2 teaspoons vanilla, 1 teaspoon cinnamon andt/z teaspoon VARIATIONS nutmeg. Cut in the butter. Spread Fresh Cherry Cobbler:Substitute 4 C pitted fresh (or frozen and the mixture over the apples. Bake thawed) red tart cherries for the blueberries; increase sugar in fruit mixin a 350 degree oven until top is ture to 1t/s cups, cornstarch to 3 tablespoons and substitute '/4 teaspoon crisp and brown and apples are almond extract for the lemon juice. tender, about 45 to 60 minutes. Fresh PeachCobbler: Substitute 4 cups sliced fresh peaches (peeled) — Recipe adapted from '7hyme and for the blueberries and add '/4 teaspoon cinnamon to the sugar-cornthe River" by SharonVanLoan starch mixture. and Patricia Lee Fresh PlumCobbler: Substitute 4 cups unpeeled sliced fresh plums for the blueberries; increase sugar in fruit mixture to '/4 cup, cornstarch to 3 tablespoons and addt/z teaspoon cinnamon to the sugar-cornstarch mixture. Apple Crisp
/s to s/4 Cpacked brown sugar '/z C all-purpose flour '/z C oats s/stsp cinnamon s/s tsp nutmeg /3 C butter or margarine, softened
the balls on wax paper to
S t evenson,
— "Fanny Farmer Cookbook,"edited by Marian Cunningham
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Serving Central Oregon since 1903
D4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
HOME ck A RDEN
a c ar
a ze 0 0
• It looks simple, but a DIYfire pit project can turn into a lot of hard work
LIVING SMART
Slow drain causes,
possiblesolutions and prevention tips
By Bob Tedeschi New York Times News Service
Dear Angie: Why does my bathroom sink drain
In the 13 years we've owned our home, my wife and I have
ANGIE HICKS
so slowly? I removed the
was a rock ring in the woods,
piping below and it was clear. Meanwhile, the tub
where we sat on boulders and
and toilet drain normally.
invited armies of mosquitoes to mainline our blood while
Also, how much could it cost to repair the sink drain problem?
built three fire pits. The first
we pretended not to notice.
The second, in our scrubby side yard in suburban Con-
If a plumber or drain deaner tells you the problem is with your home's main line to the
sewer, and that you'll need to replace or reline it at a cost of
— Tony L., Livonia,
Michigan Dear Tony: It's quite likely you're experiencing a partial clog comprised of hair
necticut, never saw flame but
eventually hosted many interesting species of weeds and at least one tree. Then I invested in bricks
Tony Cenicola/New York Times News Service
and a grate, building a pit 10 A child and dog enjoy the new fire pit at the home of writer Bob Tedeschi in Guilford, Connecticut. yards from our back deck, Tedeschi recommends one should break up the fire pit project into two days at the minimum. where it sat unused for two years before I kicked it down. Starting with a kit What would it take to inmodest fire pit at the center. I decided to use a wood-fire spire an outdoorsy family of Among other ambitions, I For your next act, lay down design.Of course, not everyfire lovers to actually use a fire planned to build a top for the some landscaping fabric and one has that choice. Cities like pit? pit, so we could use it as a table then enjoy carting nearly a New York and Boston, among Last week, I figured I'd during daytime gatherings. So ton of river rock and fire pit others, prohibit open fires with find out. I called on John Gul- why not build a gigantic pit? bricks from your driveway to wood, and smaller municipaliland, manager and founder of Big pits, Gulland informed your yard. All of this for a lit- ties sometimes regulate fire pit Woodheat.org; Scott Cohen, me, don't reflect heat as ef- tle patch of heaven 12 feet in placementtokeep smoke away author of "Scott Cohen's Out- fectivelyas smaller ones, so diameter. from the neighbors. door Fireplaces and Fire Pits"; the wood burns less efficientDo yourself a favor and And wind conditions are and JulieMoir Messervy, a ly and produces more smoke. break up the job into two days too often overlooked by fire pit Vermont-based l an d scape "Anything bigger than 36 at the minimum — and, if pos- owners, Gulland said: "People designer and author of eight inches in diameter is a waste," sible, recruit a few muscular don't know how to burn propbooks on the subject, includ- h e said. But I w ent w ith a masochists to help. erly, which creates a ton of ing "Landscaping Ideas That slightly bigger version, for reaOne logistical, budgetary smoke, and they'll burn when Work." sons I'll explain shortly. note: I had gravel and sand left there's a breeze, which makes My landscaping specialists I chose aloose-rock floor over from my patio project, so I it really bad." got right to the heart of it: A because the thought of build- didn't need to pick it up or have He favors so-cal led topsuccessful fire pit is about a lot ing another patio turned my it delivered. My local supplier down fires, where kindling more than just the fire. stomach. With loose rock, you charges $100 for delivery, so rests on the wood logs, be"The goal is to create a go- still have to remove a layer of the material itself would have cause they produce much less to destination where you can topsoil, but you don't need to cost less than the delivery. But smoke than traditional Americhitchat with your friends," dig as deep as you do when if you've ever tried to haul a ton can campfire methods. Cohen said. "Fire just helps installing pavers, or stabi- of rocks on your own, you are prolong the use of the area." lize the base with compacted likely to recognize this as the Conversation starter gravel. immeasurable bargain it is. I forgot his advice during The right spot T o set th e p i t o n s o l i d One of my best moves was our first fire, but fortunately In designing the space, ground and prevent shifting starting w it h a ki t . P a ve- there was no wind. When my Messervy suggested I start by during the winter, though, I stone's RumbleStone round kit pit and the surrounding patio selecting a proper site. My im- had little choice but to follow costs around $400, delivered, were finally finished, I slid a pulse was to put the pit on the my paver-patio protocol. I dug and includes a pit liner and few chairs around it and colslope behind a patio I installed a 4-foot-wide circular trench screen. The company sells a lapsed in a heap on a couch in June. The patio's retaining roughly 8 inches deep and 46-inch-diameter, 16-inch-high inside. The kids took one look wall, I figured, would make a filled it with so-called stone version, butmy sourcessaid 12 and immediately demanded passable bench for the fire pit. aggregate, which is a mixture inches is a good height if you marshmallows. Messervy felt this would of sand and gravel found at like to kick your feet up on the An hour later, the stars were crowd the patio and, worse masonry suppliers. edge. (The kit itself comes in a out, the neighborhood was quistill, force me to dig tons of Working in 2-inch layers, I 10.5-inch version.) et and the fire had gathered soil to level the ground. Hav- tamped down the gravel and Even the smaller kit costs the family to it. As we sat, I ing dug myself to the edge of checked it for level, giving it considerably more than you remembered what Messervy insanity when I was building the slightest slope so the water would pay for bricks. Then said about the value of this the patio, I took her advice and wouldn't pool around the pit. again, for the extra cash, you venture. "It's amazing what happens chose a spot on a plateau a few Next, I added a I-inch layer of don't have to melt your brain yards away. In playing with sand to set the bricks. while cobbling together stones to a conversation when peodesigns and layouts, I relied Sounds easy'? Now imagine or bricks into a perfect circle. ple have fire as a focal point," on Messervy's Home Outside filling a shovel with dense soil (Do-it-yourself masons, Cohen she told me. "It absorbs your Palette mobile app, which was too many times to count, hoist- said, should avoid using riv- self-consciousness and allows useful (and free). ing it all into a wheelbarrow er rocks, as they can explode people to literally get into a Next, I checked Houzz.com, and hauling those monstrous when heated. And homemade place that's warm, andyou can which offered its usual trove of loads tosome dark corner of pits, he said, should be lined enjoyconversations in a deepover-the-top design ideas. The your property. Then imagine with fire bricks.) erway." one I liked best was round and filling the wheelbarrow with The RumbleStone liner Along with a few s'mores patiolike, with a floor of river gravel multiple times, raking would require some modifi- and a cold beer, it was enough rock wide enough to accom- it out and slamming a tamper cation for a propane fire pit, to justify all the sweat this little modate six people and a low, onto it to get it flat. but that didn't apply to me as bear of a project required.
several thousand dollars, take
the time to get a second opinion. Also, make sure that any and soap scum, but there plumber you hire is appropriare other possible causes, ately licensed, insured and induding: bonded, and has positive con• Old piping deteriorating sumer reviews on a trusted site. from within. Experts say slow drains are • An object t hat w e n t inevitable, but you can reduce down the drain and is stuck their occurrence by following a in the pipe. fewsteps: • Don't let hair go down the • A problem with your main drain line, such as in-
drain. Wipe it up with tissue
truding roots. When we posed your plight to several plumbers who've earned top ratings from Angie's List members, they said a hair clog was the likeliest culprit. The pros say only an on-
paper and toss it in the trash. If you lean over the sink while
grooming,cover or close the drain so nothing drops down. Use hair covers for shower (lralns.
• If your home has old piping, allow hot water to run oc-
casionally, to help move items mineforcertainthecauseof through. a slow or stopped sink drain. • Consider using bacteria-enHowever, they suggest a few zyme products on a monthly actions you can take before basis to help keep drains clear. calling a plumber: — Angie Hicks is the founder • Use a plunger; cover of Angie's List, which offers the sink overflow hole with consumerreviews on everything site inspection can deter-
duct tape.
from homerepairtohealth care.
• Use a plumbing snake or auger. You said the pipe below the sink i s
c l ear;
•
•
therefore, the dog may reside in the short horizon-
•
should be safe for most of Central Oregon. It does have
Continued from D1 The frame, or base, is con-
square stems, which means it is a member of the mint fam-
structed of wood or could be
ily but reseeds rather than spreads through the root sys-
several layers of cinder blocks, which would retain heat better
tem. The violet-blue flowers
•
'
tal run from the trap to the
wall. Instead of a snake, you could try a rag twisted around the end of a piece of
lath or molding. Be careful to keep a good grip on the rag so you can easily remove it.
• If one of these techniques seems to work, run
Grap
hot water for several minutes to move the dislodged gunk through your pipes and out to the main sewer. Costs for this work will vary, depending on the company, market and details and scope of the job. The pros we sampled mentioned prices ranging from $150 to $220 for simple line-snaking, or as much as $400 if they need to use a cable machine with a blade. I
ASSURANCE
I I '
iswhatyougetwhen EVERGREEN manages your loved one's medications 'r
•
Cold frame
g
EvERGREEN In-Home Care Services
g •
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541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
located next to WholeFoods
than the wood base.
attract bees, butterflies and
•
To kill weeds, lay down a layer of heavy cardboard or
h ummingbirds. Now t o t h e best part: The m int-licorice
several inches of folded news-
scented leaves put the plants
papers (no colored sections).
on the deer-resistant list. I can
Shaf Is BETTEBabout CleaningCI in/c?
Fill the cold frame with a mix-
ture of compost and bagged garden/potting soil. There are many sites on the Internet giv-
I
ing instructions for construct-
ing a cold frame. In addition to acting as a season extender
This cold frame uses recycled windows for the top to allow heat
in the fall, a cold frame can be
and sunlight in during colder growing seasons.
of value in the spring for protecting purchased seedlings or starting your own seeds. I shared an observation in a spring column that I had several honeysuckle vines to attract the hummingbirds ear-
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Our Procedures
their tracks right through the
All work is performed in accordance with
middle of the planting and they didn't bother to stop for a nibble. In conclusion to my discovery, as always, I should qualify
just make your carpet look clean, we clean them sothey are clean with the highest
the statement with, "at least
quality and thorough procedures.
denly swoop down for a salvia that the plant is a perennial snack. The plant will definite- and hardy to zone 4, which ly go on the seed-starting list
looking for a bright green providing fall attractions. chartreuse foliage plant to I certainly hit the jackpot contrast with a blue spruce. in planting Salvia coccinea Agastache Golden Jubilee, Red Summer Jewel. The 2011 also known as anise hysAll-America Selection r e- sop, turned out to be a triple ceived the reward for its early delight. and profuse blooming. The I purchased the six-pack dwarf annual sage produces a based solely on color. I wanted neon bright red flower on dark to see if the color combination green stems. I planted them in would appeal to me. It sounda large container that I placed ed attractive in a color article I near several raised beds of to- had read and shared. matoes. It's been fun to watch So it was actually after the the hummers sit on the top fact that I decided I should ring of a tomato cage and sud- do some research. I learned ly in the season but lacked in
testify that my daily visitors have no interest. I have seen
not this season."
for 2015. I have also mentioned I was
R .:
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Shower
ASK MARTHA
orative grommets through which a rod is threaded (a separate rod holds the plastic inner liner). The large grommets require no sewing or special
Continued from 01
Toptreatment
er aVori es
0 IS: C
Shower curtains can be hung several ways. Some are tools to insert; they simply held in place with hooks over a snap together. They're availrod, and the hooks go through able in a variety of fun colors, buttonholes spaced across the including metallics. Some are uppercurtain edge.Othersof- transparent. Look for them in fer small grommets through the home decorating section which hooks are placed over of the fabric store. the rod. Others, like the fea— Reporter: gwizdesigns@aoi. turedcurtain,offer large deccom
Manzano '
-MARTHA
A manzano is a type of rocoto chili, d omesticated in
STEWART
the Bolivian highlands about 6,000 years ago. It combines the juicy crunch of a bell pepper with a blast of heat. It's also called a caballo ("horse") because of its kick.
hili peppers, many in the same species
C of the Capsicum ge-
Nake yourownshower curtain
D5
nus, are native to Central and South America. The
Habanero
WHAT YOU'LLNEED (Makes one72-inch square standard shower curtain)
Spanish and Portuguese introduced them to Europe,
The habanero (along with the Scotch bonnet) is among
• Fabric of your choice • 10 plastic grommets, 1~/2inch diameter opening • Thread (if you're sewing the curtain) OR /2 inch wide fusible webtape (for a no-sew curtain)
Asia and India, and today
the most common chilies in
almost every culture has use and eat.
the Caribbean — and one of the world's hottest chilies. It's used in jerk marinades and hotsauces.
jalapeno
Santa Fe Grande
The popularity of TexMex food owes much to
"Wax peppers" like this thick-fleshed, mo d erately
the jalapeno. It adds heat
hot variety are yellow when
(ranging from mild to potent) and an undertone of
immature. This one's Spanish name is guero, meaning
sweetness to salsas, nachos
"blond"; it is excellent for pick-
and more. Dried, smoked mature (red) jalapenos are called chipotles.
ling (in escabeche) and in salsas and pepper vinegar.
Shishito
The long, sweet Cubanelle (aka Itahan frying pepper) is
• 1 yard of medium-weight fusible interfacing • Iron • Scissors • Ruler • Pins • Sewing machine (optional)
CUTTING 1. Cut the fabric into two lengths, each 88 inches long (or if using a sheet, cut a rectangle 80 inches by 88inches). This allows for a double hem onthe lower edge,which addsweight to help the shower curtain hang nicely. Remember, if you're matching a print, the rectangles you cut should allow for matching the pattern at the joining. 2. Cut two 4-inch-by-36-inch strips of fusible interfacing. ASSEMBLY 3. For the sewnversion, match the long edges of the fabric right sides together and stitch a~/s-inch seam. Forthe no-sew version, press under onelong edge ononepanel, overlap a long edge ~/2 inch on the second panel, sandwiching fusible webtape between the layers. Fuseaccording to the manufacturer's instructions to create aseam. 4. Press the joining seam tooneside. 5. Cut the twin-panel rectangle to 80 incheswide. Note that your joining seammay nolonger be in the center, or if you prefer it to be, cut somewidth from each side of the wide rectangle. At this point, your curtain should measure 80 inches by 88inches. Use the trimmed section for another project, like pillows or bath accessories like afabric basket or storage box. 6. Fold and press double 2-inch hems to thewrong side of the fabric on each longedge of the curtain rectangle. Sew orfuse in place. 7. To finish the lower edge, press adouble 4-inch hem to the wrong side of the bottom edge.Sew orfuse in place. 8. To reinforce the areafor the grommets, fuse the interfacing strips across the upperedge onthe wrong side of the fabric, abutting the ends of the strips to make it wide enoughfor your fabric curtain panel. 9. Fold and press adouble 4-inch hem to the wrong side of the upper curtain edge. Sew orfuse in place. FINISHING 10. On thewrong side of the upper hem, pin-mark the grommet placement locations equally across the width of the curtain. Mark the initial grommet center points 3 inches from the sideedges and 2 inches from the upperedge; spacethe remaining grommets equally across the curtain width in line with the first markings. 11. Insert the grommets. Eachgrommet hastwo snap-together halves, so separate the raised andflat sections into two piles before you begin the insertion process. • Using the template that comes with the grommets, center it on the pin-marked locations and trace the circular opening with a pencil. Repeat for each location. • Cut out exactly on the traced circle through all the upper hem layers at the first grommet location.
its own favorite varieties. Here are some we love to
The shishito, a Japanese
chili, is generally mild, but an occasional fiery one keeps life interesting. Sear a batch in a little oil, sprin-
J
Anaheim
Poblano
gloves when handling hot chilies. The best remedy for e too-spicy bite is to follow it with e thick dairy product, such es sour cream.
The large, thick-fleshed poblano (ideal for chiles rellenos) has a nice slice and add it to an Italian
drops, but their vitamin A in-
This is a New Mexican-type cultivar also known as the California or long green chili. The green (immature) pod is roasted and used in chiles
amount o f
hero or a salad.
creases dramatically.
rellenos, sauces, and the stew
Red Finger Hot
Fresno
simply known as a bowl of green.
he a t and
full-bodied, complex flavor. Its earthy, savory rich-
ness after being roasted This ripe form of the Indiis a true taste of Mexico. an green finger hot is slight-
— Questions of general interest can be emailed to msIIetters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.
Hot but not searing, this
chili is a staple of the Indian kitchen. It's considered a cooling spice: When eaten, it causes the body to perspire and thus cool down.
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •I•
Serrano
•
•
- ••
BarhTurfSoil.com
Cl a sssfjeds
I
. I
PROMPT DELIVERY
K. ®5 II .
and it can even be a bit hot-
ter. It also has a sharpness that cuts the richness of guacamole. A red serrano has a sweeter heat.
Green Thai l i t tl e S o u theast
chilies, is a natural anti-in-
flammatory agent.
the hole
pro t ruding o p posite
RedThai
location on
through ell
g r o mmet half of the ha l f from the grommet
In this mature (ripened) form of the green Thai
right side. i n place to
chili, the heat is sneakier; it
What the great Cascadia earthquake could mean to Central Oregon.
tends to build as you work your way through a curry, noodle soup or other dish.
The red and green chilies are often harvested and
Cherry Hot T his chili
Join expertsforapanel discussion on Cascadia and an in-depth look at how the major earthquake predicted to hit the Oregon coast sometime in the next 50 years could impact Central Oregon.The panel includes: Dr. Scott Ashford, Dean of the College of Engineering, Oregon State Univeristy Sgt. Nathan Garibay, Emergency Service Manager, Deschutes County Sheriffs Office
sold together. runs f rom
sweet and mild to moderately hot. It really comes
Lisa Stroup, Executive Director, Oregon Mountain River Chapter of the American Red Cross
into its own when pickled:
Serve it as an antipasto, or
Let go with Catalan-style tomatobread By Leah Eskin
Tomato Bread
Chicago Tribune
Summer, we crammedin sun Prep: 5 minutes; Cook: 2 minutes and sea and sand. Ice cream Serves: All of Catalonia and tomatoes and zucchini. We packed up and dropped off: Olive oil first one, then the other. Garlic W e looked ateach other,puzzled. It had been 17 years since
Baguette
we'd beenalone,together.We fled to Spain.
Season: Pour olive oil into a small bowl. Slice garlic and stir in. Brush: Slice baguette in half the long way; open. Brush cut sides lightly with the flavored olive oil. Broil: Set bread on a broiler rack. Slide under a hot broiler until golden brown, about 2 minutes. Rub: Slice tomato in half along its equator. Rub cut side of tomato against toasted faces of the baguette, covering it with pale red pulp. Best to do this with the strong hand and furrowed brow of a Barcelona waiter. Slice: Drizzle bread with more garlic oil. Sprinkle with salt. Slice on the diagonal into 1-inch-wide wedges. Enjoy plain or topped with ham, cheese or sausage.
In Spain, we crammed in art
and architecture and adventure. Soon we gave up on packing in and took up hanging out. We slept. We strolled. We sipped vermouth, with a cool breeze and warm guitar wafting over the rooftops. We dined on fat chickpeas,
tiny dams, hot sausage, thin ham. Every meal started with pa amb tomaquet — bread
grilled golden and rubbed with fresh tomato. Pale, rosy, sweet. We all came home flush with
fresh stories and stale laundry. In the damor, we toasted up a snack, and remembered the
waiters rubbing tomato into bread, so strong, so serious about the art of letting go.
Ripe tomato Flaky salt, such es Maldon Four key organizations are partnering to bring this important preparedness event to you. Don't miss this free event for a first-hand look at the predicted Cascadia quake and for important tips on how to prepare yourself, your family and your business to survive the immediate aftermath.
t Bill Hogan i Chicago Tribune
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2014 7 p.m. at the Tower Theatre A panel presentation with time for audience questions. Free and open to the public. Tickets and information: www.towertheatre.org
541-74e-41es
Amerlcan Red Cross Oregon Mountain River Chapter
oregonstateIcascades
I
541-389-9663
Although a serrano can be used interchangeably with a jalapeno, its boldness is more consistent,
grommet
• With the curtain wrong side up, place the raised grommet section on the fabric right side poking through the cut opening. The hole should feel snug around the protruding plastic. • Press the opposite half of the grommet (flat) onto the section extending through the holeand snapthe halves together. • Repeat steps1 to 4 for each grommet. • From the right side of the shower curtain, thread the rod through adjacent holes. 12. Hang the shower rod, adding asecond rod for the inner liner.
The Fresno chili i s o ften
mistaken for a red jalapeno, but its shoulders are often
When dried, it becomes an ly less pungent but still adds ancho. punch and color. Green chilies wider and it's more conical. In are high in vitamin C; as they heat and flavor, the two chilies Green Finger Hot mature to red, the C content are very similar.
Inse r t
finish.
served with grilled meats.
centa, the central area where the seeds are attached. Wear rubber
T rim out
template.
cious sauteed with onions and Marcus Nilsson / New York Times News Service
drinks.
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the upper the layers. hem using e
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
i in
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oo wi wi a n an i e
TV SPOTLIGHT
• T ell me y o ur b e st " 2
enough. They're like, "Yeah,
• Broke Girls" joke. • In an u pcoming epi-
we don'twant any more of
By Brooks Barnes New Yorh Times News Service
• sode, 1 we have a l i t tle
e
that." I decided I wanted to ex-
III
of the show folk m i lling
gay character, about 11 years o ld. He's sitting with h i s
around the Warner Bros. lot
mother in the diner, and she
here are surprisingly dull. You see a lot of self-important hiding behind sunglasses and we-take-this-stuff-seriously haircuts.
orders a sandwich. He says, "This is why you're single." She says: "I'm not single. I'm married to your father." And
Then there is Justin Eliza-
stop pushing your lifestyle in my face."
BURBANK, Calif. — Most
led in. And that's when the idea of this fake meeting of a fake gay organization came from. It was an opportunity to reframe gay politics and talk about differing opinions within the gay community.
You've brought "The they're letting you Q •• So be you, even though the Q • • M eeting." to L o s A n -
and a Glinda the Good Witch
accent. Sayre, 32, arrived here two
show is not especially gay.
geles before. How are West Coast gays different? • have all of these straight• First, they all race up guy production assistants, • after the show and say, though. They greet people by "Finally, thank God, somesaying, "Hey, man" and giving body here isas smart as I them a slug on the arm. I was am." They're also a little niclike: "Oh, no, no, no, no. I don't er duringthe performance. answer to that. Ma'am'? Fine." They talk back less, which I appreciate. Are you a comic or a gay • comic? In New Y o r k y o u 've • A comic. But I o per• done an annual fund• ate from a p l a ce that raiser, "Night of a Thousand straight people are weird, be- Judys," benefiting homeless cause they are. gay, bisexual and transgen-
A
months ago — ta-dah! — to write for the Warner sitcom
• Yes, absolutely. We do
"2 Broke Girls." Elizabeth is not his real middle name, by the way, but one he bestowed upon himself in homage to Elizabeth Taylor; he w ears
a chunky necklace with the initials J.E.S. just to make it
clear. Sayre is mostly known for "The Meeting.," his regular
A
Q•
Manhattan variety show and
salon. Staged since 2009, "The Meeting." honors var-
ious gay inspirations: Judy
Q•
der teenagers. Now that Miley
Where did your char- Cyrus has decided to make • acter in "The Meeting." homeless youth her thing, you come from? should join forces. • I used to be a classical • That Miley is t r y ing • actor. I d id m usicals. • to have my career. I
Q•
Garland, Cher, David Bowie. Sayre hosts the session as chairman of the fictitious omites. It was a " M eeting" skit called "The New Han-
makes sense. I didn't want to be weird about it or be shack-
I wrote, "I love you, Mom, but
beth Sayre, an unrepentant dandy with pink t r ousers
International Order of Sod-
perience my gayness, if that
Amy Dickerson/New YorkTimes News Service
Justin Elizabeth Sayre writes for "2 Broke Girls" and hosts the monthly variety show "The Meeting."
A
A
And I hate to say it, but in musical theater, there is a little
kie Code" (a video of it went viral) that got Hollywood's
monthly Los Angeles ver-
attention. With " Th e M eet-
sion starting next month, a
ing" having returned Sunday spoken-word album on the to Joe's Pub in New York, a way and "2 Broke Girls" be-
want you to know that I was
spinning around naked on a ginning its third season, he tinge of homophobia. There wrecking ball five years ago. spoke — vividly — about his are very few shows where you You know how she licks that career. These are excerpts can be gay onstage in a musi- sledgehammer in the video'? from their conversation. cal.Because musicals are gay For me, that's a Tuesday.
i e isn't into us an 's
s
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l
Dear Abby: I am a f ull-time mother of three young children and have been marriedfor nine years. Since the beginning, my husband has pushed to have things "his way." He struggles with his
are talking to a licensed therapist,
temper and has yelled at me over little things. We have met with
upon the content of the ones your
ways at this point in his life. Should
husband is watching, it could add spice to
I accept this relationship for what it
a
he started pushing me to watch
patible with my lifestyle, as hard as cause it is making that would be? — Torn in Texas you uncomfortable, this i s s omething Dear Torn: I think you should that should be dis- have a talk with Frank and lay cussed with your therapist so you your cards on the table. You say he
explicit sex DVDs and read sex
won't feel coerced into anything
c ounselor a n d
DFP,R
p rovement in o u r marriage — or so
ABBY
I thought — u n t i l
because it may help to save your marriage. Frank and I are best friends. We Many couples watch "explicit" have an amazing physical relationsex DVDs together because it im- ship, but I feel I want more. I don't proves their sex lives. Depending think he's willing to change his
relationship with "Frank" for six
are getting older. years. I love him and he loves me, I know we have some big issues but I'm not sure I want to marry to overcome and plan to continue him. seeing our counselor, but do you I know I couldn't live with Frank have any advice? full time because even though he's — Stru l i n
i n t h e S outh 57, he lives like an immature fra-
Dear Struggling:I'm all for getting the most out of life regardless of how old a person is. And I'm pleased that you and your husband
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, SEPT. 16, 2014:This year you open up to manynewadventures. Your
is, or look for someone more com-
your sex life. But be-
books. I feel very uncomfortable you can't handle. doing this. He claims he wants Dear Abby:I am a woman in my us to watch them for "educational early60s.Itake good care ofmyreasons." He seems obsessed with self and have been told I'm attracthe idea that we have to get the tive. I have been in a monogamous most out of life NOW because we
a hoarder, a procrastinator and has OCD.
is ahoarder, a procrastinator and
has OCD. If you are right, they may all be connected. His house isn't the only thing that may be chaotic;
his mind may be, too. The good news is there is help for OCD and hoarding — but only IF HE IS WILLING TO GET IT. If
he is open to it, your relationship could go to the next level. Howev-
er, if he is resistant and marriage is what you want, it would be better to move on and find someone
ternity boy. He has sports memo- whose lifestyle is more like your rabilia all over his house, and he's own. m essy. There arepilesofpaperand — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com stacks of clothes everywhere. He is or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
others can hear. Tonight: Out late.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
drive and energy will make a difference on the homefront. You could move, until you might trip over an obstacle remodel your home and/or build a new addition. You also could be prone to involving your funds or a financial agreefighting with those you live with, espement. You might feel confused, as what cially if you don't have a good outlet for youareseeingwon'tbethesame aswhat your high energy. you are hearing. Tonight: Go over your budget before making any plans. 8tarsshowthe Icing If you are single, of day yoo'0 haye yo u are drawn to CANCER (Jone 21-Joly 22) ** * * * D ynamic people who inspire ** * * By midmorning, you'll perk up ** * * p ositive yo u . Get to know and seem more interested in others. ** * Average som e one before You'll have the energy and right attitude ** So-so you become emotionally involved. If to get past any problems. Others might * Difficult stepbackand become less helpfulbeyou are attached, cause they assume you can handle it all. the two ofyou Is that what you want? Tonight: Pace often differ when it comes to deciding yourself. on plans. Go along with your significant other's choices more often, as he or she LEO (Joly23-Aog.22) tends to let go more easily than you do. ** * You might choose to have a lowCANCER helps you create more of what keyday,yetsomeone coulddecideto inyou want. vadeyourspace.You willhave no choice but to deal with the issue at hand. ReARIES (March21-April 19) sponsiveness will help facilitate a sense ** * Use the early morning to make of mutuality. Know what you want to deal calls and havemeetings.As the day goes with. Tonight: Do your vanishing act. on, you might need some time to tackle a problem. You will benefit from having VIRGO (Aog.23-Sept. 22) private time. You might strive to see the ** * * L ook at the bottom line during a big picture, but it could be difficult at this meeting. Others likely will feel differently point. Tonight: At home. than you do. You might decide to go out TAURUS (April 20-May20) on your own. The question remains: What ** * * Handle a financial matter imis best for you? You will discover that othmediately, and you will be more relaxed. ers will join you along the way. Tonight: Act quickly and ask questions. Seek out Whatever makes you smile. the information you want. A wide range LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) of opinions could be difficult to handle ** * * You'll feel relaxed as long as you at times, yet they will prove beneficial to your long-term goals. Tonight: Dinner for look at the big picture. A problem is likely tooccurwhen you become too im mersed two. in an issue. Frustration and anger easily GEMINI (May 21-June 20) could come to surface. Do not sit on these ** * You'll breeze through the morning feelings; instead, express them in a way
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * * Y ou finally will achieve the level of understanding and relaxation you've been seeking. Your ability to see past the obvious defines a situation. Your detachment allows others to come
to you in order to gain adeeper perspective. Remain open. Tonight: Follow your imagination.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * Your energy could greenlight a conversation that someone has been trying to have with you. Stop resisting, and be open to the process. The other party might be very sensitive, yet he or she will understand where you are coming from. Tonight: Dinner at a favorite place.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * Others seem to rule the roost today. Consider your options, and decide not to fight what the majority wants. Try to express your feelings in a way they can be heard. You might have a lot of questions to ask at this present moment. Tonight: Sort through invitations.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You could be taken aback by recent events. You might decide that you have had enough and head in a different direction. A friend is likely to push you hard to do what he or she wants to do. Honor who you are. Tonight: Run some errands on the way home.
PISCES (Feh.19-March20) ** * * * Your imagination emerges once more to help you find your way. Your caring toward a loved one won't go unnoticed. Be careful with those in charge, as they might have some kind of grievance with you. Tonight: Enjoy the one you are with. © King Features Syndicate
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 50T01 (PG-13) l2:30, 3:30,6:30,9:30 • AS ABOVE/SOBELOW (R)1:25,4:35,7:35,10:05 • BOYHOOD (R) 2:05, 5:40, 9:15 • DOLPHIN TALE 2 (PG) Noon, 3,6,9 • THE DROP (R) 11:45 a.m., 2:30, 6:20, 9:05 • THE GIVER (PG-13) 1:30, 4:45, 7:45, 10:15 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY (PG-13)12:40,3:25,6:35, 9:20 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY3-0 (PG-13)12:55,3:50 • THE HUNDRED-FOOTJOURNEY (PG)11:55 a.m.,3:25, 6:55,9:50 • THE IDENTICAL (PG) 11:30 a.m. • IF I STAY (PG-13) 12:15, 2:55, 6:40, 9:25 • LET'88ECOPS(R)I:I5,4:25,7:25, IO:10 • NO GOOD DEED(PG-13) 1,3:55, 7, 10 • THE NOVEMBER MAN(R) 12:50, 4:15, 7:15, 9:55 • NT LIV E:A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE (noM PAA rating) 7 • TEENAGE MUTANTNINJATURTLES (PG-13)11:40a.m., 3:20, 6:10, 9:45 • TEENAGE MUTANTNINJATljRTLES IMAX3-0 (PG-13) 12:10, 2:45, 6:45 • TRANSFORMERS: AGEOFEXTINCTION 3-0 (PG-13) 9:20 • WHEN THEGAME STANDS TALL (PG)12:25,3:10,6:05, 9:10 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. r
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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on (CW), "Arrow" —Invoking the title of a cult-classic movie, "Streets of Fire" revolves around the ultimate faceoff between the forces led by Oliver and Slade (Stephen Amell, Manu Bennett) as an all-out assault on the city begins. Felicity (Emily Bett Rickards) is stunned by
a messageshereceives from S.T.A.R. Labs. Thea (Willa Holland) and her father (guest star John Barrowman, "Torchwood")
have anencounter. 9 p.m.on2,9,"Marvel'sAgents of S.H.I.E.L.D." —It certainly seems like the "Beginning of the End" for the agents in this first-season finale ... butsince they have asoon-to-start second season, don't bet on it. Coulson
(Clark Gregg)andcompany launch an all-out offense against John Garrett (guest star Bill Paxton) and HYDRA, but insidious information emerges about the agents themselves. Whether they can continue to work together becomes a big, very valid question. 9 p.m.on5,8,"Am erica'sGot Talent" —The remaining talents in this season's contest had better bring their "A" games here, since the "Finale Performance" is the ultimate one for them. What happens here largely will determine who is named the winner of the competition the next night. Mel B, Heidi Klum, Howie Mandel and Howard Stern are the judgesat New York's Radio City Music Hall — and, of course, the viewing audience also hasasay inthe outcome. Nick Cannon is the host. 9:30 p.m. on10, "The Mindy Project" —With their romance back on track, Mindy and Danny (Mindy Kaling, Chris Messina) try to readjust to each other in the workplace as the sitcom's third season begins with "We're a Couple Now, Haters!" Jeremy (Ed Weeks) partners with Peter's (Adam Pally) girlfriend (guest star Tracey Wigfield) to stage
a charity event. Morgan's (Ike
Barinholtz) cousin (guest star Rob McElhenney, "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia") comes to the medical office. 10 p.m. on FX, "Sons ofAnarchy" —SAMCROsolicits help from another charter to get a messy job done in the new episode "Toil and Till." And if you've been watching "Sons of Anarchy" very long, you know that the phrase "messy job" should
be accompanied by a huge, conspiratorial wink. Charlie Hunnam and Kim Coates star. O Zap2it
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
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264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves Antique sideboard/ 267- Fuel and Wood buffet:Walnut, 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers The Bulletin detail. Early 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment beautiful Serving Central Oregon sincetgtg 1900's. Exterior has 270- Lost and Found top drawer & 3 doors 215 with original key. InGARAGESALES Coins & Stamps side has 2 shelves 275 - Auction Sales and a drawer. Mea280 - Estate Sales Private collector buying sures 71x21x36 Ex281 - Fundraiser Sales cellent cond. Pick-up postagestamp albums & 282- Sales NorlhwestBend collections, world-wide only.$800 OBO. 415-279-9893 (Bend) and U.S. 573-286-4343 284- Sales Southwest Bend (local, cell phone). 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 241 Appliances 290- Sales RedmondArea Bicycles 8 Black, new to ex292 - Sales Other Areas Accessories cellent c o ndition! FARM MARKET Maytag Jet Clean 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery suspension Solo dishwasher, $250. Full Cruz Mtn racing 316- Irrigation Equipment Whirlpool gas con- Santa bike, good cond, must 325- Hay, Grain and Feed v ection ran g e , sell, $2000. 541-480-2652 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies $500; W h i rlpool 341 - Horses andEquipment microwave hood. $125. 345-Livestockand Equipment 541-420-8636 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers Couch, black leather w/ 358- Farmer's Column 2 recliners, like new. 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing $475. 541-408-0846 RANS Stratus XP 383- Produce andFood Recumbent Dining chairs (6), light 2011 LWB; exc. cond. 27 208
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Big pet adoption event Queensland Heelers this w e e kend at Standard & Mini, $150 Furniture for Sale Petsmart, Bend! Near & up. 541-280-1537 from Log Home: Target. Kittens, cats, www.rlghtwayranch.wor 541-504-5224 Oak roll-top desk. dogs, puppies! Sevdpress.com Coffee table,end eral animal agencies tables, 2 lamps. to be there. Fri-SatCall a Pro All beautiful and Need to get an 202 Sun 11-4. 389 8420, reasonably priced. Whether you need a ad in ASAP? www.craftcats.org. Want to Buy or Rent fencefixed,hedges You can place it 541-549-0805 or Boston Terrior 5-yr-old CASHfor wood trimmed or a house 541-588-2301 online at: male, all shots. Free dressers & dead wash- to good home. He is built, you'll find www.bendbulletin.com ers. 541-420-5640 not good with small professional help in G ENERATE SOM E Wanted: $Cash paid for dogs. 541-447-0210. EXCITEMENT in your 541-3B5-5809 vintage costume jew- Boxer/French Mastiff pups The Bulletin's "Call a neighborhood! Plan a elry. Top dollar paid for ready for new homes Service Professional" garage sale and don't Gold/Silver.l buy by the now! Docked tails, dewforget to advertise in Directory Estate, Honest Artist claws removed, 1st shots. classified! Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Females, $450; males 541-385-5B09 541-385-5809. $500. Call 541-419-0149 Rottweiler puppies par- Hide-a-bed by Basset, 205 Items for Free Cat - Loving cat free to ents on site. call for while, mattress good Santana good home. She comes details. 541-923-2437. shape. good shape, "Sovereign Craftsman riding lawn with all supplies and 1 $75. 541-382-6773 199e" Tandem mower, 22 hp V-twin year's worth of f ood.Scotty puppies, reserve now! Mom & dad on site, eng., not running. 541-408-1397 aluminum road Mike, 541-633-7137 Chihuahua, tiny teacup, 1st shots. 541-771-0717 bike, size Medium, low usage, disc blond male, $ 250. Shih Tzu puppies, AKC, 208 brakes, good condi(no p apers) s hots, 541-977-0035 Pets & Supplies wormed, dew claws retion. New, was Donate deposit bottles/ moved, 7-1/2 w eeks, $5000; selling now • Loveseat cans to local all vol., $400. Call 541-390-9868 for $1500. The Bulletin recom(chocolate), non-profit rescue, for Call 541-923-2468 mends extra caution 73' x 40", $275. Siberian Huskys, 7 yr old cat spay/neuter. when purc h as- feral Cans for Cats trailer male 8 2 yr old female ing products or serVery comfy, 245 at Jake's Diner, Hwy seeking new home toand like new, vices from out of the gether with lots of room 20 E; P etco (near Golf Equipment area. Sending cash, used only 6 months. to run & play. No money W al-Mart) i n R e d 541447-2314 checks, or credit ineeded, but w e w i l l mond; or donate M-F n formation may be check out home & I.D. at Smith Sign, 1515 541-610-5852 or subjected to fraud. NE 2nd; or CRAFT, Call 541-610-6763 For more informaCallawav X-12 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 78th S t , Tu m alo. graphite, 3-(ob, $100. tion about an adverLeave msg. for pick Yorkie pups AKC, 1 girl & Door-to-doorselling with Big Berthagraphite tiser, you may call up of l a rge amts,2 boys, beautiful! Shots, fairway metals, 3-1 3, the O r egon State 541-389-8420. potty training, health guar. fast results! It's the easiest $40 each. Attorney General's www.craftcats.org $1100. 541-777-7743 way i n the world to sell. Lady Callaway Office C o n sumer graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 Protection hotline at 210 The Bulletin Classified metals, $100. 1-877-877-9392. Furniture & Appliances 541-385-5809 Lady TaylorMade Miscelas graphite, The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincetgttt Oak Table, 6 chairs, 7-SW, driver-7 wood, $100. w/pad & extensions. (2) Sun Mountain Adopt a rescue cat or FRENCHTON puppy, $300. 541-312-2448. Speed Carts, kitten! Altered, vacci- 1 male left! Puppy pkg $75 ea. included, $1150. 42" TV cabinet with nated, ID chip, tested, Bulletin 541-382-6664 541-279-3588 more! CRAFT, 65480 slate t ri m $ 2 5 0; The extra ' 78th St, Bend, Call for Ethan Allen buffet, i recommends German Shepherds caution when purdays/hours. 389-8420 www.sherman-ranch.us storage, top folds CHECK YOURAD products or • www.craftcats.org. out f o r se r ving, chasing Quality Germans. services from out of I $250; Heavy metal 541-281-6829 the area. Sending f queen bed frame, f' cash, checks, o r ' German Shorthair AKC $ 30; Pair 3 8nx84" i credit i n f ormation pups, parents on site, beige bla c k-out may be subjected to $550. 541-306-9957 drapes, $15; Fold- i FRAUD. For more on the flrst day It runs table and 4 foldHealer pups with tails, ing information about an c to make sure it is corng chairs, in t he AKC CAVALIER King 8 weeks, 2 m ales, ibox, advertiser, you may i rect. eSpellcheckn and $40. SE Bend. t call t h e Charles Spaniel Pup- choc. & blue $225/ea. Ore g ont human errors do oc541-508-8784 pies, Champion lines, 541-390-8875 ' State Atto r ney ' cur. If this happens to health guarantee, i General's O f f i ce your ad, please conGORGEDUS,AII colors. Lab pups, AKC, black Consumer Protec- • tact us ASAP so that male, h i p s/elbows/ A1 Washers&Dryers $1800. 541-848-7605 tion h o t line a t I corrections and any eyes,$800. 541-480-4835 $150 ea. Full waradjustments can be Bichon Frise AKC reg'd ranty. Free Del. Also i 1-877-877-9392. made to your ad. puppies, 1 female & 1 POODLE puppies,toy, wanted, used W/D's I TheBulletin I 541-385-5809 male left! 541-953-0755 lovinq companions. 541-280-7355 Serving Cenrrai Oregon sincetgtg or 541-912-1905. 541-475-3889 The Bulletin Classified
T HE B U LLETIN r e Leather rifle scabbard for Thompson Contender quires computer adAK-47 7.62x39, scoped rifle, glove leather istol w/2 barrels: 44 vertisers with multiple $600. Slide Fire for lined, $75. 541-548-3408 em Mag/Genf w/Bush- ad schedules or those AK-47, $150. Ruger nell scope & carry case; selling multiple sys10/22 with 4x scope, and 22 LR match with tems/ software, to dis$175. Remington Bushnell scope 8 carry close the name of the 11-87 Police 12ga business or the term case, $850. with rifle sights, Ruger Model 10/22 LR, "dealer" in their ads. $800. Baikal Bounty stainless steel, w/Bush- Private party advertisHunter 12 ga, 20" nell scope & case, $200. ers are defined as double barrels with Savage Mod. 116 .300 those who sell one • New, never fired screw-in chokes, Win Mag, stainless steel computer. Weatherby Vanw/scope & case, $550. $450. Alf like new! guardS2, synthetic 256 300A 12Ga 541-550-7189 stock, cal 30-06. $550. Illlossberg with 2 barrels: one 22" Photography • New, never fired Bend local pays CASH!! Howa,wood stock, cal modified; & one 181/2", $250. for all firearms & .300 Win Mag.$725 Background check ammo. 541-526-0617 Must pass backrequired. Please call ground check. Please 541.389.3694, leave msg. Benelli Black Eagle 12 call 541.389.3694, ga shotgun. $400. leave message. Wanted: Collector seeks 541-639-8200 high quality fishing items Kodak Instamatic 20 Just bought a new boat? & upscale bamboo fly CASH!! orig box, manual, rods. Call 541-678-5753, Sell your old one in the For Guns, Ammo & flash cubes & exor 503-351-2746 Reloading Supplies. classifieds! Ask about our tender. 1970s.$25. Super Seller rates! 541-408-6900. Weatherby Mark V Ac541-419-6408 541-385-5809 cumark, customized Custom Mauser 30-06 257 rifle w/base & scope rings, Ruger Super B lack- 30-378, plus custom hawk .44 cal mag, ammo and Talley Musical Instruments $300. 541-548-3408 pristine co n d ition. s cope base. W I N Model 70-300, WIN Back to School SALE! $525. 541-385-6163. IOW'~MI TMIII magnum and ammo. 25% - 35% OFF WIN Model 100-284, aff music equipment. W IN a n d Am m o. Bend Pawn & Trading Co. DO YOU HAVE 541-420-8689, leave 61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend Sage Rodw/Tioga SOMETHING TO 541-317-5099 reel, $225. Custom msg will call back. SELL TFO rodwith RedFOR $500 OR 247 260 ington reel, $200. LESS? Simms waders, Sporting Goods Misc. Items Non-commercial men's Lg, worn once, - Misc. advertisers may $200; ladies small, 275 Gallon Like New place an ad new in box, $175. Plastic Totes, Overwith our Simms boots,men's stock Sale: $109. for "QUICK CASH 13, used once, $100; one tote, 2 to 5 totes SPECIAL" ladies 9, new in box, a t $99.95/ea., 6 o r 1 week3lines 12 $100.Simms wadmore at $89.95 ea. or' ing stick,new, $50. GloryBee Foods ~e e eka 2 N Fishpond chest Eugene, OR. Ad must Like new Necky Espack,$50. 541-689-0913 or kia 16' kayak with include price of 541-382-6664 1-800-456-7923 an le iem oi gnno rudder. B ulkheads ~ water tight. Seat like or less, or multiple Buylng Dfamonds Steelhead/salmon rod 8 items whose total Hatches, deck /Gold for Cash reel, quality, $75. Call new. lines and grab loops Saxon's Fine Jewelers does not exceed for into, 541-548-3408 $500. all in perfect condi541-389-6655 Tempur-Pedic x-long twin tion. Orig i nally adj matt with air cham- $1450, asking $700 BUYING Call Classifieds at Lionel/American Flyer 541-385-5809 ber, remotes; T.P. pillow; obo. P lease c a l l www.bendbulletln.com linens, in perfect cond, 541-312-2435. trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. $2500. 541-548-6642
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E4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEP 16, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Ttaesd ay,September16,2014
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz
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Cy the Cynic says that if at first you don't succeed, you can p ay somebody to do it for you. But you can'tpay anyone to play the dummy on your behalf when you're declarer. In today's deal, South got to six hearts on a simple, effective auction. West led a trump, and South counted 11 tricks: six trumps, three clubs and two spades. He drew trumps and tried the three high clubs, hoping for a 3-3 break. He didn't succeed — West threw adiamond — and when South tried again by leading a diamond to his king, West produced the ace ... and the queen. Down one. Did South give himself the best chance?
you try one spade and he bids 1NT. What do you say? ANSWER: Y ou w o u ld l i k e t o show your heart tolerance; partner could have 4 2, Q 8 6 4 2, K Q 7 6, J 3. But you can't be sure of that, and if you bid again, you would suggest extra strength and might induce him to get too high. Pass. With J 6 5 3, A K 8, 9 4, A Q 6 2, you could make a case for raising his one heart to two. North dealer Both sides vulnerable
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
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I had no idea I was so great!
adjective
Mariana Islands 5 6 S hips 45 Final part 57 Subtle "Over 4 7 Compulsive thief, here ! " for short 58 Kibbles 'n Bits
4 U-Haul vans, e.g. 49 Texter's alternative 5 Sign of hunger "Zounds!" 60 Robert of "The 6 Baseball family 51 Furry "Star Wars" S o p ranos" name creatures 61 Fabric mishap 7 Afghanistan's 52 Thick-skinned 62 Wh i rling Bora beast current 8 Divvy up
defense letters 19 With 54-Down, ©20140y King Features Syndicate, Inc. World nghts reserv 60
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By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke ©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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09/16/14
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
)
s
I
fe
s
745
860
865
870
Homes for Sale
Motorcycles & Accessories
ATVs
Boats & Accessories
Moto r homes
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,
NOTICE
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any pref860 erence, limitation or discrimination based Motorcycles & Accessories on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, amilial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly 2002 Harley Fat Boy 14,000 original miles. accept any advertis- Excellent cond. Vance ing for real estate & Hines exhaust, 5 which is in violation of spoke HD rims, wind this law. All persons vest, 12" rise handle are hereby informed bars, detachable lugthat all dwellings adgage rack w/back vertised are available rest, hwy pegs & many on an equal opportu- chrome accents. Must nity basis. The Bullesee to appreciate! tin Classified $10,500. In CRR area call 530-957-1865
880
Hariey Davidson 883 Sportster 1998, 20,200 miles, exc. cond.,
$3,800.
541-548-2872.
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
H onda Big R e d UTV. Like new with just over 40 hours use. Includes winch, 5-foot snow blade, hard roof, half windshield. L i sts over $14,000; will sell for b est o f fe r o ver $11,000. Call
2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500 503-646-1804
541-575-4267
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' For all other types of bed with ramps. $700 watercraft, please go Fleetwood D i scovery obo. 541-549-4834 or to Class 875. 541-588-0068 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 541-385-5809 options - 3 slide outs, 746 Yamaha '06 Rhino 660 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, exc. cond, winch, hard Northwest Bend Homes Look at: etc., 32,000 miles. roof w/lights and raHD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low dio, custom wheels. Wintered in h e ated Bendhomes.com 3200 mi. Stage 1& shop. $82,000 O.B.O. TheBulletin Enjoy NW Shevlin for Complete Listings of 2Rider, Vance & Hines pipes, $6950 541-447-3702. 541-447-8664 To Subscdibe call P ark, 19186 M t . Area Real Estate for Sale $12,5PP. 541-306-0166 870 I Shasta Dr. B e nd 541-385-5800 or go to Boats & Accessories www.bendbulletin.com N ew 4 bdr m s . R fa m aster o n m a i n HDFat Bo 1996 level, 2. 5 b a ths, 875 2560 sq. ft., bonus Watercraft room, 3 car garage, l ow H O A fee s 2005 HD Heritage SoftGulfstream 24' BT 648 ds published in "WaCruiser, 2004,2nd 541-419-0661 Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of a. P Houses for tercraft" include: Kay- owner, 25K miles. IndusDE Rink Const. extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt aks, rafts and motorRent General 16' West Coast trial V-10, 4-spd transmiscond., $9750 firm Realtors Welcome ~a ~ h Completely Ized personal Aluminum, $3950, 541-318-8668 sion with overdrive. 35 hrs Rebuilt/Customized watercrafts. For on gen.; stove & oven PUBLISHER'S 65 hp Mercury, "boats" please see have 2012/2013 Award NOTICE Shoreline Trailer, never been used. TURN THE PAGE Winner Class 870. New micro, new LED TV, All real estate adver2014 Stickers, Fish Showroom Condition For More Ads 541-385-5809 BlueRay/DVD, all new tising in this newspaFinder. Many Extras 541-598-5111 tires, back-up camera, per is subject to the The Bulletin Low Miles. new awnings. Excellent! F air H o using A c t Serv>ng Central Oregon since 7903 713 Unable to travel anymore $15,000 which makes it illegal 763 due to health. "any 541-548-4807 to a d vertise Real Estate Wantedi FXSTD Harley 880 $35,000.541-548-3595 Recreational Homes preference, limitation Davidson 2001, twin Illlotorhomes or disc r iminationSeeking small piece of & Property cam 88, fuel injected, based on race, color, land w/hookups avail. Vance & Hines short 1997 Bounder 34' religion, sex, handi- for my new mfd 1200 Cabin on Paulina Lake- shot exhaust, Stage I w/slide. $17,900. 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 cap, familial status, s q.ft. h o me . C a l l Rare opportunity! Fully with Vance & Hines Excellent condition, Wakeboard Boat marital status or na- 831-840-0301 (Bend) furnished, ready for winfuel management must see! Ford 460 I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tional origin, or an in- • WE BUY HOMES• ter & summer recreation. system, custom parts, w/Banks, new tires, tons of extras, low hrs. tention to make any Lake front 3 bdrm, upextra seat. HOLIDAY RAMBLER Any conditionHD FXSBI 2006 new dual A/C, rear camFull wakeboard tower, such pre f erence, Close in 7 days. raded water sys, full $10,500OBO. VACATIONER 2003 cond., low miles, light bars, Polk audio era, triple axle, Onan limitation or discrimi- Scott L. Williams Real itchen, all electric, land Call Today 8.1L Vs Gas, 340 hp, Stage I download, ex- speakers throughout, gen, 63k miles. nation." Familial staline, wood stove. At541-516-8684 workhorse, Allison 1000 Estate - 800-545-6431 tras, bags. $7900 obo. completely wired for 541-306-9897 tus includes children tached wood/tool shed. 5 speed trans., 39K, 541-447-0887 amps/subwoofers, un$300,000. 541-383-1885 NEyI/ TIRES, 2 slides, under the age of 18 derwater lights, fish REDUCED! living with parents or • Onan 5.5w gen., ABS O p en Houses • finder, 2 batteries cus771 brakes, steel cage cocklegal cus t odians, tom black paint job. pit, washer/dryer, firepregnant women, and Lots OPEN HOUSE $1 2,500 541-815-2523 HD Softtail Deuce 2002, lace, mw/conv. oven, people securing cusSat. 9/20 noon-4 broken back forces ree standing dinette, tody of children under 63109 Desert Sage St. FSBO - 16178 Hawks sale, only 200 mi. on Need help fixing stuff? was $121,060 new; now, 18. This newspaper 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2305 Lair Rd., La Pine, OR. Harley D a vidson new motor from Har- Call A Service Professional $35,900. 541-536-1008 will not knowingly ac1 acre lot w/ grandfa- 2006, FXDLI Dyna sq. ft. beautiful Pahl2007 Winnebago ley, new trans case find the help you need. cept any advertising t hered septic a p - Low Rider, Mustang Outlook Class "C" isch homes. with ITASCA 1989 34', 91I< and p arts, s p o ke for real estate which is 31', solar panel, Cat. many custom upproval. Close to Bend, seat miles. Asking $9,900 w/b a ckrest, wheels, new brakes, www.bendbulletin.com in violation of the law. heater, excellent grades, master bdrm Sunriver Resort, Mt. new battery, wind541-610-7259 n early all o f bi k e O ur r e aders a r e on main floor, waterBachelor skiing. shield, forward concondition, more exbrand new. Has proof hereby informed that fall, Arctic spa, raised $35,000. Call Sandra trois, lots of chrome, tras. Asking $58K. of all work done. Reall dwellings adver541-895-3515. flower beds. Ph. 541-447-9268 Screamin' Eagle exmovable windshield, tised in this newspaCan be viewed at $369,000. haust, 11K mi. SeT-bags, black and all per are available on 773 Steve or Jami Western Recreation n ior owned, w e ll chromed out with a an equal opportunity (top ofhill) 541-382-1660 Acreages maintained! $7950 willy skeleton theme 18.5' Sea Ray 2000 basis. To complain of in Pnnewlle. LaPine (928)581-9190 on all caps and covProvidence 2005 d iscrimination ca l l Mercruiser, low acres. 65694 Old ers. Lots o f w o r k, 4.3L HUD t o l l-free at Looking for your next 5.17 Fully loaded, 35,000 hrs, 190 hp BowBend/Redmond Hwy. emp/oyee? heart and love went rider w/depth finder, 1-800-877-0246. The miles, 350 Cat, Very Mtn view, power, wainto all aspects. All toll f ree t e lephone Place a Bulletin help clean, non-smoker, radio/ CD player, rod ter, septic approved. done at professional holders, full canvas, 3 slides, side-by-side number for the hear- wanted ad today and $174,000 O.B.O. Call reach over 60,000 shops, call for info. ing im p aired is refrigerator with ice EZ Loader trailer, Brad 5 41-419-1725, readers each week. Must sell quickly due exclnt cond, $9500. 1-800-927-9275. maker, Washer/Dryer, or Deb 541-480-3956. Your classified ad to m e d ical bi l l s, Flat screen TV's, In 707-484-3518 debra©bendbroad Allegro 32' 2007, hke will also appear on $8250. Call Jack at motion satellite. BULLETIN CLA88IFIEDS (Bend) band.com Harley Davidson new, only 12,600 miles. bendbulletin.com 541-279-9538. Search the area's most $95,000 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 2011 Classic Limwhich currently recomprehensive listing of 541-480-2019 775 transmission, dual exited, Loaded! 9500 ceives over classified advertising... haust. Loaded! Auto-levmiles, custom paint 1.5 million page Manufactured/ real estate to automotive, Take care of eling system, 5kw gen, "Broken Glass" by merchandise to sporting views every month Illlobile Homes power mirrors w/defrost, Nicholas Del Drago, at no extra cost. goods. Bulletin Classifieds your investments 2 slide-outs with awnew condition, appear every day in the Bulletin Classifieds New Dream Special heated handgrips, nings, rear c a mera, with the help from print or on line. Get Results! 3 bdrm, 2 bath 19' Pioneer ski boat, trailer hitch, driyer door auto cruise control. The Bulletin's Call 541-385-5809 Call 385-5809 or HONDA SCOOTER $50,900 finished w/power window, cruise, 1983, vm tandem $32k in bike, www.bendbullstin.com place your ad on-line 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. on your site. exhaust brake, central "Call A Service trailer, V8. Fun & only $18,000or best at cond., $975 obo. (541) J andlvl Homes vac, satellite sys. Asking Professional" Directory fast! $5800 obo. The Bulletin offer. 541-318-6049 bendbugetin.com 593-9710 or 350-8711 541-548-5511 $67,500. 503-781-8812 541-815-0936.
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
632
Apt./Multiplex General CHECK yOURAD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The BulletinClassified Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 541-318-0450 Small studio downtown Old Mill area. No pets, no smoking $495 mo., $475 dep., All util. included. 541-330-9769 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com 634
pt./Multiplex NE Bend
Call for Specla/s! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. NOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
OE'LL Yotlk OTUFF! FOR AO LITTLE AO 0 0 201
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Guitar Gibson Limited
SG Melody Maker
EleCtriC Guitar, ITI Maple body, the USA. With grain teXtured satin
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wraparound tai'jpie $395 54i-000-00
•a
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Dark Italian Sott leather Chair, OttOman afTd
couch set.
Excellent no tears, sstai ains. Very comfortable. WaS $1600 neW, offering for only COnditiOn:
700 00-000
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or up to sweeks I
Item Priced at:
Y our Total Ad Cost onl :
• Under $500 • $500 to $999
$29 $39
• $1000 to $2499
$49
• $2500 and over
$59
Includes up to 40 w o r d s of t e xt , 2 " in length, w it h bo r der, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000 po t e n t i al custome r s. • Weekly publ ication in Centr al Ore g on M a r k e t p l ace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 hou seholds. • I
• Weekly publ ication in The Cen tr al Ore g on N i c kel Ads wi th an audi ence of ov er 1 5,000 in Centr al and E astern Oreg o n • Continuous Listing online, with p h o t o, on be n d b u lletin.com
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$22,995.
541-383-3503
54'I -385-5809 Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories.
E6 TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 16 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
• •
00 •
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiies 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
880
881
882
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED
We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
I' W~
935
975
975
975
Antique & Classic Autos
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Ford Focus2010
Ford Fusion2012
•
00 908
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
h
Chevelle MaHbu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.
(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR) 1/3interestin
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ROBBERSON oo
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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 09/30/14
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maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/1 4
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
$150,000
541-268-3333
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-
Dual power heated leather seats for only $19,977 Vin¹246502 ROBBERSON
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! CHEVELLE MALIBU
1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $15,000. 541-766-0427
Chev Trailblazer LS 2004,AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags,$5N5. 541-610-6150
r
Chev E uinox
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bo- Jeepster Commando 1966 nanza A36, new 10-550/ 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, comprop, located KBDN. pletely restored. $12,000 Redmond: $65,000. 541-419-9510 obo. 608-430-5133 or 541-546-5254 www.N4972M.com 541-382-6300 2011 Loaded and Super Clean 4x4. Mercedes 380SL 1962 $23,977 Roadster, black on black, Tioga 24' Class C Vin¹463650 soft & hard top, excellent Motorhome condition, always gaBought new in 2000, ROBBERSON 4 n raged. 155K m i les, currently under 20K Say ngoodbuy miles, excellent $11,500.541-549-6407 to that unused shape, new tires, 541-312-3986 1/5th interest in 1973 933 professionally winterDlr ¹0205. Pricing item by placing it in Cessna 150 LLC ized every year, cutPickups good thru 9/30/2014 150hp conversion, low off switch to battery, The Bulletin Classifieds time on air frame and plus new RV batterengine, hangared in Keystone Raptor, 2007 ies. Oven, hot water C J5 1 9 7 6 V-S , 37 toy hauler,2 slides, Bend.Excellent per541-385-5809 heater & air condiLockers, new soft generator, A/C, 2 TVs, formance 8 affordtioning seldom used; top, power steering, satellite system w/auto able flying! $6,000. just add water and it's oversized h e ater, seek, in/out sound sys541-410-6007 ready to go! L' many extras. $6,000 tem,sleeps 6,m any ex$22,000 obo. Serious obo. 541-519-1627 tras. $29,999. In Madras, 2005 Diesel 4x4 inquiries, please. call 541-771-9607 or Chev Crewcab duStored in Terrebonne. 541-475-6265 541-548-5174 ally, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake conDod e Nitro 2011 KeystoneLaredo 31' troller, cloth split . ~i RV 20 06 w i th 1 2 ' front bench seat, slide-out. Sleeps 6, only 66k miles. 1974 Bellanca queen walk-around Very good condition, bed w/storage under1730A Original owner, neath. Tub & shower. $34,000 2 swivel rockers. TV. Kit Companion '94 26', 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 4x4 Looks as good slide, new stove/fridge, 180 mph, excellent or best offer. Ready to makememories! Air cond. Gas stove & 1 comes as Its name! with gen. Re541%08-7826 Top-selling Winnebago refrigerator/freezer. condition, always Vin ¹ 520014 duced to $4000. 31 J, original owners, non- Microwave. Awning. hangared, 1 owner 541-369-5786 7.977 sho w er. 2007 Silverado smokers, garaged, only Outside for 35 years. $60K. Chevy Z-71, loaded, 1 owner, ROBBE R SON ~ 16,600 miles, auto-level- Slide through storing jacks, (2) slides, up- a ge, E as y Li f t . Laredo 30' 2009 $19,500. 541-379-3530 In Madras, graded queen bed, bunk $29,000 new; call 541-475-6302 beds, micro, (3) TVs, Asking $18,600 541-312-3986 541-4947-4805 sleeps 10! Lots of stor& oM4e r / Dlr ¹0205. Pricing age, maintained, very good thru 9/30/14 clean!Only $67,995!Ex3300 sq.ft. Hangar Chevy Silverado 2004 tended warranty and/or fiRV Prineville Airport LS, 2WD, V6, 57k miles, nancing avail to qualified CONSIGNMENTS 60'wide by 55' overall length is 35' includes bedliner, hard buyers!541-388-7179 WANTED deep with 16' has 2 slides, Arctic tonneau cover. Asking We Do The Work ... bi-fold door. $10,750. 541-568-0131 package, A/C, table You Keep The Cash! & chairs, satellite, Upgrades include, On-site credit Arctic pkg., power T-6 lighting, GMC Suburban 1997, Find It in approval team, awning, in excellent skylights, windows, The Bulletin Classifieds! fully loaded, daily driver, web site presence. Icondition! More pix 14' side RV door, extra clean, $2650. 1997 We Take Trade-Ins! 541-385-5809 at bendbulletin.com Chevy Astro, runs good, infra-red heating, $1300. 541-410-4596 $25,500 and bathroom, Winnebago C 22' BIG COUNTRY RV Ford F250 1984 4x4 Kinq 541-419-3301 Bend: 541-330-2495 $155 000 Call Bill Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift 2002 « $30,500 Redmond: 541-480-7930 Big engine, heavy kit, 90% tires, good wood 541-548-5254 duty, many extras, truck! $2000 or best of21,000 miles, like HANGAR FOR SALE. fer. 541-279-6023 new. Please call for 30x40 end unit T Looking for your details hanger in Prineville. next employee? Hyundai Tucson, Dry walled, insulated, 541-280-3251 Place a Bulletin help 2011 l oaded, i m and painted. $23,500. wanted ad today and MONTANA 3585 2008, maculate, 39k mi., Tom, 541.766.5546 exc. cond., 3 slides, reach over 60,000 Winnebago Sightseer readers each week. prem. pkg, bronze, king bed, Irg LR, 27' 2002. workhorse Hangar for saleat panoramic sunroof, Arctic insulation, all Ford F250 4x4 1996, Your classified ad gas motor, Class A, Redmond Airport - not x-cab, long wheel base, heated seats, Navioptions - reduced by will also appear on 6' slide living rm/dia T Hangar $36,000. gation, B l uetooth, $3500 to $31,500. brush guard, tool box, bendbulletin.com nette, new tires. spare 541-420-0626 $3000. 541-771-1667 or AWD. great mileage, 541-420-3250 which currently retire carrier, HD trailer h andles great i n 541-633-3607 ceives over 1.5 milhitch, water heater, snow. War r anty, lion page views evj, &e~ micro/oven, generaOne owner, nonery month at no Honda Ridgeline tor, furn/AC, outside [ smokers, clear title. extra cost. Bulletin RTL Crew Cab shower, carbon diox$19,500 ide & smoke detector, Classifieds Get Re(under Blue Book) sults! Call 365-5609 fiberglas ext., elect. 0Call (605)610-6415 or place your ad Save money. Learn step, cruise control, OPEN ROAD 36' in Terrebonne on-line at CB radio, 60k miles, to fly or build hours 2005 - $19,995 awning, TV antenna w bendbulletin.com with your own air'as King bed, hide-a-bed booster, flat screen c raft. 1966 A e r o sofa, 3 slides, glass JEEP WRANGLER 23" TV. A M/FM/CD 2007 Extra nice 4x4, Commander, 4 seat, shower, 10 gal. wa882 stereo. $2 3 ,995. great mpg. ¹541236 ter heater, 10 cu.ft. 150 HP, low time, Fifth Wheels 541-546-2554 full panel. $23,000 fridge, central vac, $19,977 satellite dish, 27" TV obo. Contact Paul at ROBBERSON FIND IT! /stereo system, front 541-447-5'I 64. n'V matgaa front power leveling BUY IT! ~ ~ jacks and s cissor SELL ITlg 541-312-3986 2009 hard top stabilizer jacks, 16' What are you The Bulletin Classifieds 16,000 miles. autoDlr ¹0205 pricing awning. Like new! looking for? matic, AC, tilt & 541-419-0566 good thru 08/31/14 881 5th Wheel Transcruise, power winYou'll find it in port, 1990 dows, power steerTravel Trailers Toyota 1966, 46k on Low miles, EFI 460, ing, power locks, alRV The Bulletin Classifieds replaced engine, 5 4-spd auto, 10-ply loy wheels and CONSIGNMENTS spd, 4 cyl, rear wheel tires, low miles, alrunning boards, WANTED drive, r un s g r eat, most new condition, 541-385-5809 garaged. We Do the Work, good tires, body in Sell for $3500. You Keep the Cash! $22,500. good cond., $1300. OR For Hire On-site credit 916 541-419-5960 541-365-4790. 2007 Jayco Jay Flight approval team, Call for quote Trucks & 29 FBS with slide out & Ask for Theo, web site presence. 935 Heavy Equipment 940 awning - Turn-key ready 541-260-4293 We Take Trade-Ins! Sport Utility Vehicles to use, less than 50 toVans tal days used by current BIG COUNTRY RV CHECK YOURAD owner. Never smoked in, Bend: 541-330-2495 no indoor pets, excellent Redmond: cond., yery clean. Lots of 541-546-5254 bonusit ems; many have never been used. Price Peterbilt 359 p otable now reduced to $18,500 Want to impress the water truck, 1 990, BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K which is lower range of on the first day it runs 3200 gal. tank, 5hp relatives? Remodel n premium pack- Chrysler Town & Kelly Blue Book. Call to make sure it is corp ump, 4 - 3 hoses, miles,heated lumbar Country LXI 1997, your home with the Lisa, 541-420-0794 for camlocks, $25,000. age, rect. nSpellcheckn and supported seats, pan- beautiful inside 8 more info /more photos. 541-620-3724 human errors do oc- help of a professional oramic moo nroof, out, one owner, nonfrom The Bulletin's cur. If this happens to Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- smoker,. loaded with 931 your ad, please con"Call A Service non headlights, tan & options! 197,692 mi. Dutchman Denali tact us ASAP so that Professional" Directory Automotive Parts, rec o rds black leather interior, Service 32' 2011 travel corrections and any re a r available. $4 , 950. trailer. 2 slides EvService & Accessories n ew front & adjustments can be brakes O 76K miles, Call Mike, (541) 615erything goes, all 885 made to your ad. one owner, all records, 6176 after 3:30 p.m. kitchen ware, linens BODY REPAIR Canopies & Campers AUTOTOOLS, 541-385-5809 very clean, $16,900. $50. etc. Hitch, sway The Bulletin Classified 541-388-4360 541-593-9710 bars, water & sewer 1995 Lance Camper, hoses. List price Need to get an ad 11.3 ft., sleeps 6, self WANTED $34,500 - asking contained, very lightly older Dodge Ram in ASAP? $26,800 Loaded. used, exc. cond., TV, Cummins turbo diesel Must see to appreciVCR, micro, oven, pickup, 4WD 5spd, ate. Redmond, OR. fridge, 3 burner stove, Fax it to 541-322-7253 any condition, farm 541-604-5993 q ueen ove r c a b , truck okay. Private BMW X3 35i 2010 Fleetwood Prowler $6000. 541-369-6256 buyer, CASH Dan, Exlnt cond., 65K miles The Bulletin Classifieds 32' - 2001 971-231-4241 Alaska 6 ' Ca b over w/100K mile transferFIND YOUR FUTURE 2 slides, ducted able warranty. Very Camper 1996, many HOME INTHE BULLETIN heat 8 air, great 932 clean; loaded - cold extras, Stable-Lift jack ToyotaSienna condition, snowbird Antique & weather pkg, premium Your future is just apage system. $10 , 500. 2005 ready, Many uppkg & technology pkg. away. Whetheryou're looking 541-549-9461. Classic Autos grade options, fiKeyless access, sunfor a hat or aplace tohangit, nancing available! roof, nayigation, satelThe Bulletin Classified is Have an item to $14,500 obo. (2) 1959 1/2-ton Chevy lite radio, extra snow your best source. pickups: 1 is 4x4 with sell quick? tires. (Car top carrier ower take off winch & not Call Dick, Every daythousandsof included.)$22,500. If it's under arn hubs; other's 2WD, 541-480-1687. buyers andsellers ofgoods 541-91 5-9170 extra parts. Also 1941 Leather, Loaded and '500 you can place it in and services dobusinessin 1-ton Ford cab & chassis. AWD. 76k miles these pages.Theyknow The Bulletin Titles for all. 541-989-8191 Get your ¹044696 $180977 you can't beatThe Bulletin Cadillac Escalade Classifieds for: Classified Section for Advertise your car! ROBBERSON business selection andconvenience Add APicture! hlneotrl ~ l lg g mB - every item isjust a phone '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Reach thousands of readers! call away. Call 541-385-5809 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days The 541.312.3986 Bulletin Classifieds DLR¹0205 pricing The Classified Section is (Private Party ads only) good thru 09/30/1 4 easy to uss. Evsiy item 2005. All the goodis categorizedandevery Lance cabover camper ies. Must see only With an ad in cartegoiy is indexed on the 1991, 16' over cab, 6' $18,998 The Bulletin's sectioffs front page. in p/up bed. under Vin ¹192111 "Call A Service The Bulletin's cover since new, imWhether youarelookingfor Professional" Directory ROBBERSON maculate! $4,100 obo a home orneeda service, Buick Skylark 1972 "Call A Service 541-546-5069 mgma is all about meeting your future is inthe pagesof Dreams do come true! ~ ~ your needs. The Bulletin Classified. SNUGTOP pickup Pampered from day one! Professional" 541-312-3986 canopy for Ford F250 17K original miles. Dlr ¹0205. pricing Call on one of the short bed, white, like new, Photosathemmings.com The Bulletin Directory good thru 9/30/1 4 Serving Cennet Oregonvme tggt professionals today! $400. 541-416-9686 $19,900. 541-323-1898 BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154627 $11,977
Financing available.
0
Heartland P rowler Holiday Rambler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', Alumascape 28' like new, 2 slides-liv2003,1-owner. ing area & l a r ge Self-contained, closet, 15' power aw13' slide, 80W solar ning, power hitch & walkaround s tabilizers, 16 g a l . panel, queen + sofa/bed, water heater, full size loads of storage queen bed , l a r ge throughout. Excellent shower, porcelain sink cond., brand new & toilet. tires licensed 2015. $25,000 or makeoffer. Must see!$13,700. 541-999-2571 541-389-9214
Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Automatic, 6-cylinder, tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyless entry, 69K miles. Excellent condition; tires have 90% tread. $11,995. Call 541-598-5111
Columbia400,
(located O Bend)
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932
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. Acura CL 2002 silver,
one owner, 74k miles, always garaged. "perfect" $6,900 obo. Camaro 2011
~
On a classified ad
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The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
541-369-1966
Convertible. End of Season Special! vin ¹213931 $23,977 ROBBERSON
MorePixatBendbjletin.com
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Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well maintained, very clean. $10,000 obo. 480-266-7395 (Bend)
BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbuffetin.com
The Bulletin Sererng CentralOregonvnte tgtg
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014
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 365-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbullefin.com
Infiniti I30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles.
Chevy Cavalier - B9RIW
$5,900 obo.
541-420-3277
N fini
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2000 Inspected & Ready to Go!! ¹239716 $3,977
ROBBERSON I r n a 0hrr ~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014
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B ulletin recoml
extra caution 8 I mends when p u r chasing • l products or servicesl from out of the area. l S ending c ash ,l q checks, or credit in-
Chevy Malibu 2012, I Lots of options; sunl roof, 6 speed trans with manual option, bluetooth, o nStar, Subaru Outback 2012 l 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, Sirius satelite, auto. trans., AWD, I heated seats, pw, leather heated seats, pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech AWD, power moon engine, 20 MPG city, r oof, a n d mor e ! l 35 MPG hwy, USB port, Ipod r e ady, 25,600 miles. Below KB O $ 2 6,500 $14,900 OBO. 541-344-5325 541-504-6974 annie2657©yahoo.com
formation may be I subject toFRAUD. For more information about an adver-l tiser, you may call the Oregon Statel General's s I Attorney I Office C o nsumer Protection hotline atl 1-677-677-9392.
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Waste (541-317-3163), Price, addressed and 61050 SE 27th Street, mailed or delivered to Bend, Oregon 97702, Deschutes C o u nty for a fee of $50.00, Department of Solid INVITATION TO BID which is not refund- W aste, 61050 S E able. If you wish to 27th Street, B e nd, Knott Landfill Cell 6 Construction Project have them mailed to Oregon 97702 in a env e lope you, enclose an addi- sealed Sealed bids will be tional $5.00 with your plainly marked nKnott received at the Des- request. Should exLandfill Ce l 6 chutes County Depedited handling be Construction Project" desired, Federal Exalong with the name p artment o f So l i d W aste, 6 1050 S E press or e quivalent and address of the 27th Street, B end, service will be utilized bidder. Oregon 97702, until on a collect on delivwi l l be but not after, 2:00 ery basis. Inquiries No b i d p.m. on Wednesday, p ertaining t o thi s considered by October 1, 2014; at p roject shall be d i Deschutes C o u nty which time all bids for r ected t o Ger r y unless t he bid the ab o ve-entitled Friesen of G. Friesen contains a statement solid waste project will A ssociates, Inc. a t by the bidder that the be publicly opened (503) 635-1233. p rovisions of O R S and read aloud. Bid279C.600 — 279C.670 A pre-bid construction are to be complied ders must submit a First Tier S u bcon- meeting will be held at with. Each bid must tractor Dis c losure 1:30 p. m . on contain a statement Statement Form. The September 23, 2014 as to w h ether the at the Department of bidder is a resident Subcontractor Disclosure Statement may Solid Waste Office bidder, as defined in be submitted in the which is located at ORS 279A.120. sealed bid prior to 61050 SE 27th Street, 2 00 .m. on Bend, Oregon. A tour Bidders s h al l be Wednesda O c tober of the project site will prequalified with the 1 2014 or in a sepa- be p a r t of this State of Oregon in rate sealed envelope meeting. Attendance accordance with ORS marked "FIRST TIER a t the pre- b i d 279C.430 — 279C.450 SUBCONTRACTOR construction meeting and Desc h utes DISCLOSURE is optional. County Code STATEMENT-KNOTT 12.52.020. The L ANDFILL CELL 6 IIIIIPORTANT: prequalification CONSTRUCTION Prospective classification required P ROJECT" prior t o f or this p r oject i s proposers 4:00 .m. on October downloading/access "General C o nstruc1 2014 at the above ing website-posted tion.v The successful location. p roject plan s , bidders and subconpro v iding specifications and tractors S aid work is to b e other bid documents labor shall maintain a performed at the Knott MUST completeand qualified drug testing L andfill l ocated i n submit the Contact program f o r the of the Bend, Oregon and I nformation F o r m duration shall include: excava- p rovided o n th e contract. Bidders shall tion for a refuse cell; website, or contact be licensed with the c onstruction of e m the Department of Construction bankments; installa- Solid W a st e by Contractor's B o ard. tion of geosynthetics; telephone at (541) Contractors and i nstallation o f so i l 317-3163, to provide subcontractors need materials for c u sh- contact information, not be licensed under ioning, and drainage; to receive foUow-up ORS 466A.720. construction of documents Deschutes C o u nty leachate c o l lection (addenda, systems and pump clarifications, etc). may reject any bid not stations; installation of Failure to ro v i de in compliance with all landfill ga s p i p ing contact information prescribed b i d ding and system; and installa- to the De artment of procedures tion of asphalt con- S olid W aste w i l l r equirements, a n d crete pavement. The result in r o o s er may reject for good estimated c onstruc- ~ nie ualeaation. cause any or all bids tion cost is Onl those upon a f i nding of $3,000,000 to re istered with the Deschutes County it is $5,000,000. De artment of Solid in the public interest Waste will receive to do so. The protest Plans, specifications f oUow-u docu - period f or this and other bid docu- ments add e nda procurement is seven ments may be in(7) calendar days. spected at the DesTimm Schimke, c hutes Coun t y Bids shall be made on Department of Solid the forms furnished by Director of Solid Waste Waste website the County, (http://www.desincorporating all PUBLISHED: chutes.org/Solid-Wast contract documents, THE BEND BULLETIN: e /Projects.aspx ) o r including a Bid Bond Sept. 11 and 16, 2014 obtained from Des- or Cashier's Check for DAILY JOURNAL OF chutes County Dethe minimum amount COMMERCE: p artment o f So l i d o f 10% of th e B i d Sept. 12 and 17, 2014 LEGAL NOTICE
Deschutes County, Oregon Department of Solid Waste