Bulletin Daily Paper 10-19-14

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SUNDAY October 19,2014

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IN COUPONS INSIDE

SPORTS • D1

TRAVEL• C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

NEXT UP: BOSTON MARATHON?

~

beodbulletio.com/electioos

High Desert wine — It's been a goodyear for a growing industry.E1

2 starkly contrasting choicesfor governor

Plus: Acrossthe stateWine grapes aredoing well, as are hazelnuts.B3

CE

• After life throws everything atBend's Carrie Carney— including cancerand her husband'spublicized infidelity — she finishes amarathon and, maybe,will have ashot at afamousoneon the EastCoast

Chemical weaponsThe cover-up of U.S.andallied casualties in Iraq.F1 TraVel —A culinary tour of New Orleans offers more than that sandwich — but you can't forget the sandwich.C3

The Bulletin

Republican Dennis Richardsonfaceshard facts of

life in his run for Oregon governor. Democrats far outnum-

ber Republicans in Oregon. He's facing a Democratic polls say is likely to win his fourth election to the seat at the hands of voters who

History of racism-

Her mother says it was a miracle that she was even conceived. And since the day she was born, Carrie Carney has been a fighter. But the last two years of Carrie's life would bring even the strongest and most resilient to their knees. She was diag-

Remembering eugenics.A3

And a Web exclusiveHeirs sue aSwiss bank over proceeds from the saleof multimillion-dollar art looted by the Nazis. beodbonetio.com/extras

nosed with thyroid cancer in May 2012.

A year and a half later, still recovering from thyroid removal and adjusting to strong medication while raising two young children, her husband's infidelity went painfully public. "Iwould have crawled under my bed and never come out," Portland Marathon/Submitted photo

Researchers try to quell fears over Ebola

By Taylor W.Anderson

Gov. John Kitzhaber who

By Mark Moricai •The Bulletin

EDITOR'5CHOICE

NOV. 4 ELE CTION

Carrie Carney runs across the Broadway Bridge during the Portland Marathon on Oct. 5.

"Everybody warned me, 'a marathon starts with the last 10K,' and everyone was right.

said Carrie's mother, Donna Morales. But Carrie did not do that. Instead she turned to the one

true love that had never let her down — running. At the urging of her relentlessly supportive friends, she picked herself up, put one foot in front of the other, and began training for the Portland Marathon, which she ran on Oct. 5. A former standout distance runner at Bend's Mountain

That last mile ... It was a deep pain that I haven't felt in a long time, since I really

View High School, the University of Washington and Willamette University, Carrie's goal was to qualify, along with her

competed.Ijustputmy head down and just started running as hard as I could."

Boston Marathon. Carrie, who turns 40 on Wednesday,

close friend and co-worker Kirsten Scott, for the prestigious needed to finish in under 3 hours, 45 minutes, in her first ever 26.2-mile race.

— Carrie Carney

seem content to keep him. State Rep. Richardsonis hoping recent controversy surroundingthe governor's office and first lady will engulf Kitzhaber and put a Republican in the job for the first time since the 1982 election. He's telling voters that it's time for a conservative at the reins, but he's running out of time to de-

liver the message as Oregonians are already filling out theirballots.

Under a Richardson administration, state employ-

ees couldbe in jeopardyof losingtheir jobs if their employer was deemed expendable under an agency audit system that Richardson has promised. SeeGovernor/A5

SeeRunning/A7

Drug forHIV

By Joel Achenbach and Brady Dennis

prevention is controversial

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The

fear of Ebola has spread faster in America than

the virus itself. Ebola has infected the American

psyche, forcing us to do risk analysis of a patho-

By David Crary The Associated Press

gen we know little about. This is different from the

NEW YORK — The

largest U.S. gay-rights organization Saturday endorsed efforts to promote the use of a once-a-day pill

fluscaresofrecentyears, because this virus is nov-

el here, and we have no cultural memory of what

to prevent HIV infection

and called on insurers to provide more generous coverage of the drug. Some doctors have

we are supposed to do, or

think, or believe, when Ebola is on the loose. People have to wonder:

How contagious is this virus — really? Is there something different and more pernicious about this particular strain of Ebola?

been reluctant to prescribe

the drug, Truvada, on the premise that it might encourage high-risk, unprotected sexual behavior. However, its preventive use

The experts can't an-

swer such questions with certainty. Ebola has been

has been endorsed by the

known to science only since 1976. As an exotic

trol and Prevention, the

Centers for Disease ConWorld Health Organiza-

disease that until this year affected only Africans in

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

tion, and many HIV/AIDS

advocacygroups.

Carrie Carney smiles while stretching at Juniper Park in Bend last week.

rural villages, Ebola hasn't

SeeHIV /A6

been studied as closely as,

say, influenza or HIV. The virus has its quirks: Some people infected with Ebola never get sick at all. Some who become sick shed massive amounts

High court action on voter ID showsmixed record

of virus — they're "super-shedders" — but

Tribune Washington Bureau

ANALYSIS

others do not. Fever is typ-

WASHINGTON — "There

ically the first symptom of Ebola virus disease, but sometimes it's a lagging indicator or never appears

is no right more basic in our democracy than the right to participate in electing our political leaders," Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in April.

in striking down part of a federal election law, allowing a wealthy Republicanbusinessman from Alabamato give more money to candidates across the country. The contribution limit re-

Roberts spoke then for the

stricted the donor's free speech,

But the right to vote, which is how most Americans par-

Roberts concluded, and the

ticipate in democracy, has had

at all. The virus is mutating,

like all viruses, and could conceivably — this is a very remote possibilitychange its mode of transmission, a fact that has been much hyped in recent weeks by those with an alarmist frame of mind. See Ebola /A4

court's conservative majority

TODAY'S WEATHER ~r r

Mostly sunny High 72, Low43 Page B6

Constitution requires the court toerronthesideofsafeguarding that First Amendment

protection.

far less protection from the Supreme Court under Roberts.

There is no starker example than the Supreme Court

order early Saturday allowing Texas to enforce anewphoto identification law that a federal

judge had blocked this month after deciding the law would

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

Ef -6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts Gf -6 Local/State B f -6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies

C6 D1-6 C8

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 292,

4e pages, 7 sections

prevent as many as 5 percent

of the state's registered voters, or 600,000 people in all, from castingballots. The justices turned aside

appeals from lawyers for civil rights groups and the Obama administration.

SeeCourt/A6

Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt

:: IIIIIIIIIII I o

8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0

7


A2

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o consensuson as of ivorce a a ican By Laurie Goodstein and Elisebette Povoledo New York TimesNews Service

A closely watched Vatican

assembly on the family ended on Saturday without consensus among the bishops in attendance on what to say about gays and whether to give communion to divorced and

NEW S R O O M FA X

remarried Catholics. The bishops' final report

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welcoming language about gays and divorced couples that appeared in a preliminary report released on Monday, midway through the twoweek assembly. Conservative

bishops had expressed alarm that t h e

R o m a n C a t holic

Church was sending a mixed message on marriage and homosexuality. Pope Francis addressed the

closed-door meeting, Vatican come her, but then he tells her spokesmen said afterward. not to sin again," Ravasi said. The assembly has served to The final document says open the debate among prel- that gays must be met with ates and in the wider church, "respect a n d se n s itivity," as Francis said he had intend- phrasing also in the church's ed. Francis is taking the un- catechism, but emphaticalusual step of publishing the ly asserts there is no basis final report showing the vote whatsoever for comparing tallies on each passage, in same-sex unions to marriage the interest of transparency, between a man and a woman. said the Rev. Thomas Rosica, Some bishops took the poa spokesman at the Vatican sition that the church must meeting. a rticulate more clearly t h e The entire document re- reasons for its teachings on ceivedapproval from a major- marriage and its disapprovity of the bishops, but passag- al of birth control, divorce, es on gays and divorce did not homosexuality and cohabireceive support of two-thirds tation. Doctrine, they say, is of the 183 bishops in atten- unchanging. "We're not giving in to the dance on Saturday; a vote of two-thirds is required to be secular agenda," Cardinal considered the consensus of George Pell, an Australian the assembly. archbishop now serving in "It shows that it's a work in progress," Rosica said. "We

bishops in the final session, issuing a d o uble-barreled still have a ways to go." warning against "hostile Earlier on Saturday, before rigidity" by "so-called tra- the final report was issued, ditionalists," but a l s o c a u- Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, tioning "progressives" who of Italy, said it would be "welwould "bandage a wound be- coming" to gays, but not apfore treating it." The bishops proving of them. "Like Christ with the adulresponded with a four-minute standing ovation in the teress, his response is to wel-

the Vatican, told the Catholic

News Service on Thursday. "We're not collapsing in a heap." But other bishops said the church should stress inclusiveness, understanding and mercy. Doctrine should be responsive to new developments and information, they

sard.

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MiSSing hI NePal —Rescueoperations in Nepal's Himalayas moved to more remoteoutposts on Saturday ashopes for finding morethan a dozen missing trekkersalive beganto waneseveral daysafter anintense snowstorm andavalanches. KrishnaPrasadKhanal, thechief district officer of Dolpa,saidthat the military hadrescued 17trekkers from the Chharka areaof the district on Saturday. TwoSwiss trekkers and aNepali guide hadbeenrescued bya privately hired helicopter elsewhere in Dolpa onSaturday. SureshAcharya, ajoint secretary of Nepal's Tourism Ministry, said onSaturdaythat the deathtoll had reached39. HOng KOng ClaSheS —Thepolice in Hong Kongclashed with hundreds of pro-democracy protesters in the densely populated Mong Kok neighborhood early today in thesecondstraight day of violence after demonstrators recaptured blocks of city streets from the police. More than100 police officers —many with riot gear — faced off against an evengreater number of demonstrators and their supporters on NathanRoad,oneofHongKong'sbusiestshoppingstreets.

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IndOneSian leader —Indonesia's president-elect, Joko Widodo, does not take office until Monday, but healready faces ahostile opposition in parliament that has threatened to investigate him for corruption. Economic indicators for Indonesia include declining growth and a spike in unemployment while anational fuel subsidy sucks tens of billions of dollars out of the country's state budget. Widodo is expected to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Beijing shortly after he takesoffice. But in an interview in his private office in Jakarta last week, Widodo seemed confident, insisting that "within six months" he will control a majority in parliament.

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er lines Saturdayafter Hurricane Gonzalo batteredthetiny, wealthy British territory of Bermudafor several hours butcaused nodeaths or serious injuries. Thestorm's center crossed over Bermudalate Fridayand Gonzalo quickly movednorthward over theAtlantic on atrack that could take it just off theshore of Newfoundland in Canadaearly today. More than18,000 homes inBermudawere still without power Saturday night, but Premier MichaelDunkleysaid cleanup efforts were going smoothly. He said theU.S.,Britain andother nations haveoffered assistance.

— From wire reports

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TOrture ruling —When the Bushadministration revealed in 2005 that it was secretly interpreting a treaty ban on"cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment" as not applying to CIAand military prisons overseas, President BarackObama,then a newly elected senator, joined in a bipartisan protest. But the Obama administration has never officially declared its position on the treaty, and now,Obama's legal team is debating whether to backawayfrom his earlier view. The administration must decide on its stance on the treaty by next month, when it sends adelegation to Genevato appear before the Committee Against Torture, a U.N.panel.

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Iraq gOvernment —Iraqi lawmakers approved Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's remaining Cabinet nominees onSaturday, including for the critical defense andinterior portfolios, completing the formation of a government that will strive to push the Islamic State extremist group out of the sprawling territory it has seized in recent months. Control over the two powerful security ministries has long been a source of tension among Iraq's feuding political factions. TheU.S. and other allies havebeen pushing for a more representative government that can reachout to Sunnis, who felt marginalized by former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Sunni discontent is widely seen as having fueled the ISgroup's dramatic advances in Iraq since June, when it captured the country's second largest city Mosul.

Craig Ruule/The Associatedpress

With OneWorld TradeCenter in the background, a procession made upof GreekOrthodox Church officials, including Archbishop Demetrios of America, center, and others, walks to agroundbreaking for the St. Nicholas National Shrine onSaturday in NewYork. The event marked anew beginning for the former St. Nicholas GreekOrthodox Church, the only house

of worship destroyed during the 9/11attacks. The new structure, to becalled the St. Nicholas National Shrine, will be at Liberty Street, directly across from the National September11 Memorial waterfalls, and will sit more than 20feet aboveground level. Officials said they hopedconstruction would be finished by 2017, the New York Times reported.

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Poli ce:Remainsmaybe missingUVa.student By Steve Helber The Associated Press

C HAR L O T T E S V I L L E , Va. — Police searchers found

searched for the 18-year-old Graham in theweeks sinceher disappearance. "Countless hours, thousands of hours, have been spent by literally hundreds of law enforce-

human remainsSaturday that could be those of a University of Virginia sophomore who has ment, civilian volunteers in an been missingsince Sept. 13. effort to find Hannah," Longo Further forensic tests are said. "We think perhaps today needed to confirm whether the

provedtheir worth." Jesse Leroy Matthew Jr., 32,

remains are those of Hannah Graham, but Graham's parents has been charged with abducwere notified of the prelimi-

tion with intent to defile Gra-

nary findings, Charlottesville Police Chief Timothy Longo

ham. A preliminary hearing

told a news conference.

is set for Dec. 4 on the charge. In the meantime, Matthew is

The Albemarle County Po- being held in the Albemarlice Department also said a vol- le-Charlottesville Regional Jail. unteer search for Graham that Albermarle County Police had been planned for today has are now taking over the invesbeen canceled so law enforce- tigation. County Police Chief ment can turn their attention to Steve Sellers said anyone who the newevidence. may have seen suspicious acLongo said a search team from the Chesterfield County

tivity in the area or may have

seen someone who fits MatSheriff's Office found the re- thew's description in the area mains on an abandoned prop- afterGraham's disappearance, erty in s outhern A lbemarle should contact police. "Today's discovery is a sigCounty — the same region where police found the body of n ificant d e velopment a n d 20-year-old Virginia Tech stu- we have a great deal of work dentMorgan Harrington three ahead ofus," Sellers said."We months after she vanished in cannot and we will not jump 2009. Last month, after arrest- to any conclusions regarding ing a suspect in Graham's dis- today's discovery, so I ask for appearance,police said they the public's patience as we found a"forensic link" between move forward and pursue what the two cases. is now a new ongoing death Thousands of volunteers had investigation."

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday,Oct. 19, the292nd day of 2014. Thereare 73days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS ShiP adrift —A tugboatis expected to arrive to help the Russian container ship Simushir off the coast of British Columbia.

HISTORY

DID YOU KNOW?

SCIENCE

Even the bacteria in your gut can experience jet lag

emem erin w en racism was ascience

Highlight:In 1814, the first

documented public performance of "TheStar-Spangled Banner" took place atthe Holliday Street Theater in Baltimore, where it was performed byan actor now knownonly as "Mr. Hardinge." In1781,British troops under Gen. Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Virginia, as the American Revolution neared its end. In1789, John Jaywas sworn in as the first Chief Justice of the United States. In1864,Confederate Lt. Gen. Jubal Early's soldiers attacked Union forces atCedarCreek, Virginia; the Union troops were able to rally anddefeat the Confederates. In1914, the U.S.Post Office began delivering mail with government-owned cars, as opposed to using contracted vehicles. TheFirst Battle of Ypres beganduring World War I. In1944, the U.S.Navy began accepting black womeninto WAVES(WomenAccepted for Volunteer EmergencyService). The play"I RememberMama," by John VanDruten, opened at the Music BoxTheater on Broadway. In1951, President Harry Truman signed anact formally ending the state of warwith Germany. In1960,the United States began a limited embargoagainst Cuba covering all commodities except medical supplies and certain food products. In1977, the supersonic Concorde madeits first landing in New York City. In1984,Rev. Jerzy Popieluszko, a Polish Catholic priest with ties to the Solidarity labor movement, wasabductedand murdered by communist secret police. In1987,the stock market crashed asthe DowJones Industrial Average plunged508 points, or 22.6 percent in value, to close at1,738.74. In1989,a British court freed the "Guildford Four," who'd been wrongly convicted of an Irish Republican Armybombing. In1994,22 people were killed as a terrorist bomb shattered a bus in the heart of TelAviv's shopping district. Ten yearsage: Insurgents in Iraq abducted Margaret Hassan, the local director of CARE International. (Hassan is believed to havebeenslain by her captors a month later; her body has never beenfound.) Thirteen people werekilled whena Corporate Airlines commuter turboprop crashed in northeast Missouri (two people survived with serious injuries). Five years age:TheJustice Department issued anewpolicy memo, telling prosecutors that pot-smoking patients or their sanctioned suppliers should not be targeted for federal prosecution in states that allowed medical marijuana. One yearage: Nine Lebanese pilgrims abducted in Syria and two Turkish pilots held hostage in Lebanon returned homeas part of an ambitious three-way deal cutting across theSyrian civil war.

BIRTHDAYS Author John leCarre is 83. Artist Peter Max is 77.Author and critic RenataAdler is 76. Actor Michael Gambon is74. Actor John Lithgow is 69. Feminist activist Patricia Ireland is 69. Talk show host Charlie Chaseis 62. Former Republican National Committee ChairmanMichael Steele is 56. BoxerEvander Holyfield is 52. Actor Jon Favreau is 48. "South Park" co-creator TreyParker is 45. Comedian Chris Kattan is 44. Writer-director Jason Reitman is 37. — From wire reports

An exhibit at New York University brings to life a dark era in U.S. history:

By Rachel Feltman The Washington Post

the height of eugenics in the 1920s.

All living organismsincluding the bacteria that

populate your body — have biological clocks that can get thrown off by international travel. In humans, the result is jet lag. But at the microbi-

='

ii jo

e,

ii

gs

al level, the result could be a gut full of the wrong kinds of bacteria — including species that promote obesity. In a s t udy p ublished Thursday in Cell, researchers looked at the microbiome — or bacterial populations

V:

11.

~

rll

The jet-lagged mice started putting on more weight than those that hadn't

"traveled," even though they were on the same diet. fected: The two participants had an increase in bacteria

that have been linked to obesity. But their microbiome shifted back to a

h e althy

baseline after only a couple dent and human subjects. of weeks. " These findings p r o The abundance of different bacteria (and their activities) vide an explanation for a changed based on the time of long-standing and mysteday the sample was taken. rious observation, namely T he r e searchers t h e n that people with chronically messed with their subjects' disturbed day-night cycles biological rhythm. For the due to repetitive jet lag or two human subjects, this shift work have a tendency meant a flight from the to develop obesity and other United States to Israel. The metabolic c omplications," mice were kept at home, but senior author Eran Elinav the researchers manipulat- of the Weizmann Institute of ed their light sources and Science said in a statement. meal times to simulate a trip "These surprising findings across time zones. In both may enable us to devise pre— in the fecal matter of ro-

I-

'.:-®.-.p-": "

.

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory andthe Eugenics Image Archive, Dolan DNA Learning Center via The New YorkTimes

cases, the gut microbiome

ventive treatments for these

A new exhibit at New York University, "Haunted Files: The Eugenics Record Office," re-creates the Eugenics Record Office, pictured in the1920s, where scientists once applied rudimentary genetics to

was affected. The jet-lagged mice started putting on more weight

people to lower their risk for

singling out supposedly superior races anddegrading minorities.

these complications." But the actual health im-

plications remain to be seen, eled," even though they were Elinav told National Geoon the same diet. When the graphic. It may not be that researchers transferred gut traveling across time zones bacteria from jet-lagged mice causes weight gain, and even to healthy ones, these new if it does, the microbiome mice saw the same effect. might just be one piece of the Humans were similarly af- puzzle. than those that hadn't "trav-

By Joshua A. Krisch

citizens. Funding poured in from the Rockefeller family

accepting evidence that reso-

An old, stucco house stands and the Carnegie Institution. atop a grassy hill overlooking Charles Davenport, a prolific the Long Island Sound. Less Harvard biologist, and his colthan a mile down the road, the league, Harry Laughlin, led renowned Cold Spring Harbor the charge. "There were many promiLaboratory bustles with more than 600 researchers and nent New Yorkers involved in technicians, regularly produc- eugenics," Tchen said. "It was ing breakthroughs in genetics, initially about how to become cancerandneuroscience. more efficient as a modern But that old h ouse, now society."

said Daniel Kevles, a science

New York Times News Service

a private residence on t h e

outskirts of town, once held a facility whose very name

R esearchers sought o u t "unfit" families in the Manhattan slums and the Pine

nated with social prejudices," historian at Y al e U n iversity who is not involved in the NYU exhibit.

Ar

1 in 8 Women ffected By BreastCancer

Barrens of New Jersey. They Eugenics Record Office. cataloged disabilities and unIn its heyday, the office was desirable traits, scribbling the evokes dark memories: the

the premier scientific enter-

exact dimensions of h eads

prise at Cold Spring Harbor. and arms. There, bigoted scientists apPsychiatric institutes sent plied rudimentary genetics to crates of case files to the ofsingling out supposedly supe- fice, where the chief characrior races and degrading mi- teristics of "the feebleminded" norities. By the mid-l920s, the were collated into pedigree officehad become the center charts. Davenport himself deof the eugenics movement in vised a sophisticated apparaAmerica. tus to quantify skin color. "The Eugenics Record OfToday, all that remains of it are files and photographs fice was built around very — reams of discredi ted re- systematized ideas that still search that once shaped an- might be seen as legitimate ti-immigration laws, spurred today," said Noah Fuller, an forced-sterilization

cam-

artist and co-curator of the

paigns and barred refugees exhibit. "At the time, this was from entering Ellis Island. widely accepted as legitimate Now, historians and artists at New York University are

science."

By the 1920s, the office had bringing the eugenics office begun to influence the U.S. back into the public eye. government. Laughlin testi" Haunted Files: The E u fied before Congress, advogenics Record Office," a new cating forced sterilization and exhibit a t t h e u n i v ersity's anti-immigration laws. ConA sian/Pacific/American I n - gress complied. The Immistitute, transports visitors to

gration Act of 1924 effectively

1924, the height of the eugen- barred Eastern Europeans, ics movement in the United Jews, Arabs and East Asians States. Inside a dimly lit room,

from entering th e

historian at NYU and co-cuW hen war b r oke out i n rator of t h e e x h ibit. (This Europe, widespread discomArthur L. Carter Journalism Institute, a separate branch of

October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month

c ountry.

the sounds of an old typewrit- And thousands of people er click and clack, a teakettle who were deemed unfit were whistles and papers shuffle. sterilized. The office's original file cabThe University of H eidelinets loom over reproduced berg in Nazi Germany later desks and p eriod k nick- awarded Laughlin an honorknacks. Creaky cabinets slide ary degreeforhisw ork in the open, and visitors are encour- "science of racial cleansing." aged to thumb through copies He accepted the award, and of pseudoscient ificpapers. his research on Long Island "There's a haunted quality, continued to influence Nazi that's the nature of the files," ideology throughout World said John Kuo Wei Tchen, a War II and the Holocaust. reporter is a student at the

Early Detection Is The Best Cure.

fort with eugenics and ¹ zism turned public sentiment against the office. In the late

the university.) "We hoped we 1930s, an independent recould evoke a visceral feeling view by the Carnegie Instiof what it was like to be in a

tution found the office unfit

detention center, where people were presumed to be ineligibleunlessproven otherwise." When the Eugenics Record

to conduct human scientific research, citing biases and

O ffice opened its doors in

closed in 1939.

heavy reliance on anecdotal

evidence, and the office was

"The Eugenics Record Of1910, the founding scientists were considered progressives, fice was flawed in terms of intent on applying classic methodology, taking hearsay genetics to breeding better evidence, and in terms of bias,

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

Ebola

ted to the intensive care unit but had not yet tested positive

sols — such as would be produced by a sneeze. But such

Continued from A1

for Ebola. Duncan died Oct.8.

droplets are differentfrom

The CDC and Texas officials have warned that there

small particle aerosols that can float through an air duct.

may be other health care workers who test positive in

M oreover, the E bola v i r u s

Yet for all these uncertain-

ties, the Ebola emergency in the United States has in a key respect played out exactly as epidemiologists would have expected: The people who have gotten infected, both of

them at a Dallas hospital, had

"If a virus were to acquire

also hundreds of people being

the ability to go airborne, it would change the landscape dramatically," Jahrling said. But he said the likelihood of that is "remote squared."

monitored because they flew on the Frontier Airlines plane.

So far, secondary infections at ly sick person. a distance from the hospital Today marks 21 days since haven't materialized, not even Thomas Eric Duncan, who among the people who stayed

This summer Kinzer, the

CDC epidemiologist, told members of the Guinea media, "Ebola's not transmitted by the air. Fear and ignorance are transmitted by the air." The big picture is that Ebola is rampant in West Africa

with Duncan in a small apartment after he was feverish.

It's conceivable there are in-

stances here of "asymptomatic

Dallas. Officials have been infection." Researchers say Youssouf Bah/The Associated Press file photo monitoring 48 people poten- a person can become infect - Health workers teach people about the Ebola virus and how to tially e x posed t o D u n c an ed with Ebola, never develop prevent infection earlier this year in Conakry, Guinea. prior to his hospitalization, symptoms, never b ecome because these are very poor his fiancee among them. The contagious, and fully recover, countries in which people incubation period of E bola, becoming virus-free — with- 10 days after the beginning like nothing seen before, and often lack access to public from infection to symptoms, out knowing any of that had (i.e. the usual incubation peri- that could have implications health care. Ebola v i ctims is generally considered to be happened. od),a person startsto become at the microbiological level, suffer in unhygienic condi"Asymptomatic cases are between two and 21 days. So symptomatic." said Peter Piot, director of the tions, and their caregivers far, none of these people has likely to have a little bit of viThe virus itself evolves London School of Hygiene & struggle to keep themselves shown signs of Ebola disease. rus for a little bit of time, then over time, as all viruses do. Tropical Medicine, and one clean, Kinzer said. Burial traThis could change with the fight it off," said Steve Bellan, a Whether that evolution will of the main researchers who ditions include close contact next news flash, but so far the post-doctoral researcher at the be significant in this outbreak discovered the Ebola virus in with the bodies. Under such virus hasn't spread wildly in University of Texas at Austin. is unknown. Genetic chang- 1976. He said that all the pre- conditions, a pathogen is not the United States. es could potentially affect the vious outbreaks c ombined under pressure to evolve in a "There's a reason it's not ev- Small vs. big picture accuracy of diagnostic tests or killed about 1,500 people. way that enables a new mode erywhere. It's just not as easy There have emerged in re- the effectiveness of vaccines. This one has killed more than of transmission. to transmit as people think," cent weeks two overlapping What would be even more 4,500 people in West Africa, Someday there could be a said Michael Kinzer, a medical scientific narratives about this alarming, scientists say, is if and the virus has many more widely distributed vaccine for epidemiologist for the Centers Ebola outbreak. They might Ebola somehow mutated to be- opportunities to evolve as it Ebola, but for now the best for Disease Control and Pre- be labeled the microbiology come an airborne virus. passes through the human hope for Ebola patients is stay"What the hell are we going population, Piot said. vention who spent five weeks narrative vs. the epidemiology ing hydrated and nourished. "As it adapts to the human "Ebola is a disease that is in Guinea this summer fight- narrative. Call it the small pic- to do if we suddenly see the ing the outbreak and will re- ture vs. the big picture. potential for transmission that species, it could kill in a slow- basically leaky pipes," Kinzer turn Monday. The microbiologists study might be respiratory in nature. er way, which is paradoxically said. "Your vessels are leakSuch encouraging words the virus up close, scrutinizing Do we have aplan?" Michael a bad thing," Piot said. "If it ing, you're losing water, elecare unlikely to settle the jan- its structure, genetic sequence Osterholm, an outspoken Uni- kills only 30 percent of pa- trolytes, protein, nutrients. gled nerves of Americans who and behavior as it invades versity of Minnesota epide- tients, there is more time for You're losing the things you fear the virus will spread like a cell, hijacks cellular ma- miologist, said last week at a people to be sick and to infect need to fight off the viral indandelion seeds in the wind. chinery, replicates and then conference on Ebola at Johns others." fection. You feel terrible. You Americanshave an unsettled spreads through the body. A Hopkins University. He suspects the depth and don't feel like taking care of relationship with the expert drop of bodily fluid can potenbreadth of the current epi- yourself. If you can counteract transmission class, admiring the achieve- tially contain a million virus M ode of demic are attributable not to that, you can vastly increase ments of scientists without particles. Most scientists have said changes in the virus but rath- your chances of survivaL" fully t r u sting t h a t t h e y're In theory, a single virus par- it is extraordinarily unlike- er the lack of a timely internaThe World Health Orgaimmune t o f un damental ticle — a virion — is capable ly that Ebola will change its tional response and the way nization on Friday sent out mistakes. of being infectious and, after mode of transmission. Sci- societies have become more its latest update on the West It happened already in this replicating billions of times, entists are wary of absolutes urban a n d in t e rconnected Africa outbreak, officially season of Ebola: The CDC killing the host. That makes as a rule, but in the annals of in recent decades. "A perfect listing the United States as assured the public that Amer- Ebola unusually infectious medical science, such a ma- storm," he said. having three cases (Duncan, ican hospitals could handle and virulent. jor change in transmission There i s s om e e v idence Pham and Vinson) and one an Ebola patient without perBut that's not t h e s a me has never been observed in a from animal studies that the death (Duncan). Liberia, Simitting secondary infections, thing as contagious. Ebo- pathogen that already affects virus can be spread over short erra Leone and Guinea have and then in Dallas one case la in humans is spread only human beings. distances,perhaps a few feet, had 9,191 cases and 4,546 became three. Skepticism, for through direct contact with The scale of this outbreak is through small droplet aero- deaths. many people, is a form of per- virus-laden bodily fluids, and sonal protection.

is not as transmissible as such

Overreaction

airborne viruses as influenza and measles.

But Ebola fears have incited overreaction. On Friday, hazmat teams raced to t he

Some scientists have said that perhaps this strain of the

Michel du Cille was disinvited to speak at Syracuse Univer-

a t Galveston, said h e

Looking back, the mistakes are easy to see:Waiting too long, spending too little, relying on the wrong people, thinking small when they needed to think big. Many people, governments and agencies share the blame for failing to contain Ebola when it emerged inWest Africa. Now they share the herculean task of trying to end an epidemic that is not even close to being controlled. Many of the missteps are detailed in a draft of an internal World Health Organization report. It shows there wasnot one pivotal blunder that gave Ebola the upper hand, buta series that mounted.

does not have an affinity for the cells deep in the lungs.

the days ahead. There are

close contact with an extreme-

contracted Ebola in L i beria and then flew to the United States, was admitted to Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital

Edola dlunders-

VictimmemorialWith hymns andprayers, familyand friends gathered at a North Carolina church on Saturday to bid farewell to Thomas EricDuncan,the first person to die ofEbolain the United States. Duncan's mother sat weepingwith other relatives in thefront row of the sanctuary of the small church theyattend in Salisbury, RowanInternational Church. Aslideshow of photos of Duncanin Liberia played in aloop over the dais. In eulogies, relatives rememberedhim asa giving manwhohadshown courage throughout his 42 years, even asbullets flew during the Liberian civil war. — Bulletin wire reports

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virus generates an unusually Pentagon when a woman mis- high "viral load," with more takenly thought to have trav- virus present in any drop eled recently to West Africa of fluid. That would make it threw up in a parking lot; 22 more contagious simply as a peoplewere quarantined for function of mathematics. So hours on a shuttle bus because far there is no published data the woman had briefly been supporting that. onboard. Peter Jahrling, who has The same day, the Carnival studied Ebola for the National Magic cruise ship was turned Institute of Allergy and Infecaway by Mexican authorities tious Diseases, said tests on at the port at Cozumelbecause patients in Africa have turned a passenger had potentially up "a lot of virus," but he said handled sealed blood sam- that could be an artifact of a ples from Duncan at the Dal- new type of testing. las hospital. Meanwhile, The T homas G e isbert, w h o Washington Post's Pulitzer studies Ebola at the UniverPrize-winning photographer sity of Texas Medical Branch and

other scientists have samples

sity because du Cille had cov- of this Ebola strain in their ered the story in Liberia three

laboratories. He said it's dif-

weeks ago and, as the journal- ficult to tell if a new strain of ism school's dean wrote in ex- the virus is replicating faster plaining the decision, "We did than earlier strains, because you'd need very precise data not want to create a panic." A school district in Northfrom patients at comparable east Ohio closed a m i ddle stages in the course of the disschool and an elementary ease. The viral load isn't statschool because an employee ic. It increases as the disease had flown onthe same Fron- progresses. That's why a person who tier Airlines plane on which Ebola-stricken health care is infected but without sympworker Amber V i nson had toms will not spread the virus flown. They weren't even on initially: There's very little vithe same flight. rus present in the blood, and That's an example of Ebo- it is not yet present in other

la hysteria, said Mark Rupp, bodily fluids. It can be many an infectious disease doctor days, for example, before it inat Nebraska Medical Center, vades the bladder and begins where two Ebola patients have to be detectable in urine, Geisbeen treated. bert said. "You would have to assume "Statistical p r o babilities that the nurse is contagious at come into play," Geisbert said. an early stage, which is very "In most cases, people are limited, then you have to as- symptomatic before there are sume there was a contaminat- any large quantities of virus in ed environment on the plane, things like urine or feces." and that the contamination The question of precisely results in transmission, which when a person begins to shed is pretty unlikely. Then you the virus, and in what quanhave to assume that a per- tity, is extremely important son who was not even on the given that Vinson, the infectsame flight but who flew on ed Dallashealth care worker, the same plane then came into traveled twice on a plane, Oct. contact w it h c o n taminated 10 and Oct. 13, the second time material and became infect- when she was already symped, and then assume that im- tomatic with a temperature of

mediately transfers to a child, which is impossible," Rupp said. "It's unlikely unlikely unlikely unlikely, and then impossible impossible."

99.5 degrees.

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"We don't have itworked out to what exact viral load c orrelates to t h e o n set o f

symptoms," said Daniel Bausch, a researcher at Tulane ers who contracted Ebola, University. "Think of a bell Vinson and nurse Nina Pham, curve starting from the mohad direct contact with Dun- ment of infection (zero virus), can when he was suffering then increasing virus repliextreme symptoms, including cation to the top of the curve, vomiting and diarrhea. They maybe around 20 days later, were among the workers who when there is a high level of treated him at a p r ecarious virus and the person is severetime when he had been admit- ly ill. Maybe around eight to The two health care work-

LI

ii)

PROVIDENCE Health Plan


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Governor

NAME:Dennis Richardson

Continued fromA1

AGE:65

The state would be run like

a business, he said, focusing on efficiency and cutting the fat. That means getting rid

of any agency that's found to have outlived its usefulness.

pressure would be enormous," he said. Richardson has made some

RESIDENCE: Central Point EDUCATION:Brigham Young University; J. Reuben Clark law school GOV/CIVICEXPERIENCE:State representative; Boy Scout leader; church leader

" I am a r ealist, not a . . .

Utopian," Richardson said in his south Portland campaign headquarters just two hours

NAME:John Kitzhaber

after debating Kitzhaber in early October. "I don't make

AGE:67

my decisions based on a Utopian attitude."

Richardson reverts nearly any conversation on state

coal to Asia because the de-

the state Ethics Commission

mand is there. He disputes sci- to determine whether Hayes entists who say pollution from is considered a public officoal burned in Asia comes

cial and w h ether contracts

over the Pacific Ocean and affects air quality here. "There may be microns, but I'm not seeing strong indica-

between Hayes' Bend-based consulting firm, 3E Strategies, and three companies violated state rules. The Oregon Republican Party followed up by requesting a full investigation. "I can tell you that there's

take back. He also said he supports the courts' decisions on

By Philip Rucker

incumbents — Alaska, Ar-

The Washington Post

kansas and Louisiana — and it is expected to pick up Dem-

solved. And I will enforce the law. That's the oath I take," he

system."

gaining in Georgia and have along with sudden, surprising a slim edge in North Caroliscrambles in key states, have na. Both parties see Coloraadded new volatility to the do and Iowa as tossups that 2014 campaign. could determine the majority. The political climate dearly Worries over Ebola are furfavors Republicans, buoyed ther complicating candidate by President Barack Obama's strategies. Many Republicans record-low popularity and a and some Democrats have voter-enthusiasm advantage. called for travel restrictions However, the kind of wave on flights from West Afrithat lifted Republicans in 1994 ca, an idea opposed by the and 2010 has eluded them, in Obama administration and part because the GOP brand many public-health experts. also is damaged. In Iowa, the first questions Voters are restive and dis- at Thursday night's Senate satisfied with their political debate were about Ebola. In leadership, turning what had Minnesota, Republican canbeen a workmanlike slog of didate Mike McFadden — the a midterm campaign into an underdog challenger to Demunpredictable sprint. More ocratic Sen. Al Franken — resitting governors and law- vamped his stump speech last makers are in danger of los- week to capitalize on Ebola ing today than just a month fears. "The No. 1 role of the fedago, while both parties see new opportunities and haz- eral government is to protect ards, especially in the battle our citizens," McFadden told for the Senate. about 30 voters huddled in a "A lot of pressure is build- Mankato sports bar Friday ing up," said Alex Castella- morning. In a n i n t erview nos, a veteran Republican afterward, he said: "It is the strategist. "The top comes off No. 1 question that I'm receivthe pressure cooker on Nov. ing on the trail. People are 4 and — boom! Democrats scared. couldsurprisein some places All year, Republicans have and Republicans in others." tried to frame the election Republicans have little around Obama, attacking his margin for error as they seek health care law in particular. the six seats needed to give Ebola, along with the rise of them the Senate majority. the Islamic State extremist The GOP's fortunes have im- group in Iraq and Syria, has proved slightly in a trio of offered the GOP a fresh entry conservative-leaning states point for criticizing the presiwith embattled Democratic dent's leadership.

There are some numbers

on the economy that plague

r e cently Kitzhaber.

released reports that show The state's 7.1 percent unthe dysfunction of the leaders employment rate is higher than the national average of

change website. 5.9 percent. "The exchange was a disasOregon spent more than ter. No question about it. I own $300 million in federal monit," he said. ey building a health care exRichardson wants everyone change that never worked. to know that Cover Oregon

The state also spent nearly

failed under Kitzhaber. And

$200 million planning a complex bridge over the Columbia

saw it coming and the gover- River between Washington nor should have taken action and Oregon, but today there is sooner. no newbridge or plans to build

Richardson's background

one.

July 24, 2013, a state holiday

Those were projects championed by the governor before they collapsed. The state's high school

in Utah celebrating Brigham

graduationrate,68 percent ac-

Richardson launched his campaign on Pioneer Day, Young's entry into the Salt

cording to the latest data from Lake Valley in 1847 afteryears 2010-2011, is second-lowest in of persecution against Mor- the nation, according to the mons in the Midwest.

The principles of his religion show in his calm demeanor and dedication to pub-

lic service. He and his wife, Cathy, have eight daughters, whom he frequently references during speeches while promising to take up the issue of gender pay inequality. Richardson flew helicopters in Vietnam. He recalls

U.S. Department of Education. K itzhaber touts hi s o w n numbers. He points to a rate of un-

insured that has dropped 63 percent between July 2013 and 2014. Ninety-five percent of

Oregonians now have health insurance.

He said the Cover Oregon money wasn't actually wasted because the state still en-

rolled 500,000 people in health a period of his life back home care plans, and he said a lawthat he refers to as a tipping suit Attorney General Ellen mate in Oregon." point that could have led to an Rosenblum filed against OraRichardson is persistent in nothing there. There could unhappy life of drinking and cle could get the state its monhis message that unseating be an ethics issue, but there's debauchery. ey back "and more." "Hell begins when you see Kitzhaber and replacing him certainly not a criminal issue," K itzhaber proposes t o with a s o f t-spoken retired Kitzhaber said in an interview themanyou might havebeen," move public teachers into new southernOregon lawyer isthe with The Bulletin. Richardson said. "The war got health care plans by the end of right move. Kitzhaber doesn't The r evelations a bout my attention. The conversion next year that he says would seem worried about his chanc- Hayes created a toxic political shaped the future of my life." save the state $4 billion by es, even though his 2010 win issue as the state was putting After the war, he devoured 2023. over Republican Chris Dudley ballots in the mail. No poll has books of all kinds before readIf all goes well with the was narrow. been released since the Hayes ingthe Book of Mormon and state and national economies, news made national head- converting to the faith. Kitzhaber said, the state's defiKitzhaber and controversy lines, so it's hard to say what He said he supports creat- cit would be gone by 2021. After 12 years as Oregon's impact, if any, it would have on ing strong local government He said he has no interest in chief executive, Kitzhaber Kitzhaber's re-election bid. and limiting the power of the running for higher office. He's says he needs four more. That He concedes he can't avoid state so that it accurately re- seen what being a presidential would be it. the issue. So he addresses it flects the will of the people. hopeful like Scott Walker in The former e mergency head-on before talking about To do that, he will use his Wisconsin and Chris Christie room doctor from Roseburg his plans to emphasize third- famous newsletter. With more in New Jersey can do. "The closer governors get is running on a platform that grade reading and privatize than 400,000 subscribers, the highlights issues such as the state's major infrastruc- six-time legislator has a wider to Washington, see, the more health care reform and the ture projectsto address Ore- reach than almost every news- they start acting like members looming dangers of a lack of gon's share of a trillion dollar paper in America. of Congress," he said. money for roads and major in- infrastructure gap along the One of his plans for runBut he is confident he'll get frastructureprojects. West Coast over the next three ning a Capitol that could re- another term. Polls conductHe is delivering his message decades. main otherwise controlled by ed before the Hayes scandals to votersafter severalexpenThe idea would be to bid out Democrats involves gaining put him ahead by nearly 10 sive projects over his last term contracts to private companies 300,000 more subscribers and points, though his early lead n ever materialized. I n t h e who would design, build, oper- using them to pressure law- over Richardson had waned background of his answers ate and maintain projects and makers to pass bills they favor slightly. "There's no survival valduring d ebates an d i n t er- get a return on the investment. or fix proposals before they views, always delivered in his Kitzhaber notes that could in- become law. ue in pessimism. Anything "When hundreds or thou- can happen in the next three speedy, to-the-point oration, is volve tollways, and it's already the idea that past failures are in place in British Columbia. sands of constituents contact weeks but we're working pretoutweighed by what he says He actively calls for reform- their state representative or tyhard." are victories in state health ing the state's tax system and their senator with a specific — Reporter: 406-589-4347, care reform and an economy also hiking the state gas tax request to pass this bill, the tanderson@bendbulletin.com tion that what is being burned in China is affecting the cli-

Senate, make small gains in

ocratic-held seats in Montana and West Virginia. However, Kansas and South Dakota — races Repub-

the House and retain many

portation funding needs. He

he wants them to know that he

W ASHINGTON — Re publicans are bullish that they will win control of the

said. "Now we should focus on our economy, on creating jobs, on an education system that should be a quality education

to address short-term trans-

of the state's health care ex-

is ess re icta e

past those issues.

Kitzhaber andnumbers doesn't hide f ro m

Eection ictuIe

same-sex marriage and abortion and would like to move "Gay marriage, abortion in Oregon, those matters are re-

RESIDENCE:Portland EDUCATION:Dartmouth College; University of Dregon Medical School GOV/CIVICEXPERIENCE:Current governor; former state senator and representative

governanceto an example of where he says Kitzhaber has failed. He says the governor is in- that has improved since he flicting his own philosophies took office. "If we did nothing more onto Oregonians, and that has led to an unemployment rate than get the vast majority of that's higher than the nation- Oregonians in good health al average, lower wages than care coverage, that i tself neighboring states and hun- would feel pretty darn good," dreds of millions of misspent Kitzhaber said. taxpayer dollars. Kitzhaber is a political proVoters have starkly con- fessional.He doesn't refer to trasting candidates to choose Richardson by name. He opfromfortheirnextgovernor. erated a quiet and confident Richardson doesn't believe campaign for 10 months up that climate change is making until two weeks ago. wildfires worse, even after the In early October, reports put state saw more acres burned attention on Kitzhaber's fianin 2012 than anyyear since the cee, Cylvia Hayes, who works mid-1800s, and Washington as an environmental and enerhad its largest recorded fire gy consultant and also advises this year. Kitzhaber has said the governor. that climate change is threatThe first report questioned ening the state's forests. whether Hayes used the gov"I think t h at's a p olitical ernor's office for private gain. statement by the governor that Another showed Hayes took is not based on science," Rich- $5,000 to marry a man seekardson said. Instead, he said ing citizenship in 1997, and a the state isn't maintaining its third showed she lived on the forests and that's what has led property of a prospective marto bigger fires. ijuana operation in WashingHe says the state should re- ton that same year. verse course and help export The governor's office asked

statements in his newsletter about gun control and abortion that he now says he would

A5

close calls during battle and

governor'soffices this year. licans were expected to easily But just over two weeks from win — are now in jeopardy. Election Day, fears about Ebola and Islamic State militants,

Meanwhile, Democrats are

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

HIV

, i I f-

l II I I W

Continued from A1 The H uman R i ghts Campaign, which recently has been focusing its gay-rights advocacy on same-sex marriage and anti-discrimination issues,

~p

Trttv t

combating HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Visitors line up to enter the Supreme Court in Washington last week, the second week of its new term. Early Saturday, the court ruled that Texas could require voters to present picture ID during

"HRC does not take this position lightly," the policy paper said. "We recognize there is still ongoing debate

the upcoming midterm elections.

... and that there are those

Continued from A1 T hey c l aimed

the n ew

with our stance." Truvada h as

been

a key test of whether the Vot-

used in combination with

ing Rights Act still stood as a barrier to racially discrimina-

others as the basic treat-

c ourt did no t r u l e o n t h e constitutionality of th e l aw,

tory laws. The conservative

but cleared the way for the restrictionsto take effect for

the November election while legal challenges work their

Critics fear that Truvade, which

can be taken daily to prevent HIV, encourages risky behavior among those who take it.

make the option available to all medically qualified individ-

ment for people with HIV. In 2012, the Food and Drug

Administration approved it for pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP — in other

words, for use to prevent people from getting sexu-

The cost of Truvada varies widely; a New York State Health Department fact sheet

gives a range of $8,000 to $14,000 per year. The manufacturer, California-based Gilead Sciences Inc., has a pro-

that might "abridge" the right to vote based on race.

ally transmitted HIV in the

to some people who are eligible to use Truvada but cannot

first place.

affordit.

democracy," Sherrilyn Ifill,

Earlier this year, a coalition

"Today, there is an un-

of civil rights groups, joined gal Defense Fund, said in re- by the Obama administrasponse to the order. "Today's tion, did exactly that. They president of the NAACP Ledecision means hundreds of

brought a suit in federal court

thousands of eligible voters in in Texas, leading to a trial Texas will be unable to partic- and the ruling by Ramos. She ipate in November's election described the state's long hisbecause Texas has erected an tory of voting discrimination

the HIV/AIDS epidemic,

ical or otherwise — to dis-

courage individuals from taking control of their sexual health and talking to their doctor about PrEP."

new law from taking effect in

have shown that Truvada,

the upcoming election.

remain in effect for the up-

But Abbott, the Texas attor-

when taken diligently, can reduce the risk of getting

confident that

t h e d i s t rict affected voters was inflated.

court's misguided ruling will Those who are over age 65 or be overturned on the merits. disabled may cast a ballot by The U.S. Supreme Court has mail, he said. already ruled that voter ID In response, the 5th U.S. laws are a legal and sensible Circuit Court in New O rleway to protect the integrity of ans lifted the judge's order on elections." Oct. 14 and said the photo ID In the past decade, the high rule may take effect. court has issued a seriesof

That set the stage for the

about two-dozen HIV/AIDS

HIV infections annually, with

organizations in New York

gay and bisexual men accounting for nearly 63 percent of them.

released an open letter to the Healthcare Foundation, ask-

late Washington state, which

Free pipe installation estimates

The CDC says studies

preme Court has agreed that Texas' voter ID law should

ney general and Republican Bean, deputy communica- candidate for governor, quicktions director for Attorney ly appealed. He denied that raGeneral Greg Abbott. "The cial bias played any part in the state will continue to defend enactment of the photo ID law, the voter ID law and remains and said the figure of 600,000

services to HIV-positive peoWeinstein also noted that ple, the Los Angeles-based — according to figures from AIDS Healthcare Foundation, Gilead — only a few thousand remains a vocal critic of the people thus far have filled prepreventive use of Truvada. In scriptions for Truvada. "If people really felt it was an ad campaignlaunched in August, the foundation says the answer, it's hard to imagmany gay men fail to adhere ine it wouldn't have spread to Truvada's once-a-day reg- like wildfire," Weinstein said. imen and describes govern- "It's obvious there is enormous ment promotion of the drug as ambivalence in the medical "a public health disaster in the community." making." According to th e C DC, On Oct. 10, an alliance of there are about 50,000 new

Human Rights Campaign. "There is no reason — med-

Republican leaders were worried that the growing minori-

coming election," said Lauren

data casting doubts on Truvada's effectiveness. "Censoring the discussion is not the answer," he said.

G riffin, president of t h e

and concluded that the state's

a t t o r ne y gen e r al ty population could threaten

York City asserting there is

in part through PrEP's aggressive prevention of new HIV infections," said Chad

discourage voting." A spokeswoman for the

praised the decision. "We their hold on power. are pleased that the U.S. SuHer decision prevented the

stein, said his organization did plan to run ads soon in New

The Human Rights Camprecedented chance to end paign urged all states to emu-

obstaclecourse designed to Texas

The Healthcare Founda-

gram that provides assistance

way through the courts. "This is an affront to our

to challenge state measures

tion's president, Michael Wein-

A prominent provider of Thor Swift/New York Times file photo

around for a decade, serv- uals who could benefit from it, ing as one of the key drugs regardless of ability to pay.

law would hinder voting by blacks and Latinos. The

justices who struck down the "pre-clearance" rule had said civil rights lawyers would still be able to bring lawsuits

AIDS epidemic by 2020. suranceregulators to take action against any insurers who deny legitimate claims from patients who've been prescribed PrEP by their doctors.

out there who will disagree

Court

letter said.

The HRC called on state in-

releaseof a policy paper strongly supporting the It depicted the drug as "a critically important tool" in

sands of fully qualified voters, she said. The Texas case was seen as

nounced initiatives in J u ne aimed at ending the state's

joined those ranks with the preventive use of Truvada.

J. Scott Applewhite /The Associated Press

implemented a program ear- ing it not to extend the ad camlier this year offering assis- paign to their state. "We believe your campaign tance in paying for PrEP. The p reventive option also w as could prevent people at risk endorsed by New York Gov. for HIV from using this potenAndrew Cuomo when he an- tial lifesaving medication," the

HIV by 90 percent or more.

Research discussed at the International AID S C onference in July found that

use of the drug does not encourage risky sex and is effective even if people skip some doses.

I'

'

As part of its announcement, the Human Rights

•.

Campaign called on insurIC

HWY 20E Sr Dean Swift Rd. •

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rulings striking down limits Supreme Court to d ecide on campaign contributions as whether Texas could enforce First Amendment violations, the law in this year's general but it has yet to issue a clear election. ruling upholding the constiLawyers for civil r ights tutional right to vote. groups and the Obama adUntil recently, federal law ministration argued in court had included strong protec- papers that it would be "virtions against possible racial tually unheard of" to allow a bias in elections. state to enforce an election law Two years ago, federal that had been struck down as judges in Washington, D.C., racially discriminatory. relying on the Voting Rights The appeals went to Justice Act of 1965, barred Texas

Antonin Scalia, wh o

o ver-

from enforcing the new photo sees the 5th Circuit. Shortly ID law approved by its Repub- after 5 a.m. on Saturday, the lican-controlled legislature. court issued an order saying Since 1965, the civil rights the civil rights appeals were law had prevented Southern denied. No explanation was states with a history of racial given. discrimination from changJustice Ruth Bader Ginsing their voting rules in a way burg filed a six-page dissent, that would make it h a rder which was joined by Justices for blacks or Latinos to cast Sonia Sotomayor and Elena a ballot. Under the law, any Kagan. changes had to be approved S he pointed out that t h e by the Justice Department or Texas law has never been federal judges in Washington enforcedin a federalgeneral beforetaking effect. election. Moreover, putting But last year, the Supreme the law on hold would merely Court, in an opinion written restore rules that have been for the pastdecade. by Roberts, struck down that in effect part of the Voting Rights Act. Texas voters were required to "Things have changed in show some form of identificathe South," the chief justice

L

t

tion to confirm their identity,

said, and this "pre-clearance" but they could do so through rule is no longer needed and a variety of means, such as stands as an affront to states'

utility bills.

The Texas law, like most others of its kind, has little ef-

lic confidence in

since those who drive already have driver's licenses that

discriminatory law, one that

"equal sovereignty."

"The greatest threat to pube l ections

in this case is the prospect fect on the majority of voters, of enforcing a purposefully

likely imposes an unconstitutional poll tax and risks deat polls. Voters in Texas may nying the right to vote to hunalso show their permit to car- dreds of thousands of eligible ry a concealed handgun or a voters," she wrote. U.S. passport. The outcome was hard to But most voters who do not reconcile with an order handdrive must go to a state mo- ed down Oct. 9 that prevented tor vehicles office to obtain Wisconsin from enforcing its an acceptable photo ID and voter ID law this year. The bring copied of their birth only apparent difference is

WHAT'5 THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THESE TWO HOMESP

can serve as identification

certificates. And in a vast state like Tex-

that Texas claimed its law

as, that may require a round

had already been enforced in several primary elections,

trip of more than three hours,

though fewer than 10 percent

of voters participated in those elections. Suspending the law is not an absolute barrier to now would change the rules voting, it could and likely will at the last minute, Texas offistand in way of tens of thou- cials argued.

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Running Continued fromA1 "Everybody warned me, 'a

scribe her as incredibly kind and remarkably upbeat. Even after struggling through such

question for their mom: "Good

marathon starts with the last

An early illness leads

to a iater cancerdiagnosis Carrie is the third of four

children. Her parents struggled toconceive and adopted their first two kids. She was

born premature and suffered through viral pneumonia at age 1. At 3, she spent 12 days in the intensive care unit with laryn-

5

/

she had already raced the Boston Marathon in 2001.

the last two years.

"Some days it's taking it by Andy Tullie/Ttte Bulletin one day, sometimes it's tak- Carrie Carney, left, and her friend Kirsten Scott wear their Portland ing it by the hour," Carrie said. Marathon competitor T-shirts and medals during a meeting outside "My priority is the kids. I have Integrated Eye Care in Bendlast week. to step up and go for it. A friend told me, 'Think of these tran-

sition periods as a long hard run. It's going to get easier.' It

line was Will, Maddie and her and whom she calls "my rock mother-in-law, Bend's Wan- for helping with the kids."

hits home at night. It's hard on

da Adrian, with whom Carrie

The next morning, on their

those little guys (Will and Mad- maintains a good relationship way to school, the kids had a infection of the larynx, trachea die). I've had to learn to ask for and bronchi that can lead to help. That's really hard. And gotracheobronchitis, a severe complete obstruction of the re-

fast, if it's life, if it's cancer, if

it's marriage or divorce," she "I have a whole new respect said, tearing up. "My mom will for all these marathoners and call me and say, 'Can you beultramarathoners," Carrie said. lieve the love that surrounds "I finished that race and I went, you, and the people who have 'Wow, I think I'm happy with stepped up'?' It makes me emothat one. I'm good."' tional. It makes me cry. I've Morales says that training learned to be an even better for the

P ortland M arathon person, for all of this that I've

helped keep her daughter's gone through. It's made me mmd occupied. "She put her mind to train-

ing, and she qualified for no reason but for her peace of mind," Morales said. "To say, all of this was not for nothing. And she did it ... unbelievable achievement. And I cannot be-

learn how to show up. When

someone's struggling, just show up. Don't ask, just show up. Because those people who have just shown up have been my angels." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorlcal®bendbulletin.com

I'm not that good at it."

spiratorypassages.One ofher The biggest help to Carrie lungs collapsed and she under- has been her devoted circle of went a tracheotomy. friends and family in Bend. "The doctor had said I would After Carrie's thyroid was rebe at an increased risk for thy- moved, Johanna Olson spent roid cancerbecause of all the five days in the hospital with radiation (X-rays and scans) her friend. Olson was dying I had at a young age," Carrie of cancer, but she found the said. strength to support Carrie, She survived, and the Mo- and the two even traveled to rales family moved from Foun- the 2012 U.S. Olympic Track tain Valley, California, to Bend and Field Trials in Eugene when she was in first grade. together. "She is the one that got me Carrie was a competitive gymnast for 10years before she took running again," Carrie said up running and swimming. A of Olson. "I was hypothyroid standout athlete at Mountain

lieve the strength ... and to see

job on your race. When can we the rallying of the people in run a marathon with you?" this town that love this girl has Carrie's time qualified her blown me away." for the April 2016 Boston MarCarrie says training for and athon, and she says she is still running the m arathon was deciding if she will run it. Scott, "definitely therapeutic." "This last year I've learned 39, finished in 3 :56:35 and failed to qualify for Boston, but that our lives can change so

physical and emotional trauma

the past two years, she is perky 10K,' and everyone was right," and positive, and quick with a Carrie said. "That last mile, smile or a laugh. that's when I dug back to the "I was always joking around whole past of the training and that she knows everybody in the running and the hurting ... Bend, and she probably does," of all those years of running. It Scott said of Carrie."Because was a deep pain that I haven't she just has that bubbly, enthufelt in a long time, since I real- siastic personality, and makes ly competed. I just put my head you feel special." down and just started running Carrie says she considers as hard as I could." herself lucky, even with everything that has happened over

one ise

IC

e es

one eserves a n ever.

and exhausted. She was train-

View, she was also a cheerlead- ing for her last marathon, the er, diver and alpine skier. 7win Cities marathon. She After graduating from Wil- was huge. I mean, she was dylamette, Carrie moved back ing of a brain tumor and knew to Bend and continued to run she had months. She was like, competitively and also took 'Come on, you're gonna come part in triathlons. She raced in out and run with me.' She was the 3,000-meter steeplechase at amazing. She was with me evthe 2000 U.S. Olympic Trials in ery day." Sacramento, California. Olson died in January 2013 Carrie was a teacher and at 33. But she finished the Twin coach at Bend's High Desert Cities marathon just months Middle School before becom- before her death. ing a vision therapist at Integrated Eye Care in Bend. She ASght to thefinish was diagnosed with thyroid C arrie ha d m a n y o t h er cancer after an annual checkup friends to keep her running with her OB-GYN. The thyroid through her cancer recovery is a gland in the neck that pro- and her marital tumult. Scott, duces two main hormones that an optometrist at Integrated control metabolism. Thyroid Eye Care, persuaded Carrie cancer can often spread to the in March to run the Portland lymph nodes and the lungs. Af- Marathon with her. She even ter surgery to remove her thy- paid Carrie's entry fee as a40th roid in June 2012, Carrie took birthday present. The two starta radiation pill to help eradicate ed training in June. "It's not like I t wisted her any remaining cancer cells. "When the pill goes in they arm, but I wanted to give her want to burn out the rest of the an opportunity to do it," Scott tissue (that could be cancerous) said. "Because I knew that she that they couldn't cut out," Car- had always wanted to do it, but rie explained. "It's such a hard I don't think she was going to surgery by the vocal cords and sign up for it on her own with everything. It's not like a clean- everything else going on." cut surgery." The longer training runs She then began medica- with Scott proved to be a helption (a pill three times daily) to ful outlet for Carrie. "Those long runs give you maintain a normal thyroid level. With no thyroid hormone in a lot of time to think and talk, her body she was hypothyroid, and work through things," which caused weight gain and Scott said. "I think lots of peoextreme fatigue. ple thought she was kind of cra"The hardest part for me is zy for training for a marathon getting your medication fig- during everything else, but I ured out," Carrie said. "It took think it was kind of for sanity a good year for me to get to for a little while ... something feeling OK. And that's hard else to think about and somewhen you've got two little kids thingpositive to think about." running around. When you go Carrie's goal was to finish hypothyroid you gain weight, between 3:30 and 3:45. The day everything slows down. I was of the marathon, Oct. 5, was unstill active, still running and seasonably warm in Portland. pushing through it, but you Scott and Carrie ran together don't feel good." for the first 13 miles, but Scott Doctors are still monitoring had been sick the week before four of Carrie's lymph nodes and she fell off the pace. that are a bit enlarged. At the When Ca r r i e r ea c hed end of this month, they will mile 19, her left quadriceps perform anultrasound to see cramped. She walked through whether they have grown. She an aid station at mile 21, but says the enlarged nodes could knew that if she stopped and mean more cancer, or that she walked any farther, she would is simply fighting a cold or an not finish. "At mile 21, you're seeing infection. "You get nervous every time everything," Carrie recalled. you go in ... but the doctors "You're seeing people throwalways say 'it's treatable, it's ing up on the side of the road. curable,'" Carrie said of thy- You're seeing people walking. roid cancer. "If you've got to You're seeing big guys running have a cancer, it's one you can byyou. It's quite anexperience." work with. I see women going Carrie says that at that point through breast cancers, and in therace,she had come to that's a whole different beast, I terms with failing to qualify think." for Boston. Her cramping con-

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tinued, and it was just too hot.

Findingstrengthfromfriends Then she gottom ile24,andshe during turmoil started doing the math. At mile In the midst of battling can- 25, she realized she had about cer, Carrie's personal life fell 10 minutes to run 1.2 miles to into turmoil when her husband, qualify for Boston. "All I could think was God, former Bend Police public inf ormation officer Lt . C h r i s why did I do this'?" she recalled. Carney, was involved in a sex "I either wanted there to be scandal with three city employ- more cushion or just know it ees and one member of the me-

was over."

dia. Details of the scandal were When she looked again at reported in Oregon media for her watch and saw 3:44:15 with weeks. the finish line about 100 meters He resigned in January and away, she knew she could do it. now lives in Portland, but often She finished in 3:44:50, qualireturns to Bend to visit his and fying for the Boston Marathon Carrie's children — Will, 7, and by a mere 10 seconds. She was Maddie, 5 — on the weekends. 38thoutof536in heragegroup The couple's divorce is almost (35-39) and 219th overall out of final, accordingto Carrie. 3,325 women. Those who know Carrie deWaiting for her at the finish

A7

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© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

BRIEFING WashingtonATV rider injured A Washington man suffered serious injuries Friday in anATVcrash east of Bend. Steve Headley, 51,of Ridgeview, Washington, was riding at the East Fort Rock OHV trail system, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. County dispatchers learned of Headley's crash at around1:46 p.m., and two sheriff's office search and rescue teams on ATVswere sent to the area. Search and rescue medics stabilized Headley and transported him to a nearbyForest Service road, where he was met by anAirLink helicopter for transport to St. Charles Bend.

Work to deginon welcome center A brief groundbreaking ceremony forthe CascadeLakes Welcome Station is scheduled for1 p.m. on Monday. The Deschutes National Forest is set to begin construction on the welcomecenter at the corner of the Cascade LakesHighway and Forest Service Road 41 this week. The welcome center will serve as placefor forest visitors to pick up parking permits and maps and askForest Service staff about weather, trail conditions and other matters.

SENIOR ISSUES

BRIEFING

8 ICBfB, f8 IfBIYl8fl f O V B COI1 Bll IOLlS Of CcII1 I cI BS • The Bulletin asks federal andstate candidatesabout issuesimportant to seniors By Mac McLean

work to immediately restore a series of cuts the Affordable

The Bulletin

U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley,

Medicare When the Affordable Care

Act passed in 2010, it made a

I

Merkley

seriesofchanges to Medicare

that scaled backpayments to private insurance companies

Wehby

Care Act made to Medicare

that run its Medicare Advan-

D-Ore., and Republican Mon- and criticized Merkley for ica Wehby, his chalsupporting the ACA tenger in thisyear's when it came to the twt

plan that would help people

clashed sharply when asked what steps they would take to help Medicare control

employers, a conflict that was

midterm election,

U.S. Senate for a vote in 20io. Merkiey de-

NO V .4

who do not have access to a

401(k) or Individual Retirement Account through their

fen d ed his support for echoed by candidates running

ELECTION the ACA and said the for seats representing Central changes it made to

Oregon in the U.S. House of

tage plans. The law also set up a new system that would reduce the

payments hospitals received from Medicare if they had too many readmissions or failed to meet a series of other quality-control measures.

Medicare helped enture for generations to come, s u re the program's financial Answering questions on stability for years to come.

Representatives and the state Legislature.

senior issues that The Bulletin sent to candidates for

to the retirement planning question even put members of

reduce Medicare's long-term

the same party at odds with

2013 to 2022.

costsand secure its fu-

The two Senate candidates

alsodisagreed on whether the federal and state offices last f e d eral government should month, Wehby said she would create a retirement savings

In some cases, the answers

In a July 2012 report, the

Congressional Budget Office said these changes would

the city, at 541-923-

7761 or gabriel.martin @ci.redmond.or.us. — Bulletin staff reports

STATE NEWS

A crash involving two vehicles east of Santiam Junction on Saturday morning killed three people in one of the vehicles, according to Oregon State Police. The wreck occurred on U.S. Highway 20 near milepost 78 shortly before10 a.m. Aneastbound car lost control and veered into the path of a westbound utility vehicle pulling a travel trailer, which hit the car broadside, OSPsaid. All three people in the car died; the occupants of the utility vehicle were not injured. Identification of the victims was not yet available. — Bulletin staff reports

outlays by $716 billion from

each other.

SeeSenior issues/B5

46TH ANNUAL COWDEO

Have a story idea or sndmission? Contact us!

The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver.................541-617-7831

Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 D.c....................... 202-662-7456

Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-383-0367 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissions • Letters andopinions:

Advisory panel seeks volunteers The city of Redmond is recruiting volunteers to serve on anadvisory committee to help plan a revitalization effort north of downtown. The city hopes to develop a plan for the midtown area, bounded by Jackpine Avenueand Antler Avenue to the north and south and Third and Eighth streets to the east andwest, that will encourage investment and redevelopment of commercial properties in the area. The committee will meet monthly for six to eight months andwork with aconsultant team to develop a planfor the area. Individuals interested in volunteering for the committee should contact Gabriel Martin, project coordinator for

Three die in wreck on Hwy20

Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com, with acivicCalendar" inthesublect and includeacontact name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens'

academicac hievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Obituaries, Death Notices: Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Mark Johnson, 12, stays upright Saturday in the senior calf-riding event during theCowdeo in Madras. The events for the older participants, ages12 to 14, more closely resembled the events seen on the adult rodeo circuit.

By Scott Hammers

— like bull riding, only with

st a yed on board for maybe

sheep — to goat undecorating,

1 1 seconds, only to have the

gon's smallest cowboys and cowgirls were atthe Jefferson

Catholic Church in Madras, but since 2003 it has been run by the fair board to support the fairgrounds and various children' sprograms in Jeffer-

in which competitors race across the arena on horseback, dismount

Mnra

County Fair Complex on Sat-

son County.

and pluck a ribbon tied

urday, roping and riding in the 46th annual Cowdeo.

Friends, family and curious onlookers filled the indoor

to a goat's tail.

On li6

The Bulletin

MADRAS — Central Ore-

Open to kids 5 to 14, the

Cowdeo was originally a fundraiser for St. Patrick's

arena on Saturday to check

out a variety of kid-size rodeo events, from mutton busting

ph ntOS

Reagan McCabe, 5, of Madras, reported his first

attempt at mutton busting was a challenge. He said he

sheep collapse and roll over him.

No w o r se for wear, Reagan said he knew

what he'd have to do the next ti m e around.

"Pick a bigger sheep," he said . SeeCowdeo/B6

Details onthe Obituariespage inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

• Community events: Email events to communitylife@ bendbulletin.comorclickon "Submit anEvent" onlineat bendbulletin.com. Details onthe

calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-633-2117

Portland

Eugene

• Eugene:Anauditor sayspoliceemployees misplaced evidence,B3 • Portlaufi:Police suspect thesameman robbed 3 banks,B3

YESTERDAY

Inmates postbail with 400 in counterfeit bills in '89 Compiled by Don Hoiness fromarchivedcopies ofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

Clarification In a story headlined Six candidates meet in forum" that appeared Friday, Oct. 17,on Page B1,the source of campaign donations to Bend City Council candidates Scott Ramsay and CaseyRoats was described incompletely. The donations came from Central Oregon Association of Realtors PAC. The Bulletin regrets the error. n

100 YEARSAGO

is wholly in line with the past

history of the state. In the "In Earlier Days"

column of the Oregon Journal this fact as to the Oregon counties was recently brought in a very clear and interesting manner. Portions of the article

south to California. Marysville, now called Corvallis,

seat.

of Redmond and Prineville

men. Its real name should be

was its original county seat.

"Crook County was taken from southern Wasco County

on January23, 1854.

on October 9, 1882. It was named after General George Crook, who fought Indians all

"Columbia County was cut off from Washington County

M any counties have divided

pecial bearing on the present

St. Helens is the county seat and when it was founded by H.M. Knighton in 1848, it was called Plymouth Rock. Its name was changed to St.

That county division is not a new thing in Oregon is readily ascertained by a study of the history of the

movement in this section. "Benton county is one of

Helens and it was a serious rival of Portland in those

our older counties, having

days.

For the week ending Oct. 18, 1914

state. From its earliest days

as a territory the division of large areas into smaller units forthe purpose ofm ore efficientgovernment had been going on, and the present movement in Crook County

are herereprinted fortheir general interest and their es-

"On December 22, 1851,

over that district in the early

county seat.

days. Barney Prine's blacksmith shop, saloon and stage station grew into the town of Prineville and became the

"Old timers" for division — prominent ranchers

the "Anti-Division League" but the other one sounds better.

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Oct. 18, 1939

ChamberlainscornsNazi peace offer Great Britain and France to-

to form Coos County. It is

The chief opposition to county division had been

day rejected the "impossible" peaceterms offeredby Adolph Hitler and warned Germany to choose between definite

and best friends. It originally embraced all the country west

named for the tribe of Indians

fathered by the "Lower Tax

guarantees for permanent Eu-

who made their home on Coos

of the Willamette River to the

Bay. Empire City, now but a memory, was its first county

League." The so-called League is a

ropean security or "war to the utmost of our strength." SeeYesterdayIB5

been created on December 23, 1847. It was named for Senator Thomas H. Benton of Missouri, one of Oregon's earliest

coast and from Polk County

portions of Umpqua and Jackson counties were combined

endorsemove

close corporation of a handful


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

E VENT TODAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a petting zoo, hay rides, pony rides and

train rides; freeadmission, charge

for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith RockW ay, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH:An8-acre Godzilla corn maze with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train,

ENDA R

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

have five minutes to talk about 20 PowerPoint slides that are rotated

5 II II

every15 seconds;free; 7 p.m., doors

541-323-1881.

open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St.; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. THE SCAREGROUNDS: Featuring the Hauntat Juniper Hollow, Dark Intentions and Distortions; recommended for ages12 and older; $12 for one haunt, $20 for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; 7 p.m., gates open at 6:30 p.m.; old Parr Lumber buildings, 443 SWEvergreen Ave., Redmond; www.scaremegood. com or 541-548-4755. "PANIC":A film director is accused of a crime at his premiere in Paris; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre,148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or541-389-0803. "THE PILLOWMAN":A play about a writer who is questioned about his stories and a possible connection to recent murders; $15 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m .;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

PUMPKINPATCH:Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. HISTORICALHAUNTS OF DOWNTOWN BEND:W alkto historical buildings that are said to have experienced paranormal events and hear their ghostly tales; $10,

PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH:An eight-acre Godzilla corn maze with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free

pony ridesandmore;$7.50, $5.50

ages 6-11, free ages 5and younger for Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other activities; 10 a.m.-7 p.m., pumpkin patch open until 6 p.m.; Smith Rock Ranch, 1250 NE Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; www.smithrockranch. com or 541-504-1414. "PANIC":A film director is accused of a crime at his premiere in Paris; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 2 p.m.;CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "SHREK, THEMUSICAL": Summit High School Theatre presents a play based on the 2001 film; $12.50, $8 for students age18, $5 for seniors and children age12 and younger; 2 p.m.; Summit High School,2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.bend. k12.or.us, lara.okamoto©bend.kf2. or.us or 541-355-4190. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY FALL CONCERT: An orchestral performance, featuring guitarist Petar Jankovic; free, ticket is required; 2 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.;www.cosymphony.

com, info©cosymphony.comor 541-317-3941. THE BROADWAY TENORS:The vocal trio performs, presented by the Redmond Community Concert Association; $60, $25 for students age 21 andyounger, $125 for families, season subscriptions only; 6:30 p.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www. redmondcca.org, redmondcca© hotmail.com or 541-350-7222. THE GREENCARDS: The progressive bluegrass band performs; $27 or $32 plus fees in advance;7:30 p.m .; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. THE CHOP TOPS: The California punkabilly band performs, with Screamin' Rebel Angels and Harley

Bourbon; $8plusfees in advance, $10at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. actiondeniroproductions.com or 541-323-1881.

MONDAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

The cast of "Panic" rehearse a scene at Cascades Theatre. The play, about a film director who is accused of a crime at his premiere in Paris, has a showing today at 2 p.m. Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY FALL CONCERT: Anorchestral performance, featuring guitarist Petar Jankovic; free, ticket is required; 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.; www.

cosymphony. com,info© cosymphony.com or 541-317-3941. THE TRIPLESHOTTOUR: Featuring singer-songwriters The Dark Whatever, River/Saint and Kingwell, with Victory Swig; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

TUESDAY PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "We Live in Water" by Jess Walter; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. SHAWN MULLINS: Thesingersongwriter performs, with Max Gomez;$20-$42.50 plusfees;

7 p.m., doorsopenat6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. PASADENA:The Maryland rock and reggae band performs; $5; 9 p.m., doorsopen at8 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

WEDNESDAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a pumpkin patch, petting zoo and various activities; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. KNOW FRIGHT: FRIGHTFUL FILMS: Showing of the film about ghost removal service "Ghostbusters"; free; 6 p.m.; Tin PanTheater,869 NW Tin Pan Alley, Bend; www.tinpantheater. com, tinad@deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1034. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LE NOZZEDl FIGARO":Featuring Mozart's masterpiece about an 18th-century manor house in

Seville, Spain;$24, $22for seniors, $18 for children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Beautiful Ruins" by Jess Walter; 6:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N.Cedar St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070. GRAHAM WILKINSON: The Texas roots-rock artist performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. SISTERSOLD TIME RADIO SHOW: Featuring scriptedradio episodes performed by locals; donations accepted; 7-9 p.m.;TheBelfry,302 E. Main Ave.; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. DAN TEDESCO:The lowafolk-rock

musician performs;$5; 8p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or

free for museummembers andages 12 and younger; 4-7:30 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave.; www.deschuteshistory. org or 541-389-1813. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Dee Williams will speak about her book "The Big Tiny: A Built-It-Myself Memoir" and show her 85-squarefoot home; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W.Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. "POMPEII FROM THE BRITISH MUSEUM":Featuring an exclusive view of the exhibit on Pompeii andthetown Herculaneum 2,000

year agowhenMount Vesuvius erupted; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. "SHREK, THE MUSICAL": Summit High School Theatre presents a play based on the 2001 film; $12.50, $8 for students age 18, $5 for seniors and children age12 and younger; 7 p.m.; SummitHighSchool,2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.bend. k12.or.us, lara.okamoto©bend.k12. or.us or 541-355-4190. IGNITE BEND12:Presenters

ages 5andyounger for Corn Maize;

$2.50 for most other activities; 10 a.m.-7 p.m.,pumpkin patchopen until 6 p.m.; Smith Rock Ranch, 1250 NE Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; www.smithrockranch.com or 541-504-1414. VFW DINNER:Fish and chips; $6; 3-7 p.m.; VFWHall,1503 NE Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. HISTORICALHAUNTS OF DOWNTOWN BEND: W alkto historical buildings that are said to have experienced paranormal events and hear their ghostly tales $10

free for museummembers andages 12 and younger; 4-7:30 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum,129 NW Idaho Ave.; www.deschuteshistory. org or 541-389-1813. REDMOND CHAMBER DINNER, DANCE &AUCTION: AHalloweenthemed evening featuring dinner, live music, dancing, live and silent auctions and more to benefit the Redmond Chamber of Commerce; $50, $500 per table of eight; 6 p.m.; South Sister building, Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way; www. visitredmondoregon.com/dinner-

dance-auction or541-548-2711. "MURDER'S INTHEHEIR": A murder mystery based onClue in which the audience votes on the killer; $10 for Friday and Sunday shows, $30 for Saturday dinner show; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; dramama©comcast. net or 541-706-1716. "SHREK, THE MUSICAL": Summit High School Theatre presents a play based on the 2001 film; $12.50, $8 for students age18, $5 for seniors and children age 12andyounger; 7 p.m.; Summit HighSchool,2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.bend. k12.or.us, lara.okamoto@bend.k12. or.us or 541-355-4190. THE SCAREGROUNDS: Featuring the Hauntat Juniper Hollow, Dark Intentions and Distortions; recommended for ages12 and older; $12 for one haunt, $20 for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; 7 p.m., gates open at 6:30 p.m.; old Parr Lumber buildings, 443 SWEvergreen Ave., Redmond; www.scaremegood. com or 541-548-4755. "PANIC":A film director is accused of a crime at his premiere in Paris; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "REEFERMADNESS,THE MUSICAL":A musical comedy based on the 1936 film of the same name that takes a lookat kids and drug use; $22, $19 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "THE PILLOWMAN": A play about a writer who is questioned about his stories and a possible connection to recent murders; $15 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. BEATLESVS. STONES- AMUSICAL SHOOTOUT:Atribute show about the two famous Britishbands; $35-$55 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. HAUNTINGFORHORSES:Featuring a haunted barn to benefit Equine Outreach; $5; 7:30-10 p.m.; Equine Outreach Ranch, 63220 Silvis Road, Bend; www.equineoutreach.com or 541-390-6660. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD:A concert featuring King Louie's Portland Blues Review III; $42 plus fees; 8 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NWMinnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford.com or 541-382-8436. MOONALICE: The BayArea jamrock band performs; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 9 p.m., doorsopen at8 p.m.;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.randompresents.com or 541-408-4329.

PUBLIC OFFICIALS STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon. gov • Secretary ofState KateBrown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616

Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state. onus Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral EllenRosenblum,D 1162 Court St. NE

P

Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor CommissionerBradAvakian 800 NE Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

RKGON

ou as oun ove owin wi aze nu s, wine ra es • Harvesting came early this year thanks to the hot, dry weather

Child ShOt —Gunfire in Gresham left a10-year-old girl with a bullet wound to her leg that police say is not life-threatening. The shooting was at about 9 a.m. on Saturday at an apartment complex. Gresham police were unable to provide a description of the subject beyond saying it was a man in dark clothes. Residents called 911 after hearing the gunfire, and seconds later, another call came in about the injured girl. The shooting struck several apartments in the Rain Treecomplex. Police say they do not believe there is any connection between the shooting suspect and the injured girl. UO fundraiSing —The University of Oregon announced a $2 billion fundraising campaign and says it has more than $700 million in commitments so far. The Oregonian reports that a primary goal of the ambitious effort announced Friday night will be hiring top scholars and researchers for the University's "clusters" of academic excellence. The campaign is also expected to fund scholarships and provide support for students, faculty fellowships, expanded programs and research and capital construction. The university launched what it calls the public phase of the campaign at an event at Hayward Field in Eugenethat drew more than 700 people. Interim President Scott Coltrane announced the goal during an event that featured videos and testimonials about past achievements and future potential for the university.

By Craig Reed The (Roseburg) News-Review

ROSEBURG — The h a rvest of hazelnuts and wine

grapes has overflowed plenty of bins in the last month or so for central Douglas County growers. The sweeping up of nuts and grape picking started and finished earlier this year than in past years because of

— From wire reports

the hot, dry weather. These are two crops that

WILLAMETTE VALLEY

h ave gradually grown i n acreage in Douglas County over the past couple of

decades. Steve Renquist, a horti-

Michael Sullivan/The (Rosehurg) News-Review via The Associated Press

Recently delivered Tempranillo grapes at Paul O'Brien Winery in Roseburg. The sweeping up ofnuts c ulture specialist w it h t h e and grape picking started and finished earlier this year than in past years because of the hot, dry Oregon State University Extension Servicein Roseburg, said there are approximate-

AROUND THE STATE

in 3 bank robberies

weather. These are two crops that have gradually grown in acreage in Douglas County over the past

couple of decades.

ly 1,500 acres of vineyards year we bingoed on both orchards. those," he said. "It's such a "The grape yields seem to fabulous year for grape growbe like last year — real heavy, ing and wine making. It just real nice," Renquist said. "I doesn't get any better than it think it was slightly larger is this year." than what people thought it He said the growing season was going to be. We've had started earlier than normal such wonderful heat and with the bud break process sunshine, those elements al- occurring in March, three low for an excellent crop and weeks ahead of what has quality." been normal. "That gave us a nice long Renquist a ls o d e scribed the hazelnut harvest as "real growing season," Jones said. nice." He said there was a "(There's been) very little heavy set on trees, and af- rain. There's been no disease ter a December freeze,the to speak of. It's been a fabuweather was mild, allowing lous growing year." for plenty of nuts to develop Terry Brandborg at Brandthrough the year. borg Vineyard and Winery in With both the grapes and Elkton said that the harvest nuts, Renquist said the quan- of grapes in that area was tity of the two products and pretty much complete, addthe stress created by hot ing that harvest was two to weather may have impacted four weeks earlier than past the size of the commodities, years. "It's the f irst t ime w e've but only slightly. That's an important factor for the nut picked with sunshine left in growers because they make the year," he said. a premium price on larger He explained the sunshine sized hazelnuts. ripened more grapes at once E arl Jones, owner o f so there was a t h ree-week Abacela Winery near W i n push to pick those compared ston, said his wine grape crop to six-week ripening periods was one of the best for his in past years. "I'm really loving the qualvineyard. "Not every year do we have ity," Brandborg said. "The quality and quantity, but this quality and flavors seem realand 220 acres of h azelnut

Same mansuspected The Associated Press

"Not every year do we have quality and

PORTLAND — The FBI

quantity, but this year we bingoed on both

says it thinks a man already

those. It's such a fabulous year for grape growing and wine making. Itjust doesn't get

metteValley bank robberies

s uspected in

tw o W i l la-

this week is responsible for

a third, this one in Cottage Grove.

any better than it is this year." — Earl Jones, owner of Abacela Winery

Spokeswoman

Bet h

Anne Steele said a Wells Fargo Bank branch inside ly excellent across the board. Some years are betterthan

t o Northwest H azelnut i n

a Safeway store was robbed

Hubbard.

Friday afternoon in Cottage

"The

others and this year looks m arket h a s b e e n excellent. I think everybody strong for the last four years is going to make great wines and it is stronger this year," in 2014. Miller said. "The demand is "This is a delightful time of up and the price is up." year," he added. "Everybody Oregon's hazelnut growers is exhausted, but happy with produce about 5 percent of the outlook." the world's crop. The county's h azelnut They'll benefit this year growers are also happy with from the freeze that hit Turtheir harvests. Norm Lehne key in March. Turkey is the at Norm Lehne Garden and world's leading hazelnut proOrchards in the Garden Val- ducer with about 70 percent ley area said the crop from of the market. his 17 acres of trees was a It is estimated that counlittle bigger than normal. He try lost almost half its crop. said the overall size of the Global prices have risen 60 nuts was "just a hair smaller percent since March to a 10than last year." year high. B ill Miller, who has a Lehne said he and his son 38-acre nut orchard near Glen Lehne have 15 acres of U mpqua, said he h a d a 1- to 2-year-old hazelnut trees "high-quantity harvest." that will soon be producing Both Lehne and Miller are and they anticipate planting pleased with

t h e h a zelnut another 30 acres oftrees in

prices. They sell their crops

Grove. I nvestigators th in k

Investigators think the same man also robbed two banks on Thursday — a Wells Fargo branch in a Safeway in Salem and an Umpqua Bank branch in

Eugene.

the

same man also robbed two banks on Thursday — a Wells Fargo branch in a Safeway inSalem and an Umpqua Bank branch in Eugene. In each case, he demand-

money and left.

ed cash from a teller, got an undisclosed amount of

varied, he's worn blue ten-

Witnesses say the man was in his late 30s to mid-

40s, about 6 feet tall and weighed about 200 pounds with brown hair.

While his clothing has nis shoes each time.

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com C om p l e m e n t s

the next couple of years.

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m

EUGENE POLICE

Workers decorated cubicles with evidence The Associated Press

year have been upheld by the city's police auditor this found rape kits, drugs, cash week. and a human skullamong The Eu g en e Re g i s1,000 missing items from ter-Guard reports criminal a Eugene police evidence charges were never filed warehouse. against the three employees, One worker allegedly used an administrative specialevidence to decorate her cu- ist and two property control bicle and seized fertilizer to specialists. feed office plants. The city placed the emThe p o licy vi o l ations ployees on paid administraspelled out against three Eu- tive leave during last year's gene police employees last investigation. EUGENE — Investigators

tral Oraq~m

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QPR - Suicide Prevention Presenter:Cheryl Emerson Pleasecomelearn howto recognizewarningsigns lt howto: Question, Persuade andRefer,andlearnabout otherresourcesin ourcommunity. Cheryl hasaMasters of Scienceincounseling, isaLicensed ProfessionalCounselor, andaCertified GatekeeperInstructorfor QPRandaMasterTrainer inASIST. Cheryl wil alsoinform us aboutASIST(amoreindepth intervention program), effortsof theDeschutes CountySuicidePrevention Advisory TaskForce, andaspecial school programshe canassistschoolsinimplementing. Please joinus;atendinghelpsyouconnect with otherspromotingbetter mental health. www.namicentraloregon.org I namicentraloregon©gmail.com

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PAT LYNCHc/o The Bulletin,P.O.Box 6020 Bend,OR 97708 or e-mail:plynch©bendbulletin.com

ELDERLAW

WILLS/PROBATE/ESTATE

I am consi dering the purchase of a single life immediate annuity which will provide me with monthly income for the remainder of my life. Will the "lump sum" I pay to the inssrance company be considered sn asset for Medicaid purposesshould I need long term care in the future?"

At the time my father passedaway all of his assets were in bank accounts cn which my brother and I were named thepOD(payable cn death)benet)ciaries Do I need tc open a probate to transfer his assets? No. Ycu only need tc open a probate if your father had assets that did aot transfer tc ycu aad your brother without a probate.Youcan submit a certit)ed copy of his deathcertificate to the bankaad theywill psy the Melissa P. Lande prcceedsfrom hisaccount tc the designated beneficiaries.Assets that can be transferred without a probateare: assetsheld with Auarney ar Lau another with right of survivorship; assetsheld is a revocable BRYANT, LOVLIENliving trust; certain bankandbrokerageaccounts with apayable & JARVIS, P.C. cn death designation; stocksandbondswith a transfer cn death AlTORNEYSATL/tW designation ssd life insurance and retirement accounts that 591 S.W.Mill View Wsy name a beneficiary. If as asset doesaot pass by one of these Bend, Oregon 97702 methods, then it will likely need tc gc throughprobate. 541-382-4331

O

OCTOBER EDUCATION MEETING: Tuesday, Oct.21,2014 -7pm to gpm St. Charles Health System-Bend Conf. Rm. "6"

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I O e SS i e n CI

REAL ESTATE My sister and I inherited out parents' house as tenants in common, each owning 50%, and we use it as a rental. She claims that the roof needs to be repaired. I disagree and wiu not pay for repairs. She said that if I don't contribute, she will force a sale of the house. Can she do that? It's likely that she can, because tenants in common may require each other to contribute heirfairshare of necessary repairexpenses.If Craig Edwards repairistneces saryand you refuse topayyourshare,she Artorney ar Lau may bring an action to partition the property, forcing EDWARDS LAW its sale if not practical to physically divide the property. OFFICES PC You should see a lawyer to find out more about your 225 N.W. Franklin Ave. rights and obligations. Suite 2 Bend, Oregon 97701

541N1s-ss61

General ly, yes, the cash surrender value of the annuity will be counted as an asset in determining your eligibility for Medicaid. Unless the annuity term is equal to your life Ltsa Bertalan expectancy as published by the Social Security AdminAttorney at Lau istration tables, the annuity is non-transferable and Hendrix, Brinch non-assignable. Yos must also name the State of Oreirs Bertatan, L.L.p. gon DHS as primary beneficiary of the annuity up to the ATTORNEYS ATLAW amount of Medicaid benefits paid on your behalf. If those conditions are met, the annuity payments areconsidered in716 NW Harriman St. come only to yoa, but may still affect your eligibility if your Bend, OR97701 income exceeds the incomecap for Medicaid. 541-3824980

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PATLYNCHc/o The Bulletin, PO. Box6020, Bend, OR97708 or email: plynch©bendbulletin.com Ny questionis:


B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

OREGON NEWS

Some landlordsstill turn away Section 8tenants

BITUARIES DEATH 1VOTIt ES Larry E. Forester,

Jordan Marie Lebeda, of Medford/Bend

of Bend Mar. 31, 1944 - Oct. 12, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 Please leave an online condolence for the family at www.deschutesmemorial chapel.com

Jeneane Lee Warner, of Bend July 11, 1954 - Oct. 14, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend, 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: An urn committal service will take place Saturday, October 25, 2014, at 2:00 p.m., at Pilot Butte Cemetery, off Bear Creek Road, in Bend.

Joe Richard Woodard II, of Terrebonne Jan. 22, 1933 - Oct. 16, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.

Dorothy Louise

Aanderud,of Redmond July 14, 1922 - Oct. 10, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel, 541-548-3219 www.redmondmemorial.com

Services: Saturday, Oct., 25, 2014, at 1:30 p.m., at Galilean Lutheran Church, in

Ocean Shores, WA. Contributions may be made to: Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd St., Redmond, OR 97756

T.U. Philip Wittboldt, of Bend Oct. 16, 1927 - Oct. 8, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorial chapel.com Services: Private family services will be held at a later date.

Kathryn Louise Bartlett, of Bend July 12, 1948 - Oct. 14, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private family service will be held at a later date.

Aug. 27, 1991 - Oct. 17, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorial

chapel.com

Services: A service for family and friends will be held on Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2014. Jordan will be laid to rest at Redmond Memorial Cemetery. Contributions may be made

[.

The most wonderful wife, mother, grandmother and f riend, J oa n L e e C l o u se (Davis) went to heaven on October 8, 2014 after suddenly falling ill. She passed p eacefully, surrounded by her family. J oan w a s b orn to M ary a n d Russell D avis o n January 21, 1933 in Ironton, Ohio. She met a Joan Clouse y oun g man named Veryl Clouse in 8th grade. G r o w in g up t ogether, Joan and Veryl became high school sweethearts and were married in 1 951. They a d o pted t w o children, a s o n P a u l V . Clouse i n 19 6 1 , a n d a daughter, Lee D. Clouse in 1965. The Clouse family moved west to Bend in 1969. Joan worked for both Bend and M ountain V i ew Hi gh Schools for many years, tn addition to raising her fami ly. She l o ved he r f a m i ly beyond w ords. Sh e l o v ed

Kinkade (husband, Jared)

o f B e nd ; a n d h e r on l y grandson, Jake Severance of Portland, Oregon. Autumn Funerals, Bend is honored to serve the family.

;e

Barton Silverman/The New York Times file photo

William Ronan, left, talks with Gov. Nelson Rockefeller aboard a Long Island Rail Road car, Oct. 281968. Ronan was the first chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and one of the most powerful officials in the modern history of New York state.

By Sewell Chan New Yorh Times News Service

NEW YORK — William J. Ronan, the architect and first chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and one of the most powerful offi-

and spokesman for Ronan from 1967 to 1973. "Building the MTA, consolidating all the transportation entities, took a tremendous amount of fortitude."

Ronan presided over two tucials in the modern history of multuous increases in the subNew York state, died Wednes- way fare: to 30 cents from 20 day at his home in West Palm

cents in 1970, and to 35 cents in

Beach, F1orida. He was 101. His death was confirmed by his daughter, Diana Ronan Quasha. Though Ronan, a political

1972 (about $2 in today's money). After the first increase, he

scientist, never held elected of-

received death threats, and the police detailed detectives to

protect him. "I was at one point probably

fice, he left his stamp on many the most hated man in New institutions, including the Port York," he recalled in a 2005 inAuthority of New York and

New Jersey, where he was chairman after leaving the transportation authority, and

the takeover of the Triborough

terview for this obituary. William John Ronan was

born in Buffalo, New York on Nov. 8, 1912, a child of Irish-Al-

teaching at New York U n i-

Bridge and Tunnel Authority

versity four years later. After and the New York City Transit completing his doctorate, in Authority. 1940, he was promptly hired That move took effect in as an assistant professor of 1968 with the creation of the government. He took a leave of Metropolitan Transportation absence during World War II Authority, which now runs the to work as an aide in the State New York City region's sub- Department and then as a lieuways, buses and commuter tenant in the Navy. railroads. The agency allowed Ronan's first foray into state for highway tolls to subsidize government came in 1956, all three, guaranteeing a boun- when Gov. W. Averell Harritiful stteam of m oney that man appointed Rockefeller remains the linchpin of the re-

chairman of a commission to

gion's mass transit financing. examine the state constitution. So encompassing was Ronan's Rockefeller named Ronan the influence and the authority's

scope that critics called it the my-winning pop-jazz vocal "Wholly Ronan Empire." group that enjoyed decades Tall, brainy and brusque, of worldwide acclaim. Died Ronan was a tenacious and Oct. 16 at a hospital in Sayre, astute student of politics. He

— From wire reports

made enemiesbut dazzled his

Phone: 541-617-7825

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020

Bend, OR97708

Get ATaste Eor Food, Home If Garden Every Tuesday In ATHOME TheBulletin

p r o spective

tenant solely for wanting to use a Section 8 voucher to pay

in Corvallis, but she had no rent. idea just how hard it would be

Corvallis, said at least a dozen

reaucratic turf. He was more at

She's had some short-term rentals in Lebanon and Alba-

whose vouchers have been turned down. And while she

ny, but both were too far from has no firm numbers on how many peoplehave been imto leave the last one after get- properly denied housing, her ting into a dispute with her experience tells her the steady the Farm Home, and she had

landlord over maintenance

trickle of complaints indicates

issues. Since then, she's had no permanent address. After spending a week in a homeless shelter, Prevish and her younger son are now staying

a much larger problem. "In general ... only one in 10 people who experience illegal discrimination try to do anything about it," she said.

in a donated camp trailer in a

Only three formal com-

church parking lot while she plaints have been filed to date continues to look for a house with the Bureau of Labor and in Corvallis. But time is runningout.

Industries, the state agency

Ahelpinghand

had enough time to adapt to

charged with enforcing the If Prevish can't secure Housing Choice Act. But enhousing by Nov. 7, she could forcement actions are likely lose her Section 8 voucher. to ramp up once housing officials judge that landlords have The Section 8 program was the newrequirements. created in 1974 as an amendment to the U.S. Housing Act One morechance of 1937. Administered by the

For E l i zabeth

P r evish,

Department of Housing and Urban Development, it providesfederall y funded assistance to poor families, the elderly and the disabled to help

things may be starting to look up.

them afford safe, decent and

needs — with a landlord who

sanitary housing. To qualify for a voucher from their local housing authority, recipients generally must earn less than half the median income for

was willing to accept Section

She recently found a man-

ufactured home a few miles south of Corvallis that fits her 8. The monthly rent was a little more than her benefits will

cover, but the owner agreed to lower the rent if he could the area where they live. Most make up the difference by recipients earn less than 30 charging a monthly fee for percent. the washer and dryer. Section 8 vouchers are in-

tended to be used on the private rental market. Recipients must pay about 30 percent of

The place also needs some improvements — a HUD in-

spector identified nine repairs that must be made to meet

their monthly adjusted gross Section 8standards forsafety income for rent and utilities, and habitability. with the

r emainder being

The landlord told Prevish

made Ronan secretary to the

landlords from discriminat-

cially if he finds another rent-

governor, in effect the chief of

ing against tenants on the er inthe meantime. "He still has the properbasis of race, religion, nationality, family or marital status, ty up on Craigslist, and that gender, sexual orientation or gives me an uneasy feeling," disability. she said. And if the deal does Source of income is also a fall through, Prevish said, she protected category, but Ore- doesn't know what she'll do gon law used to provide an next. She's running out of opexemption for federal housing tions — and energy. "I have stopped looking subsidies such as Section 8 vouchers. That changed July forother placesbecause Iam

staff and top administrative officer. er daughter, Monica Ronan;

na Vinade, died in 1996. Ronan was loath to be de-

and the target of riders' frustra- fined by his government work, tion. He was the subject of sub-

Craigslist ads that still say

the mountains to visit her son, 'no HUD,' 'no housing assisshe got approval to transfer tance,' in some cases 'no Secher federal housing benefits tion 8,'" Loewen said. from Deschutes County to That attitude is not limited the mid-valley — but ran into to the mid-valley. a brick wall when she tried to Pegge McGuire, executive use them in Corvallis. director of the Fair Housing So far, she says, half a doz- Council of Oregon, said her en local landlords have re- agency gets about a dozen fusedto accept herSection 8 calls a week from around the voucher — even though such state, ranging from property discrimination is illegal under owners with questions about Oregon fair housing laws. the law to Section 8 recipients

governor two years later and

commission's executive director. Rockefeller was elected

ease,and arguably more effec- his partner, Bette Machon; tive, behind the scenes than in three grandchildren; and three the public eye. great-grandchildren. Ronan's As chairman of the transpor- wife of 57years, the former Eletation authority, Ronan became the face of the transit system

the three-hour drive across

he's willing to do the work,

admirers with his skill at preBesides his daughter Diana, serving and enlarging his bu- Ronan is survived by anoth-

"He was able to take the

policy, contact 541-617-7825.

can't reject a

paid by the local public housing authority. Fair housing laws in Oregon have long prohibited

1, when House Bill 2639, also

but she's a little worried. he

might change his mind about spending the money — espe-

completely worn out," she

known as the Housing Choice said. "I'm tired."

and he would insist that mov-

way graffiti, and angry Long ing from the halls of academia Island commuters hanged him to the corridors of government in effigy. power was not easy for him. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

CORVALLIS — Elizabeth P revish knew i t c o uld b e tough to find a house to rent

Previshwas thrilledwhenshe property owners in Linn and got him placed in the Chil- Benton counties still have a dren's Farm Home for inpa- blanket policy against accepttient treatment in January. ingthe vouchers. "What I have seen is in After months of making

New York University, where he satian ancestry who grewup in was a professor and dean. an Episcopal family of fervent With the blessing of Gov. Democrats. (He later described Nelson Rockefeller, whom he himself as a "Rockefeller Relong served as a close aide and publican.") His father, William, adviser, Ronan engineered the was a businessman, and his state's takeover of the Long mother, the former Charlotte g oing fo r d a i l y w a l k s, Island Rail Road and then out- Ramp, was a homemaker. playing B i n go , g o i n g t o m aneuveredRobert Moses, the Ronan graduated magna Reno, and playing Scrabble master builder of highways, cum laude from Syracuse with her best friend, Ellen R ogers, for th e p ast f o r ty bridges and parks, to secure University in 1934 and began years. Joan and Veryl would be married s i x ty-three y e ars this December. She wdl be so missed but forever in our hearts. She was preceded in death by he r p a r ents and her son. Survivors include the love of he r l i fe, Veryl Clouse; her daughter, Lee

Act, dosed that loophole. Specifically, it says landlords

Corvallis Gazette-Times

rious emotional disorder, and

Jan. 21, 1933- Oct. 8, 2014

Obituary policy

Fax: 541-322-7254

,1

Joan L. Clouse

Manhattan Transfer, a Gram-

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com

I '

By Bennett Hall

w hen she decided to relocate Pockets of resistance from Redmond in May. Clearly, some landlords haA single mom, Prevish has ven't gotten the message. two sons, ages 3 and 13. The Bob Loewen, a rental housolder boy struggles with a se- ing specialist with the city of

Redmond Community Church, 237 NW 9th St., Redmond, OR 97756

Edward V. Regan, 84:Buffalo Republican who knew little about h igh f i nance Pennsylvania. when he became the New Earle Palmer Brown, 92: York state comptroller but Businessman who founded soundly managed billions the Washington-area adverin public pension funds and tising and public relations monitored hundreds of mu- agency that bore his name nicipalities and state agencies and became an industry powfor 14 years. Died Saturday in erhouse during five decades Greenwich, Connecticut. in business. Died Oct. 1 at his Tim Hauser, 72: Founder home in Potomac, Maryland, and guiding force behind the of cardiac arrest.

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

MTA architect, 'the most hated man inNewYork'

to:

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world:

FEATURED OBITUARY

"Some have

o c cupations

lumps, and, God almighty, he thrust upon them," he said, used to get lumps," said Sid- "and in a sense that's what hapney Frigand, who was an aide pened to me."

Larry E. Forester March 31, 1944 - October 12, 2014 Larry E. Forester, 70, passed away October 12, 2014, in his home in Bend, Oregon, surrounded by family. He was born in Grand Coulee, Washington, to Alvin E. Forester and Ida Catherine Forester on March 31, 1944. Larry moved to Bend in 1977 with his family to start his own business,Forester Building Maintenance. Larry enjoyed restoring old vehicles with his friends, and taking his children and grandchildren fishing. He loved taking family vacations at various lakes, and also enjoyed traveling to Reno with his wife and children. But most of ail, he loved his dogs, especially Bear, who was his constant companion. Larry is survived by his wife, Laura L. Forester,his sister, Elsie Brigham of West Linn, OR, his children, Trina K. Shanaman of Eugene, OR, Timberlee E. Lakey of Bend, OR, and Scott A. Forester of Bend, OR, and six grandchildren. Larrywas preceded in death by his son, Steven R.Forester and his brother Ray Forester of Calgary, Alberta, Canada. A celebration oflife with friends and relatives will be planned for a later date.Deschutes Memorial Chapel is entrusted with I.arry's arrangements. •

Elton J. Wilson 6

20 14

Eltoff J. Wilson, 88, of Redmond Pa away September 22, 20I4, at Brookside Assisted Living. Elton was bornJuly 4, i 926 in Eugene,Oregon, to Gladys and David Wilson. He was the oldest of three children and spent his early childhood living in Alvador, Oregon, later moving with his family to St. Helens. At age Ir, he joined the U.S. Navy and later served several years in the Oregon hrmy National Guard. ln January of l949, he married Ruth Farmer and they had two children, Linda and Martin. In l964, Elton relocated his family to Bendand one year later m oved to Redmond. He then opened Wilson's Electric Home Service in l965. In 197I, he expanded the ~ business and changed thename to Wi lson'sFurnitureand Appliance (present day Wilson's of Redmond). He and his wife, Ruth, enjoyed traveling and the outdoors. Elton had a great love for hunting aswell as fishing. His mother, Gladys Wilson, father, David A. Wilson Sr. and his brother, David h. Wilson Jr., preceded him in death. He is survived by his wife, Ruth, sister, Yvonne Johnston (Oregon City), daughter and son-in-law, Linda and Steve Perry (Baker City), son and daughter-in-law, Martin and Catherine Wilson (Redmond), two granddaughters andspouses, leslie and Russell Elms andStephanie and Ryan Elms (Baker City), and two grandsons,JesseWilson and Brent Wilson (Corvallis), four great-granddaughters, Erin, Madison, Averi and ltylee Elms(Baker City) and many niecesand nephews. A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Senior issues

in his response to the questionnaire. "But it could be another tool in the toolbox for helping folks save for retirement." Merkley said the federal opprescription drug plans to tion was especially important meet with drug manufacturers because a large number of Orand negotiate for discounted egonians do not have access to prescri ption drug prices. The a retirement savings plan or a planswere barred from doing pension from their employers. this when they were created in Wehby also acknowledged this

For full answers to The Bulletin's questionnaire Continued from B1 on senior issues, visit "Merkley voted for $716 (b)il- bundbullutin.cnm/suninrissuus lion in cuts to the Medicare

Advantage program," Wehby wrote in her answers to The

O

Bulletin's questionnaire, calling the long-term Medicare savings a cut to the program. "This is no way to treat people who've spent their whole work- 2003. "We can extend the life of ing lives payinginto Medicare." In numerous posts where it the trust fund even further by has been asked to review the allowing Medicare to negotiaccuracy of statements like ate for the price of prescription this, fact-checking agency drugs like the Veterans AdminPolitifact evaluated this daim istration does," Merkley said, as being "Half True" or "Most- explaining that because it can ly False," depending on its con- bargain for drug prices, the VA text, because while the ACA pays about half of what Medireduced Medicare's overall caredoesforitstop 10prescripspending over the next eight tion drugs. Wehby, though, said she was years, it did not cut any money that had already been allocated opposed to any plan that would to the program or its current give the federal government or recipients. Medicare's prescription plans W ehby sai d t h e A C A ' s the ability to negotiate its drug changes may also force some prices. She said the U.S. Conprivate insurers to change gress and President George what options they offered W. Bush were right to deny through their Medicare Ad- the plans this ability because it vantage plans. Politifact said it would amount to "price-fixing was possible these plans could and restraint of trade under change — either in terms of federal laws." their options or their costs-

because of the ACA's tweaks to Medicare. Merkley focused on different aspects of Medicare in the answers he provided in his questionnaire.

lack of access in her question-

portfor the mea-

sure in his an-

Merkley and Wehby also I' clashed over the U.S. De-

they found no blood. They fol-

Continued from B1 The allied powers cannot trust the "unsupported word"

The father speculated that the

not have access to an employ-

er-sponsored retirement plan, the Oregon Retirement Savings Task Force released a report

earlier this year that called on the state to create a retirement

lowed tracksinto some brush where they found the deer. lethal bullet which entered the heart had been the first one

tled peace."

Chamberlain did not exclude Bend school directors on the possibility of a negotiated horns of dilemma peace with Hitler still in powFifty-year-old Reid School

n

Jim Wilson/The New YorkTimes

Berkeley High students fill cups at a restaurant in Berkeley,

California. A campaign in the city is trying to persuade voters to impose a 1-cent-an-ounce tnx on sugary drinks. By Adam Nngourney LOS ANGELES —

running to once more r epresent House D i s trict

the pr o p osal "a

55, said while he thought the de-

s i r e to help Oregonians save for

ward to seeing how it would

help Oregonians in the future. "I strongly support plans that allow Oregonians to build up savings and ensure future economic security," Walden wrote, voicing support for the myRA

retirement was "a noble one"

Christofferson, did not return

for the 54th District seat, and

he did not agree the state government should join the federal government and private firms

her questionnaire to The Bul- Richard Phay, a Democrat runletin despite multiple efforts to ning against McLane, did not

State candidates on retirement

return questionnaires to The Bulletin despite multiple efforts

to contact them.

The debate over what role

— Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

(Note to Readers: The old Reid School is now the headquartersof the Des Chutes Historical Museum and is celebrating its 100th anniversary

of jail free" card, but a couple of county jail inmates got a good bargain when they posted $400 in counterfeit money as part of their bail last

Killer quake isworstsince '06

h as directors of

nents of the tax have raised

to impose a statewide soda

$135,000, compared with $1.4 million spent so far by the beverage industry, which has successfully blocked just about every attempt national-

tax. He was defeated on both counts.

"We want to come in and try to equalize the spend-

tive on the ballot for a 2-cents-

The Deschutes County sheriff's office was left holding the four $100 bills after a bank teller immediately recognized them as "funny money" when county jail receipts were deposited II1esday. The bills have since been

"It is not alone freedom for the small nations that is at

or may even have been reached — when it would be advisable

rections over the radio about

rooms to the new Bear Creek

that dormitories on the campus

For the week ending Oct. 18, 1964

School or get cost estimates for the sprinkler system. Chairman Richard Wayman said he had heard that there is some local sentiment favorable

were evacuated and that dorm residents were bunking with students livingin lowbuildings.

Happyyoung hunter shows unusua1setofantlers

He really hassomething to

to making the old school, built

in 1914, into a museum.

New York state Legislature

an-ounce soda tax.

<Don't send you~r =

4, --",~-.'tr;g5,W

valuable x'ugs,out of=town!

.Shop,'L oeal!7

two people who bailed out of

4e

the county jail over the weekend who may have included the bills among some genuine legal tender, but it is uncertain

~ 'tl,"jl'I IIII IliIt ('",< ll"~j'II'(III'II'<i',I)/Iji,<I'ii I '' I't" ' tI","<Il'jI""'",„'Ii'I",II I IIii~''<i~ ~i'5'i iA

whether they knew the money

was fake. "They're not what we would consider good bills," the sheriff's spokesman said. He explained that two pairs

Withmoretban60 yearsofexperience, we specializein tbe cieaninqofftne Orienta lrugs.

of the bills had the same serial

"SeeuasPou 8r 2epud 8~1"

numbers and other discrepancies showed up on closer

• OOI

• I000 • OOO

examination.

So far, no one had found any other phony cash in the

FREEPickup & Delivery

area, but anyone with suspi-

541-382-9498

cious-looking currency is advised to contact the sheriff's

S EAVIC E PROVIDER

www.cleaningclinicinc.com

office.

Licensed Bonded Insured

I • r MQI! ~p

Funny money talks, jail inmates walk

0

It wasn't exactly a "get out

talkabout Excitement is what many

young boys feel after they shoot their first deer. Such was

the case with David Burleigh, 13, when he brought down his first buck last week.

Only his was somewhat unusual. The 168 pound animal had four points on one antler

and eight on the other. Young Burleigh, who was hunting above Sand Flats with

his father, Robert J., city police sergeant, spotted the deer. The boyfired causing the deer to shudder, his father reported. Two more shots were fired when the animal started to run.

Both hunters thought that the buck had escaped when

Help Plan Regional Trails

• • •

-

Oregon Parks and Recreation Department (OPRD) o " o l v is seeking public ideas and comments at a series of upcoming workshops on trails planning. As part of a larger statewide trails plan for Oregon, OPRD sTATE is developing trails plans for motorized (ATV) trails, snowmobile trails, non-motorized trails, water trails and State ScenicWaterwayplanning components. The RegionalTrail Planning Workshop will be held on October 23rd at East Bend Library 62080 Dean Swift Rd, Bend,OR 97701from 6:00-8:00 pm. At this meeting, OPRD will review the overall statewide trail planning process,survey findings for the workshop's region, answer questions, and ask attendees to provide input on regional trail issues, needs, and potential trail developmentopportunities. For more information about the meeting, contact Terry Bergeron, State Recreation Planner, at 503-986-0747 or terr .bnr erson©ore on. ov.

5

• OOOO

turning off gas." stake ... but the peaceful exis- not to put more money into the Hurley said Anne had talked tence of ... all the freedom-lov- antiquated building. briefly after the quake with her ing countries." One possible solution would sister, Mary. be the addition of eight classHurley said she heard later

50 YEARS AGO

supersize soft drinks in New York City and to persuade the

'Orien'taljRu j~.0wnerS

sent to the Secret Service for

dilemma. A handful of Bend residents was loudly cheered. How much longer should the who had managed to make "Whatever may issue from district pour money into the contact wit h r e latives and the struggle," he said, "the old stone structure to keep it at friends in the Bay Area by this world will not be the same minimum standards? morning said they appeared to world we have known before." Superintendent R.E. Jewell have escaped Tuesday's earthBut, the prime minister de- reported to board members quake unharmed. clared, the peace terms ad- last night that he had been Pat Hurley, a teacher at vanced by Hitler — whom he told Friday by John Bornst- Mountain View High School denounced as an aggressor edt, deputy state fire marshal, whose daughters are among and a breaker of pledgesthat overhead sprinklers must a number of Bend youths atcould be accepted only if Brit- be installed in classrooms if tending the University of Sanain falsified "her honor" and the district continues to use ta Clara, about 30 miles northabandoned her claim that in- the building after the present east of the quake's epicenter ternational disputes should be school year. said she got a phone call 70 settled peacefully. Director Bert Hagen noted minutes after the quake from The German people, he said, that the question of whether or her daughter, Anne. "She was on the third floor want peace and so do the rest not to use the school has arisen of the peoples of Europe. But periodically and each time the of the library and plaster was they do not want Hitler's kind school board had to condude falling from the ceilings and of peace, he maintained, be- that the seven classrooms are books were flying all over," cause it would be a triumph for too badly needed to abandon Hurley said. "They were really terrified. aggression. the building. "Surrender to wrong doing But directors appeared in They were without lights, but would spell the extinction of all agreement last night that the everybody was just being terhope," Chamberlain declared. time might be approachingrific. They were following di-

to impose a ban on the sale of

A TTENTI ON :

weekend.

t h e B e nd

teesof future peace. His speech

Wolfson, a senior adviser to

Bloomberg. As mayor, Bloomberg tried

In Bend, relatives andfriends analysis. wait for word would be acceptable as guaran- School Board on the horns of a Investigators are looking for er but said that acts not words

In

Berkeley, California, where a campaign is on to persuade voters to impose a 1-cent-anounce tax on sugary drinks, the spending fight has been lopsided indeed: Propo-

But Bloomberg contributed close to $10 million to a successful campaign to impose a ly to levy such a tax. In Berke- heavytaxonsugarydrinks in ley, a community of 117,000, Mexico last year — and there that amounts to nearly $12 has been a notable drop in per resident spent to defeat soda consumption since the the ballot measure. taxwent into effect this year. Now, Michael Bloomberg, In Berkeley, known for its the billionaire former mayor liberal leanings, the beverage of New York who has made industry sees an opportunia campaign of trying to ty to drive the final nail into curb consumption of sugary the coffin of the soda taxdrinks, is throwing in some though the industry acknowlfinancial weight. Aides said edges that it could be a tough that he had decided to spend fight given the community's money in Berkeley — they long and idiosyncratic politidid not say how much — to cal history. helpcounterthebeverage inBloomberg is staying out of dustry, most likely by paying a similar battle being fought for mailings and get-out-the- across the bay in San Franvote efforts. cisco, where there is an initia-

in offering retirement savings accounts. initiative. His opponent in this Craig Wilhelm, a Democrat year's election, Democrat Aelea who is runningagainst Buehler

contact her.

i ng disparity, which i s enormous," said Howard

New York Times News Service

tionnaire, Rep. Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte,

naire and called

this year) Minister Neville Chamberlain fired. told the house of commons, The unusual antlers had a 21 25 YEARS AGO again implying that Germany inch spread. must eliminate the Hitler reThe older Burleigh shot a For the week ending gime to achieve "a real and set- young forked horn later. Oct.18, 1989 of the Nazi government, Prime

Recognizing the fact that 45 percent of Oregonians do

government agencies should relatively modest play in helping people save for plan." He said he looked for- McLane

Yesterday

Bloomberg to back soda tax in Berkeley

state Legislature.

swers to The Bulletin's question-

partment of t h e T r easury's "myRA' initiative and the role Walden

"The Affordable Care Act has extendedthe solvency of retirement. the Medicare Trust Fund by 13 Announced during Presyears," Merkley said, referring ident Barack Obama's last to areport from the Medicare State of the Union address, Board of Trustees that found the myRA program would let the ACA's savings extended people who do not have access the solvency period — the time to a retirement savings plan when a program can pay all of through their employer save up its expenses with the money it to $15,000 in an Individual Reearns in payroll taxes and has tirement Account. This money in its trust fund — from 2017 to would be invested in the feder2030. Politifact has not yet veri- al government's Thrift Savings fied this statement. Plan, a defined-contribution In his questionnaire, Merk- plan for federal employees. "This approach should not be ley also voiced his support for a proposal that would allow rep- seen asa replacement for Soresentat ives from Medicare's cial Security," Merkley wrote

WEST NEWS

the government should play in helping people save for retirement is also taking place in the

naire but said it would be a bad savings option and outlined idea for the federal government characteristics it shouldhave. "I applaud State Treasurto get involved. "There are hundreds of pri- er Ted Wheeler (and the task vate 401(k) or IRA plans that force) for focusing legislative individuals without company andpublic attention onthe issue pension plans can access," she of retirement savwrote, explaining she would lngs antl securlty," said Republisupport any government measure that provided people with can Knute Buehan incentive to save toward reler, who is runtirement. "But a federally manning for Bend's aged plan poses several prob- Buehler Hou s e Dis t r ict lems, not the least of which is 54. "(If elected) giving the federal government I'llbe an advocate for protecting an enormous, unhealthy role federal social security benefits. in the nation's equity markets ... In addition, I'll explore both and thus opening these mar- the public and the private policy kets up to politicization." options available to incentivize But while Wehby opposed stmnger retirement savings, the myRA program, U.S. Rep. induding Treasurer Wheeler's Greg Walden, R-Hood River, state-sponsoredplan." voiced his supIn his answers to the ques-

Retirement plans

B5

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B6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

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

i

1

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 72.

ALMANAC EAST:Mostlysunny and pleasant today. Partly cloudy tonight. Times of clouds and sunshine tomorrow.

TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 72 48'

81 32'

83' in 1 903 12' in 1917

PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace 1.11"in 1914 Record Month to date (normal) 0.0 9 " (0.27") Year to date(normal) 5.82 " (7.44") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 8" 7: 2 6 a.m. 8: 1 3 p.m. 4:1 2a.m. 4 : 4 3 p.m.

MOONPHASES

New

F i rst

Last

/50 lington 73/43 Meac am Loati ne 54/55 73/5 • W co 7 l47 73/38 Enterprfse • • dl h, 72/ he Daa • • 71/38 Tigamo • CENTRAL:Mostly andy • 57/55 Mc innv • 74/49 JosePh 3/55 Govee • He ppner Grande • sunny today.Partly n t • u p i Condoli 2/41 74 42 Cam • 72 cloudy tonight. Mostly Lincoln union 41 65/ cloudy, breezyand Sale 55/55 • pmy Granitee cooler with spotty 76/ • 5/48 'Baker C Newpo 69/36 showers tomorrow. 55/55 3/53 • 43 • Mitch II 70/34 Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Pleasant with 71 /44 e U eu Yach 71 /42 • John sunshine andsome 53/55 75/53 • Prineville Day 1/37 tario clouds today.Mostly 74/43 • Pa lina 73/44 7 41 cloudy tonight with a Floren e • Eugene • Re d Brothers 7041 Valee 65/55 little rain late. 76/53 40 Su Were 72/43 72/42 Nyssa • 6 9 / 1 • La Pine Ham ton c e 72/41 Juntura Grove Oakridge • Burns 73/38 OREGON EXTREMES 74/51 /49 FortRock Riley 73/33 YESTERDAY Creacet • TO/4O 72/37 68/40

Portland

High: 79 Set 5:57 p.m. 8:18 p.m. 9:08 p.m. 3:48 p.m. 7:32 p.m. 5:30 a.m.

1 4~3

• Ashl nd Falls 75/

62/5

Yesterday Today Monday

1

73/45

74/42

• Burns Juntion 76/42

Rome 77/43

Fields •

McDermi 74/36

Yesterday Today Monday

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

City Portland Prinevige Redmond Roseburg Salem Sisters The Dages

71/5 6/0.0473/55/pc 63/52/r 79/ 42/0.0274/43/s 57/40/hs 73/ 42/0.0475/44/s 62/40/sh 79/ 5 7/0.0578/55/pc 66/49/r 75/59/0.33 76/54/pc 64/51/r 71/44/0.00 74/42/s 62/39/ sh 7 3 / 49/0.05 74/49/s 67/49/sh

Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday

Wee d s Abs e nt

NATIONAL WEATHER

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

~ 108 ~ 0

WATER REPORT

8

~ 08

~ t ee

~ 208

~ 30 8

NATIONAL Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES (for the 301 7 8 55vo YESTERDAY

Reservoir C rane Prairie Wickiup 51255 28'Yo Crescent Lake 5 5 8 82 84% Ochoco Reservoir 15028 34% Prinevige 88278 58vo River flow St a tion Cu. ft.laec. 214 304 565

96 2

*

*

*

*

*

*

FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver Mod~erate ~ ~ Redmond/Madras ~M od ~erate ~ Sisters ~l L ow ~ Prinevige ~M o d~erate ~ La Pine/Gilchrist ~M od ~erate ~

*

*

*

*

Salt take Ity 73/50

ah e hclscO

73/41

Juneau * *

*

* *

*

* *

Ol

Oma

„„8 /4 7

e7/eo Ph .~

York

s ZW52

klahoma 0

o

C o lmb '8

O

• as vil 64/

• L'

7 48

• Dall

ea

Ihgvuh

Charlo 4

• At

ulr inuha 71/

City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Abilene 80/54/0.00 79/60/pc Akron 52/47/0.05 52/41/pc Albany 61/57/0.09 51/32/pc Albuquerque 74/56/Tr 72/52/pc Anchorage 44/35/0.00 42/32/c Atlanta 76/60/0.00 70/49/pc Atlantic City 71/60/0.00 57/43/pc Austin 86/57/0.00 83/59/pc Baltimore 72/52/0.00 56/36/pc Billings 75/39/0.00 72/45/s Birmingham 75/56/0.00 71/48/pc Bismarck 58/39/0.00 71/35/s Boise 71/42/0.00 77/51/s Boston 71/57/Tr 53/38/pc Bridgeport, CT 70/62/0.00 57/40/pc Buffalo 52/49/0.13 49/40/c Burlington, VT 60/58/0.39 48/32/sh Caribou, ME 58/49/0.00 47/30/sh Charleston, SC 85/61/0.00 73/51/s Charlotte 76/54/0.00 67/44/s Chattanooga 73/53/0.00 67/45/pc Cheyenne 66/32/0.00 68/39/s Chicago 50/45/0.01 56/47/s Cincinnati 55/50/0.05 57/44/pc Cleveland 49/46/0.18 51/42/pc ColoradoSprings 61/38/0.00 72/40/pc Columbia, Mo 64/43/0.00 66/51/pc Columbia, SC 84/56/0.00 71/45/s Columbus,GA 83/55/0.00 73/49/s Columbus,OH 54/48/0.07 55/42/pc Concord, NH 67/52/Tr 49/28/pc Corpus Christi 88n3/0.94 84/69/pc Dallas 82/62/0.00 77/58/s Dayton 56/50/0.07 56/43/pc Denver 71/40/0.00 72/43/pc Des Moines 59/41/0.00 67/49/pc Detroit 49/44/0.01 52/45/pc Duluth 49/34/0.00 58/42/c El Paso 79/61 /0.1 0 78/56/1 Fairbanks 40/19/0.00 31/1 7/pc Fargo 46/42/0.00 69/39/c Flagstaff 68/40/0.05 66/37/pc Grand Rapids 50/45/0.01 54/46/pc Green Bay 52/42/Tr 54/43/pc Greensboro 71/51/0.00 65/42/s Harrisburg 67/53/Tr 55/36/pc Harfford, CT 69/57/0.1 0 54/34/pc Helena 71/39/0.00 70/39/s Honolulu 89/79/0.47 esnr/r Houston 86/63/0.50 82/62/pc Huntsville 73/53/0.00 67/44/pc Indianapolis 54/47/0.09 57/45/s Jackson, MS 80/62/0.00 74/46/s Jacksonville 84/54/0.00 76/57/s

iii/Lo/W 82/59/pc 56/48/sh 58/41/pc 73/51/pc 41/31/c 74/53/s 62/54/pc 82/59/pc 61/47/pc 75/49/s 75/51/s 71/41/s 77/50/pc 56/46/s 58/51/pc 54/47/sh 53/41/pc 45/28/pc 77/59/s 70/49/pc 72/49/s 69/41/s 62/43/c 59/46/pc 57/47/sh 68/42/s 72/46/pc 75/52/s 76/51/s 59/47/c 55/37/s 85/68/pc 83/59/s 60/45/c 74/47/s 70/44/s 59/46/sh 53/36/pc 75/55/t 34/21/pc 63/40/s 66/39/s 59/44/sh 58/38/pc 69/50/pc 59/46/pc 58/44/pc 74/43/s

Amsterdam Athens

60/53/pc 73/58/s 61/51/pc 88/58/1

i

Orleans 79/61

Chihuahua 81/50

lando

a

82/de e

Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin

Bogota Budapest BuenosAires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Geneva Harsre Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg

~.f

Miami

ae~

Morrrerreg +

Auckland Baghdad

Dublin Edinburgh

8 ee

*

4 ~x x

/42 P iladelphia 4/41

4

72/4

Albml erque

OII

/38

s

Kansas

• 9~ A

an /6

uke

C icag

ae/ 9/es

ronto /3

47/49

• Den

tav uas Los An lev

*

~ 10 0 8 ~ t t c a

8/ •

64

~

e

Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Cold Front

Source: USDA Forest Service

39'

Lima Lisbon

London Madrid Manila

72/55/0.00 88/64/0.00 64/54/0.91 85/63/0.00

gon7/0.00 74/50/0.00

81n5/0.24 63/51/0.00 63/52/0.35 66/50/0.00 73/66/0.18 93/72/0.00 88/68/0.02 68/50/0.00

86n3/0.10 64/58/0.00 63/57/0.11 68/50/0.00

67/55/r 71/58/s 63/52/s 90/67/s 88/77/t 72/49/c 76/64/1 70/56/s 65/50/1 65/46/pc 76/52/s 89/67/s 85/66/pc 66/38/s 85/75/pc 60/48/sh 59/47/sh 72/53/pc 83/56/s 86/78/pc 62/52/pc 68/53/t 79/54/s 69/60/pc 80/65/pc 66/53/pc 81/53/pc

OklahomaCity

Providence Raleigh

92/52/0.00 85/72/0.00 70/65/0.07 74/59/0.00 70/44/0.00 69/61/0.00 73/66/0.05 66/61/0.00 81/51/0.00 84/75/0.05 GOm/pc

egmn

71/56/Tr

75/53/0.00 69/34/0.00 73/40/0.00 76/58/0.00 62/46/0.06 Sacramento 81/53/0.00 St. Louis 65/48/0.00 Salt Lake City 72/44/0.00 San Antonio 90/66/0.00 San Diego 74/67/0.00 San Francisco 79/65/0.00 San Jose 78/54/0.00 Santa re 65/46/Tr Savannah 84/56/0.00 Seattle 67/57/0.61 Sioux Fags 53/42/0.00 Spokane 66/48/0.02 Springfield, MO 64/44/0.00 Tampa 81/62/0.00 Tucson 91/60/0.00 Tulsa 69/53/0.00 Washington, DC 74/57/0.00 Wichita 65/48/0.00 Yakima 72/43/0.02

Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY

78/50/s 80/61/s

58/45/pc 55/44/pc 72/56/pc 85/55/s 86/78/pc 63/54/s 65/48/sh 81/51/s 70/60/pc 83/64/pc 60/53/pc 79/53/pc

54/49/0.05 52/39/pc 56/47/c 70/55/0.28 52/32/pc 55/41/s

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA

71/50/s 63/44/sh

eensn

Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Litlle Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

83/60/pc

61/48/pc 64/48/r 70/53/pc 71/59/s 87/66/s 82/63/s 69/42/s

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 49/42/0.50 49/42/r 50/37/r 63/40/0.00 67/50/pc 72/46/s 47/44/0.01 52/45/pc 58/43/sh 84/68/Tr 86/63/s 87/63/s 58/56/0.01 61/44/pc 64/50/pc 59/35/0.00 73/43/pc 73/40/s 75/56/0.00 70/48/pc 76/56/s 78/61/0.00 79/63/pc 77/61/pc 58/55/0.00 61/46/s 64/50/pc 53/45/Tr 58/44/pc 61/37/pc 71/55/0.00 68/49/s 73/56/pc 86/67/0.00 86n1/s 86/72/pc 48/43/0.07 56/46/s 61/42/c 54/41/0.00 65/44/c 62/39/s 66/50/0.00 64/44/s 70/49/pc 85/64/0.00 79/61/s 81/62/s 70/60/0.00 55/42/pc 57/52/pc 70/57/0.00 56/40/pc 59/50/pc 76/57/0.00 61/46/s 67/55/pc 74/55/0.00 74/56/pc 80/58/s 58/38/0.00 71/46/pc 71/44/s 83/58/0.00 84/66/s 84/67/s 92/65/0.00 94/68/s 94/67/s 55/47/Tr 62/51/s 68/45/pc 72/58/0.00 56/41/pc 61/51/pc 90/68/0.00 92//0/pc 93/69/s

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegss Lexington Lincoln

87nelc

89/78/t 70/47/c 74/63/s

Yesterday Today Monday

City

82/56/s

65/53/s 73/50/s 85/65/pc 76/67/pc 73/61/pc 75/57/s 69/43/pc 75/52/s

70/57/pc 70/42/pc 71/47/s 66/51/pc 85/67/s 87/64/pc 73/56/pc 58/43/s

75/55/pc 72/44/s

gono/o'.oo 91/69/s

Yuma f

54/35/pc 56/44/s 65/42/s 68/51/pc 71/40/s 75/46/s 78/46/s 71/36/pc 63/40/s 67/51/pc 49/35/sh 56/46/sh

104/81/0.00 ggnels 67/57/0.16 68/53/1 Montreal 61/50/0.06 46/30/pc Moscow 28/26/0.00 34/28/c Nairobi 79/61/0.25 79/60/1 Nassau 84/73/0.00 87/75/s New Delhi 88/66/0.00 89/66/s Osaka 72/48/0.00 74/59/pc Oslo 50/37/0.58 58/48/pc Ottawa 57/54/0.08 45/28/pc Paris 75/55/0.00 74/57/pc Rio de Janeiro 79/73/0.00 89/74/s Rome 79/63/0.00 78/61/s Santiago 59/52/0.01 77/49/s Sao Paulo 82/66/0.00 genon Sapporo 57/48/0.00 65/50/s Seoul 70/41/0.00 71/55/pc Shanghai 76/57/0.00 79/67/pc Singapore 88/77/0.10 88n9/t Stockholm 50/37/0.28 58/50/sh Sydney 70/50/0.00 80/58/s Taipei 81/69/0.00 86/72/s Tel Aviv 82/69/0.04 78/64/1 Tokyo 68/55/0.00 71/61/s Toronto 52/48/0.01 48/36/c Vancouver 64/54/0.12 64/53/c Yienna 64/57/0.00 68/52/s Warsaw 52/46/0.01 64/54/s

FOR YOUR HIP/ICNEE PAIN

Photos by Meg Roussos /The Bulletin

Sage Smith, 10, finishes the junior barrel-racing event Saturday during the 46th annual Cowdeo in

Madras. i I

Continued from B1 Thayne Dickson, 6, of Madras, had similar difficulties,

I

Tr

u<<vswo< 5<a<~a

drawing a n ag g ressively bucking sheep that pitched him overthefront. "I stayed on a

'

l i t tl e b i t ,

but my dad was in the way," Thayne said, explaining how his ride got off to a bad start when he ran into his father's a rm on the way out of t h e

FREE Seminar

chute. Kids 5 and younger had two

Tuesday, October 28, 2014 ~ 7:00 p.m.- 8:00 p.m.

noncompetitive events to par-

ticipate in: a race on stick hors- Hayden Heath, 10 competes during the junior calf-riding event es and the chicken and rabbit duringthe Cowdeo. The Cowdeo was open to kids ages 5 to scramble — chase chickens 14 and included some noncompetitive events for the youngest and rabbits around the arena children. and take home whatever you can catch.

For the older kids, the 13-year-old Mary Olney, of Cowdeo more closely resem- Warm Springs, who stayed bled the events seen on the atop her bucking calf as it adult rodeo circuit, with barrel chargedto the far side ofthe racesand calfriding. arena. With the noise of the At the start of the senior calf crowd rising, Mary lifted herriding event, a succession of self off the calf, smoothly slid12- to 14-year-old riders were ing off its back and landing on quickly thrown to the ground, both feet. many barely 20 feet out of the Unstrapping her chaps bechute.

The string was broken by

Speaker: Erin Finter, MD Riverhouse Convention Center Cascade Ballroom US 97 & NW Mount Washington Dr. Bend, OR 97701

Refreshments provided by OePuy Synthes Joint Reconstruction* All attendees receive a free first aid kit!

gOOdTTde. "It was my time to get off; it WaS fLI," She Said.

Mary said she's been doing rodeo "since I was a baby," and won one of her first prizes at the Cowdeo years ago, taking home a belt buckle for mutton

busting. "I love doing this," she said.

hind the chutes, Mary said her

dismount was a good end to a

Seats are limited, RSVP today! Call 800-256-1146 and mention reservation code 4869N Or ViSit eVentS.jOintrePlarement.COm

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

Sponsored by:

Weekly Arts & Entertainment

Q) DePuySyrtthes JOINT RECONSTRUCTION

F ridays In TheBulletin

M )L G A Z I N E

73/50/r 74/48/pc

77/54/s 84/66/pc 75/65/pc 72/59/r 69/52/r 70/44/pc 78/58/s 60/53/r 70/41/s 69/47/pc 72/49/pc 85/70/s 87/65/pc 80/56/s 65/54/pc 81/52/s 67/43/sh 93/69/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

LEARN ABOUT TODAY'S SOLUTIONS

Cowdeo

0

Mostly cloudy

Partly sunny; rain at night

i

ea/3

Anchorage 42/3

*

~8 0 8 ~ 9 08

1f)r,uay

Mn /44

Che

*

*

~7 0 8

Qu

71/35 Billings 72/45 71/4

Boise • 77/51

*A w *„*„ „* ~"o '

43'

Mamarck

at Cotulla, TX National low: 17 at Bodie State Park,CA Precipitation: 1.42" at Brownsville, TX *

~ eca

~ 508

,„.„0

ee/38

48 contiguousstates) National high: 94

1110 142

~4 08

Celga

As of 7 a.m.yesterday

77 190 2

Jordan Vgey

Frenchglen

74/42

70/35

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 66/59/0.25 68/55/pc62/51/r Ls Grande 73/46/0.00 74/42/s 73/44/pc 72/34/0.00 70/34/s 71/36/pc La Pine 68/45/0.03 69/41/s 57/38/sh Brookings 70/59/0.09 62/54/pc 60/51/r Me d ford 77/5 1 /0.02 78/51/pc 65/46/r Bums 67/29/0.00 73/33/s 69/30/pc N e wport 6 6/59 /0.47 65/55/pc 60/53/r Eugene 78/58/0.02 76/53/pc 63/50/r No r th Bend 70 / 61/0.10 68/56/pc 62/53/r Klamath Fags 67/41/0.00 68/42/s 57/32/sh O ntario 73/35/0.00 72/41/s 74/46/pc Lakeview 70/28/0.00 70/35/s 60/30/pc Pendleton 75/49/Tr 73/48/s 72/48/pc

POLLEN COUNT

Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie Deschutes R.below Wickiup Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls Little Deschutes near LaPine Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake Crooked R.above Prineville Res. Crooked R.below Prineville Res. Crooked R.nearTerrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

• Lakeview

58/42

City Astoria Baker City

3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.

T r ee s Ab s ent

52/

Bro Ings

The highertheAccuWealher.rxrmIY Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgon.0-2 Low

G rasses Absent

• Ch ristmas alley Silver 71/39 Lake 58/40 70/41 • Paisley • Chiloquin 71/42 Medfo d '58/40 ,TNBT Klamath Beaver Marsh

78/55

Po 0 Gra 64/ Gold ach 7 o

0'

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

~ 3~ I

Roseburg

67/56

Low: 28' at Lakeview

UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon

Bandon

at Roseburg

Oct 23 Oct 30 Nov 5 Nov 14

THE PLANETS The Planets Rise Mercury 8:55 a.m. venus 7:17 a.m. Mars 12:34 p.m. Jupiter 1:32 a.m. Saturn 9:39 a.m. uranus 5:45 p.m.

~

Yesterday Today Monday

Full

yktdg

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 72/44 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

Seasid e5/56 Cannon

TH U RSDAY

4

58' 4 2'

A blend of sun andclouds; rain at night

Mon.

Today 7:25 a.m. 5:15 p.m. 3:14 a.m. 4:16 p.m.

~

A couple of afternoon showers; cooler

Partly cloudy

~

SUN ANDMOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

43'

~

WEDNESDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday High Low

TUESDAY

59' 40'

LOW

Mostly sunnyandpleasant

i f '1

MONDAY

Photo above is nm of actual joint replacement patients The REDCROSSdesign and words are registered trademarks of JOHNSON &JOHNSON. Products bearing these trademarks have oo connection with The American National Red Cross. *CePuy Synthes/oint Remnsuuciion, a divisian of bePuy Orthopaedics, Inc C DiPuy Synthes Joint Re:onstrucuon, a division of DOI 2014.

99n4A

69/54/1 50/39/pc 42/38/i 80/59/1 87/76/pc 91/67/s 73/63/r

56/45/pc 50/37/c 62/49/r 81/69/r 76/61/s 83/52/s 76/59/r 66/49/r 65/55/r 84/67/c 88/78/t 53/39/sh 67/56/sh 87/72/s 76/63/pc

73/64/pc 54/44/sh 59/50/r 72/55/pc 63/47/r


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT

Actor will present

scary stories

Actor Alastair Morley Jaques will bring his act, "AmericanGothic: A Journey Into theShadows of American Literature," to Bendthis month. "AmericanGothic" includes aselection of scary classic tales from American history and literature, including those written by NathanielHawthorne, H.P.Lovecraft and Shirley Jackson. The showswill take place at 6:30p.m. Oct. 29 and30atthe DesChutes Historical Museum,129 NW IdahoAve. in Bend. Tickets are $8and limited to 50 per night. They canbe purchased atthe museum, andorganizers expect them tosell out. For more information, call 541-389-1813 orvisit www.deschuteshistory.

• Small town makes big waves onNorthern California coast

OI'g.

Veterans parade seeks entries The VeteransDayParade of Bend isseeking entries for this year's parade. Theevent will take place at11 a.m.Nov. 11 in downtown Bend. The Veterans ofForeign Wars is seekingveterans, schools, bands, businessesand individuals to participate. Interested participants must register before a planning meeting scheduled for Oct. 27.This meeting will take placeat the Veterans ofForeign

Bill Nichols, courtesy of the Half Moon Bay Chamber of Commerce / Submitted photo

Surfers Greg Long, left, and Jamie Sterling stream down a giant wave at Mavericks during a recent big-wave competition. In winter, the surf routinely breaks at 20 to 25 feet; after North Pacific storms, it may crest at more than 50 feet.

By John Gottberg Anderson«For the Bulletin

HALF MOON BAY, Calif.

hen surfer Jeff Clark was a teenager

Wars Post1643, 1503

The DesChutes Historical Museumwill host the annual Historical Haunts of Downtown Bend from 4:30to 7 p.m. Thursday through Saturday. Thehistorical walking tour will take visitors to various locations through Bend. Starting at the museum, located at129 NWIdaho Ave., the tour will end at Crow's FeetCommons. Visitors are reminded to wear comfortable shoes and bring their own flashlights. Hot chocolate and apple cider will be available. Sign up is first-come, first-serve and begins every day at10 a.m. The cost is $10 per person, free for members and children ages 12and younger. Museumadmission is included in the tour fee. There will be aspecial member-only night from 5-7 p.m. Wednesday. Contact: www.deschuteshistory.org or 541-389-1813.

Tuesday deadline for Bazaar listing Tuesday is thedeadline for submitting to The Bulletin's listing of holiday fairs andbazaars. The Community Life section will publish a complete listing Oct. 25. Each submitted event must include abrief description of whatwill be sold, dates, times, location, admission priceand acontact phonenumber. After Oct. 25, a list of holiday bazaars and fairs happening each week will publish Fridays in GO!Magazine. New submissions are welcome during that time. The submission deadline is noon Wednesday for publication the following week. Submit events by email to communitylife© bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-3830351.

'til1 III

e

NE Fourth St., Bend. Registration is free. To learn more visit www.bendchamber.org.

Historical Haunts tours beginning

-

se

in the mid-1970s, he was told there

al

were no really big waves on the North American coast. Clark knew otherwise. As a high school student, he hadbegun to surfa Pacific Ocean break dubbed "Mavericks" just south of San Francisco. His friends were intimidated, but not Clark. For 15years, he surfedalone atMaveri cks,so named foranother surfer' spetGerman Shepherd.By 1990,he had made his mark as a big-wave surfer, just as longtime Bend resident Gerry Lopez became identified with Hawaii's Banzai Pipeline in the early '70s. Today, Mavericks is known to surfers around the world.

It's quiet in summer, but in winter, the surf routinely

breaks at 20to 25 feet, ahalfmile offshore from Pillar Point. After a North Pacific storm, it has been known to crest at more than 50 feet.

Photos in surfing magazines and video footage in surfing documentaries began to draw attention to

Mavericks in the early 1990s. Big-wave Hawaiian surfers

finally visited in 1994. One of them, Mark Foo, died in the waves, adding to the Maver-

Barb Gonzalez/For The Bulletin

MODERN TRAVEL

claims to be the only oceanfront resort in the San

fame. But still the big-wave

com, he relates the story of

adjacent harbor hamlet of Princeton-by-the-Sea. Here,

Francisco Bay Area. Perched on a bluff, the elite

property has 261 guest rooms, fine dining, a spaand other facilities.

he sells the surfboards that he has for decades been shaping specifically for the Mavericks break. On his website, wwwjeffclarkmavericks.

surf shop, Jeff Clark Mavericks, is an institution in the

course at the Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay, which

Next week: Traveling by electric car

icks legend. When actor Gerard Butler nearly lost his life during the filming of the 2012 movie "Chasing Mavericks," the break earned additional surfers come. Since 1999, an invitation-only big-wave competition has been held here. It was started by Clark, who at 57 still regularly surfs Mavericks. His eponymously named

Terrace seating overlooks a championship golf

0 MILES

S s ran o San Francisco Bay

the early years of the surfing spot.

Pillar point

Half • Moon

What makes Mavericks

special'? In late summer, from the top of Pillar Point Bluff, a section of the James V.

ea I deta

Half MoonBay

Fitzgerald Marine Reserve a few miles north of the town of Half Moon Bay, there wasn't

much in my view to distinguish the waves. SeeHalf Moon Bay/C4

Ocean

C AL

NIA

Pacific Ocean Greg Cross /The Bulletin

Divin ee er into our ove o orror ims By Mac McLean

mond and Downtown Bend

The Bulletin

public libraries (see "If you

Drew Beard says supernatural horror movies continue

to be popular because they satisfy a human desire to be scared, and they touch on

themes like going broke, losing a home or being forced to rely on a crowd of strangers, themes that may keep people awake at night, but would translate into a pretty dull

film. "They continue to be a popular genre because they're so flexible," said Beard, an adjunct professor with Portland State University's School of

Theater & Film who will be talking about scary movies during two events at the Red-

go"). Beard, who has studied the

genre for five years but has been fascinated with it since he was a child, said the first

supernatural horror movie came out in the late 1890s

and was nothing more than a 3-minute short where people performed a magic trick that featured the devil and a haunt-

ed castle. "The horror movie as we know it didn't solidify until

If yougo What:PSU adjunct Professor Drew Beard presents "Beyond the Amityville Horror: Why Supernatural Horror Still Haunts" When:3:30 p.m. Saturday at the RedmondPublic Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave.; 2 p.m. Oct. 26at the Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St. Cost:Free Contact:Liz Goodrich,

such as "Frankenstein" or

an economic recession — the

"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" that had been around for decades. It wasn't until the 1970s and 1980s — when movies such as

most popular horror movies

"The Shining," "The Exorcist" and "The Amityville Horror"

usually do — because it's during times the economy is bad that people are worried

about losing their jobs, losing their homes or being forced to

came out — that we started to

make other changes because

see what he calls the modern horror film.

of poverty. "People aren't going to

With the exception of "The

Shining," Beard said these movies and others like them focus on some type of invader who comes into a person's home, disrupts his way of

541-312-1032 the 1920s or 1930s," he said, life and forces him to either explaining that was when abandon his property or make filmmakers were able to ina significant change that may clude the sounds of people But even then, these movies not always be for the better. screaming in movies played at were really nothing more than He said it's no coincidence the theater. retellings of horror novels these movies came out during

make a film about foreclo-

sure," Beard said, explaining the demons or ghosts that appear in horror films are usu-

ally metaphors for economic ruin. "But they will make a film

about people who can't live in their house (because it is haunted) and have to sleep in their car."

SeeHorror films/C7


C2 T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

M IQESTON'

ts + ~L 7

For ms f o r e ngagementw,eddinganniversary orbirthday announcements areavailableat TheBulletlnl,777sytrchandlerdve v Bendor by emai l i n g m ilestones@bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must besubmittedwithinonemonthof the celebration. Contact: 541-633 2117.

ANNIVERSARIES

enwe in costs

voI In By Karen Ruffini

pretty darn important.

Newsday

s

".

'esXih

egn 0+

Dan and Darlene (Yocum)Skeels

Skeels

Oct. 12, 1949, in

Dan and Darlene (Yocum) Skeels, of Madras, will celebrate their 65th wedding anniversary with a f amily gathering. The couple were married

chael Skeels, of Bend, and Patti Tarrant, of Vancouver,

R i ckreal.

They have two children, MiWashington; four grandchildren and eight grandchildren. They have lived in Central Oregon for 44 years.

7.Thank-you gifts Planning a wedding can On top of purchasing gifts be tough on your wallet, for your bridesmaids and but if you plan for these groomsmen, it can be easy to costs, you can prepare be- fail to remember other special forehand and stick to your people, such as your flower budget. girls and your ring bearers. It 10. The e ngagement goes without saying that parparty ents also deserve a little someOften, this gets over- thing special, so calculate looked when planning a those gifts into your budget as wedding because it is not well. something that is for your 6. Venue lighting actual wedding day. From Do you want an awesome booking a venue to pur- set-up of lights for your rechasing an outfit for the ception? What about rows of party, expect to chalk up a string lights for a warm glow good chunk of change for during dinner? Expect to pay this celebration with family a pretty penny. Some light setand friends. ups can cost $1,000, making 9. Postage this hidden cost a big one to Make sure you weigh ignore. your wedding invitations 5. Wedding decor We're not t a l king a bout before sending them. If the envelope is heavier flowers or wedding favorsthan a typical card, addi- little things like the guest book, tional postage is required. candles on the tables, specialty Though it may seem like a linens and printed menus for relatively small expense, if your guests can add up faster you're sending 100 or more than you can say "I do." Plan invitations, it can add up ahead for these little details very quickly. Be sure not to that can ringup a bigbill. forget that Save-the-Dates, 4. Transportation for your RSVP cards and thank-you guests cards will require the same Though it may not apply to process. everyone, many couples opt to 8. Your marriage license foot the bill if there are several Remember, you have to out-of-town guests, if it's a desfile for your marriage li- tination wedding or if guests cense to make it officiaL become too intoxicated to Depending on the state you drive home. Plan beforehand live in, a marriage license to make surethere is no stress can cost up to $100. Make the day of your wedding consure not to overlook this on cerning your guests' safety. your to-do list, since mak3. Cake-cutting fee ing your marriage legal is If you hire an outside ven-

Thinkstock

Being aware of all of the costs and fees associated with a wedding can help you avoid financial surprises that might keep you from

fully enjoying your special day. dor to make your cake, some venues will charge you per slice for cutting and plating. Make sure you speak with

ger. Discuss beforehand with

vendors are supposed to leave,

with a reception bill that is

you may wantto keep them there for another hour or two.

thousands of dollars, the taxes can be substantial. Keep in mind that tipping your vendors in some cases is expected,sobesureto setasideextra

these vendors to see what your

best option would be if you'd like them to stay past the hour your vendor about this before you agreed upon initially. the big day, as this can set you 1. Taxes and gratuities back a few hundred dollars. Be sure to carefully look 2. Overtime fees over your contracts to make If you're only getting the sure the sales tax is included party started by the time your in your price. When dealing

7ifpically the DJ, photogra-

pher and videographer are there for a set amount of time and will charge overtime fees money for them the day of the if you ask them to stay lon- wedding.

JFIC wedding negativessell big at auction By Philip Marcelo The Associated Press

BOSTON — One black-

and-white photograph cap-

two show the entire wedding

tures a dapper John F. Ken-

party,and the remainder show the cake, reception and

nedy slicing into his wedding cake. Another shows the family dog peeking out playfully from the folds of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy's billowing white dress. The images were among those imprinted on 13 origi nal n egatives f ro m

Thinkstock

Incorporating fall into a wedding can spice up the celebration, from influencing the bridal party's colors, to a specialty cocktail.

Fun and festive fall ideas to include inyour wedding By Karen Ruffini

that are sure to blend perfectly

Newsday

with your fall theme. "When it comes to color,

Fall might be the most beau-

tiful season to have a wedding. navy is a bestseller as we head The leaves turn gorgeous hues into fall. From preppy and caof red, yellow and orange, the sual to classy and sophisticatweather is not-too-hot and not- ed, it can cover all the bases. too-cold and pumpkin and ci- Coral is also a color that flatder are finally back. ters all skin tones, and it douThere are endless possibili- blesas a greatpop ofcolorfor ties to incorporate the celebra- thefallseason," Stern says. tion of the fall season into your Andbe sure to ditch matchywedding — from the bouquet matchy for th e next f ew down to the drink selection, months as well. Stern says that weave the season's offerings "more and more brides are throughout the details of your having their bridesmaids mix day. and match. Pick a color and let For your florals, add a major your maids select the style that fall detail, such as pine cones, best flatters them. Another thistles, ferns or berries. Keep- fun way to mix and match is to ing rich tones of orange, red take traditional 'spring' colors and yellow will bring out the (think mints and blushes) and season's colorful spirit.

combine them with a r icher

Signature cocktails are pop- color (like navy) for the fall. ping up in weddings now more Think of how gorgeous a mint than ever, so make a drink and navy combination would that will warm up and delight be!" your guests. Think spiked ciWith the welcoming of ders, horchata or even a hot breezier weather comes lontoddy station. ger dresses, too. Opt for an A nother fantastic way t o welcome the cooler weather

A-line skirted dress, or even a full skirt and a blouse instead.

is by dressing up your bridesmaid apropros. Ilana Stern of WeddingtonWay.com has trends for your favorite ladies

Complete the look with a car-

tographer and have likely never been published. Four are of the newlyweds,

the

wedding attendees.

The Kennedy wedding was a high society affair covered by Life magazine, drawing some 700 guests to the ceremony and 1,200 to the reception.

These photos are part of a

At the time, Kennedy was less than a year into his first

collection of 13 original images

Kennedys' fairytale wedding that sold for $34,073 term as a U.S. senator from Wednesday to a doctor in Massachusetts and more Las Vegas, who declined to than seven years from his reveal his name, according election as t h e c o untry's to RR Auction in Boston. first Roman Catholic presiThe Kennedys were mar- dent and its youngest elected

resonates."

photographer's darkroom.

the memories," he said. "These

World War II-era letters Ken-

nedy sent to the family of a lost PT-109 crewmate for $200,000. Last October, it sold a white Lincoln Continental that the

president and first lady rode in hours before his death for

$318,000, as well as assassin Lee Harvey Oswald's gold wedding band for $108,000.

The Bulletin

MI LESTONE ' G UI

DELIGHTFULGIFTS Enduring, Artisan, Handmade

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photos really capture the beginning of Camelot, and that

made by Frank Ataman, of Fall River, Massachusetts, that were auctioned by RR Auction on Oct. 15. The original negatives were discovered in another

The negatives are among ried on Sept. 12, 1953, at St. head of state. other Kennedy materials aucMary's Church in the wellBobby Livingston, the tioned off Wednesday, includheeled resort town of New- auction house's executive ing a White House holiday port, Rhode Island, locat- vice president, says interest card President Kennedy and ed about 60 miles south of in Kennedy memorabilia his wife signed days before his — and indeed other icons assassination in Dallas, Texas, Boston. The images, which went of the 1960s, such as NASA on Nov. 22, 1963. That sold for up for auction Sept. 26 with and the Beatles — continues $19,500, according to the auca $200 opening bid, show the to grow as the Baby Boomer tion house. wedding party posing out- generation enters the later In September, RR Aucside, the newlyweds leaving stages of their working lives tion auctioned a collection of the church and the couple or retirementand have more cutting the wedding cake. disposable income. "These things have an RR Auction said the images are attributed to freelance intense public interest. Bephotographer Frank Ata- cause it's the Kennedys, m an and were found in the there's a passion for collectdarkroom of another pho- ing these and a passion for

digan a la Kate Middleton, and

Get ATaste Eor Food, Home Ir Garden

Photos Courtesy RR Auction/ The Associated Press

0• 000

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Socailly Yours Taps Mobile Pub The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

ee In

C3

tat omewit New reans inin

By Matthew Odam ~Austin American-Statesman

Marvin Day leaned across the marble counter at Camellia Grill and gave my buddy an animated postmeal fist bump. "Good energy transaction," Day said with a smile as wide as the Mississippi River. It was also a welcome mat. A brotherly hug. Reassurance that no matter what is going on, as long as you're at Camellia Grill throwing down a bacon cheeseburger and a trademark freeze, everything's going to be all right. New Orleans just has a way of making you feel at home. trips all started (and ended) tion across the street in 1980 with a visit to Cochon Butcher. is owned by Roland and Ora It's a new tradition I have no M ollere and operated by sevinterest in abandoning. eral of their children. A menu C hefs Donald L i n k a n d of veal parmesan, spaghetti Stephen Stryjewski opened and red gravy and pizzas is a the modernist take on the Old testament to the Italian influW orld butcher shop i n t h e ence of the area, and you can Warehouse District in 2009, find crunchy soft-shell crab or around the corner from their fried oyster po'boys, but you restaurant Cochon. They took need to try the roastbeef. They classmate Leon Martin have down a wall and expanded dip half of the sesame-seed worked at the uptown diner the shoebox deli to a full din- flecked loaf into a rich beef for more than 30 years, en- ing room and bar this year, but gravy that laps up against the t ertaining c u stomers w i t h you can still expect a wait for sides of the bread and then pile their indefatigable enthusi- one of their sublime sandwich- a messy heap of slow-roasted, asm while line cooks crank es at lunchtime. lean beefbits onto the other. out juicy burgers, gargantuan As you wait, you can adomelets and mind-numbing mire a refrigerated case Southernhospitality freezes — frothy drinks made stuffed with house-cured meat Service snaps with a sweet with ice, ice cream and milk or and homemade sides such as conversational w h i p , and juice. duck confit, boudin blanc, an- no matter who's waiting on The doub l e -horseshoe douille, smoked hot dogs, cole you,your name isgoing to be "baby" and hers will be "yes, counter allows staff to interact slaw and pimento cheese. with each customer — a floorPillowy and crunchy pow- ma'am." Decoratedin neon show for good energy trans- dered ciabatta envelop three beer signs and fleurs-de-lis, actions. Try to leave that place types of salami (coppa, cotto the busy restaurant offers a without a smile on your face. and sopressata) and tangy great opportunity to wade in It was my first trip to the and peppery arugula on the the unique sounds of the New In the words of charismatic

New Orleans band leader Kermit Ruffins, "If you're feelin' down and out, and you feel there's no way out, you get dropped off in New Orleans." The city infuses you with a resilient energy that comes in many forms: music, dance, drink, food. Always food. Day and his junior high

68-year-old restaurant t hat,

Gambino, the Butcher's take

Orleans accent — where vow-

with its four columns, resem- on an Italian hero and one of bles a Greek temple devoted

to gluttony and bonhomie. By the time we jumped in the cab to head back downtown,

I had added another place to my can't-miss list. It's no small roster.

City pride As much as any town I've visited, New O r l eans elic-

its the evangelist in people when it comes to dining and drinking. Tell a friend familiar with the Big Easy you're headed that way and sit back and let the suggestions roll in like a summer storm: brunch at Commander's Palace; that

garlic-packed pasta dish at La Petite Grocery; cocktails at Bar Tonique. Here comes the rain.

els puff and roundbefore snapmy favorite sandwiches in the pingoff at the end. R's get swalcountry. lowed, syllables get elongated Housemade pastrami and or eliminated, and consonants pork belly sandwiches boast in the middle of words drape big flavor and artisanal atten- their arms around each other tion to detail, but for a taste of and disappear into one sound. classic New Orleans po'boys, It is part Bronx, part Boston, we took a 15-minute cab ride part nasally Midwestern and from downtown to R&O's in all New Orleans — a squawked Metairie. trumpet played atop the belMaking your way through lowed slide of a trombone. Lakeview, the devastation of With its handsome wicker Hurricane Katrina echoes off chairs, art deco flooring and the pristine new houses that white tablecloths, chef John dot the r ebuilt community. Besh's Luke in the Central R8 0's was spared by a mat- Business District has a more ter of a few hundred feet. The genteel feel than R80's, but A-frame restaurant is locat- the seafood gumbo will make ed acrossthe road from the you roll up your white Oxford Bucktown M a r in a H a r bor, sleeves and drop your elbows just a couple of blocks west of to the table. The sumptuous the 17th Street Canal, where a roux, packed with shrimp, breached levee led to historic spicy sausage and crabmeat, destruction. flexes with brawny soul, and

On my most recent trip, I decided to hit places I'd never visThe restaurant that start- the croque monsieur sandited. Well, mostly. My past few ed as a little 10-table opera- wich disappears behind a melted drape of Emmenthaler

FeaturedNew OrleansRestaurants

barneworleans.com Head to this clean, bright French Quarter bar whenthe Brigtsen's weather is nice andthe doors are left open andenjoy a Prohi723 Dante St. 504-861-7610, bition-era cocktail on the edge Brigtsens.com of the madness. Camellia Grill R-Bar 626 S. Carrollton Ave. 5041431 Royal St. royalstreetinn. 309-2679 com/r-bar Cochon Butcher "No crying. No stupid drinks." 930 Tchoupitoulas St. 504588-7675, cochonbutcher.com The signs tell you all you need to know about this fun and Luke moody dive located in the 333 St. Charles Ave.504-378Faubourg Marigny just outside 2840, lukeneworleans.com the Quarter. Peche Seafood Grill PLACES TOSTAY 800 Magazine St. 504-5221744, pecherestaurant.com W Hotel-French Quarter R80's 316 Chartres St. 504-5811200, wfrenchquarter.com 216 Metairie HammondHighThis refined oasis in the French way. 504-831-1248 Quarter features a beautiful HAPPY HOUR courtyard pool, gym, chic It's always happy hour in one themedguestrooms anda of the world's best drinking swanky restaurant, SoBou, cities. I could list 50 places to from the Commander's Family drink in NewOrleans, but we of Restaurants. Rooms start will keep it to five. around $299*. Avenue Pub Hotel Monteleone 1732 St. Charles Ave.theave214 Royal St. 504-523-3341, nuepub.com hotelmonteleone.com This place offers about 50 The grande dameof French beers on tap, with styles from Quarter hotels, this massive all over the world. Hole up and ornate beauty is home downstairs or head up tothe to 600 rooms, a rooftop pool balcony at the weathered spot and the famousCarousel Bar that's open 24hours aday, & Lounge, the 64-year-old every day of the year. revolving merry-go-round bar The Columns Hotel where the VieuxCarrecocktail was invented. Rooms range 3811 St. Charles Ave.thecolumns.com from $129 to $399. Enjoy a cocktail in the Victorian Hotel Modern Lounge or on the front patio at 936 St. Charles Ave.504-962this grand131-year-old hotel in 0900, thehotelmodern.com the Garden District. Located on Lee Circle, this French 75 Bar at Arnaud's modestly priced boutique hotel 813 Rue Bienville. Arnaudssits at a nice middle point berestaurant.com/French-75 tween the GardenDistrict and the French Quarter, and its eleMingle with fine Southern gant Bellocq bar serves some gentlemen andghosts in this of the best craft cocktails in the elegant bar whereyou canget a Ramos GinFizz inthe middle city. Rooms start around $89. *Prices vary depending on of the land of Jell-0 shots. season, day of weekand availKingfish ability. 337 Chartres St. cocktail-

cheese. The kitchen at the restaur ant that o p ened i n 2 0 0 7 puts delicate grace notes on

a robust dish — of nutmeg, smoked paprika and allspice in a concoction that tastes like

pork chocolate — with refined touches of pickled watermelon rind and a layer of sweet Mos-

cato gelee.

empire, beginning with August in 2002, is part of a long line of celebrity chefs who have brought national acclaim

to New Orleans. Another member of that lineage is Donald Link, the Cochon Butch-

er co-owner, whose flagship restaurant, the i mpeccable Herbsaint, is located just a few

blocks from Luke. Link and partner Stephen Stryjewski's latest hit, Peche

Seafood Grill, opened in April 2013 on Magazine Street between Cochon and Herbsa-

int. The airy, high-ceilinged restaurant won the Best New Restaurant in America award

Photos by Matthew Odam /Austin American-Statesman /TNS

from the James Beard Foundation this year and also gar-

TOP: The roast beef po'boy at R&0 in New Orleans spills out of the side of the sandwich. ABOVE: The Gambino isCochon Butcher's take on an Italian grInder in New Orleans.

nered the restaurant's chef, Ryan Prewitt, the Beard honor of Best Chef in the South. The restaurant, with its bare

the city. Chef Frank Brigtsen can pie floating on a glistening opened his eponymous restau- pool of caramel sauce.

pine ceilings, concrete floor,

rant with wife Marna in 1986,

and I imagine the menu has construction lamps, lends an seen few changes since. I air of hip urbanity to the win- would venture the unparaldow-wrapped seafood restau- leled hospitality and dated distressed wood columns and

been there before. And I knew I wanted to go back. New Orleans has a way of doing rant. A raw bar that sits at the interior of the restaurant built that. It's a place full of ghosts opposite end of the restaurant inside a 150-year-old former that welcome you home. A of an overcrowded bar delivbargeboard cottage are about place that feeds your body ers ruby slabs of tuna with the same, as well. Sometimes and soul. A place to hide and rich and piquant aioli and there's no need for change. to recharge. A place to shake Louisiana oysters the size of Brigtsen spent the early off pretense, drop out and rean elephant's ear. part of his career working linquish yourself to a cultural A wood-fired oven turns for chef Paul Prudhomme current that's been flowing for out a p l ate-erasing whole at Commander's Palace and hundredsofyears.It's a place flounder, charred and flaky K-Paul's Louisiana Kitchen be- where you can find something on the outside and tender and fore bringing Brigtsen's to up- new and have it still feel familmeaty inside and drizzled town with Prudhomme's help. iar. It's the reason there's no with an emerald salsa verde The food comes at you with place I'd rather be dropped off that shimmers atop the smoky the delicacy of a bear doing a than New Orleans. fish. Bronze hunks of f r ied second line dance and wraps catfish remained crispy in a you in its warm embrace, from spicy chili broth, with pickled a file gumbo studded with rabWILCO greens giving a tangy finish to bit and andouille sausage to a an Asian-influenced dish. The cochon du lait surrounded by W ilco i s international bet subsides on a sea of rich gravy and topped a ca l m a dish of catfish smothered in with rafts of crackling skin. and quiet a deep, complex roux that re- The dinner was highlighted by Chihuahua, minds you exactly what city a massive roasted duck with 2 y e ars old and you're in. crispy skin, the gamey meat just over enlivened by a tart dried cherClassicly hip 5 pounds. ry sauce and grounded with He eagerly While Peche takes a refined humble dirty rice. The only anticipates staff and volunteers,hoping approach to seafood restau- way to finish a meal like that for some attention, some hugs and rant as gastropub, with an aes- is with a slice of decadent pe- a walk. He has done well with other thetic that would be as fitting small dogs. Wilco loves a warm lap in Chicago or Portland as it is

National attention Besh, who has built a sev-

en-restaurant New Orleans

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www.ReconnectandHeal.com


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Half Moon Bay Chamber of Commerce / Submitted photo

ABOVE: Pumpkins large and small, carefully cut from their vines, await selection by Octo-

ber visitors to one of the many farms in the Half Moon Bay

area. Farmer John's PumpLLS'

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kin Farm nurtures 20 kinds of pumpkins, while the Arata

Pumpkin Farm has a2-acre hay maze and a petting zoo.LEFT: Historic Main Street buildings in downtown Half Moon Bay

have been repurposed to serve visitors and locals, including the local farming community. The HalfMoon Bay Feed & Fuel Co. proudly calls itself, "The best place in town to pick up chicks."

At the heart of the garden shipwreck, the Oceane; its 36-

Photos by Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin

foot mast supports a camera through which visitors can view the horizon by turning the ship's wheel. The wreck's lumber and cannonballs went

At 115 feet, the Pigeon Point Lighthouse is the tallest lighthouse on the West Coast. Built in 1871, automated in 1974, it includes a popular youth hostel contained within its historic lighthouse keeper's

into construction of a 20-foot t all "marble" run, w it h 1 4

quarters.

ramps and two lift towers requiring competitors to pedal bicycles to raise their bowling

Half Moon Bay

kept a certain amount for it-

ent. An unusual underwater

self, as it was a discreet and popular hideaway for movie stars, politicians and writers such as novelist Dashiell

rock formation, as depicted

Hammett, who set one of his

Continued from C1 Winter, however, is differ-

in sea-floor maps published mysteries here. by the National Oceanic and When Prohibition ended in Atmospheric Administration,

St.; Giuseppi Boitano's Gen- ball-sized "marbles." There's eral Merchandise Store and also a mining flume, a vertical Saloon at 527 Main St., which garden with a solar-powered has been doing business since pump and a schedule of on1873; and the 1911 Half Moon going "maker" activities that Bay Jail at 505 Johnston St., range from making a kite to now housing the Spanishtown building a terrarium.

Historical Society Museum. Our most interesting stop in ued asa restaurant,lateradd- the downtown area was at a 1933, "Frank's Place" contin-

directs a U-shaped wave over a ramp that rises from deep to ing the distillery and changshallow water. ing its name. In a story published in New Downtown Half Moon Bay Scientist magazine in 2007, features more of the charm

Greatpumpkins Autumn visitors may know

shop called Oddyssea. Outside Half Moon Bay best for its anof their retail store, which fo- nual pumpkin festival, held cuses on science and art, own- last week (Oct. 10-12). The ers Mike and Ellen Harding highlight came when a colosRikk Kvitek, director of the of that era. Several blocks of have reclaimed an abandoned sal white pumpkin tipped the Seafloor Mapping Lab at Main Street are lined with lot as a garden, planted it with scales(and some scalesthey California State University, late-19th and early-20th-cen- native (and often edible) flo- must be!) with a North AmerMonterey Bay, described the tury buildings, including the ra, furnished it with salvaged ican w eight r e cord: 2 ,058 phenomenon as "a combina- Estanislao Zaballa House, and repurposed materials pounds — more than a ton. tion of a gradual and steady built in 1855 and now a bed- and turned it into a place with That's a lot of pumpkin pie. decrease in depth combined and-breakfast inn at 324 Main i nteractive activities for t h e Continued next page with a wave convergence due

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Rumrunners Y ou don't have t o b e

a

surfer to enjoy Half Moon Bay, so named for the cres-

T HE E

ND N I H TI F R E E!

cent-shaped harbor f r amed

by Pillar Point, a few miles north of downtown. Located less than 20 miles south of

the San Francisco city limits on the San Mateo County coast, the town of 12,500

dates its modern history to 1769, when Spanish explorers and

m i ssionaries f i rst

traveled through the region then inhabited by Coastanoan Natives.

There's never been a better time to stay on the central Oregon Coast. Stroll the long sandy beaches, and explore lighthouses and hidden tide pools, or watch for whales. Hike, fly kites, play golf or blow your own glass float. Visit galleries and museums. Discover unique shops and excepdonal dining. At 6e end of the day stay in one of these fine hotels, each with a spectacular mew. Through December23,2014 take advantage of a special "2nd Night Free" discount on stays Sunday through Thursday. Some restrictions apply. Plus, visit PlayandStayCoupons.com and print coupons for great savings on area attractions and shops when you stay at any one of these fine hotels.

Subsequent Hispanic settlement was built around five Mexican land grants, so that

when the first visitors and settlers of northern European ancestry arrived at Half Moon

Bay, they called it Spanishtown. Ships from San Fran-

ciscoserved the area,traveling around the rugged headlands that initially stymied land travel; by the late 1800s,

stagecoaches ran across the Santa Cruz Mountains, which

separate San Mateo and Redwood City from this coastal community. During the Prohibition era,

San Mateo Coastside, as this region calls itself, became infamous. Rum runners from Canada found clandestine harbors inits secluded coves,

especially under the cover of thick fog, while local moonshiners worked undisturbed

in isolated mountain canyons. Speakeasies thrived. A classic, surviving example is the Moss Beach Distillery, seven miles up the coast from Half Moon Bay. Estab-

lished atop a seaside bluff in 1927, it used its location to buy copious spirits from bootleggers, dragging spirits uphill in the dark to be sold in San

Francisco. The speakeasy

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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TOP: Jeff Clark Mavericks Surf Shop is an institution at Pillar Point Harbor. It was established by famed surfer and board designer Clark, who surfed the giant waves alone for 15 years, starting in

1975, before magazine and video coverage attracted other surfers from around theworld. BOTTOM: The James Johnston House, better known to locals as the "White House," is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was built in1855 in the saltbox style, a popular colonial design that featured a long pitched roof on one side of the building.

Expensesfor two (as a side trip from SanFrancisco) Gas, San Francisco to Half Moon Bayand vicinity (roundtrip), 104 miles at $3.90/gallon: $16.22 Lodging (two nights), Half Moon Bay Inn: $253 Dinner, Via Uno:$66.55 Brunch, Half Moon BayBrewing Co.: $53.68 Dinner, Sam's ChowderHouse: $82.04 Breakfast, Moonside Bakery: $33.82 TOTAL: $505.31

If you go (All addresses in California) INFORMATION Half Moon BayCoastside Chamber of Commerce & Visitors' Bureau. 235 Main St., Half Moon Bay; 650-726-8380, www.visithalfmoonbay.org

LODGING Beach House Hotel: 4100 N. Cabrillo Hwy., Half MoonBay; 650-712-0693, www.beachhouse.com. Ratesfrom $250 1855ZaballaHouse:324 Main St., HalfMoonBay;650-7263921, www.zaballahouse.net. Rates from $99 Half Moon Bay Inn: 401 Main St., HalfMoonBay;650-7261177, www.halfmoonbayinn. com. Rates from $115 Hi-Point Montara Lighthouse: From previous page From summer into fall, the fields surrounding Half Moon Bay — which got its start as an agricultural enclave, and which continues to support

Photos by Barb Gonzalez 1 For The Bulletin

Grandparents share the natural wonders of intertidal life with their grandchild at the James V. Fitzgerald Marine Reserve near Moss Beach, north of Half Moon Bay. Park rangers are usually present to describe invertebrate animals and protect the area from illegal collecting.

16th Streetand Highway1, Montara; 650-728-7177, www. norcalhostels.org/montara. Rates from $27 (dorm), $78 (private room). The Inn at Mavericks: 346 Princeton Ave., Half MoonBay; 650-728-1572, www.innatmavericks.com. Rates from $199 The Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay:1 Miramontes Point Road, Half Moon Bay; 650-712-7000, www.ritzcarlton.com. Rates from $399

to expensive Via Uno Cucina Italiana: 2810 N. Cabrillo Hwy., Half Moon Bay; 650-560-8858, www.viaunorestaurant.com. Lunch and dinner every day. Moderate

ATTRACTIONS

Ano Nuevo State Reserve and Interpretive Center: 1 New Year's CreekRoad, Pescadero; 650-879-0227, www.parks. ca.gov Arata Pumpkin Farm: 185 Verde Road, Half MoonBay; DINING Half Moon Bay Brewing Com- 650-726-7548, www.aratapumpkinfarm.com pany: 390 Capistrano Road, Half Moon Bay; 650-728-2739, Farmer John's Pumpkin Farm: 850 N. Cabrillo Hwy., Half Moon www.hmbbrewingco.com. Bay; 650-726-4980, www. Lunch and dinner every day. farmerjohnspumpkins.com Moderate Miramar Beach Restaurant: James Johnston House: 110 131 Mirada Road,Half Moon Higgins CanyonRoad,Half Bay; 650-726-9053, www.mira- Moon Bay; 650-726-0329, marbeachretaurant.com. Lunch www.johnstonhouse.org and dinner every day. Moderate James V. Fitzgerald Marine to expensive Reserve: 200 NevadaAve., Moonside Bakery and Cafe: Moss Beach; 650-728-3584, 604 Main St., Half Moon Bay; www.fitzgeraldreserve.org 650-726-9070, www.moonClark Mavericks Surf sidebakery.com. Breakfast and Jeff Shop: 25 Johnson Pier, Pillar lunch. Budget to moderate Point Harbor, Half Moon Bay; Moss Beach Distillery: 140 650-560-8088, www.jeffclarkBeach Way,Moss Beach; 650mavericks.com 728-5595, www.mossbeachDddyssea: 601-617 Main St., distillery.com. Lunch, dinner Half Moon Bay; 650-440-4555, and Sunday brunch. Moderate www.oddyssea.com to expensive Spanish Town: 501 SanMateo Sam's Chowder House: 4210 Road (state Highway92), Half N. Cabrillo Hwy., Half Moon Bay; 650-712-0245, www.sam- Moon Bay; 650-712-1050, schowderhouse.com. Lunch www.spanish-town.advertory. and dinner every day. Moderate com

is an outstanding area for tidepooling near Moss Beach. ed withbeer-steamed prawns Park rangers are normally and Baja fish tacos, washed present to describe the inver- down with schooners of the tebrate life in the reef areas brewpub's Mavericks Big and to assure that no illegal Break Ale. collecting takes place. Sea Indeed, the brewers' logo stars, anemones, urchins, nudibranchs and other intertidal

features the giant curl at near-

denizens are highly sensitive

Pillar Point Harbor from its

to hands-on i ntrusions by

outdoor patio with a good

— Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com

www.Agateoeachwotel.eom hivate, vintage,oceanfront getaway ewport, O tR 1- Oi Oi-7SS-5r674

by Mavericks, visible across

A ~rat eBea(h Otel

overlycurious nature lovers.

Stay and dine Lodging is plentiful in the Half Moon Bay area and ranges from youth hostels in lighthouses (at Montara and Pi-

geon Point) to luxury resorts with international cachet. In the latter category is The Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay,

I

I ' • 5

which lays claim to being the only oceanfront resort in

the San Francisco Bay Area. Perched on a bluff surrounded by 36 holes of golf, this elite property has 261 guest rooms, whose occupants may enjoy an extravagant spa, two upscale restaurants, a wine bar and terrace dining area, swimming and tennis. At half the cost, we were suitably impressed by the

&

neat, clean Beach House Ho-

tel, on state Highway 1 north of town. And in the heart of down-

marshes.

chowder. We stuck with seaAno Nuevo is of special note food at the excellent new Via

FREE! Yes,free. Enjoy a free brunch and free tournament every Monday in October! Must be at least 55 and a Bonus Club member to participate. Limit one brunch per guest

per Monday. Management has the right to revise, review, or cancel this promotion at any time. Restrictions apply; see Bonus Club for complete details.

::53 FREESLOTPLAYjlOIIPOII LEAVE THEDRllllNGToUS! Call for reservations, location 8t times: 541.783.7529ext.209 Valid forBend,LaPineandRedmond guestsonly;localzipcodesdo sotapply. Limit one coupon per person psr visit. Expires November 30, 2014.

~4 HQ 34333HWY 97IIORTH I CHILO QUII OR97624 I 541 783 7529I KLAMO YIICISIIIO COM

for its breeding colonies of elephant seals and Steller (northern) sea lions. Weighing up to 5,000 pounds, the elephant

from an adobe rancho on a

ies of pumpkins of many sizes, Mexican land grant. Later colors and shapes, from min- a country getaway for San iature gourds to 500-pound Atlantic giants. Th e A r a ta

National Marine Sanctuary,

pair of binoculars. On the inmarinated octopus and house- terior walls are photographs made spaghetti with local arti- and artists' depictions of local chokes and rock shrimp. surfing pioneers. A t th e H a l f M o o n B a y And yes, they are really big Brewing Co., we were delight- waves. Uno Cucina Italiana, opting for

town, we found the Half Moon Bay Inn, with 15 very moderately priced rooms in a reroof on one side. It's open for known not for its towns and stored historic property that tours on the third Saturday of buildings, but for its seaside. carried the mood of Spanish each month, January through Between Ano Nuevo State Re- California into the frescoes on September. serve, 27 miles south of Half its interior walls. Several tiny farming vil- Moon Bay, and Fitzgerald At mealtimes, we were natlages, including San Gregorio Marine Reserve, a half-dozen urally drawn to the bounty and La Honda, are scattered miles north, the state beaches of the sea. At Sam's Chowder through the hill country south at Bean Hollow, Pescadero, House, a longtime local instituof Half Moon Bay. Most inSan Gregorio and Cowell all tion, we had local petrale sole triguing is Pescadero, whose embrace pockets of sand amid and gril led swordfish,precedsteeple churches and frame headlands and bird-friendly ed, of course,by cups ofclam

a prolifi c number of farms are filled with rapidly growing pumpkins and other squash. (Artichokes, Brussels sprouts and commercial flowers are other leading crops.) houses are little changed from At Farmer John's Pumpkin the mid-19th-century days Farm, owners John and Eda when the settlement grew Muller nurture about 20 variet-

ny of the 2,500-pound marine mammals. The Fitzgerald Reserve, a parcel of the Monterey Bay

Franciscans, who patronized

seals breed and raise their

two resort hotels here in the young here between DecemPumpkin Farm offers addi- 1920s, Pescadero has become ber and March, when guided tional attractions, including a a popular home for craftspeo- tours are offered only by reslabyrinthine, 2-acre hay maze; ple, antique dealers and an ervation. Tours are self-guida petting zoo and children's award-winning goat-cheese ed the rest of the year, but in train ride; a "haunted" barn; dairy. It has several small latespring and earl y summer and a 6-acre corn field. restaurants and b e d-and- visitors are advised to give Farther into the hills east

of Half Moon Bay, old Spanish Town has been reborn as

breakfast inns. B ut " Coastside" i s

plenty of r oom t o S t ellers: b e s t This is the southernmost colo-

I~t

an art community, where an

eclectic variety of artists, photographers, designers and im-

R •

porters have studios and retail

shops. Its curious landmarks — hard to miss for travelers

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C6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

SU D O K U

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acres, up a pebble path and behind large wooden doorsI swung my arm forward we found the Irish School of with an exaggerated swoop- Falconry. ing motion, and, as promised, Once inside the gates, Mark Milly took to the air. Just a few greeted us and gave us a tour powerful pumps of her red and of theschool's35 or so birds brown wings, and she was ris- of prey, caged in a U-shaped ing over the strip of manicured duster. He started with its lone lawnbefore us. owl, amale European eagle She soared over trees flank- owl, the first resident visitors ing both sides of the lawn, but come across, and seemingly she soon cirded and headed all-knowing.

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JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3

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the special gloves. My friends

(Minneapolie) Star Tribune

Chip and Martin volunteer for

I again held out my arm. Milly was coming in quickly. Too quickly. I turned my head away, just as a gentle plop landed on my outstretched, oversized leather glove. There she was — regal, alert and clearly more comfortable than I was as her human perch. The Harris hawk had done

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

this countless times before

sunday, october 19,2014

with countless strangers. But

boy, I felt special. There are many ways to

Summer in La$ Vega$

spend an afternoon in Ireland.

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency C)

In July 1971, I left for the ACBL "Summer Nationals" in Chicago with $100, some groceries, no idea where I would stay and no dates to play. I don't recall how I survived. The ACBL n o w s t ages three " North A meri c a n annual Championships." The stnnmer event is the largest, especially if the site is a tourist mecca, but at the 2014 NABC in Las Vegas, attendance was off. Las Vegas can be expensive. There was grumbling about the cost of amenities and the ever-increasing entry fees. The league must think its rank-and-file members have money trees. For rich sponsors who pay hefty fees to pros, the $3,000 cost of attending a 10 - da y N A B C is negligible. But for others — young adults and seniors on fixed incomeit may be prohibitive. In the Open Pairs, Jim Foster of Birmingham got his money's worth from today's deal. At three hearts, Foster won the first spade with the ace ... and led the nine! West played low; he feared East had the bare king left. Foster then picked up the trumps and exited with a club. The defense took three clubs, but East next led his last club, an error: South's pattern had to be 4-5-1-3. Foster ruffed and cashed his last trump at the 10th trick. If West bared his ace of diamonds, Foster could

By Karen Lundegaard

back toward me.

EVEfZYONE-

BRYDIH

Take a 'hawk walk' in Ireland

end-play him. So West <hscarded his ace, hoping East had the king, but Foster made his contract for a top score. He and Larry Sealy finished third in the event. (As the cards lay, declarer could succeed legitimately with a ruffing finesse in diamonds, but his play was more pleasing.) East dealer Both sides vulnerable

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lin, where many leaders of the Irish rebellions were imprisoned and sometimes executed. This day, I had hiked a national sula and bought an authentic Irish knit sweater. But walking

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I had already been to pubs and eaten fish and chips. I'd visited

the grounds of an Irish castle with hawks coming to and

fro was unlike anything I had done before. Honestly, left to my own de-

vices, I might not have thought of such an excursion. But luckily my friend Roy did — one of the advantages of traveling with friends. Ashford Castle — a five-star

hotel now — sits between Galway and Westport, in a town

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you come to Ireland to explore. Getting past the guards at the gate without spending a small fortune for a room was easy enough. They pointed my friends, my husband and me

the first flights. Mark shows them how to hold the hawks by their jesses, soft leather straps

attachedto theirlegs, before we walk outside the gates. We walk up a short path

through woodlands to a break in the trees. Trim lawns stretch in front of us.

Chip goes first, swooshing Milly away. I take my glove off 'Ibrns out he's not universal- and get my camera ready, exly adored. One of the hawks, cited for the photos I imagine Rua, views him as a potential

I'm about to take.

threat because he has night As Milly flies in, I'm ready: vision and she doesn't. The dis- glove under the arm, elbows in, like is mutual. camera steady. But Milly keeps The falconers need to know coming, past Chip, straight the personalities of each of the toward me a few feet behind birds. Some don't fly well to-

gether so they aren't sent on walks at the same time. Falconers have their favorites, as well.

him. I duck, Mark acts, whistling Milly to him. Note to self:

These Harris hawks love these leather gloves, no matter where

Mark is fond of Milly, a Har- they are. ris hawk whom he has taken Within minutes, it all seems hunting. natural. "Who's got him?" Mark — from Sligo, about Mark would call, and sometwo hours north — has traveled body would eagerly stretch out manytimes to the United States his gloved arm. with his American girlfriend We walk through the woodand has spent a fair amount lands and back to the gravel of time outside Philadelphia. road, the hawks coming and That Mark was our guide felt going. While the hawks are like a welcoming gesture for trained to respond to whisour group of eight, mostly New tles and taps to the glove,just Yorkers. He was young ad ea- holding up the glove — with ger and cared more about the birds than the tourists, in a de-

lightful way. He regaled us with stories ofhawktraining, including taking one to the local pub, where it is welcomed. But although birds of prey are trainable, and falconers can grow attached, the bond isn't mutual. The hawks con-

or without meat — is often

enough. They are also trained to not stay so close all the time, getting bigger rewards for flying farther away and landing in bigger trees. A few trees on the walk aredubbed jackpot trees

by the falconers. At the end of our walk, I don't think any of

sider Markameans to get more us want it to be over. food,whether achance to hunt As we head back to the on the grounds or get treats of school, I put Milly's jesses unchopped up mice, chicks and der my thumb to make sure she raw beef. All raw. All meat. doesn't go anywhere. Fruits and vegetables need not

appiy. Falconry is sometimes called the oldest sport in the world,

having originated in the Far East around 2000 B.C. Official-

As we walk t h rough the

gates, a couple are preparing to depart on their own Hawk Walk. They're dressed to the

nines inperiodgarb, as if ready for a Renaissance festival or

ly it means hunting game in the actors in a S h a kespearean wild with a trained bird of prey, play. "How odd," I thought to myand it was a way to feed famiin the direction of the Hawk lies before bows and arrows. self. Then the hawk landed on It's still used for hunting today the woman's arm, and her cosWalk. We continued on, past signs and is legal in all U.S. states but tume seemedcomplete. for boating and archery, un- Hawaii. I whispered to my husband, til — at the edge of the 330 Our group of eight all put on "Next time."

(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC e e'

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LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis "DOUBLE PLAYS" 91 Hoops venues By FRANK VIRZI 92 Chorussection 93 Writing ACRoss implementfor f "Let's get Vaticanedicts? started!" ee Atleast one 9 Anepicurehas 97 Final finish? a refinedone 98 Much, informally 15 Diamondcovers 99 Go 20 Makerof 103 "How smarTouch disgusting!"

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e DNA polymerase, e.g. 7 Hornless honkers foe Blabbed about 8 Spherical 108Crossword clue, 9 Romana

often:Abbr. 10 Cathedral area 1II Level,in 11 RickyMartin's "Livin'La Vida Liverpool 112 Abruzzotown in a Longfellow 12 Rainforest rodent poem 13 Thrice,in Rx's 2e Takesto court 113 Dental restoration 14 Letters on some 27 River of 114 Dance for loafers Flanders bears? 15 Itty-bitty 28 Riviere filler 118 tr i p fe Boyin"TheKite 29 Turmoil 119Seniorgolfer Runner" 30 Hunger Mark 17 Deserter 31 Artist Modigliani 18 Eventsfor 33 Rulers before 120Spouse 121 Growsfaint select Lenin customers se Fed. auditing 122 Lowplants 123 Buttercupkin 19 Cardiac agency contractions 37 BarkeeP'S DOWN 24 Argentite,vis-asupply f fi t vissilver 38 Formal dance fortiny, winged 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 debutantes? 42 Playfortime 20 45 Lack of vigor 48 Cuttingrooms?: 23 24 Abbr. 49 Chick'stail? 50 BigPUshto 26 27 collect singles bar COmeenS? 30

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C7

oasta eaut an a ventui'ea oun inWaes By Samantha Feusse Tribune News Service

s the weather turns colder and the leaves fall, many of us begin to plan our spring holidays and think of the days when

everything will be bright and blooming again. If the thoughts of adventure, nature, a unique culture and history, good food and warm people make you want to book a trip — why not think Wales? A tiny country surrounded by it's better-known neighbors, England, Scotland and Ireland, Wales is a part of the United Kingdom but has a heritage and language all it's own. Fear not, non-Welsh speakers — almost all of the Welsh speak English,

many as a first language (though you can hear the distinct language spoken often, and all signs in the

country are multilingual). Bordered by England to the Wales is a must-visit, being east, it is surrounded by water the No. 2-ranked coastal deson its north, west and south- tination in the world. (Nationern borders. The country is al Geographic, 2011) If it's the coast you love, one so proud of its coastline that it became the first country in of the most amazing sights is the world to create a coast- just a quick drive from Swanal path that covers the entire sea — the Gower Peninsucountry. The Wales Coast la. With its amazing views, Path began in 2012 and has

been attracting nature lovers and hikers to the country since. If you love the beach,

Photos by Samantha Feuss/Tribune News Service

Along Wales' Rhossili beach you can also see the remains of the Helvetia, shipwrecked in1887 on the sands and visible during low tide. "must-see" list. Take a stroll all the way out to "The Worms

Head," named for its resemblance to a sleeping dragon. Along the way, marvel at the

striking limestone cliffs, lush greenery, wildflowers and historical ruins on the path, as

well as the Rhossili beach below. For a very tiny area, there

is much to see. If you are able, and even some interesting do take the walk down the bird sightings, this is one spot steep hill to the beach (wear that should be on everyone's appropriate shoes, this is not a path for flip-flops or heels), and you will get an amazing scenery that is hard to match

a lternate view — up at t h e

cliffs. You can also see the remains of the Helvetia, ship-

wrecked in 1887 on the sands and visible during low tide. This spot has been designated as an "Area of Outstanding Beauty" since 1949, the first place in the U.K. to win

such an honor, and once you are there you will understand

why.

Exploring by horseback

Horse riding lessons are roughly an hour and a half from the Gower Peninsula in South Wales, where you can find the beautiful

Brecon Beacons. Once you have arrived, there are quite a few stables to choose from depending on your skill set and how long you would like to ride.

perienced guide will show you — the website is easy to find the bestthe area has to offer. (http://www.showcaves.co.uk/ If you choose, you can also get ), and of course tours are in horse- or pony-riding lessons, either language, or you can a treat for adults or children tour by yourself with an audio alike. Visit http://www.horser- guide. The caves are an amazidingbreconbeacons.com to ing sight, with many different find the tour for you. kinds of formations created over the years. Make sure you Fun for the whole family look for the stunning "angel" Stay in the area for some formation, and your children hands-on farm fun, as well as will delight in finding "cave children's activities at Cantref, bacon" and getting "cave kisswhere you and your brood es" (drips of water that fall on can experience indoor and them as they walk through outdoor adventures. Located the caverns). There are autoin Brecon, this is a great spot mated, talking statues of the for family fun. There are live original cavers, brothers Tomshows, an indoor play area, my and Jeff Morgan, that will outdoor splash paddle boats, give you bits of information pig racing, pony rides — ev- about their lives, discoveries erything to make for the per- and the caves as you wander fect day. Your family can feed through. many of the animals (there is Before you leave, make sure even a Guinea Pig Bedtime you pay a visit to Dinosaurs that is adorable — the kids can Park and the Shire Horse feed them and give them fresh Centre and Farm, located in bedding under the supervi- the same area. With so much sion of an animal caretaker) to do in one area, make sure including bottle-feeding baby you pack a lunch (or you can lambs. The caretakers first eat at the cafe, whatever you give an explanation of how please) because your children to feed the lambs and how to won't want to leave until they hold the bottles, and then the have seen and done it all. Did children are given bottles of I mention they can also pan their own and the lambs come for gold? Yes, real gold, just to them for a feeding. If there the way it used to be done. In

If you have not gotten enough communing with nature, why not try your hand at riding a horse'? No matter if you are an experienced hand, a novice or a child, there is a horse or pony with your name on it. Roughly an hour and a are bottles left after the chilhalf from the Gower Penin- dren have turns, the adults sula (or slightly longer than can try as well. The caretakone hour from Cardiff, two ers are available if children hours from London) in South need assistance, but honestly, Wales you can find the beauti- the lambs pretty much know ful Brecon Beacons. Once you what they are doing. This was have arrived, there are quite the highlight of the day for a few stables to choose from many of the kids (and adults) depending on your skill set in the crowd. and how long you would like Encounter Wales on a whole to ride (full day, half day and new level — literally — as you even several day trips). The tour the Dan Yr Ogof Show scenery is lovely, and your ex- Caves. Try to say that 10 times fast. The Welsh language can be a bit of a tongue twister for nonspeakers, but that's OK

Horror films

this protected world of limited social interaction, and that

Continued from C1 Although "The Shining" features some paranormal spirits that haunt a family,

can be a little scary for some just one person you have to people. watch out for but everybody "Zombie movies are about a else." fear of other people," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7816,

Beard said its main conflict

"In a time when we are more

separated from others, they tap into this idea where it's not

food and homes.

Lessons in farming After your tour of ancient times, take a walk to more

modern ones — and right down the road. Leave the car where it is, and check out Mr.

Morgan's Victorian Farm and the Shire Horse Centre and Farm. Mr. Morgan was one

of the brothers who explored the Show Caves, and he led a very interesting life. Models of himself, as well as his animals and home, are throughout the farm and narrate his experi-

ences (even his dog has plenty to say). Additionally, there are plenty of live animals to

pet and play with, such as the giant Shire Horses. There are also indoor play areas where your children can burn off any excess energy they might have left — Jurassic Karting Track

is meant for ages 3 to 6, and Barney Owl's Adventure Playground is for ages 6 to 10. We got the most out of our trip by touring with South Wales Tours — which covers the whole country. These personalized tours let you choose the right kind of adventure

for your party, large or small. It is perfect for families with

young children or traveling ter wheel, roll your sleeves up with grandparents, because and grab a pan — sift away you can set your own pace and until you find something that see what interests you most. sparkles. Those little specks Visit http%/outhwalestours. are indeed gold, and your com/ to book your tour or to child will delight in his or her get more information. See find. http://www.visitwales.com/ The dinosaur l i fe-sized for more on why Wales is your models are located just up the next holiday. a little stream with a little wa-

hill, and there is a path that

gives information on the life and times of the giants. There is also an ancient Welsh Iron

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vader or of ourselves'?

"Does the haunting come from thecharacter's alcoholism, his failure as a father or

from a ghost?" Beard asked, explaining this level of depth is one of the reasons "The

Shining" is his favorite horror

I

s

movie of all time. Looking a t m o r e r e cent

movies and TV shows, Beard said it's interesting how zombie-themed ent e r tainment

such as "The Walking Dead" seems to be popping up a lot lately and always pulls in a substantial crowd. He said the surge in popularity of these films is likely the result of a shifting landscape where most of the in-

teracti ons a person has take place through text messaging, phone calls or in a social media-fueled environment where you can literally "hide" someone if you don't like what they

have to say. Because zombie movies, or for that matter any movie

or TV show that touches on a postapocalyptic world, often featuregroups of strangers who are forced to come together and fend for their survival, Beard said they run counter to

It's what we create together. It's the teams we cheer for, the friendships we form and the lessons we pass on. It's access to new ideas and resPect for new voices. It's not just the Place we live but the Place we'Te creating.

And it's why we continue to invest in arts and education in Central Oregon. yiihat

We Shaye

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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

mazon se s ou

viewers

TV SPOTLIGHT

c ustomers, spending

By Jay Greene The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — Against one wall in a Woodinville ware-

data about its Prime members,

house hangs a portrait of Adolf Hitler. The U.S. Capitol is in the background, a Nazi flag billowing from the dome. On the opposite wall in the wood-paneled room is a giant window, with a huge inlaid wooden swastika. This Nazi embassy was

for this make-believe world as

Erika Schultz/The Seattle Times/TNS

Actress Alexa Davalos talks with co-executive producer Jordan Sheehan and actor Luke Kleintank while on set for a new pilot, "The Man in the High Castle," produced by Amazon.

part of the production of "The Man in the High Castle," a new pany's Netflix-like Prime In- programming for its Prime Inexpectedto release next year. stant Video streaming service. stant Video customers. pilot that Amazon Studios is

Last year's hit, "Alpha House,"

created by Sir Ridley Scott's production company, Scott Free. Amazon has made its for-

Amazon has long been willing to lose huge sums, even for Last week, Amazon said severalyears,on strategic op- it ordered a second season of portunities, sometimes bleed- "Transparent" for 2015. " We're not t r y ing t o b e ing rivals who can't match its Amazon's critical success meek," said Roy Price, the vice long-term investment. With stands in contrast to the sorry president who runs Amazon Amazon Studios, the com- history of tech companies that Studios. "We're trying to be pany is hoping its conversa- have tried to produce Hollyinteresting." tion-generating programs will wood programs. Microsoft That's not just a bold bet for persuade consumers to sign and Yahoo, among others, Amazon Studios. It's a daring, up for its $99-a-year Amazon stumbled with original proand expensive, gambit for the Prime service, which offers gramming, which gave some company itself. Amazon is two-day shipping at no ex- producers pause when Amapouring what Bernstein Re- tra charge, in addition to the zon came knocking. " We didn't i n itially t a k e search analyst Carlos Kirjner streaming video content. The estimates is as much as $2 bil- reason is pretty simple: Prime this project to Amazon," said lion this year to buy and create members are Amazon's best David Zucker, executive pro-

safe way to spend their money. When it comes to television production, though, the company is making a name for itself by taking on some of the riskiest projects coming out of Hollywood. Its latest show, "Transparent," about a father's transition

into a transgender woman, has won criticalraves and drawn recordviewership on the com-

Willing to lose

an in a oween oo ums tis. Every October, I start dreading

a relative or neighbor to help you "Jr." or "the II," too? — Harry in Athens, Georgia dole it out, or leave the bowl outside by your door with a note saying: Dear Harry: According to Em-

Halloween, which I consider to be a

"Take ONE."

Dear Abby:I am a retired widow, crippled with rheumatoid arthri-

legal form of extortion. Living on Social Security, I re-

Dear Abby: Ihave been HIV-pos-

ily Post, the answer is yes. Junior, Senior, II and III are suffixes used

by men, but can also be used by am in good health. I never told any- women. candy. Also, it is difficult for me to one in my family about it. Dear Abby:My 9-year-old niece get up and down every five minutes Ihavenow returned tomy home- asked her mother what kind of to hand out candy. Too many of the town after being away for 40-plus makeup would cover her freckles "children" are 16- to years. I want to tell — her beautiful freckles that God 19-year-old males. my father and broth- put on her face, a part of her. It I have tried keepers that I'm HIV-pos- made me want to cry. DEP,R itive, but I don't want She has also been begging her ABBY "hiding" in my bedt o alarm t he m o r mother to let her dye her brunette room, but I wake the have them start med- hair blond (like a little girl at school next morning to find dling in my life. I feel does). How can we convince her toilet paper in my trees and shrub- like I'm lying by not telling them. that she's perfect as she is'? bery. Once, my front door had been What should I do'? — Auntie in the South — I've Gota Secret sprayed "Stingy Old Witch." The Dear Auntie:Start by telling her police said they couldn't actbecause Dear Got a Secret:Maintaining you think she is beautiful just the I didn't see who did it. Of course, one's privacy is not lying. Because way she is, and that some people even if I had seen them, they prob- your intuition tells you that if you think freckles are angels' kisses ably would have been in a costume. disclose your HIV status to your and she should be proud of them Doyou have any suggestions? family they will be "alarmed or because not everyone is lucky — Grouchy Grandma in Austin, start meddling," don't do it. You're enough to have them. Texas in good health, your HIV is being As to coloring her hair, say that Dear Grandma: Yes. Because well managed, and the only per- if she still wants to do it when she's what you've done hasn't worked, son who has to know is your sex older, her mother will consider it. buy a large bag of inexpensive partner. But once a person starts, it has to candy — they are often for sale at Dear Abby:If I name my son af- be maintained or it looks fake — as this time of year — and when the ter myself, he will be called "Jr." or she will notice when her friend's "extortionists" knock on your door, "II." But what if my wife named her roots start to show. In time she'll pay up. Because your physical con- daughter after herself? I have nev- realize you are right. dition makes it difficult for you to er heard of it happening, but I just — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com get up and down, enlist the help of wondered.Would she be call ed or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069 itive for more than 20 years, and I

ally don't want to waste money for

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, OCT. 19, 2014:This yearyou openup to a lot on a subconscious level. Whether you access this information through your dreams or through unexpected insights, the outcome will be the same. Your home life could be subject to change. Many of you will move, while others will opt to remodel. A new roommate is a possibility. If you are single, you might want to socialize

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE A friend might surprise you with unexpected news. Tonight: Make a favorite meal, and invite a friend or two over.

** * * * You know what you want, but you might besomewhat dependentona friend who hopefully will follow through. You'll have a lot of nervous energy that needs to be worked out. Go for a lengthy walk and enjoy the fall foliage. Tonight: Join friends, but curb your spending.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * Speak your mind. Don't expect someone to knowthat there could be a 8tars showthe ging your clrcle of problem. Allow your imagination to help of dsy you I hsve friends. If you are you find the right words to encourage a ** * * * D ynamic attached, the two loved one to come out of an emotional of you enjoying go** * * p ositive maze, which likely will be self-imposed. ing out and about, ** * Average Tonight: Squeezein some one-on-one but you benefit ** So-so time. enormously from * Difficult

more andexpand

some one-on-one time. VIRGOknows

how to irritate you.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * Plans are likely to get confused. You might not pick up on all the details, as you seem to be more distracted than usual. Someone you need to deal with could be unusually difficult. Your natural impulsiveness is likely to conflict with a situation. Tonight: Get some extra R and R.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * * You might have wanted to spend some time with a friend or get into a good book, but a situation demands your presence.Though you mightnotbe inagreement with what is happening, you will be supportive. A loved will add some mischief to the moment. Tonight: Make it early.

CAPRICORN (Dsc. 22-Jan.19)

** * Be aware of the financial implications of certain choices. You might want to revise your budget as well as how you spend your time. Make acall to someone at a distance. Remember, this person is in your life because he or she keeps things interesting. Tonight: Your treat.

** * * Read between the lines with news that heads in from someone at a distance. You might not be getting the full story — in fact, you can count on that hunch being right. Revise your thinking, if need be. Charge any frustration into assuming a positive role. Tonight: Cocoon at home.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)

** * * Your personality often attracts those who are different. Your creativity could takeyou in a new direction and allow a partner to feel freer. Expect the TAURUS (April 20-May20) unexpected. You might want to rearrange ** * * Your creativity might enchant others, but it could cause a problem when a room to create a more comfortable it comes to making plans. You could atmosphere. Tonight: Only whatyou want come up with so many options that others to do. cannot decide. You'll gain insight into a LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) loved one by his or her reactions. Tonight: ** * * You might want to do more for Not a worry in the world. others, but right nowyou need to care GEMINI (May 21-June 20) for yourself. If you are not well rested and ** * You are more grounded than you there is some chaos in a key area of your might realize. Understand your limits. A life, you are not in the position to give to close associateseemsout of sorts, and others. Go off and clear your plate first. could become very controlling as a result. Tonight: Screen calls.

er checked with other writers,

the cost of luring customers directors and producers who to Prime with edgy, expensive have worked with A m azon programming is worth the Studios. investment. And he watched the programs the company has First-series success developed. "They established their Although the company releases few details about its op- bona fides fairly early," Zuckerations, it has crowed about er said. "They've encouraged the success of "Transparent." us to be very risk-taking in the Amazon has called the material." show the "most bingeAmazon Chief E xecutive watched" series on Prime InJeff Bezos stopped by "The stant Video, with nearly 80 Man in the High Castle" set percent of viewers watching during shooting at the Paratwo or more episodes on the mount Theatre, intended to same day. resemble New York's Times

It's an adaptation of Philip K. Dick's book of the same name,

tune offering consumers a

Man in the High Castle," Zuck-

difficult to measure whether

~s~

a political comedy f r om Doonesbury creator Garry Trudeau, racked up big audiences skewering self-absorbed Republican congressmen.

But after the company expressed interest in the "The

including the growth related to its video offerings. So it's

I p,

built from scratch, courtesy of

Amazon.com. The online retail giant paid

t h r ee ducer of "The Man in the High

times as much as non-Prime Castle" and president of Scott shoppers, according to some Free's television unit, which analyst estimates. has also produced the CBS leAmazon won't reveal much gal drama "The Good Wife."

** * * * P lan to spend quality time with a loved one or special friend. The one mistake you could make would be to lump people together. Your ability to get past problemsemerges as you help someone see his or her way through an emotional maze. Tonight: Opt for togetherness.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Defer to a loved one who is needier and more emotional than you are. Avoid making this behavior a pattern; otherwise, you could find yourself feeling depleted. An authority figure might need some one-on-one time ,so makethata priority. Tonight: Just don't be alone. © King Features Syndicate

Square in the 1960s. Direc-

tor David Semel said Bezos encouraged the show's creators to produce something

"disruptive."

When A mazon l aunched

its studio business four years ago, it would have been hard to imagine that its marquee show

7 p.m. on 2, 9, "America's Funniest Home Videos"Someone call Child Protective Services, now! Among the highlights of tonight's new episode, two truly twisted parents remove the cream filling from an Oreo and replace it with toothpaste to film their children's reaction. Elsewhere,

a man inadvertently presents a cautionary tale about the perils of turning cartwheels in a hotel room with low-hanging ceiling sprinklers, and a little boy is ecstatic after getting his first kiss. Tom Bergeron hosts. 8 p.m. on10, "The Simpsons" — In the new annual spooktacular "Treehouse of Horror XXV," after Bart reads a set of Aramaic symbols on the underside of his desk, he and Lisa are hurled into a demon-filled alternate universe. In a parody of "A Clockwork Orange," Dum

(Homer) wants out of Moe's vicious gang to please his new girlfriend (Marge). Finally, the Simpsons are visited by the cruder versions of themselves from "The Tracey Ullman Show" in a send-up of "The Others." Dan Castellaneta, Julie Kavner and Nancy Cartwright head the voice cast.

would feature a transgender heroine and an upcoming pilot would have Nazis setting up

8 p.m. on BRAVO, "The Real

shop in the U.S. Capitol. But

son finale, escalating tensions

the edgy programming choices are winning the company converts.

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. t

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Housewives of NewJersey"

— In "Judgment Day,"the seabetween the Teresas threatens to derail Dina's swiftly approaching Ladybug Charity event. Elsewhere, Amber loses her hair again, this time for a good cause, while Joe and Melissa break ground on their dream home. After pleading guilty to multiple charges, Joe and Teresa Giudice learn their fate in federal court — and it isn't pretty. 9 p.m. on 2, 9, "Resurrection" — In the new episode

"Old Scars," Margaret (guest star Michelle Fairley) pushes Lucille (Frances Fisher) to host a dinner celebrating the return of Jacob (Landon Gimenez). What starts outas a vaguely uncomfortable gathering, however, quickly becomes even more tense with the arrival of some unexpected guests who strain family relations to the breaking point. Elsewhere, Rachael (guest star Kathleen Munroe) gets some troubling news about her baby, while

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t )~ t

Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • ALEXANDER AND THE TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD,VERY BAD DAY (PG)1:20,3:20,5:20,7:20 • ANNABELLE (R) 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10 • THEBEST OF ME (PG-I3)2,4:25,7 • THEBOOK OF LIFE (PG)Noon,4:30,6:50 • THEBOOKOFLIFE3-D (PG) 2:10 • THE BOXTROLLS (PG) 12:05, 2:15, 4:30 • GONE GIRL(R) 6:40 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • ALEXANDER AND THE TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD,VERYBADDAY(Upstairs — PG) 1,3:45, 6:45 • GONE GIRL(R) 1, 4, 7:10 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

Jack

Jack: Jack is a one attd a half year old Border Collie mix who was brought to the shelter as a stray attd sadly, never reclaimed by his owner. Jaek's ideal adopter would be someone that could spend a lot of time with him for socialization and training that is familiar with his breed. If you think this active boy is the one foryou, come down to HSCO attd adopt him todayl HUMRNE SOCIEIY OF CENTRAL OREGON/SPCA ~ D11705 f. ethSt., HEND~ (541) 38R-3557

s "


Scoreboard, D2 M L B, D3 Sports in brief, D2 NBA, D3 NFL, D3 Motor sports, D4

Golf, D4 NHL, D6 Preps, D6

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

GOLF

RUNNING

3 days, 3 aces for 81-year-old

Track star grinds out

PITTSBURGH — A

Pennsylvania man achieved afeat so rare that a national association had neverattempted to calculate its odds. Dom DeBonis, 81, hit three holes-in-one on three consecutive days while playing at three difference courses in the Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, areaearlier this month. The National Hole-inOne Association did not have the odds of such a feat, but considering the odds of an averagegolfer getting a hole-in-one are estimated at12,000 to1 by Golf Digest, the chances of getting one on three consecutive days is beyondastronomical. His first, on Oct. 6, came at FarmsteadGolf Club in Calabash, North Carolina, where heaced the112-yard17th using a 9-iron. The next day, at Thistle Golf Club in Sunset Beach, North Carolina, he aced the129-yard sixth hole using a7-iron. On Oct. 8, hedid it again at Blackmoor Golf Club in Murrells Inlet, South Carolina, holing an 8-iron from 118yards for his third hole-in-one in three days.

a bumpy transition • On a Homecoming evening with paststars galore, true freshman RoyceFreemansteals the show with fourTDS

By Scott Cacciola New York Times News Service

BEAVERTON — Alan Webb arrived at Portland International Airport last month and prepared to present his

passport. He was scheduled to fly from Oregon to Denver to Houston to Istanbul and fi-

nally to Alanya, Turkey, so he could make his Olympic-distance debut in the triathlon.

And he was flying coach. There was only one problem: Webb, 31, had taken the

wrong passport. The one that belonged to his 2-year-old daughter, Joanie. In his continuing effort to reinvent himself as a triathlete, Webb — the onetime face

of American track and fieldhas encountered lessons big and small. Forgetting his passport (and missing his flight) ranked somewhere in the mid-

dle of that sliding scale. "The trip back was actually worse because a flight was canceled," Webb said. SeeWebb/D4

— Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

COLLEGE FOOTBALL PAC-12 Washington

'S

20

No. 17 ArizonaSt N o. 23 Stanford 1 0 No.22SouthernCal 5 Colorado 28 UCLA

California

Thomas Patterson /The New York Times

34

Alan Webb, the onetime face of American track and field, is reinventing himself as a triathlete.

TOP 25 No. 5 Notre Dame 27

WORLD SERIES

Tennessee est Virgini No. 4 Baylor

41 27

Bochyhas the playoff Midas touch

No. 7 Alabama No. 21 TexasA&M 0 N o.8Michigan t.

Indiana

5 17

Arkansas

32

By Janie McCauley

N .14 Kansas Stat 31 No. 11 Oklahoma 30

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCOHe vowed to stick with his

No. 12 TCU

struggling leadoff man, and

No. 15 OklahomaSt. 9 No. 13 OhioState Rutgers

17

No. 19 Nebraska Northwestern

17

No. 24 Clemson 1 B oston College 14 No. 5Mars a

4

FIU

13

NBA Anthonywon't de

it worked. He let a rookie

reliever challenge Bryce Harper and wasn't daunted • A tale of when the ball s plashed into Ryan Kang /The Associated Press

Oregon running back Royce Freeman celebrates one of his four rushing touchdowns Saturday night at Autzen Stadium in Eugene.

20 yearsafter 'The Pick,' the daysof Husky dominanceareancient history

scoring asmuch

New York Knicks forward Carmelo Anthony says new coachDerek Fisher's triangle offense means hewon't be relied upon to carrythe entire offense. Notebook,03

MOTOR SPORTS Confusion reigns at Talladega A new qualifying format means fulltime racer Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will not start today's Sprint Cup race,04

EUGENE-

Oregon increased its win streak to 11 straight

he Pick" happened 20 years ago, but it m ight aswellhavebeen 100yearsago. Many of the players on the field Saturday at Autzen Stadium had yet to be born when Kenny

Wheaton jumped the route on a Damon Huard pass to intercept the ball and return it 97 yards for

a touchdown and a 31-20 Oregon victory over Washington in 1994.

over Washington with a 45-20beatdown of the Huskies on Saturday. The Ducks' average margin of victory during that streak is 25, the closest game a 34-17 Oregon victory in 2011. MARK The legendaryplayby Wheaton, MORICAL who served as the grand marshal of Oregon's homecoming parade Saturday, marks a turning point in Oregon football history, the beginning of the

But more importantly, the Huskies just have not

given the Ducks a challenge in the past 11years of

Ducks' rise to dominance and the end of the Hus-

kies' reign.

See Ducks /D5

this bitter Northwest rivalry.

Nextup No. 9 Oregon atCalifornia When:7:15 p.m. Friday TV:FS1Radio: KBND-AM 1110, FM-100.1

Inside • A closer look at Royce Freeman's performance against Washington,05

• No. 2 Florida State • Arizona State tops survives scare Stanford to keep against No. 5 Notre pacein Pac-12 Dame. Top25 South. Pac-12 roundup,OS roundup,05

Dominant decade No game has been closerthan 17 points during Oregon's 11-game winning streak over Washington.

zoa4 ....45-20 zoi3 ....45-24

zou ....52-21 zon ....34-17

thet a p e

McCovey Cove. o ft wo And he made the cities: difficult decision K ansas to banish Tim

City

Lincecum to the v s . San Francisco, bullpen. Bruce Bochy 03 is clearly in charge of these San Francisco Giants. Now, as he guides them into the World Series for the third time in five

years, he could soon join some elite company. SeeBochy/D3

ROYALSVS. GIANTS

zoio .... 53-1$ 2009.... 43-19

zoos....44-10 zoo7....55-34

zooo .... 34-14 zoos....45-21 2004.......31-6

Tue.

at Kansas City 5 p.m.

Wed. at Kansas City 5 p.m. Fri. at San Francisco 5 p.m. Oct. 25 at San Francisco 5 p.m. x-Oct. 26 at San Francisco 5 p.m. x-Oct. 28 at Kansas City 5 p.m.

x-0ct.29 at Kansas City 5 p.m. All Times PDT; x-if necessary


D2 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

ON THE AIR

COHKBOARD

TODAY GOLF

LPGA Tour,South African Open Champions Tour,Greater Hickory Kia Classic PGA Tour,Shriners Open SOCCER England, QPRvs. Liverpool England, StokeCity vs. SwanseaCity Women's college, Maryland at Indiana Women's college, LSU at Georgia Women's college, Oregon atWashington St. Women's college, Florida at Kentucky Men's college, OregonState at UCLA MLS, Seattle at Los Angeles FOOTBALL NFL, Seattle at St. Louis

NFL, KansasCity at SanDiego CFL,Edmonton atSaskatchewan NFL, NewYork Giants at Dallas NFL, SanFrancisco at Denver

Time TV / Radio 5 a.m. UHD 1 1:30 a.m. Gol f 2 p.m. Golf 5:30 a.m. N BCSN 8 a.m. NBC S N 10 a.m. Big Ten noon ESPNU 1 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) 1 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. Pac - 12 5:15 p.m. E SPN2 10a.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1:25 p.m. 5:20 p.m.

Fox CBS ESPN2

Fox NBC

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Talladega

11 a.m.

ESPN

Women's college, OregonSt. at Southern Cal 11 a.m. Women's college, Stanford at Utah 1 p.m.

Pac-12 Pac-12

VOLLEYBALL

BASKETBALL

NBA preseason, Boston at Brooklyn NBA preseason, Charlotte at Chicago

noon 5 p.m.

N BATV N BATV

MONDAY SOCCER England, West Brom vs. Manchester United noon NBCSN Women's World Cupqualifying, Trinidad andTobagovs. Guatemala 2 p.m. FS2 Women's World CupQualifying, Haiti vs. USA 4:30 p.m. FS1 Men's college, California at Stanford 7 p.m. Pac - 12 Women's college, OregonSt. at Washington 7 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) BASKETBALL

NBA preseason, ChicagoatCleveland

4 p.m.

NBA T V

FOOTBALL

NFL, Houston at Pittsburgh

5 :15 p.m.

ES P N

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER AmeriCan MOrgan to miSS 4-6 WeekS With injury —Alex Morgan will be sidelined for four-to-six weeks because of aleft ankle sprain and will miss the remainder of theCONCACAFWomen's Championship. Morgan reinjured her left ankle in agroup-stage victory over Guatemala onFriday night, just four months after returning to action following a long layoff. An MRI onSaturday confirmed the sprain. Morgan, who has 49goals in 77 international appearances, first hurt the ankle during training late last October andmissed nine games with her club team, thePortland Thorns of the National Women's Soccer League.

BOXING GOIOVkin StOPS Riidio in 2nd, defendS WBAtitle — Gennady Golovkin stopped MarcoAntonio Rubio in the second round Saturday night in Carson, California, defending his WBAmiddleweight title with his18th consecutive stoppagevictory. Golovkin (31-0, 28 KOs)punctuated his brief West Coast debut with a crushing left hand to the forehead of Rubio, who tumbled to the canvasand couldn't get his wits together in time.

FOOTBALL SeahaWkS PlaCe MarSh On injured reSerVe — TheSeattle Seahawks placeddefensive end Cassius Marsh on injured reserve Saturday and signed tight end RaShaunAllen andsafety Steven Terrell from the practice squad to the53-man roster. Marsh broke a bone on the outside of his foot during practice Wednesday.Earlier Saturday, Seattle completed the trade that sent wide receiver Percy Harvin to the NewYork Jets for a conditional draft pick. Seattle (3-2) is at St. Louis (1-4) today.

BASEBALL GiantS fan WhoCaught home-run dall giVeS it baCkA lifelong San Francisco Giants fan had apiece of team history in his hands after Thursday's game: the home-run ball that sent the Giants to the World Series. Then hedid the unthinkable and gave it back. Frank Burke, of Oakdale, California, said that he wanted the hitter, Travis Ishikawa, to have the ball. So after having it authenticated by a Giants official and learning Ishikawa wanted it back, he went down to the clubhouse andhanded it over. In exchange, Ishikawa gave him asigned bat. After doing a media interview the next morning, he got a call from the Giants. Burke now hasfour tickets to Game 3 of the World Series at SanFrancisco's ATBT Park onFriday.

MOTOR SPORTS Labonte Calling it quitS after Talladega —Terry Labonte will compete in his final NASCAR race today at TalladegaSuperspeedway. Thetwo-time Cupchampion turns 58 next month. He ran 26 full seasons at NASCAR'stop level and apartial schedule the past decade. Labonte hadfour scheduled races this season with Go FAS Racing and good friend crew chief/owner Frank Stoddard. Hewas a season-best11th at Daytona in July. The final start for "TexasTerry" will be the 890th of his career, which is tied for third in NASCAR.It will be his 61st start at Talladega, which is tied for most all-time.

TENNIS RuSSian unrePentant OVer WilliamS COmmentS — Russian Tennis Federation headShamil Tarpischev says the comments he madeabout the Williams sisters were only meant asjokes, and that he doesn't understand why hewas banned for a year bythe WTA tour. Tarpischev was fined $25,000 andsuspendedfrom tour involvement for a yearafter referring to SerenaandVenus Williams as "brothers" on a Russian TV show andcalled them "scary" to look at. Asked whether he regretted his comments, Tarpischev told The Associated Press at the Kremlin Cup onSaturday that the program on which hespokewas"ahumorous show,"adding:"Idon'tanswer stupid questions." — From wire reports

ON DECK

FOOTBALL

Monday Boys soccer: Southwest Christian atCentral Chris tian, 4p.m. Girlssoccer: Jeffersonat LaPine,4p.m.

NFL

PGA Tour

NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPDT

ShrinersHospitals forChildrenOpen Saturday,at TPC Summerlin Las Vegas Purse: 55.2 million yarda ge: 7,255;Par:71 Third Round BenMartin 68-66-62 —196 RusselKnox l 65-67-66—198 JimmyWalker 69-69-62—200 AndrewSvoboda 66-67-67—200 KevinStreelman 71-67-63—201 BrooksKoepka 69-68-64—201 67-67-67—201 Scott Piercy WebbSimpson 69-65-67—201 AlexCejka 69-68-65—202 DavidHearn 70-66-66—202

Tuesday Boyssoccer:Bend atSummit,7 p.mc Mountain View atRidgeview,4:30p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 4p.muCrookCounty atEstacada,6 p.m.; Gladstoneat Madras, 6 p.mcLaPine at Glide, 4:30 p.m. Girls soccer.MountainViewat Ridgeview,3 p.m.; Bend at Summ it, 4:30 p.mcSisters at Cottage Grove, 7p.mcMadrasatGladstone,6:30 p.m.; Estacada at CrookCounty, 4 p.m.;LaPineatGlide, 2:30p.m. Volleyball:Ridgeviewat Redmond,6:30 p.m.;Mountain Viewat Bend,6:30p.m.; Sistersat Junction City, 6:45p.m.;CrookCountyvs. Madrasat Ridgeview High,6 pmcGlideatLaPine,6 pm.;Heppner atCulver,4p.m. Cmss-coun try: CrookCounty, Madras at Tri-Valley Conference championshipsin Estacada,1 p.m. Boys water polo:Summitat BendatJuniperSwim& FitnessCenter, 7:10 p.m. Girlswolerpolo:Summitvs.BendatJuniperSwimfk FitnessCenter, 6:20 p.m.

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

GOLF

East L T Pct PF PA 2 0 714 187 154 3 0 500 118 126 3 0 400 120 124 6 0 143 121 185 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 4 2 0 667 189 136 Houston 3 3 0 500 132 120 Tennesse e 2 4 0 333 104 153 Jacksonvile 0 6 0 000 81 185 North Biff Lunde 68-68-66—202 W L T Pcf PF PA JasonBohn 68-68-66—202 3 1 1 700134 113 BrandtSnedeker 67-68-67—202 4 2 0 667 164 97 Martin Laird 64-70-68—202 3 2 0 600 134 115 Jim Herma 68-72-62—202 n 3 3 0 500 124 139 Spencer 71-63-68—202 Levin Wesl 68-65-70—203 TonyFinau W L T Pcl PF PA Jonathan 69-69-66—204 Byrd SanDiego 5 1 0 .833 164 91 JohnMerrick 69-70-65—204 Denver 4 1 0 .800 147 104 KevinStadler 67-70-67—204 Thursday KansasCity 2 3 0 .400 119 101 HudsonSwafford 69-67-68—204 Football: CulveratWeston-McEw en, 7p.m. Oakland 0 5 0 .000 79 134 WesRoach 67-67-70—204 NATIONAL CO NF E RE N CE 71-63-70—204 Boys soccer:MountainViewatBend,4.30p.m.;RidGeorge McNeil 68-70-67—205 geview atRedmond,4:30 p.mcSistersatSutherlin, East BryceMolder 71-67-67—205 230pm4 MadrasatCrookCounty,4pmcPleasW L T Pct PF PA Robert Streb Philadelphia 5 1 0 833 183 132 Vijay Singh 67-71-67—205 ant Hill at La Pine,4:30 p.m. Dallas 5 1 0 833 165 126 66-71-68—205 Girls soccer: Mountain Viewat Bend, 3 p.m.; RidHidekiMatsuyama 71-68-66—205 geviewat Redmond, 3 p.m.; Sisters at Sutherlin, N.Y.Giants 3 3 0 500 133 138 HarrisEnglish 64-75-66—205 4p.m.;CrookCountyat Madras,6 p.m.; Santiam Washington 1 5 0 167 132 166 Stewart Cink 70-67-68—205 Christianat LaPine,3 p.m. South Scott Brown 68-71-66—205 Volleyball:Redmond at Bend,6:30 p.mcSummit W L T Pct PF PA Jonathan Randolph 3 2 1 583 141 157 Colt Knost 68-72-65—205 at MountainView,6:30 p.m.; LaPineat Pleasant Carolina 67-65-73—205 Hill, 6 p.m. NewOrleans 2 3 0 400 132 141 Andrew Putnam 2 4 0 333 164 170 SamSaunders 66-72-68—206 Cross-coun try: Sisters at Sky-EmLeague champi- Atlanta 69-70-67—206 onshipsat LaneCommunity Collegein Eugene, 2 TampaBay 1 5 0 167 120 204 Erik Compton 70-68-68—206 p.m.; La PineatClass3A/2A/1A Special District 4 North JohnSenden 74-65-67—206 championshipsinPleasantHil,11:15 am. W L T Pct PF PA DudleyHart 4 2 0 667 116 82 DanielSum merhays 71-68-67—206 4 2 0 667 161 130 Friday CharlesHowell III 70-69-67—206 3 3 0 500 143 144 NickWatne 68-69-69—206 Foelhalh Summit atBend, 7p.m.; Ridgeviewat Mouny 2 4 0 333 104 143 Alex Prugh tain View, 7 p.m.;North Eugeneat Redmond,7 p.m.; 71-69-66—206 Estacadaat CrookCounty, 7 p.m.; Sweet Homeat West BrendondeJonge 70-68-69—207 Sisters,7p.m.;CorbettatMadras, 7p.m.;Harrisburg W L T Pct PF PA JohnHuh 72-67-68—207 4 1 0 800 116 106 WilliamMcGirt at La Pine,7 p.m.; HosannaChristian at Gilchrist, Arizona 68-71-68—207 SanFrancisco 4 2 0 667 141 123 Jarrod 3p.m. Lyle 66-71-70—207 Crosscountry: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Seattle 3 2 0 600 133 113 Brendan Steele 68-70-69—207 1 4 0 Ridgeview,Summit at Intermountain Conference St. Louis 200 101 150 Sean O'Hair 71-69-67—207 Kevin Ki s ner 70-65-72—207 championshipsat Eagle Crest in Redmond, 3:30 Today'sGames Tim Clark 68-67-72—207 p.m.; Culver at Class3A/2A/1A Special District 5 Seattle atSt.Louis,10 a.m. TroyMerritt 72-68-67—207 championshipsinPendleton, 3p.m. Miami at Chi c ago,10 a.m. Ryo Ishikawa 72-68-67—207 Boyswaterpolo:Summit at SalemTournament at C arolina at G r een B a y,10 a. m . W es Ho m an 68-72-67—207 KrocCenter AtlantaatBaltimore,10 a.m. AndresGonzales 70-68-70—208 Saturday Tenne sseeatWashington,10a.m. BriceGarnet 68-70-70—208 Boys soccer: CulveratUmatilla,1 p.m. atJacksonvile,10a.m. KyleReifers 73-66-69—208 Boyswaterpolo:Summit at SalemTournament at Cleveland Cincinnati at Indi a napol i s ,10 a.m. A dam H ad w in 67-72-69—208 KrocCenter Minnesota at Bufalo,10a.m. CarlosDrtiz 69-70-69—208 NewOrleansat Detroit,10a.m. Martin Flores 70-70-68—208 HOCKEY KansasCityat San Diego,1:05 p.m. KevinTway 73-67-68—208 ArizonaatOakland,1:25 p.m. J.J. Henry 71-69-68—208 N.Y.GiantsatDallas,1:25 p.m. AaronBaddeley 69-70-70—209 NHL SanFranciscoatDenver, 5:30p.m. CarlPettersson 72-66-71—209 NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Open:Philadelphia,TampaBay KenDuke 69-68-72—209 All TimesPOT Monday'sGame Whee Kim 71-68-70—209 Houston at Pi t tsburgh, 5:30 p. m . Steve W h ea tc rof t 74-65-70—209 EasternConference DerekErnst 70-69-70—209 Atlantic Division StevenAlker 70-69-70—209 GP W L OT Pls GF GA America's Line Byron Smi t h 71-69-69—209 Montreal 6 5 1 0 10 20 20 Nick Tayl o r 71-65-73—209 NFL Ottawa 5 4 1 0 8 14 10 66-68-75—209 Favorite Open Current DN Underdog Bo VanPelt TampaBay 5 3 1 1 7 17 10 TomHoge 68-72-69—209 Today Detroit 5 3 1 1 7 11 8 Players m ade cut did not finish COLTS 3 3 49N B engals Boston 7 3 4 0 6 15 17 46'/~ Ti tans Tommy Gainey 73-65-72 —210 WASHINGTON 4 5N Toronto 6 2 3 1 5 15 19 B EARS 3 ' / z Percy 68-68-74—210 3 ' / z 48'/z Dolphins Cameron Florida 5 1 2 2 4 5 11 Browns 4 N 70-70-70—210 5N 45 JAGUARS CamiloVilegas Buffalo 6 1 5 0 2 8 22 Seahawks 6N R A MS PadraigHarrington 70-69-72—211 7 43'/~ MetropolitanDivision 68-71-72—211 P ACKERS 7 6'I ~ 49 P a nthersD.A. Points GP W L OT Pls GF GA RAVENS 7 70-70-71—211 6N 49'/~ Falcons JohnPeterson N.Y.Islanders 5 4 1 0 8 20 15 B ILLS 70-70-71—211 4'/z 5 ' / z 42N V i kingsZacharyBlair Washington 5 3 0 2 8 18 11 L IONS 48'Iz S a ints Stuart Appl e by 74-64-79—217 2 ' / z 2 '/z Pittsburgh 4 3 1 0 6 16 10 CHARG ERS 5'/z 4 44N C h iefs Columbus 5 3 2 0 6 15 12 COWBOYS 5'/r 6'I~ 48 Gia nts NewJersey 5 3 2 0 6 17 16 Cards LPGA T ouy' 4 3 N 44'/~ RAIDERS Philadelphia 5 1 2 2 4 17 21 BRONCOS 6'/r 6'/z 50N 49 e rs KEBHanaBa ak N.Y.Rangers 5 2 3 0 4 13 20 Saturday,at Sky72 Golf Clu h, OceanCourse Carolina 4 0 2 2 2 10 15 S TEELERS 4 Monday 3 44N T errans Incheon, South Korea WeslernConference Purse: $2 mill ion Central Division yardage:5,354;Par: 72 GP W L OT Pls GF GA BASEBALL Third Round Nashville 5 3 0 2 8 12 8 H ee-Kyung B ae 70-73-68 —211 Chicago 4 3 0 1 7 12 7 MLB playoffs 74-69-68 —211 K yuJung Ba ek Dallas 5 2 1 2 6 15 17 71-73-68 —212 InbeePark MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL St. Louis 4 2 1 1 5 12 6 76-67-69 —212 In Gee Chun All TimesPDT Minnesota 3 2 1 0 4 9 2 73-70-69 —212 Pornanong P ha t l u m Colorado 6 1 4 1 3 9 20 72-70-70—212 YoonKyungHeo WORLDSERIES Winnipeg 4 1 3 0 2 7 11 70-71-71—212 SandraGal (Best-of-7;x-ff necessary) PacificDivision 69-72-71—212 Oct. 21; San Francisco(Bumgarner20-11) at f heeLee GP W L OT Pls GF GA Tuesday, 70-71-71—212 Suzann P ett e rsen KansasCity (ShieldsI5-8), 5:07p.m. SanJose 5 4 0 1 9 20 11 70-70-72—212 Wednesd ay,Dct.22:SanFranciscoatKansasCity, BrittanyLincicome Anaheim 5 4 1 0 8 18 13 70-70-72—212 BeatrizRecari 5:07 p.m. L os Angeles 5 3 1 1 7 13 9 71-68-73—212 Vancouver 4 3 1 0 6 13 10 Friday,Oct.24:KansasCityat SanFrancisco,5:07p.m. KarineIcher 76-70-67—213 Michelle Wi e Calgary 6 3 3 0 6 15 16 Saturday,Dct.25:Kansas City atSan Francisco, 5:07 AngelaStanford 74-71-68—213 p.m. Arizona 4 2 2 0 4 13 18 72-72-69—213 CristieKerr Edmonton 5 0 4 1 1 11 25 x-sunday,Dct.26:Kansas City atSanFrancisco,5:07 69-74-70—213 CatrionaMathew p.m. NOTE: Two points for a win, onepoint for overtime 72-69-72—213 A zahara Mun oz x-Tuesday,Oct. 28: SanFranciscoat KansasCity, Eun-HeeJi loss. 70-73-71—214 5:07 p.m. Saturday'sGames 73-70-71—214 x-Wedn esday,Dct.29:SanFranciscoatKansasCity, GerinaPiler Washington 2, Florida1, SD LydiaKo 73-69-72—214 5:07 p.m. Bosto n4,Buff alo0 69-79-67—215 Amy Yan g Montreal3,Colorado2 74-72-69—215 Katherine Ki r k Ottawa 3, Columbus2 MOTOR SPORTS So Yeon Ryu 76-69-70—215 Detroit1, Toronto0, OT HyoJooKim 72-72-71—215 SanJose4, NewJersey2 J ulieta Gra na da 71-72-72—215 NASCAR Pittsburgh3,N.Y.Islanders1 Austin Ernst 76-71-69—216 Philadelphia6, Dalas5, OT SprintCup 74-71-71—216 LizetteSalas Chicago 2, Nashvile1, OT GEICO550 Lineup MirimLee 69-74-73—216 St. Louis6,Arizona1 AflerSaturdayrfuafifying; racetoday M organ Pre ss el 73-70-73—216 Tampa Bay4,Vancouver2 At Talladega Superspeedway S eul A Yo on 73-69-74—216 Today'sGames Talladega,Ala. Jung-MinLee 71-70-75—216 Minnes otaatLosAngeles,noon Lap length: 2.55miles Ha-NeulKim 74-72-71—217 SanJoseat N.Y. Rangers, 2p.m. lcar num ber inparentheses) MiJung Hur 72-69-76—217 CalgaryatWinnipeg, 4p.m. 1. (55)BrianVickers, Toyota,196.129. ShanshanFeng 71-79-68—218 St. LouisatAnaheim,5p.m. 2. (48l Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet,195.732. Jin Young Ko 73-74-71—218 3. (47AJ Allmendinger,Chevrolet, 195.496. ChellaChoi 70-75-73—218 4. (12 Ryan Bl a n ey, F ord,194.015. I Sei Young K i m 74-71-73—218 SOCCER 5. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford,194.007. Ha-NaJang 80-71-68—219 6. (95)MichaelMcDowell, Ford,193.693. Min-SunKim 75-72-72—219 MLS 7. (33)TravisKvapil, Chevrolet,193.603. HaruNom ura 75-72-72—219 8. (5) Kasey K ah ne, C h evr ol e t,193.498. M in-Young Le e 75-71-73—219 MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER 9. (32)TerryLabonte, Ford,193.431. Su-Yeon Jang 72-72-75—219 All TimesPDT 10. (7)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet,193.162. Kim Kaufman 70-74-75—219 11. (31) Rya n N e w m an , C h ev rol e t,191.302. MeenaLee 73-71-75—219 EasternConference 12. 78 Martin Truex Jr., Che vrol e t,190.981. C aroline Ma s s on 76-75-69—220 W L T Pls GF GA 13. 20 MattKenseth, Toyota,193.415. JennyShin 75-76-69—220 y-D.C.United 17 9 7 58 51 36 14. 23 Alex Bo w m an, T oy ot a ,193.376. MinaHarigae 75-74-71—220 x -NewEngland 1 6 1 3 4 5 2 50 46 15. 99 Carl Edw a r ds, Fo rd,193.291. Mariajouribe 74-73-73—220 x-SportingKansasCity 14 12 7 49 48 39 16. (21) Tre vor B a yne, F or d,192.401. Jenni f erJohnson 74-77-70—221 x-NewYork 12 9 11 47 52 47 17.43Aric Almirola,Ford,192.278. AnnaNordqvist 73-77-71—221 x-Columbus 12 10 10 46 47 40 18. 41 Kurt Busch, Ch ev rol e t,192.096. II MinjeeLee 69-78-74—221 Philadelphia 10 11 12 42 50 49 19. (13 Casey Me a rs, C h evrol e t,191.908. BrittanyLang 73-73-75—221 TorontoFC 11 14 8 41 44 53 20. 27 Paul Men ard, Ch ev rol e t,191.773. I HaejiKang 67-75-79—221 Houston 11 16 6 39 38 56 Min Lee 74-75-73—222 Chicago 5 10 18 33 39 50 21. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,190.985. 22. (26)ColeWhitt, Toyota,190.97. HeeYoungPark 75-74-73—222 Montreal 6 18 9 27 37 57 23. I49) Mi k e W a l a ce, T o yo t a ,184.729. Lexi Thomp son 77-72-73—222 WesternConference 24. 16 Greg Bi f fle, Ford,191.577. N a Yeon C h oi 75-73-74—222 W L T Pls GF GA 25. 34 DavidRagan, Ford,191.42. I I Sarah Jane S m it h 75-73-74—222 x-Seattle 19 10 3 60 61 48 Mo Martin 78-69-75—222 x-LosAngele s 1 7 6 9 6 0 67 33 26. (9)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,191.214. 27. (10) Dani c a P a t r i c k, Ch e v rol e t,191.149. Line Vede l 74-78-71—223 x-FCDallas 16 11 6 54 55 43 28. 88) Dal e E ar nha rdt Jr., Ch e vrol e t,191.134. M i Hyang Le e 74-77-72 —223 x-RealsaltLake 1 4 8 1 1 5352 39 29. 40) Landon C as si l , Chevrol e t,191.13. Amelia Lewi s 79-72-72—223 Vancouver 11 8 14 47 41 40 30. 3) AustinDilon, Chevrolet,191.027. YaniTseng 72-76-75—223 Portland 11 9 13 46 59 52 31. 1) Jamie McMurray,Chevrolet,190.818. 74-72-77—223 Se RiPak Colorado 8 17 8 32 43 61 32. (83) J.J. Ye l e y, T oyo t a ,190.689. 71-74-78—223 MoriyaJutanugarn ChivasUSA 8 18 6 30 28 59 33. 15 Clint Bow y e r, T o yot a ,190.681. 77-74-73 —224 Jiyai Shi n SanJose 6 15 12 30 35 49 34. 66 MichaelWaltrip, Toyota,190.586. I.K. Kim 75-71-78—224 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepointfor tie. 35. 98 Josh Wi s e, Fo rd,190.507. 77-75-73—225 BelenMozo x- clinchedplayoff berth 36. 36 Reed Sorenson,Chevrolet,189.305. 78-72-76—226 ThidapaSuwannapura y- clinched conference 37. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 76-73-77—226 Pernilla Lindberg 38. 1 t) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, Owner Points. 78-75-74—227 ChristinaKim Saturday'sGames 39. 4) Kevi n Ha rvi c k, Ch ev rol e t, Ow ne r P oi n ts. 78-72-77—227 JessicaKorda TorontoFC1,Montreal1, tie 40. 22) Joey Lo gano, F ord, O w n er P oi n t s . 81-74-73—228 PaulaCreamer FC Dallas1,Colorado0 41. 18) Kyl e Bu s ch, T o yota, O w n er P oint s . 75-80-73—228 Danielle Kang Philadelphia 2, Sporting KansasCity1 42. (42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet, Owner Points. 76-76-76—228 NatalieGulbis D.C.United2,Chicago1 43. (24) Jeff G or don, C he vrol e t, Ow ner P oi n ts. 76-76-77—229 Kris Tamulis SanJose0, Vancouver0,tie 77-79-74—230 Jodi EwartShadoff Today'sGames Pei-Yun Chi e n 79-76-76—231 ColumbusatNewYork, noon BASKETBALL Seattle FC at LosAngeles,5:30 p.m. W 5 3 2 1

NBA preseason

Women's World Cup

NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

Qualifying

All TimesPDT

GROUPSTAGE All TimesPOT

Saturday'sGames CostaRica2,Jamaica1 Mexicofg, Martinique0 Monday'sGames Trinidad&Tobagovs. Guatemala, 2p.m. Haiti vs.UnitedStates, 4:30p.m. Tuesday'sGames Martiniquevs.CostaRica,2p.m. Mexic ovs.Jamaica,4:30p.m.

Saturday'sGames Indiana 98,Dallas93 Detroit104,Atlanta100 Philadelphia95,Orlando84 Miami111,SanAntonio 108,OT Denver104,L.A. Clippers 93

Today'sGames BostonatBrooklyn,noon Minnesota vs.OklahomaCityat Tulsa,OK,4p.m. CharlotteatChicago,5 p.m. GoldenStatevs. Houstonat Hidalgo, TX,5p.m. utah atL.A.Lakers,6:30 p.m.

Champions Tour

PaulGoydos JohnCook MikeGoodes DougGarwood KevinSutherland Tommy Armour III Skip Kendall RoccoMediate GeneSauers JoseCoceres ChipBeck Jeff Hart Willie Wood Stephen Ames BobTwa y Jeff Magge rt KennyPerry MichaelAllen MikeReid Colin Montgom erie LeeJanzen EstebanToledo MarcoDawson TomPerniceJr. SteveElkington GaryHallberg ScottDunlap StevePate PeterSenior SteveLowery BarryLane Gil Morgan BobbyClampett ChienSoonLu LarryMize MarkBrooks Jeff Freem an DanForsman CoreyPavin JohnRiegger BlaineMccallister WesShort,Jr. PH. Horgan III John Inman Billy Andrade GuyBoros Jim Rutledge Scott Simpson LorenRoberts JoeySindelar AndersForsbrand FredFunk CraigStadler MarkMcNulty RodSpittle Joe Daley BobGilder DavidEger BobbyWadkins Joel Edwards Scott Hoch TomByrum TomKite Bob Niger SonnySkinner MarkMouland TomPurtzer Jim Thorpe JohnHarris Hal Sutton AndyBean

68-67—135 67-68—135 66-69—135 70-66—136 69-67—136 69-67—136 71-65—136 66-70—136 70-67—137 70-67—137 70-67—137 70-67—137 69-68—137 69-68—137 69-68—137 68-69—137 72-65—137 67-70—137 70-68—138 69-69—138 71-67—138 71-67—138 68-70—138 67-71—138 67-71—138 67-71—138 65-73—138 70-69—139 70-69—139 69-70—139 71-68—139 68-71—139 68-71—139 67-72—139 70-70—140 70-70—140 69-71—140 69-71—140 68-72—140 66-74—140 70-71—141 71-70—141 73-68—141 70-72—142 71-71—142 71-71—142 71-71—142 72-70—142 69-74—143 71-72—143 71-72—143 68-75—143 74-69—143 71-73—144 69-75—144 71-73—144 72-72—144 73-71—144 73-72—145 74-71 — 145 74-71—145 73-73—146 73-73—146 73-73—146 73-73—146 76-70—146 71-76—147 75-72—147 76-71—147 71-77—148 74-78—152

TENNIS ATP Ersle Bank Open Saturday At WienerStadthaRe Vienna,Austria Purse: SBBO,BOO(WT255) Surlace:Hard-Indoor Singles Semifinals AndyMurray(2), Britain,def.ViktorTroicki, Serbia, 6-4, 6-3. DavidFerrer(t), Spain,def. PhilippKohlschreiber (4), Germ any,6-3,2-6, 7-6(3). Stockhol m Open Saturday At Kungliga Tennishallen Stockholm,Sweden Surlace:Hard-Indoor Purse:$550,500IWT255) Singles Semifinals Grigor Dimitrov(2), Bulgaria,def. BernardTomic, Australia,6-3, 7-5. Tomas Berdych(I), CzechRepublic, def.Matthias Bachinger,Germany, 7-6(7), 6-4.

WTA KremlinCup Saturday At Olympic Stadium Moscow Purse: Men,$775,620(W T255);Women, $71B,BBB (Premier) Surlace:Hard-Indoor Singles Men Semifinals RobertoBautistaAgut(5), Spain,def. Ernests Gulbis (3),Latvia,6-4, 6-4. Marin Cilic (2), Croatiadef. , Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan,4-6,6-3,6-2. Women Semifinals Irina-Came lia Begu,Romania, def. LucieSafarova (4), Czech Republic, 7-6(5),1-6,6-3. AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova(6), Russia, def. Katerina Smrak ova,CzechRepubhc, 6-2,6-2. Luxembourg Open Saturday At CK Sporlcenter Kockelsheuer Luxembourg Purse:5250,000(Intl.) Surlace:Hard-Indoor Singles Championship AnnikaBeck,Germany,def.Barbora Zahlavova Strycova(4),CzechRepublic, 6-2, 6-1.

DEALS Transactions BASKETB ALL

NationalBasketballAssociation CHICAGO BULLS—Waived GsKim English and BenHansbrough. FOOTBA LL NationalFootballLeague CLEVEL AND BRDWNS — Signed DLJacobbi McDaniefrom l thepractice squad.WaivedTEGerell Robinson. DALLASCOWBOYS— WaivedDTKen Bishop. SignedLBKeith Smith fromtheir practicesquad. NEW ORLEANSSAINTS — Released TE Tom Crabtree.SignedLBTodd Davis fromthepractice squad. NEW YORK JETS— AcquiredWR PercyHarvin from Sea tle for aconditional draft pick.Released WR DavidNelson. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — Placed DE Cassius Marsh oninjured reserve. SignedTERaShaunAllen and SStevenTerrefffromthepractice squad. TENNE SSEETITANS—PromotedTEBrettBrackett from thepracticesquad. PlacedTECraigStevenson injured reserve. WASHIN GTONREDSKINS — Activated DEStephen Bowenfrom thephysically-unable-to-perlorm list. PlacedLBAkeemJordanoninjured reserve. HOCKEV NationalHockeyLeague DETROIT REDWINGS— RecalledGPetr Mrazek fromGrandRapids (AHL). AmericanHockeyLeague GRANDRAPIDSGRIFFINS — Announced G JaredCoreauwasassignedto theteamfromToledo (ECHL).

FISH COUNT upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 1,150 2 4 7 82 4 348 The Daffes 978 2 2 7 595 227 John Day 91 3 157 915 400 McNary 8 8 8 245 795 363 upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville1,146,662184,871 321,048 128,558 The Daffes764,274 131,047 246,549 96,881 JohnDay 643,201 114,841 191,488 72,400

GreaterHickoryKiaClassic Saturday AtRockBarnGolfandSpa,JonesCourse Conover,N.C. Purse:$1.6 million yardage:5,874;Par:71 SecondRound Jay Haas 63-67—130 DavidFrost 67-65—132 66-66—132 Kirk Triplett Joe Durant 63-69—132 WayneLevi 67-66—133 Biff Glasson 66-68—134 RogerChapm an 65-69—134 Jeff Sluman 69-66—135 McNary 598,122 107,038 197,802 70,131


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

NFL NOTEBOOK

D3

NBA PRESEASON NOTEBOOK

'Melo I don't think ... I'll be thescoringchamp' Bulletin wire reports

Kevin Durant. Both years, the

GREENBURGH, NY. — It is

only four games into the preseason, but that's a big enough sample for Carmelo Anthony to

make some predictions about how his role will change this season in the triangle offense.

Kathy Willens/The Associated Press

Denver's Julius Thomas presents e nightmare matchup for

most opponents. Sen Francisco,missingsome keydefenders, will have an even more difficult time than usual.

Who can

"I don't think, especially in this system now, I'll be the scoring champ," Anthony said after the New York Knicks practiced Saturday. "With the style of play we're going to have, I don't think I'll have to lead the league in scoring." Anthony was the league's scoring champion in 2012-13, averaging 28.7 points per game in a season in which the Knicks

won 54 games. Last season, with the team struggling, he averaged 27.4 and finished second to

49ers Lise

when he no doubt will continue

Cavs still waiting on BigThree

team's basic offensive philosophy to be the go-to guy. As Kyrie Irving returned from "What I l ike, so far, is that came down to getting the ball to a sprained ankle in Friday's 108Anthony and letting him do his throughout the game, you don't 102 loss to the Dallas Maverthing. have to focus on getting me icks, Kevin Love sat for what the The highly structured triangle the ball or me trying to score in Cleveland Cavaliers called rouoffense will be a n adjustment bunches or coming down and tine maintenance. for Anthony, but i t s h ouldn't just throwing the ball to me and They have now played five prepreclude him from winning the everybody watches," Anthony season games, but Irving, Love scoring title. Michael Jordan won said. "Everybody will be a part and James haven't played togethseven scoring titles, Kobe Bryant of the game. Everybody will feel er since the opener two weeks two and Shaquille O'Neal one like they have something to do ago. No one seems overly conwhile playing in Phil Jackson's with the game. cerned, however, and the hope is "Then, when it comes down to the Big Three will play together triangle. So there definitely is an opportunity for a superstar scor- it, I think we all know that when in both of next week's games. "I'm only concerned that we're er to shine, and to be competitive, it's time for me to go to work, it's the Knicks are going to need An- time for me to go to work. But for all healthy w hen th e s eason thony to put up big numbers this the most part, it's different, be- starts," James said. "We'll have season. cause before, when I was trying time throughout practices and Anthony said he will get fewer to start off in the first quarter and regular season games to make shots in the triangle but will have end it in the fourth, now I can just the adjustments that are needed. a chance to be more effecti ve, play my position, play my part But we need to be healthy. That's especially at the end of games, and get everybody involved." all that matters."

to defend Thomas?

WORLD SERIES

Nextup Portland at Denver When:6 p.m. Tuesday Regulnr-sensnn opener: Portland vs. Oklahoma City When:7:30 p.m., Oct. 29 TV:ESPN Rndin:KBND-AM 1110, FM-100.1;

KRCO-AM690, FM-96.9

Bochy Continued from D1 He is trying to become just the 10th manager with three

Bulletin wire reports

rings. Every manager in that group is in the Hall of Fame,

SANTA CLARA, Calif. A linebacker, safety or cor-

a small club t hat

nerback? A combination of defenders? Someone in a San F rancisco 49ers uniform i s

going to have to cover Denver Broncos all-world tight end

i n cludes

recently enshrined Tony La Russa and Joe Torre, and old greats Casey Stengel and Connie Mack. Bochy ins i st s he

Julius Thomas.

doesn't

The question: Who'? Regular inside linebackers NaVor-

accomplishments. "I'm not just trying to be

ro Bowman and Patrick Wil-

the humble guy. I'm fortunate

lis won't be available because of injury. Therefore, the job is going to fall upon the likes of linebackers Chris Borland and Michael Wilhoite and

that I have a great club here, a gritty club with a lot of charBy Naila-Jean Meyers •New York Times News Service

s afeties Eric Reid and A n -

toine Bethea, perhaps cornerback Chris Cook. "When you get a tight end like him, some people think you're crazy if you don't put a (defensive back) on him," 49ers defensivecoordinator Vic Fangio said of Thomas, a former Portland State stand-

out. "Then the next guy will think you're crazy because of the size mismatch if you don't

have alinebacker on him.

of who's on him for us."

Then again, it might not matter who is on Thomas if

it's only one guy. Thomas is playing at the kind of level that causes Fangio and oth-

on

his

acter that plays to win," he

he rivalry between Kansas City and San Francisco isn't a rich one. The cities seem to be connected only by fiber-optic cables after Kansas City won a national competition to be the first place to get Google's high-speed network. A defining chapter in the cities' rivalrybegins Tuesday, when the Kansas City Royals and the San Francisco Giants meet in Game 1 of the World Series. The teams have played only 12 times since the Royals entered Major League Baseball in 1969 — three times this season alone. Qansas City has won 9 of the 12 games, including the past five.) The Kansas City Athletics and the San Francisco Giants overlapped in the majors from 1958 to 1967 but never

"That's what t hese good

tight ends do. They cause you problems. So, it will be a mix

dwe l l

played each other, unlike their predecessors, the Philadelphia Athletics and the New York Giants, who met in the World Series in 1905, 1911 and 1913. And the Oakland A's and the San Francisco Giants know each other well by now, having played 104times, including the 1989 World Series. But that doesn't mean there is no sporting history between Kansas City and San Francisco.

said. "They seem to thrive on these type of games. It's all about makeup guys and ownership and giving us the resources to hopefully get here. They've given me the tools, and that's how this works." There's a popular Bay Area phrase these days, "Boch Genius." He just shrugs it off. The 59-year-old is deter-

mined not to jinx a good thing. "It's always those players on how they perform," he said. "It's a gutty group. I don't know what's going to happen, but I will say that they will leave it all out on the field for you." Bochy was a backup catcher during his entire nine-year career, hardly the kind of player anyone would consider a Hall of Famer. Now making another run at a title,

er defensivecoordinators to

ponder the merits of committing a second defender to the

~

Bochy has established himself as one of the best in the

r

ci t y of fountains

cause.

business.

Thomas, 6-foot-5 and 250 pounds, has nine touchdown

San Francisco is ~

cI

thecitybythebey ~

receptions through the Bron-

cos first five games. That's

'+

tied with Detroit Lions wide receiver C a l v i n Jo h n s on

"I'm glad I'm playing for a guy like him, for sure," s aid Travis I s hikawa, t h e

The Associated Press photos

n i'l'll] l~

(2011) for the most receiving touchdowns through five games in NFL history. Thomas burst on the scene

j ourneyman who hi t t h e pennant-winning three-run homer Thursday night. "He just seems to have the right intuition with every move he makes."

Before he arrived in San

last season after he caught

Francisco in 2007, Bochy was

only one pass in nine games his first two seasons com-

known for his postseason failures with the Padres. His

. W>qP

bined. In 2013, he hauled in receptionsfor 277 yards this

San Diego team was swept in the 1998 World Series and eliminated in the minimum three games in the 2005 Di-

season. Bethea said he and his de-

vision Series by St. Louis, then lost in four games to the

fensive mates are accustomed

Cardinals in the first round the next year. That '98 team

65 passes for 788 yards and 12 touchdowns. He has 24

to matchup nightmares when it comes to tight ends. "All the tight ends nowa-

days in this league are big body and it's tough to get around them. Like last week,

Cook had a big body. Week in, week out, we see more of these tight ends with big bodies, wide radius of range of being able to catch the ball." In a perfect world the 49ers

could devote Borland or Wilhoite to covering Thomas one-on-one, depending upon which side of the field Thomas lines up.

, fjl

ttv

Qr

NFL The 49ers and the Chiefs also have played only 12 times since 1971, including San Francisco's 22-17 victory this

rsl'r.rre

i'~ (

they folded two years later, and the Scouts were in Den-

ver. The Scouts franchise eventually became the New Jersey Devils.

cities opened in 1993, when Joe Montana was traded from the 49ers to the Chiefs. Steve Bono made the same jour-

Music The hometown of Charlie Parker, Kansas City devel-

ney in 1994. Elvis Grbac was drafted by the 49ers, but he

oped its own style of jazz in the 1930s. "San Francisco

whether it's during the season

signed with the Chiefs as a free agent in 1997, replacing

Sound" came out of the rock scene in late 1960s and early 1970s that included Jefferson Airplane and the Grateful

or postseason. The one thing I think I've learned is it's differ-

Dead.

ent, the postseason. It's not the

Songs

regular season," Bochy said. "You don't have that margin

month. But a strange quarterback pipeline between the

Bono as the starter. Alex Smith, the current Kansas City quarterback, was the No. 1 overall pick by the 49ers in 2005, but he went to the Chiefs in a 2013 trade.

Pro basketball

According to Tony Bennett, "little cable cars climb half-

ference foes from 1972 to 1985, when the Kings moved to Sacramento. But all those games came after the Warriors moved from San Francisco to Oakland.

Kansas City" and "it's better than a magic lantern show."

College basketball

Directors

The 1957 Final Four, held in Kansas City, was among the most memorable in NCAA tournament history. The

There is no shortage of movie connections in both cities. Kansas City is the birthplace of Robert Altman, while

ford to leave their cornerbacks

San Francisco Dons were the two-time defending champi-

Clint Eastwood was born in San Francisco and roamed its

in man-coverage at all times. In the end, Fangio said, the

ons, but Bill Russell and K.C. Jones were no longer on the team. In the national semifinals, Wilt Chamberlain and

streets in the "Dirty Harry" movies. Both directed movies

best solution might be to treat Thomas as just another play-

the Kansas Jayhawks, whose home in Lawrence is about

er, the Broncos as just another

nus connection: The Dons are now coached by the former

Animators

team and today's game another challenge. "Ultimately, you got to play your package," Fangio said. "If

Kansas star Rex Walters.

Walt Disney, the person, grew up in Kansas City. Pixar, the company, grew up outside San Francisco. (Disney now owns Pixar.)

uation for the 49ers. Borland will be making his first NFL start, Wilhoite his ninth.

Also, the Broncos are so deep and talented at wide receiver that the 49ers can't af-

12 seasons as Padres skipper

before his move to Northern California. "You're always learning from your past experiences,

way to the stars" and "the morning fog may chill the air" in San Francisco, where, Scott McKenzie says, "you're gonna meet some gentle people." But in Kansas City, "they got a crazy way of loving," Fats Domino says. And Rodgers and Hammerstein insist, "Everything's up to date in

This is far from an ideal sit-

was Bochy's lone pennant in

The most fruitful sports competition between the cit-

ies is in the NBA, where the Kansas City Kings and the Golden State Warriors played regularly as Western Con-

40 miles west of Kansas City, defeated San Francisco. Bo-

Hockey

about the Kansas City jazz scene: Altman's "Kansas City" and Eastwood's Charlie Parker biopic, "Bird."

of error to make up for these

games. You lose a game in May, and you still have 100plus games to make that up."

Bochyintheplayoffs Bruce Bochy's career playoff winning percentage of.585 is seventh all-time among managers with at least five playoff appearances. Only Joe McCarthy, Sparky Anderson, Terry Francona, Darrell Johnson, Joe Torre andCaseyStengal have better records. Year Team 1996 Padres 1998 Padres 2005 Padres 2006 Padres

you start tinkering here and

From 1974 to 1976, Kansas City had an NHL team, the Scouts. They compiled a 4-2-2 record against the Cali-

Chocolate

there to cover up somebody's perceived deficiencies, that

fornia Golden Seals, who played in Oakland. It was not an illustrious matchup. Both teams finished in last place

San Francisco-based Ghirardelli is the second oldest chocolate company in the United States, while Kansas

just leads to problems other

in their divisions those two seasons, with the Scouts

City-based Russell Stover Candies is the country's leading

2012 Giants

places, too. You got to be able toplay."

winning 27 games totaL When the 1976-77 season began, the Golden Seals had moved to Cleveland, where

manufacturer of boxed chocolates. But both are owned by the Swiss chocolate giant Lindt & Sprungli.

Totals 7npp.

2010 Giants 2014 Giants

Rec Wnn 0-3 7-7

NL

0-3 1-3 11-4 NL,WS 11-5 NL,WS 8-2 NL,?? 3 8-27 . 5 85


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

"l'm not the runner that l was, but l still have this opportunity for however long."

NASCAR

— Alan Webb Brian Vickers climbs out of his car

Webb

At the 2001 Prefontaine

on Saturday

Continued from 01

Classic as a

after winning the pole for today's NASCAR Sprint

Cup race in Talladega, Alabama. Rainier Ehrhardt I The Associated Press

It is not a glamorous life, but

high school senior, Alan Webb ran the mile in 3:53.43,

it has seldom ever been. For all of Webb's achievements as an

elite middle-distance runner — the sub-4-minute miles he ran asahigh schoolsenior,the records he stills holds — there was little nuance to his approach. The only way he knew

by Jim Ryun in 1965. Webb

Vickers winspole in Talladega quali ing

sonable boundaries of human

neverlived

performance. All those flashes of greatnesscame atacost, his career slowly unraveling amid injuries. Toward the end, Webb wound up swapping coaches as if they were socks, moving

up to the hype of that

By Jenna Fryer

most of the time," Allmending-

from coast to coast (and back

The Associated Press

er said.

again) as he chased the runner he used to be.

SCAR's new qualifying format put Brian Vickers on the

pole at Talladega Superspeedway but left many drivers angry and confused, and three full-time teams failed to make to day's race. Kevin Harvick called the

"If I was them, I would be upset, but we all knew what

Reed Sorenson initially didn't qualify, but got into the race when Joe Nemechek was disqualified for failing inspection.

how to train was to stretch his

"PRRSLAISftl

The long roadback

These days, Webb spends most mornings at a fitness performance club, where he swims laps andrecently and lifts weights. He pays retired from for a membership, just like track and field everybody else. On a recent with the goal weekday, Webb's training of making consisted of 3,800 yards of the 2016 Rio de Janiero Olympics in the triathlon.

"I hated to see him strug-

fifth at the U.S. trials.

swimming, 45 minutes in the

weight room, a 90-minute bike ride and a 35-minute jog.

wants to see what is possible

ever, it always seemed like it was going to be a disappoint-

— and he wants to go about it carefully.

ifying, when 23 cars had five minutes to make their qualifying lap. Nobody wanted to and many sat on pit road wait-

time it to make their fast lap at

got across the start-finish line in time.

"My spotter was giving me

the information I needed and

I wish (Gordon's) would have been doing the same."

was an injustice to a regular

nal segment. The format allowed partA.J. Allmendinger and Jim- time drivers Ryan Blaney, mie Johnson had a more prag- Mike Wallace, Michael Mccompetitor.

"Racing is not really fair

m o re,

out there running better than

Not making the field was The fastest 24 in the field met with outrage on Twitter then had five minutes to qualfrom some o f S t enhouse's ify in the second round, with fellow drivers, who felt it the top 12 advancing to the fi-

matic outlook.

"I w anted m o re,

NASCAR cut the field in half for the first round of qual-

weekend." the end of the five minutes, but Drivers admitted when they their times were not counted arrived at Talladega that they because many of them failed didn't understand the qualify- to cross the start/finish line in ing format, and it showed as the allowable time. "I thought being the last car there were no clear strategies throughout the field. in line would be beneficial for Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and us. We had Jeff Gordon leadJustin Allgaier, two full-time ingthe packthere I thought we Sprint Cup Series drivers, would have a good shot at putfailed to make the field. ting a good lap in, but my spot"I have no idea if I made the ter was telling me, 'Hey, you race or not," Stenhouse said as have 30-seconds to get across the second round of qualify- t he start-finish line' as w e ing began. "I asked if we made were entering Turn 3," Stenit, and nobody knew." Sten- house said. "(Gordon) kept house drives for well-funded slowing the pack down and we Roush-Fenway Racing, one of didn't get a good lap and never the top teams in NASCAR.

particularly hard.

gling," said Dathan Ritzenhein, a friend and fellow track Olympian. "Unless he was

should be used to set the field ing for traffic to pull out. at superspeedways. T hey all w a nted to t u r n Dale Earnhardt Jr. called their laps while racing in a for a return to single-car qual- pack to get the most speed on ifying at Daytona and Tal- one of the two tracks in NAladega instead of the group SCAR that requires the use of formats, and Jeff Gordon horsepower-sapping restrictor tweeted, "Wow never been so plates. frustrated & confused trying The first drivers were beat to qualify for a race. Not the by the clock as they tried to way we intended to start the

hot. He hit the weight room

the rules were coming into it and what could happen," said Johnson.

format "the dumbest thing I've ever seen in my life," and be the first driver on the track, Kyle Busch said heat races

2008 Olympics not far off, Webb continued to train the only way he knew how: white

more, more, more," Webb smashing the sard. previous high I t turned out t o b e t o o school record much. He was left off the of 3:55.3 set Olympic team after placing

5-foot-9 frame beyond the rea-

TALLADEGA, Ala. — NA-

the coming months, with the

Dowell and Trevor Bayne to make the field.

The Associated Press file photo

"Let's really chase this," Hall said. "And I think if we

ment to him."

Now, Webb is trying something new — and going about it a new way, exercising caution and patience as a triath-

go about it the right way, it's not a question of if it will hap-

pen. It's more a question of when it will happen."

lon neophyte. In November,

he will decamp with his wife, Officials from USA TriathJulia, and daughter to Scotts- would gladly accept financial simple. He made one Olympic lon began to focus on Webb dale, Arizona, so he can train assistance — but it has also team, in 2004, but was elimi- about two years ago. Since for six months with coaches been liberating. Gone are the nated in the first round of the 2008, his track career had and athletes from USA Triath- outsize expectations; he can 1,500 meters in Athens. He evolved into a kaleidoscope of lon. Webb's stay there could learn as he goes. advanced to world champion- injuries (surgery on an Achilshape his future in the sport, And then there is his reship finals in the 1,500 in 2005 les'tendon, one stress fracor perhaps determine whether vised approach to training. On and 2007 but failed to win a ture, three stress reactions) he even has one. a recent weekday morning, medaL and coaching changes (at "If anybody can put the he went for a jog at what he "People grossly underesti- least four). He bottomed out pieces together on something called an easy pace — slightly mate the psychological com- in 2012 when his speed trainlike this, I think Alan can," slower than seven minutes per ponent of what he did and ing was hampered before the said Jerry Schumacher, the mile. Webb had a hard time what he had to live up to in Olympic trials. He entered the coach of the Bowerman Track recalling ever running that the running world," said Jon- 5,000 meters, only to finish Club in Portland. slowly when he was a miler. athan Marcus, a friend who last in his heat. "I wasn't that guy anyWebb has set a goal of comAt the same time, Webb is an assistant track coach peting at the 2016 Olympics in has discovered the difference at Portland State. "That just more," Webb said. Rio de Janeiro. Last month, at between the intensity of his wears on you. If he didn't go His endorsement deal with the race in Turkey, Webb tack- training as a miler and the out and give an incredible Nike, a longtime sponsor, led 1.5 kilometers in the water, volume of his training as a performance and set a record was set to expire at the end 40 kilometers on the bike and triathlete. He describes tri- or win by an exorbitant mar- of 2013, and Webb wanted 10 kilometers running on the athlon fatigue as "systemic fa- gin, it was deemed a failure." to honor that commitment, road. He placed 26th out of 72 tigue," which is different from Part of the problem was he said. By then, though, the entrants — a solid showing track fatigue — and in some t hat Webb di d e nough t o idea of a transition to the tridespite being caught up in a ways more difficult. Few peo- make th e e x t raordinary athlon was becoming more crash on the bike course. ple, probably, can tell them look altogether attainable. real. Last October, Hall invitIn his final race before he apart. In July 2007, at an otherwise ed Webb to watch an event "You feel like you're going subdued meet in Belgium, a in San Diego so he could heads to his triathlon incubator in Arizona, Webb placed all day," he said. seriesof pacesetters guided get a feel for it. Webb was 10th of 73 (and fifth among His triathlon coaches mon- Webb through the opening intrigued. Webb's retirement from Americans) at an event in itor his heart rate and bar him laps of the mile before he South Korea on Saturday. from exceedingvarious ex- was left on his own, his stride track became official in FebIt still sounds strange to him ertion levels. "So I don't kill somehow lengthening as his ruary after he competed whenever someone refers to myself," said Webb, who can closed on the finish line. His at the Millrose Games — a him as a triathlete. "I guess sense incremental improve- time, 3:46.91, broke Steve valedictory of sorts — and you could call it an identity ment. "Every once in a while, Scott's 25-year-old American he quickly set about honing I'll be like: 'Ahhh, OK, there it record by almost 0.8 seconds. his swim stroke and improvcrisis," he said. Part of it has to do with liv- is. Getting a little closer.' " In an interview afterward, ing his strength on the bike. ing in the Portland area, long He added: "I don't think Webb sounded euphoricThere were more rudimentaa hub for distance running, there are any shortcuts. You not necessarily because of ry lessons too like learning where Olympians can often be can't fake it. You have to put what he had accomplished, how to remove his goggles seen training on the trails in the work in. Sometimes it just but because of what he be- before he clipped into his Forest Park. There was a time takes time." lieved was still possible. He pedals. when Webb would have stood

GOLF ROUNDUP

Martin takes lead inVegas The Associated Press LAS VEGAS — Ben Martin

birdied five straight holes on the back nine Saturday and finished with a 9-under 62 to

Jonathan Hall, the perfor-

mance leader for USA Triathlon, helps map it all out. Hall

out among them, and perhaps 'lt felt incredible' he still does — if only because At the beginning, it all of his reputation and the role happened so quickly. In May he played in re-energizing 2001, Webb broke Jim Ryun's American runners. Not that 36-year-old high school reWebb sees it that way, at least cord for the mile by running not anymore. the distance in 3 minutes "I'm just a dude here hang- 53.43 seconds at th e P r eing out," he said. "I'm really fontaine Classic. Given the not that special." trajectory of Webb's early His life has changed in oth- career, it was easy to predict er ways. For the first time in a future full of world champiyears, Webb is without a spon- onships and Olympic medals. sor. It is not by choice — he

Yet it was never quite so

was convinced that he could run even faster. It was his

"I told him that this was

like Michael Jordan trying to modus operandi: anticipating hit a 95 mph fastball," Marcus rather than reflecting. Be-

said. "It's not easy."

sides, he was only 24. "I bet if you asked a lot of

For Webb, who has spent much of his adult life trav-

people about the races when

eling from Point A to Point

they ran their best, it always B as quickly as possible, it kind of feels that way," Webb has been a different type of said. "It felt incredible." experience. Yet it was also the start of a

"I'm not the runner that I

slow decline. Two weeks later, was," he said, "but I still have Webb injured his hamstring, this opportunity for however long." which hindered him at t he world championships. Over He wants it to last.

take a two-stroke lead in the Shriners Hospitals for Chil-

dren Open. Winless in 55 career starts

FIND YOUR INNER SUPERHERO!

on the PGA Tour, the 27-year-

old former Clemson player matched his best score on the tour — set last year in the Zu-

rich Classic — to get to 17-under 196 at TPC Summerlin. He has the 54-hole lead for the first time on the PGA Tour. "Just go out tomorrow with the same mindset, head down,

and try to keep making birdies," Martin said. Martin had fourbirdies and a

bogey on the front nine, birdied

In the workplace. Online. By maiL By phone.

Ben Martin reacts after making a birdie putt on the10th green during the third round of the Shriners Hospitals for Children

No. 10 and took the lead with his birdie run on Nos. 13-17. "I felt it from the first hole

Open on Saturday in LasVegas.

(when) I made a 20-footer for birdie," Martin said. "So I felt confident with my put-

semifinal match today against

ter and I was getting a lot of

GIVE.

John Locher /The Associated Press

Finland's Mikko Ilonen, a 2-up

winner over France's Victor Dubuisson. In the other semi-

looks. I've played that stretch final, Sweden's Henrik Stenof holes well all week, 15 and son will face South Africa's 16, and that's really the part of George Coetzee. the course that most guys are Two South Koreans share making their birdies." LPGA lead: INCHEON, South Scotland's Russell K n ox, Korea — South Korean' Heetied for the second-round lead Kyung Bae and Kyu Jung with Andrew Putnam, was second after a 66.

BECAUSE GREAT THINGS HAPPEN PYHENPYE LIVE UNlTED.

LIVE UNITED

Baek both shot 4-under 68 to

share the third-round lead in Also on Saturday: the LPGA K E B -HanaBank Luiten headed to semifinals Championship. at Match Play:ASH, England Haas uptwo inChampions Dutchman Joost L uiten event: CONOVER, N.C. — Jay extended his unbeaten run in Haas shot a 4-under 67 to take the World Match Play Cham- atwo-strokelead afterthesecpionship, routing Spain's Pab- ond round of the Champions lo Larrazabal 6 and 5 in the Tour's Greater Hickory Kia quarterfinals. Luiten set up a Classic.

' •

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United ~~~< Way ~

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United Way of Deschutes County

PO Box 5969 Bend, OR 97708 (541) 389-6507 www.liveunitedco.org Oliveunitedco


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 5

OLLEGE FOOTBALL COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD FBS Pac-12 AH TimesPDT Nerlh Division Conf Overall W L W L PF PA 3 1 6 1 305 166

Oregon 2 2 4 Stanford California 2 3 4 Washington 1 2 5 Oregon St. 1 2 4 WashingtonSt. 1 3 2 South Division SouthernCal 4 1 5 ArizonaSt. 3 1 5 Arizona 2 1 5 Utah 2 1 5 UCLA 2 2 5 Colorado 0 4 2

3 168 86 3 291 269 2 229 173 2 164 146 5 245 245

2 249 162 1 232 167 1 225 161 1 227 130 2 246 205 5 218 270

Saturday'sGames Oregon 45,Washington20 Southern Cal56,Colorado28 UCLA 36, California 34 ArizonaState26,Stanford10 Friday, Oct. 24 Oregonat California, 7p.m. Saturday, Och25 UCLA atColorado,11 a.m. Oregon Stateat Stanford, 12:30p.m. Arizona at Washington, 3p.m. SouthernCalatUtah,7p.m. ArizonaStateatWashington, 7;45p.m Saturday'sSummary

No.9Oregon 45,Washington20 6 0 7 7 — 20 7 21 7 10 — 46 First Ouarter Wash —FGVanWinkle 33,10:20. Dre — Freeman37run(Wogankick), 8:28. Wash —FGVanWinkle 40,6:21.

Washington Oregon

EAST UMass36, Eastern Michigan14 SOUTH AppalachiaSt nate53,Troy14 Duke20,Virginia 13 FAU45,W.Kentucky38 LouisianaTech27, UTSA20 Louisville30,NCState18 LSU41,Kentucky3 Maryland38, lowa31 MiddleTennessee34, UAB22 Missouri42,Florida13 NorthCarolina48,GeorgiaTech43 SouthAlabama30,GeorgiaSt.27 SouthCarolina41, Furman10 Syracuse 30, WakeForest 7 UCF20, Tulane13 MIDWEST

Ball State32, Central Michigan29 KentState39,Army17 Minnesota39,Purdue38 Northernllinois 51,Miami(Ohto) 41 Ohio 23,Akron20 WesternMichigan26, Bowling Green14 SOUTHWE ST Cincinnati41,SMU3 SouthFlorida38,Tulsa30 SouthernMiss.30, NorthTexas20 Texas48,lowaState45 TexasTech34, Kansas21 FARWES T Air Force 35, NewMexico 31 ColoradoState16, UtahState13 Idaho29,NewMexico State17 Nevada42,BYU35 UCLA36,California 34 San Diego State20, Hawaii10 SanJoseState27,Wyoming20,DT

FCS BIG SKY

Saturday'sGames EasternWashington26, NorthernColorado18 SecondGuarler IdahoState56,Southern Utah28 Dre—Freeman3run(Wogankick),14:54. Montana State23,Weber State13 Dre —Freeman1 run(Wogan kick,8:17. Dre — Marshall 23 pass from Mariota (Wogan NorthernArizona21,Portland State17 Montana42,UCDavis 28 kick), 1:32. Cal Poly56,SacramentoState27 Third Ouarler Dre—Stanford16passfromMariotaIWogankick), Saturday,Oct. 25 10:23. EasternWashingtonat NorthernArizona,11:30a.m. Wash —Cooper 3 passfrom Miles (VanWinkle NorthDakotaat Southern Utah,noon kick), 4:45. PortlandStateat Weber State, noon Fourth Guarter IdahoStateat Northern Colorado,12:30 p.m. Dre—Freeman3run(Wogan kick),10:56. Montana atCalPoly,5 p.m. Wash —TWilliams7 runIVanWinklekick), 5:22. Dre — FGWogan26,1:20. A—57,858.

Division II

GREATNORTHWEST W ash O r e First downs 20 29 Saturday'sGames 36-133 50-218 Rushes-yards Passing 1 84 3 3 6 SimonFraser53,South DakotaMines31 CentralWashington 24,WesternOregon20 Comp-Att-Int 24-38-1 24-33-0 AzusaPacific 29,Dixie State27 ReturnYards 4 16 Saturday, Oct. 25 Punts-Avg. 4-43.3 1-36.0 1-1 0-0 Fumbles-Lost AzusaPacific atSouthDakotaMines,1 p.m. Penalties-Yards 4 -24 7 - 9 0 SimonFraseratWesternOregon,1 p.m. Time ofPossession 29:27 30:33 CentralWashington atHumboldt State, 6p.m. MenloatDixieState,6p.m. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Washington: Ross2-44,TWigiams 5-28, Coleam n12-28, Cooper 5-23, Miles6-13, MickDivision III ens 2-12,Hall 1-(minus3), Team1-(minus4), D.WashNORTHWE ST ington2-(minus8). Oregon:Freeman29-169,Marshall 5-30,Bas sett6-20,Tyner3-0, Mariota7-(minusI). Saturday'sGames PASSING —Washington: Miles 19-28-1-147, Pacific 31,Pacific Lutheran28 TWilliams 5-10-0-37. Oregon:Mariota24-33-0-336. Willamette 45, Le wis &Clark7 RECEIVIHG —Washington: Cooper6-48, Coleman3-34rMickens3-22,D.Washington3-20,Ross Linfield65,Whitworth13 3-15, Pettis2-23, Lenius2-9, Perkins1-8, Cam pbell PugetSound33,George Fox14 1-5. Oregon:Carrington5-79,Stanford 5-55,Marshall Saturday, Oct. 26 5-48, PBrown 3-99, D.Alen2-28, Freeman2-4, Tyner Linfield atLewis& Clark,1 p.m. 1-13,Baylis1-10. WillametteatPacific Lutheran,1p.m. PugetSoundatWhitworth,1 p.m. Saturday'sGames Pacific atGeorgeFox,1 p.m. TOP 25 No. 2FloridaState31,No.5 Notre Dame27 NAIA No. 3Mississippi 34,Tennessee3 WestVirginia41,No.4Baylor 27 FROHTIER No. 7Alabama59,No.21TexasA8M0 No. 8MichiganState56, Indiana17 Saturday' sGames No.9Oregon75,Washington20 RockyMountain35, Collegeof Idaho21 No.10Georgia45, Arkansas32 Carroll 42,SouthernOregon40 No.14KansasState31, No.11Oklahoma30 MontanaWestern34, Eastern Oregon28 No.12TCU 42, No.150klahomaState9 Montan aState-Nort hern37,MontanaTech34 No.13OhioState56,Rutgers17 Saturday,Oct. 25 No.17Arizona State26,Stanford10 Montana WesternatRockyMountain,1 p.m. No.19Nebraska38, Northwestern17 SouthernOregonat College ofIdaho1p.m. No. 22Southern Cal56,Colorado28 No. 24Clemson17, Boston Colege13 Carroll atMontanaTech,1 p.m. No. 25Marshall45,FIU13 MontanaState-Northernat EasternOregon,2p.m.

Freeman continues to roll for Ducks Qv

By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

EUGENE — W h ile Ore-

I-yard touchdown. Oregon kicker Matt Wo-

7

gan missed a 33-yard field goal wide left, but Erick

gon's coaches believe something has clicked for Royce

Dargen intercepted Miles on

F reeman in t h e p ast t w o games, the Ducks' true fresh-

W ashington's ensuing series and two plays later Mariota

man running back considers his recent success more a natural progression. Freeman ran for 169 yards

hit Byron Marshall with a

and four touchdowns on Sat-

tion of the season. Dwayne Stanford leaped above two defenders to pull down a 16-yard touchdown

23-yard touchdown pass to make it 28-6. It was Miles' first intercep-

urday night as No. 9 Oregon extended its winning streak over Washington to 11 games with a 45-20 victory.

"A turning point?" Freeman asked. "I'm just trying Ryan Kang /The Associated Press to go each and every week Oregon's Royce Freeman hurdles Washington's Budda Baker to and improve and get a break- score a touchdown Saturday night at Autzen Stadium in Eugene. through. I'm just trying as hard as I can."

Marcus Mariota threw for

goals and No. 17Arizona State

cleared a big hurdle by running past No. 23 Stanford, 2610 on Saturday night. The Cardinal had become a nemesisofsortsforA rizona State, powering past the Sun

Devils in two games last season, including a dominating win in the Pac-12 Champion-

ship game. Arizona State (5-1, 3-1 Pac12) turned the tables against Stanford with an efficient performance on both sides of the

ball. The Sun Devils scored the most points allowed by the nation's top-rated defense behind

a nice mix of run and pass, while its defense refused to get

Viks lose onlate TD PORTLAND — Chase

Cartwright raced across the goal line from the 3with four minutes left as Northern Arizona beat Portland State 21-17 Saturday night.

Portland State (2-5 overall, 1-2 Big Skyj surged ahead whenSteven Long ripped a 62-yard touchdown run on first down early in the third quarter, followed by a31-yard Jonathan Gonzales field goal. Long gained 253yards on16 carries. NateTago scored the game-opening TD but was stuffed on two tries from the 1 late in the

game. NAU drove 83yards in 11 plays for the winning TD aided by back-to-back first downs on two Vikings penalties.

pushed around by bigger Cardinal up front. Stanford (4-3, 2-2) labored offensively again and nearly tripled its nation-leading average of 10 points allowed per game on defense. Also on Saturday: No. 22 Southern California

nior tied the conference record for TD passes in a non-overtime game. He finished 17 of 24 for 318 yards. UCLA 36, California 34:

5 6, Colorado 28: LOS A N -

BERKELEY, Calif. — Brett

GELES — Cody Kessler set a school record with seven touchdown passes, throwing five in the first half. Nelson Agholor caught three TD pass-

Hundley threw for 330 yards and two touchdowns and

es from Kessler, who broke the

Hundley accounted for 424

— The Associated Press

turned a corner after becom-

ally wanted this game but

ing the team's first 100-yard

u nfortunately, t h e

downs for the Ducks (6-1, 3-1 Pac-12), who won their second straight game as they

rusher with 121 yards and two touchdowns in Oregon's ceiver Jaydon Mickens said. on a 3-yard run early in the victory last weekend against "They were the better team fourth before Washington UCLA. today so hats off to them." replaced Miles with redshirt "If he just runs downhillWashington's opening se- freshman Troy W i lliams, as big and as strong as his is ries was capped by Van Win- who capped his first college — he's a force," Frost said. kle's 33-yard field goal.After drive with a 7-yard keeper to

distance themselves from a

loss at home to Arizona on Oct. 2. Freeman's four TDs were

the most rushing touchdowns in a single game for

Cameron Van Winkle hit a

scoring pass to Deontae Coo-

Du c k s per to make it 35-13. prospered today," Huskies reFreeman's fourth TD came

Oregon went ahead on Free-

make it 42-20.

man's 37-yard touchdown Freeman appeared to get a Duck since Kenjon Barner run up the middle, the Hus- h is fifth t ouchdown on a 2-yard run late, but a holding had five against Southern kies narrowed it w ith Van California in 2012. Winkle's 40-yard field goal. penalty on the offense called cYou saw some of his eluEarly in the second quar- it back. The Ducks settled for siveness that was legendary an interception and a fumble. t er Oregon went for i t o n Wogan's 26-yard field goal "That's very tough. It's a in fall camp," said coach fourth down and Freeman for the final margin. "Royce is Royce," MarioMark Helfrich, who said rivalry. Some people don't scored on a 3-yard option Freeman is playing freer. think its rivalry, but it is a pitch from Mariota to make ta said. "I don't know how to it 14-6. The Ducks extend- explain it. He's done amazing Offensive coor d i nator rivalry and it means a lot. It Scott Frost said Freeman has m eans a lotto us and we re- ed the lead with Freeman's things all year." pair of field goals for Washington (5-2, 1-2). Sophomore Cyler Miles struggled to find a rhythm, throwing for 147 yards and a touchdown with

Ducks Continued from 01 But it has been so long since Oregon-Washington has been even somewhat competitive,

that Wheaton's interception return — which is shown on the

big screen before each Duck home game — seems like ancient history.

Perhaps the most enthralling part of Saturday's game

$F

was minutes before kickoff, when Wheaton rode on the

back of a motorcycle that sped across the turf in the same route in which he returned the

interception in 1994.

"It's special; that was a his-

toric play for the program," Oregon wide receiver Byron Marshall said of W heaton's

interception. Ryan Kang /The Associated Press

looked like a serious threat, Or- 3-yard touchdown as he was gonoffenseisimprovingevery from a few undefeated teams egon looked much the same as being tackled early in the sec- week, and he certainly looked who must lose, and their it did against UCLA the week ond quarter is the pretty unstoppable. schedule is not exactly a piece "The way we've of cake, but whose is in the before — almost unbeatable. type of play only he lt I78S 5eeA been prac t icing, 2014 Pac-12'? The Ducks' much maligned canmake. defenseagain came to play, Other playmak Sp Iprlg with the urge and Stanford's visit to Autzen moving fast to the ball and ers stepped up, too' SIACe tglS desir e n o t t o b e on Nov. 1 looms large, as the missing very few tackles. i nduding Fre e tadded, we're try- Ducks look for revenge after "The defensive side played man, who was a I'NBIQABS ing to break every losing to the Cardinal the last one of their most complete beast, rushing for 5e e r i e tr r un and not go two seasons. But Oregon canireri down," Freeman not overlook its trip to Cal next games," Oregon coach Mark 169 yards and four Helfrich said. "The defense is touchdowns while SOmeW I a t Friday, as every game in this playing with more understand- breaking tackle af- COmPBPIPIVe Since the loss to strong Pac-12 could be a dog ing and more belief. All those tertadde. Arizona on Oct. 2, fight. thg( 'Tge "We saw some that's two consecguysunderstand theirroles, But the Dawgs put up little identifying things and playing of his elusiveness u tive games t h e fight Saturday, and their longfast. They've all made great that was legend- like anCient Duck s have looked ago dominanceover Oregon is strldes. ary in faII. camp," hiStOry. like a team that can but a distant memory. The offense was vintage Or- Helfrich said. "He's get back into the Still, the rivalry remains. "U-Dub hates us," Marshall egon, as the Ducks scored fast starting to play free hunt for the inauguand often. Mariota was once of thought and let his natural ral four-team College Football said. "And we hate U-Dub." again brilliant. His last-second gifts take over." Playoff. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, pitch to Royce Freeman for a Freeman said that the OreS u r e, they need some help mmorical@bendbzrlletin.com.

TOP 25 ROUNDUP

No. 2 Seminolesbeat No. 5Irish to remainunbeaten The Associated Press TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Jameis Winston threw f or -

273 yards and two touchdowns and No . 2

added a third score on the

ground to help UCLA snap a seven-game skid at California.

mark previously held by Matt yards of offense to overcome Barkley. Kessler became the his own fumble and intercepfirst Pac-12 quarterback to

4:45 left in the third when Miles connected on a 3-yard

team that came in 5-1 and

Sun Devilskickfour FGsin secondhalf, top Cardinal kicked four second-half field

Washington scored its first

touchdown of the game with

No. 9 Ducks (6-1) on Saturday. Oregon's Dwayne Stanford, center, celebrates a touchdown during the third quarter. Even against a Washington

PAC-12 ROUNDUP

TEMPE, Ariz. — Mike Bercovici threw for 242 yards and a touchdown, Zane Gonzalez

third quarter.

336 yards and tw o t ouch-

But there was no need for late-game heroics from the

The Associated Press

pass from Mariota that put t he Ducks up 35-6 in t h e

tion as the Bruins won at Me-

throw seven TD passes in the morial Stadium for the first first three quarters, and the ju- time since 1998.

three touchdown passes for — Nick Chubb ran for 202 scoresforOhio State. West Virginia, which earned yards and two touchdowns No. 19 Nebraska 38, Norththeir first win over a top-five for Georgia. western 17: EVANSTON, Ill. opponent since beating No. 3 No. 14 Kansas State 31, No. — Ameer Abdullah had four

F l o rida Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl

State held off No. 5 Notre

after the 2007 season. S a t urday No. 7 Alabama 59, No. 21

11 Oklahoma 30: NORMAN, Okla. — Michael Hunnicutt

Dame 31-27 on missed a 19-yard field goal night a f te r a n off e n sive Texas A&M 0: T U SCALO- with 3:53 left after Oklahoma pass-interference p enalty OSA, Ala. — Blake Sims drove to the 1. wiped out the Irish's appar- passed for 268 yards and No. 12 TCU 42, No. 15 Oklaent g o -ahead t o u chdown three touchdowns and scored homa State 9: FORTWORTH, pass with 13 second left. on a 43-yard run w hile Texas — Trevone Boykin

Also on Saturday: leading Alabama to 35 sec- threw for a career-high 410 No. 3 Mississippi 34, Ten- ond-quarter points. yards with three touchdowns, nessee 3: OXFORD, Miss. No. 8 Michigan State 56, ln- two on long plays to Josh Bo Wallace threw two touch- diana 17: BLOOMINGTON, Doctson in the first quarter. down passes and Mississippi Ind. — Connor Cook threw No. 13 Ohio State 56, Ruthad another dominating de- three touchdown passes, Jer- gers 17: COLUMBUS, Ohio fensive performance. emy Langford ran for three — J.T. Barrett completed his West Virginia 41, No. 4 Bay- more scores. first nine passes, ran for 107 lor 27 : M O R GANTOWN, No. 10 Georgia 45, Arkan- yards and two touchdowns WVa. — Clint Trickett threw sas 32: LITTLE ROCK, Ark. and threw for three more -

1-yard touchdown runs and

quarterback Tommy Armstrong Jr. scored on a 16-yard reception.

No. 24 Ciemson 17, Boston College 13: BOSTON — C.J. Davidson ran 32 yards for a touchdown with 9:35 to play

and Clemson stopped a Boston College drive in the final minutes.

No. 25 Marshall 45, FIU 13: MIAMI — Rakeem Cato set

an NCAA record for consecutive games with a touchdown pass with 39, finishing with four scoring tosses to help Marshall remain unbeaten.


D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

NHL ROUNDUP

PREP ROUNDUP

ar suniie a er aiures Pair of victories helpCulver clinch CBC championship

Bulletin wire reports Hockey has its own peculiar calculus of success. To win a majority of games,year after year, means

l'ip

little. Only a postseason champion-

• Bulldogs claim their fourth consecutive league title

hs

ship is truly meaningful, and when even excellent teams fail to achieve

Bulletin staff report

that, they can be torn down to the

foundation and rebuilt.

fo u r t h s t r aight three wins in the gold bracket to win league championship was on Cul- the Corbett Tournament. Madras dever's mind on Saturday, and the Bull- feated Sweet Home 25-13, 25-11, Credogs made quick work to achieve that swell 25-21, 25-20 and Valley Catholic goal. 25-15, 25-19 to take the title.

/x

But the San Jose Sharks are an exception. For a decade, they have

been a superb regular-season team that falls short every postseason, yet they have never truly blown up their

r>

With back-to-back Columbia Basin

twiceand Alex Galchenyuk had a goal and an assist in Montreal's vic-

Trinity Lutheran 3, Prospect 0: Behind eight kills by Emily Eidler and 10 assists and seven aces by Allison Jorge, the Saints won the Mountain Culver improved to 9-0 in league play Valley League regular season title and secured the league title in its first with a 25-3, 25-20, 25-18 win in their CBC season. final match of the regular season. "It's great," Bulldogs coach Randi Trinity Lutheran (13-0 MVL) plays Viggiano said. "That's what we want- next Saturday at the Mountain Valley ed today, to take care of business both League championships in Klamath games." Falls. Against Weston-McEwen, Hosanna Christian 3, Gilchrist 0: Shealene Little pounded out 19 kills KLAMATH FALLS — In both teams' and had 18 digs for Culver, Lynze regular season finale, the Grizzlies Schonneker had 12 kills and six digs, dropped a 25-23, 25-5, 25-10 Mounand Emma Hoke tallied 23 digs and tain Valley League contest. Jasmine two aces. Margie Beeler dished out 42 Krohnke led Gilchrist (4-9 MVL) with assists, and as a team, the Bulldogs three aces and four digs, Kelsi Macktotaled 66 digs, 44 kills and six aces. el had eight digs and one kill, and Little had 12 kills and seven digs Sierra Shuey finished with four kills against Stanfield, Beeler racked up and 13 digs. 27 assists, Kaylee Aldrich chipped in Butte Falls 3, Central Christian 0:

tory over Colorado.

with five kills and four aces, and An-

VAgGHN

Conference volleyball wins — 25-10, 25-19, 25-20 over Weston-McEwen; 25-7, 25-11, 25-7 against Stanfield-

roster or management structure. Not even after last spring, when they frittered away a

3 - 0 open-

ing-round lead against the Los Angeles Kings and lost the series in seven games. Thatfailure seemed

to take a psychological toll on the team — embarrassment, of course, but also apparent divisions in the

locker room, with some players telling general manager Doug Wilson that their fellow Sharks felt like

"co-workers, not teammates," Wil-

pool, the White Buffaloes picked up

CULVER — A

Julio Cortez /The Associated Press

New Jersey goalie Cory Schneider, left, makes a save on a penalty shot by San Jose center Tommy Wingels during the third period of Saturday night's game in Newark, New Jersey. The Sharks won 4-2.

son told the NHL Network's "NHL Live!" show.

N.J. — Logan Couture had a goal "It made for good TV," defensem- and two assists, and Antti Niemi an Scott Hannan said of the reports made 35 saves as San Jose topped of internal friction. "That was last pesky New Jersey. year. Everyone in here, everything's Penguins 3, Islanders 1: PITTSgreat." BURGH — Evgeni Malkin and PatReferring to the Sharks' peren- ric Hornqvistscored power-play nial playoff woes, forward Tommy goals55 seconds apart in the secWingels said: "I don't know why ond period, and Pittsburgh gave the

through the third period to give Ottawa a win over Columbus. Canadiens 3, Avalanche 2: MONTREAL —

P .K . Subban scored

Blackhawks 2, Predators 1:CHICAGO — Jonathan Toews scored we haven't cleared that hurdle. But New York Islanders their first loss a short-handed breakaway goal at unfortunately we're not going to be of the season. 3:26 of overtime to lift Chicago over given another opportunity for many Bruins 4, Sabres 0: BUFFALO, Nashville. months now, until the playoffs are N.Y. — Niklas Svedberg made 32 Flyers 6, Stars 5: DALLASto begin. We'd love to fast-forward saves in his first NHL shutout, and Claude Giroux scored a power-play there." Boston blanked Buffalo. goal 2:49 into overtime to give Over the past 10 postseasons, the Capitals 2, Panthers 1: WASH- Philadelphia a come-from-behind Sharkswere hailed continuously as INGTON — Washington scored on vlctory. Stanley Cup contenders. Each sum- all three shots in the shootout, and Blues 6, Coyotes 1:GLENDALE, mer they were labeled busts. Justin Peters made 20 saves in his Ariz. — Jaden Schwartzcompleted Despite the annual playoff dis- first start this season to lift the Capi- his first NHL hat trick with 3 secappointments, the Sharks' owners tals over Florida. onds to play, goalie Jake Allen was have not panicked. Wilson has been Red Wings 1, Maple Leafs 0: DE- strong in his first NHL start in two the general manager since May TROIT — Henrik Zetterberg scored seasons, and St. Louis dominated 2003. the lone goal 4:50 into overtime to Arizona. "The answer isn't always just fir- give Detroit a victory over Toronto Lightning 4, Canucks 2: VANingpeople, "Kevin Compton, am em- and a sweep of the teams' home- COUVER, British Columbia — Steber of the Sharks' ownership group, and-home series. ven Stamkos scored two goals and said after San Jose bowed out in the Senators 3, Blue Jackets 2:OT- added an assist, and Ben Bishop TAWA — Mike Hoffman made up made 30 saves as Tampa Bay beat first round two seasons ago. Also on Saturday: for missing a penalty shot by scor- Vancouver and hand the Canucks Sharks 4, Devils 2: NEWARK, ing the tiebreaking goal midway their first loss of the season.

Dedicated to

OF CX 0

drea Retano contributed three kills and four aces. In other Saturday action: VOLLEYBALL

• •

I

I '

Valley League match of the season and finished 0-12 in league play. GIRLS WATER POLO

Cowgirls fall in semis: WEST

Summit 7, Ridgeview 3: REDLINN — Despite a tournament-long MOND — Sydney Goodman scored 32 kills and 30 digs by Karlee Hollis four goals, and the Storm held off a and 29 kills by Jen Roth, Class 4A Raven rally to take the Central ValCrook County fell to 6A Jesuit 25-18, 25-13 in the semifinals of the West

ley League match at Cascade Swim

kills and five blocks for Crook Coun-

the fourth quarter. BOYS SOCCER Riverside 5, Culver 2:BOARDMAN — Carlos Martinez scored twice, both

Center. Annie Jarvis had two goals Linn Tournament. The Cowgirls de- for Summit, and Caroline Richelsen feated Reynolds 25-14, 25-18 in the scored once. For Ridgeview, Kyrie first round of the gold bracket before Prescott, Arianna Schweitzer and losingto Jesuit.Laura Fraser had 20 Tristy Osbon each scored a goal in ty,Aspen Christiansen served 90 percent with five aces and had 61 digs, and Kayla Hamilton dished out 51

assists. Jennifer McCallister totaled 16 kills, and Abby Smith served 88 percent with five aces while racking up 23 assists. Madras takes tourney title: COR-

off assists by Ruben Jimenez, to guide the Bulldogs to a 2-2 halftime score before three unanswered goals by the Pirates dropped Culver to 0-6-1

BETT — After placing first in their

play and 3-7-2 overall.

nd ing

MS.

REDMOND — The Tigers fell 25-13, 25-20, 25-14 in their final Mountain

in Class 3A/2A/1A Special District 4


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

Nonfood biofuel: the new frontier in ethanol

A town's joint push

R

I

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I(/;'.( :,i,

to better its

,'".j'r'

n, g/.

customer service

By David Shaffer

By lan Mount

(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

New York Times News Service is A

EMMETSBURG, Iowa — The first large ethanol

As chief executive of the Steamboat Springs Chamber Resort Association,

plants to produce biofuel from nonfood sources like

Tom Kern had a profes-

corn cobs are starting operations in the Midwest as the industry worries that they might also be the last — at least in the United States. After a decade of re-

sional interest in ensuring that tourists love Steam-

search and development,

The small-business community's preliminary Net

boat Springs, a resort town in Colorado. For this

reason, the visitor survey results he received in late fall 2013 concerned him.

ethanol maker Poet Inc. and its Dutch partner Roy-

al DSM recently produced the first cellulosic ethanol at a $275 million plant next to a cornfield in this

Promoter Score — a rating

are completing new cel-

derived by asking customers, "How likely is it that you would recommend us to a friend or colleague'?"came in at 70 of a possible 100 (the final tally was 68), meaning that, while visi-

lulosic ethanol plants in Iowa and Kansas. By

tors liked the town, many were not excited enough

next year, they expect to be producing millions of gallons of the advanced biofuel.

to spread the word. Worse, the score had dropped 7 points from the previous survey, in 2010.

"It was a big moment

"How could we be a 70?" Kern asked himself. "We're

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Fermented wine pours out of a press at Maragas Winery and into an 80-gallon trough to bepumped into barrels, where it will age.

northern Iowa town. Two other companies

when we produced ethanol," said the Emmetsburg plant's general manager,

such a friendly town." Looking deeper into the results, he saw growing numbers of negative com-

Daron Wilson, who kept a vial from the first batch in August as a memento. "It

ments about the service at stores and restaurants. He

was jubilation." Yet the goal of producing ethanol from nonfood sources faces a murky future. Wavering U.S. policy

knew there had been chatter for years that the town's

on renewable fuels and the

•Oo•

0 ••Og

North American oil boom cast a shadow over the commercial triumph.

growth might be diluting its Western friendliness. Was this a sign'? Kern did not panic. Annual growth in sales-tax

®

The next big cellulosic ethanol plants are planned on being con-

collection — one measure

of business health — was up about 7 percent in 2013, putting it ahead of other

structed in Brazil, not the

local resorts like Aspen

United States. Although

and Crested Butte but

the U.S. government has

behind Vail and Telluride. But competition among resorts is brutal, and Kern

spent more than $1 billion to develop cellulosic technology, industry executives recently wrote to

concluded that Steamboat

Springs had to differentiate

President Barack Obama that other countries,

itself.

"Anybody who comes to the West can go mountain biking or road biking or

including China, could "reap the economic and environmental rewards of

• A fruitful harvestsecuresthe future of Central Oregon winery

technologies pioneered in

hiking in Telluride or As-

pen or wherever," he said. So Kern and a group of business owners made an unusual decision — to give

America." Most ethanol is fer-

By RachaelRees sThe Bulletin

mented from corn kernels. The fuel made at the new

Emmetsburg plant is derived from inedible parts

the whole town custom-

of the corn plant. Straw

and grasses also can be used because, like corn residue, they contain sugars that cellulosic technology can extract from the fibers. Outside the Emmets-

burg plant are 158,000 bales of corn cobs, husks

and stalks collected from farmers' fields. The residue is ground up, subjected to acid, water, heat and enzymes to extract hidden sugars. Then they're fermented and distilled. The 200-proof alcohol is the same as that made from

corn. See Ethanol/E5

er-service training. In part, the decision was inspired

TERREBONNEs Doug Maragas shoveled out the last

by the town's dominant mountain resort, Steam-

of the fermented grapes from a one-

boat Ski & Resort Corp., which several years earlier had brought in a consul-

' 'i

ton bin, the smell of fresh red wine

i'

(

»s 1

tant to improve the conver-

i

wafted through the crisp fall air at Maragas

.:;,,71' <

Winery.

sion rate for incoming sales calls. The consultant, Ed Eppley, from Dublin, Ohio, taught telephone agents to connect with potential

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

"Boy, that smells good," Maragas said, as he watched fermented grape juice trickle through his wine press and into an 80-gallon trough. Subzero temperatures took a toll on Maragas' vineyard in December, destroy-

ing 90 percent of his newly planted 19 acres of vines.

conversation and to use the

and prepare wine barrels for filling at Maragas Winery.

information learned to offer vacation packages that

But a warm summer and fall

yielded a record harvest that is giving the winemaker

much in such a short period

grapes, an additional ton

security for the future.

of time."

"We've never harvested so

vest Sept. 11 and finished Oct. 3 with three tons of

over last year, from his vineyard about 3/2 miles north of Terrebonne. SeeWine /E2

"Fall has been a harvester's paradise," he said.

clients through personal

Grant Scholz, 21, left, of Portland, helps Doug Maragas move

fit the caller. Following this

Maragas started his har-

program, the telephone sales "batting average" rose to22 percent from 18

percent. SeeTown effort/E5

e secre 0 Se in: an emo iOna mnnee ion By J.D. Harrison

years. John is now an inves-

The Washington Post

tor on ABC's "Shark Tank."

In the late afternoon on March 24, 1989, Daymond

This was edited for length and clarity. How did you get your

John, who just turned 20, stepped onto astreet corner

in Queens with his first batch of handmade hats. John peddled his headwear — wool beanies with a string knotted on top, replicating a popular urban design — to pedestrians, who quickly snapped up $800 worth. F rom t h ere, J oh n b u i l t

FUBU, the hip-hop-inspired apparel brand that's notched sales eclipsing $6 billion in 25

about the reason people buy

time, we heard that they were clothes — that when there's saying things like "We don't an e m otional c o n nection, make clothes for rappers."

When I had success selling them that first afternoon, the

A

products sell quicker. That's when I started thinking about

Q•

A

Q•

A

up with it.

light bulb went off. I realized

My thought was, "Who's I didn't have to wait for an ingoing to be proud of this seg- cident to happen like a Mike • start in t h e c l o t hing the concept of "for us, by us." ment of the market'?" And it Tyson or a Rodney King. wasn't about a color. It was People just loved this product and fashion world? • I printed up shirts when Why that message? about a culture. It was about and the idea behind FUBU. • the Rodney King riots people who loved hip-hop. were happening in Los An• I h e a rd r u m o rs t h a t How did you come up • many top fashion deTell us about those • with the name FUBU? geles, with lines like "What happened to poor Rodney s igners didn't w ant t o a c • hats. • I d on't r e member the King?" Then Mike Tyson got knowledge that they were • T hey were l i ke s k i • e xact m o m e nt. B eincarcerated, and we did the making a lot of money off the • caps, with a string tied ing young kids who never "Free Mike Tyson" shirts. We hip-hop community. Having on top. They were selling for thought this would amount to would sell them at events and since met many of those de- $20 in stores. So I sold mine anything, we were probably on street corners. signers, I think those were for $10. My mother actually sitting around in the baseIt showed me something just urban legends. But at the taught me how to make them. ment drinking beer and play-

Q•

ing cards, and we just came you say "we," Q •• When who were you working with'? • I t was

A • childhood friends. Our plan had always been to have t h r e e o f my

Q•

five guys, with the thinking being that, by c ombining

A

all our tastes, we could ap-

peal to every type of person in our community. But that fifth person never lasted, so

we had this revolving fifth member. See FUBU/E3


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

B USINESS MONDAY Is a Career in Real Estate Possible?: Principal broker Jim Mazziotti will lead this discovery course on what it takes to get started in the real estate industry; free, register by email; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 NE Greenwood Ave., Suite 100; 541-480-8835 or soarwithexit©gmail.com.

TUESDAY Business and Entrepreneur Meetup: Network and learn five steps to brand your business for long-term success; $10,lunch

included; noon-1 p.m.; Epikos

Community Center, 222 Reed Market Road, Bend; 541-610-8318

or www.meetup.com/bend-

oregon-entrepreneurs. WorkSource Connect Job Club: Peer support for job-seekers,

END A R

plus help with goal setting, networking, resumes and more; free, registration requested; 2:303:30 p.m.; WorkSource Bend, 1645 NE Forbes Road; 541-388-6106 or

melissa.a.olsen@oregon.gov.

Business After Hours: 4:30-5:30 p.m.; Comfort Suites, 2243 SW Yew Ave., Redmond; 541-5048900.

SCOREfree business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute oneon-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.SCORECentralOregon.org. Getting the Word Out: Learn to write effective marketing materials for your business; registration required; Tuesdays Oct. 21-Nov. 18; $79; 6-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;541-383-

Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.

7270. QuickBooks Pro 2014 Intermediate for Macs: Explore advanced features that will help with payroll, inventory, job costing, budgets and financial statements; experience with accounting and QuickBooks required; registration required; Tuesdays and Thursdays Oct. 21-28; $99; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;541-3837270.

Learn steps to develop the leadership element of character in yourself and others, and how to measure success in terms of positive community impact; $35 Opportunity Knocks members, $45 nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Bend, 300 NW Franklin Ave; 541318-4650 or www.opp-knocks. org.

Business Showcase 8 Expo: Discover Central Oregon

businesses or showcaseyour

WEDNESDAY MS Project Basics: Learn to use project management software; registration required; Mondays and Wednesdays, Oct.22-29; $159 includes workbook; 8:30-11:30 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. Character-based Leadership:

product and network; free; register online; 5 p.m.; The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541382-3221 or www.bendchamber. org.

successfully implement new HIPAA/HITECH requirements; registration required; $89; 8-11:30 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. QuickBooks Pro 2014 Intermediate: Explore advanced features that will help with payroll, inventory, job costing, budgets and financial statements; experience with accounting and QuickBooks required; registration required; Thursdays Oct. 23-Nov. 6; $99; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. Launch Your Business: Work one-

SE College Loop, Redmond; 541383-7270. Ignite Bend12: Presenters have five minutes to talk about 20 PowerPoint slides that are rotated every15 seconds; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St.; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre. org.

FRIDAY BNI Chapter Oeschutes Business Networkers: 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road; 541-610-9125.

on-one with a businessadvisor

SATURDAY

and peers to develop a working

plan; 3coachingsessionsplus 3Thursdayevening classesOct.

THURSDAY Compliance 101 for Medical Managers: Learn how to

23-Nov. 20; registration required; $199 includes workbook; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030

Open House: Free; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Alpenhimmel Creative Arts Emporium, 392 W. Main Ave., No. 3, Sisters; 541-588-0931, alpenhimmel@gmail.com or www. alpenhimmel.com.

• Ronald E. Duffy to Frank E.and Mary A. Fancher, Fairway Point Village II, Lot 5, Block11, $429,000 • David A. and Karen J. Cooper to Michael D. Oliver, Antler Ridge Phase 2, Lot 47, $260,000 • Charles E. and Karin A. Wilcoxto Lawrence andKathleen D.Medina, Mountain High, Lots 3 and 4,Block 8, $525,000 Crook County • Nina Davis to Colleen H. and William E. Noble, Northridge Subdivision Phase 2, Lot 54, $221,900 • Robert D. and Pamela T.Wittwer to Jerry M. and Maureen C.Castor, Partition Plat 2005-30, Parcel 2, $150,000 • Steven C. Hagman to James and Linda Richards, Stone Ridge Phase 8, Lot119, $234,000 • William R. and Linda M. Spores to Robert A. and Catherine A. Cage, Westridge Estates, Lot17, $367,000 • Troy W. and Shawn R. Waite to Benny J. and Bridget J. Sullivan, Sunrise Acres, Lot 3, Block 4, $348,000 • Matthew J. Hagedorn to TammyL. and Kenneth L. Gallentine, Westwood Phase1, Lot 5, Block 2, $205,000

• Larry E. and Debra A. Syme to Nathan D. andTiffany J. Reed, Partition Plat1998-20, Parcel1, $350,000 • Pilot Butte Hereford Ranch Inc. to Clint and VanWoodward, Partition Plat 2014-09, Parcel 3, $300,000 •John M. and AlexandraS.Davisto Kelly G. Adovnik, Ochoco Ridge, Lot 27, $155,000 • DonaldN.and GeorgianaG. ThomastoPaulD.andClaudiaJ. McCarty, Northridge Phase12, Lot 241, $163,000 •MossLand & CattleLLC,John H. and Georgia L. Moss, and Moss Group LLC, to Mark andAnn Malott, Prineville Ranch Phase 2, Lot 25, Partition Plat 2008-14, Parcel 2, Partition Plat 2007-11, Parcel1 and 2, Township14, Range14, Section 35, $5,300,000 • Lee Investment lnc. to Kristy Titus, Saddle Ridge Ranch PUD,Lot17, $275,000 • Raymond L. Merrill and Angela M. Merrill, who acquired title as Angie M. Merrill, to Michael W. and Loni J. Shields, Township14, Range16, Section 27, $190,000 • Anthony S. Jones to Thomas J. and Jacqueline A. Brown, Second Crestview, Lot12, $210,900

DEEDS Oeschutes County • Lands Bend Corp to Franklin Brothers LLC, South Deerfield Park, Lot 23, $265,747.75 • Franklin Brothers LLC to Judith M. Bell-Putas, South Deerfield Park, Lot 23, $265,747.75 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Anthin J. and Joanne C.Zito, Bridges at Shadow Glen Phase1, Lot 39, $379,950 • Brooks Resources Corp. to Amanda Wright, North Rim onAwbrey Butte, Phase 4, Lot 80, $230,000 • Eric W. Moore Sr. to Lester J. Knispel, trustee of the GoldenGate Trust, City View Subdivision Phase1, Lot 3, Block1, $510,000 • Stone Bridge HomesNWLLCto Leslie G. Cooke,Ridge at Eagle Crest 28, Lot 168, $347,900 • Judith B. Solomon, trustee of the Solomon Family Trust, to Christine W. Cercone, trustee of the Cercone Family Revocable Trust, Parks at Broken TopPhase4, Lot136, $338,000 • Roger M. and ElenaS. Pehlke, trustees of the Roger M.and Elena S. Pehlke1999 Revocable Trust, to Donald A. Fischer, trustee of the Donald A. Fischer Living Trust, Pine Canyon, Phase 2,Lot 26, $225,000 • Robert Eisenberg to John R. and Susan E. Krouscup, trustees of the John R. andSusan E.Krouscup 2011 Living Trust, Awbrey GlenHomesites Phase 2, Lot 50, $646,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Karen L. Williams, Badger Forest, Phase 2,Lot 8, $209,800 • Janet M. Fauerso to Colin and Beth Mecey, MadisonPhases1,2and3, Lot 8, $256,000 • JNJ Trust LLC to Melvin McDougal, Alstrup Estates, Lots 1-30, $1,250,000 • Donald C. andDebra S. Bradford to Nan M.Johnston,W estCanyon Estates Phase1, Lot 41, $249,900 • David Sturm to CarmenG.and Erik A. Johnson, Eagles Landing, Lot 44, $326,500 • Robert L. Widger Jr. and Darla Widger to Sharon D.Anderson, Woodcrest Phases 3and 5, Lot18, $207,000

• William S. and NancyL. Avery to Steven Hill and Kelly Potter, Rivers EdgeVillage Phase 7, Lot 64, $508,000 • Kimberley S. Marchant to Scott A. and Peggy L.White, Foxborough Phase1, Lot 51, $231,000 • Rogue Builders LLC to SharmenL. and Matt L. Daft, Starwood, Lot1, Block 4, $349,500 • Maria A. Peterson, now known as Maria A. Hoover, to Kevin J. andDebra L. Kenny, Pilot Butte Park Phase 2,Lot 3, $470,000 • Steven R. andJamie E.Stradley to Matt A. and Stephanie G.Peerboom, River Village 3, Lot1, Block13, $345,000 •JasonA.Mendellto Bruce L.Kemp and High Returns LLC,Alpenglow Estates South, Lots1-10, $600,000 • Jeroen and DebraSueWalhof to Jason P.and Katie K. Jundt, NorthWest Crossing Phases 9and10, Lot 430, $599,000 • Neal R. andTeri L. Maerki, trustees of the Neal R.andTeri L. Maerki Living Trust, to Rebecca L.andSeanA. Sullivan, River CanyonEstates, Lot 32, $620,000 • Eric O. andJeannine K. Pedersen to Carol D. andRandyStatton and Jeremy J. andLauren N.Shields, Township15, Range12, Section14, $250,000 • Sharon K. Duncan, Kathy L. and Manuel J. Aguilar to Kimberley Marchant, TerrebonneEstates, Phase 18, Lot 41, $174,000 • Grant and Carri Hanson to John D. and KarenAnnSwenson,Township 17, Range12, Section15, $525,000 • Kelley A., Roger L. andDarlene M. Stafford to Susan H.Felder, River Canyon Estates, Lot 38, $630,000 • Steven V. Nelson, trustee of the Anne K. Hutchison Trust, to Kimberly H. Vogee, trustee of the KHV Trust, Elkai Woods TownhomesPhase3, Lot 60, $457000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Jonathan K. andKell y B.Klos,LavaRidgesPhase 4, Lot 84, $360,000 • John W. andKatherine J. Pursley to John J. Douglas Jr. andLaurel M. Reid, Rockwood Estates Phase4,Lot 10, $470,000

• lan W. and Megan M. Lasslett to Casey D.andRebecca L.Currier, Eastbrook Estates Phase 4,Lot 80, $215,000 • Faye Taylor, trustee of the Faye Taylor Revocable Trust, to Ann S.VerSteeg, trustee of the Ann S.VerSteeg Trust, Highland Addition, Lot1, Block 34, and West BendVillage Phase1, Lot14, $241,500 • Jeani C. Penn,trustee of the Living Trust of Gary D.Christensen, to Lynn M. and Donald A.Daucher, trustees of the Daucher Family Trust, Forest Hills Phase 4, Lot 67,$405,000 • Gary and Jessica Johnson and Richard A. andPatricia A. Oliphant to Eric S. and Kristen L. Hill, Mountain Village East I, Lot1, Block10, $424,900 • Pamela A. Ward, trustee of the Pamela A.Ward Living Trust, to Edward A. andLeslie Bainbridge, The Homes atRiverpointe, A Condominium, Stage A,Unit108, $375,000 • Hans Van den Houten to1943 Bend LLC, Westbrook MeadowsPUDPhase 3, Lot 26, $420,000 • Jimmie 0. and Della M. Lowery, trustees of the Lowery Revocable Trust, to Tod J.and Ronda L Pade, Crooked River RanchNo. 4, Lot10, $345,000 • Society of St. Vincent de Paulto MidOregon Federal Credit Union, Partition Plat 2012-8, Parcel 1, $250,000 • Crooked Pine RanchLimited Liability CompanytoKen L.andGingerG. Harrison, Partition Plat 2013-11, Parcels1, 2, 3, $837,500 • CW Ventures LLC toEric T. and Leslie S. Wegmet, Newport Heights, Lot 3, $338,900 • LeRoy F.and Jean C.Rogers, trustees of the Jean C.Rogers Revocable Living Trust andthe LeRoy F. Rogers Revocable Living Trust, to Mark S. andSandra J. Krause, Ridge at Eagle Crest14, Lot 94, $197,000 • Bruce Hammonto Kristopher R. and Eilean F.Karpstein, Terrango Glen East Phase1, Lot7, $263,000 •LindyL.MountandJamesA. Elliott, trustees of the Hugh S.Mount Marital FundTrust, to Matt and Keri Blackburn, 27th Street Crossing, Lot

Wine

by hand and placed into totes,

are put into a press that sepa-

Damon said. When the totes rates the liquid from the solid are full, they are dumped into pieces of grape and squeezes half-ton bins that will be trans- out the juice. "There's a stainless steel state are expecting banner ported to Pallet Wine Co. in harvests because of warmer Medford to be fermented and slotted screen all the way evening temperatures that bottled. around the cylinder," Maragas "It will be the best harvest said. "There's a bladder that reduced vine stress, said Michelle Kaufmann, assistant ever to come out of Ranch at inflates inside the cylinder communications manager for the Canyons," Damon said. and it's going topush the juice "The vines are starting to hit the Oregon Wine Board. through there and it's goingto "It's been a record year for that mature leveL We should fall into a trough below and heat units, not in daytime start seeing much more pro- that's going to getpumped into highs, but overnight lows were ductionfrom here on out." the barrels." much higher than they norRanch at the Canyons plans On Monday, hepressed four mally are," she said. to sell the wine under the Mon- tons of Tempranillo grapes he The Oregon wine grape and key Face label. White wines harvested from the Applegate wine industry generates more are expected to be available in Valley region in Southern Orthan $2.7 billion in economic fall 2015, and reds in February egon. Those grapes will bring activity each year, according 2016. the total fermenting at his winto the Oregon Wine Board. Cindy Grossmann, co-own- ery to 28 tons, which will creThe state had 605 wineries er of Faith, Hope and Charity ate about 2,000 cases of wine Continued from E1 Wineries throughout the

and 951 vineyards in 2013,

Vineyards 8: Events Center west of Terrebonne, said her

that will be ready in one to five

trend since 2011, according vineyard produced fruit, but to data from th e Southern there was no harvest.

"Tenacity is the name of the

continuing a steady growth Oregon University Research Center. Central Oregon has

game. You're going to have "Our vineyard manager de- that with farming and agricided early on that we need- culture. You're going to have ed to take all the grapes," she these moments where it's exsaid. "He wanted one more tremely risky," he said. "You year to strengthen the vinesso have to have thick skirL ... we removed the grapes early You don't always get what you

an emerging wine industry with three wineries licensed to make wine — Maragas, Volcano Vineyards and Faith, Hope and Charity — as well as half orl. a dozen vineyards and several The vineyard was planted tastingrooms. in 2010. 7ypically, it takes a Kerry Damon, the vineyard coupleyears before a vineyard manager of Monkey Face is ready to produce usable Vineyard at Ranch at the Can-

yons, a gated community near Terrebonne, said he expects a

9-ton harvest, the 8-year-old vineyard's largest. On Oct. 9, a group of ranch staff, homeowners from within Ranch at the Canyons,as well as members of the Cen-

tral Oregon Wine Growers Association, picked the final 3.5 tons of grapes at Monkey Face. Each cluster of grapes is cut from the vine individually

years.

fruit. Grossman expects to have her first harvest at Faith,

Hope and Charity next year. While several local vine-

yards produce grapes, Maragas said he has the only wine production facility in the re-

gion, and Maragas is the only one producing a wine from grapes owned and grown on the winery's property. After harvesting his grapes, Maragas destemsand places them in fermentation tanks for

about two weeks. Then, they

want and you have to make it

through the tougher times." But other years, he said, result in amazing vintages, which is the payoff for making it through the more difficult times.

2, $250,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Bethany E. Klier, Rivers EdgeVillage Phase14, Lot15, $455,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Burr N. and Cathy Richards andBurr Richards Jr., Obsidian Ridge Phases1 and 2,Lot 36, $250,576 • Robert W. andVirginia D. Finnan to Robert A. andLanayaE. Strouse, Mountain GlennPhase3, Lot16, $240,000 • Fallon M. Martin to Nicholas M. Vidaurri, Murphy, Lot 6, $202,000 • Anthony C. and Selena J. Iorg to Brian J. andMarnae T.Powell, Echo Rim Subdivision Phases1 and 2,Lot 19, $251,000 • Reece Madison to Christopher R. and Lisa K. Mizeur, Partition Plat 2014-14, Parcel1, $200,000 • Shannon and Betty A. Griggsto George W.andJudy C.Ellis, Parkway Acres, Lot1, Block2, $288,000 • Dwight Johnson to Peter A. and Donna L. Roberts, and Francis A.and Malia L. Manguiat, Deschutes River Woods, Lot14, Block FF,$162,000 • Harold H. EvansII, personal representative of the estate of Harold H. Evans, to Barbara L.Williams, trustee of the Barbara L.Williams Trust, Cliffs, Lot 7, $362,500

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A commitment to our communities has been one of RBC Wealth Management's core values. It's part of how we run our business day in and day out. We believe that our most visible imprint is through the great work being done by the organizations we support. During the past 12 months, 'Ihe Bend Office of RBC Wealth Management isproud to have help raise over $26,000 for the

following local non-profit organizations that each provide critical services to our Central Oregon community:

• Saving Grace (as lead sponsor for the Balloons Over Bend Children's Festival) • Ro nald McDonald House • Ki d s in the Game •

Mo u n t ain Star Family Relief Nursery

• Be nd Volunteer Corp • Ca sting For Recovery

• Realms Middle School • Boys and Girls Club of Central Oregon • Le t's Pull Together — Noxious Weed Pull

RBC WealthManagement

"That's really the core of

the industry," he said. "That's why we have great vintages, and others that aren't so sig-

BEND O F FIGE OF RBC

nificant. That becomesthe challenge of the winemaker,

1133 NW Wall St., Building 2 ~ Bend, OR 97701 Phone: (541) 385-5026 ~ www.rbcwmfa.com/bend

to bring those vintages that

W E A L T H M A N A G EM EN T

may be lacking from harvest and bring them to the point

where they become something remarkable." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com

'

.

© 2014 RBCWealth Management, a division of RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Member NYSE/FINRA/SIPC.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

E3

Minimumwa eincreaseraises o esan ou ts By ChrisKirkham and Tiffany Hsu• Los Angeles Times

ly be homeless," she said.

For many workers, it's not

just low wages that cause fi-

Raising doubts

LOSANGELES-

Zenaida Torres, 45, earns hour. She has health-care ben- $9 an hour as a server at a efits, sick leave and a job that Mexican restaurant in Boyle allows her the flexibility to take Heights. classes at Los Angeles Trade She loves what she does, Technical College. but feels overworked and exVasquez believes prices ploited. Recently, she and sevwould go up if employers are eral colleagues accused their forced to raise wages — so employer of wage theft, and would she really get ahead? the restaurant agreed to pay a Smaller businesses and non- settlement. profits like Skid Row DevelopBut Torres said her hours ment might have to cut staff. were significantly cut in retal"Everybody sees the money, iation. She's now able to work but they don't see the issues, only on weekends, about 15 the problems that would come hours a week. She fears she'll with it," she said. "They'd prob- be fired, and worries about ably hire someone more ed- whether she could find a better ucated, maybe with a B.A. or job. master's ,pay them threebucks Her feelings are mixed on a more and letoneofusgo." minimum wage increase. If the Nelson Rice is just entering required pay goes up, employthe workforce at age 19, and ers might hesitate to hire her, already he can't keep up. After she said in Spanish, through leaving home at 18 and train- a translator. But more income ing as a certified nursing as- would enable her to move into sistant, he's had trouble finding a larger apartment, allowing housing he can afford. her 12-year-old daughter, AnHe makes $10.10 an hour gelica, to have her own room. working at a nursing home, but Currently, the two squeeze he's been homelessfornearly a into a studio in East Los Anyear, bouncing among several geles. Her paycheck is quickly youth shelters. He expects to consumed by basic bills: $700 Garcetti's push for $13.25 an

here's little room for surprises in James Collins' monthly scramble to manage rent,

bills, debts and gas. The $250 repair bill for his fiancee's engagement ring didn't fit the budget. So he asked the jeweler if he could add the repair cost to his one-year installment plan for the ring. No problem, an employee told him last month.

Don Bartletti/Los Angeles Times

James Collins stands in his small apartment in Long Beach, California, where he's forced to use the living room as a bedroom for his children. Collins makes $9.95 an hour as an activities coordinator at

s nursing home. But when he r eturned a surewould affectfarmorepeoweek later, a manager vetoed ple in Los Angeles than in any vancementorraises.They jugthat decision — and kept the other city considering a mini- gle several jobs to keep up with ring as collateral on the bill. mum wage increase. expenses, sacrificing sleep and "I still have this bill, I don't time with family. "Right now, minimum wage have the ring and I don't know By thenumbers when I'm going to get the $250 With its huge population, is not a steppingstone," said to get it back," Collins said. high poverty rate and high cost Michael Reich, an economics Such are the daily trade- of living, Los Angeles is among professor at UC Berkeley who offs in one of the nation's most the nation's most impoverished has studied the effects of raisexpensive cities with one of cities. About 567,000 workers ing the minimum wage. "It's a the largest shares of working in the city earn between $9 place where people are stuck poor. Collins, 42 and a father and $13.25 an hour, accord- for longperiods of time." of two, makes $9.95 an hour, ing to a study, requested by Bartolome Perez has worked just above the state minimum, Garcetti, from the University at the same McDonald's franas an activities coordinator at of California, Berkeley, Instichise in South Los Angeles for a nursing facility in Watts. On tute for Research on Labor and 21 years. He started as a custothe day he needed $250 to re- Employment. dian, became a cook and later pair the ring, he had less than They are primarily mid- moved up to crew trainer. He's $30 in his checking account. dle-age workers supporting back to being a cook. More than a third of pr ifamilies, the Berkeley rev ate-sector workers i n L o s searchers found, relying on Unable to save Angeles make less than $13.25 data from the U.S. census and He started at $4.25 an hour an hour — t h e m i n i mum other federal sources. — the minimum wage in 1993 wage proposed by Mayor Eric Contrary to stereotypes of — and now makes $10.75 an Garcetti last month. City Coun- minimum wage workers as hour. After adjusting for inflacil members supporting the bill teenagersor part-timers, near- tion, that's a raise of slightly would like to further boost the ly half of those who would be more than $2 an hour over the floor to $15.25 an hour by 2019. affected are between 30 and past two decades. "More and morecompanies 54 years old. More than a third "Right now in my savings are moving to the minimum are supporting children. More account I have $400," Perez wage as their main worker's than two-thirds work full time. said on a recent evening in a wage," Garcetti said. "That has Nearly half have taken college small two-bedroom duplex kind of undermined that prom- coursework. he rents with his wife, two ise in America that if you work They have a wide variety daughters and a 10-month-old hard, you will be able to sup- of occupations. Many work in granddaughter. "If I divide that port yourself." restaurants or retail positions. by 21 years, how much have I The political push to raise But othersare professionals saved? And is that what a huwages will be as controver- in health care, manufacturing man being deserves, having sial in L.A. as it is nationally, or nonprofit organizations. spent a whole life working for a and researchers continue to They are bank tellers, telemar- corporation?" squabble over whether and

keters, library assistants and

how much it would help low-in- zookeepers. come workers — or hurt the Minimum wage workers ofbusinesses that employ them. What's dear is that the mea-

nancial pressure. It's also uncertainty about hours.

Still, she's skeptical of

His wife, Vilma, works for

the school district as a cafeteria worker. After nearly a decade

of part-time work, she was recently upgraded to full-time status. It's the first time she and

her husband have had medical benefits in a quarter-century of living in the United States.

The family has gotten by on luck and medicine brought by relatives from El Salvador.

Perez has looked for other jobs through the years in other industries like food packag- remain that way until he gets ing. Some paid more; others his GED and a license to be a about the same. He stuck with vocational nurse. McDonald's because of the Recently, a group of young consistency. men saw him in his scrubs Every day, Yvonne Vasquez on the bus and attacked him, counsels those who are home- fracturing his jaw. They wantless, unemployed or struggling ed money, and they assumed, to get by on low salaries as an from his medical garb, that he intake specialist at the nonmade more, he said. "I love L.A., but I can't even profit Skid Row Development Corp. enjoy the city I was born in," She makes $11 an hour and Rice said, struggling to speak often reflects on how her cir- with his jaw wired shut. "It's cumstances aren't so different

in rent; a 30-day bus pass; the

phone bill. There's nothing left.

"I'm looking for different alternatives — a way to make money independently," she said. "Maybe I'll make crafts, sell food on the street, even

sing — anything that can get me an income."

' NORTHWEST

not beneficial to me at all. It just

CROSSING

from those of the people she stresses people out trying to tries to help. make money."

Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's

"If I didn't like the job, I think

I'd hate the pay," said Vasquez, 38.

2 locations inBend

She has three children and

Main Center

lives with a long-term boyfriend in an apartment near

2150NE StudioRd,Suitet0

teestside.

NWX 2863Nortwhest CrossingDr,SuitelO

Staples Center. "If we would

ever break up, I would basical-

www.northwestcrossing.com

541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbroadband.com

Since last year, he's been active with other fast-food work-

ers who have staged protests pushing for a $15-an-hour minyears, with few chancesforad- imum wage. ten remain in the same jobs for

FUBU Continued from E1 • During this time, did • you have another job? • Yes, I had a little deliv-

• ery van, and I did work around Queens. I was also a waiter at Red Lobster, so I was

working on the business in between jobs. came next after Q •• What the hats?

A

• We s t a rted s e l ling

• screen-printed T-shirts a long w it h t h e h a t s . W e

would go around to big events and expos around the North-

east. As we made more money, we made more products, and we e ventually started

taking some of that to stores and giving it t o t hem on consignment. did the brand Q •• When take off? • Using s ome m o n ey A • from our sales,wem ade high-quality shirts and hockey jerseys with the FUBU logo across the front. We only had enough moneytomake about 10.

Greg® ~

So for two years, we took t hose amazing shirts to a s

many music videos as we could, placing them on differ-

Scott Eells/Bloomberg News

Daymond John, also an investor on ABC's "Shark Tank," built the hip-hop-inspired apparel brand FUBU, which has notched sales

eclipsing $6 billion in 25years. Our shirts were in about 30 videos, and suddenly we were perceived as this huge clothSo we took out a second ing company. No one realized mortgage on the house my it was the same shirts over and mother and I had for about

and shipping and electricity, but not seeing payment from stores until another 120 days

over. Stores started requesting

later. So we were basically out

en

ent rappers and artists.

$120,000. We turned the house

more products, and we start- into a factory.

V

~s

'w* .

t t sc ssat GREtaWALOEN.COM

VOTE GREG WALDEN FOR CONGRESS

of money.

ed to leverage credit cards to

keep up with demand.

• What challenges did • you face in those early years?

So the company was Q •• mostly f inanc e d W ell, we through savings and credit A • • money.

ran out o f

cards?

A convention out in Las Vegas, • U ntil 1 994, w hen w e • went to " M a g ic," this

and we came home with about

• Where did you turn?

• We used what we had • left to take out an ad in the New York Times. It said

something to the effect of, "A

Q•

A

Completely'?

• A lmost. W e had • about $500 left of that

million dollars in orders. Need

financing." Samsung America's textile division saw the ad. We ended

$300,000 in orders from retail- $120,000, and not because we up doing a distribution deal ers. We didn't have enough were spending it on anything with them. That changed evcapital to make that much, so lavish, but we just didn't have erything. They were my verwe went to the bank, because enough financial intelligence sion of a shark that came in none of us knew anything between us. We were paying with the financing, the back about angel investors or ven- and then waiting 120 days office, the i ndustry k n owlture capital. We got turned for raw goods to arrive from edge. They helped us push evdown by 26 banks. overseas, then paying staff erything onto a global scale.

=

s

s

a

0

s



SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Ethanol

Town effort

Continued from E1 "Cellulosic is kind of like corn

Continued from E1

ethanol was in the '80s," said

Jeff Lautt, chief executive of

phasis on connecting with customers spread around

Sioux Falls, Sout Dakota-based

the resort, and soon people

Poet, the nation's second-largest ethanol maker operating 27tra-

in town began to notice a difference. Even the notoriously cranky lift operators began to ask skiers their name and how they were doing in their

ready have great customer Eppley then taught some- service. Why do I need to inthing he calls "the connec- volve my employees?'" tion stack," a system meant After learning the system, to help employees find com- however, the pilot students direction.

With this success, the em-

ditional production plants."

Lautt and other industry officials said cellulosic ethanol can be produced today for $3 per gall on, but costs are sure to drop, making it competitive

few seconds together. David Shaffer/(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

Corn husks and cobs stripped of their kernels are the raw material average rack price recently for a new cellulosic ethanol plant in Emmetsburg, lowa. dropped below $2 per gallon. Besides federal RkD grants, "The truth is that there is Congress has, at times, offered cooperative officially flipped a $1 per gallon tax credit to pro- only so much ethanol being the switch on its system — $9 mote advanced biofuels like bought in this country," said million worth of bolt-on equipcellulosic ethanol. The credit Paul Niznik, research manag- ment to boost the plant's ethexpiredlastyear.In 2007,Con- er and biofuels expert at Hart anol output by 6 percent, and, gress enacted the renewable Energy Research & Consulting eventually, 11 percent, chief exfuel standard that imposed a in Houston. "If you are making ecutive Delayne Johnson said complex system of mandates to cellulosic ethanol, you are not in an interview. "Our technology doesn't blend more ethanol into the na- competing against petroleum tion's motor fuel. The oil indus- products,you are competing need any government subsidies try hasresisted it as onerous, with other ethanolplants." to makeitprofitable," said JohnWhat's next? costly andunworkable. son, who believes the investEthanol makers say that The game plan for cellulos- mentwillpayoff inthreeyears. without a blending mandate, it ic pioneers like Poet-DSM is Some researchers have queswill be difficult if not impossi- to license their technology to tioned whether cellulosic ethable to raise investment capital other ethanol companies and nol from cornfield residue truly for more U.S. cellulosic ethanol earn fees on the intellectual helps reduce greenhouse gases plants. The Obama adminis- property. linked to climate change. Hill tration, which has signaled it That might be difficult if said long-term studies are needmight change the mandate, is investment dollars dry up for ed to resolve those scientiTic expected soon to announce its large, new ethanol plants. Yet issues. Ethanol makers say celpolicy. there is another, new, low-cost lulosic technology's low-carbon One problem facing the eth- cellulosic option that may ap- benefit sareproved— andcould anol industry is that traditional peal to ethanol plants looking offer business opportunities. ethanol plants have more than to expand. enough capacity to supply 10 Quad County Corn ProcesVisit Central Oregon's percent of the U.S. fuel supply. sors, a locally owned ethanol Almost all gasoline is sold at plant in Galva, Iowa, develthat blend, E10. oped technology that extracts Ethanol m akers n e ver trapped sugarsfrom fibrous planned on cutting back corn parts of the corn kernel and ethanol output to make way ferments them in an ethanol for the new cellulosic version. plant's existing equipment. See 100 life sized samples of with corn ethanol, whose U.S.

HunterDomglas

At Emmetsburg, the Poet-DSM

ICM Inc., the Colwich, Kansas,

cellulosic plant called "Project Liberty," stands next to a

company that designed most of the U.S. ethanol plants, offers a

9-year-old corn-ethanol plant.

competing corn-fiber cellulosic That leaves one choice: high- technology. erblends like E15. In September, the G alva

Plan Well, Retire Well:

i,—

3 0"Ran g e

cards that ask five questions:

Kern called Eppley and asked him to p repare a training program for two pilot groups of r estaurateurs, small-business owners and municipal employees. Eppley agreed to give the training at a steep discount. this connection. And over four four-hour sesBut first, Eppley and Kern sions spread over a month had to overcome the resislast spring, he briefed the 25 tance ofsome business ownstudents in current custom- ers who were not convinced er-service thinking. Pointing they needed help. "I was pretty skeptical of to Disney as an example of excellence, he talked about Ed's program when I was going the extra mile, for ex- invited," said Kelly Landample, by walking a lost ers, 44, who owns the town's visitor to a location instead Creekside Cafe and took the of just pointing in the right training. "I thought, 'We al-

Score survey, the town's score slipped further to 67.

Kern, who resigned from the Steamboat Chamber in September to take care of his

aging parents in Michigan, said it was too early to draw conclusions. The town plans

to continue training restaurant workers and expand into the retail sector in 2015.

C A S E Y •

P OP BEND CITY C O U N C I L

• •

15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS

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CSX

33.86

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TXT

36.65

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URI

103.27

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AAL

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$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

3.21

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415.0

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96.4

85. 7

-82.6

18. 6 6

7.27

6 3.s

28. 7

25.2

29. 3 5

11.2 2

6 1.9

14. 8

69.6

4.04

1.09

36.9

27. 8

50.2

1.97

0.47

31.3

-25.4

9.52

2.23

30.6

10.7

11.35

2.53

1.01

0.22

2 s.7 27.s

-11.4

1.14

0.24

26.7

-24.0

1.91

0.39

25.7

-36.8

13.87

2.81

25.4

5.9

19. 2 9 10 . 3 9 4.50

3.75 2.01 0.86

24.1 23.6

13.1

12.0 Repros Therapeutics R PRX 39.1 Nuverra Environ NES - 17.8 Aerohive Networks HIV E

Metflix Inc

NFLX

357 . 09

-94.99

-21.0

-22.0

Covidien PLC Apache Corp Expedia Inc CF Industries it/ferck & Co

C OV

82.2 0

-10.73

-11.5

-9.5

APA

72.85

-7.06

-s.s

-24.5

E XPE

74.5 7

-6.43

-79

-12.4

5a1 Covisint Corp

covs

244.96

-21.15

-7.9

-5.2

23.6 Alpha Pro Ltd

APT

M RK

54.0 2

-4.64

-79

-10.7

esay Inc Tyson Foods

E BAY

47.9 5

-3.91

-7.5

-8.5

T SM

37.5 6

-2.86

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Icahn Enterp LP Weatherford Intl Ltd

IEP

97.15

-7.23

16.3 9

-1.20

-s.s -s.s

-11.9

W FT

17.0 Panhandle Oil & Gas PHX -10.5 Extreme Networks Inc EXTR 2 6.6 Seventy Seven Egy S S E 19.0 Emerald Oil Inc EOX 0.0 ProQR Therapeutics P R QR

SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA

-86.6 Amsterdam -4.5 Brussels Madrid 243.9 Zurich -4.4 Milan 99.1 Johannesburg Stockholm

75. 4

-17.3

FRI. CHG FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD +24.00 +1.29% +2.08% +267.37 3 12% L -7 35% -6.50% +114.38 +1.85% V +122.27 -1.22% 0 53% +114.56 +2.92% T T -6.12% -205.87 -1.40% -1 0.80%

LAST 1886.76 8850.27 6310.29 23023.21 4033.18 14532.51

T Mexico ci t y Bo l sa 43273.50 +365.88 +0.85% v v 16.6 s ao Paolo Bovespa 5 5 7 23.79 +1425.46 +2.63% X V 165.7 T oronto S&P/TSX 142 2 7.68 +174.71 + 1 .24% V -90.4 /AFRICA -59.3 EUROPE

31. 1

24.0

s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225

-41.9 BuenosAires M erval 10542.60 +563.81 +5.65% 4

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employees took it to the front

Where are you from'? What lines, where some say they do you do? Where did you go found the connection stack to school? Where do you trav- was an easy way to get closer el? What are your hobbies'? to customers. The idea is to improve the The most recent customer customer's experience service survey, however, was and encourage loyalty — by inconclusive. The portion of teaching workers how to visitors giving the friendliness form a w a r m c o n nection of the town's people a perfect w ith clients and u s e t h e 10 points rose to 53 percent knowledge they glean from from 47 percent in 2013. But

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-43.6

4.67

-1.96

-29.6

-43.3

2.76

-1.14

-29.2

-41.8

5.55

-1.88

-25.3

99.6

18.49

-5.30

-22.3

-42.4

24.2

387.06 2987.93 1015.59 8250.10 18700.98 47836.69 1310.46

+1 0.79 +100.20 +28.21 +194.69 +61 7.87 +955.57 +39.45

Seoul Composite 1900.66 -18.17 Singapore Straits Times 3167.73 +13.52 0.0 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 2 60.10 + 15.80 -77.8 Taipei Taiex 8512.88 -120.81 343.5 Shanghai Composite 2 3 4 1.18 -15.32

3.07

-0.83

-21.2

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-46.9

-3.60

-19.4

-39.5

0.0

3.50

-0.83

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-49.4

-48.4

12.49

-2.97

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-23.7

0.0

L X V

2 87% +3.47% +2.86% +2.42% +3.42% +2.04% +3.10%

+1.2 8% +8.19 % +4.45%

3 67% 2 19% +0.36% +0.57% i16.56%

+3.42% -1.69%

ASIA

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T

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-5.50%

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V V V

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+0.01% -f 74'/ -f 15'/ +10.64%

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Quotable "Society faces difficult questions of how best to fairly and justly promote equal opportunity." — Janet Yellen, Federal Reserve Chair in a speech to a Boston conference on economic opportunity on Friday

Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).

Value •

I s'der

Who he is: Senior Analyst, Morningstar Outlook: There's still value in auto stocks.

Richard Hilgert

On the surface, newly minted shares of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV don't aPPear to be aS gOOd Of an inVeStment as the company's Detroit-area competitors. Fiat Chrysler (FCAU) doesn't have a big presence in fast-growing China and other Asian markets. It's exposed big-time to macroeconomic woes in Europe and South America. It's the world's seventh-biggest automaker and it doesn'tmake as much money in the growing U.S. market as Ford Motor and General Motors. Shares ol the recently merged companybegan trading Monday on the New York Stock Exchange at $9 and fell as low as $7.20. By Friday they recovered to around $9. Morningstar Senior Analyst Richard

How does lt compare with Ford and GM? None of the three has a competitive advantage or "economic moat" around them.Few automakers do,butmany parts supply companies have them becauseofinnovations.Yetbecause What do you see as the prospects for the stocks are under-valued compared the new Fiat Chrysler stock? with Morningstar's fair-value price estiThere's nothing out there in the market mates, they have growth potential and that has changed our longer-term get the top five-star ratings. The price perspective. The stock is simply overly estimates are for two or three years beat up. It's a turnaround situation. It's into the future. Fiat Chfysler's ls $19, got a lot of debt on the balance sheet while GM's is $53 and Ford's is $23. and it's in a cyclical industry that's (GM has been trading around $30, and highly competitive. So investors need Ford around $14.) The estimates are to be cognizant of the risk. In the long based on long-term cash flows for the run, those who are willing to accept the companies. Fiat Chrysler carries the risks will be well-rewarded. highest amount of risk because of its debt and because it must invest more Hilgert says Chrysler and the other two Detroit companies are undervalued and may be worth taking a risk. Hilgert has been with Morningstar since 2010 and has more than 20 years of experience in auto industry analysis.

than competitors to turn lts product porffolio around. Will the industry continue making money even with economic problems ln Europe and South America? The recoveries in Europe and South America are going to be protracted, but I think we are not going to see significant declines going forward. There should be modest improvement, and in 2016, I think we'll see a more serious recovery in those regions. In the rest of the world, production should grow 3 to 5 percent per year for the foreseeable future. Demand will be there for the production that the automakers will put out. Interviewed by Tom Krisher. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, October 17, 2014

16,380 ~A1

+

N ASoaa ~ 4,258.44

1 78 0

S&P 500

+

1,886.76

19

RUssELL20DQ 1,082.33

+

29 pp

W ILSHIRE 5000 ~ 7 5 19,900.42

23


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

UNDAY D

R

erior eSI AIS

ere S jneSAre directional tires the best fit for you?

By Jason H. Harper Bloomberg News

Well, hello, elegance. Nice to see you, sophistication. And, look! Restraint has entered the

By Brad Bergholdt

building, too. And they've al l f o und a home under a common

out my Q •• Icarjusth asfound d i r ectional

good ideasince frontand rear tires are subjected to differing forces and wear accordingly. Performance oriented tires

tires. What are the benefits?

may also be have one tread pat-

— Jerry Dawson

need to bemounted correctly

Tribune News Service

I don't like that they can't be tern on the inside of the tire and rotated. another on the outside. These

roof: that of th e 2015 Mercedes-Benz C400 sedan.

The C-Class used to be Mercedes's entry-level sedan, and

irectional, als o A •• Dcalled u n i d irection-

over the years it became stiff-

er andsportier and generally more churlish. The Daimler AG unit was of

REVIEW th e m in d t h at younger buyers

al, tires are designed to of- performance benefits. Look for fer optimum straight line a notation on the sidewall, indiacceleration, dry w eather cating front versus back. cornering p e r formance Don R. asked for more and wet weather traction by • information regarding utilizing large tread blocks the use of an infrared temperaand angled grooves and ture gun. He was interested in sipes (narrow slits). Tread learning more about various

A•

wanted something closer to a

s'e+

BMW 3 Series than a cushy Benz. But if you want to combat

Munich-based

(front side versus back) on each wheel to provide the intended

B a yerische

Motoren Werke AG on its own turf — windy back roads — it

means giving up some measure of comfort and pliability. The last generation C-Class, Jason H. Harperl Mercedes-Benz via Bloomberg News especially the C350 Sport and The new 2015 Mercedes-Benz C400 performs well on the road, but shows Its brightest colors through C63 AMG, could rock you like Its sleek InterIor design. a hurricane on a back road. But, you know, how wearisome. Because rocking you What most impressed me your satellite radio or input a also means beating you up, was the use of space in the destination. My only real comas sports suspensions and front. There's always a war in plaint is the lack of an obvious oversized wheels are often too Base price: $48,590 modern cars between places place to place your mobile firm for the majority of buyto rest your arms and store phone. Astested: $64,200 ers, who forgo the path less your stuff and all the necesYou can option the C400 all Type:all-wheel-drive taken for the highway much sary controls for the transmis- the way tomore than $68,000. 4MATIC sedan quicker. sion, radio, navigation and car How could you not want the Engine:3-liter twin-turbo The new C-Class is availsetup. Mercedes star on the grille V-6 with 329 horsepower able in t w o a l l -wheel-drive Mercedes has been using a to be illuminated for $480? and 354 pound-feet of models, the C300 and C400. mechanical dial on the divider Nineteen-inch six-spoke alloy torque The former has a 241-horsebetween driver and passenger wheels may call to your shopMileage:21 mpg city, power turbo f our-cylinder to control the navigation sys- per's soul for $1,820, and the 29 mpg highway and thelattera 329-horsepowtem and radio. They've added same perfume atomizer you er turbo V-6. Pricing starts a touchpad on top of that dial, can find in the S-Class runs at $40,400 for the C300 and which allows for swipes and a mere $110. My test model, $48,590 for the C400, not in- inches wider than the previous two-finger scrolling, akin to which had everything from cluding destination chargesmodel. That gives just enough an iPad. Its use isn't utterly a trick air suspension to the or the many options pre-load- extra air in the cabin to swing obvious, but it's no harder to $2,800 Driver A s sistance ed on most vehicles on the your elbows and kick out your learn than any average piece Package, was $64,200. sales lot. legs, even in the back. of new technology. Entry level? Not at all. That The fourth-generation car The interior is lovely. All of There's also a series of re- optional package includes a has taken a U-turn away from materials are cut into straight dundant hard buttons on the fancy cruise control that keeps s ports-car h a r shness a n d and tidy lines and match up dashboard, and you can use you inside your lanes and even back toward Mercedes-wor- nicely. The stitching is good t hese controls in an y c o n- lets you take your hand off the thy coddling. It may be sev- and it comes together with an junction. After a few minutes, wheel for a few seconds at a eral times smaller (and less eye to taste, not flash. you'll find it's easy to change time. expensive) than the knightly S-Class sedan, that chariot of

2015NercedesBenzC400

blocks are the portions of

temperaturesof engine,brakes

tread between the grooves. During dry weather, widely spaced grooves (larger tread blocks between) allow a greater contact patch

and other parts. A typical temperature reading at the thermostat housing of an engine at operating temperature is 195 degrees. Validating the proper

and less tread squirm while

turn-on point of an electric ra-

corning. During wet weather, one typically desires closer spaced grooves to channel water away, lessening the chance of the tire hydroplaning. By optimizing the tread design for a par-

diator cooling fan might show a reading of about 215-230 degrees. An infrared gun may also be used to check exhaust manifold temperature, possibly indicating a cylinder misfire should a cooler reading than

ticular direction of rotation, the siblings be seen. Automatic directional t i res p r ovide transmission pan temperature

the bestcompromise be- is typically only a few degrees tween dry and wet weather

cooler than the ATF inside,

performance. A directional tire's diagonal grooves need to be oriented correctly (as viewed from behind the tire they should point upward), so a directional tire has arrows molded into the sidewall, indicating the proper di-

providing useful information for those who tow, and aren't equipped with a transmission temperature gauge (no more than 220 degrees is advised during a mid-mountain check). Observingcorrectbrake temperature should show con-

rection of rotation. When

sistent side-to-side temps and rotors should not exceed 300F

installing and rotating tires, during downhill s t retches one will adopt right side and without a cool-down stop. Anleft side tires which are not other favorite is verifying an interchangeable. Should a exhaust restriction such as a directional tire be installed failed/clogged catalytic conbackwards, it will not hurt verter — it will be noticeably the tire, but performance cooler downstream of the fault. — particularly wet weather

These are only some of the cool

traction — will be reduced. things that can be done with Periodic tire rotation is a this tool!

choice among executivesand

despots, but the C-Class clearly comes from the same gene pool. The exterior is refined and

restrained, a simple sweeping silhouette with gently molded sides. The nose is ample and the grille somewhat oversized, but it doesn't feel

overworked or too grandiose. You won't find a bunch of air intakes or vents on the body,

and you can opt for the traditional standing Mercedes star on the hood. It's tasteful without being

blandly inoffensive, interesting without being gimmicky. That's a good trick. Park one next to an S-Class and even a toddler could identify them as

being akin to each other. This C-Class knows what it wants

to be when it grows up. If the C300 has gone up-

scale, that's because Stuttgart,

Germany-based Daimler has a new model to offer first-time

I

I

I I

I

Mercedes owners, the CLA sedan. The CLA is front-wheel

drive with a starting price of about $30,000. I like it a lot,

'

I

I

g•

'

I

I

I I

g

g• •

•4

I

• 'I

I ' I

g

I I I I

but the design is gussied up in a way the C-Class no longer needs to be. The C300 has a 2-liter, turbo

e

inline four-cylinder that gen-

I I I I

erates more torque and power than the V-6 it replaces. A

sweet engine in almost all respects, it's ideal for punching through traffic in Manhattan's Midtown, though it sounds a

I

r

I

I

bit coarse when pushed hard

up a hill. The C400 gets a 3-liter, twin-turbo V-6 with 329 horse-

power and 354 pound-feet of torque, mated to a seven-speed a utomatic t r a nsmission. I t

doesn't have gobs of power, nor is it particularly savage. Rather, it's one of those power-

plants that makes life easy. That goes for the total experience of the C400. It rides

nice, drives nice and feels nice. Not crazy fun, not boring. It'll

St. MEDICAL Charles GROUP

get you places in a happy, easy manner, and you won't have to think about it a lot.

What you will find yourself mulling over is the interior. That's where the sophistica-

tion and elegance really kick in. There's not a whiff of entry-level anything, really, if you pick a few key options. The car is some 4 inches (10 centimeters) longer and I'/z

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Submissions, F3

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

JOHN COSTA

Politics

has been wof se Watching politics today can be very dlscouraglllg.

Adivided electorate, rigidpositions, attack ads and seemingly insoluble problemscan and do giveeven the most jauntyobserver abad case of the blues. There are moments when it's hard tobelieve that the environmenthas

everbeenmeaner. But it has, significantly so. For

sanity's sake, it's good to keep that in

Chemical arms foundhyij.S. forces inIrap

tnlnd.

There is a trilogy written by jour-

Between 2004and2011, thousands of chemical munitions were discovered. In several cases, U.S. troops wereexposed to them. Fiveselected incidents detailed in this story:

nalist Rick Perlstein that underscores this view. The nominal focus of the books is

1. MAY 2004 Two soldiers exposed tosarin from a shell nearBaghdad's Yarmouk neighborhood.

• Locations where chemical munitions were found

thethreeconservativeleaderswho dominated Republican politics from

Areas now underfull control of the IslamicState militant group

the 1960s through the 1980s.

The first is, "Before The Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking

2. SUMMER 2006 Over 2,400 nerve-agent rockets found at this former Republi can Guardcompound.

TURKEY

of the American Consensus," followed

by"Nixonland: The Rise of a Presi-

IRAN

dent and the Fracturing of America"

8 gULY2008

Six Marinesexposedto mustard agent from anartillery shell at anabandoned bunker.

and conduding with "The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan." '; Kir'kuk j,~v

They are more than the titles

suggest. They are incisive and smoothly

4. AUGUST 2008

Five U.S. soldiers exposed to mustard agentwhile destroying aweaponscache.

SYRIA

written inspections of the culture,

r

issues, politics and attitudes of the political parties, participants and people of one of the most volatile periods in American history.

hr

Fy Fa

dlady4 ,. „Ihtt gamp Taii

5. 201 0 0 R EARLY2011 Hundreds of mustard rounds discovered in acontainer near an American military base.

, ghdad

All of which, as Perlstein writes,

I RAQ

were grist for use or exploitationby politicians, leaders of causes, lobbies

s

and factions of all dimensions and

"g •

l fgt ~r rdh,

ably, about levels of taxation, the New York Times News Service

the government or the marketplace should dictate the terms ofhealth

Soldiers in chemical protection gear, including a U.S. Army specialist and

care.

Taji, Iraq, on Aug. 16, 2008.

they seem topale in importance to society's struggles in that period with

SUNDAY READER

the war in Vietnam, assassinations that tore apart major cities, a federal

judge's prior restraint of a newspaper publishing the Pentagon Papers and the impeachment and resignation of

By C.J. Chivers e New York Times News Service

he soldiers at the blast crater sensed something

had just exploded a stack of old Iraqi artillery shells

summer of 1968 and watched news reports from the Democratic conven-

buried beside a murky lake. The blast, part of an effort

about at length. The politics notwithstanding, what

startled my Aussiebartender and me were the violent street battles between

police and anti-war demonstrators.

bombs, uncovered more shells. 7wo technicians assigned to dispose of munitions

thebartender asked me if I was certain I wanted to go home.

them, Spc. Andrew Goldman, noticed a pungent odor,

secondvolume that made me think about thatanswertothebartender. Itinvolvesthetrialof the anti-war

Harrhburg (Pennsylvania) 7, in which "anunwhotaughtarthistory... and a pac1T1stpriestweresupposedtohave plotted... to blowup Washington and

kidnap Henry Kissinger." Though the government, for calculated teasons, chose avery conservative

regionforthetrial, the caseendedina mistrial. Perlstein describes the reactiontothe

mistrial of Village Voicereporter Paul Cowan, who at first thought it was their

elitelawyerswhogot the defendants off thehook

He lifted a shell. Oily paste oozed from a crack. "That doesn't look like pond water," said his team leader, Staff Sgt. Eric Duling. The specialist swabbed the shell with chemical detection paper. It turned red — indicating sulfur mustard, the chemical warfare agent designed to burn a victim's airway, skin and eyes. All three men recall an awkward pause. Then Duling gave an order: "Get the hell out." these soldiers had entered an expansive but largely secret chapter of America's long and bitter involvement in Iraq. From 2004 to 2011, U.S. and U.S.-trained Iraqi troops repeatedly en-

indictment.

gence documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.

Theytold Cowan,"Howstupiddid those people in Washingtonthink(we)

The United States had gone to war declaring it must destroy an active weapons of mass destruction program. Instead, U.S. troops grad-

were.

ually found and ultimately suffered from the remnants of long-aban-

Cowan, accordingto Perlstein, said, democracyis areligion." Insomethingwe should allremember, Cowan addei, "Sometimes it is possible tounifyAmericans in situa-

tionsthat call forgenerosity orfairness instead of dividingthemintobattles overphysical orpsychological turf." — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com

Shells, chemical or conventional, often sat for years before being found, with dirty, unclear exteriors. Some of the shells pictured at left, found side by side nearTaji, contained sulfur mustard, but others did not.

Sulfur mustard leakage

Interior tlifferences M107 conventional explosive round

M110 chemical round

Solid explosive

doned programs, built in close collaboration with the West.

Liquid chemical agent

An X-ray was sometimes the only way to tell chemical from conventional shells. But X-rays Small amount can be impractical of explosive in a war zone.

152mm binalysarinround, an unusalfind In at least one incident, U.S.soldiers werewounded by arare Iraqi-made152mmsarin prototype. In this kind of weapon,the chemical precursors are kept in two separate canisters, divided by abarrier that shatters upon launch. Asthe round spins in-flight, the contents mix to form sarin. Iraq tested theserounds in 1988. IffratlOR

EXTERIOR

Fuze 152mm 6inches

Five years after President George W. Bush sent troops into Iraq,

realizedthese souls, thoughlikelyconservative, sawthroughthe shamof the

"I realized that for many Americans,

Subtle exterior differences

something, he said, he had never smelled before.

countered, and on atleastsix occasions were wounded by,chemical weapons remaining from years earlier in Saddam Hussein's rule. In all, U.S. troops secretly reported finding roughly 5,000 chemical warheads, shells or aviation bombs, according to interviews with dozens of participants, Iraqi and U.S. officials and heavily redacted intelli-

He then interviewed the jurors and

Makeshift bombswere often built from Iraq's abundant stockpile of old artillery rounds. Evidence suggests the insurgents often did not know if the munitions theywere using were conventional or chemical.

to destroy munitions that could be Used in makeshift

stepped into the hole. Lake water seeped in. One of

It was a fair question, but of course

Chemical munitionsin makeshift domds

It was August 2008 near Taji, Iraq. They

Knowing I was a soldier in the war these demonstrators were protesting,

Iwas. There is a descriptionin Perlstein's

Sources: Reporting by The New York Times, participants in the chemical weap ns recoveries, WikiLeaks (chemical munition locations), Institute for the Study of War (Islamic State area of control)

was wrong.

apresident who unquestionably ordered the breaking of the law against his political opponents. I was in Sydney, Australia, in the tion in Chicago, which Perlstein writes

KUWAIT

a sergeant, examine suspected chemical munitions at a site near Camp

All important issues to be sure, but

of political leaders, violent reactions to school busing and open housing

easr-

SAUDI ARABIA

divide between rich andpoor, whether or not to go to war and whether

100 miles

i;

Nasiri a,I

stripes. Todaywe obsess, and understand-

Canisters

648mm 25.5inches

Sarin prototype photographed by LLN. inspectors

Map and graphics by New York Times News Service

Staff Sgt. Eric Duling, left, and

Spc. Andrew Goldman were part of an ord-

nance disposal

The New York Times found 17 U.S. service members and seven Iraqi police officers who were exposed to nerve or mustard agents af-

team in Iraq and were treated for

ter 2003. U.S. officials said that the actual tally of exposed troops was slightly higher but that the government's official count was classified.

exposure to a

The secrecy fit a pattern. Since the outset of the war, the scale of U.S.

chemical agent in 2008. But

encounters with chemical weapons in Iraq was neither publicly shared

they have since

nor widely circulated within the military. These encounters carry wor-

struggled to receive care.

risome implications now that the Islamic State, an al-Qaida splinter group, controls much of the territory where the weapons were found. See Secrecy/F5

Eric Ouling / Submitted photo / New York Times News Service


F2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

on' o eu If ree

TIIBIIIIEcoNEIITAsNGY QHEQEQAN

I BELIEVE THE CHURCHCANBE MORE WELCOMINS To SAY5 AND LESBIANS.

WELcoME.

he plan the city of Bend has for the area around Third Street is a journey to gridlock. If it comes to be, residents of Bend will be going about life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness with more frustration.

popE

FRAIICI5

The plan'simpenetrable name should be the first clue. It's an uninviting fortress of words — the Bend Central District Multimodal Mixed-Use Area. There are things about the plan thatwould be good for Bend. And its starting point is an admirable one: revitalize and spur development in the Third Street corridor east of the Bend Parkway. Second Street an d F o urth Street would be spruced up. The entire area would be more friendly to b i k ers an d p edestrians. Bike lanes would be added. Sidewalks would be widened. Trees and planters could be positioned. Density would be allowed to increase with taller buildings. The area could get more of the feel of downtown. T he increased density a n d friendliness t o n o n automobile traffic are also important to satisfy the requirements of the expansion of Bend's urban growth

boundary. But then there's the plan to slow traffic on Third Street. There must be a n a c k nowledgment, the Bend City Council was told Wednesday night, that auto congestion around the area "isan acceptable tradeoff for f l exible development." There are few subjects that people in Bend or anywhere complain about like traffic. We are not sure that auto congestion is an acceptable tradeoff. Keeping traffic flowing on Third Street should be an embedded priority in the plan, not an acceptable tradeoff. When Councilor Scott Ramsay brought up the issue of traffic on Third Street, city staff assured him it would be for only a brief stretch of the road. But if you slow traffic down even on a brief stretch of one of the primary north-south routes in town, the slowdown spreads. Keep Third Street flowing.

M 1Vickel's Worth SupportBuehler As a native Oregonian and De-

schutes County taxpayer, I am thrilled to support Dr. Knute Buehler for state representative. A candidate

with Buehler's outstanding qualifications and energy comes only once in a generation. I have observed

The Bulletin's election endorsements Editor's Note: Please send election-related My Nickel's Worth and In My View submissions as soon as possible to letters@bendbulletin.com. We will give priority to election submissions, publishing as many as

•Measure 90 — Top-two open primary:Yes • Measure 91 — Recreational marijuana:No • Measure 92 — GMOlabels: No

possiblebefore Election Day.

• Deschutes County Commission Po-

Deschutes County sition 1: Jodie Barram

Below are The Bulletin's endorsements for the Nov. 4 election. The editorial board interviews candidates only in contested races. Ballots were mailed starting Wednesday and must be returned to countycierks'officesby 8 p.m .on Election Day. To read the full endorsements online, please go to www.bendbulletin.com/endorsements.

• Bend City Council Position 5:Mark Capell • Bend City Council Position 6:Casey Roats

• Bend City Council Position 7:Scott Ramsay • Sisters City Council:David Asson, Nancy Connolly, Bob Wright • Sisters legalize medical marijuana dispensaries: No • Sisters school bond:Yes • Redmond City Council: Tory Allman, Anne Graham, Jay Patrick

• La Pine City Council:Don Greiner,

Federal

Stu Martinez

• Senate: Monica W ehby • House District 2:Greg Walden

trict bond:Yes

State

• Cloverdale Rural Fire Protection Dis• Newberry Estates Special Road District dust-abatement levy:Yes

• Governor:Recent news events have Crook County delayed an endorsement for the gov• Crook County Court:Seth Crawford ernor's office. • Bowman Museum levy:Yes • House District 54:Knute Buehler • House District 55:Mike McLane

• Measure 86 — Tuition endowment fund:No •Measure87 — Judges employment: Yes • Measure 88 — Driver cards:Yes • Measure 89 — Oregon ERA:No

M

Jefferson County • Jefferson County Commission Position 1:Tom Brown

• Madras City Council:Richard Ladeby, Jim Leach, Bill Montgomery • Culver City Council:Daryl Lonien

a ein

Buehler's civic involvement for more than two decades and applaud his willingness to serve the public. A Legislature full of Buehlers would be the best government Oregon couldever have — free of divisive partisanship and full of the talent, intellect and problem-solving leadership we so desperately need. Dave Frohnmayer Bend

So why don't they want to promote the presence of their agricultural invention to the public? If it's so wonder-

ful for all of us, I would expect them eager to have food containing it be prominently labeled as such. Given the information I've read and believe, I wouldn't be scared to eat products containing it. It's unlike-

ly to be worse than a lot of what most Americans eat. Maybe it's because

human consumption is far from the whole story. The GMOs of Monsanto are one-

ing in the flood of vacation rental applications, which clearly has the potential to alter the character and face

keep in mind that this could mean life

or death for both dogs. Thankyou. Dennis Fehling Terrebonne

'First lady'title undeserved After watching the "Today" show

of our historic city neighborhoods, is not the right kind of action. Neither has extensive experience in leader- is granting hundreds of new permits ship roles. As a proven military com- while a hesitant and plodding promander he served our country for cess moves forward. over 13 years, inciuding flying ChiJon Skidmore is rightly concerned nook helicopters and leading soldiers about basic property rights and in combat missions during Operation leaving the city open to legal chalIraqi Freedom and in Afghanistan. lenges, but it is the fundamental job When I met Wilhelm I asked him of city managers and council to balabout his motivation to enter the po- ance those rights with the rights and

this morning on TV, I was very embarrassedto w atch thestory regarding Gov. John Kitzhaber's fiance and her "sham" marriage along with otherrevelations.Iwasembarrassed for Oregon and the governor. It also got me thinking — why is she referred to asthefirstlady?

litical arena. His response is what

to all the media refer to her as such,

needs of the community at large.

She is not, and being referred to

in that manner or by giving her that title is very wrong. I have listened

sets him apart: simply his desire to Other Oregon communities have and I would like to see that corrected. serve and represent Central Oregon's found thoughtful ways to find that Using that title makes the story seem interests in Salem. Plain, simple and

balance. Why can't Bend? Adam Albright Bend

remarkablyrefreshing. No spin or dogmatic adherence to politics as usual.

As eloquently written by Stephen Ambrose in "Band of Brothers" de-

Follow leashlaws

all the more scandalous. I do realize

that is the goal of all media in today's world, but to me this is just another "sham" she is getting away with. Donna Viola Redmond

scribing the defeat of the German My name is Dennis Fehling. I am a army at the Battle of the Bulge: "The professional dogtrainer in Redmond. (See mere letters, next page)

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnlsts. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

i a irst s te t o w a r r e o rm IN MY VIEW

and a long-term economic problem. and the new varieties are often more The grain is specifically genetically destructive than their parents. Addi-

several crops in this country.

Hasty and arbitrary action in rein-

stmng candidates running for state representative. However, there is only one proven leader: Craig Wilhelm. A decorated former Army major and West Point graduate, Wilhelm

M easure 92, which would require the

cess. It now dominates the growing of

vacationrentals ill-advised

We are fortunate to have two

half of a two-part system, and this

it to farmers, with extraordinary suc-

Haste inregulating

Vote for Wilhelm

By David Horn Your recent editorial against Ballot labeling of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), has me bewildered. Monsanto, a leading producer of such seed, claims to be proud of their patented genetically engineered creation and is aggressively promoting

Americans established a moral su- This might be a touchy subject but periority over the Germans. It was one that needs tobe addressed. based not on equipment or quantity Most of my work involves workof arms, but on teamwork, coordina- ing with aggression and fear in dogs. tion, leadership and mutual trust. The There is nothing more frustrating moral superiority was based ... ulti- when after months of very hard work mately on a more open army reflect- it all goes down the drain when an ing a more open society ...." Wilhelm "off leash" is allowed to approach myhas honed his skills at teamwork, self or my ciients and their dogs. coordination, leadership and mutual There are specific laws that protrust under combat conditions. We hibit dogs from being off leash, but need those same leadership skills in they arebeing ignored by people our state representative. who refuse to playbythe rules. Wilhelm has fought valiantly for Please keep in mind that although our country. I urge you to give him your dog might be friendly, there are the opportunity to fight for Central dogs out there that are not and deOregon — we can depend on him. serve the right tobe able to walkwith Daniel Fishkin their owners without having to be apBend proached by your off-leash dog. Also

process is an environmental disaster engineered to promote the intense use

tional irresponsible consequences of

of Monsanto's "Roundup," an incredi- GMO use have been the devastation bly toxic, broadly, but not totally, effec- of beneficial plants and insects, such tive herbicide. This herbicide has led as Monarch butterflies and bees (The to bad and sloppy farmingpractices. Bulletin; Sept. 21), the latter a critical A farmer is quoted (The Bulletin; component of successful crops in the Aug. 17), "I consider myself a Roundup U.S. worth tens of billions of dollars baby, and it was great. You didn't have eachyear. to think about anything." But now his This new unnatural "desert" we're farm is overrun with death-defying creating for these and most other inweeds! sects and beneficial flora is destroySeems heshould have been think- ing our environmental system. Add to ing more. Seems Mother Nature de- this that making each crop so unified velops plants that can mutate fast (e.g., corn is now 90 percent laboratoenough and in sufficient numbers to ry-engineered) is resulting in massive survive our scientists' cleverest efforts susceptibility to a single destructive to kill them. Then these herbicides no scourge, as has already happened in longer work so well, and new ones our corn belt (The Bulletin; Oct. 4). are needed with more unintended This practice of extreme specialconsequences. ization has been known for decades Worse, this natural rate of mutation is faster than we can respond to it,

Wealready have oversight systems.We already have labeling. This ts nota whole new procedure, just an addition to the existing

system.

consequences?

We alreadyhave oversight systems. We already have labeling. This is not a whole new procedure, just an addition

to the existing system. I agree the bill is not perfect and profits is so strong it overwhelms wise could be better-written. So let the long-term stewardship that requires proponents of GMOs give us good patience. labeling regulations to promote their I just received the propaganda fli- supposedly wonderfully beneficial er urging me to vote no on 92. It tells

invention. But we'd better not forget

me how expensive it will be and how labeling costs will massively "... increase grocery costs for Oregon families by hundreds of dollars per year"

that Europe, Japan and South Korea,

as the farmers pass on the regulation costs to the consumer.

The truth is we shouldn't be wor-

increase of between 5 percent and 10

should ban their use entirely and re-

all important export customers, have

seen the hypocrisy and ban many of our products that are infected with it.

rying about labeling GMO products, This vague generality suggests an though that is a good step. Better we

percent on yearly grocery bills just don't learn. The focus on short-term because of GMO regulations. Nonto be bad risk management. But we

sense! Are not the costs of dealing with the problems created by Roundup (The Bulletin; Aug. 17: $11 million in Georgia alone, 2009, and exploding) passed on because of the negative

turn to healthy farmingpractices. — David Horn lives in Bend.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F3

M Nickel's Worth Faulty reasoning onWehby

the voters just as councils did during sible for saving the lives of numerous Bend's period of rapid growth, keep- young Americans, allowing them to The Bulletin has the right to make ing rates too low and delaying con- return home to their loved ones. endorsementsbut has the respon- struction of needed infrastructure. He has demonstrated that same sibility to its readers to provide fair Now the infrastructure need is criti- courage and willingness to take

cluding his participation in the Sew- ily farm history. After the irrigation er Infrastructure Advisory Group. water shutoff in 2001, I made a deciRoats' private-sector management

sion to exit farming in Klamath and

and utility-operations experience give him practical experience in baland accurate justification for its en- cal and present. bold action throughout his m o re ancing compliance with regulatory dorsements. Otherwise the process Councils must fund improvements than 12 years of service in the state requirements, risk and level of serbecomes a farce. to prevent c atastrophic f a ilures. Legislature. vice where his own finances are at Such isthe case for its endorse- These essential improvements inRichardson's vision for Oregon is stake. His engagement in our comment Oct. 9 of Monica Wehby for crease rates. If candidates who claim to form a fiscally conservative state munity, and in his business affairs, the U.S.Senate over incumbent Jeff rates are too high can't understand government that will focus on the has shown me he is collaborative Merkley. straightforward water and sewer is- stewardship of taxpayer dollars. Its and solution-oriented. I trust Roats In regard to Merkley as a cham- sues, how can we hope they will com- primary job will be to improve the in- to hold city staff, stakeholders and pion of the middle class, The Bul- prehendcomplex issues facing Bend? comes of working families. colleagues accountable and through letin faults his policies for not "im- I strongly encourage all voters to reRichardson recognizes that the leadership to give all of those parties proving their lot." While the econ- elect Councilors Mark Capell and most effective way to create pri- something to reach for. omy is complex, and not a single Scott Ramsay and elect candidate vate-sector family-wage jobs is to R. Brady Fuller

finally in 2010 achieved my goal. During a Republican administra-

action can improve "the lot" of the

Casey Roats. I worked with them on

allow the free market to work by

middle class, a higher minimum wage would be a major step in that

several infrastructure projects and

getting government out of the way of small-business development. As gov- Roats is most qualified ernor, he will be positioned to help make that happen. For the past four years, I have had We strongly believe that Rich- the pleasure of serving with Casey

with homegrown local support and he was there from day one.

know they have detailed understand-

ings of infrastructure and other city Merkley supports Senate Bill 460, needs.

direction.

The Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2014, which would raise the federal min-

Electing this team can assure the

public that the council will have the ardson is the antidote to what ails imum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 per knowledgeand experience to devel- Oregon. hour. Wehby is critical of Merkley's op cost-effective and environmentalVotersare provided a clear choice support of this bill and last December ly sound solutions for issues facing between the status quo and a new told conservative Portland radio talk Bend in the future. and vibrant vision for Oregon. We show host Lars Larson that "the minFrank Turek have the opportunity to "take Oregon imum wage is an important protecBend back" this November. tion for workers, but my view is that The only question is "if we will act" it should be left to the states to determine what rates work best for them."

Misinformation on GMOs

The Bulletin failed to mention those

John Valenti wrote that v oters

should read about a "really good study" before voting in November porations and millionaires who will ("Read about GMOs," published ship more jobs overseas. How will Oct. 10). In trying to view the subthis "improve the lot" of the middle ject study (which is elusive) I found class? Not in the least! more articles stating that the study is What ideas does she have to imflawed and invalid (search for GMOs prove the lot of the middle class? Seralini). None! W e the readersdo nothave a qualLinda Davis ified source on which to base our decritical differences. Rather, Wehby would favor more tax breaks for cor-

Sisters

Wilhelm understands education issues I saw an attack ad on television a nd felt compelled to s h are m y

thoughts on the upcoming election. Rather than tear down candidates, I'd like to focus on the issues that motivate me to vote. As a teacher and a

Bend

The Bulletin endorsed Measure 88.

our education system are: too many studentsper class,too few teachers and too much emphasis on highstakes assessments. Wilhelm understands what we experience. As a

driving tests required by the DMV. I also know that the issuing of driver

military commander, he knows what

use it to obtain a passport, register to

we thought supported the agreement ran for the "tea party hills." Who was left standing at potential political

risk? The newly elected Merkley. He realized this agreement was created Since then, my wife and I have

moved toBend. We bought a home on the east side with 10 acres of irrigated farmland. Just couldn't get

Roats has served on that provides in-

staffdeserve another term.

put to the City Council on water, sew-

Karl Scronce

er, stormwater and transportation

Barram is right for the job

In running his business, Roats

has to deal with many of the same issues that will be facing the city in Yes, it's true. We are clearly biased the coming years. How to provide in our enthusiasm for Jodie Barram's w ater, sewer and other services to candidacy to serve as Deschutes meet future growth will continue to County commissioner. For 20 years, be a challenge. Roats' business backwe've known Jodie very well as our ground will be a valuable asset to the beloved daughterin-law. We have City Council in making the signifi-

services to the current and future

cards to undocumented neighbors will allow them to use it for no other

purpose but driving. They cannot

her studious attention to all issues,

needed improvements to our infra-

articulate in her convictions and gra- structure in a timely and economical cious in her relating to people on all manner.

Bend

fat), so we drove to another state just

to get old-fashioned peanut butter. W e never had coldcutsbecause ofthe nitrites and nitrates (preservatives). It

took many years for my mom to be proven right. I personally don't want to wait that

to be worried. They must be GMO

how the county connects with cities

qualified candidate to deal with

chasing any products that contain

and with the state of Oregon. Barram is known as a careful listener,

these issues. He is passionate about

GMOs. Only someone who has some-

the city and providing great services ready to engage with all perspectives to his customers. He is a "hands on" and decisive in taking action when manager, and you may see Roats the time is right. out on one of his company's conBarram was born and raised in struction projects with a hard hat Deschutes County. She knows the and shovel working alongside his history of the area and the heartbeat employees. of people who call this home. BarRay Auerbach

low-paying jobs, attend church reguAelea Christofferson is a fresh face advocate for our community's chil- larly, do not drink or take drugs and on the political scene. She is a busidren in the state Capitol to fully fund take no government welfare. They nesswoman who could help shake up schools and protect students from ed- are modeling all the family values Washington with her ideas to change ucation policy fads. that we admire. But they do have to the tax structure ofbusiness. She facLocal teachers support Wilhelm. driveto work, the grocery store,take es a superfunded 16-year congressWe hope you will too. kids to doctors' offices, etc. I believe man, Greg Walden,for Congress. Amy Sabbadini they have earned the right to do one If you are one of the people tired of Bend thing legally, and that is drive. I hope Washington the way it is, she would you will join me in voting yes on be a wonderful change. I am voting Measure 88. for Christofferson, a woman with KaRene Lehman ideasforEastern Oregon to represent and Roats

SupportCapell,Ramsay

Richardson isthe antidote to what ails Oregon

Why wouldanyone go to so much trouble'? Bottom line, money! The farmers who are against 92 need farmers and this would affect their bottom line. How? I will not be pur-

ican citizens. They both work hard in

Bend

of three weeks for No on 92?

I believe that Roats is the most

sides. Barram clearly understands

Christofferson could

me they do not understand the city's ratesor infrastructure needs. Bend

took place. The Republicans whom

is one of the three committees that

it's like to be given a near impossible vote, enter a government building or mission without the necessary equip- get a firearms ID card. Their pictures ram's passion for the future health Bend ment and be asked to execute it under will be taken and entered into a rec- of all aspects of our lives here is tough public scrutiny. ognition database, which is used in strong. We totally concur with all of job for 'first lady' Wilhelm knows the importance of tracking crime. It is also important to the reasons The Bulletin's editorial teamwork in those situations of high know that their immigration status board so enthusiastically endorsed I think if Gov. John Kitzhaber is stress and high stakes. He knows does not change. They will still be Barram for D e schutes County re-elected he should appoint his "first lady"asdirectorofOregon'sOfficeof the outcome ofour performance can undocumented. commissioner. have serious and lasting consequencFinally, though, a driver card is an Doug and Loretta Barram Immigration Affairs. You just can't es for our nation. He doesn't take our issue of justice. For example, a family Bend beat experience! jobs lightly. I know has been in the USA for over Russ Winge Wilhelm has taken the time to vis- 25 years. It is a two-parent family Fall River itour classrooms, to understand our raising three children who are Amer- shake up Washington

rates are too high, it demonstrates to

the Klamath. In that time period a change in president and U.S. senator

farming out of my blood. I urge you to support and re-elect Merkley. He and his professional

Roats on the city of Bend's Infrastructure Advisory Committee. This

pressed us with her commitment to residents and business in the city, excellence. She is comprehensive in and planning for and building the

I do to have passed the written and

cil candidates say water and sewer

ect, among other stakeholders in

issues. His background as an owner of a private water company serving a justsayyes to M easure92 on that opportunity. portion of the city has provided him Sen. Doug Whitsett a greatdealofknowledge and expeReading food labels is not new to and Rep. Gail Whitsett rience to effectively deal with these me. My mother in the 1950s was conKlarnath Falls issues. cerned about hydrogenated oil (trans

t he Bend City C ouncil have i m -

Vote for driver cards

My main issues with the state of

When I read Bend City Coun-

was created and supported by farmers in the Klamath Irrigation Proj-

many years this time. I still read labels and that is why I find it hard to cision. Do not base your vote on any watched her as a wife, mother, busi- cant financial decisions that will be understand why adding whether a single study. There is a lot of misin- nesswoman,teacher and civic leader, required. All four candidates for Po- food has GMOs or not is such a big formation out there on both sides of both as a volunteer and as an elected sition 6 on the City Council seem to deal. Why have I received three, four the issue. officiaL agree on several major issues facing colored brochures, gotten two phone Wayne Linschied Her four years on the city plan- the city: revising the urban growth calls, viewed three television ads and Redmond ning commission and six years on boundary, providing cost-effective listened to two radio ads in the span

They have done the right thing. I, too, mother, education is my No. 1 issue. will vote yes on Measure 88. This is I'm writing this letter to explain why why. local teachers choose Craig Wilhelm There are safety issues. I want for state representative. everyone driving on the roads that

students' needs, to listen to educators. We believe he is the candidate to best

tion, a water settlement agreement

me.

Don't mail your ballots too soon

People should consider not mail-

Support Roats

State Rep. Dennis Richardson is has a "net zero" or break-even rate the Republican candidate for Oregon I am writing to express my suppolicy, meaning these funds do not governor. His qualifications to lead make a profit. Water and sewer are this state are impressive. port and endorsement of Casey independentfunds and money canRichardson was a helicopter pilot Roats for Bend City Council. I apnot be transferred between them or during the Vietnam War. He flew preciate his insight into the city's to other city funds. The rates are cal- combat missions, sometimes under infrastructure challenges, and his culated to pay for operation, mainte- heavy enemy fire, and was awarded part in identifying and endorsing nance and replacement of worn-out 19 air medals and the Vietnamese solutions that have lowered the equipment. Candidates who claim Cross of Gallantry with Bronze Star. overall cost to city ratepayers while rates are too high are pandering to His courageous actions were respon- building needed infrastructure, in-

for Bendcouncil

listed on a food label. I want the choice to decide, and a

"yes" on Measure 92 will allow me to do just that. A little information

goes a long way and does not harm anyone — however, misinformation just might. Please do this for me, if not for yourselves. Vote yes on Measure 92. Sue Despotopulos Bend

At a defining moment Our state is at a defining moment.

We have adecision to make: Who will be our next governor. What isthe record of our governor? Is it one of competency or incompetency? We know the following: • We have the worst or s econd-worst absenteeism rate in public

ing their voter ballots too soon, as

schools.

you might find out something at the last minute that could change your

• We have the worst or s econd-worst elementary/high school

mind about a particular person or

system in the country. • We have the worst DMV in the

issue. Think how you will feel if you wish you had waited for all of the facts to

country. • We have an arrogant transporta-

surface before mailing that ballot. tion department that attempts to steal Personally, I wait until final day, then people's homes and businesses under take my ballot to one of the drop box-

Mayme Trumble es around town. Redmond

thing to hide, or lose, would go to these lengths to stop having GMOs

threat of condemnation.

• We hired a schools chief who Darlene Ashley gratefully accepted wages but failed Redmond

Merkley deserves another term

to work.

• We squandered a half-billion dollars on Cover Oregon and a bridge to Washington.

• The recovery jobs are part-time, I encourage you to support Sen. low-pay. Jeff Merkley. In an election phase • We have a governor whose perbombarded with campaign mail, his sonal life is far from being an exemopponent prefaces Merkley with the plar for our youth to follow. term "liberal." I personally find that Do the foregoing examples suggest not the case. competency? Is it time for a change? I am a former farmer from KlamThomas Tnplett ath Falls with over 100 years of fam-

Bend

We can do more to create jobs and opportunity here By Knute Buehler

T

he Bend Venture Conference,

and technology leaders, including Seven Peaks Ventures general part-

the second-oldest angel inves- ner Dino Vendetti and former Bendtor conference in our state, em- Broadband CEO Amy Tykeson, who bodies for me the spirit of entrepre- believe I have the right mix of expeneurship that makes Central Oregon rience and ideas to help make Bend such a special place. and Oregon a place where compaWe are independent, innovative nies want to locate and where future and hardworking. We have the scen- generations enjoy ample opportunity. ery and culture that naturally at- A number of our state's leading busitracts high-level talent. At the same ness groups, including the Oregon time, the economic recession hit us Business Association and the Oregon particularly hard, and unemploy- Small Business Coalition, have also ment in Deschutes County remains endorsed my candidacy. In addition, too high. m ore than 225 peoplehavejoinedour If I am fortunate enough to be cho- Beer Lovers for Buehler Coalition sen by voters to represent Bend in the focusedon protecting local brewers Oregon House, I will make high-qual- and consumers from unfair taxation ity job growth a top priority. and regulation. As a physician, an inventor and a Over the past several months, I've small-business owner, I know how

sought advice from across the polit-

challenging it can be to build and sus- ical spectrum concerning ways to tain a business. I am proud to have grow Central Oregon's economy. I've the support of many Bend business talked to people about what we need

IN MY VIEW

must focus state investment on as- turer to build new relationships and sisting businesses with high-growth grow its reach overseas. to do today to help struggling fami- potential. Bend is fortunate to have a num• Fight new taxes and regulations ber oforganizations and agencies lies and how we can ensure that our children are prepared to fill tomor- that cost jobs and raise prices. Since already working collaboratively to row'sjobs. These ideas are reflected 2007, there have been 11 proposals in connect promising ideas with venin my five-point plan for healthy eco- the Oregon Legislature to raise beer ture capital, connect companies with nomic growth. I believe we must: taxes. I will encourage a bipartisan educated workers and connect com• Connect local high schools and Craft Beer Caucus to stand strong munity members with a long-term colleges to the tech industry to devel- against such ideas. vision of what's possible. op custom curricula and internships • Support small- and startup-busiWorking with the Bend Chamber to ensuregraduates can compete for ness grant and development pro- of Commerce, Economic Developgood jobs in a modern 21st-century grams. New and small businesses ment for Central Oregon, the Tech economy. There's no question that are usually the most disadvantaged Alliance and others, I want to be your a healthy economy requires world- by government rules and regulation, voice in the Oregon House to promote class schools. but programs like the Oregon Busi- good ideas and enhance our spirit of • Advocate for affordable higher ness Development Fund (OBDF) and entrepreneurship. If we can put findeducation, including the OSU-Cas- the Oregon Trade Promotion Pro- ing solutions ahead of partisan policades expansion. Students must have gram (OTPP) are examples of smart tics, I am confident that our economy localaccess to computer science, en- government at work. An OBDF loan can bemore diverse,more dynamic gineering and other curricula. helped a local robotics company and stronger in the long term. • Promote innovation and research build a new manufacturing facility to — Dr. Knute Buehler is a candidate for by expanding Oregon's research expand its production. and OTPP alstate representative ot House District 54 and development tax credit. We lowed a local outdoor gear manufacin Bend.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Oct. 12. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "Deadline" by JohnSandford (Putnam) 2. "Burn" by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge (Little, Brown) 3. "Edge of Eternity" by Ken Follett (Dutton) 4. "Mr. Miracle" by Debbie Macomber (Ballantine) 5. "Paris Match" by Stuart Woods (Putnam) 6. "SomewhereSafewith Somebody Good" by Jan Karon (Putnam) 7. "Personal" by LeeChild (Delacorte) 8. "Lila" by Marilynne Robinson (FSG) 9. "The Lost Key" byCatherine Coulter (Putnam) 10. "The Christmas Bouquet" by Sherryl Woods (Mira) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "Killing Patton" by Bill

O'Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Hold) 2. "Thug Kitchen" by Thug Kitchen (Rodale) 3. "Not That Kind of Girl" by Lena Dunham(Random House) 4. "Stop the ComingCivil War" by MichaelSavage (Hatchette/Center Street) 5. "Agents of the Apocalypse" by David Jeremiah (Tyndale) 6. "The Innovators" by Walter Isaacson (Simon & Schuster) 7. "Worthy Fights" by Leon Panetta (Penguin Press) 8. "You Can,YouWill" by Joel Osteen (FaithWords) 9. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan) 10. "Guinness World Records 2015" by Guinness World Records (Guinness World Records)

BRIEFING

A father-son story that played out on screen "Even THIS I Get to Experience"

By Frazier Moore

Jeffersons" had predominantly or completely African-American casts) while confronting cutting-edge social issues that ranged from war, sexuality

The Associated Press

and abortion to poverty and

Even This I ( e t to Experience

By Norman Lear (Penguin

Press,464 pages)

how a toilet-paper roll should be placed in its bathroom holder (overhand or underhand'?).

NEW YORK — From the

moment Norman Lear began writing his memoir, he knew what the first line would be:

But Lear insists he didn't

"When I was a boy I thought

:1 ( ~

that if I could turn a screw in

coming soon The eerie TVtown of Twin Peaks will soon beavailable between covers. Flatiron Books says its Macmillan division will publish "The Secret Lives of Twin Peaks," a novel that promises to reveal what hashappenedto the residents of that mythical burg since they werelast seen a quarter-century ago onthe groundbreaking ABCseries, which aired in 1990-91. The publisher said Thursday the book is being written by Mark Frost, who wasco-creator and executive producer of the series with David Lynch. It will be published in advance of the Showtime sequel announced last week to air in

~t

the world, nor was there any

my father's head just a sixteenth of an inch one way or

master plan behind the empire he and Yorkin built.

the other, it might help him

Norman Lear

to tell the difference between right and wrong."

"We were just really having a good time," he says.

and "Divorce American Style," Meanwhile, they were tanstarring Dick Van Dyke, both gling with the talent, notably by turns flamboyant, loutish, directed by his production Carroll O'Connor, who played charming an d d o wnright partner, Bud Yorkin. Archie and contested nearcriminal, and an i nspiration Nick Ut/AssociatedPress file photo In 1971, the duo's TV as- ly every line of dialogue they for histragi-comichero, Archie In his memoir, Norman Lear says Archie Bunker of "All in the Fami- cension began with "All in wrote for him. "My God, that was difficult!" Bunker — occupies an overar- ly" was inspired by the sitcom pioneer's father. the Family," adapted for CBS ching presence in Lear's "Even from a British sitcom about a says Lear. "But it ended up evblue-collar bigot locking horns ery (darn) week with 240 peoTHIS I Get to Experience." The 92-year-old Lear, still his father in Connecticut and ter Winchell, landed a writing with his liberal son. ple in the studio audience roarfull of pep and new projects, Brooklyn during a recent in- job on NBC's "Ford Star ReWhy did Lear choose such ing with laughter. How do you reigns as a filmmaker, hu- terview. "But at the same time, vue," one of TV's original vari- a show to r etrofit for U .S. NOT have a good time with morist, impresario, activist, I wished to make him every- ety shows. viewers? THAT?" "It was so early in the (TV) "Because it related to me," TV pioneer and unrivaled sit- thing I wanted him to be. My How restorative it must have com titan with a portfolio of favorite way of thinking about game that after a couple of he declares. "My father would been for Lear to hold sway over hits in the 1970s and '80s that him was as a rascal, and not weeks we were considered vet- call me the laziest white kid Archie Bunker, his f ather's included "Sanford and Son," — I have a hard time saying it erans," laughs Lear, speaking he ever met. Then he would surrogate, and to deal from a "Maude," "Good Times," "The even now — as a thief." of himself and his partner at say I was 'a meathead — dead position of strength with the Jeffersons," " One Day at a The book, published Tues- the time. "We had cachet." from the neck up.' That was his actor who brought Archie to Time" and the show that start- day, became a reckoning for life — not to "turn the screw Jobs followed with such '50s expression." ed it all, "All in the Family," Lear. But it is no dirge. This is TVheadliners as Martha Raye, Thus was Lear able to craft a a sixteenth of an inch," but to whose patriarch would make an entertaining, penetrating George Gobel and Tennessee TV version of his own upbring- processthe bygone rel ationfamous Herman Lear's own celebration of a richly lived life, Ernie Ford, not to mention the ing through the characters of ship with his father while enhabitual demand that his wife as well as a show-biz chronicle superstar team of Dean Martin Archie Bunker and son-in-law tertaining millions. "stifle it." "I was dealing in the human kicking off in the late 1940s and Jerry Lewis. Mike ("Meathead") Stivic. "I wanted to run as far as I when Lear, after being fired as B y the 1960s, Lear h ad With that explosive success, condition in a way that intercould from anything he stood a press agent pitching publicity moved into writing films, in- Lear soared as a champion of ested me," says Lear, summing for," says Lear, his voice chok- items to such gossip columnists cluding the Frank Sinatra com- TV diversity ("Good Times," up his career gratefully. "How ing as he recalled life with as Dorothy Kilgallen and Wal- edy "Come Blow Your Horn" "Sanford and Son" and "The lucky is that?" L ear's father, Herman -

'Gone With theWind' prequelfollows Mammy'sjourney to Tara "Ruth's Journey" by Donald McCaig (Atria Books,384 pages) By Jill Vejnoske ATLANTA the Wind"?

and brought home to his wife, where she was born, if she was who names the Creole- and ever married, if she ever had French-speaking child "Ruth" children," McCaig told The on the spot. New York Times in the spring • Ruth wasn't just married. about the novel, which opens She was a mother herself. in circa-1800 Saint-Domingue Long before she ever laid eyes (now Haiti) and ends almost on the O'Haras, Ruth had her where Mitchell began her sto- own family in Charleston, ry, at a barbecue at Twelve S outh Carolina. Ho w t h a t Oaks in 1861. "Indeed, we happened — and, spoiler alert, don't even know her name." how it all came horribly unMuch of Ruth's backstory done — is the most riveting is McCaig's creation. But fa- part of the book and leads her miliar characters and events to her life at Tara. to the third, we don't know

JOIU15'

Cox Newspapers

'Twin Peaks' novel

launch his comedies to change

"Gone With

TNrsUINCNltCO ll00%L, Ol Pl lllllf Fll'0\I

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With the p ossible excep-

THE WIIVD::

tion of Coca-Cola, Margaret Mitchell's fictional creation is Atlanta's most sustainable

brand. The book that the onetime Atlanta Journal reporter churned out in an apartment

from "Gone With the Wind"

• Scarlett O'Hara has noth-

in "Gone With the Wind," At-

lanta barely figures in "Ruth's Journey." Instead, Savannah is where Solange et al. land in the U.S. when her scheming gets them onto a ship steaming out of strife-torn Saint-

Domingue; and,other than a few years in Charleston, Savannah is where Ruth resides until the time that Ellen

marries Gerald O'Hara and brings her lifelong "Mammy" along to their new home in the "Up-country." • Ruth gets the last word.

house on the corner of 10th and Peachtree streets sold

show up in ways that help ex- ing on her maternal grand- After 250 pages of third-perplain her gradual progression ma. Solange Escarlette Forn- son narration, the final por1 76,000 copies when it w a s 2007). Actually, "Ruth's Jour- toward her life at Tara. Here ier Evans Robillard (her first t ion of the book i s t old i n published in 1936. By 1939, it ney," which arrived in book- are a few things that stand out h usband was the one w h o Ruth's own voice. It mostly had passed 2 million in sales; stores last week, is mostly a about the new book: found little Ruth o n S aint- takes place at Tara in the days even now, it's the indefatigable prequel. And, McCaig sug• Now we do know "Mam- Domingue) is one of the book's leading to the Civil War — a Scarlett O'Hara of books, reli- gests, a much-needed flesh- my's" real name. (Or do we'?) most colorful characters and a time and setting that some feel ably selling some 75,000 cop- ing out of one of the original The book begins during the true survivor — that is, until Mitchell overly romanticized book's "three major charac- slave revolt that u l t imately she dies after the birth of El- in "Gone With the Wind." The ies every year. And now comes another ters" — the O'Hara clan's in- overthrew Saint-Domingue's len, her child by her third hus- final sentence might not have authorized sequel, the second dispensable, tough-love-dis- French colonial rulers. A band and the future mother of the same ring as "Tomorrow by acclaimed Civil War nov- pensing "Mammy." young black girl who survived Scarlett O'Hara. is another day," but it does go "Scarlettand Rhett are fa- her family's slaughter is dis• And Atlanta has nothing to the woman formerly known elist Donald McCaig ("Rhett Butler's People" came out in miliars, but when it c omes covered by a French officer on Savannah. A major player only as Mammy.

2016.

Frost called the novel a "dream project." The Showtime limited series will be written and produced by the original creators, and Frost will direct.

A Free Public Service

Australian wins Man Booker Prize Richard Flanagan is the 2014 winner of the ManBooker Prize for his novel "The Narrow Road to the Deep North." The

award, worth about $85,000, was announcedTuesday ata gala ceremony in Londonand broadcast by the BBC. Flanagan, the author of a half-dozen books, is the third Australian and first novelist born in Tasmania to win the prize. "The Narrow Road to the Deep North," published in the U.S. in August, was inspired by his father's experiences as a prisoner of war during World War II when he was forced to help build a railway between Burma andThailand. His father, in his 90s, died ashe completed the novel. This was the firstyear that Americans hadbeen included in the competition. TwoAmerican novelists madethe shortlist: Karen JoyFowler with her novel "We AreAll Completely Beside Ourselves" andJoshua Ferris with "To RiseAgain at a Decent Hour." — From wire reports

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties I

1

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0 gggg •

ig or use the • l 33 0 QKg©Zgg) service to be automatically emailed of notices that match your needs.

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN F 5

Chicago and 'The Birth of the Pill' Latest Virgil Flowersmysteryfollows seedy murder ofMinnesota reporter

"The Birth of the Pill: How Four

riage, Stanley, who was in his

Crusaders Reinvented Sex and Launched a Revolution" by Jonathan Eig (W. W.Norton 5 Company,400 pages)

early 30s and the comptroller

a big Searle project, Eig said. "Searle is really fed up with for the family's International him, and he goes to Chicago to Harvester business, was diag- try to salvage the relationship. nosed with schizophrenia. And he's telling the director of "When he died (in 1947 in research that he's working on By Melissa Harris his 70s), she came into all his this cure for baldness, and he Chicago Tribune money," about $373 million in off-handedly, casually menChicago journalist Jonathan today's dollars, although not tions that he's also working on Eig got the idea for his new w i th out a legal fight, Eig said. this birth control pill for Marbook, "The Birth of the Pill," "An d she wanted to spend it garet Sanger. Searle's not interfrom a sermon his rabbi gave on a mission. Her first choice ested. They're more interested manyyears ago. was to fight for reproductive in the baldness." "He was claiming the (birth r i gh ts. So she immediately got Ehh. Men. control) pill was i n t o uch w i t h Pincus, however, is able to a bigger deal (activist) Marga- rely on Searle to supply him t han t h e ai r ret Sanger and with the synthetic hormones asked, what's the one of its chemists had creatplane, than the A-bomb," Eig e t aTtI o s best use of this ed by accident and that Pincus T He P I L I. s aid o f R a b b i ', money?" needed to continue his birth Elliot Cosgrove, Katharine Mc- control experiments. As PinHow Four Ctuesdere thenof the Anshe Cormick bought cus' work advances, Searle beAeiaventek Sex Emet Synagogue into Sanger's vi- gins to invest in the pill. launcheJ "They don't have to take on C h i cago's Ile ol tio a sion of a pill that North Side. "At could pr e v ent much risk or build any laborafirst, I thought he pregnancy and tories," Eig said, "because they was crazy. Then be as easy to in- have the benefit of Katharine joNATHAN EIC I came to think gest as aspirin. funding a large operation for maybe he was , ' Eig said McCor- this." right." m ick, me a n - Pincus conducted his first Eig wondered w hile, kne w experiments on the pill in 1951 how the history of something of scientist Gregory Pincus with FDA approval coming so important could be so quick- through his hormone research within a decade. McCormick, ly forgotten, especially in Chi- on schizophrenia and suggest- then near 90, goes into a drugcago, the city arguably most ed Sanger get in touch with store with a prescription from responsible for its existence. him McCormick's contribu- her doctor andpicks up abottle Almost all of the money for the tions to everything from new to celebrate, Eig said. d evelopment of the birth con- l a b oratory buildings for Pincus The sermon "wasn't on the trol pill came from Chicago's to tr avel expenses related to pill," darifies Cosgrove, Eig's McCormick Family. research would reach into the former rabbi, who now minisI n 1904, Katharine Dexter m i l ions. l ters at New York's Park Ave"She was a one-woman ac- nue Synagogue. "It was on the McCormick, who grew up in Chicago and was the first counting office," Eig said. ability of people to redefine w oman to graduate from MIT By this time, Pincus had the terms of their existence. I with a degree in science (bi- been firedfrom Harvard for think I probably framed it as ology), married Stanley Mc- exp e rimenting w i t h in- v i - an example of one of the most Cormick, the youngest son of tro fertilization and boasting t ransformative pivots of t h e Cyrus McCormick. about it in the press. While past century, a flashpoint that C yrus McCormick had in t r y i n g to get his career back in marks our lives with a before 1 834 patented the mechanical o r d e r, he received a few grants and an after." Eig's book, "The Birth of reaper, a machine that auto- from G.D. Searle & Co., the matically cut, threshed and pharmaceutical company then the Pill: How Four Crusaders bundled grain, and established headquartered in Skokie, Illi- Reinvented Sex and Launched a fortune for his family. But nois. (It is now part of Pfizer) a Revolution," went on sale "An d he fails miserably" on Monday. within a fewyears of their mar~O

~

-

~

-

-

Secrecy

that Saddam was hiding an

Continued from F1

struction program, in defiance

The U.S. government withheld word about its discoveries

of international will and at the world's risk. U.N. inspectors

than a wounded soldier," said

rushed into production in the

a former Army sergeant who sufferedmustard burns in 2007

1980s duringthe Iran-Iraqwar. All had been manufactured

and was denied hospital treat-

before 1991, participants said.

ment and medical evacuation Filthy, rusty or corroded, a to the United States despite re- large fraction of them could not quests from his commander. be readily identified as chemiCongress, too, was onlypart- cal weapons at all. Some were ly informed, while troops and empty, although many of them still contained potent mustard

silent or to give deceptive ac- agent or residual sarin. Most counts of what they had found. could not have been used as "'Nothing of significance' is designed, and when they rupwhat I was ordered to say," tured, they dispersed the chemsaid Jarrod Lampier, a recently ical agents over a limited area, retired Army major who was according to those who collectpresent for the largest chemical edthe majority of them. weapons discovery of the war: In case after case, particimore than 2,400 nerve-agent

pants said, analysis of these

rocketsunearthed in 2006 at warheads and shells reafa former Republican Guard firmed intelligence failures. compound. First, the U.S. government did Jarrod Taylor, a f ormer not find what it had been lookArmy sergeant on hand for the ing for at the war's outset. Then destruction of mustard shells it failed to prepare its troops that burned two soldiers in and medical corps for the aged his infantry company, joked weapons it did find. of "wounds that never hapAs Iraq has been shaken pened" from "that stuff that anew by violence, and as past didn't exist." The public, he security gains have collapsed said,was misled fora decade. amid Sunni-Shiite bloodletting "I love it when I hear, 'Oh there andthe rise of the Islamic State, weren't any chemical weapons this long-hidden chronicle illuin Iraq,'" he said. "There were minates the persistent risks of plenty." the country's abandoned chemRear Adm. John Kirby, ical weapons. spokesman for Defense SecM any chemical weapons inretaryChuck Hagel,declined cidents clustered around the ruto address specific incidents

ins of the Muthanna State Es-

detailed in the Times inves- tablishment, the center of Iraqi t igation o r t o d i s cuss t h e chemical agent production in medical care and denial of

the 1980s.

medals for troops who were

Since June, the compound has been held by the Islamic

exposed. But he said the mili-

tary's health care system and State, the world's most radical awards practices were under and violent jihadist group. In review and that Hagel expect-

a letter sent to the United ¹

ed the services to address any tions this summer, the Iraqi shortcomings. government said that about "The secretary believes all 2,500 corroded chemical rockservicemembers deserve the ets remained on thegrounds best medical and administra- and that Iraqi officials had tive support possible," he said. witnessed intruders looting "He is, of course, concerned equipment before m i l itants by any indication or allegation shut down the surveillance they have not received such

cameras.

support. His expectation is that The U.S. government says leaders at all levels will strive to theabandonedweapons noloncorrect errors made, when and ger pose a threat. But nearly a where they are made." decade of wartime experience The discoveries of these showed that old Iraqi chemichemical weapons did not sup- cal munitions often remained port the government's invasion dangerous when repurposed rationale. for local attacks in makeshift After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Bush insisted

I have to admit I was intrigued when the Post-Gazette's book review editor

series of stories titled "Life on the Land: An American

about a school board that

calls a closed-door session to

novels and two nonfiction

take a vote to put out a hit on the localnewspaper reporter

bombs, as insurgents did start-

ingby 2004.

their trail.

gest that the costs for gas and

food are recorded higher in the district 's

He is the author

budget than the

of 35 published

actual payout. The reporter is on the verge of breaking the story when he

t

makes the mis-

take of confiding in his editor, Viking Laughton, owner of the paper, regular

re p o rter

for the school board and co-conspirator

"Deadline." The book starts

closed-door sessions, also called executive s essions,

found in a roadside ditch, and

with Flowers being called to Trippton by his friend to intrying to figure out what vestigate a dog stealing ring the board is discussing be- when he gets drawn into the hind those doors. Was the Clancey Conley murder case. book editor trying to tell me Readers are quickly drawn something'? to the main characters in The reporter in "Deadline," each of the story's threadsClancey Conley, a 45-year- the school board members old former drug addict whose and their conspirators, the career has bottomed out at meth-cooking hillbillies who the Trippton Republican-Riv- live on an isolated hillside er weekly newspaper in rural and the dog snatchers who Minnesota, ends up dead by are suspected of keeping the the end of the third chapter. dogs on that same hillside unThe rest of the story folds til they sell them for medical his murder investigation, the research. breakup of a dognapping By the end of the novel ring and a meth-lab bust into there will be multiple dead a fast-moving read with lots

of details, action and complicated, colorful characters.

cable. It was May 15, 2004.

board continues to knock

murder.

Flowers doesn't get a lot of help from local authorities, but a senior citizen who likes

to keep an eye on the school district budget, a 12-year-old who lives and lurks near the

meth-making hillbillies, and the school custodian help him to nail down evidence.

While not every event in the story line is plausible, the

richcharacters,the descriptions of small-town life, pol-

ingread.

found a jug and poured it onto tailed analysis of Iraq's weapons programs. The widely the showers, where he found heralded report, by the multiYandell at a mirror, transfixed national Iraq Survey Group, by his own image. concluded that Iraq had not "It was just pinpointed pu- had an active chemical warpils," Yandell later recalled. fare program for more than a "And that is like the classic sign decade. of sarin exposure." The group, led by Charles The soldiers lived with three Duelfer, a former U.N. official sailors, who told them to rush to working for the CIA, acknowlthe dinic. edged that the U.S. military had The soldiers staggered in found old chemical ordnance: claiming exposure to a nerve 12 artillery shells and 41 rockagent. The staff, Yandell said, et warheads. It predicted that the shell before stumbling to

acted as if he and Burns were

troops would find more.

recalled.

weapons, stating that because

lying. "They suspected we were The report also played down doing drugs or something," he the dangers of the lingering

Weeks before, Burns had found

he said later, that "it was rotten

Flowers is pulled from his dog-stealing case to solve the

itics and corruption and the bodies as t h e B u c hanan concurrent trails of a ction County Consolidated school make for a fast and entertain-

A medic who had been with in Europe and filled in chemi- a similar bomb made with an il- themvouchedthat theyhad just cal-agent production lines built lumination shell — a pyrotech- handled an artillery shell. The in Iraqby Western companies. nic round that lacked explosive staff changed its stance. "They Nonproliferation o ff icials power. It, too, had been rigged stripped us down and helped us said the Pentagon's handling with an i d entical telephone shower," Yandell said. of many of the recovered war- cable. The two techs were given oxheadsand shellsappearedtoviThis shell, t h e s e rgeant ygen, then Tylenol. At 3:20 p.m., olate the Convention on Chemi- thought, was a duplicate. The medics irrigated their eyes with cal Weapons. According to this bomb-makerhad goofed again. atropine gel. convention, chemical weapons To prevent militants from reBy then the Navy techs had must be secured, reported and using materials, disposal teams examined the shell. Word was destroyed m BI1 exactlllg and often destroyed any warheads circulating. Burns' team had time-consuming fashion. and shells they found on the picked up an exceedingly rare The Pentagon did not follow spot. But snipers stalked this weapon: a 152 mm binary sarin the steps but says it adhered to neighborhood. Burns under- shell. the convention's spirit. "These stood that risks grew the lonYandell had h andled the suspect weapons were recov- ger the soldiers remained. He shell without gloves. Both men ered undercircumstances in decided he would destroy the had inhaled sarin vapors. Their which prompt destruction was shell near their base. cases, said Col. Jonathan Newdictated by the need to ensure Yandell carried the shell to mark, a retired Army neurolthat the chemical weapons their truckbed. ogist, became "the only docucould not threaten the Iraqi The drive back passed mented battlefield exposure to people, neighboring states, co- through a bazaar. Burns no- nerve agent in the history of the alition forces or the environ- ticed a bitter smell and thought, United States." ment," said Jennifer Elzea, a

operator, to throw police off

in the embezzling scheme. Soon Conley's body is

Participants in the chemical plosive Ordnance Disposal Company, peered into a video UnitedStates had suppressed screen at a bomb's cracked knowledge of finds for multi- remams. ple reasons, induding that the It was an unusual device. A government bristled at further short while before, it had been acknowledgment it had been detonated beside a U.S. patrol wrong. "They needed some- in southwest Baghdad. The thing to say that after Sept. blast had been small. No one 11 Saddam used chemical had been wounded. rounds," Lampier said. "And all Two ordnance disposal of this was from the pre-1991 techs, Burns and Pfc. Michael era." Yandell, manipulated a robot Others pointed to a n oth- toward the device to examine er embarrassment. In five of it via video feed. They expected six incidents in which troops to find a high-explosive shell. were wounded by chemical The video showed a damagents,themunitions appeared aged shell rigged to a telephone to have been designed in the United States, manufactured

secret, even a local meth lab

Farm Family."

books. who discovered that school Virgil Flowofficials had been siphoning ers was devel$1 million a year from the oped from a district's $39 million budget. previous series I am a reporter who covers of de t ective school boards and have on n ovels b u i l t more than a few occasions re- around the ported on financial and other character Ludealings that board members cas Davenport, likely would have preferred w ho i s F l o w ers' boss in to keep secret. And I've often sat outside

off anyone who threatens its

Like many real-life reporters, Conley gets his first tip to the big scandal story from an author a n d j o u r nalist low-level school employees, who won the Pulitzer Prize including a bus driver and in journalism in 1986 for a cafeteria worker who sug-

handed me a copy of "Deadline" by John Sandford and said it was perfect for me. Turns out the novel is

active weapons of mass de- weapons discoveries said the

even from troops it sent into said they could not find eviharm's way and from military denceforthese claims. doctors. The government's seThen, during the long occrecy, victims and participants cupation, U.S. troops began said, prevented troops in some encountering old chemical muof the war's most dangerous nitions in hidden caches and jobs from receivingproper roadside bombs. Typically 155 medical care and official recog- mm artillery shells or 122 mm nition of their wounds. rockets, they were remnants "I felt more like a guinea pig of an arms program Iraq had

officerswere instructed to be

"Deadline (A Virgil Flowers "Deadline" marks the Novel)" eighth book in a series featurby John Sandford (Putnam, ing Virgil Flowers, an agent 400 pages) with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. By Mary Niederberger John Sandford is a pseudPittsburgh Post-Gazette onym of John Roswell Camp,

As the two soldiers were

their contents would have deteriorated, "any remaining chemical munitions in Iraq do not pose a militarily significant threat." By then the Pentagon had

test results showing that the sarin shell could have been

deadly. U.S. chemical warfare specialists also knew, disposal technicians and analysts said, that in the 1980s Iraq had mas-

tered mustardagent production in its Western-built plant.

Its output had been as pure as 95 percentand stable,meaning that the remaining stock was dangerous. Reached recently, Duelfer agreed that the weapons were

still a menace but said the report had striven to make it clear that they were not "a se-

cretcache ofweapons ofm ass destruction." "What I was trying to con-

Pentagon spokeswoman. vegetables." The convention, she added, Then he felt the onset of a "did not envisage the condi- headache.He told Yandell, w ho tions found in Iraq." was driving, that he did not feel Nonetheless, several partic- right.

afflicted by symptoms of this unlucky distinction, their supervisors initially pressed for a cover-up. "They put a gag order on all

vey is that these were not militarily significant because they (were) not used as WMD," he said. "It wasn't that they

ipants said the United States lost track of chemical weapons

Nauseated and disoriented,

of us — the security detail, us,

See Secrecy/next page

Yandell had quietly been strugthat its troops found, left large gling to drive. His vision was caches unsecured and did not blurring. His head pounded. "I warn people — Iraqis and for- feel like crap, too," he replied. eign troops alike — as it hastily Dread passed over Burns. exploded chemical ordnance in Maybe, he wondered aloud, the open air. they had picked up a nerve This was the secret world agent shell. Duling and his soldiers enAs they arrived at t h eir tered in August 2008 as they building, Burns was sure. In stood above the leaking chem- the back of the truck, the shell ical shell. The sergeant spoke had leaked liquid. Illumination into a radio, warning everyone rounds, he knew, do not do back. that.

the dinic, everyone," Burns said. "We were briefed to tell

"This is mustard agent," he

said, announcing the beginning of a journey of inadequate medical care and hon-

ors denied. "We've all been exposed." The cache that contaminated

Duling's team was not the first discovery ofchemicalweapons

"I thought: 'I've gotten Mike

family members that we were

exposed to 'industrial chemicals,' because our case was classified top secret."

Ten days after the incident, both soldiers were awarded Purple Hearts.

Playing down dangers In September2004, months after Burns and Yandell picked

up the leaking sarin shell, the U.S. government issued a de-

killed, and maybe everyone else around here, driving a chem roundontothe FOB,'"he said, using the acronym for forward operatingbase. Disposal teams kept bleach

team leader in the 752nd Ex-

BIG

savings!

Advanced Technology

25% to 45/o e asee t-0,

Beltone

for decontamination. Burns

Serving Central Oregon for over 22 years!

ready found thousands of similar warheads and shells. Staff Sgt. James Burns, a

Little ad

OFF MSRP

in the war. U.S. troops had al-

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Secrecy

The Pentagon did not pro-

protective suits, approachedthe crater from upwind and found a pile of rusty 155 mm shells. They tested negative for chemical agents.

vide this information to the Senate Select Committee on

Continued from previous page

Intelligence as it worked in the summer of 2006 examining intelligence claims about Iraq's weapons programs. Even as

During 2003 and 2004, the United States hunted for un-

conventional weapons and evidence that might support

Relieved, the techs removed

the rationale for the invasion. the Senate committee worked, But as the insurgency grew the U.S. Army made its largest and makeshift bombs became chemical weapons find of the the prevailing cause of troops' war: more than 2,400 Borak wounds, the search became rockets. a lower priority for the rankWith this discovery, the U.S. and-file. Some saw it as a military had found more than distraction. 3,000 pieces of chemical ordLate in 2004, at roughly the

same time as the release of the Duelfer report, the Army

were still dangerous. The military did not disclose this as

signaled internally that it was

the Senate worked; instead, it stood by data from the Army's

concerned about the risks of chemical weapons by distrib-

b last unearthed still munitions.

uting detailed new i nstruc-

. >,.c ( ~'

»! ~

In the blast crater, Goldman leaking; soon it tested positive

Tyler Hicks/New York Times News Service

for sulfur mustard. He swore. After the shells were de-

Navy Petty Officer Third Class Jeremiah Foxweli, who worked on a bomb-disposal teem in Iraq in 2006, wes returned to duty within

stroyed, symptoms started.

Their company command-

command ... discussed the incident with me again," he said.

er, Capt. Patrick Chavez, who retired as a major in 2013, said

The report, released in Sep-

One of the memorandums,

tember 2006,claimed "another

culties, problems with balance

25, 2006, after militants det-

and tingling in his legs. onated two roadside bombs "I have been dropping items near a U.S. patrol in southern such as tools, soda cans, cups Baghdad. of water, pens and pencils," he Two Navy techs — Chief Petwrote. "I will stumble or near- ty Officer Ted Pickett and Petty ly fall while standing up from Officer Third Class Jeremiah a chair. While speaking, I will Foxwell — arrived at the blast stutter or stammer and lose site. They found three dammy thought." aged shells, decided against Nonetheless, the military destroying them in a populated continued to w i thhold data, area and drove them to a demleaving the public misinformed olition range beside their base, as discoveries of chemical according to Foxwell, who left weapons accelerated sharply. the Navy in 2008. There they In late 2005 and early 2006,

soldiers collected more than

military recovered roughly 700 chemical warheads and shells, according to data obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.

The mustard exposure left him in permanently poor respiratory health; in 2013 he

had surgery to keep his airway open.

insurgents' use of a mustard

that rather than help the pa-

shell faded from view. "No one

tients, the clinic seemed intent

The sailors radioed for a

in my chain of command, outside of Ted, discussed the incident with me again," he said. After Foxwell was honorably discharged, the Veterans

on proving them wrong. "They The United States had invadwere trying to come up with ed Iraq to reduce the risk of the other causes for the symptoms weapons of mass destruction — heat exhaustion, things like that it presumed Saddam still that," he said. possessed. And after years of The clinic's attitude changed, encountering and handling the techs said, only after a pla- Iraq's old chemical arms, it had toon leader broke the chain retroactively informed the Orof command, sending photo- ganization for the Prohibition graphs of Goldman's blisters of Chemical Weapons in 2009 to a supervisor in the United that it had recovered more than States. 4,500 chemical weapons. Medical records show the But it had not shared this shift. On Sept. 1, a physician data publicly. And as it predropped the line that Goldman pared to withdraw, old stocks could return to duty. He reclas- set loose after the invasion sified the case: "poisoning by were still circulating. mustard gas." The team was Finding, safeguarding and flown toGermany and then destroyingthese weapons were to Walter Reed Army Medical to be the responsibility of Iraq's Center in Washington. A colo- government. nel visited from the Aberdeen Iraq took initial steps to fulProving Ground, an Army fill its obligations. It drafted a chemical warfare center, to dis- plan to entomb the contaminatcuss lab results. ed bunkers on Al Muthanna, "He said we would probably which still held remnant cheminever see the paperwork, but cal stocks, in concrete. our blood showed that we had When three journalists from all been exposed to mustard The New York Times visited agent and that my exposure Al Muthanna in 2013, a knot of was the highest," Goldman Iraqipolice officers and soldiers said. These lab results were guarded the entrance. Two connot put in his medical records, taminated bunkers — one conGoldman said. taining cyanide precursors and Why such vital information old sarin rockets — loomed be-

technical escort unit, then put on gloves and gas masks and wrapped the shell in plastic and duct tape. They waited. Hours passed. No chemical

Administration awarded him

a partial medical disability in Mustard agent acts slowly 2008, noting chronic respiratoon victims. Symptoms of ex- ry infections and the developposure often do not appear for ment of asthma. hours and intensify for days. The incident was a forebodWithin two days, lesions ing sign. Several months later, specialists arrived.

formed i n

F o x well's nasal on March 11, 2007, two Army techs were burned.

passages and upper airway, according to his medical records, which noted exposure

The shellsbesidethe lake

to "chemical vapors — mus-

The military's handling of

tard gas" from a " t errorist mustard exposure casesc hemical weapon." But t h e combining reflexive secrecy, care he would receive proved substandard medical care and to be much less than that man- an inconsistent awards system dated under the Army's treat- — reached a low point after

ment order. Duling's team was exposed on The clinic did not perform Aug. 16, 2008. required blood and urine tests The exposures followed the on Foxwell, according to his discovery of a seemingly small medical records. Both men batch of artillery shells by were returned to duty within Bushmaster Company, 1st Batdays, although Foxwell said talion, 14th Regiment, a mechhis breathing remained la- anized Army infantry unit bored and his chest hurt. searchingan area from which The Army opened an inves- American forces had taken fire. tigation into why the chemical

Duling, of the 710th EOD

substance they had thought

them in the clinic or submit

Foxwell was instantly alarmed.

why were we in this country in the first place'?"'

ed positive for sulfur mustard.

"It smelled overbearingly like extreme toxicity," he said recently. "The hair stood up on the back of my neck." The shell contained a brown crystalline

shell had leaked a noxious liquid. As he inhaled its vapors,

440 Borak 122 mm chemical rocketsnear Amara, in southeastern Iraq. And in the first nine months of 2006, the U.S.

"I'm like, 'Wait a minute, who

swab with detection paper test-

specialists had been delayed Company, arrived and rein arriving. An officer taking lieved another disposal team. statements from participants The first team leader was in a forbade Foxwell from discuss- chemical protection suit. "He was shot," Duling reing the incident with his peers, restricting him from issuing a called. "It was like 115 dewarning. grees. He was throwing up in Foxwell said his Navy of- his mask." "I said, 'Roy, we can take it ficer-in-charge did not visit

discovered that one 155 mm

m o r e the medal — no matter the

noticed one of the shells was put them rounds there'? And

Center that it had declassified in late June.

by the Medical Command, stat- 500 filled and unfilled degraded that "exposure to chemical ed pre-1991 chemical muniweapons is a continuing and tions" had been found — about significant risk to our deployed one-sixth of the military's inforces." The instructions re- ternal tallies. This tally, obsoquiredblood and urine tests for lete as it was published, was patients and follow-up tracking not updated in the ensuing oftheexposed — forlife. years, as more chemical weapIn the years ahead, these ons were found and as more steps would often not be troops were exposed. followed. By then the soldiers woundAgent inroadside bombs ed by sarin had returned Once U.S. forces began findhome. They still suffered ing large numbers of M110 symptoms. Yandell c o m- shells, it was all but inevitable plained of severe headaches. that disposal teams would be Burns, in a note for his medical exposed to blister agent. This recordin late 2004,described happened for the first time, memory lapses, reading diffi- several techs said, on Sept.

later. The team was told their

Army secretary's role in preSoldiers from Bushmaster senting it. Company formed a human The rejection was a bitter chain to stackshells for another turn. "They said, 'You blew a blast, said one participant, Phil- cache and got bit, but it wasn't ip Dukett, a former sergeant. enemy action,'" Duling said.

National Ground Intelligence days after being exposed to mustard ges. "No one in my chain of

tions for treating troops exposed to warfare agents.

ren, would present awards and that they needed soldiers for the photographs. The turnabout came weeks

their chemical suits and deto- Purple Hearts had been denied nated the pile from afar. The and that Duling could not wear

It

nance and knew that many

secretary of the Army, Pete Ge-

from here.'"

was a homemade explosive. A them for Purple Hearts. The

Duling and his team put on

l

1'

was withheld is not clear. The

Today

hind. The area where Marines

Army Medical Command, in a had found mustard shells in written statement, said it was

2008 was out of sight, shielded

by scrub and shimmering heat. Next the Army took up the

The Iraqi troops who stood question of P u r ple H earts. at that entrance are no longer Chavez submitted the soldiers there. The compound, never for the medals. In late October, entombed, is now controlled by the hospital staff told them the the Islamic State.

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Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

1967 Browning Safari GLOCK 21SF .45ACP grade 300 Win-mag $850. Gen 3 w / 3- 1 3 rd American Arms 10 qa mags, 3¹ trigger 8 ext Sage Rodw/Tioga 0/U, $550. 541-389-7385 mag release, Bladereel, $225. Custom tech RH holster, $480; Bend local paya CASHII TFO rodwith RedM1 GARAND CMP ington reel, $200. for all firearms & Antique iron twin XL Special Grade .30-06, ammo. 541-526-0617 SJmms waders, Beach Cruiser bed complete. $395 LA w / e x t ras, $ 9 9 0 ; men's Lg, worn once, Custom made, 54'I 350-1684 Bird hunting in Condon, MOSSBERG Internat'I $200; ladies small, one of a kindOR - 2014. Also big Silver Reserve 0/U new in box, $175. no 2 alike! Good classified adstell game hunting access 12ga, Turkish mfg, Simms boots,men's Excellent condition. in 2015. 541-384-5381 e ngraved, the essential facts in an $390 ; 13, used once, $100; Fun, fun, fun! interesting Manner. Write REVELATION Model ladies 9, new in box, Capstan Rope Winch 360 20ga SXS, $250; $850. from the readers view -not $100.Simms wad(new) $275., Royal REVELATION Model ing 541-749-8720 the seller's. Convert the stick,new, $50. Throne Tent $ 7 0 ., R310EC 410ga pump, Fishpond chest facts into benefits. Show many more hunting pack,$50. the reader howthe item will Medium full-suspension items. Call for details. 3", $220; C all Rob 541-382-6664 541.234.4644 or help them insomeway. Solo Santa Cruz Mtn rac- Culver area 928.310.8032 i ng bi ke , goo d c ond, m u st This sell, $3000. 541-480-2652 541-325-6193 advertising tlp THE LAW AND LOGIC CASH!! brought to you by 242 O F ARMED S E LF For Guns, Ammo 8 DEFENSE - 7 p.m., Exercise Equipment The Bulletin Reloading Supplies. Oct. 23. Taught by a gerrrng Cent el Oregnn ernee lggg 541-408-6900. lawyer and p o lice T readmill, Wes l o Antiques wanted: tools, trainer. $65. C l ass Cadence 78S, infurniture, sports gear, clines, exc. cond. Get your size limited. Sign up • New, never fired early B/W photography, $125. 541-678-8822 at Double Tap Firebusiness advertising, beer cans... Weatherby Vanarms (541-977-0202). 541-389-1578 245 guardS2, synthetic stock, cal 30-06.$550. Golf Equipment Where can you find a e ROW I N G • New, never fired helping hand? Howa,wood stock, cal with an ad in .300 Win Mag.$725 From contractors to Must pass backThe Bulletin's yard care, it's all here Callawav X-12 ground check. Please "Call A Service graphite, 3-fob, $100. call 541.389.3694, in The Bulletin's Big Berthagraphite leave message. Argus 300 slide Professional" "Call A Service fairway metals, 3-13, projector Iillodel Directory Professional" Directory $40 each. 111 Series, $50 Lady Callaway Also 1950s era graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 slides of Bend, and NOI'T IIIS RI l Largest 3-Day l ThompsonContender metals, $100. local camping/huntistol w/2 barrels: 44 Lady TaylorMade GUN & KNIFE ing/fishing trips in em Mag/Gen1 with Miscelas graphite, SHOW Alaska, Make off er DO YOU HAVE Bushnell scope & carry 7-SW, driver-7 wood, October 17-18-19 541-419-6408 SOMETHING TO case; & 22 LR match $100. Portland Expo SELL with Bushnell scope & (2) Sun Mountain Center FOR $500 OR carry case, $850. Mahogany GlassChina Speed Carts, Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, LESS? Closet, 68nH x 39 nW x SavageMod. 116 .300 $75 ea. Sun.10-4 Non-commercial Win Mag, stainless 16 nD, 3 d r awers, 541-382-6664 1-5 exit ¹306B advertisers may steel w/scope & case, glass front d o ors, Admission $10 place an ad $550. good shape. $425. CHECK YOUR AD I 1- 8 00-659-3440 I Mossberg300A 12Ga with our 541-382-6773 "QUICK CASH i CollectorsWest.co~m with 2 barrels: one 22" modified; & one SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 181/2", $250. :I OJ' Background check Remington 11-87 required. Please call ~ne ekn gn! semi-automatic 541.389.3694, Iv msg. on the first day it runs Ad must Police 12gauge to make sure it is corinclude price of with rifle sights, Pump Organ, rect. nSpellcheckn and nn le temnfgnnn ~ $700. Wanted: Collector seeks ¹11948 built Jn 1870 human errors do ocor less, or multiple Baikal Bounty high quality fishing items by New England cur. If this happens to items whose total Hunter 12 gauge, & upscale bamboo fly Organ Co. your ad, please condoes not exceed 20" double barrels rods. Call 541-678-5753, IT Ivl/ORKS! tact us ASAP so that $500. or 503-351-2746 Beautiful carved with screw-in corrections and any cabinet. In 1878J it chokes,$350. adjustments can be Call Classifieds at took 2nd place in Wanted: high-quality 541-385-5809 All like new! made to your ad. Sydney, Australia. hunting dog shock 541-365-5809 www.bendbuiietin.com 541-550-7189 Was presented to a collar. 541-408-0014 The Bulletin Classified minister after his service in the Civil War. $600. 541-385-4790 g7

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend CA King Henredon 284- Sales Southwest Bend Sleigh Bed with Or286- Sales Norlheast Bend ganic Mattress and 288- Sales Southeast Bend Bedding. It's mag290- Sales RedmondArea nificient. $4500 292 - Sales Other Areas Cash only. 541-390-7109 FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery NEED TO CANCEL 316- Irrigation Equipment YOUR AD? 325- Hay, Grain and Feed The Bulletin 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies Classifieds has an 341 - Horses andEquipment "After Hours" Line 345-Livestockand Equipment Call 541-383-2371 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 24 hrs. to cancel your ad! 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column Simmons Maxipedic twin 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing mattress/boxsprinq/frame 383- Produce andFood $200. 541-231-28f 7

Pets & Supplies

Want to Buy or Rent

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King Bed and mattress set,Sleep Comfort massager, includes linens, and electric blanket, $800 obo 541-516-8578

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Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

T h e • Qu I I e t I n:

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

Classified telephone hours:

Single Twln bed solid oak w/mattress, shelf headboard and foot• P ets & Supplies board, and 5-drawer bed frame. $2 00. Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, 541-526-1018 2 boys, baby dolls! Shots, potty training, health quar. $700 & up. 541-777-7743 208

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Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. T railer a t Jak e ' s 210 D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Petco (near Wal-Mart) Furniture & Appliances in Redmond; or donate M-F a t S mith 3-section bookcase, staTempur-Pedic® Sign, 1515 NE 2nd tionary middle, 7'H x 5'W, Contour Elite King Bend; or CRAFT in $100. 541-231-2817 size mattress 8 foundaTumalo. Can pick up tion, BRAND NEW. large amts, 389-8420. A1 Washers8 Dryers New cool model. www.craftcats.org Purchased; then spent $150 ea. Full warsummer in Alaska, and ranty. Free Del. Also French Bulldog mix, 4y it was past time to rs old u n -neutered wanted, used W/D's 541-260-7355 return to store. male, would m a ke Paid $3600; great agility dog. Free sell for $2600. to go o d hom e . 541-548-3810 541-447-0210. German Shepherds The Bulletin www.sherman-ranch.us recommends extra Quality Germans. I cnnen ne p n 541-281-6829 chasing products or s Antique table: German Shorthair AKC services from out of I engraved with sail2 Male Pups. the area. Sending k I ing ship on top and 541-306-9957 cash, checks, or s has an old oak capGerman Shorthaired l credit i n f ormation stan base. very urebred puppies, great may be subjected to heavy, Very unique unting dogs! 2 females piece. Asking $500 l FRAUD. For more left, 9 weeks old. $450. 54'I -419-6408. information about an c 541-728-1004 advertiser, you may The Bulletin reserves right to publish all Lab AKC, 2 blk M's, OFA I c all t h e Oregon / the State Attor ney ' ads from The Bulletin vet/yx/worm. $700. CH M arePi X t a B e n d b ( i l e t i I I. C O m newspaper onto The l General's O f f i ce FT lines. 541-480-4835 Consumer Protec- • Bulletin Internet webPurebred Labs, not pa tion h o t line at I site. pered, 1st shots and i 1-877-877-9392. wormed, vet checked, The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincerggg b londe an d b l a ck > TheBulletin > Sernng renver Oregon enre rggg $400. 541-416-1175.

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Beautiful Oval Table Solid walnut, handP eople giving p e ts crafted by an Amish away are advised to artisan for Schanz be selective about the Furniture Co. Excellent new owners. For the condition w/lovely patina. protection of the ani- 27" H, top 30" L and 20" mal, a personal visit to wide. Graceful curved n the home is recomlegs with 2-1/2 mended. hand-turned center support. Orig. $649; The Bulletin sell $350. Serving Central Oregonsince eggg

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Antiques & Collectibles

How to avoid scam and fraud attempts YBe aware of international fraud. Deal locally wh e never possible. 541-385-4790 Y Watch for buyers QueenslandHeelers offer more than Australian S h epherdStandard 8 Mini, $150 Couch, black leather w/ who & up. 541-280-1537 2 recliners, like new. your asking price puppies. AKC/ASCA who ask to have Excellent Bloodlines. www.rightwayranch.wor $400 obo. 541-408-0846 and m oney wired o r dpress.com Born 10/1 4/1 4. h anded back t o $650-$1200. Reserve Rottweiler pup, female, Electrolux Affinity Frigid- them. Fake cashier aire front loadin~ washer, Now 541-815-9257 parents on site. $550. red, 5 yrs ol , n eeds checks and money Call 541-923-2437. electrical part. $ 400. orders are common. Bichon/Poodle cross, Y N ever give o u t small, male, white, Scotty AKC pups, ready 541-390-4478 free to retired senior now! Mom/Dad on site, Freezer, used upright, personal f i nancial information. home. 541-788-0090 1st shots. 541-771-0717 $250 or best offer. Y T rust y o ur i n 541-639-8944 Chihuahua pups, pure- YORKIE-CHI-POM mix stincts and be wary bred lonq hair, parents on puppies 2 females 2 G ENERATE SOM E of someone using an site, $300. 541-420-9474 males born 8/19 tails docked, dew claws re- EXCITEMENT in your escrow service or Cute Doxie-cross pup- moved, wormed, first neighborhood! Plan a agent to pick up your pies, 4 mo., 2F/1M, shots. come with puppy garage sale and don't merchandise. UTD wormed, $250. starter pak. doing well forget to advertise in The Bulletin Pics avail. (541) 788- with paper t r aining. classified! genrlng Central Oregnnsince fggg 541-385-5809. 0890, 541-788-0908 $350 541 815 8234

Viewmaster $35: case, Disney, National Park reels. 541-419-6408 240

Crafts & Hobbies AGATE HUNTERS

ponshers • Saws • e

Repair & Supplies

CraffersWanted Final Open Jury Mon., Oct. 20th, 6:00pm Highland Baptist Church, Redmond. Tina 541-447-1640 or

Buy 8 Sell Safely In TheBulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every attempt to ensure that products sold in our classifieds are from a valid source.

Call 541-385-5809 toplaceyour adtoday.

www.snowflakeboutique.org

Gazebo: 10x10 easy-up with side panels, $50. 541-389-3632 Long Arm Quilting Machine, Husqvarna/Viking, 10-ft bed, computerized, $8500. 541-416-0538

BSSl 1C


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

G2 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014•THE BULLETIN

T HE N E W

YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D

INNER WORKINGS

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ACROSS I Shortend of the stick 8 1960s dance 14 French port just up the coast from Boulogne 20 Speedily 21Key of Grieg's only piano concerto 22 Belabor, say 23Leading indicator? 25 Spruce up 28 Sinus specialist, succinctly 27 Zest 28 Bacalao and boquerones 30 Ugly one 31Misfit 36"American Pie" songwriter 39 Boosts 40" Grows in Brooklyn" 41 Shakespearean lament 42 Like a pilot that's working again 45 Locale that made Hillary famous 49 One who'senthrall ed, metaphorically 52 French possessive 53 Response to a 26-Across, perhaps 54 Botanist Gray 55 Dedicated 56Quod demonstrandum Online snbscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords

($39.95 a year).

58 First steamship 117 Directs, as a with a planned conversation circumnavigation 118 True of the globe 119 Transgression 5$ Something on a hero, 120Show disdain for, in maybe a way 62 Greeted and seated 121Dinners at which 64 Pitbull or Snoop people read at the Dogg table 68 Never 122 Hide 6$1998 Winter Olympics host DOWN 72 Studio behind I Sake source "Amadeusn and "Platoon" 2 Like most graffiti, for short 73 Winning an Oscar, Emmy and Tony, 3 "Come again?" e.g. 4 AT&T Stadium team, on scoreboards 77 Activist Brockovich 78 Hypnotist' s signal 5 Corner key 7$ One of a dozen popes 8 Speedily 80 Suffix with ball 7 Peace Prize (award 81 Game warden? discontinued in 82 U.S.N. rank 1990) 84 Much ado about 8 Charges nothing 9 Girl's name that 8$ "Iwouldn't beton becomes a different it! n girl's name if you 92 Top of the Eiffel switch the first two Tower? letters 93 Honduras-to10 Goalie Howard of Guatemala U.S.A.'s 2010 and direccidn '14 World Cup 94 Hearing-related teams 95 Blues rocker Chris 11 QBJohnny 98Become fixated 12 Ping maker 97 Deteriorate rapidly 13 ' Toreiterate ..." 104 Make d ash 14 Opposite of waste for 15 Michigan, in 105 Went out with Chicago: Abbr. 106Actress Falco 16 Hide stuff 107 Neutrinos, 17 -Detoo("Star symbolically Wars" droid) 110Broccoli-like 18 World peace, e.g. vegetable 19 Atmospheric probe 112 It's hard to find

24 "But wait, there's more ..." 29 Best suited 31 Mailroom stamp 32 Like some chardonnays 33 Relinquish 34 Plotting 35 Thousands, in slang 36 Avian mimic 37 Whatstripes and polka dots do 38 Luau locale 42 Lakers, to Celtics,

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83 Weird Al Yankovic, 95 Fixed, as Easter e.g. eggs 85 Third person 96 Michael of "The masculine? Great Santini" 86 Relative of turquoise 97 Like some truths 87 n if fss 98 Andrea or Nicolo, in 88 International cricket the music world match 99 Scruffs 90 Ones left holding the 100 Ho preceder bag? 101 Gentle alarms 91 Gaps are filled with 102 Go on to say them

103 Some launchsites 107 Half of Mork's farewell 108 La Jolla campus, briefly 109 -Ball 111 See 69-Down 113 Vane dir. 114 It. is there 115 Army E-7: Abbr. 116 Contact info abbr.

PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place 8photo in your private party ad for only $75.00 perweek.

OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday.

Can be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 485- Independent Positions 247

Sporting Goods - Misc.

Like new Necky Eskia 16' kayak with rudder. Bulkheads water tight. Seat like new. Hatches, deck lines and grab loops all in perfect condition. Orig i nally $1450, asking $700 o bo. Please c a l l 541 -31 2-2435. 255

Computers T HE B ULLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party adveriisers are defined as those who sell one computer. 257

Musical Instruments

2009 Beautiful Lowrey Adventurer II Organ Absolutely perfect condition, not a scratch on it, about 4-feet wide, does everything! Includes a nice bench, too. 8550 obo. 541-385-5685

Back to School SALE! 25% - 35% OFF all music equipment. Bend Pawn 8 Trading Co. 61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend 541-317-5099 TURN THE PAGE

For More Ads The Bulletin Casio piano keyboard, lap model, $400. 541-385-9350

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgag83 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

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Building Materials

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Sales Northwest Bend

Hay, Grain & Feed

Schools & Training

Employment Opportunities

Natural gas Ruud iankless water heater, brand new! 1 99 BTU, $1600.

BarkTurfSoil.com

Pre-Moving Sale! Premium orchard grass, Sunday only, 10-3. barn stored no rain, Collectibles, patio furni1st cutting $225, 2nd ture, household items. $250, delivery avail. 63375 Saddleback Dr. Call 541-420-9158 or

HTR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.ILTR.EDU

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s U B A RU.

Auto - Sales PROMPT DELIVERY Sales professional io 541 -948-701 0. 542-389-9663 Join Central In Sunriver area. 286 Quality Orchard/Mixed 470 Oregon's l a r gest 530-938-3003 Sales Northeast Bend Grass har, between new ca r de a ler Domestic & For newspaper Bend &I edmond. Subaru of B e nd. In-Home Positions delivery, call the $230/ton, small bales. Offering 40fk, profit REDMOND Habitat Circulation Dept. at ** FREE ** Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 sharing, m e d ical RESTORE 541 -385-5800 Caregiver female non Garage Sale Kit split shifts and Building Supply Resale To place an ad, call Wheat Straw For Sale. smoking, needed for plan, 257 260 paid vacation. ExpeQuality ai Place an ad in The also weaner pigs 541-385-5809 upbeat active woman rience or will train. Misc . l t ems Musical Instruments • Bulletin for your gaLOW PRICES 541 -546-61 71 with MS, Mon. thru or email 90 day $1500 guar1242 S. Hwy 97 rage sale and recleeeified@bendbulletin.com Fri., 8-4, 40 hours wk, a ntee. Dress f o r How to avoid scam 54'I -548-1 406 ceive a Garage Sale $14/hour, in Awbrey Looking for your and fraud attempts success. P l ease Open to the public. Kit FREE! The Bulletin Butte home. Exp. re- apply at 2060 NE Sarvlne Central Oraeen sincefate next employee? YBe aware of internaquired. 3 references, KIT INCLUDES: Place a Bulletin Hwy 20, Bend. See 266 tional fraud. Deal lovalid ODL and reli• 4 Garage Sale Signs help wanted ad Bob or Devon. cally whenever posHeating & Stoves able t r a nsportation INSTANT GREEN • $2.00 Off Coupon To today and sible. 541 -31 S-f 335 beSPINET PIANO use Toward Your McPheeters Turf reach over Watch for buyers NOTICE TO tween 9 a.m & 9 p.m. Next Ad 1 973 Fayett S Gable Y who Lawn Fertilizer 60,000 readers offer more than ADVERTISER • 1 0 Tips For "Garage Advertise your car! made by Everett & each week. your asking price and Since September 29, Sale Success!" Add A Picture! Sons, excellent conT herapeutic Fos t e r Reach thousands of readers! who ask to have Your classified ad 1991, advertising for dition, recently 542-389-9663 Parents are urgently Call 541 -385-5809 money wired or used woodstoves has will also tuned. sounds great! needed for youth in The Bulletin Classileds handed back to them. been limited to modPICK UP YOUR appear on 37000 your community! Work Prompt Delivery GARAGE SALE Iul at Fake cashier checks els which have been bendbulletin.com 541 -385-8367 from home part-time 1777 SW Chandler and money orders certified by the Or- Rock, Sand & Gravel which currently and get reimbursed FOOD SERVICE Ave., Bend, OR 97702 are common. egon Department of Multiple Colors, Sizes receives over u p t o $ 1 800 p e r YNever give out per260 Environmental Qual- Instant Landscaping Co. 1.5 million page month for each youth 541-389-9663 The Bulletin sonal financial infority (DEQ) and the fedSer ing Cenval Oregon sincefsln Misc. Items views every in your care (max 2). mation. eral E n v ironmental 270 month at no Contact us for more YTrust your instincts Protection A g e ncy Buyfng Diamonds extra cost. information! Lost & Found I CI I I I I I I I R I C I and be wary of (EPA) as having met 288 /Gofd for Cash 1 -SSS-MSOREGON Bulletin smoke emission stansomeone using an Saxon's Fine Jewelers Sales Southeast Bend WWW.MAPLEClassifieds Nutrition Services escrow service or dards. A cer t ified 541 -389-6655 STAROR.ORG Get Results! Manager agent to pick up your w oodstove may b e Daniel is Closing his Call 541-385-5809 merchandise. identified by its ceriifi- REMEMBER: If you Glass Studio! Fusible Check out the 8 hrs/day or place your ad cation label, which is 476 have lost an animal, Bullseye 90 ari glass, all classifieds online The Bulletin permanently attached don't forget to check 1/2 price. Molds & forms, on-line at Start Date: Dec. fst Serving Central Oregon since tsea Employment www.bendbulletin.com Annual Salary: $75,000 to the stove. The BulThe Humane Society 1/2 price. Asst'd arl sup- bendbulletin.com Opportunities Great benefits. Position Updated daily letin will not knowBend plies, tools & more. The Bulletin Offers closes Oct 27 2014 accept adveriis541-382-3537 Custom made 3-shelf 341 Free Private Party Ads ingly Add your web address To apply, please yisit the BUYING ing for the sale of Redmond collapsible display stand. Horses & Equipment • 3 lines 3 days Dfstnct s websfte at to your ad and readLionel/American Flyer • Private Party Only uncertified 541 -923-0882 10x10 gazebo w/side ers on The Bulletin's www.redmond.k12.or.us trains, accessories. • Total of items adverwoodstoves. Madras panels. Sat. 10/1 8, 12-4, and click on JOBS tab web site, www.bend541 -408-21 91. 740 SE 9th St. ¹f 0; 541 -475-6889 For additional tised must equal $200 bulletin.com, will be OR - call for appt thru 267 Prineville information, contact able to click through BUYING a SE LLING or Less 10/31, 541 -389-3632. 541 -447-71 78 Fuel & Wood carol. ustaveson@ All gold jewelry, silver FOR DETAILS or to automatically to your or Craft Cats redmond.k12.or.us PLACE AN AD, website. and gold coins, bars, 541-389-8420. rounds, wedding sets, Call 541-385-5809 WHEN BUYING Silverado 2001 5th Fax 541-385-5802 class rings, sterling silFIREWOOD... wheel 3-horse trailer Accounting Technician ver, coin collect, vin29'xs', deluxe showtage watches, dental Wanted- paying cash To avoid fraud, man/semi living gold. Bill Fl e ming, for Hi-fi audio 8 stuThe Bulletin Oregon State University-Cascades in Bend, 541-382-9419. quarters, lots of exOregon invites applications for a full-time (1.0 dio equip. Mclntosh, recommends paytras. Beautiful condiment for Firewood FTE) Accounting Technician. The OSUJBL, Marantz, DyCRYPT at Deschutes naco, Heathkii, Santion. $21,900. OBO Cascades Accounting Technician provides only upon delivery Memorial G a r d en sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Reward f o r lost 54f -420-3277 and inspection. general office support and has a range of 1 1-month female Pit Meadow Pond space • A cord is 1 28 cu. ft. duties that includes task management and Call 541 -261 -1SOS 4D4 - dbl depth lawn Bull. Fawn with white 4' x 4' x 8' clerical functions in finance, accounting and 325 crypt, full grave for 2. tear drop blaze on right human resources. • Receipts should 261 Hay, Grain & Feed B uyer w i l l ne e d side of nose, upper lip. include name, granite & bronze dbl • Medical Equipment White on chest. She Minimum requirements i n c lude 12 quarter phone, price and interment m a r k er was lost in La Pine but 1st Quality mixed grass kind of wood hours (8 semester hours) of Accounting hay, no rain, barn stored, plus interment costs. Electric lift chair recliner, we have heard that courses AND one o f t h e f o llowing: An purchased. $250/ton s he was t a ken t o 81500. For more info very good cond, brown, • Firewood ads Associate's Degree in Accounting; OR One Call 54f -549-383f $195. 541-382-3520 c all K e llie A l l e n Prineville & Si s t er. MUST include year of experience that includes entering, Patterson Ranch, Sisters 541 -382-5592 or This is my daughter's species & cost per compiling and/or reporting financial informaseller, 207-582-0732 companion dog and 263 cord to better serve tion; OR An equivalent combination of educamissed greatly! our customers. tion and experience. Tools CAREGII/ERS NEEDED!! 541 -704-5259 The ALL SHIFTS,WILL TRAIN Call a Pro picture was taken as a Transcripts must be submitted for all required C ommercial Delt a The Bulletin baby. She is full grown. and/or related courses. All courses must be sarvine central oraeensincessaa Whether you need a Unifence table saw, Want to be a paid caregiver, but don't know from accredited colleges, universities, or fence fixed, hedges e xtended ben c h , where to start? At Home Care Group will train 280 private vocational schools. Pre f erred router, new lift, com- Afl Year Dependable on the job and provide all courses needed. tdfmmed or a house Estate Sales requirements include a demonstrated ability to plete grip m a ster. Firewood: Seasoned; Join a growing industry today. work in a team environment and provide built, you'll find Many extras. $1500. Lodgepole, split, del, Estate Sale, Sat. 8 excellent customer service, 1 year of preparprofessional help in 541 -923-6427 For more information, Bend, 1 f o r $ 1 95 Sun., 9-6, 537 SE ing transactions, journal entries and spreadfill oui the online application at The Bulletin's "Call a or 2 for $365. Call for Ponderosa, Madras. sheet experience, cash handling and http://www.athomecare-centraloregon.com multi-cord discounts! 265 experience working with large complex F urniture, ap p l ., Service Professional" send resume to 541-420-3484. electric baby grand, databases. • Building Materials Directory employment@athomecaregroup.com 60 years of stuff. or come in person to fill out an application at Use the following link to view or apply for this 540 -385-5809 4 Brand new Milgard Pine & Juniper Split Just bought a new boat? 205 SE Wilson, Suite 1, Bend. position http://oregonstate.edu/jobs/ single hung vinyl clad Sell your old one in the Use posting number 001 31 88 to apply on-line. Fun BZ Magic Castle windows. 4'x5', retail PROMPT D ELIVERY classifieds! Ask about our Must be able to pass 8 drug screening and The closing date is 1 0/24/201 4. Bounce House $200 $259/ea, 5500 for all Super Seller rates! 542-389-9683 criminal background check. OSU is an AA/EOENets/Disabled. 541-322-9461 4. 541 -41 9-8249 541-385-5809 •

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

R I C E M A C A W N E R F H A R S H

A W D E A L NH A S T E O A L C A N N T R I R O U N C L E A N L A C K R A N D Y K I S A A V H IT E H A M I LL A G A N O R I N S E F C P O A T C H A N A U R A A N D G O T M A D D A A P I N I T E E R S I S S A T

W A A R N D D S E D I T I O N

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O R A T C E L O H T E H A E V S E

A T U S M IN O Y M I N T A Q U A R U P S I T M T O R E E R S A W I N N O T IO N P P E A T E B E R R E A E L L B D E Y N E E E N U P D E R S

I R E P E A T

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

C O N S E R V E R A I S E O K E E F E

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

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 G3

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Loans & Illlortgages

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WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

A N T E S

632

775

Apt./Multiplex General

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 541-460-5323

New Dream Special 3 bdrm, 2 bath $50,900 finished on your site. J andM Homes 541-548-5511

634

AptJMultiplex NE Bend

Call for Specials!

Limited numbers avail. 1,2&3 bdrms w/d hookups, patios or decks. Mountain Glen 541-383-9313

Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. 652

Houses for Rent NW Bend

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00 850

Snowmobiles

4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer, $8500. 541-379-3530

ELEGANT CUSTOM 860 Brand Ne w Sm a rt Motorcycles & Accessories 1-877-877-9392. Home. 3500sf, never lived in. 3 bdrm/4 bath. BANK TURNED YOU Great room perfect for 1985 Harley Davidson DOWN? Private party entertaining. Awesome 1200C with S portster will loan on real es- view of the city and 4th frame and '05 Harley tate equity. Credit, no fireworks. S p acious crate motor. Rat Rod Screaming Eagle problem, good equity gourmet kitchen. Wal- look, leather saddlebags PUZZLE IS ON PAGE 62 is all you need. Call nut flooring with knotty tips e xtras. S acrifice a t Oregon Land Mort- alder cabinetry and im- $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, 476 476 476 gage 541-388-4200. pressive rock work. 2 458-206-8446 (in Bend). Employment Employment Employment LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Irg. decks. Triple gaOpportunities Opportunities Opportunities secured trustdeeds & rage. Family rm w/ note,some hard money movie rm & kitchenette. loans. Call Pat Kellev Master & off ice space HOTEL/RESORT QUALITY 541-382-3099 ext.13. on main. Great locaRoofer Wanted The Riverhouse Bend's largest Hotel CONTROL tion near Rivers Edge Small, family-owned Look at: Golf Course. $3,350 TECHNICIAN local roofing comand Convention CenBendhomes.com 2001 Honda Goldwing mo. Call for personal ter is seeking qualitypany looking to hire (Bend/Redmond) 1800cc w/2005 Califor Complete Listings of showing minded a journeyman comfornia side car trike • Asst. Front Desk position roofer to Area Real Estate for Sale KOZAK PROPERTY conversion, 40K acIlllANAGEMENT CO. work with a 2-3 man Manager tual miles, every op573 541-382-0053 • Housekeeping crew. Willing to pay tion imaginable! CD, top dollar for a proBusiness Opportunities Supervisor 656 AM/FM, cruise, has 5' to join the Riverhouse fessional, trustworHrake, side rails, some Houses for Rent thy reliable and reWARNING The Bulletin Team. Must be able to riding gear. Well serwork a varied schedspecfful person. recommends that you SW Bend viced. Iocated in Mt. Must have driver's i nvestigate ever y ule. You will have the Vernon, OR. Trailer license, vehicle and phase of investment 3 bedroom 2 bath, dbl use of t h e R i ver- Accepting resumes optional.$22,500. a phone. Please call opportunities, espe- garage,1450 sqft natural house facilities. FREE for potential (will 541-350-5050 GOLF. Come work for 541-815-9009 c ially t h ose f r o mgas. $1350/mo.; $1500 Bend's finest! Bring train right person) out-of-state or offered security dep. 1273 SW Con t r ol resume and complete Quality by a person doing Wheeler. 541-815-4185 Does require business out of a lo- People Lookfor Information application in person Tech. y ou to p as s t h e at The R iverhouse, cal motel or hotel. InODOT CAgT o r vestment o ff e rings About Products and 3 075 N . H w y 9 7 , ODOT QCT / A CI caution when purmust be r egistered Services Every Daythrough 2005 HD Heritage SoftBend, OR. Or apply Grade 1 C ertificachasing products or I with the Oregon De- The Bvllefin Classifierfs and submit resume/ tion this winter. Will Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of services from out of ~ partment of Finance. cover letter online at: extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt required to per- f the area. Sending 675 We suggest you conwww.riverhouse.com be cond., $9750 firm form lab and field c ash, checks, o r PRE EMPLOYMENT sult your attorney or RV Parking 541-318-8668 testing. Successful f credit i n f ormation call CON S U MER DRUG SCREENING candidate will have ~ may be subjected to ~ HOTLINE, IS REQUIRED. Legal RV space with basic knowledge of FRAUD. 1-503-378-4320, Canyon views between Word, Excel and AcFor more informa- I 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. Redmond & Terrebonne. cess and will have What are you tion about an adver- • $300/mo., incl water 8 o utstanding m a t h f tiser, you may call sewer. 541-419-191 7 looking for? skills. O D L an d the Oregon State acceptable DMV reYou'll find it in I Attorney General's quired along w ith s Office C o n s umer s Harley Davidson Bsnl &RmRs The Bulletin Classifieds ability t o l i f t 8 0 I Protection hotline atI 2001 FXSTD, twin VcF MQ cam 88, fuel injected, pounds. E s sential I 1-877-877-9392. Vance & Hines short to take direction and 541-385-5809 work independently LThe Bulletin shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines while maintaining a fuel management quality, professional system, custom parts, Mechanic service or i e nted 632 extra seat. Looking for your next S hevlin Sand & attitude. Required to Apt JMultiplex General employee? $10,500 OBO. Gravel llc is looking work in a fast, safe, 744 Call Today for a Truck/Heavy efficient m a n ner. Place a Bulletin help Open Houses CHECKYOUR AD 541-516-8684 wanted ad today and Mechanic. ExperiBenefit pkg. Wage reach over 60,000 ence required. Must DOE. EO E / AAE. readers each week. have own tools. P lease email r e Open 12-3 REDUCED! Your classified ad Wages will depend sume t o hr m an1880 NW Hartford will also appear on of level of experiager© hookercreek. Ave. bendbulletin.com ence.* Full-time M-F net o r fax to NorthWest Crossing which currently 7 to 4. C a l l Rick 541-749-2024. on the first day it runs Stylish Mid Century receives over 1.5 5 41-408-1722 o r to make sure it is corShelleyGriffin, million page views Brian 541-948-3883 rect. "Spellcheck" and Harley D a vidson Broker every month at human errors do ocRoofers Wanted 541-280-3804 2006, FXDLI Dyna no extra cost. cur. If this happens to Call River Roofing, Theesrnereroup.com Low Rider, Mustang Bulletin Classifieds your ad, please con541-383-3569 seat with backrest, Garage Sales or applyin Get Results! tact us ASAP so that person at new battery, windCall 385-5809 corrections and any 697 SE Glenwood shield, forward conor place Garage Sales Drive, in Bend. adjustments can be trols, lots of chrome, your ad on-line at made to your ad. Screamin' Eagle exGarage Sales bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 haust, 11K mi. SeOpen 12-3 Want to impress the The Bulletin Classified 63178 Riverstone n ior owned, w e l l Find them relatives? Remodel maind! $7950 L a Dr. in Pine (928)581-9190 your home with the Priced Reduced The Bulletin on River Sanctuary help of a professional RsyBachmsn, from The Bulletin's Classifieds Broker "Call A Service 541-408-0696 541-385-5809 Professional" Directory Central Oregon Community College has TheGamerGroup.com openings li s te d bel o w . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply NEWSPAPER online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, Harley Davidson 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; 2011 Classic Lim(541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. Open 12-3 ited, Loaded! 9500 COCC is an AA/EO employer. miles, custom paint 815 NW Harmon The Bulletin is seeking a sports-minded journal"Broken Glass" by Blvd. ist to join our sports staff as a part-time preps Custodian Nicholas Del Drago, West Bend Charm assistant. Duties include taking phone and email Responsible for cleaning assigned College new condition, Near Mirror Pond information from sources and generating con- buildings. Assist in the security of campus heated handgrips, Alison Mata, Broker cise accounts of local high school sports events. buildings. 40hr/wk $1,955-$2,325/mo. Closes auto cruise control. 541-280-6250 Hours vary; must be available to work week- Oct 19. $32k in bike, Theaarneraroup.com nights and Saturdays. Interpersonal skills and only $16,000 professional-level writing ability are essential, as SeniorSystems Administrator, 541-318-6049 are a sports background and a working knowlAccount &Team Support Specialist edge of traditional high school sports. Responsible for assisting and managing cross-team functions in the areas of technical Harley Davidson 745 The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an support and administration of COCC's server 883 Sportster equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment i nfrastructure. Associates + Homes for Sale 3 - yrs e xp. 1998, 20,200 miles, drug screen required. $58,000/yr. Closes Oct 27. exc. cond., FSBO, Quick Escrow= To apply,please emailresume and any Copy CenterLead Clerk Move in bv Halloween! $3,800. relevant writing samples to: Quality, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Oversee reproduction of all Copy Center copy 541-548-2872. 1400 sq ft. home, s ortsassistant@bendbulletin.com jobs and department processes. Required: $205K. Serious buyers, 2-yrs operating high-volume digital photocopicall 541-279-8783 No phone inquiries please. ers, customer service, and 1-yr. supervisor or lead experience. $2,401-$2,858 for 11-months. NOTICE Closes Nov 2. All real estate advertised here in is subDirectorof e-Learning Serving Central Oregon since 1903 ject to th e F ederal Manage the academic computer support team. Harley Fat Boy 2002 Fair Housing A c t, Responsible for support and enhancement of NEWSPAPER which makes it illegal 14k orig. miles.. Exe-Learning, and implement quality control to advertise any pref- cellent cond. Vance & practices. Master's degree + 2-yrs exp. in onHines exhaust, 5 erence, limitation or line teaching environment and administrative spoke HD rims, wind leadership. $ 5 4,000-$64,800/yr. C l oses discrimination based vest, 12" rise handle on race, color, reliNov 12. detachable luggion, sex, handicap, bars, The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and enga e rack w/back familial status or na- rest, thusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to Part-Time Instructor Positions iwy pegs & many tional origin, or inten- chrome join a staff that covers the wide range of com- Looking for talented individuals to teach accents. Must tion to make any such petitive and recreational activities for which our part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our see to appreciate! preferences, l i mita- $10,500. /n CRRarea region is famous. employment Web site at https:/fjobs.cocc.edu. tions or discrimination. call 530-957-1865 Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 We will not knowingly We are seeking a reporter who can cover ev- class credit), with additional perks. accept any advertiserything from traditional sports to the offbeat ing for r eal e state HDFat Bo 1996 and extreme, with particular emphasis on comwhich is in violation of munity (participation) sports and preps. Neces- General this law. All persons sary skills include feature writing, event cover- The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturare hereby informed age, and the ability to work well on deadline. A day night shift and other shifts as needed. We that all dwellings adcollege degree is required. Reporting experi- currently have openings all nights of the week. vertised are available ence, polished writing skills and a track record Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts on an equal opportuof accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and nity basis. The Bullethe duties of this position require evening and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoCompletely tin Classified sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. weekend availability. Rebuilt/Customized Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a 2012/2013 Award 750 Also important is the ability to conceptualize the minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Winner Redmond Homes multimedia components that might complement are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of Showroom Condition loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackstories, including video, audio and slide show Many Extras elements. Experience using social media sites, ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Low Miles. Looking for your next and other tasks. For qualifying employees we including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred. emp/oyee? $15,000 offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Place a Bulletin help 541-548-4807 The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid wanted ad today and newspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 sur- vacation and sick time. Drug test is required reach over 60,000 prior to employment. rounded bysnow-capped mountains and home readers each week. to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a Your classified ad drug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity Please submit a completed application attenwill also appear on employer. Pre-employment drug screening is tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available bendbulletin.com at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanrequired prior to hiring. which currently redler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be ceives over HD FXSBI 2006 new obtained upon request by contacting Kevin To apply, please email cover letter, resume 1.5 million page cond., low miles, Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). and writing samples to: views every month Stage I download, exNo phone calls please. Only completed applis ortsre orter©bendbulletin.com at no extra cost. tras, bags. $7900 obo. cations will be considered for this position. No Bulletin Classifieds 541-447-0887 resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reNo phone inquiries please. Get Results! quired prior to employment. EOE. Call 385-5809 or Find exactly what place your ad on-line The Bulletin you are looking for in the at Serving Central Oregon since 1903 bendbulletin.com CLASSIFIEDS 5erving Central Oregon since r903

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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 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 Bend Homes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757 -Crook County Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763- Recreational Homesand Property 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

Motorcycles & Accessories Call The Bulletin At

The Bu l l etin To Subscribe call Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-385-5800 or go to At: www.bendbulletin.com www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809

HD Softtail Deuce 2002, broken back forces sale, only 200 mi. on new motor from Harley, new trans case and p a rts, s p o ke wheels, new brakes, n early all o f bi k e brand new. Has proof of all work done. Removable windshield, T-bags, black and all chromed out with a willy skeleton theme on all caps and covers. Lots o f w o r k, heart and love went into all aspects. All done at professional shops, call for info. Must sell quickly due to m e d ical bi l l s, $8250. Call Jack at 541-279-9538.

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DESCHUTESCOUNTY ' CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST I, Care

Coordinator (2014-00103). Full-time position. Deadline:THURSDA Y, 10/23/14. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I,

Homeless Outreach (2014-00107). Full-time position. Deadline:MONDAY, 10/20/14. BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST I, Bridge

Program (2014-00110). Full-time position. Deadline:THURSDA Y,11/20/14.

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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 RentNEBend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 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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HONDA SCOOTER 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. cond., $975 obo. (541) 593-9710 or 350-8711

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II,

Residential Specialist (2014-00094). Full-time position. Deadline Extended: OPEN UNTIL FILLED.

KAWASAKI KLX125, 2003, good condition. $1100. 541-593-8748

Yamaha V-Star, 250cc 2011 motorcycle, new custom seat for rider, vinyl coating on tank, 2 helmets included. Gets 60mpg, and has 3,278 miles. Asking $4700, firm. Call Dan 541-550-0171 865

ATVs

PEER SUPPORT SPECIALIST(2014001 08). Two part-time positions avail able.Deadline:MO NDAY,10/20/14. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE I OR II (PHNII) (2014-00040). Will consider full or part-time equivalent, two positions available. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER

(2014-00001). Will consider full or part-time equivalent, two positions available. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED.

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 ffe r ov e r $11,000. Call 541-575-4267

PSYCHIATRIST(2014-001 01). Full-time position. Deadline:This recruitment is OPen until filled. APPliCatiOnS Will

be reviewed weekly beginning on Monday, September 29, 2014. PUBLIC SAFETY SYSTEMS SPECIALIST

(9-1-1)

(2014-001 04). Full-time position. Deadline:SUMDAY,10/19/14.

870

Boats & Accessories 16' Driftboat Alumaweld Oars, anchor, engine mount, and trailer. $2950. 541-546-7'I 44

PIIBLI CWORKSCUSTOMER SERVICECLERK (2014-00106). Temporary, part-time position. Deadline:SUNDAY,10/19/14. TELECOMMIINICATOR (2014-00105). I Multiple positions available. Deadline: ThiS reCruitment Will riin COntinuauSly

over several months. Applications will be reviewed for competency at regular 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $1 2,500 541-815-2523

interValS beginning With the flrSt reVieW OnMOnday, OCtaber 13, 2014. COMING SOON: BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II,

School Based Health Center Consultant (2014-00109) DESCHIITESCOUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISITOUR WEBSITE AT WWW.

19' Pioneer ski boat, 1983, vm tandem trailer, V8. Fun & fast! $5800 obo. 541-815-0936.

2006 Bayliner 185 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345.

deschutes.org/jods.Alj candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the reCruitment has CIOSedand aPPliCatiOnS

have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent vja email only. If you need aSSiSt anCe, PleaSe COntaCt the DBSChuteS COunty PerSOnnel Dept.,

1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701, (541) 617-4722. DBSChutBSCOunty enCOurageS qualified

2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp

Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition, $23,500 503-646-1804

persons with disabilities to participate jn jts programs and activities. To request information jn an alternate format, please call (541) 6174747, fax to (541) 3853202 or send email to aCCBSSjbjljty@d6SChuteS.org. EOUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER

Women, minorities, and the disabled are encouraged to apply.


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

G4 SUNDAY OCTOBER 19 2014 •THE BULLETIN

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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobilss 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorbomss 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

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908

932

933

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

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870

880

880

Boats 8 Accessories

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Freightliner custom 5th wheel puller, 1/3 interest in wellsleeper cab, rebuilt equipped IFR Beech Boengine with 20k miles, nanza A36, new 10-550/ 6.5 generator, 120 cu. prop, located KBDN. ft. storage boxes - one $65,000. 541-419-9510 8' long. Gets 10.9 www. N4972M.com mpg, many more features. All in good shape. See to appreciate (in Terrebonne area).$26,500.

new, Activ hull, safe lock canister, 15HP Yamaha w/ t r olling plate, 6 gal Transom tank, less 30 hrs, 2 chest seats, full Bimini Freightliner 1994 top, Transom wheels, Custom cover, RV's special. Motorhome $5500. 541-923-6427 Will haul small SUV 21' 1998 S E ASWIRL or toys, and pull a 400 hrs. cuddy cabin, trailer! Powered by garaged, exc. cond., 8.3 Cummins with 6 302 Ford V8, Volvo speed Allison auto Penta outdrive. End of trans, 2nd o wner. season special!! Very nice! $53,000. $5,300. 541-977-2048 541-350-4077 875

Watercraft

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

880

Motorhomes

2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras.Asking $58K. Ph. 541-447-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (fop of hill) in Prineville.

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HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEI/!/ TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008

Motorhome + Dinghy! 2011 Georgetown 34' by Forest River. 14,900 mk 2 slides, 5.5 KVA generator, In Motion satellite, auto leveling, 7-yr/50K mi ext'd warranty. Immaculate, always garaged. 2007 Jeep Wrangler, 47K mi, exlnt cond, tow ready. Both for $83,000or motorhome only, $71,000. 541-420-5139

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Alfa See Ya 2006 36' Excellent condition, 1 owner, 350 Cat diesel, 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, icemaker, gas stove, oven, washer/dryer, non-smoker, 3 shdes, generator, invertor, leather interior, satellite, 7'4" ceiling. Clean!$75,000. 541-233-6520

Automatic trans., runs. Was being restored; has many parts to help compiete restoration. Clean title. More photos on Bend's craigslist.$4000. Call Greg,503-5514827

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance &affordable flying! $6,000. Chevy Silverado 2012 4x4 Crew Cab 541-410-6007 39K miles, White Diamond paint, Tonneau cover, leather heated seats, running boards, tow-ready, new tires (only 200 miles on them), like new inside and out! 1974 BeHanca $32,900 1730A

Keystone Raptor, 2007 37 toy hauler,2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system,sleeps 6,many extras. $29,999. In Madras, call 541-771-9607or

Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago 31J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-level541-475-6265 ing jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified Companion 26', '94 buyers! 541-388-7179 1Kitslide, new stove/fridge, Gd for huntinq/camping! 881 $2500 541-389-5788 Travel Trailers FIND IT! The Bulletin Classifieds 2007 Jayco Jay Flight 29 FBS with slide out & awning - Turn-key ready to use, less than 50 total days used by current owner. Never smoked in, no indoor pets, excellent cond., yery clean. Lots of bonus it ems; many have never been used. Price now reduced to $17,200 which is below Kelly Blue B ook. Call Ei s a , 541-420-0794 for more info / more photos. Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993

www.bendbulletin.com

Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-447-8664

Chevy 454, heavy duty chassis, new batteries & tires, cab 8 roof A/C, tow hitch w /brake, 21k m i . , more! 541-280-3251

S

ROBBERSON ~m m m

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 10/31/14

Ford F250 1984 4x4 King Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift kit, 90% tires, good wood truck! $2000 or best ofJeepster Commando 1968 fer. 541-279-8023 6-cyl Buick 4WD comSave money. Learn pletely restored. $12,000 BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most to fly or build hours obo. 808-430-5133 or 541-382-6300 comprehensive listing of with your own airclassified advertising... c raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, Mercedes 380SL 1982 real estate to automotive, Roadster, black on black, merchandise to sporting 150 HP, low time, & hard top, excellent goods. Bulletin Classifieds full panel. $21,000 soft condition, always gaappear every day in the obo. Contact Paul at raged. 155 K m i les, 541-447-5184. print or on line. $11,500. 541-549-6407 Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com 916 Find It in Trucks & The Bulletin The Bulletin Classi0edsl SevingCenWI Oregon since f9$ Heavy Equipment 541-385-5809

541-419-3301

MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options - reduced by $3500 to $31,500. 541-420-3250

$8500.

I

Call 54 I - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 5 ' ro m o t e

o u r se r v i c e

B"'Id'ng/C ntr t'ng Landscap!ng/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for construction work to be licensed with the ssllvlNeCENTRAL OREGON Construction Contracs<nce 2003 tors Board (CCB). An Residential & Commercial active license means the contractor Spnnlder Blow-Out is bonded & insured. SprinklerRepair Verify the contractor's CCB l i c ense at MAI1VTElt!jAlt!jCE www.hirealicensedcontractor.com • Fall Clean Up or call 503-378-4621. • Weekly Mowing The Bulletin recom& Edging mends checking with the CCB prior to con- • Bi-Monthly& Monthly tracting with anyone. Maintenance Some other t rades also req u ire addiLAltljDSCAPING tional licenses and certifications. • Landscape Construction Debris Removal Water Feature Installation/Maint. • Pavers • Renovations • Irrigations Installation Will Haul Away

«0 FREE~ For Salvage t|n'. ; Any Location. ,4 Removal Also Cleanups g,,

Senior Discounts Bonded &lnsured

'

541-403-2465

541%1%4458 Lcnrr8759

.

Open Road 36' with 3 slides!

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1/3 interestin

your ad, please contact us ASAP so that

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Columbia400,

Financing available.

$150,000

CHEVELLE MALIBU

1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $13,500. 541-788-0427

(located I01 Bend)

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541-288-3333

I I

GMC Sonoma 1991 4x4 Ext. Cab, 6-cyl, AT, runs great, new radiator, AC, power, tow pkg, bedliner, 155K, must see! $4500. 541-385-4790

Mercedes 450SL, 1975 97K Miles

$8999.

541-504-8399

Nissan Frontier 2013, (exp. 10/19/14) Vin ¹717729 V W CONV. 1 9 78 Stock ¹83155 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 $26,977or $339/mo., $3900 down, 84 mo., Volkswaqen Convert4 .49% APR o n ap ible. Cobalt blue with proved credit. License a black convertible and title included in top, cream colored payment. interior & black dash. This little beauty runs S UHA RU eusmuommnaom and looks great and turns heads wherever 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. it goes. Mi: 131,902. 877-266-3821 Phone 541-504-8399 Dlr ¹0354

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cense.

Managing Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. Central Oregon CrewMax, 2011 - Only Landscapes 29,700 miles & loaded! Since 2006 381hp, TRD off road pkg, Bilstein shocks,18" al!oys, sunroof, rear s l i ding Fall Clean up window, backup camera, Don't track it in all Winter 12-spkr JBL sys, running •Leaves brds, hitch/trailer sway •Cones kg, 10-way adj leather • Needles td seats, dual climate • Debris Hauling control, sonar, 6-disc CD, Bluetooth, more!$37,900. Winter Prep 541-390-6616 •Pruning i Aerating 935 •Fertilizing Sport Utility Vehicles

2005 DieSel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

Compost Applications Use Less Water

$$$ Save $$$ Improve Plant Health

Chevy S i lverado 1500 20 1 4 , L T , 4 WD, crew c a b , short box, 5.3L, new Feb. 28, 2014. Not driven since June 2014. Gar a ged. Loaded, brown tan cloth interior, 4900 m i., $34,9 9 0 . 541-480-5634 gythrp © gmail.com

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, nayigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-915-9170

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Principal Broker

$200,000s. Brand new homes in Bend with the quality Pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with

EDIE DELAY

RHIANNA KUNKLER Broker R E A L

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541-30G-0939

Ask about our FAIL SPEC!ilL!

Call 541i 337.6149 CCBt195960

MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter Repaint Specialist!

EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential

Oregon License

Senior Discounts

¹186147 LLC

Same Day Response

541-815-2888

541-390-1466

Large1929SFhome, 4 bedrooms and 3 full baths. Inviting foyer leads to open great room that features a cozy fireplace with

20781 NE Comet Lane

given to allow for tons of /fighr on Sierra, Le ft on Black pmder, natural light a much more. Right on Comet Lane. Loo/rforigns. Come by the model home for starting in the low more information and plans.

541-420-2$50

Weekly, Monthly 8 One Time Service

• Interior and Exterior • Family-Owned • Residential R Commercial • 40 years experience • Senior Discounts • 5-year Warranties

SAT 8r. SUN 12PM - 3PM

under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention Directions:North on Boyd Acres,

Hosted 6Listed by:

2014 Maintenance Packages Available

All American Fainting

I

Homes starting is the Iow

TEAM DELAY

Painting/Wall Covering

L'a~< C'~ r,.

THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM

Homes Starting Mid-$200s

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Zdue4 Qua/reI

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Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SE Golden GatePlace,Bend of walking trails. Tour a DAvcfiorrs:From theParkuay, eu/ variety of single level and on ReedNarlret, south on 15th, then 2 story plans. follonr sigrrr.

CleanouteFi~

933

Pickups

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THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM

HOSted 6 LiSted byr

NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o pe r form Landscape Construction which includes: Handyman p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, and inI DO THAT! water-features, stallation, repair of irrigation systems to be l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be included in all adverHandyman/Remodeling tisements which indicate the business has Residential/Commercial a bond, insurance and Small Jobs to workers compensaEnlire Room Remodels tion for their employCarage Organization ees. For your protecHome lnsPection RePairs tion call 503-378-5909 gwaliry, Honest work or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to oennis 541.317 9768 check license status ccsel5>573 6oededllnsued before contracting with the business. Persons Landscaping/Yard Care doing land scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i jh

(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)

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

S S

Vin¹A10401

541-385-5809

00

Winnebago 22' 2002 - $28,500

Only $4,998

541-598-7940.

king bed, hide-a-bed Peterbilt 359 p otable sofa, glass shower, water truck, 1 990, 10 gal. water heater, 3200 gal. tank, Shp 10 cu.ft. fridge, cenpump, 4-3" h oses, Heartland P rowler tral vac, satellite dish, 541-480-2019 camiocks, $25,000. 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 27" TV /stereo sys541-820-3724 like new, 2 slides-livtem, front power levHave an item to i ng area 8 la r g e eling jacks & scissor SEMI-DRY VAN sell quick? closet, 15' power awstabilizer jacks, 16' Need to get an ad 53' long x102" wide, ning, power hitch & awning. 2005 model If it's under good tires, no dings, in ASAP? s tabilizers, 18 g a l . is like new! $17,500 '500you can place it in $8500. water heater, full size 541-419-0566 541-403-2465. queen bed, l a r ge The Bulletin Fax it to 541-322-7253 shower, porcelain sink Classifieds for: & toilet. RV 931 The Bulletin Classifieds $25,000or make offer. CONSIGNMENTS Automotive Parts, '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 541-999-2571 WANTED Service& Accessories We Do the Work, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days You Keep the Cash! RV (Private Party ads only) On-site credit 14" rims (4) great for this CONSIGNMENTS year's snow tires, $60 all approval team, WANTED obo. 541-279-8908 web site presence. We Do The Work ... RV We Take Trade-Ins! You Keep The Cash! CONSIGNllllENTS (4) 205/75x14 studded On-site credit Allegro 32' 2007, like snow tires, 85% tread, WANTED BIG COUNTRY RV approval team, new, only 12,600 miles. We Do The Work ... $200. 541-410-3425 Bend: 541-330-2495 web site presence. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 You Keep The Cash! '65-'66 Mustang original Redmond: transmission, dual exWe Take Trade-Ins! On-site credit 541-548-5254 bucket seats, completely haust. Loaded! Auto-levapproval team, rebuilt, better than new. eling system, 5kw gen, BIG COUNTRY RV web site presence. 1957 DeSoto 341 cu. in. power mirrors w/defrost, We Take Trade-Ins! Bend: 541-330-2495 885 dis. headers, unused. 2 slide-outs with awRedmond: Canopies & Campers 390 Ford cu. in. dis. nings, rear c a mera, BIG COUNTRY RV 541-548-5254 headers, just like new. trai!er hitch, driyer door Bend: 541-330-2495 Skamper 1990 8-ft pop- Plus other older Ford & w/power window, cruise, Redmond: 882 up cabover camper, imChevy parts. exhaust brake, central 541-548-5254 541-447-7272 maculate, many extras, vac, satellite sys. Asking Fifth Wheels 3-burner stove, heater $67,500. 503-781-8812 w/thermostat, hot water Shop automotive 6hp Tioga 24' Class C heater, oversized pres- 60-gallon special verMotorhome sure water s y stem„ tical air compressor Bought new in 2000, tank, $600 Fantastic Fan, lots of currently under 20K 541-365-9350 storage, sleeps 4, $3750. miles, excellent 541-617-0211 932 shape, new tires, Alpenlite 28 ft. 1987, professionally winterAntique & ized every year, cutnew appliances, Beaver Marquis, o Classic Autos off switch to battery, everything works, 1993 plus new RV batter0 0 good shape. 40-ft, Brunswick ies. Oven, hot water Includes queen floor plan. Many heater & air condibedding, micro, extras, well maintioning seldom used; DVD, hitch, tripod. tained, fire supjust add water and it's $4500. ready to go! pression behind 541-977-5587 $22,000 obo. Serious refrig, Stow Master inquiries, please. 5000 tow bar, Chevelle Malibu CHECKYOUR AD 908 Stored in Terrebonne. $22,995. 1966 541-548-5174 Aircraft, Parts 541-383-3503 Complete 8 Service restoration, $32,900.

Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 miles. Wintered in h eated shop. $82,000 O.B.O.

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Good runner 4x4

usroas~

Chev Trailblazer LS 2004,AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags,$5995. 541-610-6150

• • I

Ford F-150 1991

1965 Mustang Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, p.s/ p.s. garaged, well maint. engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition. $12,500. Please call

II IR K R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 pricing good thru 10/31/14

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T

$22,500

-

Call A Service Professional find the help you need.

hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

LlllcoLN ~

brake controller, King Ranch leather seats, sun roof. $18,900. 541-923-2953, ask for Mike

call 541-475-6302

Laredo 30'2009

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

2011 Has everything, seriously!! Vin¹301632 $49,977 ROBBERSON

FORD 250 KING RANCH TURBO DIESEL 4X4 2004 Excellent condition with 91,200 miles with tow package &

In Madras,

BIIY ITl SELL IT!

ies. Must see only $16,977 Vin ¹192111 ROBBERSON

541-815-4949

Need help fixing stuff?

hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

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

2005. All the good-

long bed, good tires, g ood b o dy , hi g h I I II c 0 I N ~ IM ROR miles. N e ed s a Tune-up. $2500. 541-312-3986 1993 Ford F250 long Dlr ¹0205. pricing bed with power lift good thru 10/31/14 gate, body r o ugh, good tires, auto trans., strong running veCadillac Escalade hicle. $2500. See at 571 NE A z ure Dr., Bend. Call Jerry @

541-350-0775

2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always

935

Cadillac Escefad

1996 GMC 1500 4WD,

1/5th interest in 1973

Four Winds 2008 18' travel trailer used very little Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000

Chevy El Camino, 1965

503-949-4229

2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like

ds published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

DOWNSIZING 2 of 3 pickups for sale want to sell 2 and leave 1 for me! 1999 Chevy Silverado 1500 3 door, 4WD 5.3 l iter e n gine, a u t o trans, PS, PW, PB, less than 150k miles. GREAT TIRES Good body. $6000

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equlpment 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

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

$200,000s

custom mantel. The kitchen has upgraded cabinets that are 36" 1452 NW 20th Ct, Redmond tall allowing for lots of storage.Directions:North on r/rr 19"st., Left Upstairs, the master suite boastson Nw iarcb Ave., Right ont/rr / 20" ct., a tray ceiling with spaciouswalk- home oncul-de-sac. in closet. Two-cargaragewith a large RV parking area.

$254,900

Hosted 6 L!sted by: GARY DIEFENDERFER Broker

R E A L T 0

R s

541-480-2620

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OREGO N

RRAL1vGROUP,IIC. Adding Vatue MReal Estats


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

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19 2014

935

940

975

975

975

975

975

975

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Ford Fusion SE

Mercedes300E

Chev Trailblazer

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2 h

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Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, 2002 LS 4x4, 121k beautiful inside & miles, a u t omatic, out, one owner, nonpower steering and smoker,. loaded with brakes, power winoptions! 197,892 mi. dows, t il t w h e el, Service rec o rds Sirius XM satellite available. $4 , 950. radio, tow package, Call Mike, (541) 815and brake controller 8176 after 3:30 p.m. $5,995.

Buick LaCrosse 2006 CXL VS

32K miles, gets 30 mpg on the highway. Immaculate! Premium package, leather. Mounted snow tires included. $11,000. Call 541-593-8749

541-383-2429

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

FordEscape Limited 2010, (exp. 10/1 9/1 4) Vin ¹B21115 Stock ¹83028A

$17,979 or $199/mo.,

...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

Buicks! Buicks! 2002 LeSabre, 135k very clean. $3999 2005 LeSabre 2005 179k, leather seats, very clean. $4999. 2007 Lucerne, 31k very clean. $7499 541-419-5060

$3500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -

proved credit. License and title included in pavment.

®

S UBA R U

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

ToyotaSienna 2011, (exp. 10/1 9/1 4) Vin ¹019106. Stock ¹43981A

$23,979 or $295/mo.,

$3000 down, 84 mo. at 4 .49% APR o n a p -

proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

GMC Suburban 1997, payment. fully loaded, daily driver, S UBA RU. SUBCRUOSSRHD.OOH extra clean, $2250. 1997 Chevy Astro, runs good, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 $1150. 541-410-4596

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Dlr¹0354

975

Automobiles

Chrysler200 LX2012,

Dodge Avenger 2013, (exp. 10/19/14) Vin ¹535474

(exp. 10/1 9/1 4)

VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014

2012. Low miles-

Stock ¹83015

$13,979 or $195/mo., $13,979or $195/mo., $2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.

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payment.

s u a A Ru SUSBRUOBSHHD.OOH

S UBA R u

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

Chrysler Pacifica 2005, (exp. 10/1 9/1 4) Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A

high miles per gallon$15,977

Vin¹302474 ROBBERSON y LINCOL N ~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 10/31/14

Check out the classifieds online OB www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well maint'd, 95K miles, very clean. 1 owner $8950 obo. 480-266-7396 (Bend)

$12,979 or $169/mo., CHECKVOUR AD $2500 down, 72 mo., 2011 Get there for on the first day of pub- 4 .49% APR o n ap less, low miles. lication. If a n e r ror proved credit. License Vin ¹ A15581 may occur in your ad, and title included in $21,977 payment. p lease contact u s Infiniti i30 2001 and we will be happy ROBBERSON great condition/ S UBA R U . to fix it as soon as we LINCBLN ~ II IR K R well maintained, can. Deadlines are: 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 127k miles. Weekdays 12:00 noon 877-266-3821 541-312-3986 $5,900 obo. for next day, S at. Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0205. pricing 541-420-3277 11:00 a.m. for Sungood thru 10/31/14 day; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! The Bulletin's 541-385-5809 Need to get an The Bulletin Classified "Call A Service Door-to-door selling with ad in ASAP? Professional" Directory fast results! It's the easiest You can place it is all about meeting TURN THE PAGE way in the world to sell. online at: your needs. For More Ads www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classified The Bulletin Call on one of the 541-385-5809 professionals today! 541 N385 N5809

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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 10/31/14

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 10/31/14

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

l

MERCEDES-BENZ GL450 2 010 Im maculate, custom wheels and new 20" tires. 2nd set MBZ wheels with snowflake tires. Full new car ext. warranty March 2017. 59,500 miles. Fully loaded incl. DVD and NAV. $34,500. 541-815-3049

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-

Countryman AWD Loaded - Get there in style! ¹H99552 $23,977 ROBBERSON

1993 sharp, well maint. Vin¹857877 Bargain Corral Price $3,977

Advertise your car! Add A Picture!

Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our 'Wheel Deal"!

Reach thousands of readers!

advertisers

More PixatBendbuletin.com On a classified ad

Call 541 N385 N5809

The Bulletin Classileds WHEN YOU SEE THIS

f o r private party l

L '"'" " "

J

go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Looking for your next employee?

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. (exp. 10/1 9/1 4) Your classified ad Vin ¹609121 will also appear on Stock ¹44515A bendbulletin.com $8,999 or $152 mo., which currently re$1000 down, 60 mo., ceives over 1.5 milTake care of 4 .49% APR o n a p lion page views proved credit. License every month at your investments and title included in no extra cost. Bullepayment. with the help from tin Classifieds S UBA R u Get Results! Call The Bulletin's 385-5809 or place "Call A Service 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. your ad on-line at 877-266-3821 bendbulletin.com Professional" Directory Dlr ¹0354

Subaru Outback LLBean Edition 2004,

®

Ford Focus 2010 Honda Pilot 2005, (exp. 10/1 9/1 4) Vin ¹520644 Stock ¹44661B

$9,999 or $169/mo.,

$1000 down, 60 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.

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S UBA R U

SUBLRUOSSSHD.OOU

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Jee Liberty 2012

Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154827 $11,977 ROBBERSON i ~

mHSB BH

541-312-3986

DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 10/31/14

Chevy Malibu 2012, Lots of options; sunroof, 6 speed trans with manual option, bluetooth, o nStar, Sirius satelite, heated seats, pw, pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech engine, 20 MPG city, 35 MPG hwy, USB port, Ipod r eady, $14,900 OBO. 541-504-6974

In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds

.i

Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149708

21.977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN~

SHHHHH

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 10/31/1 4

JEEP WRANGLER

I

OCH

2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt 8 cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

$22,500.

541-419-5980

Nissan Murano2012, (exp. 10/1 9/1 4) Vin ¹229346 Stock ¹83013

$15,979 or $199/mo.,

$3800 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -

proved credit. License and title included in payment.

©

S UBA R U

SUBLRUOSBSHD.OOU

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

Subaru Forester

1999 runs good! Vin ¹715926 Bargain Corral price $3,977 ROBBERSON LINCCLN ~

IM HO H

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 10/31/14

Suzuki XL7 Ltd 2003, 134K miles, well

equipped and well maintained, extra wheels with studded tires. Is set up to tow behind RV. Asking $4800. 541-771-1958 940

Vans

ChevyExpress Cargo Van 2011, (exp. 10/1 9/1 4)

Vin ¹126159 Stock ¹44535A

$22,979 or $279/mo.,

$3000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -

proved credit. License and title included in payment.

®

S UBA R u

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

2 0 15. Four subsequent one year terms may be entered into if agreed * upon by both parties 120 days prior to the * first of May. The Bend Metro Park and Recreation District is con("Spec/alprivate party rates applyto sidering whether or merchandiseand automotive categories.) not to provide these services i n - house, and if so desired will Principal subjects an- not enter into any ticipated to be consid- subsequent contract ered include general extensions once the b usiness. A dra f t decision has b e en agenda for the meet- made. The location of ing will be posted un- the concession is also der Legal Notices on subject to change in the Housing Works the event that Riverweb site www.hous- bend Park is deemed by Bend Metro Park ingworks.org. and Recreation DisIf you have any ques- trict to no longer be tions or need special the preferred location to host the concesaccommodations, please contact Sandy sion. N Goldapp at (541) T he P roposal ( Pro923-1018. For special posalN) shall be subassistance due to mo- mitted in a sealed ention, vision, speech velope and marked: and hearing disabili- Riverbend C o ncesties, the toll free num- sion. Prequalification ber of CenturyLink's prior to submission of services for custom- a Proposal is not reers with disabilities is quired. Technical questions re1-800-223-3131. garding the project, or requests for clarificaTom Kemper, tion or change, should Executive Director be directed to Matt Housing Works Mercer at 799 S W (abn Central Oregon Regional Columbia St r e et, Bend, Oregon 97702 Housing Authority) (541-706-6103) a n d LEGAL NOTICE must be received at least three (3) days PUBLIC AUCTION prior to P r oposal To be held Saturday, date and time. October 25, 2014, at Proposal packets can 1:00 P.M., at Jamison be obtained by conStreet Self Storage, tacting David 6 3177 Jami s o n Crowther at Street, Bend, Oregon 541-706-6102. 97701. The District may reject any Proposal not in (Unit A-017, Howe) c ompliance with a l l prescribed Proposing PUBLIC NOTICE procedures and reREQUEST FOR quirements and may PROPOSAL reject for good cause Riverbend Concessions all Proposals upon a finding of the District Sealed Proposals will that it is in the public be accepted by David interest to do so. L . Crowther at t h e Bend Metro Park & Recreation D i s trict Administration Office, 799 S W C o lumbia PUBLIC NOTICE Street, Bend, Oregon T he Bend Park & 97702 until 2:00 pm, Recreation D i s trict October 28, 2014, at Board of Directors will which time and place meet in a regular sesP roposing wil l b e sion at 7 0 0 p m ., closed, and the Pro- Tuesday, October 21, posals opened and 2014, at the district read. No Proposals office,799 SW Cowill be received after l umbia, Bend, O r egon. The board will closing. The concession site is consider approval of a located at Riverbend contract amendment Park 799 SW Colum- for the Pine Nursery To p l a c e y o u r a d , v bia Street, Bend, Or- and Ponderosa Park egon 97702. The con- Landscape 8 Irrigacession includes, rent tion Project, McArdle river tubes, stand-up Road easements, and paddle boards, pro- codify amended, new v ide free PFDs t o and suspended perHours: children 12 and under, sonnel policies. The Monday - Friday distribute river safety Board will not meet in 7:30am - 5:00pm information and other a work session. potential concession T he a g enda an d Telephone Hours: items as approved by s upplementary r e Bend Park and Rec- ports are posted on Monday - Friday reation District. the district's website, 7:30am - 5:00pm The T e r m of thi s www.bendparksanSatruday10:00am -12:30pm Agreement will begin drec.org. For more on the May 1, 2015 information call and will end on Sep- 541-389-7275. LEGAL NOTICE Housing Works will hold a Regular Board Meeting on Wednesday, October 22nd, 2014 at 3:00 p.m. at Housing Works, located at 405 SW 6th Street, Redmond, OR 97756 and with electronic communication with Board members.

tember 30th

Full Colar Photos

For an addifional '15 per week '40 for 4 weeks

Add Color to your ad

For an addifional '2 per day

Add a Border

For an addifional '1.50 per day

Ifalic and Bald headlines For an addifional .50C up to $2.00 per ad

AttentionGetting Graphics

For an addifional '3 per week '10 for 4 weeks

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GOLDEN RETRIEVERPUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for a caring home. Please cail right away. $500.

QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck Modern amenities andali the quiet can haul it ali! Extra Cab, 4x4, you will need. Room to grow in and a tough V8 engine will get your own little paradise! Call now. the job done on the ranch!

GOLDEN RETRIEVERPUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for a caring home. ease cail right away. $500.

QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenitiesandall the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your ofitQ little paradisel Call now

FORD F150 XL2005. This truck can haul it ali! Extra Cab, 4x4, and 8 tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!

GOLDEN RETR!EVERPUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please cail right away.$500.

~QUAINTCABIN ON 10 ACRES! I Modernamenities andall the quiet ,'you will need. Room to grow in ,'your ownlittle paradise! Call now.,'

II I

FORD F150XL 2005. This truck can haul it ali! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!

2t)05. This truck GOLDENRETRIEVERPl/PPIES, Ol/AINT CABIN ON fff ACRES! FORD F15D XL Ws are three adorable, loving Modsrnamenitiesandallthequiet can haul it ali! Extra Cab, 4x4, puppieslookingforacaringhome. you will need. Room to grow in and a tough V8 engine will get Please cail right away. $500. you r own little paradise! Call now.the job done on the ranch!

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GOLDEN RETR!EVERPUPPIES, QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck We are three adorable, loving Modern amenities andall the quiet can haul it ali! Extra Cab, 4x4, puppies looking for a caring home. you will need. Room to grow in and a tough V8 engine will get your own little paradise! Call now. the job done on the ranch! Please cail right away. $500.

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To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


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