Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q
SUNDAY Se tember 21,2014
~~ en 's azzscene isa
no
COMMUNITY LIFE• C1
MORETHAN
'110
IN COUPONSINSIDE
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
VOTING
~
JOHN HAMMACK'S LEGACY
IN O REGON
Online registration may save thousands
Model railroad —Alocal
club's annual openhousegave the public an opportunity to check out trains on asmaller scale.B1
By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
SALEM — Oregon elec-
TriathlOn — The Leadman
tions officials this Novem-
Triathlon on Saturday brought out athletes for a grueling long-distance race.D1
ber will see whether the
White Houseintruder
— A knife-wielding manwho made it to the front doors is a former soldier with PTSD,a relative says.A3
state's recent efforts to im-
— and the way he died not forgotten
College feetdaii recaps
In Yosemite National Park, after years of bad behavior by bears, the animals seem tobe bothering humans less. bemlbulletin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
A writerly chill at Bezos' fire By David Streiffeld
cludes the name of John Ham-
mack, a Central Oregon logger killed last summer near Sisters while fighting a fire. Hammack, 58, died on Aug. I, 2013, when the top of a massive, burning Douglas fir tree came crashing down on him. He'd been at the fire for just a half-hour and hadn't even put his chainsaw to its trunk. More than a year later, his
boss can't yet bring himself to pick up his own chainsaw, Hammack's family still feels his loss and federal officials have learned lessons leading
ico. Dozens of well-known novelists have attended, but they do not talk about
the private planes that ferried some home, the abundance of high-end clothing and other gifts, the lavish meals or the discussion under the desert stars by Neil
Armstrong.
day, the state sent out re-
m inders to nearly 900,000 potential voters who aren't
Where Hammack died 14
DES HUT S N ION L
yet registered for the general election. That effort was put in place by one of several changes the Legislature and secretary of
Black 11
Black Butte Ranch
state made to the election
system that clerks have already seen in the last two elections.
Oregon is one of five
Si te
states that created an online voter registration system in 2010.
MOUNT
Itlr A S H INGT 0 INILDERNES
Greg Cross I The Bulletin
SeeRegistration/A4
crippling
c
Freedom of Information Act request by The Bulletinand interviews with his boss
health care in Liberia
and daughter give details into Hammack's death and the aftermath.
By Lenny Bernstein
9
The Washington Post t
MONROVIA, Liberia
— While the terrifying spread of Ebola has captured the world's attention, it also produced
1933, with Hammack the
only firefighter death in the
L.S. Forest Service I Submitted photo
An American flag markswhere John Hammackwas killed in summer 2013. The top of a
Deschutes National Forest. That's not to say Central
burning tree — which was measured at more than120 feet tall — fell, crushing and killing Hammack.
Oregon hasn't felt the painful loss of firefighters before. In 1994, nine members of elite firefighting crew, were among the 14 who died at the South Canyon Fire on Storm King Mountain in Colorado. Like some of the Hotshots killed on Storm King, Hammack had deep roots in Cen-
zon, or soft sell either. The
Redmond, raised in Sisters and lived near Culver when
a lesser-known crisis:
the near-collapse of the already-fragile health
"That tree was huge. Huge.... I didn't even know there were
the Prineville Hotshots, an
Writers loved it. There was no hard sell of Amaman who sells half the books in America seemed
Ahead of National Voter Registration Day on Tues-
Ebola fight
leased by the U.S. Forest Service in response to a
A federal database shows 39 wildland firefighter deathsin Oregon since
end in Santa Fe, New Mex-
accurate.
investigation reports — re-
Cowboy, logger
founder of Amazon, hosts Campfire, a literary week-
The Bulletin file photo
A John Earl Hammack, 58, died Aug. 1, 2013. He is one of 39 wildland firefighters killed in Oregon since1933, and the only one in the Deschutes National Forest.
on fires. Federal and county
When Jeff Bezos tells writers to keep quiet, they Every fall, Bezos, the
election, and the state has streamlined registration to help sign up more voters using a new process to make its voter rolls more
to changes in tree cutting
New Yorh Times News Service
obey.
thousands of dollars per
The ForestServicehasdetailed what happened inthe woods the dayJohnHammack,a Redmond-bornlogger,waskiled. It found threemainlessonsand is changing thewaywildland firefighters will work.
regon's Fallen Fire Fighters Memorial now in-
And a Wed exclusive-
Over the past four years,
the state has added tools that may save counties
By Dylan J. Darling eThe Bulletin
— The Ducksand Beavers both won in late gamesSaturday night.D1
LOngeVity —A Silicon Valley contest is challenging scientists to discover ways that humans can live to biblical ages.A3
prove its elections process will pay off.
care system here, a de-
velopment that may be as dangerous — for now — as
trees that big still out there. (But) he was excited to be on that fire.
the virus for the average Liberian.
Nothing much scared him."
W estern expertssaid that people here are dying of preventable or treatable condition such as malaria, diarrhea, pneumonia and the effects of high blood pressure and diabetes,
— Kelli Jo Hammack, 36,ofRedmond
tral Oregon. He was born in he died.
to want nothing more each
SeeHammack/A6
Kelli Jo Hammackisubmitted photo
4 John Hammack with his daughter, Kelli Jo, and son, Johnny, in the mid-1980s at his home in Sisters. See more photos of Hammack thrOugh the yearS inSide.
such as strokes. Where
yearthanforeveryoneto
have a good time. All he asked in return was silence. For four years, the bargain held. But the fifth
Campfire, which writers say is taking place this weekend, is a little differ-
ent. Amazon's acrimonious
New app lets youseea doctor at home
services do exist, Ebola has complicated the effort to provide them by stoking fearamong health care workers, who sometimes turn away sick people or laboring mothers if they can't determine whether the patient is infected. And
battle with Hachette, the
By Carol M. Ostrom
fourth-largest publisher, is fracturing the secrecy and sapping some of the good will. (Amazon will not con-
The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — "Isn't there an app for that?" 'Itrrns out there is, if what
firm that the event is even
you're after is birth control or
happening) SeeAmazon/A7
a test for a sexually transmitted infection.
providerface to face on a
fast-growing "telemedicine," video conferencing that vir-
bonneau, president and CEO
some people, health care
smartphone, tablet or person-
of Planned Parenthood of
al computer.
the Great Northwest: "People
workers said, will not seek care, fearful that they will
tually extends medical exper-
Fueling the Planned Parenthood Care project, un-
are sexually active for six to nine months before they get
real-time "office visits" that
derway in Washington state and Minnesota, is a "horrible
a really reliable birth-control method."
bring patient and medical
statistic," says Chris Char-
In the latest example of
tise, Planned Parenthood is rolling out a pilot project for
SeeTelemedicine/A7
become infected with Ebola at a clinic or hospital.
"If you stub your toe now in Monrovia, you'll have a hard time getting care, let alone having a heart attack
or malaria," said Sheldon
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunshine High 86, Low 51 Page B6
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
E1-6 Community Life C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries 84 Sp o rts G1-6 Local/State 6 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C8
The Bulletin AnIndependent
Q I/I/e use recycle newspri d nt
Vol. 112, No. 2B4,
46 pages,
Tsections
0
8 8 2 6 7 0 2 3 30
7
Yett, the Liberia country representative for UNICEF. "It's a tremendous threat to children and a tremendous threat to families." See Ebola/A5
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
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By Hamza Hendawi, lan Phillips for fighting terrorism and that and Lee Keath the U.S.-led coalition to fight The Associated Press the Islamic State group in Iraq CAIRO — Egyptian Presi- and Syria should take note. "More than a year ago, I dent Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has faced widespread internation- warned that the region was al criticism for his ouster last heading to great danger from year of Egypt's first freely extremist thought," he said. "It elected president and his fero- didn't receive proper attention cious crackdown on Islamists until the events in Iraq took that has k i l led m ore t h an place and the Islamic State 1,000 and imprisoned more swept over the Iraqi-Syrian
time alliance. El-Sissi makes his first visit to the United
than 20,000. But in an interview with
borders."
"We are completely commit-
Washington is looking for support by Arab nations for
ted to giving support. We will do whatever is required."
The Associated Press — his first with the foreign media
its strategy to strike the Islamic State group. But at the
since he took office in June-
el-Sissi insists all his actions were to combat militancy and save the country from civil
war. He said Egypt is a model
States as president to attend the U.N. General Assembly in
the coming week. So far there are no plans for talks with
POliCe ShOOter SearCh —The suspect in the deadly ambush at a state police barracks in a remote part of northeastern Pennsylvania remained at large for an eighth daySaturday as police appeared to have narrowed their search, largely shutting down the areawhere he lived with his parents but leaving neighbors with few answers about what's going on just outside their front doors. With a helicopter flying overhead, law enforcement officers wearing bulletproof vests and armed with rifles continued their hunt for Eric Frein, 31, now on the FBI's Most Wanted list. "Our troopers are determined to find him and bring him to justice," state police spokeswomanMaria Finn said. Police released fewdetails about their search of the heavily wooded community in the Pocono Mountains, saying only that they were exercising extreme caution. Late Saturday, authorities lifted a shelter in place order but urged residents returning home to usecaution and to stay out of the dense, boggy woodlands where the search was underway.
President Barack Obama.
El-Sissi said he is ready to help the U.S.-led coalition. Asked if Egypt might provide airspace access or logistical support for airstrikes, he said,
But he appeared to rule out
sending troops, saying Iraq's military is strong enough to
same time, it has been critical of Egypt's crackdown on Isla- fight the militants and that mists, withdrawing some mil- "it's not a matter of ground itary aid and straining a long- troops from abroad."
NeW Zealand eieCtiell —The dominant center-right National Party was re-elected on Saturday to a third term in government with a historic level of support, despite an election campaign tainted by political scandals and resignations. The party's large lead became apparent early in the evening's vote-counting process. Whencounting finished, it had won 48percent of the vote, the strongest result for a single party since NewZealand adopted a proportional election system in1996, according to preliminary results from the national Electoral Commission. The commission estimated voter turnout at 77 percent, up from 74percent in 2011. Theresult gives the National Party 61 of the121 seats in Parliament, enough to govern alone, although Key said hewould work on forming a coalition with the three smaller parties that are part of the existing coalition: the ACTNew Zealand Party, United Future and theMaori Party.
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MISSillg Stllllellt — Nearly1,000 volunteers, some driven by worry for the safety of their own families, fanned out from the University of Virginia campusSaturday to search for a sophomore who disappeared aweekago. Volunteers met at the university's basketball arena before going out in teams throughout Charlottesville to search for18-year-old HannahGraham. Police said Friday they have spokenwith a man they believe waswith her in a bar on the night she went missing, but did not haveenough information to arrest or detain him after searching his car andapartment. In an emotional appeal, Charlottesville Police Chief Timothy Longo asked anyonewho mighthaveseenGraham andthemanearlySept.13 on the Downtown Mall to contact authorities. Longo stopped short of calling the unidentified man asuspect, but said police are keeping an eye on him.
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Ukraine CeaSe-fire —A giant explosion shattered the stillness of an early fall morning here just hours after Ukraine and pro-Russian rebels signed the latest version of their cease-fire accord, illustrating the fragility of a truce agreed upontwo weeks ago.Although shelling and other violence continues daily, both sides maintain that the agreement is still in force. Theamendment signed overnight Friday into Saturday wasmeant to strengthen the truce by requiring both sides to movetheir artillery nine miles back from the front lines, forming a buffer zone clear of heavy weapons. Although the artillery fire Saturday violated the original cease-fire, it was not a direct breach of the newprovision because of a24-hour grace period for its implementation. The artillery struck a dynamite factory that had served this region's mining industry, with predictably dramatic results. Two powerful explosions lifted a towering cloud of white smoke over the site that was visible from miles away.
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: y[ r
— From wire reports Bullit Marquez 1 The Associated Press
Residents continue to be housed in evacuation centers Saturday in Marikina City east of Manila. Tropical Storm Fung-Wong that brought torrential monsoon rains which flooded much of the Philippine capital gained strength and battered the country's northernmost provinces Saturday with heavy down-
pours and strong winds. The national disaster agency reported that more than half a million people were affected by the storm in metropolitan Manila and nearby provinces, forcing close to 90,000 people to evacuate. At least five people have been killed. 2 LocationsinBend Main Center
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White Houseintruder has PTSD,relative says By Evan Halper and Louis Sahagun
said he had a 3tra-inch folding
Los Angeles Times
pocket.
WASHINGTON — The intruder with a knife who scaled
a WhiteHouse fence and made
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Gonzalez has been charged w ith unlawful entry t o White House complex.
foraffBe
the
An Army spokesman con-
an Army veteran diagnosed
firmed that Gonzalez served on active duty and was retired in2012.
was stillunder investigation. Gonzalez joined the Army in A family member in Califor- the mid-1990s, the family memnia said Omar J. Gonzalez, 42, ber said. He was diagnosed of Copperas Cove, Texas, near with post-traumatic stress disFort Hood, has been homeless order after his first tour in Iraq. and living alone in the wild and "But they sent him back for a in campgrounds with his two second tour," the relative said. dogs for the last twoyears. During a second tour, about "We talked to him on 9/11, three years ago, Gonzalez was and he said he planned to go to reportedly injured by a homea Veterans Administration hos- made explosive device."His job pital to seek treatments," said was running patrols in Baghthe family member, who asked dad when his Humvee was hit," that he not be identified pend- the family member said. "A portion of his foot was ing completion of the Secret Service investigation. amputated," he said, "and the "He's been depressed for evidence is the limp you see quite some time," the relative in the video of him running said. "He'd been taking an- across the White House lawn." tidepressants and a nti-anxiGonzalez was honorably ety medication. I suspect he discharged and initially rented stopped taking it, otherwise a house in Copperas Cove. Afthis wouldn't have happened." ter that, he traveled around the Secret Service officials said country in a truck, sleeping in Gonzalez climbed a fence on campgrounds, the family memthe north side of the White bersaid. House at about 7:20 p.m. Friday The incident on Friday, Gonand sprinted roughly 100 yards zalez's relative said, "was a and into the building before he complete surprise. Omar usuwas capturedby officers. ally stays in Texas. We have no "Gonzalez failed to comply ideahow he gottoW ashington, It
with responding to Secret Ser-
DC
vice Uniformed Division Officers' verbal commands, and was physically apprehended after entering the White House North Portico doors," agency
The Secret Service contacted the family member at about
10 p.m. Friday. "Two hours later," he said, "an agent was knocking on my door. They officials said in a s tatement told us what happened. Omar's Saturday. President Barack in a hospital and under arrest. Obamawas not on the grounds But I was told their intent is to at the time. help him." "Omar is not some maniac," Officials initially said Gonzalezwas unarmed, but a crim- the relative said."He's aveteran inal complaint filed Saturday who needs help."
•
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knife in his right front pants
it through the front doors was with combat trauma, but authorities said Saturday the case
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 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, Sept. 21, the 264th day of 2014. Thereare101 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Sierra LeOne — Athree-day nationwide lockdown is expected to conclude today, with officials wrapping up inspections of homes in anattempt to find Ebola victims.
HISTORY
RESEARCH
an oiveo
OWB OU
Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and the scientists they are backing think humans can live to biblical ages. A new contest — the Palo Alto Longevity Prize — will give out $1 million in prize money to find out the secret to longevity. But some are concerned about
Highlight:In1989, Hurricane Hugo crashed into Charleston, South Carolina (the storm was blamed for 56 deaths in the Caribbean and 29 inthe United States). In1792, the FrenchNational Convention voted to abolish the monarchy. In1893, one of America's first horseless carriages wastaken for a short test drive in Springfield, Massachusetts, by Frank Duryea, who haddesigned the vehicle with his brother, Charles. In1897, the NewYork Sun ran its famous editorial, written anonymously by Francis P. Church, which declared, "Yes, Virginia, there is aSanta Claus." In1912,magician Harry Houdini first publicly performed his "Water Torture Cell" trick at the Circus Buschin Berlin. In1938,a hurricane struck parts of NewYorkand New England, causing widespread damageandclaimingsome 700 lives. In1948, Milton Berle madehis debut as permanent host of "The TexacoStar Theater" on
what increasing life spans will do to the planet — and how it will affect the meaning of life.
NBC-TV.
this month in San Francisco,
controversy, such as in vitro
Yun declared aging an urgent John Green1 Bay Area News Group problem, saying every day Joon Yun announces the Palo Alto Longevity Prize at the Golden Gate Club in San Francisco Sept.9. 100,000 people die unnecessar- Yun, a doctor and investor, is the main backer of the prize to crack the code of life. ily of age-related illness. The Presidio gathering induded proponents of life extension $500,000 to the first team to ex- expanding by about 75 million of life extension and advisers who believe the current limit on tend the life of a test mammal people a year." to the Palo Alto Prize, brush human life, roughly 120 years, by 50 percent beyond its life exAubrey deGrey and Sonia these concerns aside.De Grey, can be pushed back several de- pectancy by restoring homeo- Arrison, two leading advocates chief scientist for the SENS Recades, or perhaps hundreds of static capacity. years. The competition has drawn "Ultimately, I t h i n k w e ' ll well-credentialed researchers crack the age code and we'll from across the country. One hack aging," Yun announced. team is led by Doris Taylor, di"And if we do, not only will rector of regenerative medical
fertilization, are accepted by succeedinggenerations.
In1964, Malta gained independence from Britain. In1970,"NFLMondayNight Football" made its debut on ABC-TV asthe Cleveland Browns defeated the visiting New York Jets, 31-21. In1982, Amin Gemayel, brother of Lebanon's assassinated president-elect, Bashir Gemayel, was himself elected president. National Football League players began a57-day strike, their first regular-season walkout ever. In1987, NFLplayers called a strike, mainly over the issue of free agency. (The24-day walkout prompted football owners to hire replacement players.) In1991,an 18-hour hostage drama ended inSandy, Utah, as Richard L. Worthington, who'd seized control of a hospital maternity ward and killed a nurse, finally freed his nine captives, including a babyborn during the siege. (Worthington committed suicide in prison in 1993.) Ten years ago:President George W.Bush, defending his decision to invade Iraq, urged the U.N. General Assembly to stand united with the country's struggling government. The death toll in Haiti from deluges caused by Tropical Storm Jeanne topped700. Fiveyearsago:Record flooding hit the Atlanta area, leaving neighborhoods, schools and even sections of roller coasters submerged in several feet of water. One year ago:Days after mass shootings in Washington and Chicago, President Barack Obama urged theCongressionalBlackCaucusFoundation to help push stalled legislation out of Congress sodangerous people wouldn't get their hands on guns. Islamic militants attackedanupscaleshopping center in Nairobi, killing at least 67 people in the deadliest terrorist attack in Kenyain 15 years. AnAfghan wearing a security forces uniform turned his weaponagainst U.S. troops, killing three in eastern Afghanistan.
BIRTHDAYS Poet-songwriter Leonard Cohen is 80. Producer Jerry Bruckheimer is 71.Author Stephen King is 67.Basketball Hall of FamerArtis Gilmore is 65. Actor-comedian Bill Murray is 64. Movie producer-writer Ethan Coen is57. Actor-comedian DaveCoulier is 55. Country singer Faith Hill is 47. Actress-talk show host Ricki Lake is 46. Actor LukeWilson is 43. TV personality Nicole Richie is 33. — From wire reports
SAN FRANCISCO — Ever wanted to stretch your life to
search Foundation in Mountain View, argues humanity will
Old Testament proportions? You may be in luck. A movement of Silicon Valley thinkers and entrepreneurs wants you to live as long as Jacob, who died at 147, and maybe even Noah,
solve resource scarcity through innovation. Arrison notes that
who made it to 950.
increasingthehealthylife span, by extending the sweet spot of
the rate of global population expansion is slowing. Arrison, a Palo Alto-based author and teacher, claims that
One yearafter Google createda company named Calico with the goal of extending hu-
adulthood that combines vigor
with the wisdom of experience, will give the world's best minds
man life, Menlo Park investor
and Stanford-trained radiologist Joon Yun has launched a $1 million science competition with the lofty aim of "curing" the disease more commonly known as aging. While Calico's plan remains largely opaque, Yun
more time to innovate solutions
has laid out specific criteria
2011book on longevity. Eric Weinstein, managing director of Thiel Capital, one of the tycoon's investment
to humanity's problems. One of Silicon Valley's top crusaders against death is PayPal cofounder Peter Thiel, who
has pledged at least $3.5 million to de Grey's research and wrote the introduction to Arrison's
for the 11 teams that have already signed up to compete for the Palo Alto Longevity
Prize, which focuses on improving "homeostatic capacity," or the ability of an organism to bounce back to normal
funds, spoke at the launch.
People are squeamish about major advances in biomedicine, he said, fearful of disrupting the natural order. But innovations that begin in
in the face of stress.
At a swanky launch party
health care be transformed, research at the Texas Heart Inbut humanity. At that point stitute, a nonprofit arm of CHI
we'llhave unlocked human St. Luke's Health that focuses capacity." on the prevention and treatThe idea for the competition ment ofcardiovascular disease. came from Yun's daily life. As Taylor's outfit will pursue stem president of Palo Alto Investors, cell therapy. an investment fund targeting Even if human life could be the health care sector, Yun gets extended tens or hundreds of an early look at innovative re- years,there is disagreement search. At the age of 46, he's over whether radical life exnoticed the many small ways tension is worth pursuing. in which his own homeostat-
Some critics wonder whether
ic capacity has degraded over from apoor night's sleep. That same lack of resilience, Yun said, helps explain serious illnesses such as diabetes and hypertension — the body loses
increased longevity would rob life of its meaning. Others say there are far more pressing problems to address, from hunger and infectious disease to climate change. One of the chief critiques of
its ability to self-tune when its
life extension is that it would
blood sugar or blood pressure gets too high. The Palo Alto Longevity Prizehas twoparts. Judges will give $500,000 to the first team
exacerbate global overpopulation. Mathis Wackernagel, president of the nonprofit Glob-
time — for instance, recovering
that increases a small mammal's heart rate variability to
levels typical of a young adult. Heart rate variability is an in-
er than nature can renew, and many on our planet legitimate-
the target through these ambiguous tones, the researchers
While caaching the Nighty Nites, Jennifer makes every minute count. She deposits the team's fundraising checks directly from her smart phone.
[
Pays the bills for team uniforms and equipment online with Bill Pay. Locates the nearest ATM to grab cash for the big game day ice cream celebration.
Does your dog think the claim, it's probably because it water dish is half empty? New was hopeful that one of them research from the Universi- would lead to a reward. On the ty of Sydney shows evidence other hand, the researchers that dogs can be distinctly report, the "pessimistic" dogs optimistic o r p e ssimistic. grew distressed when amJust like h umans, optimis-
biguous tones didn't result in
tic canines have a distinctly sunnier outlook on life, while pessimistic pups are likely to
the task.
SelCO.Org I SOO-445-44S3 Several locations in Bend and Redmond
This study is really meant as a proof-of-concept for a sort of doggy personality testone that could help determine the bestservice dogs for par-
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ticular tasks. The researchers
found that pessimistic dogs, receive milk, a reward, while for instance, were doing better the other just meant they'd get in their training to be guide water. Once they'd learned animals for the disabled. They what those tones meant, they were careful and anxious and "water" pitch. If a dog kept happily hitting
Thanks to SELCO's mobile banking tools, Jennifer has more time to do what she loves, on or off the turf.
milk, and avoided repeating
drink. One tone meant they'd
w ere presented w it h n e w tones in-between the "milk"
rate, to join."
already about 50 percent fast-
The Washington Post
one of two tones — two octaves apart — to receive a
to hack, to create, to collabo-
al Footprint Network, argues
By Rachel Feltman
The dogs were trained to
either by a deity or by selection,
theplanet is already overtaxed. "Our demand on nature is
Dogs can bedowners, new study discovers
touch a target after hearing
said Weinstein, referring to DNA. "We are being invited,
Take SELCO to the sidelines.
dicator of autonomic nervous ly need more resources in orsystem health that decreases der to have a decent life," said over time. They also will award Wackernagel. "And we are still
expect the worst.
"We find ourselves sitting on
top of our own source code,"
about taking risks. But a per-
sistent, optimistic dog might do a better job in search-andrescue missions.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
TODAY'S READ:GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS
Fields filled with corn,soybeansare a desert for bees tt
By Josephine Marcotty Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
MINNEAPOLIS — Mac Ehrhardt often feels like he
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has one leg on either side of a barbed-wire fence. On one side stand the farm-
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ers who have bought seed from his family's business for
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three generations, and who
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rely religiously on insecticides to protect their crops. On the other is Ehrhardt's growing
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nesota's two-tone landscape of corn and soybeans has become a barren and toxic place for a crucial player in
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Keith Johnson plows a field for cover crop on rented land near his farm in Centre City, Minnesota. He lets the outskirts of many of his fields grow wild with flowers and many native plants, which helps
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the nation's food system — the
honeybee. Ehrhardt's uncomfortable
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bee populations.
position at the Albert Lea Seed
Company reflects the powerful role that farmers could
play in the plight of the bees. Though theyrepresent just 2 percent of Minnesota's popu-
Photos by Renee Jones Schneider/Minneapolis Star Tribune
lation, farmers control half its
Gary Schrad stands in one of his corn fields on the outside of Albert Lea, Minnesota. Schrad farms land. And their embrace of the 3,500 acres and uses genetically modified corn seed. monocultures and pesticides that form the basis of modern
industrial agriculture has been ded with astonishing genetics. implicated in the decline of One type of gene makes corn, bees and pollinators. soybeans and other crops imBut as long as farmers sit mune to herbicides, including a t the receiving end of a n Roundup, allowing farmers to agri-chemical pipeline that fu- kill weeds at will without killels the nation's rural economy, ing their crops. not much is likely to change, As a result, weeds and wildhe said. flowers between the rows are "No one in this county sparse — leavingbees andbutis getting paid for growing terflies to forage in the smaller bee-friendly corn," Ehrhardt and smaller areas that are left: said. Organic farmers might state parks, wildlife preserves ask why use chemicals at all, he added. "I respect that. But
and tiny strips of land between the roads and the fields.
out here in farm country, that's Another added gene makes not what's happening." the plants themselves poisonous to insects such as corn
Modernmethods
Gary Schrad, one of Eh-
rootworm that are the bane of farmers. But it's not foolproof
rhardt's customers, doesn't against all pests.
farm the way his father did.
The solution? A new class of
There was a t i m e w h en insecticides first introduced in farmers would plant their crop, 1994that is relatively harmless
ing 90 percent of corn and 60 technologies. "The fact is, the vast majorpercent of soybean acres. Farmers, in fact, have few ity of farmers have no choice options. The highly complex but to go down the road that seed combinations they find the seed biotech industry has on themarket are determined decided to lead them," Chuck by interwoven licensing agree- Benbrook, a professor who ments among the companies studies sustainable agriculthat control the seeds and the tural systems at Washington companies that make the in- University, said. "The farmer secticides. Often they are one can't go to the dealer and say: and the same. Bayer Crop- 'Hold the Roundup Ready Science and Syngenta, for gene.' It's not the pickle on the example, sell seeds and make hamburger." It's a costly package deal. some of the most widely used neonicotinoids. Monsanto, the A standard bag of GMO seed world's leading seed company, corn, pre-treated with insectiuses Bayer's neonicotinoids cides and fungicides, enough on some of its leading geneti- to plant 2 acres, costs $300 or cally altered seeds. Monsanto more, compared with about also developed the herbicide $120 for non-engineered corn Roundup, as well as the geneti- that usually comes with the cally engineered seeds that are same kinds of coatings. That resistant to it. price alone provides a powerWhen it comes time to buy ful incentive for farmers not seed, farmers have a dwin- to question the relatively lowdling number of alternatives. cost neonicotinoid coating that
harvest it, and then save some to people and animals — neonof the seed — or buy a neigh- icotinoids. Now added routinebor's seed — to plant the next ly as a coating on seeds, neonyear's crop. icotinoids provide additional Three corporations control Not anymore. insurance against soil pests. more than half of the world's N ow, most o f t h e s e e d Today, genetically engi- commercial seed m arket, Schrad plants on his 3,500 neeredcrops dominate agri- and the top 10 control threeacrescomes from corporations culture, and two-thirds of the fourths, according to ETC such as Monsanto and Syn- world's cropland getsaregular Group, a C a nadian nongenta,and they come embed- dose of neonicotinoids, includ- profit that tracks emerging
comes with it.
Trouble for bees
icotinoids after they noticed Entomologists and federal a sudden and inexplicable regulators say the case against collapse of their colonies over agricultural n e onicotinoids winter. They used to lose 10 is not settled. Bees encounter percent of their bees in the cold
many different i n secticides
months, building their hives back up in the summer. But in the past decade, average hive losses of 25 to 30 percent have become routine, a decline that
while foraging in millions of flowers and blooming trees. They live for only six weeks and are very efficient at detoxifying their colonies, bee
many say is not sustainable for
scientists say. They also suffer
their businesses. Bayer CropScience, Mon-
from invasive parasites, a multitude of diseases and a less
santo and others in agribusi-
nutritious diet of sugar water
ness say there is no evidence and artificial pollen that many t hat neonicotinoids are t o commercialbeekeepers have blame. Years o f
r e s earch adopted because of the Mid-
went into their development, west's increasingly flowerless including studies that con- landscape. cluded the low d oses bees
In short, though some sci-
encounter as they forage for
entists are beginning to link
pollen and nectar are insuf-
neonicotinoids to the decline of the honeybee, the precise ef-
ficient to kill them, company officials say. Yet beekeepers, environmentalists and many scientists
fect remains elusive. "We know half the equation," said Bob Koch, an ento-
disagree. Dozens of studies mologist at the University of have now found that low doses
Minnesota. "We don't know
of neonicotinoids may not kill what bees are experiencing bees outright, but can cripple from crops." their highly sophisticated navigational and communication HEARING AIDS skills, and hamper a queen's DOES reproduction.
EVERVONa
Scientists have also warned that crops take up only a small
MUMBLE?
portion of the insecticide, leav-
Connect Hearing
ing the rest behind in the soil. If the toxins spread from fields
e -*
— .
YOUII HEARING PROFESSIONALS
Bees, however, may be paying a high price of their own. into streams and wetlands, In 2006, beekeepers began they may ripple through the raising the alarm about neon- food system, they say.
FORMERL Y LBISELDHBIRIN6AID CENTER
1-888-568-9884
Find Your Dream Home ISrrrsrrorrisssrr ':
T h p~ ~
Registration
handwritten forms. Oregon doesn't track the
Continued fromA1 money it saves per election The process allows anyone using online registration, said with a state ID or driver's liTony Green, a spokesman for cense to register to vote on- the secretary of state. line. Voters can also update The process has worked information online.
well for pioneer states like
The process, now used in 20 Washington, which in 2008 states with four more on the was the second state to create way, is popular among a wide an online system. swath of voters, according to The state saves about $1.25 elections experts, and it saves for all of its nearly 242,000 clerks money and the time it online registrations it has protakes elections staff to deal cessed since 2008. "It's working very well with thousands of paper registrations every year. for us. It's very popular par"Processing an online reg- ticularly with the younger istration is eight to 10 times
County pays about 65 cents every time something is returned and is required by state law to be sent out again. Multnomah County has seen its undeliverable mailings drop by about half using the new programs.
"
•
using the Electronic Registration I n formation C enter — Colorado, Delaware, Mary-
land, Nevada, Utah, Virginia and Washington — registered an average of 5.4 percent of voters contacted via the system. The state would see an ad-
"It's a significant amount
of money when you're talking ditional 48,600 voters sign up about3percentof450,000bal- in the next few weeks if that lots mailed," Scott said. Data from the 2012 election
1829 NE Berg Way Custom 2 bedroom + den in award-winning Village Wisteria, cherry floors; clubhouse and acres of green space. $365,000 • ML S ¹201408925 DIRECTIONS: From Hwy 97, turn east onto NE Revere; lefton Berg
JAN LAUGHLIN
trend continues. — Reporter: 406-589-4347,
show the seven original states
BROKER, ABR, ats, CSP,GRI
541-350-6049
tanderson@bendbulletin.com
tk
MORRIS REAL ESTATE
voters, who do most of their
fasterthan processing apaper business online and like the registration," said Tim Scott, convenience of being able to Multnomah County elections
use their smartphones," said
director. Oregon's biggest coun-
Dave Ammons, a spokesman for the Washington secretary
ty has processed more than
of state.
75,000 registrations, since
This year, Oregon started using the Electronic Registra-
2010, according to county data that includes preliminary data
through mid-September.
tion Information Center to see whether eligible voters still
The data also show voters flock to register online in the
aren'tregistered ahead of the
weeks leading up to general
The system checks across other state agencies to see
elections. Deschutes County
Oct. 14 deadline to register to
his address with, say, the Department of Motor Vehicles, but hasn't yet updated voter
registration information. The electronic information system
vote in Oregon. helped member states identify "If the (online) record is cor- more than 6 million potential rect, then it may be 30 to 50
secondsto review everything and process it," Blankenship
voters in 2012 and 2013 alone. The system sends reports to state elections officials that
help identify potential inaccumay have to cut down to size, racies and eventually creates stamp the date and where it a more accurate voter roll, came from, then you scan it Green said. "If someone shows up in through a scanner and input all the data." both Oregon and Washington, Oregon has seen 412,000 we've got to make sure where voters either sign up or update they belong and make sure their voter registration online that they're not getting ballots said. "Versus a card that you
since its system was unveiled
in March 2010, according to data from the secretary of state.
Studies by different groups
in both states," Green said. The Electronic Registration
Information Center helps with that process. Just 14 states participate in
it. The system is what led Oring voter registration systems egon to announce last week show the online process is that i t w o ul d s end n early more accurate than paper reg- 900,000reminders to possible istration. It has the potential voters, potentially bumping up to save millions every election thestate'salready above-averin staff and material costs for age registration rate. the paper registration proUse of the information syscess. It also eliminates steps tem also means a potential that could lead to inaccura- cost savings for counties. cies, such as staff misreading Scott s a i d Mul t n omah that advocate for moderniz-
I O e SS i e n CI PAT LYNCH c/0The Bulletin,P.O.Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
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or e-mail:plynch©bendbulletin.com
Oct. 14 deadline.
C l erk whether a voter has updated
Nancy Blankenship said her office is benefiting from the online system in the final weeks before the 11:59 p.m.
e a
ELDERLAW
WILLS/PROBATE/ESTATE If I sell my rental home and carry the mortgage, what happens if I die before the buyer's have paid the mortgage olr? Will my estate have to collect the payments for 20 years? Depending on what method you use to sell the property, the buyers will either sign a promissory note or a land sale contract agreeing to pay the John D. Sorlie purchase price over time. If you die before the note or Attorney at Law contract is paid, the personal representative of your esBRYANT, LOVLIENtate will assign the right to collect the payments to your & JARVIS, P.C. heirs. Your heirs will then have the right to collect those ATTORNEYS AT LAW payments directly from the buyer. If you have more than one heir, each paymentrnsy need to be split be591 S.W. Miii ViewWsy tween the heirs, so it may be wise to set up a collection Bend, Oregon 97702 escrow so the escrow company can divide the payments 541-3824331 between the heirs.
REAL ESTATE What is the proper amount for an earnest money deposit? An earnest money deposit should be the amount by which the seller expects to be damaged if the buyer decides not to close the sale despite the removal of all contingencies. In other words, if the buyer Craig Edwards is able to arrange financing, the house passes an inspection, and all other contingencies are ArrorrMy ar Larrr satisfied, what costs and damages will the seller EDWARDS LAW likely incur if the buyer cancels? Will a new sale OFFICES PC price likely be less than the present otrer? Will 225 N.W. Franklin Ave. the seller incur costs if the sale fails? The amount cannot be intended as a penalty to the buyer: if Suite 2 Bend, Oregon 97701 it substantially exceeds the reasonably expected 541N18-s061 damages, it will be void and unenforceable.
What does an eider law attorney do? Many people believe that an elder law attorney represents clients over a certain age, say 65, with any of their legal issues such as landlord/tenant questions or divorce problems. While some law firms cover an extensive array of legal issues, elder law itself is focused on the issues Nancy Hoffman facing us as we get older. Clients need not be seniors to have eider law questions which rnay include estate Artorney ar Larr planning, wills, trusts, probate, guardianships, LAW OFFICEOF conservatorships, dementia, incapacity, long-term NANCYHOFFMAN care, elder abuse, and Medicaid eligibility. An elder 61535 SHwy 97, law attorney will try to help clients identify and Suite 5-296 address those issues which may arise as they and Bend, OR97702 their loved ones age. 541-5084087
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PATLYNCH doTheBulletin,PO.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708oremail: plynch©bendbulletin.com Nyquestionis:
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Ebola
Islamic State's releaseof
Continued from A1
Turkey'shostagesraises queriesabout exchange
Good data on the deterioration of non-Ebola health ser-
vices is difficult to find. But representatives of several Western
nonprofit groups confirmed a small, recent measles outbreak in Lofa County — a town
about 270 miles from Monrovia where the epidemic first hit Liberia — probably due to the fact that vaccinations are no
longerbeing provided.Measles is highly contagious and can be
'F
fatal.
Liberia had made some *
strides in recent years in ar-
eas such as reducing its infant mortality rate. Now, according to the World Health Organization, which cited Liberian government statistics, the Ebo-
I
the period of May to August 2014 saw a sharp drop in the percentage of infants delivered by a skilled birth
Michel du Cille1 The Washington Post
From left, Mawata Sheriff, Mohammed Sheriff, Fatuma Sheriff and Amie Turay talk about their sister's difficulty finding health care in Monrovia, Liberia. Their sister, Fatumata Fofana, died in late July from
a pregnancy complication during four days of labor when she could not get medical care.
attendant (52 percent to 38
friend to scour the city for help,
percent); the percentage of women who received prena-
to no avail. After two days, Fofana, 35, moved to another clinic about a
tal care within six weeks of
interview w it h
Los Angeies Times
broadcaster, Consul General
IRBIL, Iraq — Questions emerged Saturday over what, if anything, Turkey gave up in exchange for 49 mostly Turkish hostages who were released by Islam-
Ozturk Yilmaz said U.S. airstrikes occasionally struck near th e b u i lding w h ere
ic State militants in Syria af-
guarding it.
ter being held for more than three months. The hostages, who were taken from aTurkish consulate in Mosul, were released
Recep Tayyip E r dogan praised "the preplanned, carefully calculated oper-
a T u r k i sh
they were held and in one instance killed two Islamic State militants who were In a statement, President
ation s ecretly c o n ducted after p r o tracted n e gotia- throughout the night." He tions between Islamic State said the intelligence agency
la outbreak has caused significant declines in most public health measures. When compared with2013,
By Raja Abdulrahim
confirming their pregnancies half-mile from her home, where (41 percent to 25 percent) and a kind of physician's assistant women who r e ceive treat- was on duty. But her baby died. ment for malaria (47.8 per- It wasn't long before Fofana cent to 29.4 percent), among was dead herself. other measures. Accounts like Sheriffs, veriFor a few weeks in August, fied by an administrator at the the government ordered all clinic where Fofana perished, health f acilities n ationwide are disturbingly common dosed because so many nurses in Monrovia. A 40-yearold were becoming infected with teacher who lives in the PipeEbola. line community of nearby "If you broke a leg and you Paynesville said he was told at needed surgery, sorry," said a private hospital in Monrovia Sister Barbara Brillant, nation- in mid-August that his intense al coordinator of the Liberian stomach pain was due to an inCatholic Church's health coun- flamed appendixthat needed cil. "If you had appendicitis and to be removed. But because of needed surgery, sorry. It's not the fear of Ebola transmission, available." the hospital was not performWhen Fatumata Fofana ing such operations, he said. He went into labor in the last days has beenathome since,taking of July, she couldn't get in to medication. He hopes to have JFK Hospital, the city's main the surgery "when Ebola is general care facility, which over." "What I'm depending on is was closed at the time. Family members finally found a spot the intervention of God," he for her in a medical clinic, but said Saturday. He asked that complications developed. Her his name not be made public to brother, Mohammed Sher- avoid trouble with his medical iff, said he desperately sent a insurance later.
"If you brokea leg and you needed surgery, sorry. If you had appendicitis and needed surgery, sorry. It's not available." — Sister Barbara Brillant, national coordinator of the Liberian Catholic Church's health council
Pregnant women are espe- Catholic Hospital, the city's cially vulnerable in the new largest private hospital, is still environment. W h i l e
t r e at- closed, the result of 11 nurses
ment of some kinds of problems can be deferred,the arrival of a child cannot. As
a Washington Post photographer watched one day last week, a woman in labor arrived at the JFK Ebola treatment center in a t a xi , sent by workers at the hospital's
contracting Ebola. But six of her system's eight clinics are open, and two are delivering babies. "We cannot let Ebola run our
lives," she said. "People have malaria, they need to get their medicine. People have HIV,
theyneedtoget theirmedicine." recently reopened maternity For Fofana and her famiward because she had no ev- ly — including her four othidence she was free of Ebola. er children — any progress But noone came tothe Eb- comestoolate.Forthree days, ola facility's gate — and even she was wracked by pain, her if someone had, the woman's brother said, but no one could chances of gaining entry were help. next to zero. With no evidence that she had Ebola, the isola-
"In those three days, she was
crying 'help me, help me'," he tion center would not bring her recalled. ''We blamethe government," inside among those who have the virus. Brillant, the Catholic he addedlater."Allthe hospitals church'srepresentative, said were dosed. Nowhere to go. she has managed to keep some If all the hospitals are dosed, of her health network open. where can we go'?"
Dedicated to
"has followed the situation very sensitively and patiently since the beginning and, as a result, conducted a sucabout what other leverage cessful rescue operation." the Turkish government An unidentified Foreign might have used. Ministry source told the ofThe release was particu- ficial Anadolu news agency larly significant in light of that the intelligence agency Turkey's reluctance to join a developed a strategy — using U.S.-led coalition against the sources in Mosul, unmanned Islamic State, also known reconnaissance drones and as ISIS, perhaps because of electronic communications the hostages after concern for the fate of the — to free hostages. analyzing previous Islamic "I think i t' s self-evident State kidnappings in Syria that there was some sort of and Iraq. quid pro quo," said Howard Turkey insisted it did not Eissenstat, a Turkey expert pay any ransom for the reand the Turkish intelligence agency, and Turkish officials said that no ransom was paid. That led to speculation
at St. Lawrence University
lease of hostages. The reve-
in New York, speaking of the nue of Islamic State, which release. "I think what's like- has been called the richest ly is Turkey gave some sort terrorist organization in the of guarantee that its actions world, relies in part on kidagainst ISIS would be limit- napping ransoms, and some ed in nature and it wouldn't
E uropean
play a primary role in any
known to have paid for the release of their citizens.
military coalition."
The 49 hostages, 46 of whom were Turkish, included the consul, other consular
officials and their families. They were captured by the al-Qaida breakaway group on June 11, when the militants seized control of Mosul,
The
c o untries a r e
A s sociated P r e ss
quoted a former Turkish diplomat as saying that the official explanation "sounds a
bit too good to be true." "There are some very legitimate and
u n answered
es were flown to A n k ara,
questions about how this happened," said Sinan Ulgen, who now chairs the Istanbul-based Center for Economics and Foreign Policy
the Turkish capital. In an
Studies.
in northern Iraq.
After their release Saturday morning, the hostag-
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
Hammack Continued from A1 Hammack started f alling timber in 1978 and worked
off and on in the woods for 30 years, according to his resume. The document doesn'tmention his other passion — rodeo. When not in the woods Ham-
mack was often on a horse, ridingin bareback rodeo competitions. He earned all-around titles at the Sisters Rodeo in 1974, 1977, 1980 and 1984. In recent years, he'd served as the
bucking chute boss at the Sisters Rodeo. Hammack lived in a home
he built himself near Culver and grew up in the woods a round Sisters. So di d h i s
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daughter, Kelli Jo Hammack.
" It's where I s hot m y f i r st deer," she said. "It's where I
(
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H.. fi
learned to drive." After taking time off from working in the woods to build
the home by Culver, John H ammack returned t o
Kelli Jo Hammack/Submitted photos
John Hammack, right, in 2002 at the wedding of his son, Johnny Hammack, center, at the Grange Hall in Paulina. His daughter, Kelli Jo Hemmack, is also with them.
l o g-
gingtomake some money and avoid a mortgage, said Kelli Jo Hammack, 36, of Redmond.
He signed up with R & K Water Service, a logging outfit out of Washington, to cut trees on
fires. The small company supplied pairs of loggers — called a falling module or falling crew in Forest Service speak — to cut down large or diffi-
cult trees on or near wildfires. The team on Aug. 1, 2013, was Hammack and Norman "Jay"
Crawford, 49, of Sisters. The pair was assigned to Incident No. 398, a fire burning in the top branches of one very large tree westof Sisters offstate Highway 242. Lightning started the fire on July 31, 2013, along with other firesscattered around
the Sisters Ranger District of the Deschutes National Forest. Forest Service firefighters
responded to the fire that day. A faller with the fire crew tried to cut the tree, even making a
preliminary cut into its side, but after 45 minutes and burn-
ing through a full tank of gas for his chainsaw realized the effort was futile. A small fire
burning around the base of the tree added to the difficult chore. The crew called for a
helicopter to douse the blaze, but dispatch said one wasn't available. They decided to tackie the problem the next day with the help of professional loggers. When Hammack and Crawford arrived at the fire short-
"It's a change in culture for
long string of emergency vehia close watch on the top. As des joined the somber procesways been, 'We bring in fallers Hammack moved close to the sion as it rolled out of the woods to fell trees."' tree to start his cut, Crawford and into town. Now it's OK to leave a tree looked down to secure his burning for 24 or 48 hours, al- footing. When he looked back League of loggers lowing time for the situation up, he saw the top of the tree Throughout his career, Hamto become saferfor the people plummeting toward them. He mack worked mainly for logwho may work below. Even shouted as he dove to the side ging outfits in Central Oregon, with more time, Gales said, and was hit himself. induding Madras, Prineville firefighters and loggers still The big tree section square- and Warm Springs, but last face the difficult task of decid- ly struck Hammack, burying year was working for a friend ing whether a hazard tree, one him beneath a pile of burning of his brother. Rick Kintner, that poses a risk to people or branches. 53, of Enumdaw, Washington, has the potential to spread fire, The blow broke both of is a longtime logger who has should be brought down. Crawford's shoulder blades, but run R 8 K Water Service since If the tree in Incident No. 398 it didn't stop him from trying to 1991. He onlyhires loggers with had been left to burn it could uncover Hammack. Fire made years of experience, readyto do have kept burning all summer, the task too dangerous, even difficult jobs. Loggers like John perhaps even longer, according as nearby firefighters waiting Hammack. to Forest Service investigators. for the tree to be felled arrived Kintner calls H ammack's From the lessons report: to help. Amid the flames, fire- death a tragic accident. And "It would need to be confighterscould see the crossbar like investigators and Hamstantly monitored and spot of Hammack's chain saw and mack's family, he has struggled fires from the burning top his fire shelter. They knew the through the "what ifs" of the sitwould continuously set new worst had happened. uation. The top of the tree could fires throughout the remainder Another two-person faller have fallen 30 seconds earlier. It of the fire season. During peri- crew cut down the tree around could have hit a different spot. ods of high fire danger, this tree 6 p.m. that day. Firefighters Hammack could have dodged would likely ignite new fires decided it would be best to re- it. "It was just the wrong place that would become challenging cover Hammack's remains the to suppress. A decision to not next day, once the tree could be at the wrong time," Kintner take down the trees is a deci- brought down and fire around sald. sion to involve potentially hun- it put out. A firefighter brought While cutting trees at a wilddreds of firefighters, working an American flag from a For- fire could seem like a frantic in snag-infested country over a est Serviceoffi ce and draped challenge, he saidthe workwas long period of time." it over Hammack. The next relaxing compared with the The report shows Ham- day, a procession brought busy days spent in the woods mack and Crawford were Hammack through Sisters to a by a commercial logger. On a aware of the risks of being un- funeral home in Redmond. A typical day, a logger will cut der theburning tree and kept
us," Gales said. "...gt had) al-
John Hammack at the 2013 graduation of his oldest granddaughter, Taylie Jensen, from Redmond High School at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center. down 200 to 300 trees. In con- ing the loss. trast, a logger on a fire might Kelli Jo Hammack has choonlybring down eight trees. sen not to learn the exact de"So it is kind of like a vaca- tails ofher father's death. tion for us when we are on a fire," Kintner said. Incident No. 398 was the first fire of the year for Ham-
"I just didn't want to be an-
gry about it," she said. But she's still close to the dangers of logging and firefighting:
mack and for the company. It Her fiance does the same was also Hammack's first fire work as her dad. "This year I've asked him since the B&B Complex, which burned more than 90,000 acres, not to," Kelli Jo Hammack said. over 140 square miles, near Sis- "I'm not ready for him to yet." ters in 2003, according to his Some good has come from resume. the bad, though. Over the past The 18-page Forest Service year, her family has become i nvestigation r e port
a b o ut close to Crawford, the survivor of the accident. Shortly after vestigators had questions about her father's death, Crawford whether his name was listed on even led her to where the big R 8 K WaterService's contract. tree once stood, blocking out Forest Service officials de- his personalpain to help her. "Because I wanted to go out dinedtoaddresstheseissues. Kintner said Hammack's there, he took me out there," name was on the contract and Kelli Jo Hammack said. he's answered the Forest SerShe, Crawford and Ham-
Hammack's death shows in-
vice's questions. This year, Kintner decided not to sign a
new, three-year contract to fall hazard trees with the Forest Service.
mack's other familyandfriends gathered Thursday in Salem to see him added to the state's Fallen Fire Fighter Memorial
at the Oregon Public Safety "After (Hammack's death), Academy. "It's nice that's he's not forhappenedIhaven'ttouched my saw," he said. gotten," Kelli Jo Hammack SBld.
Familycarries on Kintner is not alone in feel-
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarltng@bendbulletitt.com
ly before 9 a.m., it was clear
Hammack was going to make
0
0
the cut, Crawford later told investigators.
"That tree was huge. Huge,"
said Kelli Jo Hammack. "... I didn't even know there were
trees thatbigstill out there." A fter her father's death last summer, she was drawn to the
place where he died and wanted to see it for herself. Investigators also sized up the tree.
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•
Reports show it was 120 to 150 feet tall and about 5 to 6 feet
I
wide near the base. The top of the tree that broke off and hit
I
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Hammack was about 4 feet in
diameter and 30 feet long.
.
Hammack wasn't alarmed by the tree or the task of cutting it down. "He was excited to be on that fire," Kelli Jo Hammack said.
.
•
"
+.:*~, 1
"Nothing much scared him." His mission on that August day was to bring down the large, burning tree. As he approachedthe tree,ready to dig
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•
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into it with his saw, a 30-foot
section snapped from the top and fell directly on top of him, killing him instantly. The section continued to burn, delaying the recovery of his body until the next day.
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$
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S
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r
r
Lessons leafned A concise, 20-page report by the U.S. Forest Service details
e
'
'I
•
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I
what happened in the woods the day John Hammack died
and whatcan be learned from it. The three main lessons:
• Share the story and similar stories so firefighters and loggers are aware of the dangers posedby cutting such trees. • Spend more time evaluating a tree and a situation before
starting to cut. Crawford may have put it best to investigators in talking with them: "Take
more time to assess the top. Walk around to get different
St. MEDICAL Charles GROUP
viewpoints." • Make it clear that the mis-
sion for a falling crew is to assess a tree and then cut it down,
only if the risks aren't too great. This last point has led to a
change in the way wildland firefighters work, said Shelby Gales, fire safety specialist for the Forest Service and Bureau
of Land Management in Oregon and Washington.
180 PROVIDERS AND 19 SPECIALTIES
SCharheHealhCan.orI/SCMG SQ
FANILY CARE IMMEDIATECARE PREOPERATIVECARE PEDIATRICS EMERGEiIiCVMEDICIIIiE CARDIOLOGY GENERALSURGERY SLEEP MEDIOilE BEHAVIORALHEALTH OB/GYN ANESTHESIOLOGVNEONATOLOGY PALUATIVECARE PijLMONOLOGY ONCOLOGY INFECTIOUSDISEASE HOSPITAL NEDIClilE HOSPICE CARDIOVASCUIAR SURGERY
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
wYoucome to this exclusive event, you are
Amazon
treated fabulously, and you get access to the next Steve Jobs, who happens to control how many books you sell."
Continued from A1 The struggle between the retailer and the publisher is
ostensibly over the price of
— Anonymous author
e-books but really over profit
margins and, ultimately, the future of publishing. The conflict, which is unlike any in recent publishing history, has inflamed tensions across the literary spectrum. It began six months ago and appears unlikely to end any time soon.
dispute as an advertisement in The New York Times, 17 writ-
ers and a trust split the bill. Douglas Preston, the founder
Some repeat Campfire at„iy(f 5IiD i '
they were not invited this year.
Nora Roberts, Stacy Schiff and Scott 'IIJrow. Preston also paid
Others saythey arehavingsecond thoughts about going. The
a share, as did the Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust. Seven other contributors asked to remain anonymous. "They were quite specifically worried about the possibility that Amazon would single
event has become as divisive as
the fight. "My guess is a lot of writers e
1
e
/. '
lastyear's festivities.
RickScihelli Jr./The New YorkTimes
Patterson, whose novels are The entr ance tothe Bishops Lodge Ranch Resortand Spa outside Santa Fe,New Mexico,where published by Hachette, gave Amazon hosts Campfire, a secretive and lavish gathering for writers each year. The online retailer's a speech in May, when he ongoing acrimonious push for higher profit margins has sapped some of the goodwill around Camp-
them out
warned that Amazon needed
not respond to questions on the
"I wasn't invited again, and
He noted, however, that the
fire, and some writers who have taken a stand haven't been invited back.
year, reacted with something
zon is selling with the greatest ration and stories."
akin t o
reluctanceas a way to achieve
t e rror. One w r iter
begged not to be mentioned in any way, insisting that it was a private, off -the-record event
event had been "terrific." and should remain so, lest Hugh Howey, a self-pub- Bezos be offended. lished science fiction novelist The Amazon mogul does who is one of Amazon's most dedicateddefenders, is in San-
ta Fe but said he had not wantedto go.
not make attendees sign non-
disclosure forms. His team just cautions them that the weekend is off
Even those who like to share back this year, as I want to be their every thought on Twitter able to speak my mind and and Facebook have kept it that not have any hint of a quid pro way. quo," he wrote in an email. Ayelet Waldman has attendBut this kind of openness is ed Campfire with her husband, not for everyone. Some writ- Michael Chabon. Both novelers, when contacted about their ists signed an open letter this past attendance and asked
summer in support of Hachette
whether they were going this
authors, whose books Ama-
"featured talent" that year as Armstrong as well as Marga-
comment.
the "Game of Thrones" novel-
Traces of Campfire on the Internet are decidedly rare. A publishing newsletter men-
ist George R.R. Martin and not
has rented the entire Bishop's
A m a z on's
and the directors Jason Reit-
ret Atwood, the musicians T
Bone Burnett and Moby, and George Martin — presumably the Beatles producer. A spokeswoman for Atwood
requirements for the online
Here's how the virtual visit works: Download a "Planned
world.
Parenthood Care" app for an Apple or Android device, or go to the plannedparenthood.org and fill in state of residence. A Washington resident will
ry, she says, think about what ban, but the case will continue. RU-486, which ends an happens in most offices: Patients self-report their medical early-term pregnancy, differs history. from the emergency contraWhat about making sure ception "morning-after pill"
get another screen, fill o ut
the patient isn't pregnant? Same drill: Patients self-re-
In terms of medical histo-
On Tuesday, the Iowa Su-
and rules don't have any lan-
for the pills, patches or ring,
guage about "telehealth" visits, said Deborah Carlson, nurse-practice adviser to the
state's Nursing Care Quality Assurance Commission. Under state law, Carlson
for chlamydia will be sent
noted, anyone of any age can
pills; those who test positive
obtain birth control without a
for gonorrhea will be urged to parent's consent; those under come in for injections. Patients 14 must have parental consent who report symptoms that for STI testing or treatment.
example. At Campfire, however, there is no stinting. One guest fondly recalled that the swag included down vests, fleeces, shoulder bags and small suitcases to carry
all the loot home. Getting back to mundane reality was posttook one of the private jets. (Others say they took scheduled flights.) Howey said Campfire was
he wrote in his email. "You're
bookseller into one of the coun-
try's biggest retailers, knows the psychology of w riters, several past attendees said in interviews.
open letter. "It seems that I'm not invit-
ed," she wrote in an email. She declined to say anything else.
"You come to this exclusive
event, you are treated fabu-
lously and you get access to the
A physical first? O'Halloran says that for a teen, having an STI test kit
already is?" she says. And as far as the doctor-patient relationship goes, for
available by mail might tempt
85 percent of W ashington's
Planned Parenthood patients, necessaryexaminations. she says, "Planned Parenthood And although she says tele- is their primary-care doctor." medicine can be usefulafter Telemedicine, she predicts, a doctor-patient relationship will help bridge physical disis established — for example, tance inmany ways — meafor follow-up visits with men- suring heart rates, testing tal-health patients — in this blood sugar, monitoring from case, she thinks they shortcut afar."Some people arecalling a crucial step. it the 'nurse in your purse,'" she "It strikes me as a real dis- says, and contraception is a service to young girls and natural fit. "We set about trying to figwomen to denythem the benefits of an in-person history ure out what would be legal, and physical exam by a doctor what would be possible, what before they're potentially pre- is good care. We feel like we scribed hormonal pills, patch- wrapped that all up in a bow in es or rings." Planned Parenthood Care." Kennedy agrees. "There should be a primary physician who knows the background, the family background and health, and can have a more
Free pipeinstallation estimates
some with infections to delay
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541-977-1737
much of a relationship over telemedicine."
For Charbonneau, it's back to that 'perfect-is-the-enemy-
errandsetc©gmx.com
of-the-good' equation, and that statistic about the months of
Yard Clean Up • Trash hauling
sexual activity without effec-
Clean out
tive contraception.
Apartments, garages, basements,
"We have to ask ourselves: Do we really need to make getting birth control and disease screening harder than it
storage units, etc. Major Credit Cards Accepted
•
•
p
preme Court stopped the medical board from enforcing the
that Planned Parenthood in
some forms and be invited to Washington plans to dispense an "office visit" with a medi- port the date of their last men- through virtual office visits. cal provider — in this case, a strual period, as they would in According to scientific innurse practitioner. an office. In any case, none of vestigation, the morning-after "You find yourself in a face- the birth-control methods dis- pill interrupts ovulation and to-face visit," Charbonneau pensed would affect an exist- slows sperm so there is never says. "You can see her and she ing pregnancy, Charbonneau a fertilized egg. can see you. It's like going to notes. But some anti-abortion acyour doctor, except you're not tivists still believe emergency No 'webcam abortions' breathing the same air." contraception can prevent a The visit costs $45, and for Washington nursing laws fertilized egg from implantnow, the patient also will pay
Europe this weekend. Martin
man and Werner Herzog. Di- could not be reached and Armversified Production Services, strong died in 2012. which helped stage the 2011 Whether or not fear of Amaevent, describes it on its web- zon is legitimate, it exists. site as a "private gathering When Authors United, a and conference of influential group of writers, reprinted the artists, writers, activists and open letter denouncing Amscientists for a sharing of inspi- azon's tactics in the Hachette
'Face-toface visit'
the Hachette conflict is just one
Lodge Ranch Resort and Spa, the first person I've heard sugwhich is set on 450 acres a lit- gest that people turned this tle north of Santa Fe. If you call down, so I'm inferring from the front desk seeking a par- you that the Hachette standoff ticular guest, the operator will has created tension?" not ring the room or even take Maxine Hong K ingston, a message. There are guards at who was awarded a Nationthe front gate to prevent the cu- al Medal of Arts by President rious from getting too far. Barack Obama in July, was a Bezos, who built Amazon Campfire attendee but is not from its dot-com roots as a coming back. She signed the
declined to comment except to included Jeff Tweedy of Wilco point out that the writer was in
could be something else will Most issues surrounding be told they need an in-person telemedicine center on payContinued from A1 exam. ments or rules for preventing One result: an estimated For now, shipping logistics out-of-state practitioners from 52,500 unintended pregnan- have stalled Planned Parent- "seeing" Washington patients. eremergencies in Washington in 2010, hood'sdesireto off But in the last legislative according to the state Depart- cy contraception such as Plan session, a broadly supported ment of Health. B (the "morning-after" pill), measure to allow insurance Combine that with the prev- because the pills must be tak- billing and reimbursements alence of chlamydia, the most en soon after intercourse to be for telemedicine consultations commonly reported sexually effective. was derailed after Dr. Patritransmitted infection, or STI, The virtual-office-visit idea cia O'Halloran, a Tacoma in the U.S., and gonorrhea was more than two years in internist, raised the specter — both primarily affecting the making. Hurdles included of "webcam abortions" for people ages 15 to 24 — and privacy, technology, legal is- patients who had "never seen Planned Parenthood hatched sues, payments, making sure any physician." O'Halloran was referring to a plan tomeet young peo- STI test kits could survive ple where they live: on their temperature extremes, craft- an ongoing legal case in Iowa, phones and mobile devices. ing foolproof instructionswhere the medical board last For now, the virtual visits and questions. year banned Planned Parentcreatea streamlined process For example: Don't doctors hood from using awebcam for getting mail-order birth need patients' medical histo- visit to dispense the abortion control — and soon, test kits ries, and don't patients need drug RU-486 to patients. for two common sexually pelvic exams? Charbonneau notes that for "You remember back in transmitted infections. a patient to receive either a Along with convenience, the the day, we thought we need- surgical or chemical abortion, virtual visits provide a techno- ed a pelvic exam and 37 the national standard of care logical answer to this question, other things in order to get dictates she must receive a pelCharbonneau says: "How do birth-control pills," Charbon- vic exam and an ultrasound. we see people who either can't neau says. "It turns out that B ut I o wa's l aw , u n l i k e or have difficulty walking into the perfect was the enemy of W ashington's, requires a docbricks-and-mortar sites, to at the good there." tor to physically hand the drug least get them started on birth All it really did was con- to the patient. So Planned control" or begin investigating vince a lot of women that birth Parenthood in Iowa devised a potential sexually transmit- control had something to do a system in which its doctors ted infection? with having a pelvic exam, she in major cities could remotely The national Planned Par- says. In fact, the only relevant dispense the drug to patients enthood organization chose test is blood pressure to make in outlying clinics through a Washington as one of the first sure it's not high, she says, a webcam and mechanical setstates for the project because number themedical provider up that opens a drawer and of its long history of support will ask for. In most communi- releases the pills. for w omen's reproductive ties,blood-pressure readings Charbonneau says the two rights and its strong local are available at drugstores situations are very different. chapter, according to the local and community centers. In Washington, medical pro"When we a ctually t ook vidersother than doctors are organization. Planned Parenthood hopes ourselves through the disci- allowed to dispense the drug, the project will expand next pline of figuring out exactly so there would be no need for to Alaska and eventually go what's safe and what's not a webcam system. "We will never be sending nationwide. Obstacles include safe, in the bricks-and-morstate laws — and possible tar world we decided long ago people we have never touched problems in the wake of a tele- we didn't have to do a pelvic RU-486," she says. "There medicine controversy in Iowa. exam," Charbonneau says, aren't any phone apps for and it didn't make sense to add ultrasounds."
Patients who test positive
T he company l i sted t h e
leverage in the dispute. An Amazon spokesman declined to discuss Campfire. A spokesman for Bezos did not respond to a message seeking
Telemedicine
become available.Insurance coverage is in th e works, Charbonneau says.
Employees a t
subject offear. Campfire this year is being nonpartisan. "They invite all kinds of peoheld under the conditions of utmost secrecy, as usual. Bezos ple with all kinds of stances,"
t h e r e cord. tioned the 2011 event, saying it
"I asked not to be invited
and for test kits when those
to controlhow many books you sell," one said.
f o r p u n ishment," poned for the attendees who
Preston said. An Amazon spokesman did
to be stopped "by law if necessary, immediately." I wouldn't have gone if I had been," he said. "I would feel very odd being there."
next Steve Jobs, who happens
of the group, said the writers headquarters in Seattle have to willing to be identified were pay for their perks, down to the Patterson, David Baldacci, Lee candy bars from vending maChild, Nelson DeMille, Aman- chines. And the company is fada Foreman, Stephen King, mously tough on its suppliers;
tendees who have supported Hachette in the dispute say
turned it down this year," said James Patterson, who attended
A7
ing, and consider that to be an abortion. Some activists
also worry that webcam visits, though solely for birth control, may ultimately lead to more abortions. "We know how these things
start," says Dan Kennedy, CEO of Human Life of Washington. "Who is honestly going to believe that's as far as it goes?"
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AS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
WASHINGTON WEEK
OSU-CASCADES
WASHINGTON-
Both chambers of Congress approved President Barack Obama's request to arm Syrian rebels and train them to fight the Islamic State in Iraq and theLevant. Both bodies included language adopting the president's strategy in a continuing resolution, a stopgap funding bill that provides enough shortterm money to keepthe government openat current spending levels. The measure cleared the House onWednesday in a bipartisan 273-156 vote. A majority of both Republicans (159) and Democrats (114) voted for the measure. The no votes were fairly evenly split between Republicans (71) and Democrats (85).
It's train time on Ben 's east si e
Company receives $3.4Min funding By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
An OSU-Cascades innovation that could simplify
the use of natural gas to power vehicles recently received $3.4 million in grant funding to help bring the product to market.
',is • i,
Onboard DynamicsInc.,
a spinoff of research conducted by Chris Hagen, assistant professor in the en-
U.S. HOUSE VOTE
ergysystems engineering program at the Bend OSU campus, has developed a means of using natural gas directly out of the gas lines
Greg Walden(R)................ Y Earl Blumenauer (0).......... Y Suzanne Bonamici (D) ..... Y Peter DePazio(0) ...............N KurtSchrader(0) .............Y
er vehicles, cutting the cost of fueling a natural gas powered vehicle roughly in half. If it succeeds, it would
used to heat homes to pow-
be the first commercial venture launched at the
The Senate onThursday passed the continuing resolution 78-22. The yes votes werecast by 45 Democrats and 33 Republicans, while nine Democrats joined 12 Republicans and Vermont Independent Bernie Sanders in voting no.
Bend campus. Last week at the Oregon BEST FEST, a Portland
conference for clean technology startups, the company announced it has received $3 million from the U.S. Department of En-
ergy and another $400,000 from Oregon BEST and the Oregon Nanoscience
and Microtechnologies
U.S. SENATEVOTE JeffNterkley(D) ................Y
Ron+den (D).................. Y On Monday, Senate Republicans blocked the Paycheck FairnessAct, a bill designed to make women's pay more equal to that received by their male counterparts. Needing 60 votes to invoke cloture, the bill failed to advance in a 52-40 vote. All of the
yes votes werecast by Democrats, while Independent Angus King of Maine voted with 41 Republicans against it.
Photos by Meg Roussos i The Bulletin
lan Swihart, 31, of Bend, rides with his children, Tessa, 1, and Lucian, 3, on the steam-powered trains Saturday during the Central Oregon Area Live Steamers open house in Bend. The event continues today from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
• Central Oregon Area LiveSteamers host annual model railroad openhouse
4
!ett-'
':++ 'ij!,'s "'rtstts
"It was like actually being on a real train, and it was fun
Jeff Merkley (D)................. Y
Ron+den(0) .................Y — Andrew Clevenger, The Bulletin
beingup inthe front," she said. Sierra's grandmother,
lon equivalent cost down
The Bulletin
Roberta Valejo, said it was a
Hansen said that although bifuel vehicles that
arly Saturday, crowds
E closest thing to a passenger train station anywhere started lining up at the
tE
trains she rode at Southern
As president of the Central Oregon Area Live Steamers
Maggie Hubbell, 34, center, rides with daughter, Georgia, 3, on
model railroad club, it's Brian
the one-eighth scale steam-powered trains Saturday. Theevent
SBld.
Benjamin's job to keep the trains running on time during
is held just east of Bend on 20 acres off Ward Road crisscrossed by 3t/2 miles of track.
the club's annual open house,
held on a 20-acre property off Ward Road crisscrossed by
1. 36 Pit
• Acres: 4,320 • Containment: 40% • Cause: Humancaused 2. Deception Complex • Acres: 6,010 • Containment: 85% • Cause: Lightning 3. 790 Fire • Acres: 3,023 • Containment: 90% • Cause: Lightning 4. Onion Mountain • Acres: 4,102 • Containment: 20% • Cause: Unknown Norts trtrildfire news, B3, B5
trains has been a way of not
can run on either gasoline or compressed natural gas are increasingly common, stations where such vehicles can be fueled are still
rare. Although the natural gas used for home heating and running a bifuel vehicle are chemically identical, the gas used in
to tell it from one of the originals," he said. The commitment to au-
day, the line to ride the club's trains was taking shape much out the models and ride the earlier. trains each fall for the last 19 "I had 20people lined up years. The free, two-day open at quarter 'til ready to go," he house continues today from said. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Benjamin said the open Benjamin said many of
thenticity goes beyond the
family. As hetells it, when
cosmetic. As the dub's name
he was 18, he met a girl, and
dispensing the fuel are expensive to build, she said, $1 million to $2 million each.
suggests, the locomotives are steam powered, using onboardpropane tanks to heat
couldn't bringhimself to take a job that would have takenhim
Right now, there are only three stations in Or-
away from home — and her
the water in the boilers. Billows of white steam trail out of
— for weeks at a time. Thirty
egon selling compressed natural gas, none of which
house is a joint effort of his
his fellow dub members are
club and the Eastern Cascade Model Railroad Club, which runs a smaller HO gauge indoor model railroad on the property. Benjamin said
sticklers for accuracy, with the locomotives and cars
the stacks, and ontheirwayup the handful of gentle hills scat-
first of the one-eighth scale
there'sa lotofcrossover be-
Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit • http://inciweb.nwcg. gov/state/38 • www.nwccweb.us/ information/firemap. aspx
For dub member Conrad
Firkus, of Bend, buildingand running the scaled-down
to around a dollar.
letting his childhood dreams get in the way of real life. Growing up, Firkus planned to work for the railroads, as had many of the men in his
trains wasn't due to roll out of the station until 10 a.m. Satur-
FIRE UPDATE
''beautiful experience" that remindedher of the miniature California amusementparks decades ago. "I thinkyou can go back to your childhood on this," she
3t/z miles of track. Though the 'Be d
Onboard Dynamics, said such a system could provide significant savings. Compressed natural gas, or CNG is about $2 20 per gallon equivalent, Hansen said, a bit less than half the price of gasoline. The Onboard Dynamics system could cut that in half, she said, bringing the per gal-
By Scott Hammers
in Bend.
U.S. SENATEVOTE
See video coverage on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.com/modelrailrsasl
O
Institute. Rita Hansen, CEO of
tween the two Bend groups,
though he's gravitated toward
drop and take a picture of it,
the larger trains as he's found his hands are too large for delicate model-building work. Club members have invited the public to drop by to check
you would be hard-pressed
built and painted to replicate
every detail of their full-sized counterparts. "If you were to take the seat
off it andput it against aback-
tered across the properties, the
locomotives chug-chug-chug, spitting water on the tracks. Sierra Sanchez, 11, of Bend,
saidridingthe trains was surprisingly realistic.
years of marriage and four children later, the girl, he said, is still here.
"If you love trains andyou can't work for the railroad, this is the next best thing," Firkus satd. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletirLcom
a vehicle needs to first
be compressed to 3,600 psi to be usable. Stations
are in Central Oregon.
Onboard Dynamics' innovation uses the pistons and cylinders of a
bifuel vehicle to provide the needed compression, bypassing the need for a dedicated CNG station. SeeNatural gas/B5
YESTERDAY
Donkey football detours to Bend toavoid Europeanwar in 1939 Compiledby Don Hoinessfrom
a letter to J.M. Lawrence, who
archived copies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
was withthem abroad earlier in the summer some of their experiences are given. They were at a health resort at the beginningof the conflict
100 YEARSAGO For the week ending Sept. 20, 1914
Almostshotasspy in Germany Mr. and Mrs.A.M. Drake,
formerlyof Bend, who were in Germany when the war broke out, recently arrived in New
York after passing through somewhat strenuous times in getting out of the war zone. In
riding in the car. Conflicting orders caused much delay, and
to get the trunks out of Paris
uninformed officials caused
They arrived in New York from Rotterdam in late
more. Severaltimes theparty were searched and their let-
and has not been heard from. September.
ters and papers read and the
and it became necessary for Mr. Drake to go to Frankfurt to
greatest carewa stakento see
obtain a passport for his chauf-
anything that Germany did not want to get out andyet a day-by-day record, embracing
For the weekending Sept. 20,1939
comments not at all flattering
Donkeyfootball slated for Bend
feur. While onthis trip accord-
ingto his account, he narrowly escaped being shot as a spy. Latera startwas made for the Holland frontier. It was down the Rhine through the military lines and there were
innumerable haltings and inspections, and frequently armed guards would insist on
that they did not get away with
totheGermans, was over-
75 YEARS AGO
Donkey football termed the "greatest gridiron burlesque" The Drakes got out of Euwill be brought to Bend on rope with their handbags, the September 19 and20, presentbulkybaggage havingbeen left ing a new and unique form of behind. Their chauffeur went entertainment. looked. At last neutral Holland was reached.
According to C.M. Davis,
advance and publicity agent, the European war was directly responsible forthe troop com-
ingto Bend. Following an appearance in Philadelphia, the long-eared footballists were to return to
New York City thence embark for London, England. While in Philadelphia, the management received a wire from London cancell ing theappearance and advisingthem to head toward the Pacific coast. A letter was immediately posted to the
Bend Twenty-Thirty Club requesting a date. SeeYesterday/B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
E VENT TODAY DOG AGILITYTRIAL: Bend Agility Action Dogs will host a performance event with beginner and master dogs; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; private home, 65875 Cline Falls Road, Bend; www.benddogagility.
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
JONATHA BROOKE:The folk-pop singer-songwriter performs, with Peter Bradley Adams andChristine
McKinl ey;$24;6p.m.,doors open at 5:30 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; www.peaksummernights.com or 541-385-3062.
FRIDAY
MONDAY
course; free;11a.m.-5 p.m.; Crook
MT. BACHELORKENNELCLUB ALL BREED AGILITYTRIALS: More than120 dogs of different breeds race through atimed obstacle
com, agilitypearl©yahoo.comor 541-280-4198.
COMMUNITY BENEFITANDYARD SALE: Yard sale to benefit nonprofit Chabad of Central Oregon programs; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Chabad Lubavitch of Central Oregon, 61023 Snowberry Place, Bend; www. jewishbend.com or 541-633-7991. FALL RV SHOWANDSALE: See new floor plans and technology advances for 2014 models; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo. deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. MODEL RAILROADOPEN HOUSE: Ride miniature trains and see models of all sizes; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Eastern Cascades Model Railroad Clubhouse, 21520 Modoc
Lane, Bend;www.ecmrr.org or 541-317-1545. MUSIC INPUBLIC PLACES: Musicians from the Central Oregon Symphony perform, featuring the Summit Express Jazz Band; free;1 p.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www. cosymphony.com or 541-317-3941. "LES MISERABLES": A new production of the opera about convict Jean Valjean; SOLDOUT;3 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "BLACK & WHITE": Arts Central's fundraiser features food, wine and silent and live auctions; $90, registration requested; 4-8 p.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; www.artscentraloregon.org, acinfo©artscentraloregon.org or 541-633-7242. MUSIC INPUBLIC PLACES: Musicians from the Central Oregon Symphony perform, featuring the Summit Express Jazz Band; free; 4 p.m.; Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor Village, 19800 SWTouchmark Way, Bend; www.cosymphony.com or 541-317-3941.
HEART:Theclassic rock band
performs;$39-$75plusfees; 6 p.m., gates openat4:30 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater,344SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend;www.bendconcerts.com or 541-322-9383. GRAND LIFE ACOUSTICTOUR:
FeaturingLosAngeles-basedsingersongwriters Isabel Beyoso,Chrissy DePauwandLeahHannaKin; 6:30 p.m.; BrokenTop Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe, 1740NW Pence Lane,Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. "LOVINGANNABELLE":A screening of the 2006 film abouta Catholic teacherand the affair shehaswith her female student; $5; 7p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub,70SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
TUESDAY REDMOND FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park,Seventh Streetand EvergreenAvenue; redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. com or 541-550-0066. CLASSICBOOKCLUB: Readand discuss "TheWoman inW hite"by Wilke Collins; 6 p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library,601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. OLD CROWMEDICINE SHOW:The Americana bandperforms, with The Deslondes; $35;6 p.m.,gatesopenat 5 p.m.; Century Center, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend;www.bendliveandlocal.
com.
Brian Bulemore / Submitted photo
Audience members attend a past Armchair event. Armchair Storytelling takes place at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Tin Pan Theater in Bend. and NWOregon avenues; www. bendfarmersmarket.com. PICKIN' ANDPADDLIN': Featuring the Moon Mountain Ramblers, with Sweet Harlots and ThePitchfork Revolution; $5, free for children 12 and younger; 4-9 p.m.; Tumalo Creek Kayak 8 Canoe,805 SW Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; www. tumalocreek.com or 541-317-9407. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Elizabeth & Hazel" by Dave Margolick; 6:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. CedarSt.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070. LEE KOCH TRIO: The California folk artist performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174.
Central Oregon educators and school administration; free; 6-8 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Jess Walter, author of "Beautiful Ruins," will speak; $20; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www. dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1027. "GOD OFCARNAGE": A play by YasminReza abouta playground altercation between two boys and the tensions that emerge; $15, $12 for seniors and students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. ARMCHAIR STORYTELLING: Featuring several storytellers sharing personal stories; $10 in
THURSDAY
advance only; 7:30 p.m., doors
SMART ART: SHOW,SALE, SOCIAL: Featuring an art contest, raffles, live auction and music; proceeds benefit Start Making A Reader Today programs; $10 or a new hardcover children's book, reservation recommended; 5 p.m.; Aspen Hall,18920 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org,
dturnbullcegetsmartoregon.org or
WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERS MARKET: 3-7 p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW Franklin
541-355-5600. TEACHERS' NIGHT OUT: Teacher appreciation night and community resource fair for
open at 7 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869NWTin PanAlley ,Bend; www.tinpantheater.com or 541-241-2271. BEND COMEDY SHOWCASE: Featuring Central Oregon female
comics; $5inadvance,$8at the door; 8 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage,125 NW Oregon Ave.; www.bendcomedy.com, scottieIIcocomedyscene.com or 480-257-6515. PATCHY SANDERS: The Ashland seven-piece folk band performs, with Brothers Reed; free; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70
County Fairgrounds, 1280 S.Main St., Prineville; www.mbkc.org or 541-388-4979. SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenueand Ash Street; sistersfarmersmarket@gmail.com. VFW DINNER: Fishand chips;$6;3-7 p.m.; VFWHall, 1503 NEFourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. MISSIONCHURCH FALL FESTIVAL: Featuring hay rides, pumpkin decorating, a mechanical bull and more; free; 4-8 p.m.; Taylor Ranch, 22465 McArdle Road,Bend; www.experiencethehighlife.com, info©mymissionchurch.org or 541-306-6209. REDMOND KIWANIS OKTOBERFEST:Over 30 craft beers on tap, plus wines and ciders; live music, games and silent auction; free admission; 4-10 p.m.; Wild Ride Brewing Co., 332 SWFifth St.; 541-980-2040. BEND ROOTS REVIVAL: A festival thatcelebrates and showcases the musical, artistic and cultural character of our community; free; 5:30 p.m.-1 a.m.; Deschutes Brewery's lower warehouse, 399 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive; www.bendroots. net. "THE TROUBLEWITH HARRY": Alfred Hitchcock's comedic whodunnit about Harry Worp, who appears dead on ahillside by a small town, presented by Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.beattickets.org or 541-419-5558. REDWOOD SON:The Portland Americana band performs, with The
YasminReza abouta playground altercation between two boys and the tensions that emerge; $15, $12 for seniors and students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC SERIES: Featuring VanchesteinPark-Vanhauwaert Trio; $35, $10 students and children age18 and younger; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. highdesertchambermusic.com, info@highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-317-0700. CRUTCHES:The Seattle punk band performs, with Frustration, E.F.A. and Hog's Breath; free; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.
SATURDAY MT. BACHELORKENNEL CLUB ALL BREEDAGILITYTRIALS: More than120 dogs of different breeds race through a timed obstacle course; free; 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www.mbkc.org or 541-388-4979. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring local artists and crafters; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Downtown Bend Public Library, 600 NWWall St.; 541-420-9015. CRAZY MAMACRAFTFAIRE: Featuring 70 local craft vendors and artists; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; BendFactory Stores, 61334 S. U.S. Highway 97; SewSavvyMP@hotmail.com or 541-848-0334.
TOUCHMARK rlNCE 1980
Revelry; free; 7p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "GOD OFCARNAGE": A playby
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PUBLIC OFFICIALS U.S. SENATE • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http:I/merkley.senate.gov
• Sen. Ron Wyden,D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http:I/wyden.senate.gov
Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. NE,H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state. OI'.Us
Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-District 55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District 53 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.
• Ed Onimus Phone: 541-604-5403 Email: Ed.Onimus©ci.redmond. or.us CITY OF SISTERS
520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters, OR 97759 Phone:541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561
Sisters City Council • David Asson Phone:503-913-7342 U.S. HOUSE OF Email: dasson@ci.sisters.or.us REPRESENTATIVES • Wendy Holzman • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver Phone: 541-549-8558 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Email: wholzman©ci.sisters.or.us Building • Brad Boyd Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 541-549-2471 Phone: 202-225-6730 Email: bboyd©ci.sisters.or.us • Catherine Childress Web: http:I/walden.house.gov 0I;us Phone: 541-588-0058 Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant Email: cchildress©ci.sisters.or.us STATE OF OREGON • McKibben Womack • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D CITY OF BEND Phone: 541-598-4345 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Email: mwomack©ci.sisters.or.us Salem, OR97301 710 NW Wall St. Phone: 503-378-4582 Bend, OR97701 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov Phone: 541-388-5505 CITY OF PRINEVILLE • Secretaryof State Kate Brown, D Web: www.ci.bend.or.us 387 NEThird St., Prineville, OR97754 136 State Capitol Phone: 541-447-5627 • City Manager Eric Ki n g Salem, OR97301 Email: cityhallecityofprineville.com Phone: 541-388-5505 Phone: 503-986-1616 Web: www.cityofprineville.com Email: citymanager@ci.bend.or.us Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us Prlnevllle City Council Bend City Council • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, D • Betty Roppe • Jodie Barram 159 Oregon State Capitol Email: broppe©cityofprineville.com Phone: 541-388-5505 900 Court St. NE • Jack Seley Email: jbarram@ci.bend.or.us Salem, OR97301 • Mark Capell Phone: 503-378-4329 Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: oregon.treasurer©state. Email: mcapell@ci.bend.or.us 0I'.Us • Jim Clinton Web: www.ost.state.or.us Phone: 541-388-5505 • Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, D Email: jclinton©ci.bend.or.us 1162 Court St. NE • Victor Chudowsky Salem, OR97301 Phone: 541-749-0085 Phone: 503-378-4400 Email: vchudowsky@ci.bend.or.us Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Doug Knight • Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian Phone: 541-388-5505 800 NE OregonSt., Suite1045 Email: dknight@ci.bend.or.us Portland, OR97232 • Scott Ramsay Phone:971-673-0761 Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Email: sramsay©ci.bend.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli • Sally Russell Phone: 541-480-8141 LEGISLATURE: SENATE Email: srussell©ci.bend.or.us • Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District30 (Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) CITY OF REDMOND 900 Court St. NE, S-323 716 SWEvergreen Ave. Salem, OR97301 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone:503-986-1950 Phone: 541-923-7710 Email: sen.tedferrioli©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. Tim Knopp, R-District 27 Redmond City Council • Mayor George Endicott (portion of Deschutes) Phone: 541-948-3219 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR97301 Email:George.Endicott©ci.redmond. Phone:503-986-1727 or.us Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us • Jay Patrick Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp Phone: 541-508-8408 • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 Email: Jay.Patrickeci.redmond. (Crook, portion of Deschutes) OI;us 900 Court St. NE,S-303 • Tory Allman Salem, OR97301 Phone: 541-923-7710 Phone:503-986-1728 • Joe Centanni Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state.or.us Phone: 541-923-7710 Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett Joe.Centanni@ci.redmond.or.us • Camden King LEGISLATURE: HOUSE Phone: 541-604-5402 • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 Email: Camden.King©ci.redmond. (portion of Deschutes) or.us 900 Court St. NE,H-477 • Ginny McPherson Phone: 541-923-7710 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1454 Email:Ginny.McPhersonc eci.redmond. Email: rep.jasonconger©state.or.us ocus
Email: jseley@cityofprineville.com • Stephen Uffelman Email: suffelman IIcityofprineville. com • Dean Noyes Email: dnoyescocityofprineville. com • Gordon GiBespie Email: ggillespie©cityofprineville. com • Jason Beebe Email: jbeebe@cityofprineville.com • Gail Merritt Email: gmerritt©cityofprineville.com • Jason Carr Email: jcarr@cityofprineville.com
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CITY OF MADRAS
71 SE DStreet, Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2344 •
Madras City Council • Mayor Melanie Widmer Email: mwidmer©ci.madras.or.us • Tom Brown Email: thbrown@ci.madras.or.us • Walt Chamberlain Email: wchamberlain@ci.madras. ocus • Royce Embanks Jr. Email: rembanks@ci.madras.or.us • JimLeach Email: lleach@ci.madras.or.us • Richard Ladeby Email: rladeby©ci.madras.or.us • Charles Schmidt Email: cschmidtcoci.madras.or.us
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
RKGON
OV. I Z 8
B I ' B C BFBS II'8
emer en near o an
AROUND THE STATE Salem dridgS —Thegroup choosing a design fora proposed third bridge across theWilamette River in Salemhasgonewith concrete instead of steel. TheStatesmanJournal newspaperreports theconcrete design is moreexpensivethan asteel girder bridge, but theSalemRiver Crossing Oversight Team said it would require less maintenance. The design consists of two side-by-side bridges, providing for two lanesof traffic in eachdirection north of downtown. Thenewspaper reports that aplan to financethe project is amongthe issues to be resolved. Thecost of the river crossing project is expected toexceed$300 million.
The Associated Press L8kSVISW blOfOSIS — Thefederal government hasannounced that a biomassplant to bebuilt in Oregonwill producefuel for the U.S. Navy andMarines. TheCapital Press reports RedRockBiofuels will use debris from logging or thinning operations to produce fuel at thefacility in Lakeview. It wasoneof threefirms selected for the project, which is intended to produce acombined total of100 million gallons annually at an averagecost of lessthan $3.50 agallon. It is also expect to generate 50 percent lessgreenhousegas emissions thanconventional fuel. The Bend Bulletin newspaperreported earlier this yearthat RedRockBiofuels had received a $4.1 million Defense Department grant for aplant engineering anddesign study. DanShoun, chairman ofthe LakeCounty Board of Commissioners, told theCapital Press he'scautiously excited about the project that would createjobs in the rural county.
PORTLAND — A bout 90
homes have been put on evacuation notice because of a wild-
fire burning in a rural area west of Portland.
The Scoggins Creek wildfire 2 miles northwest of Henry Hagg Lake started Friday afternoon and has scorched 400
acres. No injuries have been reported. Residents from about three
dozen homes have been told to evacuate, and people in another 50 or so were advised to
be ready to go, said Sgt. David Thompson, spokesman for the W ashington CountySheriff 's Office. Helicopters dropped water from Hagg Lake on the fire Saturday while ground crews
C~7WW W C~7W
worked to establish containment lines.
Fire officials said low humidity, northeasterly winds and hilly terrain have made it diffi-
Crew at the Scoggins Creek wildfire 2 miles northwest of Hagg Lakeprepare to workSaturday near
cult to contain the blaze.
Forest Grove. Water was extracted from the lake and dropped onto the fire.
Thomas Boyd/The Oregonian /The Associated Press
G ov. John K i tzhaber i n -
vokedthe Emergency Conflagration Act so the Oregon fire ers, eight helicopters and a sup- season is still not over, and the marshal can mobilize resourc- port team were on the scene danger to life and property peres from around the state to Saturday. The cause of the fire sists anywhere a spark and dry protect homes. About 200 fire- has notbeendetermined. fuel exists, no matter what time "We are reminded that fire fighters, half a dozen bulldozof year," the governor said in a
statement.
Scoggins Valley Park was closed to assist the firefighting effort and could remain that way for a week.
WOIVSS SttSCk —Thestate Department of Fish andWildlife says wolves killed eight sheepandinjured two flock protection dogs in northeast Oregon.Theagency told the Capital Press newspaper in astatement that it's the first time protection dogshavebeenhurt by wolves. The attacks occurred Mondaynight andTuesdaynight on public land. The wolveswerefrom theMt. Emily pack,oneof eight documented packs in Oregon.The sheepproducer has not beenidentified. Theagency says it's working with the producer to prevent further attacksandwill coordinate with other arealivestock owners. WillamSttS algae —State health officials haveconfirmed the presence of toxic blue-greenalgaein the Wilamette River neardowntown Portland. TheOregonHealth Authority says anadvisory recommending that peopleandpets stay out of thewater stretches from RossIsland to the south end ofSauvie Island. Nopublic drinking water comes from the portion of the river affected bythe algaeblooms. Accidental swallowing of the water might causediarrhea, nauseaandcramps. There's noestimate for how longthe health advisory will remain ineffect. Late summer is the peaktime for algae bloomadvisories, and six havebeenissued in Oregon sofar this season. Therecord is 22, set in 2010. — From wire reports
om ass ousecu wecomes e or'smenta By Vickie Aldous Medford Mail Tribune
an outsider. Relationships are formed as they do productive
MEDFORD — Liza Reibel used to suffer from such severe
work."
left her bedroom.
ers them to think, 'What's pos-
Today, she is on the board of direct ors and is a member of the newly opened Compass House, a Medford dub that welcomes people living with men-
sible for me?'" Reibel said.
She said new members are clinical depression she not only asked, "What are your goals?" "That one question empowrarely left her house, she rarely Unlike drop-in centers for
mentally ill people, Compass House is a members-only organization. Members must have
been referred by a mental or While there, members can physical health care provider, socialize, pursue their educa- who verifies the person is not a tions, work on administrative safety risk. tasks and dub chores, prepare But Compass House is acmenus, go grocery shopping, tively seeking new members, learn to cook and help each oth- including veterans struggling er. Compass House is staffed with mental illness. Opened on with professionals who facili- Aug. I, it already has about 50 tate the tasks, but the activities members. are member-driven. The dub hopes to eventually "Having a place to socialize have 300to400 members, said means a whole lot," said Reibel, Chad McComas, who has long who has recovered from her worked on behalf of the mendebilitating depression but still tally ill and is chairman of the struggles with post-traumatic Compass House board. stress disorder. "It's a place to He said the club gives membelong. They can come and bers a sense of purpose and a see familiarfaces.People ac- place to go duringthe week. "They step out of their isolacept them. They don't feel like tal illness.
"It's a place tobelong. They can come and see familiar faces. People accept them. They don't feel like an outsider. Relationships are formed
as they do productive work." — New member LizaReibel,on the Medford Compass House
was visiting Compass House earlier this week said a job program for mentally ill people is desperately needed. Her 27-year-old son was misdiagnosed with autism and
for her son to keep him afloat.
severe emotional disturbance
chiatric hospitalizations and
as a teen and placed in specialeducation dasses before finally being diagnosed with tion and find friends and peers. program,said executive direc- schizophrenia. "It was a challenging and difThey learn to worktogether and tor Matthew Vorderstrasse. learn social skills," McComas The club will work with loficult time for me. When I heard said. 'They come here to do cal employers to identify jobs his diagnosis, it floored me," something. They don't just sit on that could be filled by mem- said the mother, who asked that the couch." bers. Compass House will train her name not be used. Member Jill Redelf, who suf- members to do the work. Staff She said it's hard for mentalfers from severe anxiety and members will also learn the ly ill people to secure jobs bestress, said she enjoys working skills so they can fill in if neces- cause they are competing with at the reception desk and cook- sary, Vorderstrasse said. a pool of applicants who don't ing. She recently learned how The goal is for a member to suffer from mental illness. Her to make curry. stay in the job for six to nine son's condition has improved Redelf said she thinks Com- months, then move on to sus- and he is attending Rogue pass House helps people. tained, long-term employment, Community College, but he has "They get community so he said. teetered on the brink of homethey wouldn't be so nervous On the educational front, lessness in the past. "He's applied for jobs, gotten and stay home all the time," she members will be able to learn said. "I love it."
to read, pursue their GEDs and
interviews and then been frus-
In January 2015, the fledg- enroll in college, write scholarling Compass House plans to ship essays and learn about stuexpand its offerings by launch- dentloans,Vorderstrasse said. ing a transitional employment An Eagle Point mother who
trated that he can't get a job," said the mother, who has se-
curedOregon Health Plan,disability and food stamp benefits
hours to an ad on social media that was written by an under-
es flooded in. Everything from "Hey babe" to "What's your rate?"
The detect ive engaged those responders with increasing-
response that we get is pretty shocking." The eight men who have been arrested since July range in age from 21 to 46. Two of
cover Eugene police detective ly detailed text messages that them, McKee said, were on stupretendingto be a teenage girl. spell out that the girl is under- dent visas from other countries. The sting was part of a con- age and willing to engage in McKee said the police detinuing police effort to stop sex. partment wants to make parpredatory pedophiles that has One respondent lateragreed ents aware of the risk that's yielded eight arrests this sum- to meet the supposedly 15-year- out there. He said parents may mer, The Register-Guard in Eu- old girl at a shoe store. As think they are doing a good job genereported. reporters invited by police at monitoring the social media The post from the undercov- watched,the 27-year-old man and texting activities of their er detective went online Friday arrivedin ablackAudi andwas children. But given the prev— a teenage girl who says she's arrested on a charge of online alence ofpredators,parents lonely and wants to talk — and the detective's phone immedi-
ately started ringing. The detective didn't answer the calls, but the text messag-
sexual corruption of a minor.
should be more careful, he said.
"We've had the opportunity McKee has two daughters, to capture more, it's just liter- and he called it a "shocking ally a labor-intensive process," truth" to see the volume of predSgt. Scott McKee said. "The ators inthe area.
Burglarysuspectshot at Oregonhome The Associated Press OREGON CITY — Author-
ities say a suspected burglar was shot by someone staying at the Oregon home he was
trying to enter. According to the Clacka-
International.
Compass House-style clubs exist around the world and thereare more than 200 in the United States, Vorderstrasse SBld.
Medford's Compass House is
the second in Oregon. The other is in Portland, he said. Vorderstrasse said the dub
is a place where members help each other with the myriad
challenges they face. Every day theyhave meetings where members talk about what they need to improve their lives.
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
teestside.
Police stingscatch 8predators EUGENE — More than 80 men responded within three
imprisonment of mentally ill people, according to Clubhouse
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's
EUGENE
The Associated Press
In addition to helping members with educational and employment o p portunities, Compass House could save money by reducing costly psy-
after the death of the occu-
through the front door. He fired a single round staying there on occasion from a shotgun, injuring the in hopes of preventing more 23-year-old suspect who was pant, and relatives have been thefts.
taken to a Portland hospital
The son of the deceased with a treatable head wound. family member was sleepA 20-year-old woman with mas County Sheriff's Office, ing at the house early Satur- the burglar has been charged the home outside Molalla was day when he was awakened with drug possession and burglarized several t imes by someone forcing his way lodged in the county jail.
716 SW 11lll St. Redmond . 541.923.4732
AIS2'SRTSVQ
www.northwestcrossing.com
Join us
mnS Rsrixs~s~ =
ANTICXlk At TEKNOON THUR$DAF, SEPTEMBER 25TH
1:30am- 4 :30 I R~eister your table-top sized it ~t l : 00 Selected items will be appraised for freeby Karen Stockton. Broaden your knowledge of antiques while 8'hispering 8'inds treats you to refreshments, and rage prizes.
KAREN STOCKTON, owner of Antique Appraisal Associates, is one of the top antique appraisers in Oregon
Seating is limited. Please RS VP 292o mZ. C onnsrs Xv s
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
BITUARIES Neumann
Sarah Allison McMurray
June 16, 1934 - Sept. 12, 2014
April 5, 1983- Sept. 14, 2014
DEzTH NpTjCES RIchard H. Patricia M. Gainsforth, of Bend Oct. 19, 1939 - Sept. 9, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapeicom
Services: A celebration of life will be held October 19, 1 to 3 p.m. at The Old Stone Church on Franklin Avenue in Bend. Full details in Sept. 28 obituary. Contributions may be made to:
Central Oregon Community College Foundation, Boyle Education Center, 2600 NW College Way, Bend, Oregon 97701.
Frank Middleton, of Nampa, ID Feb. 15, 1948- Sept. 18, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family gathering will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org
David T. Thayer, of Bend Dec. 22, 1949 - Sept. 14, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: Private family services were held. Contributions may be made to:
Family Kitchen, 469 NW Wall Street, Bend, OR 97701.
Lillian J, Ricketts, of Bend Mar. 7, 1938 - Sept. 14, 2014
Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592
www.deschutesmemorialchapehcom
Services: Mass will be celebrated at St. Francis Historic Church in downtown Bend (corner of Lava Road and Franklin Avenue) at 12:00 noon on Tuesday, September 23, 2014. Contributions may be made to:
Saving Grace, 1004 NW Milwaukee Ave., Suite 100, Bend, OR 97701,
www.saving-grace.org
Carolyn Jean Stephani Mey 2, 1936 - September 1, 2014 Carolyn, 79, lost her fight w ith c a ncer o n S e p t . 1 , 2014. S h e l ef t t h i s e a rth
peacefully, supported by
the love of her children. B orn to Sylvia Marie Hossbach and Edw ard L a Vaun Keller, she grew up in
Chicago, Illinois.
Carolyn Stephani tended Thornton Jr. College, cared f or her a i l ing m other an d worked for Oscar Meyer. I n 1 9 5 8 s he mar r i e d Fredrick A n d r e S t e phani. They traveled west ending up in H a w ai i w h er e t h ey r aised t h ei r 4 ch i l d r e n . Carolyn worked as a r ealt or, a s a Pot t er y S t e a k House ceramic glazier and in the time-share industry. Carolyn's ashes will be interred with the remains of h er mother i n J o l i et , I l l . Survivors i nc l u d e h er brothers, James, B il l & T om; h er ch i l dr e n , L aVonne, J o n , Gem m a , Robin; and her eight grandchildren. C a r olyn's family and friends will r emember h er amazing s m i le, w i t t y s ense of h u m o r , b a k i n g , and her beautiful gardens! "No bloom is brighter than our memory of you!"
A resident of Bend since 1993, Dick passed from this life after an 18 year struggle with P a r k inson's d i sease. He was born and raised in Fond du L ac, W I , graduated from t he University of W isconsin, ~ E Madi son and r eceived his master's Dick Neumann from Golden Gate University, San Francisco. He was an E a gle Scout, P resbyterian D eacon , s erved in t h e U . S . A r m y , and held various offices in American Management Ass oc., Advisory Council f o r U.S. Dept. of State, Industry A d v i s or y B o a r d of MESA, and was an Adjunct P rofessor at G o l den G ate U niversity an d St . M a r y ' s College, Moraga, CA . He retired from Bechtel Engi-
Sarah Allison M cM urray died S u n day , S e p tember 1 4, o f a r ar e sar c o m a cancer. She was 31. A C e l ebration o f L i fe service w i l l b e h e l d on S aturday, O ctober 18 , a t 11:00 a.m., a t W es t s i de Church in Bend. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r p arents, M ik e a n d C a r o l M cMurray ; h er si st e r , B ethany M c M u r r ay ; a n d her grandparents, Gordon and Jane Hoy of Bend, and Roy M c M u r r a y of St . Helens. S arah was born i n P o rt l and, OR, an d t h e f a m i l y shortly a f t e r m o v e d t o Bend, in 1983. She graduated from Bend S enior High S c h oo l a n d fr om Seattle Pacific U n i v ersity in 2005. She was an active member of Bend's Art commun ity p ar ticipating a t P o et H ouse, The W o r k H o u s e a nd th e W o m e n' s M u s e Conference. She was employed by P a c i fi c S o urce neering Corp., San Fran- Health Plans in Bend. cisco as Vice President of I n l ie u o f fl o w e rs , t h e Human Resources in 1989. family r e quests memorial Dick was an avid fly fishc ontributions b e m a d e i n e rman, f i shing w a t er s i n Sarah's name to: Partners Alaska, Canada, Patagonia, In Care - Hospice House of N ew Z e a land a n d lo c a l Bend, 2 0 7 5 NE W y att lakes and streams. He also Court, Bend, Oregon 97701 collected corkscrews on his travels and was a member of the Golden Gate Corkscrew Collectors. Dick took Mar. 24, 1951 - Sept. 11, 2014 pride in compiling his famRobert Ivan Lowe, 63, of ily history after hi s r etirement. H e w i l l b e r e mem- Lebanon, p a s sed p e a c efully at hi s h ome on Sepbered for his wry sense of tember 11, 2014. humor and witty remarks. H e was b or n M a rc h 2 4 , Dick married Phyllis (Ry1951 in Roseburg, Oregon. ser) of Fond du Lac on Sept ember 7 , 1 9 57, an d s h e He moved from Portland to L ebanon a s a ch i l d a n d survives him. They had two graduated f r o m L e b a n on children, Kent (wife, Patty) o f B en d a n d K u r t (de - Union High School in 1969. ceased); three granddaugh- R obert m a r r i e d Pa m e l a t ers, K e l lie, J e n elle a n d Jackson on June 20, 1970 in L auren; h i s s i s t er , R u t h Albany, Oregon. Robert attended the UniNeumann Weil (Charles); a versity of O r egon Medical niece, Jennifer Weil Small ( Matt), and neph e w , School and received his degree as a Radiologic TechM ichael Weil ( K athy). Hi s 19 7 1 . Up on p arents p r eceded hi m i n nician i n g raduation f ro m t h e U n i death. versity, he began his career A Memorial Service wi ll be held 3:00p.m. Sat.,Sept. in B e nd , O r e gon a t St . Charles M e d i cal C e n t er. 27 in the First Presbyterian C hurch, 230 N E 9 t h S t . , Bob continued hi s e d ucaBend. I n l i e u o f fl o w e r s, t ion i n t h e m e d i cal f i e l d d onations i n Me m o r y o f through the School of CarDick a r e sug g ested t o d iothoracic Perfusion a n d OHSU Foundation, w as employed by D r . A l Parkinson's Research, 1121 bert Starr an d D r . J a m es SW Salmon St., Suite ¹200, Wood o f t h e S t a r r -Wood C ardiothoracic Sur g e r y Portland OR 97205, or 1st Group in Portland, Oregon. Presbyterian Church, Youth After moving t o L e b anon, Fund. he was employed by Dr. H. S torm Floten and Dr . A n t hony F u r n ar y of the Starr-Wood Cardiothoracic Surgery Group at the McKenzie Wi l lamette H ospital Aug. 26, 1960- Sept. 16, 2014 in Springfield, Oregon until He w as M ark P e t erson o f C o r - January, 2014 . loved by his f amily, many vallis passed away of natufriends, and held in highest ral causes in his home on regard by hi s p r ofessional September 16, 2014. M ark wa s t h e o l d est o f colleagues. B ob wa s a n av i d o u t four children born to Marvin and Margaret Peter- d oorsman an d l o ve d a n y s on. He was born i n S p o- type of f i shing, bird h unting and game huntinq. kane, Washington on Aug. He is survived by his wife, 2 6, 1960, and grew u p i n Pamela; his children, JenniRedmond, Oregon. H e i s s u r v i ve d b y hi s fer Leigh and Jesse Robert; his mother, Virginia Lowe; three brothers, Greg Peterthree grandchildren,Alyssa son, Jeff Peterson and Tim Shelfer, Cameron Embree, Peterson; His two children, and Jace Embree, all of Matthew Gothard and Rist een P eterson, a n d f iv e L ebanon; b r o t h ers, D a n g randchildren; a n d mu l - Burress of Vancouver, WA, John Stevens of Tri-Cities, tiple nieces and nephews. M ark g r a d u a te d h i g h WA; sister, Julia Stevens of s chool i n 1 9 7 9 an d r e l o - California; and many nieces and nephews. He was precated to Corvallis in 1981. H e w o r k e d f o r B en t o n c eded in death b y h i s f a C ounty Public W o r k s f o r ther, Walter Ivan Lowe; sis3 0 years, where he got t o ter, Juanita Snedden; and i ncorporate h i s l o v e f o r brother, Tim Burress. A Celebration of Life will engineering with his pass ion f o r th e out d o o r s . be held from 4:00 to 8:00 Mark was an advocate for p.m. Saturday, September a ll outdoor a c tivities an d 27, 2014 at his home near Lebanon. H u s ton- Jost Fuenjoyed spending his time i n th e o u t doors w i t h h i s neral Home is handling arrangements. large family. Contributions in hi s M ark w a s a w on d e r f ul man and father; he could m emory may b e m a d e t o Samaritan Evergreen Hosbe counted on to help anyo ne at a n y t i m e a n d t o p ice and s ent i n c a r e o f r ovide a l augh fo r h i s Huston-Jost Funeral Home, 86 W. Grant Street,Lebariends and family. T he service wil l b e S a t - non, OR 97355. urday, September 27, 2014 a t 1:00 p .m . a t t h e F i r s t Food, Home & Garden Presbyterian C h u r c h of C orvallis. Parking w i l l b e • s The et m limited the day of the serv ice. A d d i t i onal p a r k i n g will be available the day of t he s e r vic e n e a r A v e r y square on 9th Street. ~
Robert Ivan Lowe
Stephen Mark Peterson
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Sunday in London. Polly Bergen, 84:Emmy-winAngus Lennie, 84: Diminu- ning actress and singer who tive Scottish actor who played played the terrorized wife in the the "tunnel man" known as the original"Cape Fear." Died SaturMole in the 1963 prison-camp dayin Southbury, Connecticut. movie 'Vhe Great Escape." Died — Fromwirereports Deaths ofnote fmmamund the worfd:
Find It All Online
bendbulletin.com
Country singerdrew audiences to Grand OleOpry, aroundworld By William Yardley New York Times News Service
George Hamilton IV, a dean- necktie and a sport coat. He cut country singer whose string also began touring other counof wholesome hits in the 1960s, tries, becoming particularly including"Abilene" and"Before popular in Canada, where he This Day Ends," helped him be- recorded songs by Canadian come an enduring draw at the writers.Several of his songs GrandOleOpryand on concert reached No. 1 on the country stages around the world, died charts in Canada, while faring Wednesday in Nashville, Ten- less well in the United States. nessee. He was 77. When he began calling himHis death, four days after a self "the international ambasheart attack, was announced sador of country music," it was by the Opry. not hyperbole. Bill Malone, in In 1956, Hamilton was a his acclaimed history "Counteenager playing in rock 'n' try Music U.S.A.," called Hamroll bands in North Carolina ilton "one of country music's when he had his first hit, a love most zealous ambassadors song called"A Rose and a Baby abroad." Ruth," written by John Loudermilk. It sold more than 1 mil-
"He
traveled extensively
was "She's a Little Bit Country," a No. 3 country hit in the United
States. Handsome,
unf a ilingly
pleasant and comfortable in
front of a camera, Hamilton never played the part of the hard-living honk y - tonker. H amilton was born in W i nston-Salem, North C arolina,
on July 19, 1937, and began playing guitar 12 years later. He was a freshman at the Universi-
ty of North Carolina at Chapel Hill when he recorded "A Rose and a Baby Ruth," the first of
several songs by Loudermilk he recorded. Survivors include his son,
George V, a singer with whom he toured. Complete informa-
in the British Isles and on the tion on survivors was not imlion copies and reached No. 6 European continent," Malone mediately available. "My great-grandfather was on the pop charts. wrote, "giving performances Yet while Hamilton had sev- and lecturing on the meaning a hillbilly, a real mountain man eralmore pop hits,none rose and history of the music he had from the Blue Ridge Mounas high as his first, and within made his profession." Hamilton tains," Hamilton told The Bela fewyears he made dear what also performed in South Africa fast Telegraph while touring in he wanted tobe: a country sing- and, in the 1970s, in the Soviet Northern Ireland in 2011. "His er, in the tradition of Gene Au- Union, where he claimed to be son, my grandfather, moved try, Tex Ritter and other stars the first American country mu- out of the mountains to the foothe had admired as a boy. sician to perform. hills in North Carolina to work He took his earnest tenor to He had plenty of pleasant for the railroad. "When I was a little boy, I Nashville in 1959, and by the hits to play on tour. His biggest, nextyear he was a member of "Abilene," from 1963, reached would sit on his knee, and he the Opry. He went on to appear No. 1on the country charts and had all these old 78 records and there dozens of times over the the Top 20 on the pop charts. banjos, and we used to listen to next 50 years, tidy in a vest and Other hits i nduded "Before the Grand Ole Opry on the raa checkered shirt or maybe a This Day Ends," "Steel Rail dio from Tennessee. He was the Blues" and "Early Morning one who inspired me to listen to Rain," one of several compo- and love country music, so it's sitions by the Canadian folk because of him, really. "Eventually I had this dream singer Gordon Lightfoot that he recorded. "Canadian Pacif- that someday I might move to Death Notices are freeand ic," written by the Canadian Nashville and join the Grand will be run for oneday, but singer-songwriter Ray Griff, Ole Opry myself. And, lo and specific guidelines must be reached No. 1 in Canada in behold, last year was my 50th followed. Local obituaries 1969. His last big hit, from 1970, anniversary intheOpry." are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay be a submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information Oct. l3, l94T - Sept. IS, 20l4 in all correspondence. Iouing sort, husband, father and I For information on anyof grandfather, born Oetober l3, t94T, to these services or about the Tessabelle and Richard Hartzell, Dout, obituary policy, contact passed awaySeptember I5, 20/4, to go be
Obituary policy
< Douglas Wayne Hartzell
541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obils©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mailt Obituaries
P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
with his Lord. He is survived by his wife, LaDauna, whom he married May I, l98T. He is afso survived by four children: Tina, Tammi, Leva and Miehael; and by seuen grandchildren:Cody, Frank, Breanna, Tayler, Aaron, Tanner and Tonya. Heteas a Vietnam veteran proudty serving his country. He worked for Deschutes County Public Works where he retired after 30 years to enjoy camping, travetirtg, cruising and square danci~. He is afso suruived by his mother, Tessabeller ttuo sisters: Pauta and Joyee and three brothers: Phil, Richard and Steve. A Celebration of Li%mill be hetd at the Redmond grange, TOT SW Kalama inRedmond, on September 27,20I4 at I0:00 tLm.; offieiated by pastorKen wutzke and Chaptain Randa0 Ross. I Doitations may be made to PartnersIn Care Hospice of» Bend. Baird Funeral Hometeas honored to serve the famity, S4I-382-0903. teunu.bairdmortuaries.eom
William Marc Fullhart January 24, 1937 — September 15, 2014 William Marc Fullhart, age 77, passed away peacefully in his home in Redmond,Oregon on September I5,20f4. There will be a memorial service celebrating his life on Tuesday, September 23, 2014 at Ih00 am at Zion Lutheran Church, H13 SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond, Oregon, 97756, (54t)923-7466, with Pastor EricBurtness officiating. There will be a reception to follow. William (Bill) was born January 24th, 1937 in San Francisco, California to Robert Lee and Elaine Cameron Fuilhart. Bill and his family relocated to Loon Lake, Oregon in 1946 where he grew up. He attended high school in Reedsport, Oregon (Class of t 953) and later graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in English and Secondary Education from the Oregon College of Education in I I~ - Monmouth, Oregon tn t962. During his time at O.C.E. Bill met the love of his life, Sally AnnCoulter and they were married in the summer of t957 in Reedsport, Oregon. Bill worked in the insurance industry for the majority of his highly successful career. He began as an insurance agent traveling throughout thestate of Oregon to manage and support field agencies for Oregon Farm Bureau eventually becoming the Vice President. He then moved to a Vice President position at Investor's Insurance Company. In I976, he was appointed as CEO of U.S. operations at Seaboard Life Insurance Company where he worked until his retirement. Following retirement, in 2000, Bill and his wife Sally relocatedto Crooked River Ranch in Central Oregonto care for Sally's parents in their later years. One of Bill's greatest joys was golfing and as an avid golfer spent manyhours on areacourses. He played three days a week, nearlyyear round up until his final day. He enjoyed fishing, hunting and camping with his family. Bill was a strong Christian man and an active member in his church. His wisdom and discernment was valued by family and friends alike. Hecounseled and mentored many in his service to the Lord. Bill is survived by his wife of 57 years, Sally Coulter Fullhart, four children: Iulianne (Keith) Meyer of Salem, Oregon, Katherine (Luis) Liceaga, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Guy (Sarah) Fullhart, Grassy Key, Florida and Ginger (Steve) Lessey, Salem, Oregon; ten grandchildren: Jennifer (Aaron) Foresman, Kirsten (Brett) Shelby, Erik Meyer, Heather Meyer, Victoria Liceaga, CameronLessey, Christian Lessey, ChaseLessey, River Fullhart and Devon Fullhart; and two great-grandchildren: Harrison Foresman and Lincoln Foresman and one brother: Robert (Donna) Fullhart of tJardiner, Oregon and cousinDonald (Nita) Cameron, Gig Harbor, Washington. Bill was preceded in death by his parents: Robert Lee Fullhart and Elaine Alaska Cameron Fullhart. I In lieu of flowers, Bill wished that charitable donations be made in memoriam to: Zion Lutheran Church, 1 t13 SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond, Oregon 97756. t
TheBulletin
FEATUREDOBITUARY
44.'
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
DASHING DACHSHUNDS
B5
WEST NEWS
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Man accuse o startin K in Firea e e r oe into ometoca 911 By Frank Shyong Los Angeles Times
The man accused of "will-
fully and maliciously" starting the massive King Fire in Northern California broke into
a home near the ignition point to report the blaze to 911, the owner said.
Wayne Huntsman, 37, was arrested this week and charged Friday with forestland arson, .rv'.
with a special allegation for aggravating factors because the
'
„4
Richard Bacon/The Bulletin
Patch bolts to the finish line of he 2014 Deschutes Veterinary Clinic Wiener Dog Races benefiting the Central Oregon Humane Society. The race was part of the Bend Oktoberfest festivities.
Natural gas Continued from B1 Hansen said the grants will be used to refine and improve the prototype developed at OSU-Cascades. She said the current model uses one cylinder of a six-cylinder engine to provide the compression, requiring the remaining five cylinders to run for an hour or two to fill the tank. Once the tank is filled and pressurized, the system automatically shuts off the engine. The company's next model will employ additional cylinders, Hansen said, in hopes of bringing the fueling time down to around half an hour. Organizations
with
large fleet of vehicles, parboard Dynamics system. A truck bed provides a place to install a compressed nat-
ural gas tank, she said, and a fleet of trucks that all re-
,Or a f3,
Yesterday
Hagen, an assistant professor at the university, has led to a potentially simpler way to use natural gas to power vehicles.
Hansen said that although bifuel vehicles that
can run on either gasoline or compressed natural gas are increasingly common, stations where such vehicles can be fueled are still rare.
board Dynamics system to
by a "snowmaker" machine, which will force compressed
measure 150 feet wide and
originator of donkey softball 750 feet long. The rope tow and donkeypolo.The official will run 250 yards. A 50 merules for six-man football will
ter jump will be constructed.
be used when they do not conflict with the rules set forth by the management for donkey football. Each team is composed of six players each mounted on a specially trained donkey. On passes, laterals,kickoffs and in receiving the ball, the players will make the play
It will be used in the United
then mount the animal and
have made the development
proceed through the play. The donkeys which will be used have appeared in the Ringling Brothers circus and have been used by university
feasible. Funding is being accomplished by procuring 100
States Junior National Cham-
pionships which will come to Bend in March of 1965. Lights will be installed for night skiing. The project is being constructed at a cost of about $10,000. L ocal
c o n t r ibutions o f
time, money and materials
interest-f ree, unsecured $100
loans. About $7,000 already has been contributed Dr. Etteams on gridirons at Northtinger said. w estern U n i v ersity, O h i o Denny Reese, Sisters, has State and the University of been appointed manager of Southern California.
the Pilot Butte Ski Area.
The game will open at 8 o'clock at O'Donnell field under a flood lighting system brought here by the donkey football management un-
Reese has been skiing for 12 years at Bachelor Butte,
der the supervision of Jack Bartlett.
50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Sept. 20, 1964
Ski run work on Pilot Butte gets underway Installation of a ski run on Pilot Butte — a development which will provide Bend with
the only in-town ski facility in the Pacific Northwest — was
announced today by Dr. Richard Ettinger, chairman of the e xecutive committee of t h e Pilot Butte Ski Association. Work started today on a
ment and fire officials were
estry and Fire Protection.
parked on his lawn. "They told me they traced
Cal Fire spokesman Daniel Berlant declined to say who
door," Lorenz said. His door was damaged, but nothing was stolen, he added. El Dorado County Sheriff's Sgt. Jeff Leikauf said he could
occurred in 2003.
Since being sparked Saturday, the King Fire has raced made the 911 call, citing the on- through 119 square miles of going investigation. dense, dry forest, becoming "Any comment that wemake the second largest wildfire could jeopardize the case that's California has seen so far this being built right now," Berlant year. The blaze was just 10 said. "The important part to percent contained Friday and
us is that we're able to hold the not comment o n w h e ther person who started the fire reHuntsman made the initial 911 sponsible for it." call to report the fire. Huntsman has four prior fel"I don't know if that's accu- onies, including assault with a
threatened 12,000 homes in the
rate, because the investigation deadly weapon, grand theft, is being handled by arson auto theft and driving under investigators from Cal Fire," the influence, according to the Leikauf said, referring to the criminal complaint filed FriCalifornia Department of For- day. The most recent charge
them Lorenz. "I don't know why he did it,"
nearby community of Pollock Pines.
More than 2,800 people have beenforcedto evacuate,one of Lorenz said of the allegations against Huntsman. "I'd like to
knowwhat was in his head."
Walter Beckwith, a student of Chris Hagen's at OSU-Cascades, fills up a truck with compressed natural gas. The research of
Continued from B1 air over w ater d r oplets at Donkey football is p ro- freezing temperatures. duced with trained donkeys P ilot Butte's ski ru n w i l l managed by Jack B a rtlett,
Steve Ellsworth/The Associated Press
Smoke from a California wildfire rising behind Lake Tahoe as seen from the Nevada side of the lake near Incline Village, Nevada, on Wednesday. Higher humidity Friday helped slow the growth of the massive Northern California wildfire that authorities say was set deliberately and has forced some 2,800 people to evacuate.
Onboard Dynamics / Submitted photo
turn to the same place every night can be refueled with a system of lines running to with the Deschutes County test the technology once the each parking space. Road Department to outfit next model is complete. Hansen said the company a county truck with the On— Reporter: 541-383-0387, has reached an agreement
firefighters and peace officers. He is being held in lieu of $10 million bail. Ralf Lorenz, who lives in a house that overlooks the ravine where the fire began, was driving back from work Saturday when he got a call from his home security company. W hen he arrived,law enforce-
the 911 call, and he made the call after he broke the front
a
ticularly trucks, are the most l ikely market for t h e O n -
firecould have caused harm to
Hoodoo Bowl and in Europe.
As a senior at the University of Oregon he has raced for the university's ski team and pos-
sesses a Class A racing card. Reese currently is practice teaching at Bend High School and will receive a Bachelor's Degree from the university
shammers@bendbulleti n.com
Woman in electric wheelchairfalls 15 feet, off trail into Camaslake bed The Associated Press
that Camas-Washougal Fire
CAMAS, Washington — A s outhwest Washington f i r e
Chief Nick
chief says a woman in an
the water level in Lacamas Lake is currently very low
day. She was taken to a hospital for evaluation. She was
electric wheelchair fell off a
in order to help with annual
not identified.
trail and 15 feet down an embankment to a Camas lake bed but escaped with only minor injuries. The Columbian reports
lake cleanup. At another time Firefighters later hauled of year, the area where the the 350-pound w h eelchair woman fell would normally back up from the lake bed be underwater. and returned it to the womSwinhart said the woman an's family members.
25 YEARS AGO
Bryant who served as one of the first editors of the stu-
For the week ending Sept. 20, 1989
College turns 40 with a look back at rich history
dent newspaper, The Broadside, went on to graduate
Bob Powell, a science pro-
on construction with Murray
Brothers and Duncan Brothers construction companies in Bend. The Pilot Butte ski facility is being constructed under a land use permit issued to the
Bend Skyliners by the State of Oregon. Members of the executive committee are, Jack Wetle, Dr. Ettinger, Dr. H.M. Kemple,
compressor and a rope tow. The facility is expected to be Jack Meissner, Doug Gaines, in operation by November 1. Dr. Robert C utter, H arvey Artificial snow will be made Watt and Gordon Robberson.
"We knew it wa s an ex-
fessor at COCC since fall of periment," he said. "We were 1967, attributes COCC's rep- the only community college utation to the priority that in-
in the state and nobody had
structors have always placed done anything like this bea legal practice in Redmond on teaching — and teaching fore. I wasn't quite sure the in 1964, but his relationship well. school would continue." from law school and set up
Forty years ago this month, with what had become CenOregon's first c ommunity tral Oregon Community Colcollege opened its doors to 27 lege was far from over. full-time students. Eventually, Bryant would A long w i t h a n o ther 8 0 become a member of the part-timers, they attended COCC Foundation, the colclasses thanks to an $8,000 lege's fund raising arm, serve operating budget approved six years on COCC's board of by the Bend school district. directors, including a year as And with no campus to call chairman, and spend the past their own that fall of 1949, dozen years as the board's lecollege students and their gal counsel. instructors set up shop at As Oregon's oldest com4 p.m. eachday in the old munity college celebrates its Bend High School building 40th anniversary, Bryant's on Wall Street — occupying long association with COCC classrooms their younger col- in a variety of roles gives leagues had vacated minutes him a unique perspective on earlier. a school that now boasts a By the time Ron Bryant en- teaching staff of 72 full-time rolled at the fledgling school instructors, a 17 - b uilding six years later, Central Ore- campus and an annual opgon College had done little erating budget of nearly $13 to offset its reputation as a million. "If you compare campusrinky-dinky junior college, If you took French, you es, buildings, facilities, or may have had a dozen stu- aesthetics, it has to be one of dents in class," recalled Bry- the finest anyplace, not just ant, who lived in Madras at in Oregon," he said. "And I'd the time. "When I graduated stand our staff u p a g ainst in 1956, I think it was six of any community college in the us that got degrees." country."
But as a student new to
COCC in fall of 1957, Powell, who admits he was still "wet behind the ears," wasn't
making any long-range predictions on his future alma
mater's longevity.
NADBuOMWW
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
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TODAY
iI
TONIGHT
HIGH 86' I f '
Very warm with sunshine
I
ALMANAC Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 82 46'
72 38'
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
LOW I -"'"-
so
""4
54
74'
5 1'
47'
~
5 0'
46
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Intervals of cloudsand sunshine
Sunshine mixing with some clouds
Clear and mild
sunshine andwarm today. Generally clear
91' i n 1918 tonight .Plentyofsun 25'in 1958 Monday.
Seasid
I
67I57
65' 4Q
Mostly cloudy, not as warm; a p.m. t-storm
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. Umatiaa Hood 90/56 RiVer Rufus • ermiston lington 89/55 Portland 88/58 Meac am Losti ne eo • W co 88/54 Enterprlse dleten 83/4 he Oaa • • 87/52
Yesterday
cify
Today Monday
Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 85/72/0.02 86/67/I 84/65/1 78/60/0.00 74/51/sh 59/43/c 75/50/0.00 80/56/I 63/45/pc 91/63/0.00 79/62/I 78/60/I 58/48/0.34 55/40/pc 53/41/pc 83/66/0.00 86/64/s 80/58/s 75/62/0.00 79/67/pc 74/53/s 88n3/Tr 91/69/pc 91/67/I 80/61/0.00 84/60/I 72/47/s
Abilene Akron 65/57 7/54 Albany PRECIPITATION Albuquerque Tdlamo • • ST/ 9 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL:Warmwith andy• Anchorage 90/62 Mc innvie • 1.17" in 1982 plenty of sunshine JosePh Atlanta Record • HeP Pner Grande • Gove nt •• upi Condon 7/54 Atlantic City Cam 88 48 Month to date (normal) 0.0 1 " (0.28") today. Generally clear Lincoln Union Austin 81/ Year to date(normal) 5.52 " (7.04") tonight. Warmand Sale 66/56 Baltimore Graniteu •' 1/59 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 5" sunny tomorrow. 86/ Billings 76/50/0.00 77/53/s a 'Baker C Newpo 85/45 ' Birmingham 84/67/0.00 89/62/s SUN ANDMOON 64/54 • Mitch 8 87/44 Bismarck 74/50/0.00 71/44/pc 0 a m P S h m n a R 8 1I WEST.Warmwith 8 7I51 Today Mon. I\ Or9 g I8 Boise 88/54/0.00 84/62/pc Yach ST/51 • John uU Sunrise 6:51 a.m. 6: 5 2 a.m. plenty of sunshine 85/53 Boston 75/63/sh 63/55 • Prineville oay 6/46 tario Bridgeport, CT 73/47/0.00 Sunset 7:05 p.m. 7: 0 3 p.m. today except some 75/56/0.00 78/63/pc 89/54 • P a lina 8 7/ 5 1 8 58 Buffalo 77/55/0.00 70/49/I Moonrise 4 :25 a.m. 5:23 a.m. clouds at the immedi Floren e • EUgene n Ue d Brothers 86 49 Valen 64/55 Burlington, VT 70/46/0.00 77/54/I Moonset 5:4 6 p.m. 6:1 4 p.m. ate coastline. Su iVern 86/51 86/59 Caribou, ME 55/36/0.02 68/55/sh Nyssa • 86 / 9 Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 75/69/0.15 88/70/s La pine 4 Grove Oakridge New Fi r s t Full Last Charlotte 82/59/0.00 86/64/s • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES 87/51 86/53 /54 Chattanooga 85/63/0.00 86/59/pc 66 4 • FortRock Riley 85/46 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 86/48 Cheyenne 79/52/0.00 68/50/I 85/46 85/48 Chicago 77/63/0.08 64/47/pc High: 100' eandon Ro s eburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 81/57/0.00 77/49/c S ep 23 O ct 1 Oct 8 Oct 1 5 at Medford Jordan V Hey 65/54 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 90/56 Cleveland 79/53/0.00 72/50/sh Low: 35' 79/53 Marsh Lake 84/50 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 83/61/0.00 65/53/I 84/47 at Meacham 86/49 Gra ra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 85/61/0.00 73/51/pc T he Planets Ris e Set • Paisley 65/ Columbia, SC 83/66/0.00 89/67/s • 81/51 Mercury 9:17 a.m. 7: 4 6 p.m. Chiloquin 85/48 58 M edfo d Columbus,GA 83/69/0.00 89/67/s 84 / 48 Gold ach Rome Venus 6:04 a.m. 6 : 5 2 p.m. 0 ' • Columbus,OH 85/59/0.00 78/53/sh 62/ n94/58 81/51 Mars 12:47 p.m. 9 : 4 5 p.m. lgamath Concord, NH 67/30/0.00 74/56/c Fields• • Ashl nd F a l l s Jupiter 2:58 a.m. 5 : 2 3 p.m. • Lakeview Mcoermi Corpus Christi 89n6/0.00 89/74/pc Bro ings 83/53 89/5 84/47 Saturn 11:14 a.m. 9: 1 4 p.m. 65/5 83/44 79/51 Dallas 92/72/0.00 93/68/s Dayton 83/57/0.00 75/47/sh Uranus 7:38 p.m. 8: 2 5 a.m. Denver 80/52/0.00 72/55/I Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Dss Moines 85/69/0.06 70/49/s city H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i t y Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W city Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 81/51/0.25 68/46/c 86/52/0.00 69/58/pc69/55/c Ls Grande 84/43/0.00 88/48/s 84/51/s Portland 94/5 9/0.0087/59/s 78/58/pc Duluth 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asfcrin 70/60/0.06 63/46/pc Baker City 84/37/0.00 87/44/s 83/46/s Ls Pine 82/36/0.00 86/48/s 79/47/s Prineviiis 82/ 4 3/0.0089/54/s 79/51/s El Paso 88/67/0.00 81/67/I 3 NI~ 5 ~ 5~ 5 3 ercokings 63/58/Tr 6 5/53/c 66/54/pc M e dford 100/ 58/0.00 94/58/s 89/56/s Redmond 85/ 4 1/0.0088/50/s 81/46/s Fairbanks 55/44/0.22 48/32/pc The highertheAccuWsnihsrxmmev Index number, eums 87/41/0.00 85/46/s 84/45/s N ew port 7 3/50 / 0.00 64/54/c 64/53/c nnssburg 97 / 56/0.00 90/56/s 84/55/pc Fargo 71/50/0.07 67/47/pc the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin profscgcn.0-2 Lcw, Eugene 90/54/0.00 86/52/s 80/51/pc N o rth Bend 7 3 / 54/0.00 65/54/c 66/53/c Salem 95/57/0.00 86/56/s 78/54/p c Flagstaff 78/47/Tr 70/44/I 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Kismsfh Falls 89/47/0.00 84/47/s 80/44/s O n tario 87/53/0.00 84/58/s 86/57/s Sisters 81/40/0.00 88/51/s 81/47/s Grand Rapids 77/57/0.22 62/42/c Lskeview 90/52/0.00 83/44/s 82/41/s Pendleton 87/52/0.00 87/59/s 85/55/s The Dslles 92 / 54/0.0090/62/s 84/57/s Greenesy 75/61/0.39 61/39/pc Greensboro 81/58/0.00 85/63/s Wenther(W):s-sunny, pc-psrtly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-shcwers, t-thundsrstorms, r-rsin, sf-sncw flurries, sn-sncw i-ice, Tr-frsce,Yesterdaydata sscf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 81/59/0.00 81/58/I G rasses T r ees Wee d s Hsrffcrd, CT 75/41/0.00 79/59/c Absent Ab s ent Abs e nt Helena 79/46/0.00 80/50/s Source: OregonAiisrgyAssccistss 541-683-1577 91/75/0.05 sgm/s ~ tos ~20s ~aos ~dos ~50s ~eos ~70s ~aos ~gos ~toos ~ttos Honolulu ~ tos ~os ~ o s Houston 89n3/0.00 gfnf/s Huntsville 87/69/0.00 86/56/pc NATIONAL v Indianapolis 80/54/0.06 70/45/c As of 7 n.m.yesterday Jackson, MS 91/69/Tr 91/68/s Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity EXTREMES 43 7 Sv / Jacksonville 78/70/0.24 86/64/s C rane Prairie 290 4 5 53% YESTERDAY(for the aismnrck Porf Wickiup 49470 25% 48 contiguousstates) 71/44 7 7 us/t44 87/59 0 • Billings Crescent Lake 6 0 7 89 70% National high: 103 Amsterdam 72/59/0.04 64/53/sh Bois 77/53 Ochoco Reservoir 15920 36% atYuma, AZ P Athens 82/64/0.00 85/71/s • 84/62 Auckland 51/50/0.66 57/51/sh Prineville 93216 63% National low:27 Baghdad 106/77/0.00 100/70/s River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t .lsec. at Berlin, NH < v. v. X X'e Che n Bangkok 95/82/0.00 94/80/I 70/49 Ch go .q P Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 224 Precipitation: 2.81" 4v.v.v. x4. s s s esfs v eeijing 80/58/0.00 78/66/pc d d d 4 Colu bus 6 47 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1170 at Mayport, FL 4J Beirut 84n4/0.00 85/74/s S/53 ma • Den Berlin 69/56/0.27 67/50/I Deschutes R.below Bend 106 74/62 % W 7 6iM< 72/5 ~ LnV * 7/ee Bogota 66/52/0.04 62/47/I Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1610 8 5 S * 91 ~nN <f y StL n Budapest 73/57/0.04 74/58/pc Little Deschutes near LaPine 121 72/so 74/ s . -k ~ BuenosAires 68/52/0.00 66/56/s C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 2 0 * * * Chnrlo . L o s A n l es + + + v Csbn Ssn Lucss 86/75/0.26 86/73/pc 4 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 v ++ ++k Cairo 88/73/0.00 89/70/s Phoen Anchornen Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 215 Calgary 70/45/0.00 75/48/s 55/4 Cnncun 88n9/0.40 86/77/1 c sR'8+ Crooked R.near Terrebonne 151 7 /ea • nnlia v Juneau Dublin 63/55/0.00 62/45/pc Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 8 89/ 2 v Edinburgh 63/55/0.08 60/45/pc Ss/48 Geneva 79/57/0.15 70/56/I nw Orlen v Hsrsre • 82/61/0.00 81/54/s ' «71 Bend/Sunriver xtrem~e Hong Kong 91/79/0.00 89/78/pc ~ ~ Honolulu y y chlhll8hlg+ y y v Istanbul 75/59/0.00 76/67/pc 89/77 Redmond/Madras ~ xtr e~me ~ ss/43 ev.v.v.v . v.WW'e X +Inmi Jerusalem 77/63/0.00 77/59/s Monte y y v.v.v.v.v.v.wwxx ssns- 'z . 82/71 Johannesburg 69/47/0.03 73/53/s Sisters ~E xt re~me Lima 63/58/Tr 66/57/pc PrineviRe ~~ xt rem~e Lisbon 75/61/0.17 77/62/I Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 66/63/0.13 64/46/pc La Pine/Gilchrist ~ xtre~me T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 79/55/0.00 81/59/pc Manila 86/75/0.04 87/77/I Source: USDA Forest Service
Cannon
""
Considerable clouds; rain at night
OREGON WEATHER ria
EAST: Abundant
TH U RSDAY
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UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
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FIRE INDEX
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vsgss Lexington Lincoln Litiis Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
79/56/I 80/57/s 78/54/s
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA
84/62/s 75/51/pc 75/50/s 57/47/sh
57/44/sh 61/42/r 88/65/I 77/53/s
OklahomaCity
66/49/s
65/44/pc 58/45/c 75/51/I 71/51/s
82/58/pc 84/61/pc 64/45/c 70/40/pc 91/73/pc 86/64/pc 64/43/pc 78/54/c 72/54/s
60/45/pc 67/48/pc 78/63/I
49/28/pc 73/52/s 73/41/pc 61/46/pc 64/46/pc 76/52/s 67/46/pc 71/45/pc 83/51/s 90/77/pc 90/67/I 75/49/s
64/45/pc 83/56/s 88/67/pc n
ssns/s
57/44/sh 98/69/s 93/78/I 77/65/c
Ssnws
58/45/r 63/48/r 63/46/pc 70/55/s
sgn2/s
91/73/s 79/51/s 87n5/f 64/48/pc 62/51/pc 66/45/pc 79/51/pc 89/78/pc
78nO/s
77/60/s 75/54/s 66/57/pc 74/63/I 64/47/pc 72/55/I
ssmn
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 52/49/1.20 56/48/r 54/45/r 82/67/0.00 72/50/pc 71/55/s 79/55/0.07 62/40/c 60/44/pc 97n7/0.00 91no/pc 94nO/s 83/63/0.00 79/51/I 67/45/pc 88/69/0.09 73/46/s 73/56/s 91/67/0.00 88/61/pc 77/54/s 78/66/0.00 81/65/pc 83/64/s 83/59/0.00 80/51/I 68/47/pc 78/65/0.04 63/41/sh 67/46/s
son«o.oo 89/59/pc
4
75/53/s
90/74/0.27 78/63/0.01 77/59/0.24 88/67/0.00
88n5/I 88/76/I 61/45/pc 64/50/s
75/57/0.00 74/58/0.00 76/68/Tr 89/69/0.08 86/69/0.27 84/71/1.11
81/64/pc 81/63/pc
65/49/s 83/55/I
sgns/o.oo 90n3/s 83no/r
84/56/I 72/49/s 86ff2/I fofm/o.oo101n5/s 81/60/Tr 70/49/pc 79/56/0.00 83/64/pc 99/81/0.00 98f/9/pc Pittsburgh 78/57/0.00 74/52/1 Portland, ME 62/36/0.00 70/57/c Providence 72/39/0.00 75/62/sh Raleigh 81/58/0.00 86/66/s Rapid City 78/53/Tr 72/47/s nsno 88/56/0.00 78/55/I Richmond 85/58/0.00 88/65/pc Rochester, NY 79/56/0.00 72/49/I Sacramento 87/62/0.00 85/59/s Sf. Louis 87/65/0.00 76/54/pc Salt Lake City 84/56/0.00 76/58/I Ssn Antonio 92/76/0.01 91f/1/pc Ssn Diego 77n«o.oo 78/68/pc Ssn Francisco 77/64/0.00 74/62/pc Ssn Jose 77/62/0.00 75/59/s Santa rs 89/53/0.00 77/56/I Savannah 77/71/0.02 88/67/s Seattle 76/58/0.00 82/59/s Sioux Falls 84/62/0.01 69/47/s Spokane 81/54/0.00 87/57/s Springfield, Mo 85/63/0.00 76/51/pc Tampa 83/70/0.51 85n5/I Tucson 90/73/0.00 90/72/pc Tulsa 89/68/0.00 82/55/I Washington, DC 84/64/0.00 87/65/I Wichita 94/66/0.00 81/53/pc Yskims 88/51/0.00 89/56/s Yums 100/79/0.00 1OOns/s
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Psoris Philadelphia Phoenix
76/54/s 73/52/pc
63/48/pc
Yesterday Today Monday
City
71/53/s 71/49/s 89/71/I 75/52/s 75/51/s 77/60/s 79/57/c 71/57/s
87nf A
103/76/s 70/48/s 73/51/s 100/76/pc 59/43/pc 71/43/pc 77/49/pc 78/54/s 78/51/pc 86/52/s 78/52/s 57/44/sh 88/59/s 72/52/s 75/59/I 92/73/pc 78/68/pc 74/61/pc 77/58/s 73/53/I 89/65/I 72/57/pc 72/54/s 83/57/s 74/51/s 84/73/I 93/71/pc 78/57/pc 75/54/s 79/57/pc 85/50/s 103/78/s
I
Mecca Mexico City
109/82/0.00 105/79/s 75/53/0.10 73/56/I Montreal 68/40/0.00 70/52/I Moscow 68/40/0.00 64/42/s Nairobi 82/53/0.12 80/56/pc Nassau 91/77/0.28 89/76/pc New Delhi 97/81/0.00 95n6/pc Osaka 75/62/0.00 81/61/pc Oslo 56/43/0.04 61/41/c Ottawa 72/39/0.07 69/46/sh Paris 81/59/0.00 68/49/I nic de Janeiro 82/71/0.06 75/67/r Rome 84n5/o.oo 81/65/pc Santiago 73/41/0.00 65/45/pc Ssn Paulo 73/66/0.14 68/54/sh Ssppcrc 67/52/0.03 72/55/pc Seoul 82/57/0.00 79/59/pc Shanghai 78/64/0.06 79/73/c Singapore 84/81/0.81 87n8/c Stockholm 64/46/0.00 61/48/r Sydney 63/45/0.07 67/50/pc Taipei 92/81/0.05 88/77/r Tei Aviv ssno/o.oo 85/69/s Tokyo 70/66/0.16 75/64/pc Toronto 77/48/0.00 70/46/I Vancouver 66/54/0.00 73/56/s Vienna 75/59/0.00 72/56/I Warsaw 70/55/0.00 69/53/I
106/79/s 72/54/I 57/43/c 63/48/pc 79/53/c 88/75/pc 95/76/pc 81/59/c 53/37/s 54/43/pc 64/46/pc 74/63/pc 79/62/pc 57/40/sh 67/54/pc 70/54/sh 81/62/pc 80/74/r 89/78/pc 52/37/sh 69/50/s 91/80/I 84/70/s 75/64/pc 59/43/pc 65/53/pc 61/49/sh 61/46/pc
NORTHWEST NEWS
GREAT THINGS HAPPEN WHEN WE LIVE UNITED
Shellfish producers praise Willapa Bay bed spraying By Don Jenkins Capital Press
LONG BEACH, Washington — Shellfish farmers who
sprayed dam beds last spring say the herbicide they used was effective and that they're
w
YOU Can't deSCribe the feeling yOu haVe When you walk out and see that the weed that's
been destroying your farm is gone." — Willapa Bay shellfish farmer Brian Sheldon
prepared to defend the practice against environmental opposition. mass, then it sort of went "You can't describe the feel- 'boom,'" he said. ing you have when you walk Patten worked with farmers out and see that the weed that's to build a case for spraying. been destroying your farm is The Japanese eelgrass turns gone," Willapa Bay shellfish sandy tidelands into meadows, farmer Brian Sheldon said. stunting the growth of clams "Uplifting would be one word. by blockingfood washed in by It's worked tremendously. Be- the tide. A1SO, the grasS ShieldS yond my expectations." clam predators and slows The farmers received a per- down ocean currents, allowing mit from the Washington De- smothering sediment to build. partment of Ecology to spray Sheldon estimated Japanese imazamox, marketed as Clear- eelgrass has cut production of cast, to kill Japanese eelgrass, Manila clams by half. Patten a non-native species classified said the industry was heading by the state as a noxious weed. toward becomingunprofitable. An environmental group, Sheldon and Patten said it's the Coalition to Protect Puget too early to say exactly how Sound Habitat, says Japanese much gain farmers will see in eelgrass benefits fish and mi- production. But both expected gratory wildfowl, attd farmers large increases. shouldn't be allowed to spray Patten said the h erbicide chemicals in the bay. The produced results that were group hopes to convince the "next to extraordinary." "Growers were very pleased State POllutiOn COntrO1 Hearings Board to yank the permit with the results," he said. "It's at a hearing in March. night and day in terms of pro"We hope to provide good duction for them." science and enlightenment to Initially, the growers sought the Pollution Control Hearings a statewide permit, w h i ch Board," said Lacey resident would have allowed spraying R obert Kavanaugh, one o f in Grays Harbor and Puget the plaintiffs challenging the Sound. The proposal drew oppermit. "We don't dispute the position, attd the ecology deWillapa Bay shellfish industry partment limited permission to is an important asset. We just Willapa Bay, where Japanese think they can operate without eelgrass was mostprevalent. putting chemicals on Japanese The herbicide was applied eelgrass." between April 15 to June 30 WaShingtOn State UniVersity research scientist Kim Pat-
on about 400 acres at low tide.
Aerial spraying was prohibit-
ten, stationed at Long Beach, ed, and no applications were said Japanese eelgrass, also allOwed within 10 meters of known as Zastera japonica, property lines. has been on the Long Beach The work was hard, said Peninsula for decades. Over Sheldon, who said he treated the last decade, it crept toward 136 acres in eight or so days. the bay and onto clam beds, he Sheldon said spaying from a SB1Cl. helicopter would have been "Once it r e ached critical easier, but that's a battle the
shellfish growers aren't taking on now, he said. The ecology department issued a five-year permit. It could
be withdrawn after three years if farms can't prove the spaying hasn'tharmed native eelgrass
on neighboring properties, ecology department aquatics plant specialist Nathan Lublin-
er said. The growers also will have to report this year how many acres were treated attd the amOunt of herbiCide used. Lubliner said imazamox is "con-
sidered practically non-toxic to animals" and that the department won't do field research
LIVE UNITED
into how the spraying affects Willapa Bay. The Coalition t o
P r otect
Puget Sound Habitat made a last-ditch motion to stop last
spring's spaying. The pollution control board declined to intervene.
A representative of the coalition, Laura Hendricks, said the group plans to lay out its case at a full hearing in March. She said the group was orga-
I n,
s I
ss
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,
4
4 s
I
9
s
'0
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I
nized to prevent the application
''
I '
8
9 8
r
I I
sss
•
of chemicals in Puget Sound and expanded its attention to Willapa Bay. "People view these as public treasures," Hendricks said. uWe're tOtally O ppOSed to
spraying." Sheldon said shellfish growersneed to continue spraying or the industry will "tank." "We're going to take it to the mat," he Said. "ThiS is a huge
thing for our industry."
WWW.liVeufiitedCO.Org
PO BOX5969 Bend, OR 977OS (54~) 389-65O7
United Wa y Unite d <I~I> ofDeschutesCounty Way '~
Tell Us how you LIVE UNITED and share your superhero photos www.facebook.com/liveunitedco
Patten said he will study the
effects of applying imazamox, including whether birds attd
fish avoid clam beds sprayed with the herbicide.
Turn your workouts into dollar donations, now through November 23rd Join the Oregon Moves Challenge and turn your active days into dollars for charities like us. RegiSter at VVVV W.everymoVO.Org/ORmOVeS
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C3-6 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
By Ben Salmone The Bulletin
ince 2010, the Oxford Hotel in downtown Bend has hosted 43 concerts in one of its basement ballrooms as part of its Jazz at the Oxford series. All 43 have sold out. It sounds impressive, but it didn't happen without a few nervous moments along the way, said Marshall Glickman, the businessman and jazz fan who founded the series and books the shows. "In year one and year two, there were some Wednesdays where we weren't sold out and
I was worried because I didn't want to have empty seats,"
Glickman said fromhis home in Lake Oswego, where he recently moved after more than
sevenyears in Bend."There were some shows that were close calls that we managed to
sell out onthe last day." To put it mildly, things have changed. "We're waypast that now," he said."(Sell-outs) are justBOOM — automatic. And what I like about that is that now the audience trusts that even if they don't know who the mu-
sician is, that they're goingto discover some fabulous music." Last week, Jazz at the Oxford
2014-15Jazzatthe OxfordLineup For more information, visit www.jazzattheoxford.com • Oct. 24-25 — King Louie's Portland Blues Review III, with LaRhondaSteele, Andy Stokes, Lisa Mannand Danny Armstrong • Nov. 21-22 — Tizer, with
Karen Briggs diverse offeringsandan educational component. Series sub-
scriptions are on salethrough Oct.21 atwwwjazzattheoxford.
com, and single-show tickets go onsale Oct.7. Glickman, formerpresident of the Portland Trail Blazers
• Dec. 26-27 — Oregon Piano Summit II with Gordon Lee, Tom Grant, RamseyEmbick and Mac Potts • Dec. 28 — MelBrown B-3 Organ GroupCD-releaseshow • Jan. 16-17 — RandyBrecker • Feb. 20-21 — Soul Vaccination, with Chester Thompson • March 20-21 — Diego Figueiredo/Cyrille AimeeQuintet experience in Bend and to nurture his son's growing interest injazz. (Laz Glickman is now an accomplished jazz pianist.) He structured the series
around holiday weekends from October through March, bringing in performers monthly for three shows spread across two
announcedthe lineup forits upcoming fifth season (see"2014-
and CEO of a sports consulting firm called G2 Strategic, start-
15 Jazz at the Oxford Lineup"), which feattues an expanded
ed Jazz at the Oxford in 2010,
tage of large crowds in town for
primarily to quenchhis own thirst for an upscale nightlife
winter recreation.
slate of shows, increasingly
a in a i By Mac McLean The Bulletin
Lisa Connors and Lisa
Shropshire are looking for a few dozen Central Oregon women who would be willing
months.
"It's group giving," Shropshire said of the group's giving process, which combines elements of a lottery and a ven-
days. The idea: To take advan-
i er e nce ro u en Who Care Central Oregon holds its first meeting Wednesday night (see "If you go"). "We're close," Connors said. "We're really dose, and it's
to get together with them four
times ayear so they can make a huge difference in their
tion is nice, but when you com-
Karen Dunnigan had a sim-
bine with 99 others, it can go a long way." Shropshire and Connors said 75 women from Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson coun-
ple idea when she formed what became the first chapter of 100 Women Who Care in 2006. Rather than make one $100
community.
Building on an ideathat came out of Michigan about eight years ago, the two women are forming a Central Oregon Chapter of 100 Women Who Care, a national
network of giving clubs where 100 women give $100 each to a selected charity every three
ties have committed to joining
their group. This means they need to
Joe Kline i The Bulletin file photo
Trumpeter Jeremy Pelt plays a show at the Oxford Hotel inBend in 2012. The Jazz at the Oxford seaSeeJazz/C7 son has soldout43 shows ina row.
ture capitalist pitch show like "Shark Tank."
"An individual $100 dona-
Thinketock
coming down to the wire."
The idea
contribution to a fundraising initiative that helped the Center for Family Health of
find some more women who
Jackson, Michigan, buy cribs and calling it a day, Dunnigan
can join them when 100 Wom-
invited more than 100 of
her friends, co-workers and
colleagues to join her in the fundraising effort by writing their own $100 checks to the
charity's fundraising drive. By pooling their resources, Dunnigan and her friends were able to donate $12,000120 checks for $100 — which
rou
"An individual $100 donation is nice, but when
you combine with 99 others, it can go a iong way." — Lisa Shropshire, co-founder of 100Women WhoCare a $27,000 donation — again
was enough for the center to
in the form of individual
buy 300 cribs that it gave to
$100 checks — right before
low-income mothers who lived
Christmas. "This donation is intended to
in Jackson and its surrounding area. Dunnigan's group continued to grow and by December 2008 had pooled enough members it was able to give Jackson's Interfaith Homeless Shelter
iv i n
make an impact," the founding chapter's Facebook page reads. "Our mission and our hope is to provide for those in the greatest need."
Over the years, 100 Women
Who Care has grownand now indudes 132 chapters in 27 states, Canada and Mexico. There are 11 Men Who Care
and People Who Care chapters — which are either exclusively for men or count men and
women as their members — in Canada, Indiana, Iowa and
Ohio. SeeGiving/C6
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
M IQESTON~ + ~L
7
Formsforengagementw,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.
A communi s loving embrace of abride
ANNIVERSARIES
By Jordan Carleo-Evangellsh Albany (N.Y) Times Union
v.s:
SCHENECTADY, N.Y.
-
One of the privileges of being a bride is that you can't be late
for your own wedding. Nothing starts until you get there. So when the white Cadillac
limousine pulled up in front of the Central Park Rose Garden on a Friday afternoon — about
45 minutes later than planned for a ceremony that didn't seem possible two weeks ago — as far as anybody was concerned, 19-year-old Jahaysia Graham was just on time.
"The wedding started at 3 — 1:40 we were still sitting in the nail salon," LaToy Shef-
field, the bride's mother, said. "We had the bride ... so it's not like they could have started
without us." The groom, Jathyis La Juett, 2 0, patiently waited in h i s
' (f'
d
white tuxedo and purple vest. The wedding was a gift from the community — nearly every aspect of it donated by people touched by the couple's story. In return, the community
groom. "I have no idea who with dozens of loved ones and half of them are. But I know strangers watching. why they're here. And that's Since last year, Graham enough for me." has been battling an aggresOne of them was Alesa sive form of bone cancer Johnson, of A lbany, who known as osteosarcoma and works at Salon Cristina in is now under the care of The Schenectady. Johnson, whose Community Hospice. After mother recently received a the couple's engagement sev- $10,000 grant to pay for cheeral weeks ago, The Com- motherapy in her own battle munity Hospice staff began with cancer, heard about the spreading the word to make efforton Facebook and volthe wedding happen as quick- unteered her hairstyling and ly as possible. makeup skills. "I just felt like I had to pay Wedding treats came from New Jersey, the ring-bearer's it forward," Johnson said. "It pillow and guest book were just did something good for sent from Phoenix, and the my heart." flower girl's dress arrived Reasia Scott grew up with from New Jersey, Community Graham and owed her a debt Hospice spokesman Rob Pug- of sorts. Graham, in the way lisi said. the adolescent girls do, engiA Facebook photo of Gra- neered a meeting in a park ham in her gown, donated by about 5i/2 years ago between the Bridal Gallery by Yvonne Scott and the man who would health — under a white tent
in Latham, tallied more than 358,000 Likes in the week
be her first love.
"She's going to be so happy. I know she's going to cry," Scott, 19, said, before the ceremony."She's going to make everybody cry." event," Sheffield said of the Graham shared her exgot to be a part of a made-for- crowd that spilled out from citement on Facebook on the social-media story: A young under the tent and out behind eve of her wedding and gave couple whose love embodies the Rev. Henry Frueh, smart- thanks for the opportunity for the vows they were preparing phones and tablets aloft to her family and friends to gathto take — in sickness and in snap pictures of the bride and er joyfully.
1
Jack and Sandy (Kellogg) Herschberger
between her fitting and the wedding. "I never thought I'd see so m any people atsuch a special
"How happy I willbe tomorrow is how I want everyone to
remember me," she wrote. When she walked down the aisle, she did it without the ox-
ygen canister that has helped her battle shortness of breath and fatigue. "I'm like, please, couldn't they have made the runway a little shorter or couldn't we
back the chairs up a little bit? She always tries to do more
than everybody else thinks she should do," Sheffield said afterward. "It's really not a
surprise. I was just, you know, knowing why she needs her oxygen, I'm like, 'Come on, come on, come on God. You know she took it off, so you must be her oxygen all the way up there. We need you right now.' And he did it, like always." Together at the altar, Graham and LaJuett sat beside each other and held hands.
Reverend Frueh began the ceremony by e x p ressing t hanks for th e weather -
partly doudybut pleasant. "It is certainly worth the wait, isn't it'?" Frueh asked.
"Yes!" the crowd shouted. "Amen," he said.
And Scott was right. Just
about everyone cried.
Herschberger
grandchildren. Mr. Herschberger worked Jack and Sandy (Kellogg) as a civil service modificaHerschberger, of Bend, will tion engineer for the U.S. celebrate their 60th wedding
A ir Force. H e w o r ked o n
anniversary today with a family celebration and vow-renewal ceremony. The couple were married
the ejection seat project for
How a decision to wed madeall the difference
the SR-71. He enjoys restor-
ing antique cars, model airplanes and doll houses. Mrs. Sept. 18, 1954, at First Bap- H erschberger work s f o r tist Church i n M a r V i s t a, Deja Vu Interiors. She enjoys California. They were high sewing and costume makschoolsweethearts and mar- ing.The couple raced micro ried after graduation. They midgets in Imperial Valley, have two children, Mark, of California. Yuma, Arizona, and ShanThey have lived in Central da Finley, of Bend; and three Oregon for 18 years.
By Rob Bluey The Heritage Foundation
Lorenzo McCutchen and Petrina Swan were highschool teenagers when their son, Andrew, was born. Five years later, his parents made
a choice that would change Andrew's life forever. The date was Aug. 1, 1992.
After time apart at separate colleges, Lo and Trina found themselves reunited in Fort
Meade, Florida. That's when they decided to get married. Their story — and the rise
of Andrew, reigning National League most valuable player — is chronicled in the Sept.
8, 2014, Sports Illustrated. The union of Lo and Trina is described as a life-changing moment for young Andrew. "Trina decided that there was no one better to teach
Andrew to be a man than his father," Albert Chen writes.
"Thatday they made a pact: They were going to raise this together to raise $5,000 to child right, with all the work send Andrew to Puerto Rico and all the love that would be to play ball. required." Today, Andrew c r edits A ndrew eventually l e d God, his parents and his the Pittsburgh Pi rates t o hometown community for their first winning season in shaping his life. Off the field, 20 years, earning the MVP he'll soon follow in Lo and award in the process. The Trina's footsteps by marryformer first-round draft pick ing longtime girlfriend Maria has matured into a four-time Hanslovan. All-Star whose team is com"A lot of things had to happeting for a second consecu- pen; a lot of people had to tiveplayoffappearance. come into your life," he tells But long before landing in Chen. And that's a reason Pittsburgh, the McCutchens he's decided to give back to were a poor family living in those in need, visiting paFort Meade, a city of about tients in a Pittsburgh hospital
s
s, •
r s s,e •
l't
~
port the family. Trina is still I really started thinking about working at the local sheriff's where my parents were at the department to support the point they got married," Mcfamily's younger daughter in Cutchen told Sports Illustrated. "They were 22 years old, movcollege. At a young age, Andrew ing in together for the first time showed a love of baseballwith a 5-year-old kid, learning and he had a father who was howto live together, wondering willing to forgo sleep to forge how they would have enough a bond with his son. Chen money. Idon'tknow how they describes the early-morning did it, because that's a lot." practices when Andrew was Lo and Trina's decision to a young boy and the finan- get married — after having cial challenges the family Andrew — is not the norm tofaced as Andrew grew older. day, even though marriage has T hat's whe n others been hailed as "the greatest stepped in. When Andrew weapon against child poverty." was given the opportunity to According to Heritage Founcompete at a higher level but dation senior research fellow lacked the financial resourc- Robert Rector, who analyzed es to afford a travel baseball census data to study the imleague,a coach named Jim- pact of marriage, "Among my Rutland offered to help. black married couples, the In the years that followed, poverty rate was 7 percent, Trina sold spaghetti dinners while the rate for nonmarried for $5.50 a pop to pay for black families was ... higher at Andrew's baseball tourna- 35.6 percent." ments. The community came President Obama has called
s' I
s',
Stan and Darlene (Baker) Shoults
Shoults Stan and Darlene (Baker)
hart, and Lisa (and Shawn) W est, of Bend; and f i ve grandchildren.
Shoults, of Bend, will celebrate their 50th wedding an-
Mr. Shoults worked as a
bration at 1 p.m. on Sept. 28 at Shilo Inn.
tired in 1996. Mrs. Shoults
5,000 in central Florida. Lo
and helping out on Habitat
worked three jobs — including an overnight shift in a phosphate mine — to sup-
for Humanity projects. "It wasn't until this year-
as I'm getting married — that
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Speaking a t hi s torically black Morehouse College last year, Obama implored graduates:
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of thesevalued advertisers:
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
Vo canoesawe onLa e Nicara ua'sa venture is e By Tlm JohnsoneMcClatchy-Tribune News Service
OMETEPE ISLAND, Nicaraguaaze eastward from the shores of huge Lake Nicaragua, and they seem almost like a mirage: twin volcanoes thrusting out of the water, one of them a towering cone of cinder and ash, the other jacketed in verdant jungle. Perhaps it was the clouds that shrouded the twin peaks. Or the majestic sunset behind our ferryboat. Whatever, as we approached on a late afternoon, the setting seemed primordial, a place of mystery and beauty with a dash of menace. In fact, land girdles both volcanoes, terrestrial tutus on
Maderas, elevation 4,570 feet.
We hired two guides at the Finca Magdalena, a coopera-
two giant dancers. A small
isthmus connects the skirts, uniting the giant peaks to
tive coffee farm and the trail-
form Ometepe Island, one of
that lead to Maderas' crater.
Photos by Tim Johnson/McClatchy-Tribune News Service
The Concepcion Volcano looms in the background as a ferry approaches Nicaragua's Ometepe Island. The island is a paradise for adven-
head for one of three paths turers and nature lovers.
the Western Hemisphere's But when a supervisor looked least recognized adventure at my sport sandals, he shook destinations. his head. The trail is rocky The island is just becom- and muddy,the climb arduing known to travelers for its ous. Don't attempt the ninehidden petroglyphs, desert- hour hike in sandals, he said. ed beaches and eco-lodges, My 17-year-old daughter where one can kayak and and I decided to go halfway, cycle, all in the shadow of the
r eturning w it h
one of t h e
our friend said the climb was
Ifyou go
harder than a half marathon she'd run months before.
Hew te get there: Visitors can arrive on OmetepeIsland by air or by ferry from the San Jorge port near the city of Rivas. Ferries leave at least10 times aday, although those carrying vehicles depart less frequently. La Cost ena,adomestic airline (https:I/lacostena. online.com.ni/j, flies twice a week to the island from Managua, the capital. Wheretostay:Westayed at the Xalli OmetepeBeach Hotel, which hasseven rooms (www.ometepebeachhote l.com).Rooms range from roughly $40 to $95, depending on theseason.Otherrecommended hotels include LaVia Verde Organic Farmand B8B (http:I/viaverde.blinkweb. comlandtheTotocoEcolodge (http://totoco.com. nil. Inexpensive hostels abound.
Nicaragua's Tourism Institute has some words for those who'd like to climb either of
the volcanoes: Hire a guide, stay on the path, take food and
t.
two looming volcanoes. Surrounding the island is
guides. Our hiking compan- water and bring warmer clothions, a fellow foreign corre- ing for higher altitudes. In one of Latin America's larger spondent and her 24-year-old 2004, rescuers found the bodinland seas. Lake Nicaragua daughter, would attempt the ies of two hikers, British and is comparable in size to Lake Titicaca, the Andean body of
entire climb. It was just 20 minutes or so
American, at the bottom of
water along the border of Peru into the hike, after we'd en-
a ravine on Maderas. They'd gone without a guide, got lost
and Bolivia. Even from atop
and tried to find their way at
tered primary forest, when the
one of Ometepe's volcanoes, bellow reached us from a disit's hard to see land across the tant ridge. It sounded antediluexpanse of the lake. vian, deep and scary. Explorers have marveled Not to worry, our guide said, at Ometepe's beauty for cen- chuckling a bit. It was just turies, including Mark Twain, some howler monkeys. We latwho wrote in 1867 of the "two er saw several of the monkeys magnificent pyramids, clad in resting on high branches. the softest and richest green, After hours of rigorous hikall flecked with shadow and ing, much of it over fallen tree sunshine." trunks, and up the increasingAround the same time, Ger-
ly steep rock-strewn trail, we
man geologist Karl von Seebach feltnearly speechless upon beholding the volcanoes: "No words, nor drawings, can ever describe this marvelous
reached a clearing: the halfway point. The brisk wind kicked up whitecaps in the lake water lashing the isthmus at Playa spectacle of nature." Santo Domingo far below. By The island gets its name this point, my weary daughter from the indigenous Nahuatl was delighted to turn around. languageand means theplace We said our goodbyes and of two mountains, referring to watched our friends head the Concepcion and Maderas up the trail, led by the other volcanoes. Concepcion, the
gulde.
larger of the two, is still active.
After n ine friends still hadn't returned
Itscone towers 5,282 feet,and
night, plunging to their deaths. Nicaragua's Ometepe Island.
Exploring beyond
the volcanoes
Everyone in our party sur-
iety on the island. In mid-2013,
on horses for about $6 an hour.
on Ometepe Island, which was
waterway that would allow
We chose to visit an aquatic playground, called el Ojo del Agua, or the Water's Eye. Along the isthmus between the volcanoes, the site collects
declared a biosphere reserve by a United Nations body in 2010, the Nicaraguan government inaugurated a $12 million airport with a 4,900-foot
mammoth ships to cross Nic-
clear water from springs into
airstrip in May. A domestic
aragua between the Atlantic
and Pacific oceans. The proposed route cuts across Lake Nicaragua, just to the south of
Ometepe Island. Whether Ortega and the Hong Kong-based company capitaL that won a 50-year concession "It is a new destination for to build and operate the canal people coming from outside can get financing and begin the Central America region," digging the massive project is said Javier Chamorro,the yet to be seen. head of ProNicaragua, an T he potential i mpact o n export and investment pro- tourism could be great. Inmotion agency in the capital. stead of coming to see natural "It is the only island in fresh wonders, tourists might arrive water that you'll find with two to observe the passage of huge volcanoes." bulk carriers, container vesJust how long Ometepe sels and supertankers. Larger might endure in its present hotels may sprout up. form is a matter of some anxCastillo, t h e s m a l l-hotel
a crystalline swimming hole, carrier, La Costena, flies twice popular with travelers. a week from Managua, the One can arc into the water
on a rope swing or sunbathe and sip coconut milk. The pre-Columbian past of Ometepe is rich. Stone statues, remnants of cultures dating to 1000 B.C.
On another day, we visited El Ceibo Museum near the wet and bedraggled. They'd town of Moyogalpa, a reposThe climb climbed to the crater rim with itory of some 1,200 archaeoAfter several days on the the guide and attempted to de- logical pieces, including big island, four of us decided to scend to a lake in the crater, funeraryvessels. test our mettle and climb the but cloud and mist shrouded There was plenty of time to smaller of the two volcanoes, everything. An avid jogger, laze at our beach-side hotel. curl above its peak.
explore farms. You can see petroglyphs and look at migratory birds."
President Daniel Ortega announced an audacious plan to challenge the monopoly of island. There was much to do. Promoting tourism the Panama Canal by buildOne canride along the beach Seeking to promote tourism ing a $50 billion transoceanic
vived, though, and it was time to explore other parts of the
urns and ceramic vessels have h o urs, o ur been found all over the island,
wispy white gases from its to Finca Magdalena,and we vents, known as fumaroles, began to worry. An hour later,
I
Pre-Columbian statues are displayed in Altagracia, a town on
they sauntered down the trail,
owner, is downcast about the canal proposal. "I don't think they will build
it," he said. "In the remote case that it is built, it might create
a false illusion of economic growth." In the meantime, he said he
hoped that tourists awakened to Ometepe's charms and that investors in restaurants and
hotels improved their offerings, bringing higher-spending — but not necessarily more — tourists.
One day, I chatted with one of the owners, Ramon Castillo
Monge, a biologist and Ometepe native.
"Tourism really s t arted about 20 years ago," he said, adding that 60 or 70 small ho-
tels, restaurants and other facilities cater to tourists these days. Castillo recited from a mental list all the things to do on Ometepe: " The island h a s
A break in the trees opens up to a panoramic view from the slopes of Maderes Volcano on Ometepe Island in Nicaragua.
SOLUTION To TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD A C T O R
P H O N E C G A M L A L S
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SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU 5 38 4 2 7 9 1 6 I 1 67 9 3 5 2 4 8 4 92 1 8 6 5 3 7 2 56 3 9 8 4 7 1 1
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C4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
En'o a et-rien
winewee en inWas in ton
By Myscha Theriault ~ McClatchy-Tribune News Service
n Eastern Washington, accessible by plane or a weekend road trip from Seattle past Mount Rainier, lies a picture-perfect getaway known as the Yakima Valley. Packed with authenticity and a cultural diversity that includes everything from Native American influences and cowboy heritage to a Mexican food scene you'd typically have to drive to a southern border state to find, the area has much to offer pet parents in search of vacation value. Sipping
portion of the nation's hops be-
Yakima Valley is home to a ing grown here. Bale Breaker fairly extensive wine region, Brewing Company in particuwith vineyards and tasting
l a r is located smack dab in the
rooms peppered among the m iddleofaworkinghopsfield, farm stands, stone-fruit fields offering an affordable frothy and apple orchards. Those beverage option for visitors to traveling with Bowser will e x perience while they gain a appreciate the built-in romp sense of how agricultural this breaks, sniffing opportunities stage of the brewing business and prevalent outdoor seating. actually is. It's a pet-friendly Bonair Winery is particularly establishment with cost-efpet-friendly, with large-breed fective beverage prices. Small dogs being greeted with open pints are available at $3, and Myscha Theriault / McClatchy-Tribune News Service paws by the venue's resident growler refills are $10. Sample Horseback riders make their way between YakIma Valley wineries. pooch. The view and grounds tasting trays start at $7. are spectacular, with the occa- A n e w addition to the trail sional BOGO wine deals add- is the Glacier Basin Distillery, tifacts and an extensive show ing to the value. located at The Hackett Ranch. on the myth and legend of the Also of note for canine wine This microdistillery produces Sasquatch. Instead of the typsnobs is Two Mountain Win- s m a l l-batch fruit brandies in a ical cafe, this museum boasts ery. The fun blend of w in e c r e atively rustic facility locat- a working replica of a 1930s barrels, plants and industrial ed next door to an area winery soda fountain restaurant. Pewarehouse fixtures provides t h a t hosts warm-weather out- riod-style treats are served in a relaxed atmosphere, and our d o or concerts. full 1930s style, for those who rambunctious Labrador was are interested in a cold treat ~lg"~ >" g welcome inside on the cool after a morning of exploring. concrete floor while we samW hen you head out of town Adult entry tickets for the mupled their selection. Grassy to explore the wine country it- seum are $5. outdoor seating with giant s elf, take the time to swing by If you feel like seeing a bit wooden lawn chairs is also a n d see the historic teapot gas more of Yakima's art deco available. station in the town of Zillah. architectural h i story, h e ad Feel like something fancier? B u i l t in the early 1920s, it'sdowntown to the A. E. Larson Treveri Cellars sells sparkling been restored and put to use Building. It's an impressive wineswithoutdoorseatingap- as a seasonal tourist informa- structure that houses several propriate forurban-mannered tion centerand giftshop.Free food and beverage establishpooches. Their wines have parking is available, along ments, including Kana Winbeen selected for a variety of w ith restrooms and a grassy ery and th e Y akima Craft state and diplomatic functions, picnic table area suitable for Brewing Company. and their $6 sparkling cock- lunch with a large-breed dog. In between tasting and bevtail selections are a hit with T h is is really more about the erage shopping, poke your locals and vacationers alike. photo opportunity but makes head into the main lobby if The sparkling syrah is an un- a fun stop to break up the day you happen to be there during David Dickinson / McClatchy-Tribune News Service usual offering and and get a peek at a business hours. It's an opulent Teepees provIde an unusual and romantic place for valley visitors to stay with theIr pets. particularly worth unique building on example of the architectural the throw down if Th e r e g iOn the Na t ional Histor- elements of the day and a free you're planning on g/Sp hgS g icRe g i ster. experience that you'd be hard- throughout the area. For ex- you're likely to find. Rooms patio, a private seating area serving red meat Another location pressed to find replicated in ample, Los Hernandez Tacome with breakfast, an eve- near your tent with a fire pit, for a special meal. P you'll want to make any museum. males in the town of Union ning soup and salad offering wood, marshmallow kit and For big, quality reds hOPS tI'BIl, time fo r be t ween If stocking your beverage Gap draws visitors from and complimentary drink a barbecue grill for cooking without the f i zz, wh jCh iS vineyard stops and cellar hasn't blown your sou- miles around. Their tamale tickets for the nightly recep- your own r o mantic dinner head to C ultura. farm stands is the venir budget, head to North treats are made fresh daily tion. With rack rates starting under the stars. Pet kennels + . l r l~ Housed in a country l town of Toppenish. Front Street to explore the and available with chicken, at $119, it's an affordable place are available on site for those barn with an indus- re l eVant With Kno w n for its mas- shops. The period buildings pork and asparagus fillings. to rest your head when you who opt to explore the wine trial loft decor, it is SUCh g /grg e si v e int e rpretive add a fun vibe, and the vari- At less than $2 each, they're a have Rover in tow. country on horseback the l ocated in the heart g history murals, it's ety of venues makes it easy to tasty and cost-effective travel Interested in more of a nextday,and romantic openf th of the wine country l an easy i n t uitive kill some leisure time. For ex- treat. splurge? Cherry Wood Bed, air twilight soaking tubs can and has outdoor nB t l on S hopS wa l k ing tour with ample, Garden Dance offers For an affordable lunch B reakfast and Barn i n t h e be booked as an affordable seating for those ar- geing grOw n a gr a ssy town park unique women's clothing and stop suitable for enjoying with town of Zillah offers a unique evening add-on for $35 per riving with a furry for Fido to take a accessories and is located di- your pooch, head to the taco pet-friendly option set amid couple. f end. break, grab a drink rectlyacross the street from truck that makes its home on the vineyards and orchards Proceeds go to fund the Visitors arriving and get some shade. Gilbert Cellars, a modern ur- North First Street in Yakima. with a commanding view of rescue and care ofthe horses by plane can get The murals e ach ban winery. A fresh produce It has picnic table seating, $5 Mount Adams and the sur- you'll see on the ranch, most additional value by taking h ave a descriptive sign, mak- market in an antique train de- combo specials and a small rounding area. The guest ac- of whom have been saved advantage of Yakima Val- i n g it easy to learn the town's pot and a garden pottery shop sauce and veggie bar for commodations here are lux- from dire circumstances. ley's Taste and Tote program, history as you move along. If are also in the Front Street choosing your own toppings. ury teepees, complete with which operates in partnership you feel like picking up some Mix. comfortable beds, refrigerSleeping with Hertz and Alaska Air s o u venirs while you're there, ators,fans, robes and rustic Pure. &md.6 Co. lines. Travelers with a vali d a n u mber of venues offer qual- Snacking Travelers visiting with a dog decor. If you're looking for casual, and wishing to stay in Yakima inbound airline ticket can get ity retail shopping. For examThe $245 per night price tag their tasting fees waived at p le, El Vaquero is the place to canine-friendly dining as you proper will want to check out includes a decadent breakfast Bend participating venues and are go for locals and travelers in enjoy this part of town, be sure Oxford Suites. First-floor pet on the ranch house viewing allowed to ship one case free search of cowboy boots, while to hit Rusillo's. Shaded patio rooms open directly onto the Redmond to their r eturn d estination. K r a f t's offers Pendleton good- dining is available, along with grassy riverfront trail area John Day www.'AgateBeachMotel.com Additionally, those wishing to ies such as robes, duffel bags, an extensive Italian menu. through sliding glass doors. Burns Private, vintage,oeeanfront getaway fly into one of the three area pursesandmore. Affordable vegetarian pizza For those frustrated with ridewport, O~R Lakeview airports and depart through The Y akima Valley Muse- options, seafood pastas and ing down 12 floors in the el'. 1 0~0~-7SS-S74 La Pine another can do so with Hertz u m i s a g reat stop for those heartysandwiches are avail- evator to coordinate canine and skip the usual drop-off wh o enjoy retro-style adver- able for $15 or less, and the bladder relief, this is about 541.382.6447 fee. Discounted rental rates t i s i ng. Theircollectionofneon staff is friendly. as convenient a situation as bendurology.com are also available. Tastean- sign art provides a whimsical A significant number of dtote.com has full details on peek at yesteryear, while their residents in the Yakima Valthe program's wine-packing carriage exhibit e xempli- ley are of Mexican heritage, requirements, current savings fies an even earlier period in which translates to one of the codes and more. history. most authentic food scenes The region has a spirits and Th e i r traveling exhibits are found in any of the northern hops trail, which is particular- of note as well, including some states. Taquerias, Latino bakly relevant with such a large unique Japanese heritage ar- eriesand more are available
aj. B~ dU
1;,,ate Bea(hmotl
TRAVEL SMART 101 < Thurs, Sept 25th I 6:00pM
This new workshop focuses on tips for traveling safely and securely as a first-time traveler.
TRAVEL SMART, PAGK LIGHT < Sat, Sept 27th i I
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Myscha Theriault/ Mcclatchy-Tribune News Service
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E IE •
A local riding enthusIast enjoys a wIne tasting at a vIneyard he visited by horseback.
r
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9:00AM St 12:00PM
E I I
I I I
Discover the secrets of packing light for any trip. Including How To: • Pack for a two week trip in an 18lb carry-on • Prepare for airport security • Protect personal data with RFID products • Pack for a cruise
Events are open to the public and free to attend. Please RS VP, as space is limite
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A ta
C5
an mar 0 ers eaut an a venture
By Brad Branan
Coyote Gulch leads across 14 miles of land and ankle-deep water. The canyon walls get bigger and the views get more dramatic as the gulch makes its way toward
The Sacramento Bee
Lying on the ground in Coyote Gulch, the night sky framed by openings in a natural arch and a curved canyon wall, I peer at the cosmos as through a Mardi Gras mask. My legs and shoulders ache near the end of a 70-mile backpacking hike in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National
the Escalante River, under the
Jacob Hamblin Arch and the Coyote Natural Bridge and past Cliff Arch. The topography gets trickier with a suc-
' jfpj~~ -e
cession of waterfalls requir-
Monument in southern Utah. This is the reward for explor-
ing the traveler to scramble on rocks at the edge of the water.
I
ing remote places: a long and challenging trek culminating
On one of those scrambles,
Y'
Ihad to ease across a strip of slickrock about a foot wide.
'c:».
in an otherworldly vista.
A short d i stance from Bryce Canyon and Zion na-
On another, I was traversing
t h e n a t ional
steep slickrock that led to a 30-foot drop-off into a rocky
monument shares some of the
waterfall. At such moments as
red-rock wonders of its bet-
these, I was most aware of my solitude. If I broke a bone, I
tional p a rks,
ter-known neighbors. During a weeklong visit in May, I saw natural arches and bridges, Indian ruins and drawings, slot canyons and more, all contained in deep-red, sculpt-
would have to wait for rescue,
which may not come. P
At such moments as these, I thought of Ruess. Any state-
Y
ment about his fate is specula-
ed ravines that run through the Escalante River basin like
'p.P ' 5,
roads in a city.
tion. I had time to develop my own: that he died in a hiking
PhotosbyBradBrannan/The SacramentoBee
The rugged region of Grand StaIrcase-Escalante Nation-
and red walls look freshly w alls press closer and closer,
come with those "amenities." This rugged region was the
al Monument In southern Utah was the last part of the continental United States to be mapped, and It requires work for those wanting to see its
last part of t h e continental
treasures.
What the Escalante doesn't
share with the national parks is well-marked trails or paved roads — or the crowds that
't
r'4,
small shafts of light seem to
set them on fire, until canyons get so tight, you can't move anymore. The highlight of my excursion was hiking the serpentine canyons of Coyote Gulch, named a top hiking destination by many outdoor writers,
United States to be mapped, and it requires work for those
wanting to see its treasures. Everett Ruess shared my
has many campsites, a river
love of remote places. A teen-
for fishing and rafting, trails for mountain biking and
ager from Los Angeles, Ruess
much more.
traveled the Southwest and the Sierra with two burros,
The Bureau of Land Management, which is responsible
making block-print art and meeting famous photogra-
neer said around the time, as
including Peter Potterfield in
his "Classic Hikes of North America." Coyote Gulch is probably the monument's most crowd-
for the monument, does not
I learned at a visitors center. provide many of the features John Wesley Powell's expe- designed to make a park usdition of the American West er-friendly: signs, built trails did initial mapping of the area and the like. While this gives during this period. the area a more wild and nat-
phers Ansel Adams and Ed-
ward Weston, before disappearing in the Escalante in 1934. "As to when I shall visit civilization, it will not be soon, I think," Everett wrote hi s
Adventurers have long ex-
Escalante.
When I finished my first trip through Coyote Gulch, I went out to the Escalante
ed attraction. In three days I saw about 40 people, most
River and saw another natural arch. Then I immediately
of them traveling in large groups. I met a couple from
made my return trip down
Coyote Gulch, to be just as stunned by the beauty as on
Northern California t r avel-
ing the trail for the second time; they had wonder and joy
ural feel, it can also make the
plored the Canyons of the Es- area more difficult to travel. calante, but it was not made Guide services in the town of
brother Waldo, in the last of
or swimming accident and his body was washed away by the Colorado River, before it was overtaken by Lake Powell. Thinking of Ruess' fate made me more carefulas I climbed or stepped on wet rocks. Ruess was apparently without a companion to help him when he disappeared. But his legacy is also one reason I took those risks — to see beautiful places such as the
painted with swirls. As those
the initial view.
My legs felt like burning stumps from a week's hiking,
etched in their faces. Most of
tired of the wilderness; rather, I enjoy its beauty and the vagrant life I lead, more keenly
the time, I trekked in seclud- but like Ruess, I had not tired ed bliss, as hours would pass of the wilderness. The beauty Bill Clinton praised the "high, If you go without a guide, without seeing anyone. propelled me forward. rugged and remote region." make sure you know a few The monument covers 1.9 mil- things about desert h i klion acres and has three parts ing. Take plenty of water, of
all the time."
— the Kaiparowits Plateau,
course. Also t ak e
Ruess' body has never been recovered, only adding to the mystery. In 1996, Jon
which includes the distinct
maps or a GPS unit. Desert trails are typically harder
Krakauer revived the Ruess story in hi s book "Into the
Hole in the Rock Road; the
places because the ground
Grand Staircase, where cliff lines and benches form the "steps" near the Arizona-Utah border; and the Canyons of the Escalante, the area I visit-
doesn't retain footprints and
a national monument until Escalante provide tours of the 1996, when t h en-President area.
his many letters recounting his adventures. "I have not
• 0 •
Straight Cliffs, a sandstone shelf that runs parallel to the
Wild," about Christopher McCandless, another youthful
wilderness traveler who died.
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d etailed
to follow than trails in other
the sparse landscape provides fewer natural cues to follow.
I used a GPS unit to find two slot canyons, West Fork ed, largely north of Hole in the and Big Horn; w ithout the Rock Road. unit, I would have been lost in In addition to endless op- a maze of desert canyons.
Longtime adventure w r iter David Roberts and f o rmer
Los Angeles Times reporter Philip Fradkin followed up a few years ago with their own books about Ruess.
portunities for hiking and backpacking,the monument
TIR'II.'3QVjlR QUJICK Once I found them, I was transfixed. Bright o r ange : :SAAei@<cweg Ani.n POGiG T(8~ISO
: 'THI8 IES RCSS o iSMR II
iI ine tIen: nteInationa tIa ic u fast-growing segment, said Michael Boyd, president of the Here are some things to Boyd Group. "Mr. Zhang flies ponder from back i n 3 6 -B, to Detroit from Shanghai to with your k nees pressed visit a factory. That's a direct against the seat in front and passenger. Then three days your elbows wedged between later he takes a domestic flight you and the armrests: to Charlotte to visit a factory About 15 percent fewer there. That's an indirect intercommercial flights will take national passenger," he said. off this year compared with As this evolves in a glob2007, with 7.8 percent fewer al market, foreign carriers seatsavailable.Fares are up. are more often flying directAirlines in the United States ly to big-city airports in the are solidly profitable, with interior of the United States, earnings at $3.8 billion in the rather than just to the coasts. first half of 2014, compared That will expand, Boyd said. with $1.6 billion in the period Among the airports likely
r
By Joe Sharkey
about 500 miles, now account
New York Times News Service
for 43 percent of Southwest's centive money runs out. But routes,compared with 53 per- Fort Wayne has been adding
last year.
to attract more direct routes
Even as service declines, from foreigncarriers in the most planes are full. So don't next three to five years are expect improvements. Why Memphis, Kansas City, Cinwould airlines want to fix cinnati, Indianapolis and New something that f r o m t h e ir Orleans, because they have point of view is demonstrably good interstate highway acnot broken? cess in industrial bases with T hose were a few of t h e important global businesses, trends under discussion rehe said. As I've noted here before, cently at the Boyd Group International Aviation Forecast domestic airlines are rapidly Summit in Las Vegas, at- retiring those 50-seat regional tended by airline and airport jets that were the backbone of executives and others in the service for midsize airportsindustry. But underlying the substituting larger airplanes obvious — tighter schedules, and reducingdaily frequency, cramped airplanes, unhappy or even abandoning routes passengers, big profits — is altogether. one strong dynamic that is reEven Southwest, which flies shaping strategy, the growing the most domestic passengers importance of international among the four major carriers, business. has been shifting from some According to t h e B oyd smaller-market flying while Group's analysis, direct or adding a f e w i n t ernational indirect international traffic accounts for a bit more than
25 percent of passengers on the three airlines in the Unit-
centin2009.
t
new service, taking another
' ' PE A K T oP E A K V8StBUI eht R lOU~
I•
83 FREE SLOT
PLAY COUPO N
Atlanta with a larger jet that
L EAVETHEQRIVINGTOUS! Csll for raservstiols. locstion 5 times:
V
with the emphasis on business has a first-class cabin. "Airlines get it," Sampson travelers, not discount-seeking leisure travelers. said. "They know we're willIn Indiana, Fort Wayne In- ing to pay the fare."
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of the airport on business, a
high rate. "With all the changes in the airline industry, we knew
there was going to be a trend away from smaller locations, and we also knew that there
would be a huge impact on our ability to keep companies here if they thought our air service was not going to be adequate,"
ShmvYour
John Sampson, the president of the Northeast Indiana Re-
gional Partnership, told me recently.
routes in the Caribbean and
Mexico and scheduling ser-
schedule that better fit their
needs," Sampson said, even "We've had a conscious though the closest big aired States with extensive glob- replumbing of our network," ports, in Indianapolis and Deal networks and alliances: said Andrew Watterson, the troit, are hours away. American, Delta and United. airline's vice president for Smaller airports i n s u ch Even Southwest Airlines is networkplanning."We've re- predicaments typically try to now flying internationally. duced our exposure to short entice airlines with financial B usiness t r avelers c o m - haul." i ncentives. Sometimes, a n ing to the United States are a Short-haul flights, usually airline might add a flight, but
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54L713.1529 ext. Z09
.HQ
shoringup its air service largely as a result of two things: a well-financed partnership with regional economic interests, and the fact75 percentof the passengers fly in and out
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: 34333HWV.97NORTH CHILOOUIH OR$7$24I 54U83.7529 KLIINIOVI ICISIIIQ.CQM'
ternational Airport has been
Like most smaller airports, Fort Wayne was losing local passengers. "People were driving elsewhere to get either lower fares or for a flight
vice next year to Costa Rica.
i
then drop it again after the in-
As this trendplays out, many tack along with the incentives. midsize airports are trying It demonstrated that l o cal with little success to persuade business travelers would pay airlines to replace lost service. somewhat higher fares. But there are some success stoA recent payoff came in July, ries, especially when a smaller when Delta Air Lines replaced airport can show that it has a small, one-class regional-jet long-term regional business flight between FortWayne and support for local service -
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Call your AAA Travel Consullanl Today! 800-222-1768
C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
SU D O K U
Completegri the d so
~gs
FR
~ Et ~
~
TH A T SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L Hoyt and Jeff Knurak
Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square,
that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
to form six ordinary words.
VICNOE
It'e goodto eee ovetyone topelde, nevlng fon.
Cgote Ttbone ContetdAgency, uo Ag Rtdta Reeened.
STHECK
/
DINEHD
mp eeeet
For those traveling, is the smartwatchreallythatsm art? By StephanieRosenbloom
/
New York Times News Service
Apple's new Ino ettalgght
MORNAL SUSERV
I
4l
WHEN P f LAYIN& Pofi CtN THE NAVY 5HIP, IT WA5 —-
ALCUTA
Now arrange the circled letlers
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon. PRINT YOUR ANSWERIN THE CIRCLES BELOW
DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
s m a rtwatch
can track your heart rate, pay for your Chicken McNuggets and give you turn-by-turn directions by sending vibrations to your wrist. You can buy one in 18-karat gold. The device, which will be available early next year, is the latest in slick wearabletechnology, a booming category that includes Google Glass, the Jawbone Up fitness tracker and Liquid Im-
age goggle-cameras.
*
But are these innovations JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
Sunday, September 21y 2014
Percentage play By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
"I know you operate by seat of pants," I said to Cy the Cynic, "not by c old numbers. Don't yo u k n ow anything about percentage play?" "I know that I can estimate the cost of living by taking my income and adding 25 percent," Cy growled. "And I don't need a statistician to confirm it." I'll never convince Cy that he needs a knowledge of c o rrectly handling combinations of c ards. When he was today's South, he opened INT with his aceless wonder. North may have feared missing a grand slam when he bid 6NT: Cy c ouldhaveheldK52, K 5 3 2 , K Q 2 ,
case: when West has the singleton nine. That is the lie of the cards Cy should cater to. Cy wins the brst spade in dummy and leads the ten o f d i amonds, intending to let it ride if East plays low. If instead East covers with an honor, Cy takes the king and returns a diamond, and if West follows, dummy covers his card to assure the slam. South dealer Both sides vulnerable
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KQ2.
Cy won the first spade in his hand and led the k ing and a s econd diamond — and darkness descended when West showed out. The Cynic took dummy's ace, but all he could do was cash his top t ricks and concede down two. "I make it when diamonds break 3-2 — 68 percent — and in several other cases," Cy shrugged. At least Cy knew the odds on an even diamond split. How would you play the slam? Cy needs five diamond tricks and is safe with any 3-2 split. He can always succeed with a little care if East has a singleton honor or a singleton nine and is always doomed if West has a singleton honor or low singleton. Cy's play matters in one
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West Pass
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really game-changers for "A traveler needs that friend that's sitting on their wrist that travelers'? On one hand, it's amusing says, 'I know you, I know what to contemplate the promise of you like,'" he said. "That's the wearable technology (or wear- kind of thing that Apple can ables) when the travel indus- do.n try is still trying to solve basic But let's get to what will problems such as how to board be available early next year 300 people onto an airplane when the Apple Watch comes without the process devolving to market. One of the biggest into a stampede. I'm remind- boons for travelers involves ed of psychologist Abraham maps and GPS: Walk through Maslow's "hierarchy of needs" a city and the watch can de— the pyramid that illustrates liver different vibrations to how rudimentary physiologi- your wrist to indicate whether calrequirements such as food you should turn left or right, and shelter must be met before so you don't have to wander we can concern ourselves with the streets peering at a tiny less crucial desires. If there device (or be a good map-readwere such a pyramid for trav- er) to know which way to go. el, boarding a plane with Jet- "It's like having this invisible sons-style alacrity would come guide with you,n Kevin Lynch, before watches and glasses vice president for technology that alert us to the nearest at Apple, said during the news Margaritaville. conference. On the other hand, wear-
Nor th 6 NT
East A ll Pas s
Giving
egon chapter from a friend who is active with the Denver chapter and posts about
it heavily on her Facebook page. It is Oregon's first 100
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD
Women Who Care chapter
ed by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols LeWts 8 A.L East team 47 Court figure e1 Millennium 48 "Airplane!"hero 9 Becomea Falcon pilot mother, maybe Striker 82 [Not a typo] 10 Field of action 49 It has keys and ee punic wars 11 skype stops fighter appointment 50 Geometry ee somefruit pte 12 Futures dealer? product crusts 51 "Shucks!" 13 Sport with a 89 Workbook refereecalled a 58 "Let's Get It chapter One singer gyoil 14 Ghana's capital 59 Signsof spring n 15 "Hurry Up! eo Men with 1e wiltshire manors monument es Temporary fix 17 Ancient region e4 JordanRiver of AsiaMinor outlet 18 Millay and e5 Likesome Milton pockets 24 BobbyJones, e7 put a cap on for hisentire ee strong suit golfingcareer ee Hold on tight 30 Time to swing 70 Virologist who 31 Snow measure worked with 33 chi Epstein 39 Downhill, e.g. 7f Layered snack 41 Makessense 72 Big name in 43 RobinRoberts' athleticshoes show, initially 7e Nonsense 44 Jokhang 77 Koufax quartet Temple city 79 Clay or 4e Cuban Webster,briefly Liberation Day eo picturefile month suffix to
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90 Op-Edpieces 92 Rescuepro ee Add more flavoring to 98 Exchanges O 99 NOW I
remember" 100 Amtrak express 102 " big deal!" 103 Get ready for a fight 104 Matches audio tovideo,say 107 This and that 109 HP Photcsmart insert 111 Where the Storting makes legislative
decisions f ie Ballet support? 117 Check
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films 38 Golfer's pocketful 23 40 Pen handle? 42 German gripe 27 43 Storiedball Cll'OPPSI'
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and is the only chapter in the Pacific Northwest outside of a Seattle-area chapter that is
also getting ready to make its first donation. "It's up to us to decide what
we want to do," Shropshire said, explaining that while each chapter follows the basic
model that Dunnigan created eightyears ago,there issome variation in how it s details
are carried out.
to be something that doesn't
make me look like an extra on the set of an alien movie," he said. Apple tackled that concern, offering an array of watch faces and bands, including leather and stainless steel mesh. "It's as much about personal technology as it is about style and taste," Timothy Cook, Apple's c hief executive, said at t h e
news conference. Though for those of us with fashionable watches that merely tell time,
the Apple Watch presents a problem. There's only so much wrist real estate. Only time will tell if wear-
ables become our second skins. "This is not going to be an overnight story," Harteveldt said. That's what makes it excit-
ing. And maybe a little scary. As Jonathan Ive, Apple's senior vice president for design, put it in a video during the news conference: "We're now at a compelling beginning."
dred bucks," Shropshire said, explaining each presenter will likely face a round of questions from the group afO nce they've made t h i s ter making her presentation. commitment, S h r opshire "If we're going to be giving said, prospective members away all of this money, I'm are presented with a form to sure there will be a lot of savnominate a charity — right vy women who want to make now, it has to be a 501(c)3 sure the decision we are maknonprofit that serves Central ing is the right one." Oregon and is not affiliated The group will then vote with a political or religious on which charity most degroup. serves their support, and She said the group's mem- each member will write that bers have selected nine char- group a $100 check then and ities and expects that a few there. The winning charity more will come in before the will then be asked to attend group closes its nominating the giving club's next meetprocess tonight so its sev- ing and explain what it has en-member steering com- done or plans to do with the mittee will have enough time money. to vet each group and make Shropshire said this prosure it "legitimately serves cess will come after a no-host the needsof Central Oregon."
The giving Shropshire said any woman who wants to join her group should visit its website — www.100wwcco.com — so she can commit to attending four meetings over the com-
ing year and donating $100 to whatever charity is picked at each of these meetings.
"We need people to live up
to their commitments," Con-
nors said, adding the group will be able to make the
wine bar at the Oxford Hotel
During Wednesday's meet- that will start one hour before ing, Connors and Shropshire the meeting begins and will will take each of the nomina- likely be followed by a few of tion forms they've received its members splitting off and — some charities have been celebrating the fact they just nominated more than once m ade a $10, 000 difference in — and throw them into a hat. their community. "At the end of the day, we're They will pick the names of three charities at random and just a bunch of women writask each group's nominator ing checks," Shropshire said. to give a five-minute presen- "It's a fabulous way to get tation about why it deserves together." $10,000. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, R A hundred bucks is a hunmmcleanclbendbulletirLcom
Lyndsey Carter
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$10,000-plus donation it has promised only if each of its Continued from C1 members shows up and folShropshire said she got the lows the rules. idea to form the Central Or-
(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
9
And some travelers will like
ables, particularly the Apple that the Apple Watch has ApWatch, could eventually trans- ple Pay, a new mobile system form the way we travel. Given that allows you to pay at the that sensors on the back of the registersof places as varied device can track your pulse as McDonald's and Walt Disrate, perhaps it might also de- ney World. Until the system is tect if you're becoming unruly ubiquitous, I'll be carrying my during a flight and follow up wallet. I'll also be carrying my iPwith a zap to your wrist and a stress-reduction video? hone because, well, you must Fantasies aside, some tech- to use all the features of the nology and travel experts see Apple Watch — and that's a real-world potential in wearreal drawback for travelers ables, even though many are who aim to carry fewer, not
said Henry Harteveldt, a travel industry analyst with Atmosphere Research Group. To attract more of them, he said, the
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most likely years from being more, devices. Wearables haven't exactly Take smartwatches, which taken off. And, for what they are already available from cost, they're not always pracbrands including LG, Motoro- tical for the average traveler. la and Sony. They're good at Google Glass is $1,500, while pushing information and alerts the Apple Watch starts at $349 from your calendar to your and you have to have an iPwrist, where it's easily glanced. hone 5 or higher for it to work. The wrinkle, said James Mc- Ditto for the Samsung Gear 2 Quivey, an analyst at Forrester smartwatch, which is about Research, is that most smart- $300 on Samsung.com and watches are clunky and imper- requires that you own a Samsonal. They cannot pinpoint sung phone or tablet. "Nearly 4 in 10 travelers can where you are or what you want, so the information they see a benefit of using wearprovide is not game-changing. ables when they are traveling," what we want them to be.
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C7
Jazz Continued from C1 Glickman books the ar t-
ists and does a fair amount of legwork involved in getting them to and from the gig; he has picked many up at Redmond Airport and shared a Thanksgiving meal with jazz singer Diane Schuur. The Oxford transforms the room — which holds 120 people per show — to approximate a dark, traditional jazz cluband provides the budget for the se-
ries, which has doubled since the first season. (Glickman
f...ew
declined to provide a more
specific budget number.) Jill Roeell Photography/Submitted photo Add it all up and you have Marshall Glickman speaks before one of last season's Jazz at the a successful venture that also Oxford concerts. Glickman, a sports consultant who nowlives in has become a vital compo- Lake Oswego, founded the series in 2010. nent of Central Oregon's music scene.
"Bend has an incredibly
a concert series, both sides
v ibrant music scene in t h e s ummer, but th e w i nter i s
were unsure of
financial viability. Bend alpretty quiet other than a few ready had one jazz concert shows at the Tower and the series — the long-running Domino Room or Midtown," monthly Jazz at Joe's shows Glickman said. "I go to the at Cascades Theatre — and M idtown for stuff an d I ' v e a full-time jazz club, Be Bop seen some wonderful shows Coffee House, had a good run at the Tower, but the fact is, in the mid-2000s but failed be-
this is, I think, the only situ-
and sound and do marketing,
t h e i d ea's the whole thing. It's not like
cause it wasn't able to attract
ation in Bend where you can enough patrons. "I wasn't sure going into it kind of sit down in a more clublike setting, have some-
because ourticket prices are
thing nice to eat and have a cocktail. I like the quality of
admittedly pretty high. I wish they were lower; it's literal-
ly a break-even proposition W hen G l i ckman a p - for the hotel, but we have to proached the Oxford about build a stage, bring in lights
the presentation."
a permanent club where you make that investment once,"
Glickman said.
Joe Kline /The Bulletin file photo
Jazz pianist Arturo O'Farrill directs two performers to close their eyes and play softly during a work-
" So I w asn't sure i f t h e
shop in January at the Oxford Hotel. The Jazz at the Oxford series combines top jazz performances
market was deep enough to step up and pay this kind of money, but, in fact, they
with workshops for young musicians.
are," he continued. "I think it
the profile of the hotel (and
says there is a market of people that want to hear really high-quality stuff in a really nice setting and they're willing to pay a little bit of a pre-
the hotel's 10 Below restau-
York City and Los Angeles, able resources to bring an as we've brought more and even higher profile artist or more national acts into it ... two to Bend. He'd also like to I get notes from the people do more shows and add opensaying, 'Wow, what a great ing acts, and he wishes the gig that was,'" Glickman said. room was "a little bigger" be"I've gotten all kinds of inter- cause he thinks the demand
rant), but also to beef up the region's cultural offerings in the winter, said Ben Perle, the
hotel's general manager.
"We are maxed out inthe mium for that." O fficials a t t h e O x f o r d summer. I think everybody
were unsure as well but signed on to not only raise
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file photo
Bobby Watson was in the 2012 Jazz at the Oxford lineup.
esting stuff that I'm already
is there. But he has no plans
agrees. And it's a great thing, talking about for next year." to move Jazz at the Oxford. "The (hotel) stepped up, but there just isn't as much The series is becoming in the winter," he said. "Cer- k nown i n Po r t l and, a n d and I'm loyal to them comtainly it was an experiment. It Glickman hopes that his new pletely," he s a i d. "They was a test. We did not know ticketing vendor — Portb acked thi s t h i ng, a n d how the audience in Bend land-based Ticket T omato, t hey've been terrific, so i f w ould respond to m ore o f which sells tickets for the Wa- something's working, I'm not a small, jazz-club feel, and terfront Blues Festival and the going to screw it up by trying I think we were really able Rose City's stalwart jazz club, to change things." to create that feeling downJimmy Mak's — will help The feeling is mutual, said stairs, and it's a very intimate spread the word further. Perle, who a cknowledged way of seeing quality music, Not that Jazz at the Oxford both the work that goes into both quality musicians and really needs much help in staging the shows and the the investment we made in that department. less tangible payoff of the "It grew and took on a life series. using quality sound." of it's own," Perle said. "Here "There are a lot of movT hose investments — a s well as Central Oregon's we are five years later and ing parts. We're running a natural beauty — have got- (we're bringing in) the likes business, and this is just one ten the attention of the perof Diane Schuur and Javon of the events that we (put formers who play the series. Jackson and Les M cCann. on)," he said. "But when I Glickman estimated that he Never in my wildest dreams see the excitement of people received at least 20 unsolicit- did I imagine we would be at- as they're walking out and ed calls from artists or their tracting people who can play saying, 'Thank you so much managers looking to make a places that are much more for doing this,' it makes it all stop in town. renowned." worth it. It really does. This is "We're on the map and With the series humming a good thing, I think, for the therefore so is Bend and, along, Glickman hopes to community and for us, too." frankly, the Oxford. Because combine the Oxford's grow— Reporter: 541-383-0377, I work with agents in New ing reputation with his availbsalmon@bendbulletin.com
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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
' esame ree 're urns or TV SPOTLIGHT
season
"Twilight Breaking Cookie." If choosing the least likely cast member to become the paragon ofvirtue seems li ke
"Sesame Street" 10 a.m. weekdays, PBS
for him."
Cookie Monster
h asn't
sworn off the cookies, but maybe he won't be quite the glutton
he once was. Appealing to both children decision was not reached light- and adults has long been "Sesly."We conductan annualcon- ame Street's" secret weapon, tent advisory seminar," says all the way back to when the Dr. Rosemarie Truglio, senior series was conceived by Joan vice president of content and Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morresearch. "We bring in all the risett in 1969. With an assist people creating content (for from a still relatively unknown 'Sesame Street') and the re- Jim Henson, who provided the search scientists, psychologists Muppets, the public television and educators share their re- series became an instant hit. search and advice." Bob McGrath, who is one of Muppet performer Leslie two original cast human memCarrara-Rudolph, who per- bers still with the show after 45 forms the fairy Abby Cadabby, seasons (Loretta Long is the among others, holds a degree other), recalls the first time the in child development through cast toured the country and did the arts from San Francisco a show for children in Griffith State. Previously, she spent Park. "Matt Robinson, who played yearsdesigning programs for kids at risk or in the hospital. Gordon, went out to do a little "This showis the perfect em- warmup, and every time he brace of everything I've ever mentioned Big Bird, it was a dreamed of," she says."'Sesa- mini-Woodstock," M c G r ath me Street' is (children's) 'Satur- recalls. The kids "all brought day Night Live.'" Big Birds, and they thrust them But putting scientific find- up over their heads like a Jimi ings in the hands of the anar- Hendrix LP." "Sesame Street" is a fictional chic Sesame Street Muppets is sometimes a tricky prop- place, of course, but to the cast osition. Truglio is mindful of and crew who've in some cases "boomerang effects" in which w orked therefordecades,itbechildren can focus on the fun- comes its own real world. "They say if you're born ny negative effect instead of the more desirable (but less hu- in Brooklyn, you're always a morous) positive effect. Brooklynite," says P a rente, "With Cookie Monster, we who has been with the show never focus on the failed at- for 26 years. "People move into tempts," Truglio says. "We try 'Sesame Street,' and it's with to show what strategies work them forever." a head-scratcher, it may make
By Patrick Kevin Day
more sense to know that the
Los Angeles Times
Calling "Sesame Street" children's programming is like calling "Saturday Night Live" a sketch comedy show or "The Simpsons" a cartoon. Technically, it may be accurate, but
the label fails to grasp its wide and powerful reach in pop culture.
Case in point: During a recent visit to "The Tonight
Rahoul Ghose/ McClatchy-Tribune News Service
With a powerful presence in popculture, "Sesame Street" aims to
S how," Maroon
5' s A d a m do for the 45th season what it has always done: teach basic learnLevine stumbled on the words ing skills to preschool-age children. t o "The Muffin M a n " a n d "Head, Shoulders, Knees and
Toes," but he got the lyrics to ing last year and with a steady strategies for managing a the "Sesame Street" theme stream of viral videos on its tough issue for humans in genspot-on. Y odIbbe channel that h a s eral, and children in particular. As the series kicks off its more than a million subscrib- Executives call it "self-regula45th season this week, it looks to maintain its cultural place
ers and more than a billion vid-
tion," and for the show, that will
eoviews. mean it will focus on giving by doing what it's always done: Since Parente took over as children ways to navigate an teach basic learning skills to executive producer in 2005, environment awash in everypreschool-age children. the show has continued to tin- thing from junk food to com"At this point, the show is ker with format and content, puter games. such a w e ll-oiled machine, going from magazine style And who best to journey there are times I think if all of to something more segment- down that path w it h t h em us went away, the show would ed and easily digestible in the than Cookie Monster, the unstill get done," says Carol-Lynn Yodlttbe era. Meanwhile, it's restrained id of the Sesame Parente, executive producer of also taking "deep dives" into Street Muppets? The big blue "Sesame Street." "And that's subjects deemed essential to devourer of all the cookies will the challenge: not to let the ma- today's children as determined learn the fine art of delayed chine get in the way of evolu- through extensive educational gratification this season in a tion and innovation." Even decades after its debut,
research.
new series of movie parodies
It's no longer just about titled "Cookie's Crumby Piclearning your ABCs. This sea- tures," short film parodies with
the show remains a powerhouse, generating more than son, the show will broaden its titles such as "Furry Potter and $46.5 million in merchandis- psychological scope to indude the Goblet of Cookies" and
Wor artner's attire isa oints
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • irtovie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby: I co-own a professional service business with a woman whose appearance has
last four years, they are not likely
In the past, I have returned them
to start coming in droves. Howev-
er, your partner should look her
all, but I feel torn under these circumstances because the gifts are
deteriorated significantly over the
best when she calls on clients, and
not for me, but for my child. Nor-
lastthree or four years. "Mary" she should not represent the busiwas never a fashion plate, but she ness looking "threadbare." You used to be presentable for business. should handle this by addressing Four years ago, this part of the probshe put on quite a bit lem only. U nless of weight. She refusy ou dress fo r t h e DFP,R estobuy e c'othes office looking like a ABBY until she loses it, but page out of Vogue, she makes no real at-
l et the w oman b e
mally, I would write thank-you cards for such things, but in this case I don't want to mislead any-
one orset a precedent that such things are welcome. Please tell me how I should del-
icately handle this. There is no hope for reconciliation, and my child will not be having a relationship with any of these people.
tempt to do so. comfortable. M ary wears the same three pair P.S. I take MY shoes off at the I don't want to hurt anyone; I just of baggy pants to the office day af- officebecause I see no reason to want to be left alone. ter day. She does have two "good" wear 6-inch stilettos while my — Etiquette-Challenged outfits she will wear to see clients, feet are under my desk. If someDear Challenged:You have albut even those arethreadbare. I
dread the idea of a client dropping in and seeing Mary in her normal
one comes in, I put them back on.
That's what your partner should
ready cut your ties with these peo-
ple. You do not plan to have a relationship with them, nor will your state, especially since she takes Dear Abby: I have been es- child. You are under no obligation her shoes off at the office because tranged from my family for many to thank them for unwanted gifts, her feet swell. years. It was a decision I thought and your child will not be deprived She has become an embarrass- long and hard about, and I have if you send the gifts back. It apment. How do you think I should no regrets. It was one of the wisest pears this is an attempt by them to handle this? decisions I have ever made, and it buy their way back into your life. — Image is Everything
do if the need arises.
helped me to maintain my mental
The gifts should be returned un-
in California and physical health. opened,with no comment. Dear Image is Everything:If cliI recently had a baby, and my — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com ents haven't dropped in during the family has been sending me gifts. or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, SEPT. 21, 2014:Thisyear you open up tomany changes, some of which are related to events that happened11 or12 years ago. It would be best not to initiate new projects this year, if possible. If you are single, you will want to check out anyone you meet carefully. However, many of you will feel as if you have met your soul mate. If you areattached,youcould become much more me-oriented. Be sure to include your sweetie in your plans more often. Starsshowthe kind It is important to of dayyou'Ilhave remember that ** * * * D ynamic a relationship is ** * * p ositive a 5o-5o kind of
*** Average ** So-so * Difficult
deal. Keepyour
ego under control! VIRGO sees eye to eye with you.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * Your efforts to reach out to someone at a distance easily could backfire. Recognize that you might need to deal with some insecurity if you overthink the issue at hand. Someone's temper suddenly could flare up. Step back, and give this person some room. Tonight: Have fun.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * You could be in the mood to relax at home and read the Sunday paper. A friendship means a lot to you, but be careful not to put this person on a pedestal. Otherwise, he or she will fall off and disappoint you. A partner could be quite irate about a personal matter. Tonight: Make nice.
GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * N o one needs to tell you to speakyour mind. However, you'll want to make sure others really understand the gist of what you are saying, as you easily could be misunderstood. Pres-
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
sure seems to build from various areas of your life. Tonight: Listen to a loved one's complaints.
CANCER (June21-July 22) *** * Your more possessive side could emerge when dealing with a loved one. You'll discover the importance of excellent communication and confirming what you believe you heard. An element of vagueness seems to drift around you right now. Tonight: Make it your treat.
might entice you to join them for a fun happening they are involved with. Use caution with spending, as you could be having such a good time that you lose track of your money. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Oec. 21) ** * * Take action in the morning, and reach out to a loved one at a distance. You will make this person's day if you do.Intheevening,you could become so busy that you might not have time to hang out with friends who drop by to visit. Tonight: Could go till the wee hours.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. 19)
** * * L isten to what a loved one ** * * Use the morning for any matter shares in the morning. The importance of relating authentically with this person you feel is very important. By the afternoon, a self-indulgent streak marks your cannot be underestimated. Try to root plans. A friend might be enticing you out the cause of someone's irritation. A to head down this path. Be careful, as a discussion with a trusted friend could lovedonecould become veryjealous. be helpful. Tonight: Why not watch a Tonight: Make the most of the moment. movie?
LEO (July 23-Aug.22)
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * * Y ou'll perk up by midday after being somewhat lazy in the morning. You might discover that a loved one or dear friend has made plans thatyou don't want to say "no" to. Be diplomatic when canceling other plans. Tonight: As you like it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * You might want to understand what is ailing a dear loved one. Treat this person with compassion, even if he or she is being outrageous. Given some time, his or her attitude will ease up, and a conversation might become possible. Tonight: Chat over dinner and wine.
** * * You know what you want. Touch PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) base with others in the morning. By the ** * * K now what you want, and consider your options. Howyou deal afternoon, you might discover that you would prefer some downtime to read the witha loved onecould change once he paper and relax. Do not pressure youror she starts sharing more. An irritating self into going out. Sunday is your day situation might trigger anger, but it also of rest. Tonight: Not to be found. could start an important conversation. Tonight: Go with what a loved one SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * I nvestigate the different possibil- desires. ities for future plans. A group of friends © King Features Syndicate
I
I
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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports Sp.m. on2,9, "OnceUpona Time" —"There's No Place Like Home" concluded atwo-part epi-
sode aswellasthe fantasy-drama series' third season. Trying to get back to Storybrooke proves quite complicated for Emmaand Hook (Jennifer Morrison, Colin O'Donoghue) since in doing so, they have to be careful not to do anything that alters history. If they do, it'll drastically affect this saga's two worlds and the inhabitants of both. Ginnifer Goodwin andJosh Dallas, now real-life spouses, also star. 8 p.m.on6,"Madam Secretary" — He doesn't appear in the show — at least not yet — but Morgan Freeman is anexecutive producer of this new political drama, giving a sense of its gravitas. The series "Pilot" introduces TeaLeoni as America's new secretary of state, an ex-CIA analyst hurriedly thrust onto the stage of international diplomacy after taking the job at the behest of the president (Keith Carradine). Tim Daly, BebeNeuwirth and Geoffrey Arend ("Body of Proof") also are in the cast.
9 p.m. on2, 9, "Resurrection" — Arcadia is at critical mass with returnees, forcing Bellamy (Omar Epps) to ask for outside help. When Sheriff Fred (Matt Craven) tries to implement his own agenda, a siege ensues — ultimately involving armed guards — in the drama's first-season finale, "Torn Apart." Frances Fisher, Devin Kelley, Samaire Armstrong, Mark Hildreth, Sam Hazeldine andKurtwood Smith also star. 9 p.m.on FOOD, "TheGreat Food Truck Race" — In the new episode "Shrimpin'Ain't Easy," Tyler challenges the three remaining teams to"cook locally" as they roll into Mobile, Alabama. After enduring some frigid temperatures, one teamwalks away from a local wholesaler with nearly100 pounds of free shrimp. After the teams add abrunch dish to their menu, local chef Pete Bloeme helps Tyler decide which two teams will move on to the grand finale. 10 p.m. onFX, "TheStrain"In the new episode "TheThird Rail," Setrakian (David Bradley) leads Eph, FetandNora (Corey Stoll, Kevin Durand, Mia Maestro) on a potentially deadly quest to find the lair of the Master (Robin Atkin Downes). Meanwhile, Zack (Ben Hyland) risks his safety for Mariela's (Anne Betancourt) sake after he is left behind at the pawnshop with her. ct zap2it
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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Scoreboard, D2 Sports in brief, D2 MLB, D3
College football, D4-5 Golf, D6 NFL, D5 Motor sports, D6 Preps, D6 Soccer, D6
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
TRIATHLON
MLB
COLLEGE FOOTBALL 2ACK HALL
Diversity
Jacoby Ellsbury is examined by a trainer during Friday night's
keyfor
game against Toronto.
Eiisbury outwith hamstring injury
Beavers'
NEW YORK — Jaco-
by Ellsbury was held out of the NewYork Yankees' lineup Saturday, a day after straining his right hamstring, and the Madras native and former Oregon State Beaver may bedonefor the season. "I am still going to do everything I can to be backas soon as possible," Ellsbury said Saturday. "I will talk to the team and we will be on the samepagewith
ic
offense CORVALLIS-
A 1
San Diego State, 28-7 on a
warm night at Reser Stadium. For the Beavers, it was a much-neededdominat-
L
ing performance against a team that would likely wipe the field with Hawaii and Portland State.
this. But I will still try
to do everything I can to play these last nine games." Manager JoeGirardi was not so hopeful, expressing frustration in losing another of his starters to injury, especially with the Yankees clinging to faint playoffs hopeswithninegames toplay. Theyare4t/t gamesoutofthesecond wild card spot. "Obviously we will give him a fewdays off and see wherehe's at," Girardi said. "It's not whatyou want but we have to deal with it." Ellsbury was hurt beating out a double-play relay in the fourth inning against Toronto on Friday night. Signed to a seven-year, $153 million free-agent contract in the offseason, Ellsbury is hitting .271 with16 homers and a team-leading 70 RBls. — The Associated Press
PAC-12
a wise investment
Saturday night. Oregon State walloped
e
i
souvenir program might have been
Yes, the Beavers' defense terrorized the Aztecs,
who nearly upset Oregon State last season, after San Diego State scored
on its opening drive. But more than that, though, it was the way Oregon State
moved the ball against the Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Triathletes exit Cultus Lake after the swimming leg of the LeadmanTri triathlon Saturday and transition to the bicycling portion of the course. A total of 285 triathletes participated in distances up to 250 kilometers.
blitz-happy Aztecs that had the 41,339 at Reser
Stadium scrambling for a roster.
SeeBeavers/D4
• The LeadmanTri might be thearea's most grueling race, but the scenerydrawsathletes Inside
• Beavers QB Mannion breaks school record for career passing yards,D4
By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
he beauty of the LeadmanTri Epic 85, at
Ducks win, but given all they can handle
least for Lynn Albrow, is its simplicity.
"Once you get out of Cultus Lake, it's just a left turn home," said Albrow, a 52-year-old Bend resident who won the women's Epic 85 triathlon race Saturday. "It's beautiful scenery. You go
By Nicholas K. Geranios
Oregon State 8 San Diego State 7
up the Sparks (Lake) grade and
PULLMAN, Wash. Marcus Mariota threw for
rizona California
past Elk Lake.... You can't beat
329 yards and five touchdowns as No. 2 Oregon
Washington State 31
45
Utah
-
held off Washington State
the views."
38-31 on Saturday night in a matchup of two of the top
Locals like Albrow and visitors from as
Michigan
10
olorado Hawaii
1 12
ana raved about the 2014 LeadmanTri triathlon, which started early in the morn-
ashington Georgia State
5 14
swimming in Cultus, competitors biked
N o. 22 Clemson 1 7
No6Tx SMU
A M
ISSISSIPPI
No. 8 LSU
Devon Allen and Keanon Lowe each had two touchdown receptions
ing at Cultus Lake and finished in Bend's NorthWest Crossing neighborhood. After
for Oregon (4-0, 1-0 Pac12), which has won eight straight games against Washington State. Connor Halliday threw for 436 yards and four touchdowns for Washington State (1-3, 0-1).
around Mount Bachelor — twice in the event's 250K race — before descending running leg in west Bend. "This is why we moved here (from California)," said Albrow, whose Epic 85 race
No. 1 Florida State
West Virginia
offenses in the nation.
far away as North Carolina and Louisi-
Cascade Lakes Highway into town for the
TOP 25
No. 3 Alabama Florida
The Associated Press
See Ducks/D5
included a 1,250-meter swim, a 75K bike ride and a 12K run. "It's an adult playground. Wedon'teven vacation anymore.
21
33 8 6 3 29
We just stay in Bend." California resident Jim Arguelles and his wife and two young daughters planned a late-summer vacation around this year's LeadmanTri. Arguelles, 48 and
Inside ~ .',:@c ' b jg,rr„~ "
Sacramento, participated in the 125K dis-
tance Saturday, a year after competing in the LeadmanTri Bend 250K.
SeeLeadman/D5
At top, Kari Cardon, of Nine Mile Falls, Washington, races during her 12K run during LeadmanTri at Tetherow in Bend. Above, Kristin Yarris, of Eugene, pedals during the cycling
portion of the race.
• After lengthy rain delay, Utes win at Michigan. Pac-12 roundup,D4 • No. 1 Florida State, without Winston, survives No. 22 ClemsoninOT.Top25 roundup,DS
N .11 Michigan St.
Eastern Michigan 14
PREP GIRLS SOCCER Troy Vanderbilt
0 34
Indiana 1 N o. 18 Missouri 2 7 No. 19 Wisconsin 68 B owling Green 17 Virginia
33
No. 24 Nebraska 41 Miami (Fla.) 31
Cougarsshakeearly goal, blow past Lebanonto remainunbeaten Bulletin staff report Heading into Saturday's matchup, MountainView knew ofLeba-
and went at them." Mountain View answered with
three uanswered goals in the first
going after them." Abby Nopp opened the scoring
non's repuation.
half and added two insurance
for the Cougars with a 13th min-
It showed in the opening minute, when the Warriors, Class
scores after the intermission to secure a 5-1 girls soccer victory.
ute goal from a Madison Choffel
5A'sthird-ranked team, scored 23 seconds into the match. "But after
"We don't just want to be in
that," Cougars coach Don Emerson said, "we picked up the pieces
these big games. We want to win
matter who the opponent is. We're
assist. Seven minutes later, Rylee Dickinson scored from Rosalie
them," Emerson said. "We're
Mendez to put Mountain View (32) ahead 2-1. Taryn Poole scored
going to go after them. It doesn't
in the 30th minute and added a
53rd-minute goal with a rip from the top of the box, sandwiching Dickinson's goal-scoring header off an Alexa Bickford corner kick. The Cougars' victory was their third straight, a stretch in the
defense is "playing phenomenal," said Emerson, whose team has outscored opponents 10-1 in that stretch.
Inside • Storm boys, girlswin Northwest Classic. Prep I'Oundup, D6
D2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
ON THE AIR
COHKBOARD
TODAY SOCCER England, Leicester City vs. Manchester United England, Manchester City vs. Chelsea Men's college, Notre Dame at Virginia Women's college, Michigan at Rutgers Women's college, South Carolina at Auburn Women's college, Vanderbilt at Georgia Men's college, Delaware atStanford Women's college, CalPoly at Stanford Women's college, Loyola Marymount at UCLA
Time TV/Radio 5 a.m. C N BC 8 a.m. NBCSN 9 a.m. E SPNU 10 a.m. Big 10 1 0 a.m. SE C noon SEC 1 p.m. P a c-12 3:30 p.m. Pac-12 6 p.m. P a c-12
GOLF
EuropeanTour, Wales Open 5 a.m. EuropeanLadies'Tour,OpendeEspanaFemenino6 a.m. Web.comTour,TourChampionship 11 a.m. LPGA Tour,YokohamaTire Classic 2 p.m. 5 p.m. Champions Tour, Hawaii Championship
Golf UHD
Golf Golf Golf
FOOTBALL
NFL,OaklandatNew England 1 0 a.m. CB S Canada, Calgary at Montreal 10 a.m. ESPN2 NFL, SanFrancisco at Arizona 1 p.m. Fox NFL, Denver atSeattle 1:25 p.m. CBS, KRCO690-AM, 96.9 FM, KWLZ 96.5 FM 5:20 p.m. NBC NFL, Pittsburgh at Carolina AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Sprint Cup, NewHampshire
11 a.m. E S PN
BASEBALL
MLB, Seattle at Houston MLB, Detroit at KansasCity MLB, Cincinnati at St. Louis
1 1 a.m. 11 a.m. 5 p.m.
R o ot TBS E S PN
4 p.m.
Roo t
4 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB MLB
MONDAY BASEBALL
MLB, Seattle at Toronto MLB, Pittsburgh at Atlanta or Kansas City at Cleveland MLB,SanFranciscoatLosAngelesDodgers
GREENBAY PACKERS alOETROIT LIONS-
Monday Boys soccer: Crosshig Christian at Central Christian, 4p.m.
Tuesday Boyssoccer: Summit at CentralCatholic, 4 p.m.; Elmira at Sisters,4:30p.m.; Corbett at Madras, 4 p.m.; Molalla atCrookCounty, 4 p.m.; La Pine at SantiamChristian, 4:30 p,mcRidgeviewJVat Culver,4p.m. Girl ssoccer:RedmondatMadison,4:15p.mcCentral Catholic atSummit, 3 p.m.;Sisters at Elmira, 6 p.mcMadrasat Corbett, 4:t5 p.mcCrook County atMolala, 4p.m.; SistersJVat LaPine, 4p.m. Volleyball: MountainViewat Redmond, 6;30p.m.; Summiat t Ridgeview, 6:30 p.mcSutherlin at Sisters, 6:45 p.mcMadrasat Molalla, 6p.mcCreswell at LaPine,6p.m.; Central Christianat NorthLake, 5p.m.;Trinity Lutheranat South Wasco County, 5 p.m. Thursday Boyssoccer.RedmondatSummit,3 p.m.;Ridgeviewat Bend,3 p.mcJunction Cityat Sisters, 4:30 p.mq Madrasat Molala, 6 p.mq Crook Countyat Gladstone,4:t5 p.mJGlideat LaPine, 430 pmJCentralChristianat LifeChristian, 415 p.m. Girls soccer: Ridgeviewat Bend,4;30 p.m.; Redmond atSummit, 4:30 p.m.;Sisters at Junction City, 4:30p.mc Molala at Madras,4 p.mqGladstone atCrookCounty, 4p.m.; PleasantHil at La Pine,3 p.m. Volleyball:Summitat Bend,6:30 p.mcMountain View atRidgeview,6:30p.m.; Sistersat Cottage Grove, 6:45p.mcEstacadaatMadras,Bp.m.;La Pine at Coquile,5 p.m. Cross-coun try: LaPineatHarrier's ChallengeinCottageGrove,4:15p.m. Friday Football:Bendat Pendleton, 7 p.m.; MountainView at Springfield,7 p.m.;Summitat TheDalles, 7 p.mc Ridgeviewat Ashland, 7 p.mcRedmond at HoodRiverValley,7 p.m.; Gladstoneat Crook County, 7p.m.;Sutherlin atSisters, 7 p.mcMadras atEstacada, 7p.m.; Burnsat LaPine, 7p.m.; Vernonia at Culver, 7 p.mc Prospect at Gilchrist, 4 p.m. Volleyball:CrookCountyat Corbett, 4:30 p.m.; Pilot Rock at Culver,5 p.m.; Gilchrist at Central Christian, 6 p.mc Paisley at Trinity Lutheran, 4:30 p.m.
RODEO
FOOTBALL
NFL, Chicago atNewYork Jets
InjuryReporl
ON DECK
NPRA 5:15 p.m. ESPN
Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis notresponsible forlate changesmadeby7Vor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF MOTOR SPORTS Teen WinSNASCARTruCk SerieS —ColeCuster's first stand as a NASCAR winner landed him in the stock car record book. Custer became theyoungest winner in a NASCARnational series race at16 years old, taking the checkered flag at NewHampshire in his seventh career Truck Series start. Custer dominated early and pulled awaylate off the final restart Saturday to win at16 years, 7 months, 28 days. He set a track record of131.897 mph to win the poleand led148 of the175 laps for his fifth top-10 of the season.
Gaughan SnatCheSNatiOnWide Win at KentuCky —Brendan Gaughansurged past rookies ChaseElliott and Ty Dillon in a wild three-wide run after a final restart for a hard-earned victory in Saturday night's 300-mile Nationwide Series race atKentucky Speedway. Elliott and Dillon initially battled for the lead onLap 192 before Gaughan's No. 62Chevrolet rocketed forward on the outside to make it three abreast, getting past both drivers a couple of laps later with Brian Scott in tow. Gaughanwent on to his second career victory by .878 seconds over Scott, followed by Dillon, Elliott and ReganSmith in a top-five sweep byChevys.
HamiltOn beatS ROSderg to SingaPOre POle —I ewls Hamilton claimed pole position for the Singapore Grand Prix by out-qualifying his Mercedes teammate and title rival Nico Rosberg by a mere seven thousandths of a second on Saturday. Hamilton claimed his sixth pole of the season with a time of1 minute, 45.681 seconds, and it could prove crucial on a tight and twisty Marina Bay circuit which will provide few passing opportunities in today's race.
NW ProRodeoAssociation 2014 Finals At Crook County Fairgrounds, PrineviHe Round1, Friday Bareback riding— t, Austin Foss,Terrebonne, 93 poi nts,$706.67.2,Tony Buckman,LaMesa, N.M., BO,$530.00.3,Jared Bain,Haines,79, $353. 33.4,Nick Gutzwiler,Cheney,Wash.,TB, St76.67. Barrelracing—1, McKinzieAdams, Bend, t5.15 seconds,$706.67. 2, StevieRaeWilis, Terrebonne, 15.23, $530.00. 3, DannaStovner, Wilder, Idaho, 15.3t, $353.3aCallahanCrossley, Hermiston, t5.32, St76.67.
Breakaway roping—I,JamieMarts, Homedale, Idaho,1.90seconds,$),300.00.2, MaryAnnKnapp, Buena, Wash.,2.BO,$975.00.3,KatieLeibold,Boise, Idaho,atg,$650.00.4,AlyshaMoore,Roseburg, 9.20, S325.00. Bull riding —I/2, ScottyBartels, Tacoma,Wash., 94 points,$992.00,andColby Riley, Ephrata, Wash., 94points,$992.00.3,JakeDavis,Mccleary,Wash., 73, $499.00. Cowmilking— I, ShaneErickson, Terrebonne, 16.70 seconds,$706.67. 2, WyattSewell, Drusey, 2t.30, $530.00.3,Clayton Frohman,Yelm,Wash., 24.30, $353.33.4, KassKayser, Ellensburg, Wash., 24.90,St76.67. Nmdce BB— 2, Brent Bannon, Prinevile, 71.00 point s,$600.00.2,CoreyRose,LaCenter,Wash., 69.00,$400.00. Saddlebroncriding —1/2, CooperDewitt, Rio Rico, Ariz.,79.00points,$763.00,andRoyJohnson, Etna,79.00points, $763.00.3, Charlie Barker,Powell Butte, 77.00,$436.00.4, MarkGage, Powell Butte, 74.00,$2tB.00. Steer wrestling — 1, JohnGreen, LaGrande, 4.50 seconds,$990.67. 2, AustinWoods, Newberg, 5.00, $743.00.3, B.J.Taruscio, Walla Wala, Wash., 5.50, $495.33.4/5,JacobStacy,MosesLake,Wash., B.tg, St23.93,andJ.W.Crenshaw,Omak,Washington,6.tg, St2393. Teamroping header— 1,SpikeMccay,Monroe, 5.10 seconds,$1,546.67. 2, ShaneErickson, Terrebonne,5.60, Sf,t60.00. 3, JakeStanley, Hermiston, B.tg,$773.33.4, Garret Rogers, Adams, t0.20, $396.67. Teamropingheeler — I, JerryUnruh,Montague,Calif., B.t0seconds,St,546.67.2, Clint Harry, Pendl eton,5.60,St,160.00.3,BuckyCampbell,Benton CityWash.,B IO,$7799a 4, BrentFalon, Yakima, Wash.,10.20,$3BB z67. Tie downroping— I, Tyler Whitlow,Queen Creek,Ariz.,8.00seconds,St,236.00.2, TyHolly, Mt. Vernon ,B.30,$927.00.3,MattNauman,New Plymouth, Idaho,9.40,$61B.OO . 4, JoeHoffman, Chehalis, Wash.,9.50,$309.00.
FOOTBALL
Schumacher, Haganwinrain-delayed Carolina event — TonySchumacherwoninTopFuelandMattHagantoppedthe Funny Car field to give DonSchumacher Racing anitro sweep Saturday in the rain-delayed finals from the NHRA Carolina Nationals in Ennis, Texas. Jonathan Graywon in Pro Stock and Eddie Krawiec in Pro Stock Motorcycle in the Countdown-opening event that was completed at TexasMotorplex after being washedout last weekend in Concord, North Carolina.
SPrint Car driVer killed in WiSCOnSin — Sprlnt car drlver Scott Semmelmann was killed in a wreck during practice for a race Saturday night at Beaver DamRaceway in Beaver Dam,Wisconsin. Beaver DamRaceway general manager Carolyn Mueller and Bumper to Bumper IRAOutlaw Sprint Car Series President Steve Sinclair confirmed the death. Semmelmann's car madecontact with another car during the second practice session, flipped three times and hit the outside wall. The 47-year-old Semmelmann, from Brookfield, was racing for the first time this season. The racewas canceled.
NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGU AH TimesPDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE Eaal W L T Pe t PF PA Buff alo 2 0 0 t .000 52 30 Miami I I 0 .50 0 43 49 N.Y.Jets I 1 0 .500 43 45 N ew England I 1 0 .50 0 50 40 South W L T Pc t PF PA Houston 2 0 0 t . OOO 47 20 Tennesse e I I 0 .50 0 36 36 Jacksonvile 0 2 0 .0 0 0 27 75 Indianapolis 0 2 0 .0 0 0 51 61 North W L T Pc t PF PA 2 0 0 t . OOO 47 26 I I 0 .50 0 42 29 I I 0 .50 0 36 53 I 1 0 .50 0 53 54 West W L T Pc t PF PA D enver 2 0 0 1.0 0 0EB 41 SanDiego I I 0 .500 47 39 Oakland 0 2 0 .000 2B 49 K ansas City 0 2 0 .00 0 27 50 NATIONALCONFERENCE
FOOTBALL
East W L T 2 I I 0
EStimated 7,000 fanS trade in RiCe jerSeyS — Morethan 7,000 fans showed up toexchangetheir Ray Rice jerseys for those of other Ravens players during a two-day event at Baltimore's home stadium. Theteamhanded out 5,595 newjerseys before running out before midday Saturday, then issued morethan 2,400 vouchers for fans to pick up their jerseys oncenewshipments arrive in October. Teamspokesman KevinByrnesaystheRavensspent"sjxfigures"on the trade-in, though declined to disclose anexact figure.
Carolina Atlanta
NewOrleans TampaBay
BASKETBALL U.S. wOmen'ShOOPSCruiSeS PaSt China 99-75 — Nneka Ogwumike scored16 points and Jantel Lavenderadded14 to help the U.S. women's national teambeat China99-75 onSaturday in an exhibition game inParis. TheU.S. scored nine of the first11 points and led 27-10after the first quarter thanks to Tina Charles and Diana Taurasi, who combined for19 points in the period. The Americans, who will play France onSunday, extended the advantage to 51-24 at the half and never looked back in thesecond half.
TENNIS Romanian NiCuleSCu takeS GuangZhouInternatianal
— Monica Niculescu of Romaniabeat No. 2seededAlize Cornet of France 6-4, 6-0 in the championship of the Guangzhou International Open in China onSaturday. — From wire reports
Arizona Seattle SanFrancisco St. Louis
W 2 2 0 0
0 I I 2
Pc t PF PA 0 1. 0 00B4 44 0 .50 0 47 27 0 .50 0 43 3B 0 .0 0 0 2B 60
South L T
0 0 I 0 2 0 3 0 North W L T I 1 0 I 1 0 I I 0 I I 0 W 2 I I I
West L 0 1 I I
T 0 0 0 0
Pe t PF PA 1. 0 0044 21 .66 7 t03 72 .0 0 0 59 63 .0 0 0 45 95 Pe t .50 0 .50 0 .50 0 .50 0
PF PA 4B 43 41 36 42 39 47 60
Pc l PF PA 1. 00043 31 .50 0 57 46 .50 0 49 45 .50 0 25 5t
Today'sGames
Dallas atSt. Louis,10a.m. MinnesotaatNewOrleans,10 a.m. San DiegoatBuffalotga.m. , Washington at Philadelphia, tg a.m. HoustonatN.Y. Giants, I0 a.m.
Tennessee at Cincinnati, tg a.m. Baltimore at Cleveland,tga.m. GreenBayat Detroit, 10a.m. IndianapolisatJacksonvile, 10a.m. Oakland atNewEngland,10 a.m. SanFranciscoatArizona, I:05 p.m. Denver at Seattle,1;25 p.m. Kansas CityatMiami,1:25 p.m. PittsburghatCarolina, E:90p.m. Monday'sGame Chicag oatN.Y.Jets,4:30p.m.
PACKE RS: OU T: LB BradJones (quadriceps), LB Andy Mulumba(knee). QUE STIONABLE: T Bryan Bulaga(knee),CBCaseyHayward (glute). PROBABLE: S MicahHyde(knee). LION S: OUT: LBTravis Lewis (quadriceps),CBCassius Vaughn (ankle), TLaAdrian Waddle(calf). DOUBTFUL: SJames Ihedigbo (neck), RB MontellOwens(hamstring). QUESTIONABLE: DE EzekielAnsah(knee), DTNick Fairley (biceps), DE GeorgeJohnson(groin). PROBABLE: RBJoiqueBell (knee),SDonCarey(hamstring). INDIANAP OLIS COLTSat JACKSONVILLEJAGUNS — COL TS: OUT: LBJerrell Freeman(hamstring), DE ArthurJones (ankle). QUE STIONABLE: DT RickyJeanFrancois (ankle), WRHakeemNicks (illness), G JoeReitz (ankle). PROBABLE: CBDarius Butler(neck),WRTY. Hilton(groin), CKhaledHolmes (ankle), CB GregToler (ribs). JAGU ARS: OUT: WR MarqiseLee(hamstring). QUESTIONABLE: TEClay Harbor(calf).PROBABLE: CBAlan Ball (abdomen), DE Chris Clemons (ilness), S Johnathan Cyprien (concussion), RB TobyGerhart (foot), SWinstonGuyJr. illness), CB JeremyHarris (ilness), WRAllen Hurns ankle), RB StormJohnson(ankle), GAustin Pasztor hand), LB PaulPosluszny(knee), WRCecil Shorts III hamstring),TEMickeyShuler(heel). OAKUINDRAIDERS alNEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — RAIDERS: OUT: LBSio Moore (ankle). QUESTIONABLE :CBChimdiChekwa(knee),RBMaurice Jones-Drew (hand), TMatt Mccants(knee), LB Nick Roach (concussion), CBCarlos Rogers (knee), DT AntonioSmith(back), WRRodStreater (hip). PROB ABLE: DEJustin Tuck(illness). PATRIOTS: QUESTI ONABLE:DEMichaelBuchanan (ankle),LB JamieCollins (thigh), CBAlfonzo Dennard (shoulder), S DonJones (hamstring), RB Shane Vereen (shoulder),CRyanWendell (knee). PROBABLE:GDan Connolly(knee),WRJulian Edelman(back), TERob Gronkowski(knee),DTSealverSiliga(hand). SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS alN IZONA CARDINALS —49ERS: OUT:CMarcusMartin(knee). QUESTIONAB LE:CBTramaineBrock (toe), TAnthonyDavis (hamstring),TEVernon Davis (ankle, knee), TEVance McDonald (knee). PROBABLE: RB Carlos Hyde (calf), QBColinKaepernick(back), DTJustin Smith (not injury related), TJoeStaley(knee). CA RDINALS: OUT: LB AlexOkafor (thigh), PDaveZastudil (leftgroin). QUESTIONAB LE:TERob Housler (hip), QBCarsonPalmer (right shoulder),DEFrostee Rucker (calf). PROBABLE: RB AndreEllington(foot), LBLarry Foote (shoulder), LB KevinMinter(quadriceps), CLyleSendlein(ankle). DENVERBRONCOS alSEATILE SEAHAWKS — BRONC OS: OUT: LB Lerentee Mccray (knee). QUESTIONABLE :LB DannyTrevathan(knee).PROBABLE:DTMarvin Austin(not injury related), SDavid BrutonJr.(shoulder),SQuintonCarter(knee), TRyan Clady(foot), GBenGarland(ankle), CBChris Harris Jr. (knee),KBrandonMcManus(right groin), LBVon Miller (groin).SEA HAWKS: OUT:CBTharold Simon (knee).QUESTIONABLE: LBBruce Irvin (rib). PROBABLE: SKamChancellor (ankle), TECooper Helfet (knee), RBMarshawn Lynch (back), RBChristine Michael(hamstring), TEZach Miler (ankle),LBMike Morgan(hip), LBKevin Pierre-Louis (hamstring). KANSAS CITYCHIEFSat MIAMIDOLPHINSCHIEFS: OUT: S Eric Berry (ankle), RBDe'Anthony Thomas(hamstring). QUESTIONABLE: RBJamaal Charles (ankle). PRO AB BLE: S Husain Abdullah (foot, quadriceps),RBCyrus Gray(foot), LB Tamba Hali (ankleknee), , CEricKush(shoulder), LBJosh Martin (quadriceps,triceps). DOLP HINS: OUT: LB Koa Mis(ankl i e),RBKnowshon Moreno (elbow), G ShelleySmith(knee). DOUBTFUL: DETerrenceFede knee), C MikePouncey (hip), LBJordanTripp(chest). UESTIN OABLE:TECharlesClay(knee), TBily Turner (foot).PROBABLE: SWalt Aikens(hand), TBranden Albert(shoulder),SLouis Delmas(calf), LBJonathan Freeny(calf), DTBruceGaston(knee), LBJelaniJenkins (shoulder),LBPhilip Wheeler (thumb). PITTSBURGHSTEELERS at CNOLINA PANTHERS — STEELERS: DOUBTFUL: WRDri Archer (ankle). QUE STIONABLE; G Ramon Foster (ankle). PROBA BLE:WRMartavis Bryant(shoulder), DEBrett Keisel(notinjury related),NTSteveMcLendon(shoulder), TEHeath Miler (not injury related),WRLance Moore(groin), STroyPolamalu (not injury related). PANTHE RS:DOUBTFUL: RBFozzyWhittaker (thigh). QUESTIN OABLE: WRJason Avant (thigh), WRJerrichoCotchery(thigh), RBDeAngeloWiliams (thigh). PROBA BLE:T Byron Bell (toe),WRKelvin Benjamin knee), WRPhily Brown(ankle), T NateChandler toe), DT Colin Cole(not injury related),LBThomas Davis(hip), DTDwan Edwards(back), TEGregOlsen (calf), RB MikeTolbert (chest), TGarry Wiliams (hip). CHICAGOBEARS at NEW YORK JETSBEARS: DNP: CRoberto Garza(ankle), WRBrandon Marshal(ankl l e),LBShea Mcclelin (hand),CBSherrick McMa nis(quadriceps), DTJeremiah Ratltff (concussion), DE Trevor Scott (foot), GMatt Slauson(ankle). LIMITED: SChris Conte (shoulder), WRAlshon Jeffery(hamstring). FULL:DEJaredAllen (back), WR Josh Morgan (groin). JETS:DNP: WREric Decker (hamstring), CBDeeMiliner (ankle, quadriceps). LIMITED:LBNick Bellore (hip), GWilie Colon(calf), LB A.J.Edds(hamstring), RBChris Johnson(ankle), C Nic
America's Lin e
TENNIS
Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog (Hometeamincaps) BILLS
Cowbovs EAGLES
Texans SAINTS BENGA LS Ravens LIONS Colts PATRIO TS 49ers
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GOLF
ATP MoselleOpen Saturdayal LesArenesdeMetz Metz, France Purse:S629,900(WT250) Surlace:Hard-Indoor Singles Semifinals DavidGoffin(B),Belgium, def.Jan-LennardStruff, Germany, 7-6(4), 6-3. JoaoSousa(6), Portugal,def.GaelMonfils (2), France,7-6(6), B-2.
WTA
TorayPanPacilic Open Saturdayal Ariake Colosseum Bears Tokyo Purse:S1million (Premier) Surlace:Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals CarolineWozniacki (2), Denmark,def. GarbineMuguruza,Spain,6-4, 2-6,6-2. AnaIvanovic(3), Serbia, def. AngeliqueKerber(t), Germany, 7-5, 6-3.
LPGA T OLAI' Yokoham a Tire C lassie Salurday Al RoberlTrentJones GolfTrail, Capitol Hill, TheSenator Pratlville, Alab ama Purse:S1.3 million Yardage:6,599;Par 72 Third Round MiJungHur 64-70-67 —20f PaulaReto 65-66-70—20t Kris Tam ulis 67-73-65—205 StacyLewis 64-71-70—205 MoriyaJutanugarn 69-69-71—20B AlisonWalshe 69-BB-7t—2OB lheeLee 67-74-69 —209 PerrineDelacour 69-72-69 —209 BrittanyLang Tt-69-70—209 AyakoUehara 66-73-70—209 Sydnee Michaels 72-65-72—209 StaceyKeating 71-Tt-BB—2t0 Ai Miyazato 73-67-70—2tg KarinSjodin 66-74-70—210 Cydney Clanton 66-72-72—2t0 ChellaChoi 70-Tt-70—2tt Jodi EwartShadoff 70-71-70—21f ThidapaSuwannapura 69-70-72—21t 67-72-72—2tt SunYoungYoo 70-72-70—212 JaneRah 72-69-71—212 BeckyMorgan 69-Tt-72—2t2 AustinErnst 69-72-72—212 Mika Miyazato 70-70-72—212 Giulia Molinaro Tt-72-70—2t3 Kim Kaufm an 69-74-71—2t3 AmyAnderson 69-74-71—213 StephanieLMeadow 71-70-72—2t3 MinaHarigae 67-73-73—2t3 BeatrizRecari BrittanyLincicome 70-69-74—213 ChristinaKim 67-Tt-75—2t3 JanePark 69-70-75—2t3 Angela Stanford 76-69-70—214 ChristelBoeljon 72-71-71—214 HaruNom ura 72-70-72—2t4 Sarah JaneSmith 71-71-72—214 JacquiConcolino 70-71-73—214 KarlinBeck 69-Tt-74—2t4 AmeliaLewis 69-72-74—214 Sandra Changkija 72-72-71—215 HaejiKang 72-Tt-72—2t5 Joanna Klatten 69-74-72—2t5 Tiffany Joh 73-69-73—215 Caroline Westrup 75-67-73—2t5 Julia Boland 71-69-75—2t5 HeatherBowieYoung 71-69-75—215 75-69-72—2t6 MoiraDunn 73-69-74—2t6 LourseFrrberg 69-74-74—216 Ji Young Oh 72-74-71—217 Alena Sharp 74-70-73—2t7 BrookePancake 73-71-73—217 JenniferRosales 74-69-74—217 Sue Kim Tt-Tt-75—2t7 MorganPressel 74-72-72—21B CristieKerr 71-75-72—21B RyannOToole Tt-74-73—2tB LisaMccloskey 71-74-73—2tB JennyShin 73-71-74—21B PaolaMoreno HannaKang 69-75-75—2tB KatherineKirk 70-73-75—2tB JulietaGranada 70-76-73—219 Brianna Do 69-75-75—2t9 DewiClaireSchreefel 69-76-75—2t9 Marina Alex 71-72-76—219 JenniferJohnson 71-TP-76—219 LizetteSalas 73-73-74—220 P.K.Kongkraphan 74-71-75—220 HaleyMilsap 70-74-76—220 KathleenEkey Tt-72-7T—220 ReilleyRankin 73-79-75—221 Hannah Colier 75-71-76—222 JenniferSong Tt-74-7T—222 JennySuh 71-74-77—222 70-75-7B—223 YueerCindyFeng Katie M. Burnet 69-71-94—223
Guangzhou InternabonalOpen Saturdayat TianheSporls Center Guangzhou,China Purse:SBOO,OOO(lnO.) Surlace:Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship MonicaNiculescu,Romania, def.Alize Cornet(2), France,6-4,6-0. KoreaOpen Saturdayat Olympic Park Seoul, South Korea Purse:t500,009(Inll.) Surlace:Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals KarolinaPliskova(2), CzechRepublic, def.Maria Kirilenko,Russia,4-B, 7-6(5)r B-3. Varvara Lepchenko(5), UnitedStates,def. Christina McHaleUni , tedStates, 3-6, B-t, 7-6(5).
MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Sylvania399Lineup After Friday qualifying; racetoday At NewHampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon,N.H. Lap length:1.059 miles (Car num berin parentheses) t. (2) BradKeselowski, Ford,t40.59Bmph.2. (t) JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet, t40.437. 3. (4) Kevin Harvick,Chevrolet,140.065.4. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,t39.757.5. (19) KyleBusch, Toyota, t39.721. 6. (4B)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,139419. 7. (22) Joey Logano,Ford, t39.24t. B. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, t39.0)7. 9. (Bt) RyanNew man, Chevrolet, I39.946.IO.(42)KyleLarson, Chevrolet, tBB.BBt. I t. (BB)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, t39865.12. (55) Brian Vickers,Toyota,139.759. I3. (24)Jefl Gordon,Chevrolet,138946.14. (I5) ClintBowyer,Toyota, 139.946. 15. (41) Kurt Busch,Chevrolet, 139.941. 16. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota, tBB.B55.t7. (5)Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet, t38925. IB. (tg) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,138.779.19.(IT) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford, t 39.577.20.(9) MarcosAmbrose, Ford, t 39.527. 21. (43)AricAlmirola, Ford,139512.22.(3)Austin Dillon,Chevrolet,139492.23.(27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, t39.472.24.(Bt) JustinAllgaier, Chevrolet, t39.29t.25.(t3) CaseyMears,Chevrolet,138.21. 26. (t6) GregBiffle, Ford,tSB.t85. 27.(47)AJAllmendinger,Chevrolet, t38.09.2B.(14) TonyStewart, Chevrolet, t37.62t. 29. (34) David Ragan,Ford, 137.5Bt.30.(40) LandonCassil, Chevrolet,136.992. 31. (26) ColeWhitt, Toyota, 136.722.32. (TB) Martin TruexJr., Chevrolet, t36.697.33. (93) Clay Rogers,Toyota, t36.56.34. (39)DavidGililand,Ford, t36.194.35.(23)Alex Bowman,Toyota, t36.077. 36. 33) DavidStremme,Chevrolet, 136.039.37. (36) M-eed Sorenson,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 39. (7) Mi chaelAnnett,Chevrolet, ownerpornts. 39.(9B)Josh Wise,Chevrolet,ownerpoints. 40.(B3)Travis Kvapil, Toyota,ownerpoints. 4t. (77)CoreyLaJoie,Ford,ownerpoints. 42.(66) MikeWallace,Toyota, owner points. 43. (32)Timmy Hill, Ford,ownerpoints.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER
AH TimesPDT
D.C.
EaalernConference W L T P l sGF GA 14 9
6 49 45 34
S porting KansasCity t3 tg 6 4 5 43 34 N ew England 1 3 1 3 3 4 2 41 40 NewYork 1 0 B 11 4 1 4B 42 Columbus t 0 9 t 0 40 4t 36 Cham pions ToLII' P hiladel p hia 9 9 tI 3B 45 43 Hawaii Championship TorontoFC 9 1I 7 34 36 43 Saturday Houston 9 13 6 S B SB 50 At Kap olei GolfClubCours Chicago 5 7 t 6 31 37 43 Kapolei, Hawaii Montreal 6 t 7 6 2 4 34 52 Purse: $2.2 million WeslernConference Yard age: 7,991;Par:72 W L T P l sGF GA Seco nd Roundleader s Seattle t7 B 3 54 52 41 67-62 —129 FredFunk Los Angel e s t 5 5 9 54 59 31 66-63—t29 PaulGoydos R eal Sal t Lake 13 6 1 0 4 9 49 36 70-61—13t CoreyPavin FC Dallas 1 3 10 6 4 5 49 39 66-65—13f Vijay Singh Portland 9 B t 2 3 9 52 4B 69-63—I32 DougGarwood Vancouver B B t 3 3 7 36 39 67-65—t32 MarkCalcavecchia Colorado B 14 7 3 t 40 53 Jim Carter 66-66—132 SanJose 6 12 10 29 33 41 TomPerniceJr. 60-72—132 ChivasUSA 6 t6 6 24 23 51 MichaelAllen 64-69—t32 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. RoccoMediate 69-65 —133 Jeff Magge rt 67-66—133 Saturday'sGames WesShort,Jr. 61-66—t33 Portland3, Vancouver0 RussCochran 67-66—133 Philadelphia 0, HoustonO,tie ScottDunlap 65-6B—133 Columbus 1, NewEngland0 Olin Brown e 69-65—t34 NewYork4, Seattle FC1 JoseCoceres 69-66—194 Montreal2,SanJose0 MarkBrooks 67-67—134 Chicago 3, D.C.United3,tie Jay Haa s 66-6B —I34 Los Angele2, s FCDallas I JoeySindelar 65-69—194 Today'sGame LarryMize 70-65—135 ChivasUSAat TorontoFC,noon MarkO'Meara 69-66—I35 DavidFrost 69-66—IBB 69-67—135 DEALS GuyBoros Jeff Hart 67-6B—135 69-67—IBB SteveJones Transactions 67-69 —135 Joe Durant BASEBAL L MarkMcNulty 71-65—136 AmericanLeague 70-66—t36 Tommy Armour III KANSASCITYROYALS— RecalledLHPTim Col69-67—136 Jeff Sluman Omaha(PCL). BB-BB—136 lins from RodSpittle LOSANGELESANGELS — RecalledRHP Drew 61-69—t36 KevinSutherland RucinskifromArkansas(TL). 72-65 —137 BobTwa y NationalLeague 70-67 —137 Esteban Toledo WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Reinstated3BRyan 69-6B —I37 BarryLane Z immerman f r om the t5-dayDL 6 9-69 — 1 37 HidekiKase FOOTBAL L ChipBeck 72-66—13B NationalFootballLeague LeeJanzen 7t-67—tBB D ALLAS COWBOYS — Re leasedDE LavarEdStevePate 70-69—tBB RogerChapman 69-69—13B wards.SignedLBKeith Smith fromthe practice squad. JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS — Released S Craig SteveLowery 69-69—13B Skip Kendall 69-69—tBB Loston.SignedWRKerryTaylorfromthepractice squad. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Released WRJerome Hal Sutton 69-70—13B MikeGoodes 66-72—13B Simpson.SignedWRCharlesJohnson. NEWYORKGIANTS— ReleasedG EricHerman. ChienSoonLu 70-69—t39 ST. LOUIS RAMS—ReleasedWRJustin Veltung Kirk Triplett 69-70—139 from the practice squad.SignedDBJemeaThomasto Bart Bryant 69-71—139 the practice squ ad. DanForsman 61-72—t39 SANDIEGOCHARGERS— PlacedLBMelvinInDuffyWaldorf 74-66—140 injured reserve-designatedforreturn. Willie Wood 72-6B—140 gram on SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS— Released QB Josh Joe Daley 7t-69 — t40 Johnson. SignedTEAsanteClevelandfromthepracGaryHallberg 70-70—140 TomLehman 70-70—140 tice squad. COLLEG E 70-70—t40 Bill Glasson EASTCAROLINA— SuspendedWRCam Worthy 69-7t—t40 TomByrum two gam e s. PeterSenior 69-71—140 69-72 —140 Hale Irwin 72-69—t4t Billy Andrade FISH COUNT 69-72 —141 MarcoDawson 69-72 —14t DavisLoveIII Upstreamdatly movement of adult chtnook,lack 69-72—t4t JohnRiegger chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCo69-72 —141 BradFaxon lumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSaturday. 69-72 —14t TomPurtzer Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsehd 69-72—t4t GeneSauers Bonneville 16,97B 9,293 2,959 7 95 7 4-69 — 1 42 Jim Rutledge The Dalles 15,770 4,507 5,131 t,555 John Inman 73-69 —142 JohnDay t2,072 2,2t2 4,662 t,32t P.H.HorganII 73-69—t42 McNary 10,943 2,3tg 4,192 t,322 Kohkildoki 72-70—142 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, JohnCook 72-70—142 jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected GregBruckner 70-73—t43 ColumbiaRiverdamslastupdatedonSaturday. AndersForsbrand 70-73—t43 Chnk Jchnk StlhdWaOhd KevinHayashi 72-72—144 Bonneville 9BB,SBBt40,392 299,949 119,796 MarkMouland 71-73—144 TheDalles 626,997 93, 992 tgz,t76 79,530 MikeReid 72-73—t45 John Day 504,233 77,t50 13t,t06 Bt,777 Scott Simpson 71-75 — 146 McNary 449,043 67,4t B 120,742 46,t15
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN D3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL uutandingS
DODGERS CRUMBLE
All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division
x-Baltimore NewYork Toronto Tampa Bay Boston Detroit
Kansas City Cleveland Chicago Minnesota
W L 93 61 79 75 78 76 75 80 67 88
CentralDivision W L
86 68 83 70 80 74 70 84 66 88
West Division W L x-LosAngeles 96 59 Oakland 84 70 Seattle 83 71 Houston 68 87 Texas 61 93 x-clinched division
Pct GB 604 513 14 506 15 484 18'/t 432 26'/z
542 2t/t
519 6 455 16 429 20
Pct GB 619 545 ff'/t 539 12'/t
439 28
396 34t/t
Saturday'sGames
Detroit 3,KansasCity 2 Philadelphia 3, Oakland0 Toronto6, N.Y.Yankees3 Baltimore 7, Boston2 TampaBay3,ChicagoWhiteSox1 Cleveland 7, Minnesota3 Houston10,Seatle1 L.A. Angel8, s Texas5
,,~/ /
Today'sGam es
NATIONALLEAGUE
East Division W L x-Washington 90 64 Atlanta 76 78 NewYork 75 80 Miami 74 80 Philadelphia 71 84 CentralDivision W L St. Louis 87 68 Pittsburgh 83 71 Milwaukee 80 75 Cincinnati 71 84 Chicago 69 86 West Division
Pct GB 584 494 14
PITTSBURGH— Elian Herrera sprinted home on Logan Schafer's sacrifice fly in the ninth inning and Milwaukee edged Pittsburgh to tighten the race for the second National League wild-card spot. The Brewers
DENVER — Eddie Butler pitched six solid innings for his first major league win andColorado beat Arizona. Corey Dickerson andJosh Rutledge homered for the Rockies, who have wonfive straight for the first time since June11-15.
Pirates after winning for just the Arizona ab r hbi Colorado ab r hbi second time in their past13 road Inciartlf 4 0 1 0 Blckmncf 4 1 2 0 DPerltrf 3 0 1 0 Rutledgss 4 1 2 2 games. Pollockcf 4 0 0 0 Mornea1b 4 2 2 0
558
Monday'sGames Cleveland 4, KansasCity 2,10innings, comp.ofsusp. game,3:05p.m. BaltimoreatN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. Kansas CityatCleveland, 4:05p.m. Seattle atToronto, 4:07p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat Detroit, 4:08p.m. Houstonat Texas, 5:05p.m. Arizona at Minnesota, 5:10p.m. L.A. Angelat s Oakland, 7:05p.m.
Rockies 5, Diamondbacks1
pulled within 3t/z games of the
Pct GB
Toronto(Hutchison10-12)at N.Y.Yankees (Tanaka 12-4), 10:05a.m. Boston(J.Kelly2-2) at Baltimore(M.Gonzalez 9-8), 10:35a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Joh.Danks 9-11) at Tampa Bay (Karns1-0),10:40a.m. Cleveland (Kluber16-9) at Minnesota (Swarzak3-1), 11:10a.m. Detroit (Porceffo15-11) at Kansas City (Guthrie 1111),11:10a.m. Seattle (Iwakum a 14-8) at Houston (McHugh 10-9), 11:10a.m. Texas (Tepesch5-10)atLA.Angels (CorRasmus3-1), 12;35p.m. Philadelphia(A.Burnett 8-17)atOakland(Kazmir 149), 1:05p.m.
Brewers1, Pirates 0
„Iuj Andrew A. Nelles/The Associated Press
Chicago Cubs' Chris Coghlan, right, celebrates his two-run home run with Matt Szczur, left, during the eighth inning of Saturday's game against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Chicago. Coghlan's homer helped the Cubs rally for an 8-7 victory.
Angels 8, Rangers5 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Jered Weaver
earned his AL-leading 18th victory, Albert Pujols reached the100-RBI mark with a two-run homer and Mike Trout also hit a two-run shot to lead the LosAngeles Angels to a victory over Texas. Texas
LosAngeles
ab r hbi ab r hbi LMartncf 4 1 0 0 Calhonrf 5 1 0 0 A ndrusss 4 0 0 0 Troutcf 3 3 2 2 Odor2b 3 2 1 1 Puiols1b 4 1 3 2 ABeltre3b 4 0 3 2 HKndrc2b 4 1 3 1 Smlnskrf 4 0 0 1 Aybarss 4 1 1 0 Telisdh 4 0 1 0 Freese3b 4 1 1 3 Rualf 4 1 1 0 Campnlf 0 0 0 0 Chirinsc 4 1 1 0 Boeschdh 4 0 1 0
Orioles 7, RedSox2 BALTIMORE — Adam Jones hit a pair of two-run homers andBaltimore received another steady performance from right-hander Chris Tillman in a victory over Boston. Tillman (13-5) gave uptwo runs and five hits in seven innings. He has allowed three runs or fewer in 20 consecutive starts, tied with Steve Barber for the second-longest such run in Orioles history behind DaveMcNally (25).
CHICAGO — Chris Coghlan hit two homers, including the go-ahead two-run drive off Brian Wilson in the eighth inning, and theChicago Cubs rallied to beat the LosAngeles Dodgers. TheDodgers wereup 7-2 in the seventh, but the bullpen couldn't hold the lead.J.P. Howell gave up anRBIsingle to Anthony Rizzo and athree-run homer to Arismendy Alcantara, making it a Miami 4 Washington one-run game.Wilson (2-4) came Cardinals 8, Reds ab r hbi ab r hbi on in the eighth and things just got S pancf 4 0 2 1 Yelichlf 4 0 1 0 ST. LOUIS — Tony Cruz hit a worse from there. Rendon3b 4 0 1 0 Solano2b 4 1 0 0 three-run homer andSt. Louis Werthrf 4 0 3 0 McGeh3b 4 0 1 0 LaRoch1b 4 0 0 0 Ozunacf 4 0 1 0 LosAngeles Chicago connected three times, beating D smndss 3 1 2 0 Bour1b 4 0 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Cincinnati and moving closer to its Zmrmnlf 3 0 2 1 Lucaspr 0 0 0 0 DGordn2b 5 1 2 0 Coghlnlf 4 3 4 3 Schrhltlf 1 0 0 0 RJhnsnrf 3 1 1 0 Puigcf 4 2 2 0 J.Baezss 4 0 0 0 fourth straight playoff berth. The WRamsc 4 1 1 0 Cappsp 0 0 0 0 A dGnzl1b 5 2 2 5 Rizzo1b 4 1 2 1 Cardinals cut their magic number Acarer2b 4 1 1 1 GJonesph 1 0 0 0 K emprf 4 2 1 0 Solerrf 3 0 0 0 to one for clinching a postseason Zmrmnp 2 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 0 0 H Rmrzss 2 0 1 0 Wrghtp 0 0 0 0 H arperph 1 0 0 0 Mathisc 3 0 0 0 R olasss 0 0 0 0 Oltph 11 1 0 berth. The magic number is six Barrettp 0 0 0 0 Cosartp 2 0 1 0 JuTrnr3b 4 0 1 0 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 for their second NL Central title in Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 V nSlyklf 3 0 2 2 Lakeph 1 0 1 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 a row. Buterac 4 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 Vldspnph-rf 1 0 0 0
Baltimore ab r hbi ab r bbi Betts2b 3 1 0 0 DeAzalf 4 1 1 0 Rosales1b 3 0 1 1 lannettc 4 0 0 0 Bogarts ss 4 0 0 0 DYongdh 4 2 3 0 E Navrrlf 3 0 1 0 D.Ortizdh 4 1 1 2 A.Jonescf 4 2 2 4 Pct GB GBckh3b 1 0 1 0 Craig1b 4 0 1 0 N.cruzrf 4 0 1 1 561 Totals 34 5 8 5 Totals 3 6 8 138 NavaIf 4 0 1 0 Lough pr-rf 0 0 0 0 539 3'/2 Texas 000 000 140 — 5 Rcastllcf 4 0 1 0 JHardyss 3 0 0 0 516 7 Los Angeles 10 2 0 50 00x— 8 BrdlyJrrf 4 0 0 0 CWalkr1b 4 1 2 1 458 16 E—Andrus (18). DP—Texas 2, Los Angeles 1. Mdlrks3b 3 0 1 0 Flahrty3b 4 1 2 0 445 18 LOB —Texas3, LosAngeles 5. 28—A.Beltre3 (32), Vazquzc 3 0 1 0 Hundlyc 4 0 0 0 H.Kendrick(31). 38—Trout (9). HR —Trout (35), PuSchoop 2b 2 0 0 1 W L Pct GB iols (27), Freese(10). Totals 3 3 2 6 2 Totals 3 37 117 z-LosAngeles 88 67 568 IP H R E R BBSO Boston 2 00 000 000 — 2 SanFrancisco 84 70 545 31/2 Texas Baltimore 002 2 2 0 1 0x— 7 SanDiego 73 81 474 14r/t LewisL,10-14 5 9 8 7 1 3 E—Flaherty (8). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB —BosColorado 64 91 413 24 Kirkman 1 1 0 0 0 0 ton 6, Baltimore6. 28—N.cruz (32), Flaherty(13). RHrndzp 2 0 0 0 Valuen3b 3 1 1 0 Arizona 62 93 400 26 Totals 35 3 123 Totals 3 3 2 7 1 S.Patton 1 2 0 0 0 2 HR — D.Ortiz (35),A.Jones2 (27), C.Walker(1). CSPRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Alcantrcf 3 1 1 3 Cincinnati St. Louis z-clinched playoffberth W ashington 00 0 0 0 0 300 — 3 Mendez 1 1 0 0 0 1 Middlebrooks(1), DeAza(10). S—Schoop. Guerrrph 1 0 0 0 Watkns2b 2 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi x-clinched division Miami 1 00 100 000 — 2 LosAngeles IP H R E R BBSO Coulomp 0 0 0 0Val aikaph-2b2 0 0 0 B Hmltncf 4 0 0 0 Jaycf 3100 E—Span(4), Zimmermann (1). DP—Washington WeaverW,18-8 7 5 1 1 1 7 Boston PBaezp 0 0 0 0 JoBakrc 4 0 1 0 Negron3b 4 0 2 1 Wong2b 3 2 3 2 Saturday'sGames 1, Miami 3. LO B — W ashin gton 7,Miami4. 28—DesGrilli 23 1 1 1 0 1 R.DeLaRosaL,4-8 4 6 4 4 2 4 Howellp 0 0 0 0 Dourntp 1 0 0 0 Frazier1b 4 1 1 0 Hollidylf 4 0 1 0 Chicago Cubs8, L.A.Dodgers7 mond (25),R.Johnson(13). 38—Zimmerman (1), Thatcher 0 1 1 1 0 0 Hembree 1 2 2 2 0 2 League p 0 0 0 0 Viganv p 0 0 0 0 Mesorcc 3 1 1 0 JhPerltss 4 1 1 0 Philadelphia 3, Oakland0 A.cabrera(2). CS—Werth(1). J.Smith 1-3 1 2 2 0 0 S.Wright 3 3 1 1 1 6 Ethierph 0 0 0 0 Kalishph 1 0 0 0 B rnhrtc 1 0 0 0 Taversrf 2 0 0 0 Colorado 5, Arizona1 IP H R E R BBSO StreetS,15-17 1 0 0 0 0 1 Baltimore BrWlsnp 0 0 0 0 BParkrp 0 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 0 2 1 Grichkph-rf 2 1 2 2 Milwaukee1, Pittsburgh0 Washington Weaverpitchedto 2batters inthe 8th. TillmanW,13-5 7 5 2 2 2 6 Friasp 0 0 0 0 Szczurrf 2 1 0 0 Brucerf 3 0 0 1 YMolin1b 4 1 2 0 N.Y.Mets4, Atlanta2 Z immermann W ,13-5 6 5 2 1 0 4 Thatcherpitchedto 1batterin the8th. Brach 1 0 0 0 0 2 Totals 34 7 117 Totals 3 5 8 128 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 Descals3b 2 1 0 0 Washington 3, Miami2 H,B 1 0 0 0 0 0 WP — J.Smith. Tom.Hunter 1 1 0 0 0 LosAngeles 204 000 100 — 7 L udwcklf 3 0 0 0 T.cruzc 3 1 1 3 Barrett St. Louis8,Cincinnati 4 ClippardH,38 1 0 0 0 0 2 T—2:57. A—35,890(45,483). T—2:51.A—43,015 (45,971). Chicago 100 100 42x — 8 Viffarrlp 0 0 0 0 Wachap 1 0 0 0 SanDiego3,SanFrancisco2 StorenS,9-12 1 2 0 0 0 0 DP—LosAngeles 1, Chicago2. LOB—LosAn- Ju.Di azp 0 0 0 0 Mottep 0 0 0 0 Today'sGam es Miami geles 6, Chi c ago 9. 28 — P ui g (37), Van S l y ke (12 ), YRdrgzrf 1 0 0 0 M.Ellisph 1 0 0 0 Tigers 3, Royals 2 Washington(Strasburg12-11) at Miami (Eovaldi Rays 3, WhiteSox1 CosartL,4-3 61- 3 9 3 3 2 2 Coghlan(26), Valbuena(31), Watkins(2). HRCozartss 4 2 2 1 Gonzalsp 1 0 0 0 6-12), 10:10a.m. M.Dunn 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Ad.Gonzalez2 (25), Coghlan2 (8), Alcantara(10). Leake p 2 0 0 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee(W.Peralta 16-10) at Pittsburgh(Worley KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Max Scher- ST. PETERSBURG,Fla. — Nick Hatcher 11-3 2 0 0 0 1 SB — D.Gordon(64). CS—D.Gordon(19). SF—Van Dennckp 0 0 0 0 SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 7-4),10:35a.m. Capps 1 0 0 0 0 1 Slyke. zer and Detroit won their appeal Franklin hit his first home run Heiseylf 2 0 0 0 Scrggsph 1 0 0 0 N.Y.Mets(deGrom8-6) at Atlanta(E.Santana14-9), T—2:59. A—20,983(37,442). IP H R E R BBSO CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 10:35a.m. on a wild play, andJoe Nathan with TampaBayand Chris Archer LosAngeles Totals 3 5 4 8 4 Totals 3 18 107 L.A.Dodgers(J.Wright5-4)at ChicagoCubs(Ja.Turn- escaped a ninth-inning jam to hold pitched shutout ball into the sevR.Hernandez 4 6 2 2 2 4 C incinnati 000 1 1 1 100 — 4 Interleague er 5-10),11:20 a.m. PRodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 1 St. Louis 032 0 1 1 1 0x— 8 Philadelphia(A.Burnett 8-17)atOakland(Kazmir 14- off Kansas City and boost its AL enth inning, leading theRaysto a Coulombe 0 0 0 0 2 0 E — B ruce (7), Wong (12). DP — C in ci n nati 3. Phillies 3, Athletics0 9), 1:05p.m. victory over theChicago White Sox. P.BaezH,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 LOB —Cincinnati 5, St. Louis4. 28—Negron2 (9), Arizona (Miley8-11)at Colorado(Bergman2-4),1;10 Central lead. 2-3 3 4 4 1 0 Howel l Mesoraco(25), Grichuk(4), Y.Molina(20). HRFranklin connectedagainst Hector p.m. OAKLAND, Calif.— Jerome WilKansasCity LeagueH,9 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cozart(4),Wong(12), Grichuk(3), T.cruz(1). SBSanFrancisco(Vogelsong8-11) atSanDiego(Kenne- Detroit Noesi (8-10) in thesecond inning. ab r hbi ab r hbi Br WilsonL,2-4BS,4-5 2-3 3 2 2 0 0 Jh.Peralta(3). CS liams beat the Athletics for the —Tcruz(3). SF—Bruce. dy11-13),1:10p.m. Frias 13 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO third time this season Cincinnati(Simon14-10) at St. Louis (Lynn15-9), Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 AEscorss 5 0 4 1 with three T rHntrrl 4 1 2 1 Aokirf 3 0 0 0 Chicago Tampa Bay Chicago Cincinnati 5;05 p.m. different teams, and Oakl and Micarr1b 4 0 0 0 Wlnghdh 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r bbi Doubront 21-3 6 6 6 3 2 L eake L,11-13 5 6 6 5 2 4 Monday'sGames VMrtnzdh 4 0 1 0 Ibanezph 1 0 0 0 E atoncf 3 0 0 0 Zobristlf 3 0 2 1 Viganueva 12-3 0 0 0 0 2 Dennick 0 2 1 1 1 0 PittsburghatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. missed an opportunity to extend JMrtnzlf 4 1 1 0 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 0 0 DeJessdh 4 0 0 0 B.Parker 1 2 0 0 0 2 Viffarreal 1 0 0 0 0 2 St. LouisatChicagoCubs,5:05p.m. its lead in the AL wi l d-card race Cstllns3b 4 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 0 2 0 JAreu1b 3 1 1 0 Longori3b 3 0 1 0 WWright 2 3 1 1 1 0 Ju.Diaz 1 2 1 1 0 1 Arizona at Minnesota, 5:10p.m. AnRmnss 0 0 0 0 LAdmspr 0 1 0 0 Giffaspi3b 2 0 0 0 Loney1b 4 1 1 0 GrimmW,5-2 1 0 0 0 1 0 A.chapmna 1 0 0 0 1 1 with a loss to Philadelphia. Freddy Coloradoat San Diego,7:10p.m. S uarezss 2 1 0 0 Kratzc 0 0 0 0 Semien ph 1 0 1 1 Frnkln 2b 3 1 2 2 H .Rondon S, 2 6-30 1 0 0 0 0 1 St. Louis SanFranciscoat L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m. Galvis hit a two-run homer in the D.Kellyph-3b1 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 2 1 A Garcirf 2 0 1 0 Joycerf 3 0 0 0 R.Hernandez pitched to2 batters inthe5th. Wacha 42-3 6 2 2 0 1 Holadyc 2 0 1 0 Infante2b 3 0 0 0 Viciedolf 3 0 0 0 YEscorss 3 1 1 0 Coulombe pitched to2 batters inthe6th. MotteW,1-0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 seventh inning against DanOtero Wild Card Tycllnsph 1 0 1 1 Mostks3b 3 0 0 0 Wilkinsdh 3 0 0 0 Kiermrcf 2 0 0 0 HBP —by BrWilson (Rizzo). WP—Coulombe 2, Gonzales 12-3 2 2 2 0 1 (8-2). Marlon Byrd added anRBI AMERICANLEAGUE Konerkph 1 0 0 0 Hanignc 2 0 0 0 Howell. ManessH,10 13- 0 0 0 0 1 W L Pct GB JMccnc 1 0 0 0 JDysoncf 4 1 3 0 RDavicf s3011 Flowrsc 4 0 0 0 T—3:44. A—34,334(41,072). S.Freema n 1 0 0 0 0 0 single in the eighth. Oakland 84 70 .545 Totals 3 4 3 7 3 Totals 3 52 112 CSnchz2b 3 0 0 0 C.Martinez 1 0 0 0 0 2 Kansas City 83 70 .542 0 00 100 200 — 3 Totals 2 9 1 3 1 Totals 2 73 7 3 Dennickpitchedto 3battersin the6th. Philadelphia Oak land Seattle 83 71 .539 '/2 Detroit Padres 3, Giants 2 K ansas City 0 0 0 0 1 0 010 — 2 Chicago 0 00 000 001 — 1 H BP — by L ea ke (Ja y). WP—Dennick, Ju.Diaz, Waab r hbi ab r hbi Cleveland 80 74 .519 3'/t LOB — D etroi t 5, Kansas Ci t y10. 28 — A .E s cob ar — 3 Tampa Bay 0 2 0 0 1 0 00x cha, Motte. R everecf 5 0 1 0 Fuldcf 3000 NewYork 79 75 .513 4'/t E—Franklin (1). DP—Chicago 4, Tampa Bay 2. SAN DIEGO (32), Hosmer (32), J.Dyson(4). HR—Tor Hunter (17). —Andrew Cashner T—2;52.A—46,157 (45,399). Franco1b 5 0 1 0 Crispph-cf 1 0 0 0 S B — M ous ta ka s (1). S — Aok i 2. L OB — C h i c a g o 7 , T a mp a B a y 5 . 2 8 — L o n g o r i a ( 2 5 ) , U tley2b 3 1 1 0 Vogt1b 4000 NATIONALLEAGUE pitched brilliantly into the ninth inIP H R E R BBSO Loney (27). HR—Franklin (1). Howarddh 4 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 4 0 0 0 W L PctGB Mets 4, Braves 2 Detroit IP H R E R BBSO ning and SanDiego beat SanFranByrdrf 3 0 1 1 A.Dunndh 3 0 1 0 SanFrancisco 84 70 .545 ScherzerW,17-5 7 7 1 1 1 6 Chicago R uflf 4 0 0 0 Mosslf 3 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 83 71 .539 cisco to keepthe Giants from gain- ATLANTA — C hamberl a i n H,27 1 2 1 1 0 1 N oesiL,8-11 6 6 3 3 3 Sl u mping Atlanta 0 0 0 0 Reddckrf 3 0 2 0 Milwaukee 80 75 . 516 3'/t West-leading was shut down byJonathon Niese GwynJIf NathanS,33-40 1 2 0 0 0 0 Guerra 1 1 0 0 1 0 ing ground on the NL Asche3b 3 1 1 0 Lowriess 2 0 1 0 KansasCity Cleto 1 0 0 0 1 1 Nievesc 4 0 1 0 DeNrrsc 3 0 0 0 LosAngelesDodgers.TheGiants ShieldsL,14-8 6 2 - 3 6 3 3 1 6 TampaBay and lost to the New York Mets, American League Galvisss 4 1 1 2 Sogard2b 2 0 0 0 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 ArcherW,10-8 6 1 - 3 2 K.Herrera 0 0 4 3 remain 3t/z games behind the Callaspph-2b1 0 0 0 damaging its flickering playoff W.Davis 1 0 0 0 0 2 Jo.PeraltaH,17 1 0 0 0 0 1 Dodgers, who lost 8-7 at theChiAstros10, Mariners1 Totals 35 3 7 3 Totals 2 90 4 0 HBP —by Scherzer (Infante). WP—Chamberlain, BeliveauH,6 hopes. Atlanta has lost seven of 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 cago Cubs. San 000 000 210 — 3 Francisco remains eight to drop to 4-13 in September. Philadelphia Shields. BalfourH,10 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Oakland 000 000 000 — 0 HOUSTON — Chris Carter and T—3:29. A—37,074(37,903). McGeeS,18-22 1 1 1 1 2 1 one gameaheadof Pittsburgh in E—Sogard(10). DP—Philadelphia 2.LOB—PhilAny combination of two PittsWP — Noesi. Alex Presley hit two-run homers adelphi a 8, Oakl a nd 4. 28—Utley (33), Asche(23). the race for the top wild-card spot. burgh wins or Atlanta losses will T—3:05.A—21,830 (31,042). HR—Galvis (4). SB—utley (8). and Houston connected five 484 15'/t
481 16 458 fgr/t
times in all, routing Seattle and preventing the Mariners from moving up in the playoff chase. Matt Dominguez andCarlos Corporan added back-to-back solo shots and Jake Marisnick hit a three-run homer in the seventh inning as the Astros snapped a four-game skid. Chris Young (129) was tagged for seven runs in three-plus innings.
Boston
National Lea ue
Cubs 8,Dodgers7
Trumo1b 4 0 1 0 CDckrslf 4 1 2 2 Milwaukee Pittsburgh MMntrc 4 0 3 0McKnrc 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Owings2b 4 0 0 0 Paulsnrf 3 0 1 1 CGomzcf 5 0 0 0 JHrrsn3b 5 0 1 0 Lamb3b 4 1 1 1 FMorlsp 0 0 0 0 Gennett2b 3 0 1 0 Sniderrf 3 0 1 0 Gregrs ss 4 0 1 0 McBrid ph 1 0 0 0 RWeksph-2b1 0 1 0 Tabataph 0 0 0 0 Cahiffp 1 0 0 0 Fridrchp 0 0 0 0 Lucroyc 3 0 1 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 0 0 Morelph 1 0 1 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Braunrf 4 0 1 0 CdArndpr 0 0 0 0 Pachecph 1 0 1 0 Ynoa3b 4 0 1 0 KDavisff 3 00 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Harrisp 0 0 0 0 Adams2b 4 0 0 0 EHerrrph 1 1 0 0 AMcctcf 0 0 0 0 E Butlrp 2 0 0 0 MrRynl1b 0 0 0 0 NWalkr2b 4 0 0 0 BBarnsph-rf 2 0 1 0 Overay1b 3 0 2 0 RMartnc 3 0 1 0 Totals 33 1 9 1 Totals 3 6 5 11 5 Segurapr-ss 0 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 0 1 0 Arizona 0 00 010 000 — 1 HGomzss 3 0 00 I.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Colorado 103 0 1 0 Bgx— 6 Clarkph 0 0 0 0 GSnchzph-1b1 0 0 0 DP — Colorado 2. LOB—Arizona 7, Colorado FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Mercerss 3 0 0 0 7. 28 — M.Montero (23), Morneau(31), Ynoa(3). Garzap 1 0 0 0 Volquezp 2 0 0 0 38 —Blackmon (3), Co.Dickerson (6). HR—Lamb Estradp 0 0 0 0 Lamboph 1 0 1 0 4), Rutledge(4), Co.Dickerson(24). SB—B.Barnes GParraph 1 0 0 0 GPolncpr-rf 1 0 0 0 5). S —Cahil. Jeffrssp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Arizona Kintzlr p 0 0 0 0 Cahiff L,3-12 5 10 5 5 0 8 Dukep 0 0 0 0 Delgado 1 1 0 0 0 2 LSchfr ph-If 0 0 0 1 O.Perez 1 0 0 0 0 4 Totals 3 2 1 6 1 Totals 3 10 6 0 Harris 1 0 0 0 0 2 M ilwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 0 001 — 1 Colorado P ittsburgh 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 E.ButlerW,1-1 6 5 1 1 1 1 E—Volquez (3), Watson (1). DP—Pittsburgh 2. FMorales 1 1 0 0 0 2 LOB —Milwaukee9, Pittsburgh10.28—Gennett (31), Friedrich 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Overbay2(14), Snider(12), R.Martin (20). SB—Over- Ottavino 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 bay(2),Mercer(4).CS —A.Mccutchen(3), G.Polanco Hawkins 1 2 0 0 0 0 (5). SF—L.Sch afer. WP — O.Perez.Balk— O.Perez. IP H R E R BBSO T—2:43. A—33,764(50,480). Milwaukee Garza 42-3 3 0 0 2 6 2 Estrada 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 Nationals 3, Marlins 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 Jeffress W.Smith 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 MIAMI — RyanZimmerman had Kintzler 2-3 1 0 0 2 0 triple, in DukeW,5-1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 two hits, including an RBI FrRodriguezS,43-48 1 0 0 0 0 0 his return to the lineup andWashPtttsburgh Volquez 7 3 0 0 3 6 ington beat Miami. Zimmerman, Watson 1 1 0 0 0 0 who missed 55 gamesbecause MelanconL,3-5 1 2 1 1 1 1 of a hamstring injury, had his HBP— byGarza(A.Mccutchen,A.Mccutchen).WPrun-scoring triple to keyWashingGarza. T—3:32.A—39,027 (38,362). ton's three-run seventh inning.
Blue Jays6, Yankees3
NEW YORK — JoseBautista
lndians 7,Twins3
hit his eighth homer of the year against NewYork, Marcus Stroman pitched six gritty innings and Toronto ended aseason-worst sixgameskidto beattheYankees.
MINNEAPOLIS— YanGomes homered anddrove in four runs to help Clevelandadvance in theAL wild-card race bybeating Minne-
Toronto
out of the second wild-card spot.
NewYork
ab r bbi ab r hbi Reyesss 5 0 0 0 Gardnrcf 5 1 2 0 B autistrf 2 4 2 1 Jeterss 5 1 2 1 Encrncdh 5 1 3 1 BMccndh 4 0 1 1 DNavrrc 4 1 1 1 Teixeir1b 2 0 0 0 Valenci 3b 5 0 1 2 B.Ryan ph-1b 3 0 0 0 Mayrry1b 3 0 0 1 CYounglf 5 0 1 0 Pompycf 4 0 0 0 Headly3b 3 1 1 0 StTllsn2b 2 0 1 0 Drew2b 4 0 1 0 Kawskph-2b 1 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 4 0 2 0 Goins2b 0 0 0 0 Cervellic 4 0 1 1 P illarlf 3 0 2 0 Totals 3 4 6 106 Totals 3 9 3 113 Toronto 1 00 003 101 — 6 N ew York 001 1 0 0 001 — 3 E—St.Toffeson(6), Drew(7). DP—NewYork 1. LOB —Toronto 8, NewYork 11. 28—Encarnacion
sota. The Indians are 3t/z games
Cashner (5-7) took a two-hit shut- eliminate the Bravesfrom the NL out into the ninth before allowing wild-card race. Hunter Pence's 20th home run, a leadoff drive to left on a1-0 pitch. NewYork Atlanta ab r hbi Joe Panik followed with a single to EYonglf 4ab1r0hbi 0 Bonifacrf 3 1 2 0 left to chaseCashner, whothrew DnMrp3b 3 0 0 0 Gosseln2b 4 0 1 0 TdArndc 5 0 1 0 FFrmn1b 4 0 1 2 106 pitches. Hestruck out seven Duda1b 3 0 0 1 J.uptonlf 4 0 0 0 and walked one. Floresss-2b 5 0 1 0 CJhnsn3b 4 0 1 0 San Francisco S a n Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi Pencerf 4 1 1 1 Solarte3b 4 0 0 0 Panik2b 4 1 1 0 Amarstss 3 0 0 0 Poseyc 4 0 2 0 Gyorko2b 4 0 0 0
Grndrscf 4 1 2 1 ASmnsss 4 0 1 0 C ampffrf 3 1 1 0 Lairdc 3000 DHerrr2b 3 1 2 2 R.Penaph 1 0 1 0 Teiadapr-ss 1 0 0 0 Constnzpr 0 0 0 0 Niesep 3 0 1 0 Buptoncf 4 0 1 0 E dginp 0 0 0 0 Minorp 0 0 0 0 C Torrsp 0 0 0 0 Halep 1000 Meiiap 0 0 0 0Jaimep 0 0 0 0 Gattisph 1 0 0 0 Russell p 0 0 0 0
IP H
R E R BBSO
Philadelphia Je.Williams W,4-2 7 4 0 0 BastardoH,11 1 0 0 0 GilesS,1-1 1 0 0 0 Oakland Pomeranz 5 1 0 0 O'Flaherty 2-3 0 0 0 OteroL,8-2 1 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 Abad 1-3 1 0 0 Cook Scribner 1 2 0 0 HBP—byPomeranz(Byrd). WP—Bastardo. T—2:59. A—31,848(35,067).
1 1 0
3 1 1
2 0 0 0 0 0
6 1 1 1 0 2
Minnesota Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourncf 5 0 1 1 DaSntnss 5 0 0 0 This Date In Baseball JRmrzss 5 1 1 0 Dozier2b 4 2 3 1 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 0 Grandl1b 4 1 1 0 Seattle Houston Brantlylf 4 1 2 0 Mauer1b 4 0 2 0 Sept. 21 CDmngpr 0 0 0 0 S.Smithrf-lf 3 1 0 0 1964 — Manager GeneMauch'sfirst-place Phigies ab r hbi ab r hbi CSantn1b 4 0 0 0 KVargsdh 4 0 1 1 Chsnhll 3b 3 1 0 0 Plouffe 3b 4 1 2 0 B elt1b 4 0 0 0 Riverac 4 0 2 2 AJcksncf 3 1 1 0 Grssmnlf 3 1 1 0 lost1-0 totheCincinnati RedsonChico Ruiz'ssteal of GBlanclf-cf 4 0 1 1 AAlmntlf 1 0 1 0 J.Jonescf 0 0 0 0 Altuve2b 4 0 2 1 YGomsdh 4 2 3 4 KSuzukc 4 0 1 0 homeinthesixthinning. ItwasPhiladelphia'sfirst of10 D enorfirf 4 0 0 0 Viffarss 0 0 0 0 D vMrprf 3 1 2 0 Arciarf 3 0 0 0 BCrwfrss 3 0 0 0 Venalepr-rf 3 1 0 0 Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 straightlosses,astreakthat costthemtheNLpennant. J.Per e z cf 2 0 0 0 May b i nc f 3 0 0 0 1970 —Oakland's VidaBluepitchedano-hitter in Cano2b 4 0 1 1 Carter1b 4 1 1 2 R Perezc 4 0 0 0 Nunezlf 2 0 0 0 Trdslvcph 1 1 1 0 Ishikawph-If 1 0 0 0 Cashnrp 2 0 2 0 BMiff er2b 0 0 0 0 Fowlerdh 4 2 3 0 Aviles2b 4 1 1 2 Hrmnnph-8 1 0 0 0 Shrevep 0 0 0 0 his eighthmajor leaguestart, beatingMinnesota6-0. Y.Pe titp 2 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 1981 —SteyeCarlton struck outAndreDawson KMorls1b 4 0 1 0 Presleyrf 4 2 2 2 Pinto ph 1 0 0 0 Doumdph 1 0 0 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 1 0 Mrsnckcf 4 1 1 3 JSchafrcf 4 0 1 1 Totals 34 4 8 4 Totals 3 5 2 9 2 in the third inning for the pitcher's3,118thcareer JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0 Morrsnlf 4 0 1 0 MDmn3b 4 1 1 1 Totals 36 7 107 Totals 3 6 3 103 N ew York 120 0 0 0 010 — 4 strikeout,themostin theNL.Butthe Philies lostto Hartdh 4 0 2 0 Corprnc 4 1 1 1 C leveland 031 0 3 0 000 — 7 MDuffyph 1 0 0 0 Atlanta 0 00 000 020 — 2 Montreal1-0in17 innings. ldtp 0 0 0 0 E—C.Johnson(6).DP—Ne wYork1. LOB—New 2000 —Colorado'sJeff Cirigodoubledtwice ina Zuninoc 4 0 1 0 G.Petitss-2b 4 1 1 0 M innesota 0 1 1 0 0 0 010 — 3 Affe DP — Cleveland1, Minnesota1. LOB —Cleveland Strckln p 0 0 0 0 CTaylrss 3 0 0 0 27), Valenci(15), a Gardner(23), Jeter (16), C.Young York 10,Atlanta7. 2B—Granderson (26), Bonifacio 13-4 winoverSanDiego, giving him51doubles for Totals 33 2 6 2 Totals 3 1 3 6 2 Totals 3 4 1 8 1 Totals 3 5101310 6). HR —Bautista(34). SF—Mayberry. 6, Minnesota 7. 28—Brantley (42), Dav.Murphy (25), (17). 38 — Td'Arnaud (2). HR—Granderson (19), the year. Ciriffo andTodd Helton(57) becamethesevIP H R E R BBSO Dozier(33).38—Aviles(1). HR —YGomes(20), Doz- San Francisco 000 000 002 — 2 Seattle 0 01 000 000 — 1 D.Herrera(3). SB—Campbeg (3), Bonifacio 2 (24). enthpairof teammatesinmajor leaguehistoryto reach San Diego 0 0 1 0 0 2 00x— 3 SF — Duda. Houston 410 200 30x — 10 Toronto ier (21).CS —J.Schafer(5). 50doublesinthesameseason. E—G.Petit (2), M.Dominguez(11). DP—Seattle1, StromanW,11-6 6 —San Francisco 5, SanDiego 8 2 2 0 7 IP H R E R BBSD E—Panik (8). LOB IP H R E R BBSO 2001 —Albert Puiolshit agrandslamanddou8. 28 — Grandal (18), Rivera2 (17), A.Almonte(5). NewYork Houston3. LOB—Seattle 7, Houston 3. 28—Fowler Aa.Sanchez H,6 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 Cleveland bled in aruninSt. Louis'9-5 winoverPittsburgh. The 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 HouseW,4-3 5 Cashner (1). HR—Pence (20). SB—Venable NieseW,9-11 7 (21),G.Pe tit (7).HR —Carter(37), Presley(6), Maris- Cecil H,24 6 2 2 1 5 38 — 1 - 3 7 2 2 1 5 slamgavehimthe major leaguerecordfor extra base 1-3 2 1 1 0 0 McAllister nick (2), M.Dom inguez (16), Corporan(6). SBMorrow 2 1 0 0 0 5 (10). Edgin 0 1 0 0 0 0 hits byarookie(83), onemorethanJohnnyFrederick's 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO C.TorresH,11 2 - 3 Grossman(8). CS—Grossman(3). Janssen S,24-29 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Hagadone 0 0 0 0 0 total forBrooklynin1929. 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 San Francisco 2003 —GregMadduxbecamethefirst pitcherin IP H R E R BBSO NewYork C.Lee Meiia S,27-30 1 1 0 0 0 0 Seattle CapuanoL,2-4 5 2 -3 5 4 4 4 2 RzepczynskiS,1-2 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 3 Y.Petit L,5-5 5 1-3 4 3 2 3 7 Atlanta major league history to winat least15games in 16 1-3 2 1 1 1 0 Minnesota 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Minor L,6-12 C.YoungL,12-9 3 8 7 7 1 3 Whitley J.Lopez 1 0 1 1 1 0 consecutive seasons,leadingAtlantaoverFlorida 8-0. 4 2-3 8 7 7 2 3 J.Gutierrez 11-3 1 0 0 1 1 Hale E.Ramirez 4 5 3 3 1 3 E.Rogers 1 1 0 0 0 3 May L,3-5 3 5 2 2 2 1 Maddux(15-11)hadsharedthe recordwith CyYoung. 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Jaime Luetge 1 0 0 0 0 2 Huff 1 1 0 0 0 1 Achter 1131 0 0 0 0 Affeldt 1 1 0 0 0 1 Madduxpitchedfivescorelessinnings, allowingonly D.Phelps 1 1 1 1 1 0 Thielbar 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Strickland Houston 13 0 0 0 0 0 Russell 2 1 0 0 1 1 one hit inhis288thcareer victory. 11-3 0 0 0 1 0 San Diego KeuchelW,12-9 8 7 1 1 1 8 Whitleypitchedto1batter in the7th. Oliveros D.carpenter 1 1 1 1 0 1 2006 —David Ortizhit his51stand52ndhomers, —by Janssen (B.Mccann). WP —Stroman, Aa. Darnell Foltynewicz 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP 1 1 0 0 0 CashnerW,5-7 8 4 2 2 1 7 Shreve 1 0 0 0 1 0 breakingtheRedSoxrecord for most homersinaseaC.Young pitchedto 2batters inthe4th. Sanchez, Capuano, D.Phelps. Housepitchedto 2batters inthe6th. Quackenbush S,5-6 1 2 0 0 0 1 Edginpitchedto1batter inthe8th. son of50setin1938byJimmieFoxx.Thehomersalso T—3:18. A—47,292(49,642). T—3:15(Delay:1:01). A—28,316(39,021). WP—C.Young 2. Cashnerpitchedto 2battersin the9th. HBP —byMinor(Dan.Murphy). set themajor leaguerecord byadesignatedhitter at45, T—2:34.A—36,525 (42,060). T—2:53. A—40,660(42,302). T—2:52.A—33,794 (49,586). two more thanhehit whenheset therecordlast season.
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
OLLEGE FOOTBALL COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD PAC-12 AH TimesPDT
Saturday'sGames
TOP 25 No. 1FloridaState23, No.22Clemson17,OT Norlh Division No. 2Oregonat Washington State,10;30 p.m. Conf. O v era No. 3Alabama42, Florida 21 W L W L II PF PA No. 4Oklahoma 45,West Virginia 33 Oregon 1 0 4 0 196 75 No. 6Texas A&M58,SMU6 Washington 0 0 4 0 165 96 MississippiSt.34, No.8LSU29 Oregon St. 0 0 3 0 95 51 No.11 Michigan St. 73,Eastern Michigan14 California 0 1 2 1 131 83 No. 13Georgia 66,Troy0 Stanford 0 1 2 1 90 13 No. 14SouthCarolina 48,Vanderbilt 34 WashingtonSt. 0 1 1 3 141 124 Indiana31,No.18Missouri 27 SouthOivision No.19Wisconsin68,Bowling Green17 W L W L PF PA No. 21BYU41, Virginia 33 Arizona 1 0 4 0 168 109 No. 24Nebraska41,Miami(Fla.) 31 ArizonaSt. 1 0 3 0 141 61 EAST SouthernCal 1 0 2 1 96 60 BostonCollege40, Maine10 UCLA 0 0 3 0 90 72 Buffalo36, NorfolkSt.7 Utah 0 0 3 0 141 51 Colorado 0 1 2 2 103 119 lowa24,Pittsburgh20 PennSt.48, UMass7 Rutgers31,Navy24 Saturday'sGames Maryland34, Syracuse20 Colorado 21, Hawaii12 Temple 59, DelawareSt.0 Utah26,Michigan10 SOUTH Washington 45, GeorgiaSt.14 Duke47,Tulane13 Arizona 49, California 45 EastCarolina70,North Carolina 41 Oregon 38,Washington St.31 GeorgiaTech27, Virginia Tech24 Oregon St. 28,SanDiegoSt. 7 GeorgiaSouthern 28,SouthAlabama6 Thursday'sGame Louisville34,FIU3 UCLAatArizonaSt., 7p.m. Memphis36, MiddleTennesseeSt.17 Saturday,Sept. 27 N.C.State42, Presbyterian 0 Colorado at California,1 p.m. Nort hwesternSt.30,LouisianaTech27 Stanford at Washington,1:15 p.m. SouthernMiss21,AppalachianSt. 20 Washington St.at Utah,5 p.m. OregonSt. atSouthern Cal, 7:30 p.m. UCF41, Bethune-Cookman7 WakeForest24, Army21 Saturday's Summaries MIDWEST Cincinnati31,Miami(Ohio) 24 linois 42,TexasSt. 35 No.2Oregon38,WashingtonSt.31 lKansas 24, Central Michigan10 Marshall 48,Akron17 Oregon 714 7 10 — 38 Washington St. 1 4 7 0 1 0 — 31 Minnesota24,SanJoseSt. 7 Northwestern 24,Westernllinois 7 First Quarter Ohio 36,Idaho24 WSU —D.Williams 18 pass from Halliday Purdue 35, So uthern fflinois13 (Breshears kick), 8;46. Toldeo34, BallSt. 23 Ore —D.Allen 80 passfromMariota (Wogankick), Utah26,Michigan0 3:38. WSU—D.Williams8passfrom Haffiday(Breshears WesternMichigan45, Murray St.14 SOUTHWE ST kick),:41. Arkansas 52, Northern Rlinois14 SecondQuarler Ore —Lowe 57 pass from Mariota (Wogankick), Arkansas St. 21,UtahSt.14 Houston47, UNLV31 12:57. Ore —D.Allen13 passfromMariota (Wogankick), NorthTexas77, NichoffsSt. 3 8:05. Old Dominion45, Rice42 WSU—Galvin 6 passfrom Halliday (Breshe ars FARWEST kick), 2:47. Arizona49, California 45 Third Quarter BoiseSt.34, Louisiana9 Ore —PBrown8 passfromMariota(Wogankick), Colorado21,Hawai12 4:32. FresnoSt.56,Southern Utah16 Fourth Quarter OregonSt.28,SanDiegoSt. 7 WSU —FGBreshears 30,14:50. NewMexico38,NewMexicoSt.35 Ore—FGWogan34, 11:04. Washington 45, GeorgiaSt.14 WSU—R.Cracraft5 passfromHaffiday(Breshears Wyoming20, FAU19 kick,8:57.
re — Lowe 6 pass fromMariota (Wogan kick),
5:33. A—32,952.
FCS
By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
Saturday'sGames First downs 22 29 42-172 17-63 EasternWashington52, MontanaSt.51 Rushes-yards Passing 3 29 43 6 SouthDakota28,NorthernArizona21 Comp-Att-Int 21-25-0 43-63-0 NorthDakotaSt. 22,Montana10 Northernlowa46, Northern Colorado7 ReturnYards 12 10 NorthDakota13, StonyBrook3 Punts-Avg. 4-36.0 2-44.5 StephenF.Austin 35,Weber St. 20 1-0 2-2 Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards 1 0-86 5 - 54 Cal Poly42, PortlandSt.14 St. 59,Menlo14 Time ofPossession 28:13 31 :47 Sacramento FresnoSt.56,SouthernUtah16 Saturday,Sept. 27 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Oregon: Freeman 20-75, Mariota NorthernColoradoat Montana,12:30 p.m. 13-58,Marshall2-22,Tyner5-20,Team2-(minus 3). NorthDakotaat MontanaSt.,1 p.m. WashingtonSt.: Wicks7-36,Morrow9-33,Halliday Sacramento St. atIdahoSt.,1 p.m. 1-(minus 6). Cal Polyat NorthernArizona,3p.m. W eber St. at Southern Utah,5 p.m. PASSING —Oregon: Mariota 21-25-0-329. EasternWashingtonat UCDavis, 6p.m. Washington St.: Halliday43-63-0-436. RECEIVING —Oregon: D.Alen 7-142, Marshall 6-45, Lowe5-104,PBrown3-38.WashingtonSt.: Division tt R.Cracraft8-107,Mayle7-75, Morrow6-79, Myers 6-28, D.Wiffiams 5-63, Galvin 5-50,Wicks2-16, LewGREATNORTHWEST is 2-13,Green2-5. Saturday'sGames Western Oregon36,Central Washington34 isconsin-RiverFalls 43,South DakotaMines28 Oregon St. 28, SanDiego St. 7 W AzusaPacific 32,SimonFraser 24 t 50,Dixie St.3 SanDiegoSI. 7 0 0 0 — 7 HumboldSt. Saturday,Sept. 27 OregonSI. 7 7 14 0 — 2 8 SouthDakotaMinesatWilliamJewell, 1p.m. First Quarter AzusaPacific atDixieSt., 6 p.m. SDSU —Pumphrey2 run(Hagemankick),11:27. OrSt —Ward12 run(Romainekick),:05. SimonFraseratCentral Washington, 6 p.m. SecondQuarler WesternOregonat Humboldt St., 6p.m. OrSt —Ward 2run (Romainekick),:27. Third Quarler Division ttt OrSt —Woods5 run(Romainekick), 9:58. OrSt —Woods2 run(Romainekick),1:16. NORTHWES T A—41,339.
First downs Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int ReturnYards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
Saturday'sGames
Whittier23,Lewis&Clark10 11 25 Willamette42,CalLutheran24 23-109 36-97 Whitworth50,LaVerne48 1 06 27 5 Dubuque16,Pacific10 14-26-2 24-31-1 Linfield 36,Redlands3 22 2 Saturday,Sept. 27 6-33.2 3-46.7 Pacific atChicago,10a.m. 0-0 3-1 Chapman at W h it worth,1 p.m. 9 -65 7 - 52 Pacific LutheranatTrinity (Texas),4 p.m. 24:33 35:27
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —San Oiego St.: Pumphrey17-89, Mills1-36,Gordon1-4, Price1-0, Kaehler 3-(minus 20). OregonSt.: Woods11-52,Ward 15-50, Brown 5-7, Bolden1-5,Mannion4-(minus17). PASSING —San Diego St.: Kaehler14-26-2106.OregonSt.: Mannion24-31-1-275. RECEIVING —SanDiegoSt.: Mils 3-35, Judge 2-15, Pum phrey2-14, Price2-5, Gordon2-(minus1), Hazely1-28, Roberts1-6, Clark1-4.OregonSt.: Jarmon5-76,Ward 5-35,Mullaney 3-46,Bolden2-21, Hamlett2-20,Ortiz2-14, Woods2-8, Dockery1-49, Anderson1-4, Smith1-2.
NAIA FRONTIER
Saturday'sGames
Carroll 33,RockyMountain 8 EasternOregon39, MontanaTech13 Collegeof IdahoatSouthernOregon Montana Western50, MontanaSt.-Northern 30 Saturday,Sept. 27 EasternOregonatRockyMountain, noon MontanaTechat College of Idaho,noon Southern Oregonat MontanaSt.-Northern, noon
PAC-12 ROUNDUP
Utah's gratification delayed by rain inwin at Michigan The Associated Press ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Tra-
vis Wilson returned after a frightening fall in the first half to throw a third-quarter touch-
helmet came off. Also on Saturday: Arizona 49, California 45: TUCSON, Ariz. — Anu Solo mon hit Austin H il l o n a
down pass, and Utah finally
47-yard Hail Mary on the game's final play and Arizona Michigan on Saturday after a scored 36 points in the fourth lightning delay in the fourth quarter to pull off a 22-point finished off a 26-10 win over
quarterof2 hours,24 mi nutes.
comeback.
The game was delayed with 7:51 remaining, and when it
State 14: SEATTLE — Wash-
Washington 45, Georgia
ington needed a second half surge to overcome a 14-point halftime deficit. The Huskies ready down 26-10 at that point. were outgained by a 231-73 Wilson went 14 of 20 for 172 margin as Georgia State built yards, although he was shak- a 14-0 lead. Cyler Miles comen up after a scary play in the pleted 19 of 27 passes for 154 second quarter. Trying to gain yards and three touchdowns a few extra yards, the Utah to lead the Washington rally. quarterback attempted to jump Colorado 21, Hawaii 12: over linebacker Jake Ryan BOULDER, Colo. — Coloraand ended up being hit by line- do's Nelson Spruce caught a backer Joe Bolden. Wilson was school record 13 passes for a flipped over to the point where career-best 172 yards, includhis head hit the ground and his ing a 71-yard touchdown. resumed, not much was left
of the announced crowd of 103,890. Michigan was al-
eavers score on e rolln , r ea recor r o u e air
BIG SKY
Ore WSU
SDSU OrSt
Troy Wayrynen I The Associated Press
Oregon State running Terron Ward scores a touchdown against San Diego State during the second quarter Saturday in Corvallis.
C ORVALLIS
—
fifth time since 1999. "I feel great, but a Se a n Ma n n i on
threw for275 yards to set an Oregon
guy like me is never
The Beavers were hurt in the second quarter when receiver Victor Bolden
satisfied," Woods said.
left the field, accompanied by trainers.
"We just have to keep on pedal to the metal. We have a good oppo-
Staterecord and lead the Beavers to a
28-7 victory over San Diego State on QIXt pp Saturday night. Mannion's passing yards gave him OregonStateat n ent next week w i t h 11,339 for his career, pulling him in Southern Cal front of Derek Anderson atop the Bea- When:7:30 D onne l Pu m p hrey vers' career list, and into third on the p.m.,Sept.27 r u shed for 89 yards Pac-12 all-time list behind leader USC's Ttl ESpN and the lone touchMatt Barkley (12,274) and fellow Trojan ttapjp K)OE down on the opening Carson Palmer (11,818). 940 AM KROO series for San Diego "It's cool knowing DA (Derek Ander- 690 AM' 96 9 State<1-2 son) and being friends with him," Man- pM K aehler t hrew f o r nion said. "It's also a cool honor being 106 yards but had two among the guys that went here, they interceptions against the Beavers. havereall y enabled me to have adegree The Aztecs scored on Pumphrey's 2-yard run on their opening drive. The of success." TerronWard and Storm Woods each Beavers evened the score on Ward's 12rushed for two touchdowns for the Bea- yard touchdown run, capping a drive vers, who open the season 3-0 for the
cepted Kaehleron Oregon State's30.
that started when Steven Nelson inter-
LaterOregon Stateannounced he had a dislocated right pinkie finger and would not return.
On the final drive of the half, Mannion hit sophomore Rahmel Dockery with a 49-yard pass to put the Beavers
on San Diego State's 2-yard line. Ward popped in for the touchdown to make it 14-7 at the break. It was Dockery's first
career reception. Woods ran for a 5-yard touchdown
on Oregon's State's opening series in the second half. He added a 2-yard scoring run as the third quarter came
to a close. In their last 22 games against the Pac-12, the Aztecs have won only once: a 42-24 victory over Washington State on Sept. 17, 2011.
Beavers Continued from C1 W orried
that
Bra n d i n
Cooks is catching passes from Drew Brees and not Sean
Mannion this year? Mannion showed Oregon State's way
forward now that Pac-12 play is about to begin — throw to
t+
everybody on the roster and
Av
then let running backs Terron Ward and Storm Woods finish off drives (the running backs both scored two touchdowns). "That was a good win," Beavers coach Mike Riley said. "We had to stay with it be-
cause it didn't look very good early." Mannion completed 24 of 31 passes for 275 yards — breaking Derek Anderson's school record for career passing yards along the way — and in doing so spread the ball to 10 Troy Wayrynen/The Associated Press receivers. The senior quarter- Oregon State wide receiver Rahmel Dockery, front, catches a pass for a first down against San back was not just serving up Diego State defender J.J. Whittaker during the second quarter Saturday in Corvaliis. the occasional token throw to
a backup slot receiver, either.
"That was big time," Riley Rahmel Dockery ( o ne said ofJarmon's catch. "He just needs to contincatch, 49 yards) and fullback time since 2011, leaned on his Ricky Ortiz (two catches, 14 ue to do what he has been lesser-known pass catchers in yards) chipped in, too. (Ward doing," Riley added on his critical spots. also made five catches.) freshman receiver's future Through the season's first Three catches from Jar- prospects. two games 33 of Mannion's mon and Dockery helped Just before halftime, Dock52 completions were to a trio set up the Beavers first three ery made a spectacular 49of pass catchers that include touchdowns. yard catch on a ball that was playmaking receiver Victor The Beavers offense strug- a touch underthown. DockBolden — who leads the Bea- gled early, but got untracked ery's first career catch put
nion-to-Jarmon play "the pivotal play of the game." This is just what the Bea-
vers with 18 catches and 192
And it even helped to open
No, Mannion, who did not ing 76 yards.
throw a touchdown pass in a game he started for the first
yards this year — tight end
late in the first quarter with
the Beavers at the 2, setting
vers n eeded o n
o ff e n se.
Late last year and early this season, Oregon State's offense has had moments of
stagnation. By spreading the b all around, the Aztecs defense
struggled to slow the Beavers, at least once they got going.
the helpof Jarmon. On sec- up Ward's second touchdown the run game. Connor Hamlett, and receiver ond and 27 from the Beavers that pushed Oregon State's That is a good sign before Richard Mullaney. 40, Mannion reared back and lead to 14-7 in the closing sec- the Beavers' Pac-12 season Mannion did not have the threw a 32-yard strike over onds before halftime. begins next week against luxury of leaning on Bold- the head of a defender to a And on the Beavers' first Southern California. "We just need to keep imen against San Diego State, leaping Jarmon, who had just series ofthe second half, though. Bolden was lost in the one catch this year. That put Mannion scrambled until he proving," Mannion said. "I second quarter with a dislo- the Beavers on the San Diego found Jarmon open near the thought we took some strides cated right pinkie after catch- State 28 just a play after the left sideline on a third-and-8 today, but there is still work to ing two passes for 21 yards. Oregon State drive seemed play. Jarmon turned upfield be done." And Mullaney and Hamlett doomed after Mannion took and turned the bailout pass Mannion is right. combined for just two catches a sack. into a 27-yard gain that put San Diego State should not in the first half. Four plays later Ward the Beavers on the 20. Three be confused with a Pac-12 I nstead i t w a s Hu n t er scored his first of two first- plays later, Woods put Ore- power after all. But if SaturJarmon, a freshman, who half touchdowns on a 12-yard gon State ahead 21-7 with 9:58 day night was any indication, seemed to emerge as a legiti- draw play with 5 seconds left left in the third quarter. the Beavers might just have mate target for Mannion with in the first quarter, tying the San Diego State coach found the right formula to five catches and a team-lead- game at 7 apiece. Rocky Longcalled the Man- W1I1.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014• THE BULLETIN
Ducks stout defense in the first half,
Seahawks insist Super rematch just another game
5I
SAN LUISOBISPO, Calif.— Chris Brown ran
sacking Mariota five times and recording seven tackles for losses, while holding the Ducks to a total of 210 yards.
for154 yards and two touchdowns andCal Poly ran away from Portland
The score was tied 21-all at
State 42-14 in the Big Sky
halftime. However, the Cougars' of-
opener for both teams Saturday night. Portland State scored twice in the fourth on Steven Long's 27-yard run andKieran McDonagh's17-yard pass to Roston Tatum.
fense stalled in the second
half, as the Ducks outscored them 17-10 to take the win. Mariota completed 21 of 25
passes with no interceptions. Halliday was 43 for 63. W ashington S t ate
NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE
Vikingslose Big Skyopener
Continued from D1 Washington State played
D5
By Bob Condotta The Seattle Times
— The Associated Press out-
In the NFL, what's past isn't pro-
gained the potent Oregon offense 298 yards to 210 in the
logue, as Shakespeare famously wrote. It's merely history.
River Cr a-
first half.
t
The Ducks then drove to the Cougars' 15 on the first drive of the second half, but
Matt Wogan missed a 32-yard field goal. Oregon recovered a fumble by Washington State's Jamal
craft caught a 5 - y ard
Or, as Seattle Seahawks defen-
touchdown
sive lineman Michael Bennett puts it: "Every game, every week is a
pass in the
new week."
As is every season. So while the popular media
end zone to tie the score at 31-31 with
Morrow on its own 35. On fourth-and-10, Mariota ran
8:57to go. Oregon came right
for28 yardstothe8-yard line.
b ack w i t h
a 7 9-yard
On the next play he threw a
The AssociatedPress file photo
Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice, second from left, speaks with team president Dick Cass, left, owner Steve Bisciotti, second from right, and Kevin Byrne, senior vice president for public Qnd community relations, after Q practice on July 24. A report Qlleges the Ravens' top executives knew of the severity of Rice'Q situation and worked behind the scenes to get leniency for their star running back from both the judicial system Qnd the NFL.
and fan narrative is that the Den-
ver-Seattle game today is a rematch of Super Bowl XLVIII, won
by the Seahawks 43-8, players and coaches insisted in the past week that the page on that chapter has
touchdown pass to Pharaoh
drive in nine
Brown for a 28-21 lead with 4:32 left in the third. Washington S t at e r e -
plays, with Mariota passing to Lowe for a 6-yard touchdown pass and a
"It's just a Week 3 matchup for us," said Seattle
plied with an 87-yard drive 38-31 lead with 5:33 left. that ended w it h Q u entin The Cougars weren't done, Breshears' 30-yard field goal as Halliday's 34-yard pass to to pull to 28-24 early in the Vince Mayle brought WSU to fourth. the Oregon 35. But WashingHowever, Oregon marched ton State stalled and turned down to the Washington the ball over on downs with
colm Smith, the
State 17, where Wogan kicked
been turned.
l inebacker M a l MVP of the Super
BowL "It's a big game because it's
4ext np Denver at Seattle
3:34left.
a 34-yard field goal to extend
Last year, Halliday threw
the lead to 31-24 with 11:04 left.
the ball an NCAA-record 89
p.m.today TV:CBS iIQtliQKRCO 960-AM, 96.9FM, KWLZ 96.5-FM
BALTIMORE — At the beginning of what would become another tumultuous week,
lease only when the video of what happened inside the elevator came out on Sept.8. "This is new territory for us, we're learning a s we go but we do believe that the fans and
Baltimore Ravens coach John Harbaugh thepeopleofBaltimoredoneedtohearour made an observation about the Ray Rice fall- side of the story, so there will be our side of out that will never sound as prescient as it
Mark WallheiserIrhe AssociatedPress
Florida State running back Karlos Williams, top, celebrates hiQ game-winning touchdown in overtime with teammates Cameron Erving, center, and Bobby Hart on Saturday night in Talahaasee, Florida.
Winston-lessSeminoles
come backfor OTwin The Associated Press
ed a dynamic performance with two touchdown passes With Heisman Trophy win- and a 56-yard scoring run. ner Jameis Winston watchNo. 11 Michigan State 73, ing from the sideline, No. 1 Eastem Michigan 14:EAST -
Florida State come back to beat No. 22 Clemson 23-17 in overtime on Karlos Williams' 12-yard touchdown
LANSING, Mich. — Connor Cook threw two touchdown
run Saturday night. Clemson coach D abo a 33-yard field goal on the first possession of over-
the third-most points in program history. No. 13 Georgia 66, Troy 0: ATHENS, Ga. — Sony Michel ran for 155 yards
time and Adam Choice was
and three touchdowns for
passes and ran for a score as Michigan State scored
stuffed for no gain on fourth- Georgia. and-1. Two plays later, Karlos No. 14 South Carolina 48, Williams bounced outside
Vanderbilt 34: NASHVILLE,
and went untouched into the Tenn. — Dylan Thompson end zone. threw for 237 yards and Sean Maguire madethe three touchdowns and ran first start of his career with for another score as South Winston sidelined. He com- Carolina rallied from 14 pleted 21 of 39 passes for 305 points down. yards with two interceptions Indiana 31, No. 18 Missouand a 74-yard touchdown to Rashad Greene to tie it at 17 with 6:04 left in the fourth. Also on Saturday:
ri 27: COLUMBIA, Mo. D'Angelo Roberts scored on -
a 3-yard touchdown run with 22 seconds remaining and
No. 3 Alabama 42, Florida Nate Sudfeld passed for 252 yards and a touchdown to Blake Sims recorded Ala- help Indiana upset Missouri. bama's second-best passing No. 19 Wisconsin 68, Bowlday with 445 yards. ing Green 17: MADISON, No. 4 Oklahoma 45, West Wis. — Melvin Gordon Virginia 33: MOR GAN- rushed for career highs of TOWN, WVa. — Samaje 253 yards and five touchPerine rushed for 242 yards downs, and Wisconsin ran and four t ouchdowns for for a Big Ten-record 644 Oklahoma. yards. No. 6 Texas A&IIII 58, SMU No. 21 BYU 41, Virginia 33: 21: TUSCALOOSA, Ala.
-
6: DALLAS — Kenny Hill
up the angle of hoping to save a little bit of face for
what happened in the Super Bowl. But Be n n ett
"I think they are trying to find out
By Jeff Zrebiec andAaron Wilson The Baltimore Sun
Swinney declined to attempt
the Denver side i kel y wi l l pl a y
says what happens today won't change what happened last February. "There is no revenge," he said.
TOP 25 ROUNDUP
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
knows some on
WllQQ:1 :05 l
times as Oregonbeat the CouHalliday then led the Cou- gars 62-38 in Eugene. gars on a 75-yard drive, with Oregon had beaten its first a 54-yard pass to Morrow three opponents this season covering most of the distance. by an average score of 52-18.
the next game." Bennett says he
PROVO, Utah — Taysom Hill
had 322 yards of total offense threw for two touchdowns playing only the first half, and rushed for another to and Jeremy Tabuyo turned lead Brigham Young. two short passes into touchNo. 24 Nebraska 41, Miami downs for Texas A&M. (Fla.) 31:LINCOLN, Neb. Mississippi St. 34, No. 8 Ameer Abdullah ran for 229 LSU 29:BATON ROUGE, La. yards to lead apunishing Ne— Dak Prescott highlight- braska ground game. -
t h e story,"Byrnesaid.
doesnow. In an interview with The Baltimore Sun "We're probably not going to get away two days after Rice's release, Bisciotti, team from it, and probably rightly so," Harbaugh president Dick Cass and general manager said Monday. Ozzie Newsome acknowledged that the orAs the Ravens prepared for toganization failed in its handling day's game against the Cleveland of the situation. Bisciotti, who was Brow~, the~ oq;~~ation re- Ra V enS out of the country on Friday when mainedundersignificantscrutiny pMtggr S t gy g the E SPN report surfaced, said f or what it did and did not do in its 8 . this month that his biggest regrets handling of the Rice situation. were that the organization did not push h a rder to obtain a copy of the The Ravens terminated the con- admitted tractoftheProBowlrunningback g17gg fhg elevator video and to pursue its on Sept. 8 after a video surfaced of pp~ggfZggtpg ow n investigation of the assault. + Rice knocking out his then-fianBisciotti admitted that the orcee,JanayPalmer,intheelevator fO ndneSS ganiza t ion's fondness for Rice, of an Atlantic City New Jersey fa r R iCe, who had long been one of the Ravens' most productive and popucasino in February. However, their actions preceding that decision lar players, got in the way of betand following Rice's arrest contin- /Ortg 5661I ter ju d gment. uetodrawheavycriticism. The ESPN report included text prfg pf gQg The team's top decision mak- ~ , messages from Bisciotti to Rice t ers, including owner Steve Bisafter the player's release in which ciotti, are expected to speak at a PrOduCtiVe the o w ner said Rice would have a news conference within a couple ggd pppU/gr job w i th the organization when of days, when they will address a his playing career was over, a I "~~ posit i on in which he would help report that alleged the team knew P~~~ of the severity of Rice's assault on in t he Way accli m a te young players to the Palmer but still worked behind the Df ggt~gt NFL. scenes to get leniency for the runThe report also detailed Cass' ' ning back both from the judicial J 'C efforts to get Rice accepted into system and the NFL commissionNew Jersey's pretrial intervener, Roger Goodell. tion program, in part because it In the coming weeks, Ravens officials will would keep the elevator video from going likely be questioned as part of former FBI di- public. Cass has not returned phone calls or rector Robert Mueller's investigation into the e m ails from The Sun. "From what I heard, it sounds like your league's handling of the Rice situation. Muel-
who they are the same way we are." Indeed, while many faces remain the same for each team, some significant ones have changed - especially on the Denver side. Denver's starting defense could feature different players at nine positions from the lineup Seattle
faced in the Super Bowl, including three high-profile free-agent signees — defensive end DeMarcus
Ware, safety T.J. Ward and cornerback Aqib Talib. Other changes include players returning from injuries such as linebacker Von Miller and cornerback Chris Harris. "It's a totally different team de-
fensively for us," said Seattle offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell. "They've added really great
players. It's completely different defense with the players that they
have now, so there's really no comparison." Denver's offense could have five different starters from the Super
Bowl, including both tackle spots, with left tackle Ryan Clady re-
turning from injury, moving Chris Clark back to right tackle. Bennett's point was merely that
any personnel change makes it a different team. Certainly, Seattle's defense last
week didn't look quite like the unit anyone has seen the past two years, allowing three touchdown passes in a 30-21 defeat against the Chargers in which San Diego held the ball for almost 43 minutes. That limited the Seattle offense
to just 38 plays, and only 13 before
lerhasyettovisittheRavens'trainingfacility t y pical NFL reaction as far as how they
falling into a 20-7 hole that forced
to conduct interviews with team personnel, h a n dled it with a player who gets in trou-
the Seahawks to play in a no-hud-
ble," said a former NFL general manager but that could happen soon. Then, there is the open-ended matter of who requested anonymity because he is
dle offense most of the rest of the game. As a r e sult, M arshawn
Rice's appeal of his indefinite suspension by s t ill connected to teams. "The Ravens stuck
Lynch had just six carries, an out-
the NFL. Under the collective bargaining behind Ray Rice until they absolutely had agreement, the NFL has 10 days from the to cut him. Now, they have to move on and
come Carroll said was "The last
ESPN report contained "numerous errors, a s
If the Broncos want to make more of it, so be it, Bennett said.
thing we want to have happen." It's getting redemption for that filing of the appeal to set a hearing date. The Ray needs to move on too." NFL Players Association filed the appeal last J o e l Corry, a former NFL agent who has performance that has hung over Tuesday. Goodell will not hear the grievance. represented players and coaches and now t he Seattle locker r oom m o r e A former NFL personnel executive who w r i t es about the business of football for heavily than upholding the honor requested anonymity expressed concern for National Football Post, noted that the relaof the Super Bowl victory. "It's big because it's our opporwhat might lie ahead for both the NFL and tionship between the Ravens and Rice has the Ravens, saying he wondered "who's go- already turned nasty. tunity to make up for what we did ing to fall on their sword and get fired with He c ited the release of the text messages last week and try to move forward this ugly situation." between Bisciotti and criticism that Rice's and put a good performance beKevin Byrne, the Ravens' senior vice pres- f r i ends and associates levied against the orfore the bye," Smith said. "But ident of public and community relations, ganizationintheESPNarticle. it happens to th e Super Bowl "That kind of thing can't help Ray as far said in a statement on Friday night that the rematch." g etting back into the NFL eventually
inaccuracies, falseassumptions,andperhaps whenever his suspension is lifted because misunderstandings." he just declared war on the Ravens," Corry The team has yet to specify what those are, said. "Some teams might want him, but this
although a team source vehemently disputed didn't make it any easier to get him on anthe report's assertion that Harbaugh wanted other team, especially with the public relato release Rice earlier in the offseason. Har- tions fallout that will go along with signing baugh, the source said, agreed with Rice's re- someone who beat up his wife."
Leadman
sophomore from Charlotte, North Carolina, made the trip to Bend this week with his fam-
Continued from D1 "The 125 is just a lot more ily. Baugher made the most out reasonable," Arguelles said of his Oregon adventure and about the race that indud- took second in the men's Epic ed a 2.5K swim, a 106K bike and a 12K run. "This distance
85K race.
"This race has been on my dad's bucket list," Jake said about how his family ended up in Central Oregon for a September vacation. His father,
is perfect. Coming off the bike, you're running about 7 miles instead of 13 (in a half Ironman)." Jake Baugher, a 16-year-old Scott, competed in the Epic
"I'm pretty sure their coaches are going to blow that (angle) up," he said. "But sometimes you can
mess yourself up trying to win something that's already been won."
125K. "I like triathlons because I
can do all three events," said Jake Baugher, who also runs high school cross-country. "I reallylike allthree disciplines." Nearly 300 individuals competed in the 85K, 125K and
event. Sixteen relay teams also
made their way across Cultus, down from Bachelor and through NorthWest Crossing. "I loved it," Sandy Beelmann, a 52-year-old Bend resident, said after completing her first LeadmanTri event. "(The
250K races Saturday. The course) is gorgeous. I live here, Epic 125K was the most pop- but you never get tired of seeular race, with approximately ingit." 160 triathletes participating in — Reporter: 541-383-0305; LeadmanTri's middle-distance
beastes®bendbulletin.com.
D6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
MLS
torm ost swee at Bulletin staff report EUGENE — Summit ap-
peared in midseason form in an early-season meet Saturday, placing first in both the girls and boys divisions of the Northwest Classic. On a hotand smoky day at Lane Community College, the Storm girls posted 32 points
nonleague victory. The War-
In other Saturday action: CROSS-COUNTRY
riors took control with a goal in the first minute, but Em-
L ocal runners shine i n
erson scored in the ensuing
Mountain View placed eight
minute and Kevin Pfeil added
runners in the top 10, includ-
a goal eight minutes later to give Mountain View (2-2-1) a at the 16-team Rogue Valley 2-1 lead. Emerson scored in Classic, falling to Class 6A
ing wins by Dakota Thornton in the boys moderate race and Tia Hatton in the girls
time of 18:02.
was the top Central Oregon Summit's boys were paced finisher at 20th. by Tyler Jones, who finished Tia Hatton won race on the third. Also in the top 10 for the girls easy course, as teamCarol
M c L atchie p r a i sed
Jones in particular for "racing aggressively." Also from Central Oregon,
Ridgeview placed 19th in both the boys and girls divisions. Top runners for th e Raven
boys were Brennan Buck-
chipped in with 47 assists and five aces. Cowgirls third at Rogue Val-
S easide: WARRENTON -
the 16th minute, and Taylor
easy competition, at the Three Willman netted a goal in the to far outdistance runner-up Course Challenge. In the boys 43rd minute to help the Cougs Union (110) for first place in 4,500-meter event,the Cou- earn their second win in three the 19-team field. gars' Gabe Wyllie placed sec- matches. On the boys side, Summit's ond, while teammate Dalen lrrigon 5, Culver 0: CULVER 55 points easily defeated run- Gardner took ninth. Caleb — The visiting Pirates poured ner-up Lincoln (115) for the Hoffmann paced Bend High on four second-half goals en title in the 22-team standings. by taking 14th, and the Lava route to the Class 3A/2A/1A Four Storm girls placed in Bears' Merle Nye was 17th. Special District 4 shutout win the top 10, led by Hannah To- Thornton was followed close- over the Bulldogs (0-3 SD3, 2-3 biason, whose time of 19 min- ly by Mountain View's Chris- overall). utes, 19 seconds was good for tian VanSise, runner-up in VOLLEYBALL third place. Also for Summit, the 5K moderate race. Dyut Outlaws take own invitationOlivia Brooks was fifth, Pip- Fetrow placed 11th for Sisters, al: SISTERS — Behind Hawer McDonald was sixth, and and Crook County's Liam ley Harrer's 40 kills and 65 Kaely Gordon was seventh. Pickhardt placed 13th. In the assists, Sisters was first out of Ella Donaghu of Grant was 5,000-meter hard race, Moun- its pool and stormed through the girls overall winner with a tain View's Adi Wolfenden bracket play to win the 16-
Storm was Eric Fykerud, who was seventh. Storm coach
asslc
team Sisters Invitational. Nila
ley: MEDFORD — In its first tournament of t h e s e ason, Crook County tied for third Willamette of Eugene, the 5A
runner-up last season, in the semifinals. Karlee Hollis had
50 kills during the tourney as the Cowgirls defeated Churchill of Eugene 25-17, 25-23 before falling 20-25, 25-18, 1513 to the Wolverines. Jennifer Roth had 28 kills for Crook
County, Aspen Christiansen totaled 56 digs and 10 aces, Abby Smith logged 22 digs and 10 aces, and Laura Fraser chipped in with five blocks. Culver 3, Reedsport 0; Culver 3, Regis 0: STAYTON — Shealene Little totaled 34
kills, Margie Beeler had eight aces, and the Bulldogs cruised past Reedsport (25-18, 25-19, 25-19) and Regis (25-12, 25-11, 25-13) in nonleague action. Little logged 26 kills and nine digs against Reedsport, while Beeler posted four aces and
Greg Wahl-Stephens/The Associated Press
Vancouver goalie David Ousted, right, reacts as Portland's
Lukens had 39 kills on the day for the Outlaws, who defeated Tillamook (25-9, 25-13) and mates Ciara Jones and Kenne- Cascade (25-15, 25-23) before dy Thompson finished ninth dispatching Banks (25-15, and 12th, respectively. Sisters' 25-22) in the final. Alex Hart- 36 assists. Emma Hoke had Aria Blumm placed sixth. In ford had 45 assists for Sis- nine digs and three aces for the moderaterace, Madison ters, Jessie Brigham added 29 Culver, Jazmin Ruiz added Leapaldt of Mountain View digs, and Allie Spear finished four digs, KayLee Aldrich placed eighth, and the Cou- with 26 digs. Madras, which had three aces, and Lynze gars' Sage Hassell placed took first in its pool, defeated Schonneker finished with five sixth in the 247-runner hard Valley Catholic 25-23, 25-19 kills. Against Regis, Little's race. To see full results and in the first round of bracket eight kills and five aces led team scores, visit www.athlet- play before falling to Banks the way, Beeler collected four
ley-Noonan, who wa s 7 7th overall, and J acob K i nzer, ic.net. who was 114th. Leaders for the BOYS SOCCER
25-22, 25-22 in the semifinal round. Over those two match-
Ridgeview girls were Whitney
MountainView 4, Lebanon
Gieschen, who was 50th, and
Hailey Gieschen, who was
2: LEBANON — Zach Emerson scored twice in the first
80th.
half to lead the Cougars to a
Diego Valeri and Fanendo Adi (9) celebrate a second-half goal by Adi (9) during Saturday's game in Portland.
Timbers score win over Whitecaps The Associated Press PORTLAND — Advan-
tage, Timbers.
aces and 18 assists, and Emma
Hoke chipped in with 11 digs es, Alexis Urbach racked up and four aces. Schonneker 26 kills and 19 digs, Shelby and Jenny Vega contributed M auritson totaled 2 1 k i l l s with five kills apiece for the and 26 digs, and Elle Renault Bulldogs.
sc o r e d spot, where Valeri volleyed
twice, Diego Valeri added a goal and an assist, and
championship."
LOUDON, N.H. — Yes, even Dick Vitale has endorsed NASCAR's new tournament-style bracket to crown a champion.
Saturday. The Timbers (9-8-12)
Li ke h i s July race at New
Harvick has been in t h e
one of the best players in the league, if not the best player." of Vancouver (8-9-13) for Robinson wa s e q ually the fifth and final playoff complimentary. "He had a big impact on position in t h e W estern Conference. Both teams the game," Robinson said. "You need your players to have five games left. " The team t h a t w o n have big impacts on games this game would be in the in certain areas, and today driver's seat. So we con- probably, he was key to them trol ou r f a te," Portland winning the game." coach Caleb Porter said.
-
'
'
.
'
boil down t o T eam
P enske vs .
On to the nextround Brad Keselowski has a
With t w o early wins, Har- spot in the next round of the
hunt to win plenty of races this vick was already locked into season. His six p oles the Chase, and could this year matched his affordto take a win-orJust win and advance, baby! total for his entire cabust mentality the rest ~~ Time for a T.O. reer entering this sea. of the season. When the ~ Sure, winning races earn a son and he's second race needed a green' driver an automatic berth into behind only Brad Kesw hite-checkered f i n the next round, decided after elowski with 1,265 laps Harvick ish , H a r v ick l i ned up every three races, before the led. He had wins at second on the final final four drivers are left to Darlington and Phoe- NSXt llP resta r t. He ran out of duke it out for the Sprint Cup rnx and f f th m Spnint C„ d t fr championship in the finale at theChaseoPenerlast NewnHamp the green flag and Homestead. week at Chicagoland. sh re coasted to finish 30th. But piling up points can get In a c h ampionNot this time around. "The a driver to Homestead even ship showdown that + h 1 1 short-term without a win. many believe wil l y risk versus reward is Kevin Harvick would love to add at least a third win to a
TV: ESPN
H en-
solid season for him at Stew- drick Motorsports, Harvick
Chase. So will today's winner (provided there's a driver out
"If we take care ofbusiness in the next five, we're
there who can dethrone NASCAR's hottest driver). But
going to be in the playoffs.
not all is lost for some of the
But we've got some work to do still."
other Chase drivers. If a Chase driver other than Keselowski wins, any driver with at least a 45-point lead on the 10th-high-
Said Vancouver coach Carl Robinson: "There's
est winless Chase driver would
15 points to play for there. We're chasing them now.
advance to the next round. If a non-Chase driver or Keselows-
S o th e court.
ki wins, a driver can clinch with a 45-point lead over the
ing in t h e 2 8th m i nute.
11th-highest winless driver.
Jorge Villafana received
sistent enough over the first
championship. "I think the whole winning
b a l l' s i n th e i r
Valeri opened the scorP
not there this time of
year," Harvick said.
I
of tne
"No matter what they tell you a b out the new system, it's not
art-Haas Racing. H a r vick, could be a spoiler to watch. though, would trade wins for He doesn't plan to gamble all about winning." his first career Cup champi- down the stretch to wi n a Harvi c k h a d beencriticalof
onship as long as he's con-
about him," Porter sad about Valeri. "In my opinion, he's
moved two points ahead
Hampshire, for example.
"
i f t h e re's
land's 3-0 victory over the anything more I can say
Harvick dismisses wins as key to Cup title have to win a race to win the
his shot past goalkeeper David Ousted for his ninth goal
Donovan Ricketts had his of the season. "I don't k no w f ourth shutout i n P o r t -
MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR NOTEBOOK
The Associated Press
quick restart and sent a pin-
point cross to the penalty
F anendo A d i
Vancouver Whitecaps on
By Dan Gelston
a pass on the left wing off a
the No. 4 team's pit stops this s e ason and said it had to be ad-
nine Chase for the Sprint Cup thing is really overrated," he dressed for him to have a shot championship races to be in said. "Obviously you want to i n the Chase. He was pleased the mix at the end.
"All you've got to do is be
win. You want to win every
w i t h the crew at Chicagoland.
"We had a lot of situations week and you show up to try the first car out of the four to win, but you can't take any where we came in leading c ars to f i n ish th e r ace at unnecessary chances and a n d went out leading," he said. Homestead," Harvick s a i d. that is kind of the box that the "That's really what you're "You don't necessarily even point system puts you in." look i ng for."
PQUgf~gi@gg BEA'D. Ok'EGO Q
RADRAC. OPECON
8Z Z I62
gylC
August 2014 GOLF ROUNDUP
Hur, Reto tied for LPGAClassic lead The Associated Press
last year after losing its title
P RATTVILLE, A l a . South Korea's Mi Jung Hur birdied four of the last eight
sponsor, had a 70.
holes Saturday for a 5-under
said Lewis, the tour leader with three victories this year.
"Beginning of the round my putting wasn't that good," Hur said. "But after turned the nine
holes, my putting gets better and better, so I had a low score."
"I didn't start too well," said
Reto, a former Purdue player from South Africa. "I had a
couple bogeys and a double there, but I kept patient and
shoot what I did. But I'm still within striking distance, still
great. They commu n i c a ted well, were cheerful,
have a chance for tomorrow, which that was the goal going
and worked hard! We are very happy!
Also on Saturday:
got. A good valuefor the money. The crew was
Thank you, Stephen F Jenny Peterson Bend, Oregon
Luiten leads Welsh Open by
Hur at 15-under 201 on Cap-
itol Hill's links-style Senator layout.
We are most impressed with your company! Quality is what we wanted and that is what w e
Tamulis shot 65, the best round of the day.
se c ond-round
0 I
"I didn't play well. It was kind of a struggle all day and just had to work pretty hard to
into the week."
leader, birdied three of the final five holes for a 70 to match
•
e =- © e
"For the way I played, the score ended up pretty good,"
67 and a share of the lead with Paula Reto in the Yokohama Tire LPGA Classic.
Reto, t h e
.0 s
2 shots: NEWPORT, Wales Hal Yeager i The Associated Press
Mi Jung Hur hits out of the rough on the second hole during the third round of the LPGA Classic at Capitol Hill in Prattville, Alabama, Saturday.
just focused on one shot at a time and it kind of helped
me out toward the end of the
Top-ranked Stacy Lewis
1ound. Hur won her lone LPGA Tour title in 2009, and Reto is winless in her rookie season.
and Kris Tamulis were tied for third at 11 under. Lewis, the 2012 winner in the event
— Joost Luiten birdied three of his closing four holes in a 6-under 65 for a two-shot lead on day three of the Wales Open at Celtic Manor.
Fathauer tops Web.com Tour Championship field: P ONTE V E DR A B E A C H , Fla. — Derek Fathauer shot
a 3-under 67 to take a onestroke lead over Zac Blair in
the season-ending Web.com dropped from the schedule Tour Championship.
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• I '
Prenatal Folic Acid Supplements May Reduce Risk of Autism Women who take folic acid supplements before and after becoming pregnant have a lower risk of giving birth to children who eventually develop the most severe form of autism.
Pal Suren, MD, of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, and his colleagues studied 85,176 children who were born between 2002 and 2008. Suren investigated which of the mothers took folic acid supplements four weeks before and eight weeks after the start of pregnancy. The children of mothers who had taken folic acid supplements were 40 percent less likely to develop autistic disorder. Still, the overall risk of autism disorder was very low~ n e - tenth of a percentage point versus two-tenths of a percentage point among children whose mothers did not take folic acid.
The findings are noteworthy because folic acid deflciency among pregnant women is a risk factor for children developing neural-tube defects, such as spina biflda. The same window of time — several weeks before and about two months after conception — is the critical time for folic acid supplementation. Reference: Suren P,Roth C, Bresnahan M, et al. Association between maternal use of folic acid supplements and risk of autism spectrum disorders in children. JAMI, 2013;309: 570-577.
Low Vitamin D is Factor in Type-2 Diabetes A study by South Korean researchers links vitamin D deficiency to a significantly greater risk of developing type-2 diabetes. The researchers studied 1,080 people who had at least one risk factor for diabetes. After an average follow up of two and one-half years, people with severe vitamin D deficiency were more than three times more likely to develop diabetes compared with those who had higher levels of the vitamin.
om. z i s i e n
ision may well be the most important of our five senses, but it may also be one of the last things we think about caring for. Other than wearing UV-blocking sunglasses, what exactly can we do to protect our vision? There are actually plenty of steps we can take to protect our eyes against a wide variety of common and agerelatedeye diseasesand disorders.An d theearlieryou start, the better off you'll be. Most serious eye diseases develop over decades, not weeks or months.
alcohol consumption. Coffee is a vasoconstrictor, and alcohol is a vasodilator — drinking too much of both gives your blood vessels mixed signals. Keep your consumption of both beverages moderate. Supplement Suggestions:Several supplements can help maintain normal blood sugar levels. These include vitamin D (2,000-5,000 IU daily), silymarin (600 mg daily), and chromium (1,000 mcg daily). Each of these supplements has been shown to reduce blood sugar levels and to increase the efficiency of insulin. For lowering blood pressure, try L-arginine (1,000-2,000 mg).
BAslc EYE PRQTEcTIQN
The single greatest long-term risk to the eyes comes from two wavelengths of ultraviolet (UV) light, UVA and UVB. Both are present in sunlight, even on cloudy days. Furthermore, UV rays are stronger at higher altitudes — think Colorado and most other Western states — because the thinner air absorbs fewer UV rays.The rays are strongestbetween 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. when the sun is highest. UV rays are also intense when theybounce offrefl ective surfaces,such assnow, water, and auto windshields. You're also exposed to UV rays in tanning beds. And some drugs, including some antibiotics and birth control pills, increase the eyes' sensitivity to UV rays. As a general rule, it's worthwhile thinking in terms of "inside-out" eye protection. In practical terms, this means takingsteps to physically reduce your eyes' exposure to UV rays while also fortifying your eyes' internaldefenses againstUV rays and other factors that can harm your vision. Some preventable health conditions increase the risk of seri ous eye diseases,such as cataractsand macular degeneration. Chief among these health problems are prediabetes and type-2 diabetes. The reason is that chronicallyelevated blood sugar over many years damages blood vessels and nerves, including the tiny ones neededfor normal functioning of the eyes and vision. Both prediabetes and type-2 diabetes also boost the risk ofhigh-blood pressure, another factor that can damage bloodvesselsin the eyes. Dietary Suggestions:To reduce your risk of prediabetes and type-2 diabetes, minimize your intake of processed carbohydrates, including foods with added sugars. Consume a protein-rich diet with a variety ofhigh-fiber vegetables. In addition, be mindful of your coffee and
MA C ULAR DEGENERATION
The macula is a tiny yellowish spot in the center of the retina, and it is necessary for seeing fine details, such as when reading. It also filters out harmful blue wavelengths of light. In the most common form of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the macula becomesabnormallythin and shows signsoffi ee radical damage. Several risk factors exist for AMD, which is the leading nontreatable cause of blindness among seniors. High blood pressure and smoking constrict blood vessels, which reduces the amount of nutrition being delivered to the eyes. In addition, eating a diet low in dark green vegetables is associated with a greater risk of AMD. Leafy dark green vegetables are rich in two antioxidants, lutein and zeaxanthin, which form the macular pigment. (Chlorophyll inthe veggies masks these yellowpigments.) Zeaxanthin tends to concentrate toward the center of the macula, whereas lutein predominates toward its periphery. Not surprisingly, many studies have shown that either eating more leafy green vegetables or taking lutein supplements can increase the thickness of the macular pigment, presumably slowing the progression of AMD. Other studies have found that the omega-3 fats EPA and DHA and B vitamins can also reduce the risk of AMD. Suggestions: To reduce the risk and perhaps to slow the progression of AMD, take 10 mg of natural-source lutein. Because lutein and zeaxanthin are packaged together in nature, lutein supplements will also typically contain zeaxanthin. Omega-3 fatty acids, particularly 100 to800 mg ofDHA, and a high-potency B-complex supplement also offer protection.
Country Life'
CATARACTS
The eye's lensfocuses images on the retina,m uch the way a camera lens focuses an image on a digital sensor. Cataracts are a clouding of the lens that results from damage to the protein-forming lens tissue. Living at a high altitude, significant lifetime sun exposure, flying frequently in aircraft, and smoking tobacco increase therisk ofcataracts. While cataracts are difficult to reverse, considerable research indicates that a diet high in antioxidants, along with vitamin C supplements, may reduce the risk of developing this type ofeye damage. In one study, women taking 400 mg or more of supplemental (but not dietary) vitamin C for at least 10 years had an 83 percent lower risk of developing cataracts. Several studies have found that lutein supplements can improve visual acuity in peoplewith cataracts and other eye disorders,even though it doesn't affect the cataract itself. Suggestions:Eat a diet rich in vegetables and take a multi-antioxidant ACES-type supplement (vitamins A, C, and E). Add extra vitamin C, so your total daily intake is 400 mg to 2,000 mg. GLAUCOMA
Glaucoma, caused by an increase in fluid pressure inside the eye, is one of the most serious of all eye diseases. The higher inner eye pressure can damage the optic nerve and narrows the field of vision. Impaired glucose tolerance — i.e., prediabetes and diabetes — is a major risk factor for glaucoma. Two studies found that alpha-lipoic acid, which can help improve glucose tolerance, can reduce intraocular pressure in people with glaucoma. In addition, a preclinical study by Russian researchers found that L-carnosine may also protect against glaucoma. Suggestions: Adopt a low-carb diet that emphasizes quality protein and non-starchy vegetables. Then add 150-400 mg of alpha-lipoic acid daily. Also consider taking 50 mg of L-carnosine. If you think about it, we could live without most of our fivesenses,such as touch,taste,smell,and hearing. But it would be extremely difficult to live without our ability to see. It's never too late to be proactive in protecting your vision — start now and enjoy healthy visionforyearsto come. 4
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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
High-end is now in for auto
<>i sTf
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> R L
Startups experience a steady decline
IR l
showrooms By Claudia Grtsnles
By Walter Hamilton
Austin American-Statesman
Los Angeles Times
For Austin, Texas, the
For years, Christina
August gathering was a fairly typical party scene: More than700 guestscom-
Marshall was convinced she would start her own
company.
I-
ing together to celebrate
the summer, enjoying food, drinks and music by a local band.
She studied entrepre-
neurship with the hope of launching a clothing company for full-figured women. But after graduatingtwo years ago, the 31-year-old
0
I', J73'hlR
But this party wasn't at a
club or a local music venue. It was at First Texas
chose a more conventional
u n ss I o l n s ( (n l n
Honda auto dealership. The days of cramped, stodgy and sterile auto dealerships appear to be
career as abrand manager at Kraft Foods in Chicago. "It felt like the timing
wasn't exactly right," Marshall said. "As much
over in Austin and the
region, as dealers — eager to stand out in a competitive market — are trans-
as I wanted to be an entrePhotos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Anna nnd Justin Scribner, of Bend, inside their Flyte Camp garage, where they restore different models of RVs.
forming their facilities into high-end showplaces complete with expansive event spaces, gourmet
preneur, I knew I needed a backup plan." The image of the U.S. as bursting with entrepreneurial zeal, it turns out, is more myth than reality. In truth, the rate at which new com-
coffee, designerfurniture, WiFi, flat-panel TVs and
kid-friendly play zones. About a dozen Central
panies are being formed has fallen steadily for more than three decades.
Texas auto dealerships either have undergone recent
The decline has occurred nationwide — even in
expansions or are planning
Silicon Valley. Business
extreme makeovers in the
creation there is still high
coming year, pumping millions of dollars into the economy as they add expanded, slick showrooms with a slew of guest perks.
compared with most of the country, but it's down markedly from the past, accordingto the Brookings Institution. "The first reaction of ev-
The mission, industry
experts say, is to get customers who increasingly do their shopping online to visit brick-and-mortar
storesmore forservice appointments and shop during their stays. "Automotive companies
eryone who sees this is they can'tbelieve it especially anyone from California," said Bob Litan, a senior fellow at Brookings. "It's down everywhere. In every locale. In everyindustry." The number of startups has fallen nearly 28 percent
Watch a video ofthe Scribners and their team working on RVs at:bendbulletin.cnm/scribners
O
took notice that customers'
likelihood to return to purchase their next vehicle,
from 1977 to 2011, accord-
By Joseph Dltzler •The Bulletin
ingto the Census Bureau.
or return for service were
much higher when they were completely satisfied with these appearance
By other measures — as a
measures," said Shawn
better way finally occurred to
St. Clair, director of syndicatedresearch forMaritz
Anna Scribner on Halloween
AutomotiveResearch. "The next step has been to
upgrade facilities. Some manufacturers mention trying to make the custom-
er experience similar to something you might find
in a vintage travel trailer in the cold.
dudingincreasedrisk aversion among workers, shifts in government regulation and a consolidation in corporate America that has left manyindustries dominated
by ahandful ofbehemoths. The drop has been sharpest amongthe millennial generation, which is grappling with heavy student debt and a frustrating job m arket, accordingto re-
The trailer was the latest in a string of
the National Automobile
vintage Rvs that Justin had renovated
Dealers Association. "Today the retail-auto-
and then sold, one after another, to
competitive than ever, and franchised new-car dealers
contributing to the trend, in-
spent hours in the driveway at their
Car buyers make an average of 1.3 visits to dealerships before buying a ve-
motive landscape is more
working-age populationit has fallen in half. Many factors appear to be
Her husband, Justin Scribner, had Bend home packing wheel bearings
a decade ago, according to
relative to the size of the
night 2009.
at an Apple store."
hicle, down from 4.5 visits
share of allbusinesses or
he notion that there must be a
search by Robert Fairlie, an economist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Anna and Justin sit inside a 1955 Spartan Manor that took six weeks to
make ends meet.
restore.
across the country are al-
from 34.8 percent in 1996.
ways thinking of new, creative ways to stay ahead of
In better times, Justin fixed up a 1958 Shasta Air-
the competition and exceed
flyte for family vacations. Then the Bend housing
their customers' expectations," said Charles Cyrill,
market collapsed in 2007
the National Automobile
and Justin, a flooring con-
Dealers Association's director of media and public
tractor, went from steady work to one or two $100 re-
relations.
pair jobs a week, he said. "We started selling ev-
SeeShowrooms /E5
People ages 20 to 34 created 22.7percent of all new companies lastyear, down
erything we owned," Anna said Tuesday. "Motorcycle went, car went, pretty soon
to fix them up for their own
always going to be our
use, only to sell them off
trailers. We didn't intend
when the bills came due.
on starting a business," he
it was time for the trailer to go. When the trailer drove off, I think I broke down."
Then came that Halloween
said. "I was sitting there that night and Anna comes
night. It finally dawned on them that they should lease
Her husband kept at it, a shop somewhere and start dragging home the leftovers a business rebuilding vinof vintage travel trailers, tage travel trailers. "All of these trailers were one after another, intending
out and she's like, 'You have got to get a shop to do this.' And I said, 'Yeah, that'd be
nice.'" SeeFlyte /E2
"The popular image of every millennial starting a company, like every popular stereotype, is overblown," said Dane Stangler, research director at
the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a Kansas City, Missouri, nonprofit.
SeeStartups/E5
ntre reneurs ea son i ita co ri t r e orm By Troy Wolverton
help of an attorney who went
San Jose Mercury News
on to spearhead the effort to
unlocking through Congress. That bill finally became law
When the Librarian of Congress reversed course and
create an exemption to the DMCA for cellphone unlock-
last month. In a recent interview with
banned the unlocking of cellphones two years ago, Sina
ing. With that issue seemingly
the San Jose Mercury News,
in the past, Khanifar resumed
Khanifar talked about his
Khanifar took it as almost a
selling his software, finished school, founded two cell-
journey from entrepreneur to activist and his push for a broader reform of the digital copyright act. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
personal affront. Khanifar was involved in
the original effort to legalize unlocking back in the mid2000s after he developed a program that helped consumers break the technological barriers that tied their phones to particular carriers. Mo-
torola demanded that he stop, citing an obscure provision of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that forbade people from breaking software locks. Khanifar resisted with the
phone-related startups and moved to the Bay Area.
Then, unlockingbecame illegal again. No longer having an active role in his
good. Members of Congress really care both about what people think, about what the
advocacy organizations that are pushing for the public good think. Those organizations really have a big impact on whether a particular representative will vote for some-
startups, Khanifar threw himself into the effort to reverse that. He launched a White
• of how the sausage is made in Washington. What
thing and what the bill will look like. But also, people actually picking up the phone and calling. That's how we got so
did you learn from that
much traction was by con-
House petition, made sure it
experience'? • You have to play a lot of
vincing people they needed to pick up the phone and calL Because so few people do that, when you do have someone
reached the 100,000-signature
requirement so it would get a response from the Obama administration, then helped
shepherd a bill legalizing
• You had a close view
• hardball. You have to
call people out when they do things that you view as being really negative for the public
call, it registers.
SeeCopyright/E3
John Green/ Bay Area News Group
Sina Khnnifnr became one of the leaders in the movement to reauthorize the unlocking of cell phones after he launched n petition on the White House website.
E2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
B USINESS TODAY Fall RV Show and Sale: See new floor plans and technology advances for 2014 models; free; 10 a.m.-5p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711.
MOMDAY Capturing the Value of Big Data: Learn about data science and how to apply it to your business; $499; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; FoundersPad, 777 SW Mill View Way, Bend; founderspad.com/workshops.
TUESDAY The Business of Social Media — More than Chatter: Learn how to use social marketing to grow your business; register online;
$25 BendChamber members, $30 community members; 11:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. Small Business Counseling: Receive confidential business
END A R
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.
planning with a SCORE volunteer; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7050. Return to Conservative Investing: Learn about CDs and annuities in this financial workshop led by Mid Oregon financial adviser JC Hallman; RSVP requested; free; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 NE Cushing Drive, Bend; 541382-1795 or info©midoregon.com.
www.deschutes.org. Search Engine Strategies I: A professional search engine marketer will lead this class on the do's and don'ts of search engine optimization; registration required; W ednesdays Sept.24-Oct.8;$99; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541383-7270.
WEDMESDAY
QuickBooksSeminar: Designed to train business owners the basic functions needed to develop accurate accounting records; registration required; $97; 9 a.m.-1
Business After Hours: Register online; $25 Bend Chamber members, $30 community members; 5 p.m.; Arbor Mortgage Group, 209 NE Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. Deschutes Property Owners Meeting: County representatives will speak about efforts to promote Brownfield redevelopment and how to evaluate a property's environmental condition; free; 6-8 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, 716 SW Evergreen Ave.; 541-385-1709, peter.gutowsky@deschutes.org or
THURSDAY
p.m.; Accurate Accounting and Consulting, 61383 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite A, Bend. AdBite: Learn how partnering with brands that have similar values
can further your company's goals; register online; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend Center for Health and Learning, 2500 NE Neff Road; 541-382-4321 or www.adfedco.org Nonprofit Workshop: Open to Jefferson County nonprofit agencies, grant writers and
fundraisers, lunch provided; free; 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus,1170 E. Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-382-1170 or cpuddyO oregoncf.org.
SATURDAY
provide security for a computer network; CCNA certification or instructor permission prerequisite; registration required; Mondays and Wednesdays Sept. 29-Dec. 5; $360; 12:45-3:05 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. Pinterest Business: Learn how to use this affordable tool to promote your business; registration required; Mondays Sept. 29-0ct. 6; $65; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. BusinessFundamentals Bootcamp — Entrepreneurship:
Beginners QuickBooks Pro 2014: Learn to do your own bookkeeping; registration required; $85; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
interested in tuning up or starting up an organization; call to register; $10 per course; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; COCC — Crook County Open Campus, 510 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-447-6228.
FRIDAY Build Your Business Website with WordPress: Registration required; Fridays Sept. 26-Oct. 10; $149; 9 a.m.-4p.m.;COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270.
model preparation instructor approval and registration required; Tuesdays and Thursdays Sept. 30-Oct. 30; $177.50; 8-9:55 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270. Business Intelligence: Students will perform a comprehensive environmental scan including
macro andmicro economic factors
and industry analysis; instructor approval and registration required; Tuesdays and Thursdays Sept. 30Oct 30; $177.50; 10:15 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270.
Series of workshops for anyone
Small Business Counseling:
MOMDAY
TUESDAY
Sept.29
Sept. 30
Cisco CCNA Security: Introduction to security related issues and skills network administrators need to
Business Modeling: Exploration of student's small business ideas from brainstorming to business
Receive confidential business planning with a SCORE volunteer; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7050. QuickBooksPro2014 Beginning for Macs: Learn to do your own bookkeeping; registration required; Tuesdays and Thursdays Sept. 30-Oct. 2; $85; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270.
Jerry B. andKaren L.Schappacher, Jefferson MeadowCondominium, Unit 2, $210,000 • Ellen T. Davisto Dianna J. Salczynski, Yeoman Park, Lot 3, $204,000 • Michelle H. Wainwright to Katherine S. Green, trustee of theKatherine Storey GreenRevocable Trust, Sun Meadow, No. 3,Lot 72, $223,000 • Phebe A. Garrett, trustee of the Anne Garrett Trust, to Charles R.and Judith L Hickson, Oakview,Phase 3,Lot2, $259,000 • William A. andLynnS. Kucharski to Kibby RoadLLC,TheWilows, Phase 3, Lot199, $184,000 • Brian J. and Kirsten K. Klym to Kevin L. andKathryn E.Aleshire, Foxborough, Phase 4,Lot199, $275,000 • Kristopher M. andErica L. McKoyto Jay M. andKatelin M. Tarvin, Diamond Bar Ranch, Phase3, Lot110, $191,900 • Jeffrey M. Kuhlman to JamesD. Heikkila Jr. andChristina M. Heikkila, Justin Glen,Phase3,Lot57,$245,000 • Lands BendCorp. to Franklin Brothers LLC,South Deerfield Park, Lot 50, $272,000 • Franklin Brothers LLC toWiliam
L. and Lisa A.Couey,trustees of the Couey Family Trust, South Deerfield Park, Lot 50, $272,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Eric M. Daughtry, BadgerForest, Phase 2,Lot 11, $212,000 • Tammy N. Settlemier to Richard F. and Alexandra B.Smith, BrokenTop, Phases1-A and1-B, Lot 53, $800,000 • Richard F. and Alexandra B. Smith to TammySettlemier, Parks at Broken Top, Lot 45, $385,000 •HaydenHomesLLCtoSamuel and Ofelia MaldonadoandSamuel Maldonado Jr., Emily Estates, Lot19, $196,049 • Kristen Jokinen, who acquired title as Kristen Grund, toGary R.Gifford, Silver LakeEstates, Lot 38, $248,500 •HaydenHom esLLCto KatherineP. Carrillo, Gleneden 2,Lot45, $230,990 • Kim S. andMarylou Elton to Camile and Barry Fischer, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 4,Lot154, $440,000 • Joan M. Grantand Carolyn J. Elfstrom, trustees of theJoan M.Grant Living Trust, to Charles S.Rosenfeld, NorthWest Townsite Company's Second Addition to Bend,Lot 8, Block 36, $412,000
DEEDS Deschutes County • Christian J. Lindquist, also appearing of record asChristian John Lindquist, to Robert A. andMelinda J.Zschoche, Gemstone Estates Replat, Lot 5, Block 2,$261,000 • Mary A. Collister to RebeccaL. Seim, Sunny Acres, Lot1, Block 5,$400,000 •JasonandSherylBlackmanto Thomas L and Robin L. Lewis, Wiestoria, Lots10-12, Block 51, $235,000 • Federal National Mortgage Association to RachelMcWilliams, Choctaw Village, Tract A, Lot 2, Block 7, $189,900 • Joshua 0. and RandiJ. Davis to Cody L and Kelsie JoWren, Forrest Commons, Lot13, $202,000 • Secretary of Housing andUrban Development to Marcie E.Amagrande, Tall Pines Fifth Addition, Lot15, Block 29, $154,600 • Herbert R. and Sandra J. Hull to Travis L. andChelsea L.Wilcox, Falcon Sky Estates, Lot1, Block 2, $463,350 • Secretary of Housing andUrban Development toGwendolynL.Jones, Tamarack ParkEast, Phase3, Lot 2, Block 5, $215,000
• MichaelJ.and Robert E.Tennantto MooseLakeInvestmentLLC,McKay Townhomes, Lot 3, $420,000 • Susan Dunn, personal representative of the estate of Erick C.Becker,to Chris I. and Kimberly A. Johnson, Newberry Estates Phase1, Lot 2, Block 1, $208,000 • Charles B. andBarbara M. Darland to James E.and Christine T. Manley, trustees of the ManleyFamily Trust, Squire Ridge, Phase1, Lot7, Block2, $485,000 • Travis M. Waiton to Rich andNancy Kelly, Deschutes RiverWoods, Lot52, Block XX, $250,000 • Travis J. Campbell to Michael J. Sackin, Kenwood, Lots15and16, Block 4, $280,000 • Michael J. Sackin to Richard and Clairen Stone, Kenwood, Lots15and 16, Block 4, $405,000 • Signature Homebuilders LLCto David I. and Catherine I. Cudo,Crosswinds, Lot 9, $218,900 •Pahli sch HomesInc.toJamesR.and Karen Z. Dunn,Rivers EdgeVillage, Phase14, Lot12, $419,950 • Paul J. and Christine C.Walker to Adam P.N. and MelindaR.Leask,Boyd
Flyte
Hills, California. BCII produc- camera sitting there watching es other shows in a similar a wall being built. This is acvein, including "Rock My RV," tually how our shop functions
Continued from E1 From t ha t
h u sband-and- and "Celebrity Rides." At their
wife exchange came Flyte own expense,the Scribners Camp Vintage Travel Trail- overhauled a vintage trailer ers LLC, a re storation firm for an episodethat included a that went in five years from spotlight onformer "American a driveway necessity to a Idol" judge Simon Cowell's 12-person shop with its own mobile-home mansion. "It just looks funny when reality T V sh o w . "Flippin' RVs" premiered Sept. 3 on you're watching it, our li ttle Great American Country, a thing.... (The show) accenting Scripps Networks cable chan- that I'm putting on a porch neL The third episode airs 5 light, a little vintage porch p.m. and 9 p.m. Wednesday, light. 'Look, it even has a according to the series website porch light," Justin said. "And at gactv.com. then they clip to Simon CowThe Scribners took their ell's three-tieredwhatever..."
Crossing, Lot 21, $249,500 • Mark A. and Kathleene R. Winslow toJasonA.and MelissaJ.Spansel, Forrest Commons, Lot 9, $153,000 • Paul-Son Construction Inc. to AA Bend LLC,BoydCrossing, Lots18and 19, Sunscape,Lots 3-5, $178,392 • Adam and WendyTemple to Jennifer L. Murphy, April Acres, Lot1, $202,500 • Anne Maxwell to Joshua 0. and Randi J. Davis, Valleyview, Lot102, $237,000 • Savwa Holdings Series B LLC to Joseph M.Carman,Township17, Range13, Section 34, $355,000 • James W. andAnne L Southam to Molly R. Michel, NorthWest Crossing, Phase1, Lot 58, $440,000 • Ronald B. and Kathleen D.Hostetler, trustees of the Ronald B.and Kathleen D. Hostetler Living Trust, to Cynthia I. Moore andAlex T. Fromm, Replat of Common Lot B,Lots97-99,Ridgeat Eagle Crest14, Lot115, $217000 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Brandon T.and Lindsey R. Overstreet, Deschutes RiverTract, Lot 34, $204,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Justin and Tanya Wray,Rivers EdgeVillage, Phase
and its decisions and the reali-
ty of her and I working together.... You've got a lot of different days, emotions and things
going onin all those episodes." The Scribners labored for
a dozenyears finding and restoring vintage trailers before they realized that a commu-
nity of aficionados similar to classic car or m otorcycle enRecession,they found enthusiastic buyers for their renovated trailers. "It was the weirdest thing, because no matter how bad
watched being towed away. Rvs. Bud Brutsman, "Flippin' problemwith peoplein differShe haddeveloped an affi n- RVs" executive producer, said ent states buying toys," Justin ity for the thing, decorating it anything vintageor collectible said. "There were people still with 1950s-era knick-knacks makes great TV these days. out there ...paying good monpicked upfrom antique shops "Antiques Roadshow," "Pawn ey for these recreational-type during their trips to the Ore- Stars," and "American Pick- things." ers" all tap that vein, he wrote goncoast, Justin said. The tr a iler "builds" the "And she loved it," he said. Wednesdayin an email. Scribners and their team un"She actually loved the design "With 'Flippin' RVs,' we're dertake are not cheap, the sense of the trailers more than not only watching Justin and price depending onthe extent staying in thetrailer." Anna Scribner hunt down of the renovation. They've reRestoring old travel trailers these incrediblevintage trail- built classic trailers from an has turned the Scribners into ers, but also restore them and original scrap of wood, Anna walking encyclopediasof RV share their passionfor the RV said, "but you can't do that knowledge. They've scoured lifestyle," Brutsman wrote. with every trailer because salvageyards,barnsandfields "We're plugged into several somebody'sgot to be backing looking for any of the thou- very popular lifestyle areas that." sands of va rieties of tr a vel — vintage, collectibles, restoFlyte Campemploys craftstrailers built between1930 and ration and RV living. We have men to re-create the vintage 1965: the Almas, KozyCoaches a greataudience." trailers as accurately as possiand Spartans, among others. The show is based around ble, they said. But they someThey scoured the Internet what projects are underway times add updated features andmuseums, like the RV Hall in the Flyte Camp shop, and such ason-demand hot water of Fame in Elkhart, Indiana, follows the Scribners as they heaters, hidden flat-screen forrarecatalogs and manuals hunt the back roads for old Tvs and sound systemsand that detail trailer construction trailers, attend trailer rallies upgraded electrical systems. "They are asfunctional and down to the smallest cabinet and resolve trailer problems pull and rare appliance.Justin for their clients. The episodes as beautiful as any brand new Scribner said Flyte Camp has are not scripted, but not left trailer on th e m a rket r ight to chance, either. They also
60 vintage trailers in the five
make charactersofthe Scribners throughtheir interactions "People either buy some- with family members, emploything and ship it to us, or ees and each other. The episomething that j ust st r u ck sodes,they said, focus on the years it's been in business.
them that they loved and just
work at hand and not on per-
had to bring back, or may- sonal drama. "They're just filming," Anna be it's a family trailer," Anna said. "And then, the other half, said. "We're not, like, acting. we go out and find trailers for But when I saw the show two them." weeksago, the first one, I was The genesis of "F lippin' like, 'I'm in that a lot.'" RVs" was an appearance in Justin at t he s tart di d n't spring on another reality believe his job as shop boss show, "Extreme RVs," created would prove very interesting by the sameproduction com- to a TV audience,he said. He pany, Brentwood Communi- soongot over it. "It wouldn't be cations International, of North
interesting if it was just, like, a
GKE
thusiasts even existed, they said. Even during the Great
businessname from the brand That appearance led to furof that fi r s t tr a vel tr a i ler, ther interest in a show devoted the one that Anna tearfully strictly to restoring vintage things got, ... there was no
rehabilitated between 50 and
14, Lot 10, $462,500 • Nancy J. Clark, trustee of the Nancy J. Clark Trust, to James A.Gomes, Davidson Addition to Sisters, Lots 4 and 5, Block 24,$152,250 • Upper Terrace Lot18 LLC toHigh Plateau Ventures LLC,Partition Plat 2004-6, Parcel 2, $800,000 • Marsha R. Sweeney, trustee of the SweeneyFamily Revocable Living Trust, to Gary L.andJudy A. Fogelson, AngusAcres, Phase1, Lot15, $310,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Collins F.and Wendy A. Hemingway, trustees of the Collins F.andWendy A. Hemingway Family Trust, Newport Landing, Lot 37, $445,000 • William H. andTeresa A. McLain to Shannon MacDonald, trustee of the Shannon M.MacDonald Declaration of Trust, Riverrim PUD,Phase1, Lot154, $523,500 • Sandra L. Huskand Charles T.Hinson to William H.andTeresaA. McLain, Hawks Ridge, Phase1, Lot9, $950,000 • Citibank N.A., trustee for American Home MortgageAssets Trust, etc., to Jason Runco, BoulevardAddition to Bend, Lot10, Block 20, $226,000 • North Allen Associates LLC to
now," Justin said.
When they lo ok ba c k on the five years since that bone-chilling day pa cking bearings in the driveway, the Scribners saidthey try to appreciate where they are to-
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brought themhere.
"It's been a whirlwind of
working really hard for areally longtime," Anna said. "Myself, I think about it ev-
ery day," Justin said. "When I wake up in the morning, I think, 'Huh? How did this ex-
actly happen?'" — Reporter: 541-617-7815, j ditzler®bendbulletin.com
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
E3
Fa in corn ricest reatenMi westa econom By TomMeersman e (Minneapolis) Star Tribune
he prospect of a bin-busting crop has driven corn prices to their lowest levels in four years and raised fears of a prolonged slump for crop farmers in Minnesota and elsewhere. After three years of profits, analysts are calling 2014 a break-even year,atbest.Some think prices could drop more and stay low into 2015. "It's the absolute flip of where we were at 12 months
Belt tightening F or Ti m
W i e rsma, w h o
ago," said Mark Greenwood, grows corn and soybeans, senior vice president at Ag- it's time to "pull back on the Star Financial, referring to reins." "Typically, if a farmer has corn prices that have dropped from more than $6 per bushel a buck, he spends two, buyin 2013 to around $3.60 on the ing machinery, upgrading Chicago Board of Trade in the the house, buying a pickup or past couple of weeks. some toys or investing into anThe sputtering prices have other business or in the marsignificant implications for ket," Wiersma said. the economy of the Upper That happened when corn Midwest, which has outpaced prices were high between 2011 much of the nation in recent
and 2013, Wiersma said, and
years partly on the strength of a strong agricultural sec-
both farmers and local businesses benefited. This season
tor. Not only are corn prices
will be different, he said, with
r~> \
r
down, but soybeans and some decent yields in Minnesota other crops have also dropped and record crops nationally. "I don't see this to be a devsharply. Beyond thinning farmers' astating time because we've David Brewster / Minneapolis Star Tribune wallets, the impact could ripcome out of some good years," Declining corn prices have heavy implications for the economy of the Upper Midwest, a truth all too familiar to Bruce Peterson, a farmer ple outward to weaken a host Wiersma said. "But if gow near Northfield, Minnesota. of service businesses: seed prices) persist and the costs companies, farm implement don't retract, we could see dealers, fertilizer marketers, some exiting of farmers out of but now corn has plummeted. to the most recent quarterly land rent prices and fixing the doldrums, Swenson said, "There's no profitability at herbicide applicators and the industry," he said. survey of agricultural lenders farm equipment instead of re- is its parts and service delandlords who rent fields to Wiersma said that he and these current corn prices," he by the Federal Reserve Bank placing it, he said. partments. "That part of the farmers. The record harvest other farmers often hedge said, and many producers will of Minneapolis. Minnesobusiness shouldn't really fall will also overflow grain bins their losses by selling on the not be able to break even. ta farmland prices dropped Equipment demand slow off that much because farmafter harvest begins this fall, futures market. He sold some Some analysts have predict- about 4 percent in the second Manufacturers have al- ers still have to plant, they still according to federal officials, of his expected 2014 corn crop ed that corn prices may drop quarter from what theywere a ready noticed the change. havetocombine and theyhave further straining railroads months ago when prices were to $3.20 or $3.25 per bushel year ago, the report said. Three weeks ago, Deere 8 to use their machines just as that are far behind in shipping higher, he said, so that will before bottoming out during Corn and soybean farmers C o. announced that i t w i l l much as theydid when comlast year's crop. ease the pain if he loses money harvest in early October. Pric- have seen ups and downs in put morethan 600 employees modity prices were high," he "A big part of Minnesota's or only breaks even on other es, of course, depend on con- the market over the years, and at four locations on indefi- sald. overall economy is from the acres. tinued good weather, which many have invested in side nite layoff because of weaker The two largest consumers outstate that flows through Bruce Peterson, who grows has been ideal for corn and businessesto spread the risk, demand for it s a gricultural of corn are animals and eththe metro eventually," said Mi- corn and soybeans with two soybeans in most parts of the such as raising livestock or equipment. Then the Moline, anol plants, according to the chael Swanson, agricultural brothers and a nephew, said Midwest this year. specialty crops or selling seed. Illinois, company announced U.S. Department of Agriculeconomist for Wells Fargo. "So that farmers who did not "forIn addition to corn and soy- another 460 layoffs at its trac- ture, and both may benefit if we better take care of it if we ward market" by selling some The insurance trigger beans, Peterson raises pigs tor manufacturing plant in corn prices stay low. "The single largest cost for want to have long-term health of their crop ahead of time are The center estimated that and cattle, and owns shares in Waterloo, Iowa. Deere said it for a big part of the state." probably "below water at this in 2013,the average Minneso- an ethanol plant. "That side of will also introduce "season- raising a hog is the price of Lower prices, of course, are point." ta corn farmer spent $5.16 in our operation will benefit from al and inventory adjustment corn," said Dave Preisler, ex"It's not all doom and gloom direct and overhead expenses the lowercorn prices,"he said. shutdowns and temporary lay- ecutive director of the Minnegood news for buyers. When corn drops, livestock opera- because the prices run in cy- to grow one bushel of corn, Kirby Hettver, who grows offs" at other factories. sota Pork Producers Associtors and ethanol producers cles and we've had a pretty and that two-thirds of those corn, soybeans and alfal fa Andrew Swenson, sales ation. In 2012 and 2013 when benefit from cheaper feed and good run recently," he said. expenses were for seed, fer- on about 870 acres in western manager of a machinery busi- corn prices were high, he said, "Most people should have tilizer and land rent. The esti- Minnesota, said that if prices ness in Minnesota, was not "probably some of the very fuel. Swanson said consumers had some fairly strong profit m ates arebased on realcosts remain low, those at great- surprlsed. best (hog) farms broke even "When corn prices are low, and made a few dollars, but at the grocery store may ben- to build up a little reserve cap- reportedby about 859 farms est risk will be growers who efit eventually from cheaper ital and reduce some debt to that are part of the Minnesota haven't farmed long enough sales really slow down almost on average there were losses corn, which is an ingredient weather a period of time when Farm Business Management to build up equity, and who exponentially at the dealer- during those years." in cereals, cookies and other prices are negative." programs. have large debt for machinery ship level," he said. New comHog farmers should be able products. But he said it may But Peterson said that three If those costs stay about the and pay high rental prices for binesrange from $300,000 to to make money this year, Pretake months to see price cuts years of healthy profits were same for 2014, said Swanson farmland. $400,000, Swenson said, and isler said. "Price doesn't really make as food companies first try to accompanied by rising costs of Wells Fargo, and if corn Les Anderson, who farms large row crop tractors typirecoup losses from when corn for fertilizer, seed, land rent prices remain at slightly under about 1,100 acres, said grow- cally cost $200,000. any difference in the big prices were high. and other expenses, and now $4 per bushel, farmers could ers cannot control whether Equipment sales at Mid- scheme of things," he said. He said it's not clear what is everyoneneeds to recalibrate. lose about $1.25 per bushel corn prices go up or down, west's 13 stores across central "What's important is the mardriving the magnitude of the Costs of production are this year. "That would gener- but they can control their own Minnesota have been healthy gin: What are your costs and "way out of balance with exswing in commodity prices. ate some of the largest losses costs. "Raising corn is pretty in recent years, Swenson said, what can you sell your prod"We say it's about supply pected revenue," said Dale that we've ever seen historical- much a break-even deal now," but the company will need to uct for. That's what keeps both and demand, but you really Nordquist, associate director ly," he said, and could trigger he said. "I don't think the pric- adjust if corn prices remain crop and livestock farmers in wonder sometimes," Swanson of the Center for Farm Finan- record amounts of crop insur- es are going to come back any- low. business." "Our business is built now said. It "boggles the mind" that cial Management at the Uni- ance payments to farmers. time soon, so everybody's gothe market thinks that corn versity of M i n nesota. Land The low prices may also be ing to be tightening their belts for $6 corn, so it'll be a little bit was worth $7 at one point in values and land rental rates affecting land values. "Land and scrutinizing expenses." of work to muscle through a r 2012 and half of that value have just caught up to where prices have moderated folThat could include apply- depressedtime,"he said. v two years later, he said. "It's corn prices were during the lowing a multiyear period of ing less fertilizer, buying less What will sustain his comincomprehensible." past couple of years, he said, strong growth," according expensive seed, renegotiating pany if corn prices remain in
Plafs Well, Retire Well
Copyright
cated. They all have software locks on them that make it so
Continued from E1
that only an authorized repair shop can repair your car. If • One ofyour com panies, your "check oil" light goes on, • O penSignal, w or k s you can top it off with oil, but
I s tarted doing A •• When the cellphone unlocking and then the DMCA campaign, I learned the tools that I
really wanted — to be able to show that people cared about
with the carriers. Was there
to reset the light, you would
any pushback either from your fel low partners or from
have to go to an authorized re- there. pair shop. The White House petition
your customers about your
advocacy on the unlocking issue? No, nothing, actually. My • co-founders joked about it, but were like, "No, you know what? Do your thing." To be honest, even the car-
A•
riers are not that anti-unlock-
ing. But fixing the DMCA has very little to do with them. It has a lot to do with the content industry — the Motion Pic-
That has nothing to do with
these issues — weren't really website was great. But then I
piracy, but it's a legal loophole wanted to send emails to Conthat really reduces consumer gress, and there was no way freedoms in relation to the de- of doing it. Or even to help vices that they buy. people who wanted to call their members of Congress. I've been spending a lot of • How are you approach• ing the politics of re- my time building up that kind forming the act'? of a tool set, working with a a really delicate area A •• toIt'stouch. The way the
team of volunteers.
content lobbyists treat copyright law is if you even go near ture Association of America it, they cause a massive hullaand the Recording Industry baloo, like if you change this Association of America. And one piece, piracy is going to go they're the ones who pushed crazy. back ridiculously hard again We have to work with the when we had a copyright other side and explain to them hearingabouttheDMCA. that we're not trying to make piracy easier. What we're Why does the digital trying to do is make it so the • copyright act need to be law doesn't have all these anreformed? cillary effects. I think without
you see yourself Q •• Do continuing to do volun-
A • ates this crazy legal loophole that lets anyone lock
their support, that lobby is so
done, and I think we want to
down a piece of electronics
to make.
Q•
• The current form c re-
simply by adding a technological protection measure to it. So, cars, for example, have
these diagnostic systems in them that are quite compli-
teer-activist work, or do you
have other entrepreneurial ideas that you're thinking about'? • I t ' s am a zing h o w A much of the work we're doing • A little bit ofboth.
seems really fundamental to be able to do this kind of ad-
vocacy online. And so I think there's a lot there for us to get
immensely powerful, it's go- get it done before we move on ing to be a very hard change to anything else. have you been Q •• How able to tie in your background in technology to your activism?
But having done a few start-
ups, it's definitely in my blood. So at some point, I'll go back to that, but for the moment,
I'm heads-down, trying to get these projects finished.
Sina Khanifar Age:29 Birthplace:Tehran, Iran Position:Digital rights activist, co-founder, OpenSignal Previous jobs:Co-founder, Repeaterstore.com Education:B.A. in physics, University of Oxford Family:In a relationship, no children Residence:San Francisco
Find It All
Online AHA'.
OenO W ebCA M
Five things adont Sina Khanifar
web+ creative and marheting
1. Although born in Iran, he grew up in Guildford, U.K., and immigrated to the U.S. with his parents at the age of16.
2. Is a citizen of three countries — Iran, Great Britain and the United Statesafter gaining U.S. citizen-
conference OlCtlher 13-14, 20l14 Hetel TOWer Theatre andlXferd O
ship in August 2013.
3. A big fan of the musician Tom Waits, he's seenWaits perform live 13 times. 4. On one particular cross-country trip, hewas involved in fouraccidents, including knockingover a utility pole ontomultiple cars. Nevertheless, heinsists that he's anexcellent driver. 5. Is licensed to drive taxis in the city of SanFrancisco.
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Startups
rents gowns for bridesmaids. The company got venture capital funding and had encouraging prospects.
Continued from E1 Falling entrepreneurship is bad for the economy. It means fewerjobs being created anda reduction in innovation that is
essential to economic growth and rising living standards. "When you see the kind of drop-off in starting up new businesses we've seen, that's going to have a really large effect on the employment numbers," said Barry Lynn, senior
bers suggest. Enrollment in college entrepreneurship programs is strong, and some surveys show many millennials plan Marshall, for
an October March of Dimes
learn how to start a business. She said she got positive feedback on her designs for upscale clothes for full-figured
''w
c
but probably when she can meet such challenges as the
e
upfront costs and the need to
women.
support her family. "I still feel like it's a callAndrew A. Nellea/The Chicago Tribune ing I need to fulfill and I'm Christina Marshall dreams of starting a fashion design business, not completely satisfied," she but not until she is able to meet such challenges as the upfront said. costs and the need to support her family. Some experts said govern-
But her plans were thrown off by the untimely deaths of
ment statistics fail to capture
all of the entrepreneurial ac-
of the country, each rate was b u siness roughly half the level of 1978 formation has picked up as to 1980. the economy has improved in There i s n o co n s ensus the last two years. about the precise causes of tivity. They t h in k
falling entrepreneurship, but
"You don't really see new-
comers saying, 'Let me open a bookstore to compete with
Amazon or an independent pharmacy to compete with CVS,'" Khan said.
Potential startups are wary
areas were startups, accord- of taking on giant rivals, said ing to Brookings. While that's L ina Khan, a fellow at t h e higher than in most regions New America Foundation.
Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades." "We wanted to see how
town location this year, more
manager at First Texas Honda, said of the 21-acre dealership, which moved into its current location in 2012. Olmstead said he and oth-
are expecting upgrades and want to be pampered," Cirota said. "So you've got to keep
than doubling its indoor fawe could give a mid-level car cility to 10,000-plus square owner a luxury car experi- feet, said Alan Cirota, generence," Jim Olmstead, general al manager.
several relatives, as well as by
the need to support her fiance and his 9-year-old son. "It made me take a step back and think whether I was
up with the times."
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16 4.23 2 0.80 10 3 .7 5 10. 7 6 39.84 3.66 71.25 6.4 7 76.58 4.78 75. 9 5 4.30 86.19 4.69 47.23 2.57 121 . 4 3 6.47 134 .9 1 6.65 60.93 2.93 67. 7 0 3 24 134 . 5 0 6.28 63.74 2.95 57.64 2.68
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15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO
14.5
% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
3. 3
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15.0
10.1
11.2
10.0
8.2
6.7
3.5
6 .0 5.s 5.s 5.6 5 .2 5.1 5 .0 4.9 4.9 4.9
6.2 4.0 9.9 6.9 9.5 7.9 6.2 1.3 4.3 7.2
TICKER
133.8 Empire Resorts 26.2 Concert Pharmaceut 39.2 Emcore Corporation 20.8 Novatel Wireless Inc 51.9 Lawson Prod 53.6 IPassInc 62.8 OtonomyInc 73.6 TG Therapeutics 9.0 Republic Airways Hld 38.5 Neovasc Inc 24.2 Corp Resource Svcs 50.9 EPIQ Systems Inc 24.3 TearLab Corp 38.2 Biolase Inc 17.1 Ryerson Holding
FRIDAY C L OS E
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
NYNY
6.44
2.39
59.0
45.7
CNCE
14.00
3.94
39.2
55. 4
0.0
EMKR
5.80
1.54
36.2
35.5
13.5
NVTL
3.08
0.72
30.5
48.1
11.5
LAWS
22.31
4.08
22.4
25.8
98.5
IPAS
1.74
0.31
21.7
35.9
Sony Corp
SNE
17.69
-2.13
-10.7
-6.2
Seadrill Ltd
S DRL
28.2 6
-2.61
-8.5
-23.0
Tesla Motors Inc IHS Inc Delphi Automotive Activision Blizzard Magna lntl Linkedln Corp Contl Resources T eck Resources Ltd
TSLA
25 9 . 32
-19.88
-z1
1.0
I HS
129. 7 8
-9.84
-zo
-8.0
DLPH
65.4 4
-4.73
-6.7
-7.3
AT VI
21.82
-1.57
-6.7
-5.7
MGA
103 . 69
-6.96
-6.3
-8.5
LNKD
21 1 . 17
-13.66
-6.1
-6.7
C LR
68.4 7
-4.41
-6.1
-9.0
TCK
20.06
-1.29
-6.0
-1 z4
91.1
OTIC
23.46
4.08
21.1
36.3
TGTX
11.21
1.70
1 zs
38 . 4
RJET
11.94
1.77
174
16.5
NVCN
6.86
1.01
173
25.6
CRRS
1.59
0.23
16.9
-21.3
EPIQ
17.29
2.45
16.5
17.2
TEAR
4.36
0.61
16.3
13. 0
BIOL RYI
2.69
0.36
1 5.5
23. 4
13.39
1.75
15.0
28. 8
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
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I s'der Who he Is: Economist at the University of Michigan
What he says: Employers say they can't find skilled employees, but won't pay more for them
s&P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
LAST FRI. CHG 2010.40 -0.96 9799.26 +1.13 6837.92 +1 8.63 24306.16 +137.44 4461.22 -3.48 16321.17 +253.60
FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD -0.05% L L +8.77% +0 01'/ L L 2 59% +0.27% +1.32% +4.29% +Q 57% -0.08% +3.85% +1.58% +0.18%
SOUTH AMERICA/CAIIADA
-9.2 B uenos Aires Merval 1 1 580.91 + 44.62 45761.90 -406.74 0.0 Mexico City Bolsa Sao Paolo Bovespa 57788.70 -578.08 83.8 Toronto s&p/Tsx 15265.35 -200.19 -9.3 /AFRICA 172.6 EUROPE
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Thls month, the International Monetary Fund included Justln Wolfers on a list of 25 economists under 45 "shaping the way we think about the global economy." He Is also a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the Peterson Institute for International Economics, and he remalns affiliated with the University of Sydney in his native Australia. He recently dlscussed unemployment, slugglsh paychecks, and what's happening with young men.
Hlrlng has plcked up thls year, and unemployment has fallen, but wages remainthe economy's weak spot. Paychecks are rlslng about 2 percent each year, the same as inflation. Why aren't employers paying more?
Becausethere's mass unemployment out there. Historically, we would have called 6.1 percent unemployment a problem. We don't have great wage growth, but we don't have a great labor market, so that seems about right. Still, If we're stuck at 2 to 2.5 percent wage inflation even as the labor market improves and we can drive unemployment down to 4 percent, on average that would be a great deal for American labor. The employed wouldn't say that, but the unemployed sure as hell would. One of the things I do In my research is look at happiness equations, and it turns out that having a lob matters way over and above the income that the job brings. It's a sense of identity, it's a sense of belonging. Unemployment Is a major evll, and I'd be willing to accept
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Mote: 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).
Why wages
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justin Wolfers
t h e c u stomers
at least a couple more years
QIXfI'TREss
al'8
"I think
ready to embrace the instability of being an entrepreneur right away," Marshall said. "To really dive in head first is
COVERINGS
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tion Toyota South Austin,
experts cite several factors.
San Francisco and San Jose
T ICKER
his mission was to copy their features — but on an even bigger level. Big changes also have come recently for AutoNa-
down the road."
Some experts said entreGovernment policies, such preneurship has been hurt as weakened enforcement of by a societal tilt toward risk antitrust laws starting in the aversion brought on partly trepreneurial Studies at the Reagan administration, have by a sluggish job market and University of Southern Cal- spurred industrial consolida- high student debt. ifornia's Marshall School of tion that has resulted in the Those factors coaxed Anna Business. emergenceofolderand larger Baxter to opt against an en"I went to dinner last night companies, experts said. trepreneurial path after gradand three people leaned over For example, businesses in uating from UCLA's Anderand said, 'Here's what I 'm existencefor 16yearsorm ore son School of Management working on,' and gave me constituted 34 percent of all last year. demos of their products in the companies in 2011, up from Baxter, 36, won a prestirestaurant," he said. 23 percent in 1992, according gious award at Anderson for Entrepreneurial zest has to Brookings. They employ co-founding a company that fallen even in Silicon Valley. 72 percentof the private-secFrom 2009 to 2011, about 8 tor workforce,up from 60 percent of companies in the percent.
COMPANY
From there, Olmstead said
which completed an $18 milwith 12 different espresso lion, four-year renovation and coffee drinks, a loaner project this summer. "We don't look old anycar and bicycle service, valet service and the largest Hon- more," said Dennis Annada service department with belli, the dealership's gener120bays. al manager. Pointing at his The dealership also brags shiny white tiles in the showabout the diversity of its room, he said, "We look modemployees, which includes ern. You can see the engine's Courtney Audain, a musi- reflection on the floor." cian who was with the band Jaguar Land Rover of AusTimbuk 3, which performed tin also completed a major the hit "The Future's So renovation at t h eir d own-
The Georgia native went to business school at USC to
o ne, still
now houses a clothing boutique, among other perks.
staffed, 50-foot coffee bar
The lure of stability also appealed to Marshall.
dreams of starting a business,
" Everybody I k n o w i s working on an app or a startup of some type," said David Belasco, co-director of the Lloyd Greif Center for En-
fundraiser. The facility boasts a fully
to be for me to find a job?'"
to start businesses eventually.
since its own 2011 renovation
had no debt, Baxter said.
ered carefully," Baxter said. "I definitely went down the path in my head of 'OK, what happens if this fails in six months? How hard is it going
Some experts said the pic-
Continued from E1
tech giant Adobe Systems Inc. to help pay $110,000 in studentloans.Herco-founder, who stuck with the company,
was something to be consid-
ture isn't as bleak as the num-
er staffers spent a month visiting Lexus of Austin, which
ing just that. The dealership hosts events regularly, including a "First Texas by West" event during the South by Southwest festival and
"A lot of my classmates upon graduation didn't have jobs. Having a secure job with a really good salary
fellow at the New A merica Foundation.
Showrooms First Texas Honda is do-
But Baxter took a job at
E5
+2.11% +4.3 4 % + 1.57% +7.30% 10 .09%
QIibtable
'VI/e thought it would be like a Twitter in terms of investor interest, but it's more like Facebook. We have three times as many orders as we had for Twitter." — JJ Kinahan,chief strategist at online-brokerage TD Ameritrade, on the start of trading for Chinese giant Alibaba
pretty high costs In order to alleviate It.
Some employerssay they can't flnd workers wlth the skills they need,even though unemployment Is still hlgh. Is the so-called "skills mismatch" a problem? Employers are not offering higher wages. My Brookings Institution colleague Gary Burtless had a very nlce expression: "What we're learning Is, it's really cheap to whine, and slightly more expensive to ralse wages." W hat else have you seen In the jobs data that has struck you as unusual? [There is] this big puzzle that few talk about, which Is: what's the matter withmen? You've got a huge number
of young men not working and not In education rIght now. We don't know what they're doing. We don't know how they're getting by. They're not committing crimes either, because crime rates are down. [Harvard economics professor] Larry Katz somewhat facetiously says that they're playing video games. There's never been a better tlme to make sure you graduate from college. Women have figured that out, and they're attending college In record numbers. Male educational attainment has flat lined for a decade or two now, which Is totally baffling for the economy that we're In. Interviewed by Chris Rugaber Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, September 19, 2014
+
17,279.74
+292.23
NASDAQ 4,579.79
+
12 1g
S&P500
+
2,010.40
24 86
R USSELL2000 ~ 1 3 6 9 I,146.92
WILSHIRE5000
21,220.31W
+178.88
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
UNDAY D
R
new irec ion or exus When buyingbarely driven 2009 model
Jason H. Harper Bloomberg News
Lexus engineers have a sports car to be proud of. It's
call ever receiving the amount
of feedbackthat resulted from the Model A Ford jumpstarting
I'm interested in a car • I saw for sale online. It's a 2009 Pontiac Solstice with only 641 miles. It is
Q•
called the RC F, and it's 467
horsepower of rubber-searing fun. Lexus is not typically the b rand you'd turn t o
By Brad Berghoidt McClatcby-Tribune News Service
resourcefuland helpful folks. Suggestions so far have ranged supposedly in perfect new from finding the hand crank condition and has been in and employing a strong kid to storage. That's what con- use it, putting two stmng kids cerns me. Could anything to work push-starting the car, be damagedfrom not hav- and a huge host of dever teching been driven? They want niques to drop voltage from the $19,000 for it. 12V donor vehicle or battery. — Alice Hart I'm working on compiling the • Hmmm. These are ideas and will forward the col-
w h en
shopping for a r i p-roaring, petrol-snorting street raptor. The Toyota Motor Corp. luxu-
ry brand has been known for smooth-jazz sedans like the LS or easygoing REVIEW c rossovers such as the RX. But even the LS executive
sedan is now available in an F Sport version, clad in an eye-catching design and a Courtesy Lexus/Bloomberg News punchy powertrain, part of Taking a risk, Lexus has branched out from luxury sedans to a sport coupe with the new 2015 RC F. a recharged and rejuvenated lineup. Nice is nice, one supposes, tage is the way it turns in the power right off the line like a but Lexus is ready to get a bit real world. Send the RC F turbo. Base price:$62,400 naughty. Akio Toyoda, presithrough a set of S curves and The interior m eets L exAs tested:$70,000 dent and chief executive officer it will nimbly dance through us standards, but in a snazType:2-door sport coupe of the Toyota City, Japan-based abrupt directional changes. zy, sport-inspired way. The parent company, loves fast, This is smart engineering that stacked console looks cool and Engine:5-iiter V-8 with passionate cars and his goal is makes you feel like a better the nicely bolstered seats on 467 horsepower and389 to make Lexus fun. driver. my test model are clad in racer pound-feet of torque It's inevitable that the RC red. I am at a private racetrack in Mileage:16mpg city, New York's Catskills, MontiF will b e c ompared to the Which brings us to the exte23 mpg highway cello Motor Club, doing things BMW M4 coupe, which has a rior. Other than the LFA superhave done before. The stabil-
and 406 pound-feet of torque. whelmed. The car is deft and The M4, only recently released, the balance sharp. is one bad machine. First, you might consider Rather than bolting on a turordering the optional sports bocharger, Lexus decided to package with an electronical- go the more traditional route, ly controlled torque vectoring using a naturally breathing differential. This adds about 5.0- liter V-8 up front. It has 467 $8,000 to the $62,400base price horsepower, 389 pound-feet of (and also nets you a carbon-fi- torque and reaches 7,100 revober roof instead of a steel one). lutions per minute. It's mated to Braking-based methods put an eight-speedtransmission. extra strain and heat on those The happy upside, particusystems. Lexus chose to utilize larly when driving on the edge, torque instead, and took the ex- is the power band is very lintra steps of using tiny electric ear and predictable. Unlike a motors and multi-plate clutches turbocharged system, there's to distribute force between the no sudden surge in torque as rear wheels. you apply the gas pedal. You The drawback is added get what you ask for. Just don't weight. But the killer advan- expect that addictive, explosive
The grille is big enough
smoke, but I'm not feeling over-
switched off, and allthat horsepower is furiously spinning the rear wheels as I drift through
corners. I'm purposely wrenchingthe car around the bends in a man-
ner where I can get the tires to break away. When they do, I add in more gas. Too often a
car gives up right at that moment, as electronic sensors pull the plug. Not the Lexus. Not this time.
It delivers more power to the rear rubber and the slide
increases. I'm working the wheel, counter-steering but
also coaxing out an ever-greater slip angle. There's noise and tires bleating and maybe some
lection to Jerry, and others who
sense. Check CARFAX?
it sort of takes the fun out of it.
I thought his words below regarding-32 degree cold starts would be fun to share: A cross th e s t t eet f r o m where I lived off base, a com-
pany that cut wood for pulp during the winter started their u nsettling thought is t h e large trucks by using a bag of car has not yet traveled far charcoaldumped into a large enough to really prove out stainless steel tray, using a litall of its mechanisms, yet tle gasoline to get it burning. is already out of warran- When the charcoal was ready, ty, based on time. Do your they pushed the tray under
to take out an entire flock of
es an emissions test, I'd be
birds. Angles are numerous and complex, with folds and air ducts throughout the bodywork. The deep crease just
satisfied. Another slightly
behind the front wheels adds
a striking visual element, and also aids in cooling. The trunk lid is crisp and
homework and compare it to other Solstices with typ-
each truck's engine area until
This could be a somewhat c ollectible car d own t h e
truck down the line. Even the
chances here. I thinkyou'll like it. I did. In fact, given the chance, this
duction numbers.
one winter to get it started and
there's actually a hidden wing that deploys at higher speeds.
the motor would turn over and ical miles and lower prices. then moved the tray to the next
Lexus was bold and took
local fire department had to road because of the low pro- tow their truck down the street
is a Lexus that may change the way that you perceive the
they had a garage to keep the
brand. As the management
Responseto previous question
would probably point out, that's exactly the point.
Wow! In all the years I've Michigan while I was stationed been doing this, I can't re- there!"
fire truck in. We endured some really cold winters in the UP of
I
l
l'
A
I'd have some concerns also of the effects of stale fuel and possibly rusty brakeparts.Ifthe carruns and stops well, and pass-
twin-turbocharged, 3 . 0 -liter car, no other Lexus has looked inline-six with 425 horsepower so exotic.
in the RC F that few Lexuses
• fun little cars, quite the head turner, and are
request it — very interesting no longer made. Pontiac reading! Thankyou all for helpbuilt about 60,000 of them ing with this. for U.S. and Canada drivOne gentleman, Walt Baker, ers during its six year run. told me a fascinating story of The like-new condition and his 6V jumpstarting experienclow miles is intriguing, but es while stationed in the Air comes at what seems to be a Force during the frigid winters many thousand-dollar pre- in northern Michigan. I think mium! Is there reliable infor- the modern Optima 6V battery mation available regarding would be easier to employ as a the car's history? I'd keep jumperthan his clever means my guard up on this un- of dropping voltage and later less all the facts make good recharging his 12V battery, but
2015 lexusRCF
ity and traction controls are
question. Model A owners are
,I
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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
O w ww.bendbulletin.com/opinion
JOHN COSTA
Decisions on health care news
't"
C
p'
ne of the best investments made by The Bulletin has been in health news coverage. Coverage of this critical Central Oregon industry has been a great part of our success as a community newspaper, but it has also prompted difficult questions concerning individuals in need. It's perfectly understandable.
O
Proposed 10-acre site .-. ":..
4 -
'
,"
I
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Our reporters try to frame stories
around individuals with health conditions and medical needs. After publication, the phone calls,
emails and letters arrive asking us to help raise money for a friend or loved one with a similar condition
t- $ :
L
. l
or challenge. The stories are often heart-rending, and it would take a r
pretty cold journalist not to consider
,
,
' 'sr
n
a response. But, for a number of good reasons,
we can't be in the money-raising business.
The Bulletin file photo
Oregon State University-Cascades is expanding to be a four-year university. The expansion, starting on a10-acre site on Bend's west side, has been welcomed, but
some haveexpressed concern about theproposed location. Agroup called Truth in Site submittsd anappeal Monday,challenging adecision to approvethe site.
It wasn't that long ago that we
didn't havemuch health coverage. But watching the booming population of Central Oregon and the growth of the health industry here,
we hired reporters dedicated to the issues, developed a weekly health section and now publish a quarterly magazinecalledPULSE. Judgingby reader response,allof it has been a winner.
The reporters andtheireditorsfor these publications look for important
new issues or compelling personal stories that we can write about to ex-
plore larger issues. There is no question that a story might prompt donations or other
Candidatesfor BendCity Council state their opinions
help to an individual whose particular situation lies at the center of the
story.
Editor's note:The Bulletin editorial board asked the candidates running for three Bend City Council positions up for election in November two questions to give voters a better idea of the differences among them. The answersto the first question about Mirror Pond appeared last Sunday and can be found online at bendbulletin.com/opinion. Here are the answersto the second question. Itshouldbe noted that most ofthe answers to this question w ere submitted before the council decided Wednesday night to hear the appeal on the siting decision.
Yet our purpose is not to benefit
that person necessarily or individually, but to describe the challenges faced by anyone and everyone in such a condition. In any of these stories, there can be significant disagreements about potential treatments, the efficacy
Question 2:Where should Oregon State University-Cascades Campus be sited?
ofcertainapproaches,the actual condition of the individual and the •
expense and role of insurance.
•
We try to explain these differences
in anevenhanded way,buttaking up the side of a particular individual would jeopardize any objectivity that our reporters can bring to these difficult questions.
Mark Capell, incumbent:OSU-Cascades is great for Bend's economy. Location is an important consideration. Regardless of the location, we need to make sure that Bend remains the place we love and
university to Bend is an outstanding idea and one
want tobe. This will require thoughtful infrastructure planning. We
not really under Bend City Council's control. How-
are prepared to let the public know how — in short form in the newspa-
have made great strides in long term planning for sewer and water. We have a good start on transportation with the general obligation bond work and are working on a long-term plan. The City Council may hear the appeal filed for the OSU-Cascades site application. The appeal is quasi-judicial so Council must
per — it can contribute.
remain impartial. Therefore, I can't talk about the specific site.
If, on the other hand, individuals,
groups or nonprofit organizations set out to raise money for a cause, we
Capell
Nathan Boddie, challenger:Bringing a four-year I have supported. Choosing a site for the campus is Boddie
ever, if we do not work closely with the university to pick the best site, we will find traffic, housing and infrastructure all suffer. My opponent has
not addressed the issue adequately and residents could find that his mistakes haunt them for years to come.
We often publish dates, times and
places of fundraising events and the names and locations of bank accounts established to benefit particu-
lar conditions and individuals. Those are in the category of public announcements, and we are happy to publish them. None of these decisions is perfect,
•
•
•
o
-
•
-
• •
•
Ron Boozell:Go Beavers. Thatbeingsaid, the OSU campus should
Scott Ramsay, incumbent:I think a four-year university would be a positive and pivotal addition to our community andI amconfident that asuitable location
a 24-hour bus system. We are about to throw a keg party with no safe way home. Are you sober yet? Five thousand students are mov-
but they are born of the best of inten-
will be found that will meet the zoning and land use
ing to a town that loves to pour beer. We have no bus system serving Boozell
cisions, and they are certain to get more challenging. The unfolding Affordable Care Act and Oregon's developing coordinated care organizations, both of which seek to reduce costs in health
us at night. Maybe we should wonder if drunk kids will be trashing our neighborhood on their way home. Maybe we should wonder if it will be your child, or mine, that will be killed by the drunk driver that didn't takethebus home. Manytimes I havebeen assured that a four-year college will make Bend more mature. Maybe we should be
requirements. The addition of a four-year university
Ramsay
city councilor, in combination with my level-headed decision-making demeanor make me well equipped to help create solutions to these challenges that work
forboththe university and our community. Unfortunately, as a sitting city councilor, I have been
Casey Roats:The current site proposal isn't ideal; however, it is
and losers. Roats
lieve the reforms are necessary, the commitment to the cause likely will
the best our city's land portfolio has to offer at this time. A smaller,
advised by city legal staff to not answer questions re-
more urban campus is a better fit for the future of higher education as technology changes the delivery of education to students. As long
garding anything outside of the criteria of land use applications in ~ to t he current site plan submitted.
as the university system helps with transit options as future phases
In respect to the land use application, we will act as a
come along, there can be a city-wide benefit. Bend needs buildable lands for education, workforce housing and employment. It's not
land use hearingboard later in the month to determine
enough to just talk about economic development, we need to act on it.
15th of this month. The City Council will judge the application based on whether the use meets the criteria outlined in the code and zoning for the proposed location. Any personal opinion is not to enter the decision makingprocess, asitcouldexemptushomtheprocess.
whether we will hear an appeal that was filed on the
createdifferentresponses ifcareis Richard Robertson:Weencourage the growth of OSU-Cascades on
reduced.
The landscape of health care coverage in our community is changing,
Robertson
the west side. It will bring in a beautiful environment and landscape.
Wethinkstudentsbringmore cultund value to our community. Barb Campbell, challenger:Juniper Ridge might have been best for OSU-Cascades. The significant hurdles of infrastructure and transportation there
not just for the individual with a par-
ticular challenge, but for all of us. Our responsibility is to cast a wide net with the hope that many will see
themselves and their concerns in our stories and learn about a path to better health.
That was — and remains — our objective as we set out to expand our coverage in this vital area. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com
will bring with it organizational and infrastructure challenges, regardless of where it finds an approved location. My experience over the past four years as a
more mature before we try to educate others.
care, are going to produce winners There will be tremendous pressure on medical professionals to save money on procedures, which could be the right way to go. And while many intellectually be-
.
be located in a city that has a self-funded transportation district with
tions in the areas of health news coverage and journalistic integrity. These are, no doubt, difficult de-
-
•
Seales
Lisa Seales:Instead of getting mired in the question of campus location, we should concentrate on supporting the expansion, while carefully planning for the needed housing, transportation, parking and access to services for future students, as well as all Bend residents. As a homeowner and former resident of two college towns, living in a neighborhood near a university does not need to be a bad thing. It's a matter of anticipating and addressing problems through cooperation among the university, the city and the neighborhood.
have got to be tadded eventually. That location might Campbell
have better served students from the entire "Cascades" region. That being said, it seems the campus is likely to be on the west side, and we'll have to work to integrate it into our community. The name of the group opposed
No matter where future campus facilities are located, I'm confident
to that location is perfect ... Truth in Site. Tactics such
that withproperplanning, expandedhigher educationwillbringour community greater prosperity, more cultural and business opportu-
as excluding Reed Market Road fromthelist of streets affected and not requiring a master plan spawn mis-
nities, and make Bend an even better place to live.
trust and have gotten us off to abad start.
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
EDj To
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ho could best represent Bend and lead change in the Oregon House of Representatives?
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The choices for the House District 54 seat are
Ceeeul4taalNlePIOR&
Republican Knute Buehler and Democrat Craig Wilhelm. We urge you to vote for Buehler. Let's start, though, with Wilhelm. He told us his campaign is about values. His values are "lead from the front," "the buck stops here" and service. You can see those values in his life. He attended West Point and served in the Army for nearly 14 years. He commanded a Chinook helicopter unit. He did combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. His commitment to his fellow soldiers continues, particularly in his work with the Windy25 Memorial Fund. It's a nonprofit that honors the crew of Windy25, who lost their lives in combat in Afghanistan. Wilhelm earned an MBA from Duke University andmovedto Bend in 2006. He is now 42 and works for a private firm that does metals recycling and trading, moving to Bend in 2006. He has volunteered time with the Bethlehem Inn and other nonprofits. When a manlike that talks about values, he is serious about them. It's easy to see how those values translate into soldiering. It's more difficult to translate them into policy positions. It's made more difficult because it's hard to pin Wilhelm down on policy positions. He says he wants better jobs andbetter livability. Who doesn't? How does he want to get there? Voters he hopes to represent do need a clear picture of where he stands and what he hopes to do. On most of the measures on the ballot, he told us that he was still making up his mind. He did say he supports the Oregon Opportunity Initiative to raise more money for students to help pay for college. He said passing the measure does not use any of the state's bonding capacity. That is true, but certainly one reason supporters want it passed is to give the Legislature the ability to use bonding capacity to help pay for college. Wilhelm also opposes the top-two primary, following right along with the Democratic Party. Buehler,50, has animpressive resume, deep roots in the community, and on most issues he doesn't just tell you where he stands. He has a contemplative, pragmaticplan to address it. Ask to see a copy of his education plan and you'll see what we mean. Both candidates expressed
concernabout government regulation. Buehler was specific. He does not believe the administrative rules process, which translates legislation into regulations, has adequate public input, or that it has adequate legislative oversight to ensure it follows the legislative intent and does not cause unintended consequences. Buehler was born in Oregon and attended Oregon State University. He played baseball, got his degree and was the university's first Rhodes Scholar. He is a surgeon, earning his medical degree from Johns Hopkins University. Having a top-notch surgeon in the Legislature, as the state grapples with health care reform, will be a tremendous benefit. Listing all the ways he has been involved in his community gets long. We'll highlight a few. He has been on the Bend-La Pine Schools budget committee, the board of the Ford Family Foundation, the Oregon State University Foundation, the St. Charles Health Systemboard and more. He can convert those connections into being a powerful advocate, especially for the new four-year Oregon State University campus in Bend. There's a notable difference between the candidates in partisanship. Although he said he was not afraid to buck his party, Wilhelm couldn't cite an area in which in he disagrees with it. It's much more difficult to pigeonhole Buehler. He is pragmatic and thoughtful. He earned the endorsement of the Independent Party. He supports the ballot measure that would switch Oregon toa top-two primary. The RepublicanParty and the Democratic Partyboth hate that idea. Buehler is also at odds with some in the Republican Party over abortion rights. We know some groups have raised a question about Buehler's position. Buehler says he is pro-choice. Wilhelm says he has no reasonto doubt Buehler is prochoice. Any claim that Buehler's position is somehow unclear doesn't stretch credulity. It snaps it. Buehler is one of the finest candidatesforpubli coffice Bend has produced in recentyears. He is strongly endorsed.
Bend needscareful vacation rental policy esidents say vacation rentals in Bend amputate the neighborliness from some neighborhoods and disrupt their lives with noise and traffic.
permits in some neighborhoods. The council did a better thing, instead. It asked staff to come back with policy recommendations in two weeks after evaluating the Councilor Doug Knight pushed fiscal and legal implications. The the Bend City Council to act swiftly. council needs to be careful when He moved Wednesday night to hold making changes to neighborhoods, livelihoods and rights. a hearingon a moratorium on new
R
Law enforcement officials
oppose driver card measure By David O. Cross n Aug. 1, the Oregon Secretary of State's Elections
O
O ffice assigned a t i tl e t o
the Protect Oregon Driver Licenses citizen's veto referendum ¹301, Ballot Measure 88, to put before the state's voters Senate Bill 833.
The passage of Ballot Measure 88 by the state's voters during the
upcoming Nov. 4 general election would require the Oregon Depart-
IN MY VIEW Oregon votersshould heed the wisdom of
members of the law enforcement community across the state and nationally ... and vote no on Ballot Measure 88.
Measure 88, opposition has arisen to driver cards for those not legally
in the country from nationally recognized experts on federal immigration law enforcement.
Derek Hernandez, vice president of the Western Region National Border Patrol Council, the labor
union representing U.S. Border Patrol agents, had this to say to
Oregon voters on the granting of driver cards to foreign nationals ment of Motor Vehicles to grant to illegally in the country: "You must persons "who cannot prove legal oppose this measure." oppose SB 833 in its entirety as this presence in the United States" a Tim M u l ler, r e cently r e t ired is a gateway to illegal citizenship special state-issued identification sheriff of Linn County, made his and the benefits that one can recalled a driver card. thoughts known on driver cards: ceive from US citizenship." "Giving a person a driver's license In reaction to state driver card Michael W. Cutler, a retired selegislation, current and past mem- who is in this country illegally is flat nior special agent, formerly with bers of county, local and federal out irresponsible and does nothing the I m m igration a n d N a t u r allaw enforcement have stepped for- to protect the citizens of this state." ization Service, expressed these ward to oppose the ballot measure. Duane Fletchell, a retired Mari- thoughts on the possibility of SB The Sheriffs of Oregon political on County sheriff's sergeant, react- 833 becoming an Oregon law: action committee (SOO PAC), rep- ed this way to the undocumented "Providing such documentation resenting the political and public being granted driver cards: "I am (driver privilege cards to illegal safety interests of the state's 36 against Oregon Senate Bill 833, aliens) is wrong for a number of county sheriffs, has come out in op- for two main reasons: the safety reasons beginning with national position to the legislation with the and tranquility of all (Oregon res- security and public safety. Amerifollowing statement: "The Sheriffs idents) and to protect our national ca's immigration laws were enactof Oregon support the citizens veto security." ed to achieve two primary goals, referendum ¹301 to overturn SB Dave Driscoll, a retired Salem protect innocent lives and the jobs 833. We urge a no vote." police officer, had strong words on of American workers." Tom Bergin, the current Clatsop whether those who could not prove Oregon voters should heed the County sheriff and past president legal presence in the state should wisdom of members of th e l aw of the Oregon State Sheriffs' As- be legally allowed to drive: "Fair enforcement community across sociation, made these statements
and equal treatment under the law.
about the driver card legislation: "It is wrong to provide special driv-
This is just a way for a select group of people to avoid Oregon law. It er's licenses to people who cannot will not increase traffic safety or prove legal presence in the United lower the number of uninsured States. For Oregon to do so, will drivers in this state. If allowed to only enhance the ability for crimi- stand, Oregon could become a safe nal behavior, thus creating a larger haven for criminals and terrorists." risk to our citizens public safety. M oving beyondcounty and local The Sheriffs of Oregon urge you to law enforcement opposing Ballot
the state and nationally who have joined together with the citizens f rom Protect Oregon Driver L i -
censes to oppose driver cards for those "who c annot prove legal
presence in the United States," and vote no on Ballot Measure 88. — David O. Cross writes on immigration issues and foreign national crime. Helives in Salem.
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Nation needs a waste and pollution tax on carbon By Michael Cappiello There is no doubt that the burning he recent ruling by the Oregon of fossil fuels is causing major warmstate land agency to reject a ing of our climate and acidification of
T River (Bulletin, Aug. 19) was very welcoal terminal on the Columbia
come news. But this represents just a small victory in the bigger battle for reducedcarbon emissions. We desperately need a national energy plan, the centerpiece of which should be
our oceans. By far, coal is the dirtiest
of all fuelsources and representsthe largestsource of carbon emissions
when it comes to electricity generation. But besides the CO2, there are also heavy metal emissions that cause
ahugeimpact (over30tonsofmercury a waste and pollution tax on carbon. are released peryear in the U.S. alone). Only then will a level playing field Natural gas is cleaner as its CO2 be achieved for competition from the emissions are 60 percent of that from non-carbon-emitting technologies. coal,and there are no heavy metal In 2013, U.S. electricity genera- emissions. Nuclear, wind, hydro and tion was 4,044 billion kilowatt-hours solar have virtually no greenhouse (kWh), 40 percent of it from coal-fired gas emissions, but are plagued by plants, 27percentfrom gas,19percent high upfront capital costs and therenudear and 13 percent from renew- fore have a difficult time competing ables, which includes hydro, wind and with fossil. solar (EIA, www.eia.gov). Now there is an interesting fact
IN MY VIEW
but if we don't do it now there will be A carbon tax will increase the cost majorconsequences later.Im posinga of electricity, but not to a level that is when it comes to nuclear. Currently waste and pollution tax to discourage excessive. A recent study by the Conthe nudear plant operators are lev- the use of fossil fuels makes sense to gressional Budget Office (www.cbo. ied a tax (at a rate of 1 cent for every me. This tax should be imposed when gov) estimated that a tax of $21 per 10 kWh) by the federal government it comes out of the ground to further ton on CO2 translated into an averto pay for the disposal of their waste. discourage exports. It is nonsense to age increase in the cost of electricity Notwithstanding the success of that sell our coal to the Chinese only to by 16 percent (to 13.3 cents per kWh). effort, the point is that there is a prec- have them burn it and create the mess Gradually introducing the tax over a edent for taxing an electricity gener- we are trying to avoid. period of 10 years would minimize the ation technology for the waste it proA waste and pollution tax w i l l impact. For comparison, France and duces. Why isn't there a similar tax begin the process of healing our at- Germany pay 19.4 and 36.5 cents per on carbon? After all, it is a waste and, mosphere. A recent study by Exxon kWh, respectively. when emitted in the form of CO2, is a (exxonmobil.com/energyoutlook) Of course unilateral action by the major pollutant. Up until now, the fos- showed that expected policy actions U.S. will not solve this problem alone, sil fuel industry has had a free ride for and/or taxes on CO2 will cause global and a coordinated international apall the waste they have dumped into emissions to peak in 2030,decreasing proach is needed to cut emissions our atmosphere. It is waypast the time thereafter. globally. Isn't it time for the U.S. to that theypay a tax for this offense. The main reason was the introduc- take leadership in this area? Isn't it Dealing with climate change is as tion of low-carbon-emitting sources time to save for retirement? much fun as saving for retirement, thatbecame economically feasible. — Michael Cappiello lives in Sunriver.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
ere ave a he so-called Islamic State has
T
left destruct ion everywhere that it has gained ground. But
as in the case of the tribal Scythians,
Vandals, Huns or Mongols of the past, sowing chaos in its wake does
VICTOR
DAVIS HANSON
not mean that the Islamic State won't
continue to seek new targets for its more dire assessments of his own devastation. If unchecked, the Islamic State will turn what is left of the nations
of the Middle East into a huge Mogadishu-like tribal wasteland, from the
Syrian Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf. And they will happily call the resulting mess a caliphate. It is critical for United States to
put together some sort of alliance of friendly Middle East governments and European states to stop the Islamic State before it becomes a permanent base for terrorist opera-
tions against the U.S. and its allies. Unfortunately, it appears unlikely that the U.S. will line up a muscular
alliance — at least until the Islamic State reaches the gates of Baghdad
or plows on through to Saudi Arabia and forces millions of Arabs either to fight or submit. Why the reluctance for allies to join the U.S.? Most in the Middle East and Eu-
rope do not believe the Obama administration knows much about the Islamic State, much less what to do
e a i e s o n e'? 2009, Iraq was mostly quiet. Both
to stop nuclear enrichment in the same
the president and Vice President Joe
manner that Assad scoffed at administmtion red lines. With Egypt, the ad-
Biden soon announced it secure and stable. Then they simply pulled out all U.S. troops, bragged during their re-election campaign that they had ended the war, and let our Iraqi and
ministration seemed confused about
whether to support the tottering Hosni Mubarak government, the radical Muslim Brotherhood or the junta of
General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi — only at against suddenly emboldened Islam- times to oppose all tlme. Chiefs of Staff. icterrorists. Obama himself seems disengaged, When Obama finally promised to In Libya, the administration folif not bored, with foreign affairs. Afdestroy the Islamic State, Secretary lowed the British and French lead in ter publidy deploring the beheading of State John Kerry almost imme- bombing the Moammar Gadhafi re- of American jo~ Jam e s Foley, diately backtracked that idea of a gime out of power — but then failed Obama hit the golf course. When the full-blown war. Current CIA Direc- t o help dissidents fight oppo~ c media reported the disconnect, he torJohn Brennan once dismissed as Islamists. The result was the Beng- scoffed that it was just bad"optics." absurd any idea of Islamic terrorists hazi disaster, a caricature of a strategy There is a legitimate debate about seeking a modern caliphate. It may dubbed"leadingfrom behind" and an the degree to which the United States be absurd, but it is now also all too Afghanistan-like failed state facing should conduct a pre-emptive war to real. Europe across the Mediterranean. stop the Islamic State before it gobbles Such confusion sadly is not new. Now, the president daims authori- up any more nations. But so far the The president hinges our hopes on zation to bomb the Islamic State based president has not entered that debate, the ground on the Free Syrian Army on a 13-year-old joint resolution — a much less won it. — which he chose not to help when it Bush administration-sponsored effort Nowonder, then, thatpotential allies once mayhave been viable.An d not that Obama himself had often criti- do not quite know what the U.S. is dolong ago he dismissed it as an inexpe- cized. If the president cannot make a ing, how long America wiII fight, and riencedgroup ofdoctorsandfarmers new case to Congress and the Amer- what will happen to U.S. allies when whose utilitywas mostly a"fantasy." ican people for bombing the Islamic welikelyget tired, quit andleave. No ally is quite sure of what State, then allies will assume that he For now, most allies are sitting tight Obama wants to do about Syrian cannot build an effective coalition, andwaiting for pre-emptive, unilateral President Bashar al-Assad, whom either. U.S. action. If we begin defeating the he once threatened to bomb for using Finally, potential allies doubt that Islamic State, they may eventually join chemicalweapons before backing the United States wants to be engaged in on the kill; if not, theywon't. off. abroad. They are watching China That is a temble way to wage coaliPotential allies also feel that the flex its musdes in the South China tion warhm, but we are reaping what Obama administration will get them Sea. They have not yet seen a viable we have sown. involved in an operation only to ei- stmtegy to stop the serial aggression — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist Kurdish allies fend for themselves
secretary of defense and the Joint
about it. The president has dismissed it in the past as a jayvee group that ther lose interest or leave them hangcould be managed, contradicting the ing. When Obama entered office in
of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Iranseems to considerU.S.deadlines
and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
THOMAS
FRIEDMAN
Essential
questions LONDON-
A
n existential struggle is taking place in the Arab world today. But is it ours or is it theirs? Be-
fore we step up military action in Iraq and Syria, that's the question that
needs answering. What concerns me most about
President Barack Obama's decision to re-engage in Iraq is that it feels as if it's being done in response to some deliberately exaggerated fears — fear engenderedby YouTube videos of the beheadings of two U.S. journalists — and fear that the Islamic State is coming to a mall near you. How did we start
getting so afraid again so fast'? Didn't we build a Department of Homeland Security? I am not dismissing the Islamic
State. Obama is right that the group needs to be degraded and destroyed. But when you act out of fear, you don't
think strategically and you glide over essential questions, such as why is it
that Shiite Iran, which helped trigger this whole Sunni rebellion in Iraq, is scoffing at even coordinating with us, and 'Ilirkey and some Arab states are settinglimits ontheirinvohrement'? When I read that, I think that Nad-
Wait till you get a whiff of Big Marijuana By Kevin Sabet The Dallas Morning News
p
roponents of legalization and other drugpolicy reforms make some important points. It is true
thatmostpeoplewho try drugs do not get addicted — they stop after using a few times. It is also true — and regrettable — that America's incarceration
"s 1' flII
I IIII '
rate is embarrassingly high and that blacks and Latinos bear the brunt of
harsh arrest policies. And, finally, despite our best efforts, fully eradicating drug use and its consequences remains a distant dream. But placing faith that legalization will help any of these issues is misguided. In fact, legalization threatens to further contribute to disproportionate health outcomes among minori-
from medical marijuana "patients,"
have announced giant expansion plans. "It is like a gold rush," remarked one vending executive. A couple of Yale MBAs recently created a multimillion-doiiar private equity firm dedicated solely to financing the marijuana business. As one of them explains,
ties, all the while creating a massive the firm has become inundated with new industry — Big Tobacco 2.0 —in- pitches from businesses who plan to tent on addicting the most vulnerable become the"Wal-Mart of marijuana." in society. To a student of history, none of this For example, with much fanfare, should come as a surprise, of course. and alongside the ex-president of Tobacco executives in the 1900s Mexico, Vicente Fox, former head of wrote the playbook on the reckless Microsoftcorporate strategy James and deceitful marketing of an addicShivley announced this year that he tive — and therefore hugely profitable was creating "the Starbucks of mari- — substance. juana." His plan? To buy up marijuaIndeed, Big Marijuana creates na stores in Colorado and Washing- unique problems that neither the staton state, "mint(ing) more million- tus quo (with all its deficiencies) nor aires than Microsoft in this business." a grow-your-own approach to legal And so, in the midst of America's marijuana presents. Like Big Tobacgreat debate about marijuana legal- co, the large-scale commercialization ization, Big Marijuana is born. Pot of marijuana will require consistently legalization is no longer about a few high use rates and increasing addicfriends calmly sharing a joint on the tionrates tokeep shareholders andinweekend in their own living room. vestors happy.We've seenthishorror Inevitably — and ever so swiftly — it movie before. has become about big business and First, weknowthat addictiveindusbig bucks. tries generate the lion's share of their Shivley isn't the only one preparing profits from addicts, not casual users. to cash in. At least three marijuana In the tobacco industry, 80 percent of vending machine companies, already the industry's profits come from 20 earning millions of dollars in revenue percent of smokers. So while most
marijuanausers try the drug and (expletive); we just sell it. We reserve stop, or use very occasionally, and the that right for the young, the poor, the brunt of the profits — and problems black and the stupid.'" — come from the minority of users, That doesn'tmean we have to be that minority causes enormous prob- content with the status quo. We need lems to our roadways, educational much better science-based prevensystem, workplace and health care tion, early intervention and treatment. system. W e needto make sure our laws are This means that creating addicts equitable and fair. Specifically, even is the central goal. And — as every as marijuana remains illegal, low-levgood tobacco executive knows (but el marijuana offenses should not won't tell you) — this, in turn, means saddle people with a criminal record targeting the young. People who start that hurts their chances at education, tobacco or marijuana in their youth, housing orother assistance. Drug when their brains are still developing, treatment courts and smart probation have far greater chances of becoming programsmust alsobe takento scale. addicted. Internal company memos But under legalization, big busireleased as a result of the gteat tobac- ness and big lobbies peddle pseudoco settlement tell us as much: "Less science and stop at nothing to protect than one-third of smokers start after their profits. Before it was ordered to age 18," says one, and "if our com- disband due to deceitful practices, pany is to survive and prosper, we Tobacco Institute Inc. was the indusmust get our share of the youth mar- try's lobby group, challenging studket.... (That) will require new brands ies linking smoking with cancer and tailored to the youth market." Such rebutting surgeon general reports m emos were circtdated even as theto- on cigarettes before they were even bacco industry was publidy rejecting published. Today, tobacco still has a youth cigarette use. powerfulpresence in Washington. The poor and otherwisevulnerable It fights any safety measures that are alsoprime targets. Theysufferthe might curb cigarette use and ensures highest addiction rates of any group. that federal cigarette taxes remain It's no wonder that peer-reviewed re- low. (To bring federal cigarette taxes search has conduded that tobacco back to their inflation-adjusted level and liquor outlets are several times as in 1960, we'd have to see a 17 percent likely to be in poorer communities of increase in tobacco taxes today) color, and that the tobacco industry We can fully expect marijuana has cozied up with homeless shelters profiteers to recycle the tactics that and advocacy groups as part of its have earned Big Tobacco billions and downscale marketing strategy. David billions of dollars. Goerlitz, a former Winston Man mod-
el who now suffers from smoking-related illnesses, testiTied before Con-
gress in 1989: "Of course, children aren't the only targets.... Once, when I asked an R.J. Reynolds executive
why he didn't smoke, he responded point-blank that 'We don't smoke this
— Kevin Sabet, director of the Drug Policy Institute at the University of Florida, is the co-founder of Smart Approaches to Marijuana and served as senior adviser at the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy from 2009 to 201I. He wrote this for the Dallas Morning News.
er Mousavizadeh, who co-leads the global consulting firm Macro Advisory Partners, is correct when he says: "When it comes to intervening in the
Arab world's existential struggle, we have to stop and ask ourselves why we
have such a challenge getting them to help us save them." So before we get in any deeper, let's ask some radical questions, starting with: What if we did nothing? George Friedman (no relation), the chairman of Stratfor, raisedthis ideainhis recent essay on Stratfor.com, 'The Virtue of Subtlety." He notes that the Islamic
Stateuprising wastheinevitable Sunni baddash to being brutally stripped of power and resources by the pro-Iranian Shiite governments and militias in Baghdad and Syria. But then he asks: Is the Islamic State "really a problem forthe United StateP. TheAmericaninterest is not stabilitybut the existence of
a dynamic balance of power in which all players are effectively paralyzed so that no one who would threaten the United States emerges.... But the
principle of balance of power does not mean thatbalance must be maintained directly.'Ilirkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia have far more at stake in this than the United States. So long as they believe that the United States will attempt to
controlthe situation, itisperfectlyrational for them to back off and watch, or
act in the margins, or even hinder the Americans. The United States must turnthisfrom a balance of power be-
tween Syria and Iraq to a balance of power among this trio of regional powers.They have far more at stake and,
absent the United States, they have no choicebut toinvolve themselves." Therefore, he condudes, the best
U.S. strategyrests in our"doingas little as possible and forcing regional powers into the fray, then in maintaining
thebalance of powerinthis coalition." I amnot sute, but it's worth debating. Here's another question: What's this
war reallyabout'? "This is a war over the soul of Islam — that is what differentiates this mo-
ment from all others," argues Ahmad
Credit gets you a new TV, not economic growth By Noah Smith Bloomberg News
t
growth is that when we talk about the fuel that powers the business cy- "credit" at the national level, we mean economists who believe that credit is
t's pretty obvious how credit cle — almost every pundit and news drives my personal household outlet seem to believe something simconsumption. If I borrow, I can
get a nice big TV and a new car, but eventually I'll have to skimp to pay it back. In a way, the consumption-fueled borrowing binge is an illusion of wealth — after all, borrowing
doesn't increase my salary. Pleasure today means pain tomorrow. Lots of people seem to think that
national economies work something like this. Credit, we are told in article after news article, "fuels" or "drives"
growth. Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio, possibly the most successfulmacro investor in human
history, makes this claim in his famous video, "How the Economic Machine Works." The post-Keynes-
ian economists, a heterodox school of thought exiled to the academic
wilderness, have a perspective similar to Dalio's. On the other side of the political spectrum, the Austriansanother exiled heterodox bunch-
believe something similar. It isn't just investors and heterodox
gross, not net. Most of the money that
caused the cycle, but in fact it was just
a passive tag-along. Maybe the cycle w as caused by something else— productivity changes, or changes in monetary policy or changes in people's sentiment and animal spirits. I'm not saying I think that's right. Maybe credit really does drive growth. Maybe excess credit really
gets borrowed during a boom is borilar. In 2009, The Wall Street Journal rowed from people in the same counsaid that China's growth was being try (at least in a big economy such as fueled by cheap debt. In 2013, the Fi- the U.S. or China). In fact, during its nancial Times declared that credit so-called credit-fueled growth binge, was the only thing allowing China's China was actually a net capital execonomyto tread water. porter, meaning Chinese peoplewere does force a boom to turn into a bust. It seems as if the only people saving more than the entire Chinese But no one has yet come up with a rewho don't instinctively believe in economy was borrowing. If taking ally compelling, testable explanation credit-fueled growth are academic on debtletsa borrower increase his for how that happens. And no oneeconomists. consumption, why doesn't making exceptmaybe Dalio — has managed The academics have good reason that loan force the lender to decrease to use credit levels, credit-growth levfor being skeptical. After all, produc- his consumption'? In other words, if els, acceleration of the ratio of credtion isn't the same as consumption. In credit is just one American lending it-to-gross domestic product, or any the example of me borrowing to buy to another, or one Chinese person such measure to predict when booms a TV and car,my debtbinge doesn't lending to another, why does it boost and busts will happen. make my salary — my productiongrowth? So this thing that almost everyHere's an alternative idea: Maybe one believes about the economy is go up at all. But in an economicboom, a country's total production really credit is a follower, not a driver, of really just a conjecture. Our faith in does rise — that's what fast growth the boom-bust cycle. Maybe credit it is probably based in part on shaky means. In other words, if credit fuels grows when the economy is grow- analogies and bad intuition. It might economic booms, then it must do it in ing, because of the need to finance be true, but we shouldn't regard it as a fundamentally different way than investment, and shrinks when the obvious. the way it fuels a personal consump- economy is shrinking, because of — Noah Smith is an assistant professor tion binge. the lack of investment. In retrospect, of finance at Stony Brook University and Another reason academics are sus-
looking at a chart of credit growth vs.
picious of the theory of credit-fueled GDP growth, it might look like credit
afreel ance writerforanumber offinance and business publications.
Khalidi, a Palestinian scholar associated with St. Antony's College, Ox-
ford. Here is why: For decades, Saudi Ambia has been the top funder of the
mosques and schools throughout the Muslim world that promote the most puritanical version of Islam, known as Salafism, which is hostile to moderni-
ty, women and religious pluralism, or even Islamic pluralism. Saudi financing for these groups is a byproduct of the ruling bargain there between the al-Saud family and
its Salafist religious establishment, known astheWahhabis. Theal-Sauds get to rule and live how they like behind walls, and the Wahhabis get to propagate Salafist Islam both inside Saudi Arabia and across the Muslim
world, using Saudi oil wealth. Saudi Ambia is, in effect, helping to fund both the war against the Islamic State
and the Islamist ideology that creates Islamic State members, through Salafist mosques in Europe, Pakistan, CentralAsia and the Arab world.
Saudi Arabia cannot continue fighting the Islamic State and feeding the ideology that nurtures the Islamic State. It will hurt more and more Muslims.
We, too, have to stop tolerating this. The futureof Islam and our success against the Islamic State depend on it. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014• THE BULLETIN
u is erss awa romnove By Rachel Donadlo
frustrate various policies, and
New York Times News Service
halfway through, he becomes an active saboteur," Amis said.
PARIS — In France, they
say they're puzzled by the humor. In Germany, they say it will be difficult to market. Martin A m is ' l a test n ovel, "The Zone of Interest," a satire
set in a concentration camp during World War II, is having trouble gaining traction in Europe, where his longtime French and German publishers have rejected it. The novel was published by
of leaves and stems. The wonderfully u nruly
the book for marketing as well
man (YaleCenter for British
heart of "Green Leaf" is a sec-
as literary reasons. "Our decision was based on
Art/Yale University Press,
tion called "Field Guide to the British Countryside." With
248 pgs., $70)
its crows and wildflowers,
on economic considerations," Salabe said.
By Dana Jennings
in Germany, so we could not
By turns a love story and a
hope to make a best-seller with his new book," Salabe
meditation on N azi h orrors written with self-consciously
At its core, "Of Green Leaf,
Bird and Flower" delights field guides are living books, in that oh-so-human urge to suffused by the adamant pascatalog and collect, to under- sion that we are enriched by stand, and then to pass that our every tryst with nature. insight on to others — makMany of the featured nating it a book in which science uralists are women, as if and artblissfullyhold hands. m en wereonlytoo happy to The portraits of nature cede thepleasures of fierce gathered here cover cen- observation, and their field turies, fixing on that space books were often created as where the naturalist's eye gifts — for friends, family and the a r t ist's i ntersect, members and, most importthat confluence in which the ant, for themselves. These are five senses and the pencil or personal works, in the same paintbrush become almost way that Emily Dickinson's indistinguishable. poems are personal. The images journey in One of the purest — and time from a 2013 photograph most Dickinson-like — treaof a brambleberry garden in sures to be savored in "Green Chester, Connecticut, back Leaf' are the wood engravto a 16th-century watercolor ings by the British naturaland gouache on parchment ist and nun Sister Margaret called " Blackbere," f r o m Tournour (1921-2003). In "Helmingham Herbal and her crisp takes on pike and Bestiary." The media used dragonflies, thistles and by this profusion of artists dandelions, Sister Margaret
wrote in an earlier email. He noted that Amis' 2010
v
grotesque humor, "The Zone
novel, "The Pregnant Widow," was "widely (though critically) reviewed, but sold modestly," and that the house had also re-
of Interest" takes place in the fictional Kat Zet I, the same
fictional branch of Auschwitz where Amis set his 1991 novel, "Time's Arrow." The new
jected Amis' 2008 novel, "The
book is certainly not the first
Second Plane," which was
work of fiction to treat the Holocaust with dark humor. But
about the Sept. 11 hijackers. Salabe said "The Zone of
in Europe, where there has
Interest" was not "frivolous,"
been particular sensitivity recently to a rise in anti-Semitic
as an interviewer in the news-
paper The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitunghad described
incidents, publishers this time seem squeamish. In a telephone interview, Amis, whose books routinely
it in a recent interview with Amis. Nor, he said, did the New YorkTimes News Service file photo
British writer Martin Amis' latest novel, "The Zone of Interest," a
many, said he was "surprised satire set In a concentration campduring the Second World War, and disappointed" by the pub- Is having trouble gaining traction In Europe, where his longtime
book chart dangerous new ground in Germany. Still, Carl Hanser Verlag's rejection of the book has
French and German publishers have rejected It, causing a stir ln
caused something of a stir in
the European press.
Germany. The newspaper Die Welt said it was "ridiculous"
range from the traditional-
pen, pencil, watercolors — to the more unusual, like digital scrolls, hand-cut paper and books hacked from logs.
that the publisher found the
an SS officer. In
F r ance, "The
man publisher for the book Zone
soon. He said the novel has
All that aside, what "Green
book's literary merits lacking. "If there is a scandal about
of Interest" was picked up by a smaller house, Calm-
been sold in other parts of Eu- 'The Zone of Interest,' it's the rope, as well as in Canada and fact that a German publisher
ann-Levy, part of the Hachette
Brazil.
blackberries and brambles, butterflies and lichens, it bolsters the notion that amateur
New York Times News Service
He added that the decision had "nothing to do with the
States by Knopf on Sept. 30.
Leaf" does best is emphasize the homely details of the natural world. In her opening essay, the editor, Elisabeth R. Fairman, senior curator of
mastered the rough and the gentle textures of life, even
in her late years when she kept to her room in a wheel-
chair with a pet hedgehog as company. The poet and book collector David Burnett writes of
Sister Margaret: "Hers is, no doubt, a still, small voice," but
one "worth listening to." "Green Leaf" is all about the joys of looking hard, of Art, quotes the 19th-centu- tilling new mental capillarry naturalist John Leonard ies. The artist Eileen Hogan Knapp: "Notices of such in- says of watching and waiting: cidents may perhaps be con- "Sitting there for longperiods sidered as too trifling to re- is important, not necessarily cord; but the naturalist, from because of what I produce, the habit of observing, sees but because staring and obmany things not obvious to servingbecome a sortofrituall persons." al and make the place mine."
thinks it has to withhold the
Amis said his German pub- work of one of the most imYet many found the deci- it next fall. lisher, Carl Hanser Verlag, portant British contemporary "It's an eminently literary sion puzzling. Writing in Le had told him that there were authors from German readMonde, the journalist Nicho- object with a r e markable "inconsistencies in the plot" ers," the paper wrote. las Weill noted that Gallimard style, a very sustained level and that it had found the main Wylie said he did not think hadn't had the same qualms of language and a very cor- character, Golo Thomsen, an business decisions were ultiabout publishing Jonathan rect tone," said Florence Sul- SS officer, too sympathetic to mately the issue. "I believe that it's about lack Littell's first novel, the Gon- tan, Calmann-Levy's director the Nazi cause. "In fact, a careful reading of of understanding of the book court Prize-winning "The general. Amis' literary agent, An- the book will show he's never on the part of both the GerKindly Ones," in 2 006, although it is told from the large- drew Wylie, said his agency a servant of the regime, that he man and the French publishly sympathetic perspective of expected to find a new Ger- was always at least trying to ers," he said. reasons."
hedges and the architecture
edited by Elisabeth R. Fair-
August to strong reviews and will be released in the United
Gallimard declined to publish the novel because "it wasn't very convincing," said Marie-Pierre Gracedieu, Amis' editor there. "It was for literary
of insects that congregate in
at Carl Hanser Verlag, said the publisher had turned down
Holocaust being a sensitive issue in Germany." Amis "is a major literary figure, but unfortunately not
lishers' reactions. "But you never quite know what motivates them." In France, the storied house
and artist's intersect
the book's contents as well as
Jonathan Cape in Britain in
come out inFrance and Ger-
Where naturalist's eye "Of Green Leaf, Blrd and Flower: Artists' Books and the Natural World"
Piero Salabe, Amis' editor
F5
group, which plans to publish
rare books and manuscripts at the Yale Center for British
Those not-so-obvious trifles indude the kinds of ber-
In that sitting, the scientist/
artist also becomes a natural-
ries badgers feed on, types ist of the self.
Journalist pens arock pilgrim's progress "How to Build a Girl"
lin Moran is, it may be time to
by Coitlin Moran (Harper, 341
find out. She is the most reliably winning byline in The Times of London, where she is a columnist, and the author of
pgs., $26.99) By Dwlght Garner New York Times News Service
"The only true currency in
She cracks a mostly male
world, the rock 'n' roll circus, largely by being funny. "Everyone loves a bad kid on a roll," she declares. She thinks "How to Be a Woman," an un- to herself, "I am a bullet, being pretentious self-help book that shot out of a dirty gun." could have been composed only by a girl who sneaked a A longing for connection lot of cigarettes in the bathThat Moran knows so much room during high school while about the music world (she has
this bankrupt world," Philip Seymour Hoffman (as Lester Bangs) says to a young rock journalist in the movie "Almost Famous," "is what you at the same time reading her been a rock critic and is marshare with someone else when share of Orwell. ried to one as well) gives this you're uncool." Moran is often compared to novel a midair payload boost. It's a cheesy line, and it
reading it I decided to give it to my 15-year-old daughter. Then I decided not to, then thought
yes then no and yes then no. If I do give it to her, I may have to open a savings account
to cover her therapy bills for the day when she arrives to tell her analyst, "My father gave me a book about a lust-addled teen rock critic when I was 15 and spoke about doing to make.
doesn't sound like Bangs at all. But it's one of the great
"How to Build a Girl" is too which is fair so far as it goes, hanna and some friends imagthough I'dadd Amy Wine- ine the defecation habits of talky at times. Johanna pos-
utterances in recent cinema
house and the early Roseanne Barr to the mix. Moran's
rock stars that deserves a spe-
sesses insights you're not sure
w orki n g - c l a s s background and politics are what
while reading Caitlin Moran's comic
"Prince does it secretly be-
p ut dir t
make it clear that this is a work of fiction. Yet Johanna's s tory isn't s o f a r from the author's own. Like Johanna, Mo-
es her readers that Neil Young owns 70 percent of all the buf-
ran grew up in public housof "Almost Famous," delivered ing,and got out while young from a female perspecti ve by becoming a journalist.
a big part of that connection,
make her way to London. It's a British version
falo in America.
Moran's narrator, Johanna Morrigan, is 14 when we meet her; she ages only a few years during the novel. Johanna decides to use language as
not to be."
Instead, she fears, she
looks "like a cheap white fridge-freezerthat someone's
wheeled onto the stage and
small part about a longing for connection, and for Johanna
tion as welL "When you are
being kissed like this, you are Christmas Day; you are the moon shot; you are field larks." At another point, Johanna
thinks: "Here's the amazing ing child's face on it, due to a thing about sex. You get a because writing is "a thing terrible unkindness." whole person to yourself, for you can do when you're lonely Johanna is smart and well the first time since you were a and poor, and have no infra- read, however, and she be- baby. Someone who is looking structure, i.e., a ballet troupe gins to send record reviews at you — just you — and thinkor some cannons. Poor people to a London music magazine ing about you, and wanting can write. It's one of the few under the pseudonym Dolly you, and you haven't even had things poverty, and lack of Wilde. She dyes her hair and to lie at the bottom of the stairs connections, cannot stop you commences wearing a top and pretend you're dead to get dolIlg. hat. (It's the '90s.) She wishes them to do it." to "conjure myself out of every I wish someone had given A comedic force sparkling, fast-moving thing I me this rowdy and fearless litIf you don't know who Cait- can see." tle book when I was 16. While her ticket out, she explains,
then painted a worried-look-
~z~
T hursday, September 25, 2 0 1 4 7:OOp.m., Send High H
R
www.dplfoundation.org
ourselves, to pluck another line from "Almost Famous,"
• aslvttw Oregon Humsnities
it's all happening.
"How to Build a Girl" is in no
she hopes, will be through sex. "I have a feeling I'll only ever and set two decades later, in Johanna getsher firstbreak properly make sense in bed, the early 1990s instead of the when she wins a poetry con- on my back," she says. early 1970s. It's got the Manic test and is invited on a nationThere is a lot of robustStreet Preachers and Bikini al television program. The which is to say, unprintable Kill on its internal soundtrack, eveningbecomesanightmare. — writing about sex here. "I "As I look at myself on the wish to be like James Bond," not the Allman Brothers. "How to Build a Girl" is dirt- monitor," she says, "I feel my Johanna decides, "who never ier and funnier than "Almost heart break." Johanna's big- leaves a party without either Famous" — it's a sexual com- gest secret is that she wants shagging someone or blowing ing-of-age story as much as to be beautiful because "it will something up." anything else — and one that, keep me safe, and keep me Yet Moran can be quite crucially, has a hard, glowing lucky, and it's too exhausting moving about sex as conneckernel of class awareness.
I .
charine at the end. You're not
spade of her prose. "I reckon Nick Cave emits a Smith or Jennifer Egan. Moran goes out pellet from his mouth, like an But her comic novel is slopof her way, at the owl. He opens his mouth and py, big-hearted and alive in all s tart of " How t o it comes out — with all little the right ways. We're made to Build a Girl," to bones in it." Johanna convinc- feel that for Johanna and for
i nvent herself a s a rock critic and
„
Li
hind the sofa — like a cat," one going to mistake Moran's ficcharacter says. Another adds: tional gifts for those of Zadie
Build a Girl." Moran's novel girl from the hint erlands (she i s poor, fat and lives in public housing) who decides to re-
I
cial comedyprize at this year's a teenage girl would. This Man Booker ceremony. book goes wobbly and sac-
first novel, "How to is about an uncool
o n th e
•I
I
These are not easy decisions
There's a scene in which Jo-
to hold it in m i nd
•,I
so in The New York Times."
Tina Fey and Lena Dunham,
nevertheless, and it's hard not
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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014
oos ac
urnin auto io ra Ica ain into iterar easure "Love Me Back"
"Thirteen Days In September Carter, Begln, and Sadat at Camp David" by Lawrence Wright; Alfred A. Knopf (368pgs., $27.95)
own misadventures and the fraternity house culture of "The Restaurant" with brutal self-awareness and a matterof-fact tone.
by Merritt Tierce (Double-
intimacy of the Camp David cabins. For most of the time
carry a grudge." As Wright points out, Carter would soon
they were there, the l ead-
come to see the "na'ivete" of
day, 224 pgs., $23.95) By Chris Vognar
ers and their entourages sat that statement. around and sulked. It didn't Carter wanted a compretake long for several delegates hensive peace that would re-
The Dallas Morning News
By Hector Tobar
to ask to be freed from "this
solve the fate of the stateless,
of Merritt T i erce's autobi-
Los Angeles Times
cursed prison." On the surface, Begin and
occupied Palestinian Arabs.
ographical debut novel, "Love Me
There's an air of t ragedy hovering over Lawrence Sadat had little in common. Wright's excellent new book But earlier in their careersboth on the 1978 peace negotia- had been prisoners of the Brittions at Camp David, presided ish colonial authorities. Both over by then-President Jimmy had fought — often viciously — for the independence of Carter. During those fateful autheir countries. Wright doesn't tumn days, the world watched spare showing us the blood as three world leaders they had on their hands. Christian, Jewish and MusAs a young Egyptian nalim — shook hands at the tionalist during World War II, White House after reaching Sadat joined a "murder socian agreement to end three ety" that assassinated isolatdecades of war. ed British soldiers Every reader of and later targeted W right's b o o k, Egyptian leaders however, wil l who collaborated know what's com-
ing in the book's epilogue — t he promise of peace in the Middle East
was fleeting and ultimately proved false. Wright is
But that dream was doomed even before the summit, since the Palestinian Liberation Organization and the state of Is-
raelrefused to recognize each other's existence. Sadat had helped set a peace
process in motion with a surprise visit to Jerusalem in 1977. By agreeing to Carter's Camp David gambit, he hoped that Egypt might displace Israel as the Americans' key ally in the region. Begin was convinced the talks would fail — he was the only one of the three leaders to arrive at the summit
without any proposals. with British coloCarter hoped the opposing nial authorities. camps would warm to each Begin was a Zi- other in an informal setting onist from a young complete with bicycles and age. In 1929, he jogging paths. But as Wright joined a paramili- points out, many in the two deltary Jewish youth egations had faced off against group in Poland. each otherin one or more of
He lost most of his t he Pul it z e r family in the HoloP rize-winning a u t ho r o f caust. In Palestine, many books, including a he became among the fiercest widely praised history of the of the rebels fighting the Brit-
the four wars the Israelis and
Church of Scientology. "Thirteen Days in September: Car-
ish for the creation of a Jewish state. He used tactics that
had left them convinced that "Israel had been created not
ter, Begin, and Sadat at Camp
would later come to be branded "terrorism."
as ahomeland forpersecuted Jews but as a base for West-
David" is his exceedingly balanced, highly readable and appropriately sober look at the peace talks that unfolded at the wooded military base in Maryland.
"The transformation of ter-
rorism as a primarily local phenomenon into a global one came about in large part
Arabs had fought over the previous three decades. For the Arabs, the support
of Westernpowers for Israel
ern imperialists to maintain their stranglehold on the Mid-
dle East." All those wars had left Israel as the region's most
because of the success of his powerful country, but one surtactics," Wright writes of Be- rounded by enemies. A critical eye gin. "He proved that, under As a condition for recognizThe agreement Carter bro- the right circumstances, terror ing Israel, Sadat demanded kered between Egyptian Pres- works." that Begin return the Sinai ident Anwar Sadat and Israeli Peninsula. Begin said such a Prime M i nister M enachem Carter's'na'ivete' deal would mean giving away Begin was th e c r owning Next to Begin and Sadat, a buffer zone of deserts and achievement of his otherwise Carter's political career was mountains in exchange for a disappointing pr e sidency. sedate and provincial. A pea- mere written promise. Given Begin's own experiences with Sadat and Begin later were nut farmer and former naval awarded the Nobel Peace officer, he rose to power as a loss and betrayal, it was a difPrize. But Wright's book is no moderate on racial issues in a ficult bargain to make. paean to the leaders. Southern state emerging from When the treaty was finally Instead, he casts a critical the violence and confrontation signed, Egypt had effectively and honest eye upon the three of segregation. Carter was severed its links to the Palmen. Much of "Thirteen Days" also a pious man with a lifeestinian cause, Wright says. details the fractured person- long fascination with the Holy W ithout " a p o werful A r a b al and public histories that Land. With the U.S. in a deep champion, Palestine became a brought Carter, Begin and Sa- economic and cultural funk, mascot for Islamists and radidat to power and eventually to he staked his political future cal factions." Camp David. And it portrays on the summit. But the final outcome was
the negotiations themselves
as atense series of mee tings between powerful men who whined, pouted and screamed
to get their way. For nearly two weeks, the
threeleaders and their many advisers lived in the forced
He brought the leaders to a
not entirely a
d i saster. As
mountain camp first made an Wright points out, there has official presidential getaway not been a single violation of by Franklin Roosevelt. Carter
the agreement in the 35 years
to nature, peaceful and iso-
el remain at peace with each other.
said, "I don't believe anyone since. Even as endless battles could stay in this place, close rage nearby, Egypt and Isralated from the world, and still
N EW YORK
All of this comes with an
"The Paylng Guests" 576 pgs., $28.95) By Mlke Flscher Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
True to her gothic roots, Sarah Waters knows that a house is never just a house; true to her
English roots, the cracks in the facadeoften involve issues of class. In "The Little S tranger"
(2009), Waters' immediately preceding novel, a man whose mother had been a servant haunts the house in which she had worked; by novel's end, that house is in ruins and its
inhabitants are dead. Set in the immediate aftermath of World War II, "Little Stranger" sug-
Waters' Leonard is familiar and flirty; given that Frances is
the self-loathing protagonist
the darkness ofher 20s. person who wrote "Love Me So howmuch of Tierce went Back" is clearly in command into Marie? "The real fiction of her craft and in a much bet- about fiction is that all of it's ter place than her
true,"she says. "It does come
Back," hurts her-
literary alter ego.
self as a way of life. She cuts and burns her body. She drinks and drugs, passes out and wakes up to do the same all over again.
To write about the hard stuff, it helps
from a lot of myexperiences in Dallas, but it's not a memoir." She pauses. "I need to find a go-to answer to that question. It's the first thing people ask not just me, but anyone whose novel is in any way recognizable."
to live through it and come out the
other side. "There's not a whiff of sentimentality i n M e r ritt's
Mostly she floats
work," says Dal-
MERRIT T TIERCE
through a series of anesthetizing
las' Ben Fountain, a National B ook Award finalist for
sexual e n c ounters — with friends, with col-
his 2012 novel, "Billy Lynn's leagues, with strangers. Long Halftime Walk." FounThe buzz about "Love Me tain published Tierce's short Back," a scalding book with story "Suck It" (now a key a disarming sense of gallows chapter in "Love Me Back") humor, surrounds M a rie's when he was fiction editor at long stint working at a high- the Southwest Review. "She end, bacchanalian D a l las goes straight to the heart of steakhouse. Tierce, now 35, whatever situation she's writdid indeed work at such a ing about and does it with a steakhouse and lived much coolly merciless clarity that as Marie did: fast, hard, reck- few writers have the guts or less. But her novel, which talent to pull off." made its debut Tuesday by Today Tierce lives in DenDoubleday, is above all the ton, Texas, with her second story of a young woman driv- husband, Evan Stone, and her en to punish herself. two daughters. She's a grad"She has internalized a uate of the prestigious Iowa really enormous psychic Writers' Workshop, and last wound," Tierce says in an in- year the National Book Foun-
itself is coming apart. "The Paying Guests," Waters' new novel, also unfolds in the aftermath of a war and also
taking it in, and she doesn't know how to get it out. I think
west Texas, then moved to Denton when she was 15 to attend TAMS, the Universi-
involves a house as a central character. Set in 1922 London,
it opens as 26-year-old Frances Wray and her mother — having lost the family's three men during World War I — find themselvesforced to accept lodgers to keep their stately
some ways of Kay and Helen, the mismatched but more developed lovers in "The Night Watch" (2006) — actually share. We never really get to find out, because midway through this long novel, a gruesome
where she worked from 2005 to 2011, was completely nuts.
Big money flowed from famous clients — twice, Rush Limbaugh left her $2,000 tips. It's well-known that she
worked at Nick and Sam's, but she doesn't want scenes from
The Restaurant read as an expose, or even pinned to a particular place. The culture was ubiquitous, she says."It's not
unique in Dallas as a scene or a restaurant. At the time I
worked there, of the fine-dining steakhouses in Dallas it could have been the raunchi-
est, most over-the-top, hateful, misogynist hot mess around. I don't know, because I didn't
work at the other ones." It's a good bet she never
way, it's natural to not want to
go back the other way." She survived her days out if she's still alive." ty of North Texas residential of self-destruction, and she "Love Me Back" is an un- math and science program doesn't miss the thrills. "I love my life now," she compromising read, one rea- where high school-age stuson why it's so hard to put dents earn college credits. says. "It's really boring and down. Marie describes her She earned her undergradu- great." Marie hurts herself to figure
K. ®5 II . What the great Cascadia earthquake could mean to Central Oregon.
Join expertsforapanel discussion on Cascadia and an in-depth look at how the major earthquake predicted to hit the Oregon coast sometime in the next 50 years could impact Central Oregon.The panel includes: Dr. Scott Ashford, Dean of the College of Engineering, Oregon State Univeristy Sgt. Nathan Garibay, Emergency Service Manager, Deschutes County Sheriffs Office
ian are physically separatedeven though the two of them
Lisa Stroup, Executive Director, Oregon Mountain River Chapter of the American Red Cross
in her characteristically under-
stated fashion; thorough and trustworthy as her historical hot and sensually beautiful, research once again is, she transcending cheap cliche. wears it lightly. But beyond the great sex, The England of this novel is it's hard to see what Frances and Lilian — reminiscent in
But she leaves no doubt that life at the steakhouse,
will. She eventually"got out of terview at BookExpo Amer- dationselected her as one of the habit of destroying" herica in May. "It's not necessar- its 5 Under 35, a huge honor. self, she says. "If you're lucky ily personal. It's just being a Tierce was always a brain. enough to catch some glimpse woman and growingup in the She grew up in a series of of hope or see that you can be culture she grew up in. She's small towns in central and living in the world a different
gay, he leaves her cold. Mean- now share a corrosive secret while, Lilian fills the Barbers' that paradoxically binds them room with tacky knickknacks even more closely. — "as if, " Frances reflects,"a One might read that secret giant mouth had sucked a bag and its crippling isolation as a of boiled sweets and then giv- metaphor for what it means to en the house a lick." We'll later have a lesbian relationship in see Lilian herself devouring 1922 England, where it's nearly sweets, "dosing her eyes in ec- impossible to express one's self stasy" after she's "prised lump and one's love within the larger after lump" from a box and world and it s prescribed conplaced each piece "whole into ventions. Frances and Lilian her mouth." must make their own path; it's This being a Waters nov- little wonder there are stumbles el, ecstasy of a different sort along the way. awaits us; for all their differencOne might say the same es, Frances and Lilian's phys- for shellshocked, postwar Enical proximity soon becomes gland, a parallel Waters draws
intimacy. Waters always writes well about sex and her new gests that the house of England novel is no exception: It's both
nant,got married and entered
— M a r i e, encouraging caveat: The
A house as acentral character by Sarah Waters (Riverhead,
ate degree when she was 19 and was accepted to Yale Divinity School. Shenever gotthere. Around the same time, she got preg-
as tired as the Wrays' crum-
bling house — which, Frances muses, seems as "weary as she was," as if it could "sense that
the jig was up." What might replace this once stately edifice from the past? And in a world
that mustbegin anew andbuild again, might one construct London townhouse. relationships along different Enter Leonard and Lilian act of violence wrenches the lines? Barber, members of the striv- story into a new channel. A Having adeptly r a ised ing "clerk dass" — one step up budding romance makes way such questions, "The Paying from working class and down- for a plot-driven police proce- Guests" seems unsure how to stn.am on the social scale from dural and its legal aftermathanswer them. Perhaps such the Wrays. Think Leonard some of it surprisingly clunky, reticence — in Frances, Lilian Bast — the similarity between coming from a novelist whose and postwar England itselfnames is surely no accident elaborate plots are usually so is inevitable, in a novel poised — from another novel about strong. between an old world dying a house: E.M. Forster's "HowAs a result of this twist in away and a new one struggling ard's End." Waters' story, Frances and Lil- to be born.
Four key organizations are partnering to bring this important preparedness event to you. Don't miss this free event for a first-hand look at the predicted Cascadia quake and for important tips on how to prepare yourself, your family and your business to survive the immediate aftermath.
t The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2014 7 p.m. at the Tower Theatre A panel presentation with time for audience questions. Free and open to the public. Tickets and information: www.towertheatre.org 641-746-4166
Amerlcan Red Cross Oregon Mountain River Chapter
oregonstateI c ascades
StfCharles HEALTH SYSTEM
ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • •
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Antiques 8 Collectibles
Bicycles & Accessories
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
TV, Stereo & Video
Misc. Items
21" flatscreen TV, 2-1/2 5 DRAWER TOOL Queensland Heelers Standard & Mini, $150 yrs old, remote doesn't chest $85, cordless Antique wood burning Benelli Black Eagle 12 work. $60. 541-923-7688 screwdriver $15, Black & & up. 541-280-1537 stove, $40. ga shotgun. $400. skill saw $20, www.rightwayranch.wor 541-549-8908 541-639-8200 DirectTV 2 Year Sav- Decker Sage Rod w/Tioga 3 - 30 in. folding table dpress.com ings Event! Over 140 $10. each, assorted tools. China hutch solid maple ree1, $225. Custom channels only $29.99 call 541-389-0340 for Rottweiler pups, parFind exactly what TFO rodwith Redexcellent cond, $500. • Loveseat ents on site. Call for a month. O nly Di- details. ington reel, $200. 541-480-9783 you are looking for in the 205 I'chocolate), Santana recTV gives you 2 details. 541-923-2437. Stmms waders, 73' x 40", $225. pool table with CLASSIFIEDS Items for Free "Sovereign men's Lg, worn once, YEARS of s a vings 8' slate Need to get an Scotty puppies, reserve ball return, $199. 1998" Tandem and a FREE Genie $200; ladies small, now! Mom & dad on site, Very comfy, 541-549-8908 ad in ASAP? 60" Sony TV, Bersa Thunder Ultra new in box, $175. upgrade! Call aluminum road 1st shots. 541-771-0717 and like new, works. You haul! Compact Pro-series, You can place it Simms boots,men's 1-800-259-5140. Are you in BIG trouble bike, size Medium, used only 6 months. 541-548-9619 9mm, 4 mags, $425. Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, 13, used once, $100; (PNDC) with the IRS? Stop low usage, disc online at: 541-647-2314 541-306-0166 2 boys, beautiful! Shots, ladies 9, new in box, wage & bank levies, brakes, good condiFREE Lifestyler www.bendbulletin.com DISH T V Ret a iler. potty training, health guar. $100. Simms wadliens & audits, unfiled tion. New, was Cardio-Fit, total body $1100. 541-777-7743 Starting ai Microwave Cart Browning BAR ing stick,new, $50. tax returns, payroll is$5000; selling now motion, 541-977-2735 $19.99/month (for 12 $24. 541-385-5809 Fishpond chest Semi-Automatic sues, & resolve tax for $1000. 210 mos.) & High Speed 541-420-2220 30-06 rifle. Great pack,$50. debt FAST. Seen on 208 Call 541-923-2468 I nternet starting a t Did you purchase col541-382-6664 Furniture & Appliances cond., $750. Call CNN. A B BB. Call NEED TO CANCEL Pets & Supplies $14.95/month (where lector plate at estate 'I -800-989-1278. John O YOUR AD? 243 available.) SAVEI Ask 3-drawer dresser, 40" x sale on Nelson Road 541-647-9180 Smoke Hollow smoker About SAME DAY In- (PNDC) The Bulletin in NE B end l ast Ski Equipment The Bulletin recom- 30", light m ahogany Classifieds has an large, $150. stallation! CALL Now! Buying Diamonds month? I found the 541-221-8226 mends extra caution color, $35. 541-728-0105 "After Hours"Line Browning Model 71, 1-800-308-1563 /Gold for Cash certificates of authenDownhill 1 pce ski suit when purc h asCall 541-383-2371 .348 cal, new condition, Thompson Center Arms (PNDC) Saxon's Fine Jewelers tication for "The Elk" & khaki, sze M-L $79 ing products or ser24 hrs. to cancel $750 cash - no trades. 541-389-6655 muzzleloader, 50 cal "The Bighorn Sheep." obo. 541-330-9070 vices from out of the Pioneer bookshelf your ad! 541-548-6268 New Englander, exclnt 541-419-6408 BUYING area. Sending cash, speakers, barely used, Downhill 2 pce SKEA shape, $295. Nice dining room table, Lionel/American Flyer checks, or credit in$15 obo. 541-408-8346 classic, olive M-L. $79 Camo bibs and coat for 541-419-1604 $79. 5 chairs on rollers, trains, accessories. toddlers, 2-4, $ 2 5. f ormation may be obo. 541-330-9070 YOUR 42" TV cabinet with $18 each. 541-420-2220 541-408-2191. 541-221-8226 subjected to fraud. Thompson ContenderREDUCE 244 istol w/2 barrels: 44 CABLE BILLI* Get a BUYING 8i SE LLING For more informa- s late t r i m $ 2 5 0; Office chair, like new, dk Camo screen partition em Mag/Gen1 w/Bush- whole-home Satellite All Ethan Allen buffet, tion about an adverred, button tufted, high Snowboards gold jewelry, silver $25. Frame p ack, storage, to p folds back, $200. 541-447-7272 nell scope & carry case; system installed at tiser, you may call gold coins, bars, $20. 541-221-8226 NO COST and pro- and out for serving, $250; and 22 LR match with the O r egon State Kodak Instamatic 20 rounds, wedding sets, NORDICA snowboard, Refrigerator, Whirlpool ramming starting at Heavy metal queen Bushnell scope & carry Attorney General's class rings, sterling silGold side x side, white, vintage '70sorig box, used once $ 1 50. CASH!! 1 9.99/mo. FRE E bed frame, $30; Pair case, $850. Office C o n sumer 38"x84" manual, flash cubes & 541-771-2885 For Guns, Ammo & Ruger Model 10/22 LR, HD/DVR Upgrade to ver, coin collect, vinbeige $100. 541-480-4296 Protection hotline at extender.$25. Reloading Supplies. stainless steel, w/Bush- new callers, SO CALL tage watches, dental black-out d r a pes, Tempur-Pedic x-long twin 245 1-877-877-9392. 541-419-6408 gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-408-6900. $15; Folding table adj matt with air chamnell scope & case, $200. NOW 541-382-9419. Golf Equipment and 4 folding chairs, ber, remotes; T.P. pillow; Slide projector Argus Custom Mauser 30-06 Savage Mod. 116 .300 1-800-871-2983. The Bulletin Cartop carrier servingcengel onyon since rggg in the box, $40. SE linens, in perfect cond, 3 00, w/slides, $ 7 5 rifle w/base & scope rings, Win Mag, stainless steel (PNDC) Bend. 541-508-8784 $2500. 541-548-6642 obo. 541-419-6408 w/scope & case, $550. Surround-sound spkrs, 38"x52"x21" H, $45. $300. 541-548-3408 541-549-8908 Mossberg 300A 12Ga Twin a djustable bed, The Bulletin reserves of 3, all $20 obo. Adorable AKC Callawav X-12 with 2 barrels: one 22" set Cobra 148GTL 40-chanthe right to publish all 541-408-8346 leave msg gd c o nd., $ 1 2 5. Registered Lab PupA1 Washers8 Dryers graphite, 3-fob, $100. modified; 8 one 181/2", nel CB, antenna, SWR 541-508-3886 Iv msg. ads from The Bulletin pies. Chocolate $150 ea. Full warBigBertha graphite $250. Toshiba 47" flatscreen, meter, $15. 541-408-8346 ($750), Silver and ranty. Free Del. Also Twin headboard book- newspaper onto The fairway metals, 3-13, Background check TV, good condition, CRYPT at Deschutes Internet webCharcoal ($1000.). All DO YOU HAVE wanted, used W/D's $40 each. required. Please call shelf, nice cond. $15. Bulletin site. Memorial G a r d en pups have dew claws 541-280-7355 Lady Callaway SOMETHING TO 541.389.3694, leave msg. $100. 541-480-8977 541-508-3886 Iv msg. removed, first shots SELL Meadow Pond space graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 255 Wanted: Collector seeks The Bulletin 4D4 dbl depth lawn and wormed. Contact metals, $100. FOR $500 OR sgrving centraloregon since rggg Computers The Bulletin high quality fishing items 541-462-3946 if interLady TaylorMade LESS? crypt, full grave for 2. Appliances extra ' Viewmaster with case & upscale bamboo fly Miscelas graphite, Non-commercial B uyer w i l l ne e d ested. Black, new to ex- i recommends rods. Call 541-678-5753, T HE B ULLETIN r e - granite & bronze dbl caution when pur7-SW, driver-7 wood, v intage reels, $ 2 5 advertisers may cellent c o ndition! or 503-351-2746 quires computer adchasing products or a obo. 541-419-6408 $100. m a r k er place an ad Maytag Jet Clean vertisers with multiple interment services from out ofi (2) Sun Mountain with our Weatherby Mark V Ac- ad schedules or those plus interment costs. dishwasher, $250. I the area. Sending I 215 Speed Carts, "QUICK CASH cumark, customized selling multiple sys- $1500. For more info Whirlpool gas con- ' cash, checks, o r ' Coins & Stamps $75 ea. SPECIAL" 30-378, plus custom tems/ software, to dis- c all K e llie A l l e n v ection ran g e , i credit i n f ormation 541482-6664 or 1 week3lines 12 ammo and Talley close the name of the 541-382-5592 $500; W h i rlpool may be subjected to Private collector buying OI' seller, 207-582-0732 s cope base. W I N AKC CAVALIER King business or the term microwave hood. i FRAUD. For more postagestamp albums & CHECK YOURAD ~g e ek s g g ! Model 70-300, WIN "dealer" in their ads. DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Charles Spaniel Pup- $125. information about an I collections, world-wide Ad must magnum and ammo. Private party advertis- 10 Americans or 158 pies, Champion lines, 541-420-8636 advertiser, you mayi and U.S. 573-286-4343 include price of WIN Model 100-284, ers are defined as health guarantee, million U.S. A d ults the O regon / (local, cell phone). I call gl e re Of $5DD W IN a n d Am m o . those who sell one ~ GORGEOUS,AII colors. read content f r om State Atto r ney ' Armoire for sale, $75. or less, or multiple 541-420-8689, leave $1800. 541-848-7605 48"x24"x74". Dark Wal- i General's O f fi ce 240 computer. n ewspaper m e dia items whose total msg will call back. each week? Discover Protec- • Crafts & Hobbies Aussie Miniature pups, 4 nut. 3 Irg drwrs. Top pivot Consumer does not exceed USB 2.0 to SATA 8 IDE on the first day it runs the Power of the Pation h o t line a t I Winchester Coyote .223 adapter, brand new, black-tri males, 1st shots, dr slides. 541-382-2313 $500. to make sure it is corcific Northwest Newswith 4x12 scope, $400. $10. 541-408-8346 tails docked, wormed, Couch, black leather w/ i 1-877-877-9392. AGATE HUNTERS rect. "Spellcheck" and paper Advertising. For Savage 99 .243 with 3x9 $300. 541-771-0956 Call Classifieds at Poliahera • Saws human errors do oc2 recliners, like new. i TheBulletin > a free brochure call scope, $325. L yman 257 541-385-5809 Serving Central Oregon since fggg cur. If this happens to www.bendbulletin.com trade rifle, .50 cal, per916-288-6011 or Boxer/French Mastiff pups $475. 541-408-0846 Musical Instruments ready for new homes Dryer Whirlpool Cabrio Repalr 8rSupplles your ad, please concussion, peep sights & email now(Docked tails, dew- like new, y o u-haul. 212 g tact us ASAP so that accessories, $425. Belcecelia©cnpa.com r corrections and any claws removed, 1st shots. $75. 541-923-5577 Great Gun Deals! g ium G a rden g u n ,American Tribute electric (PNDC) Antiques 8 uitar, amp, stand, case, Females, $450; males adjustments can be New Ruger SP101 .357, f 890-1910? $175. Drafting table 6'x4', lifts Collectibles 241 200. 541-306-0166 $500. Call 541-419-0149 Electric range and oven made to your ad. 3" bbl, Bianchi holster, 541-588-6258 8 tilts w/Venco $195. Bicycles & 541-385-5809 $535. MKA 1919 12 ga 220v, $65. Back to School SALE! 541-549-8908 German Shorthair AKC 541-549-8908 247 semi-auto, M16 style, 3 The Bulletin Classified 25% 35% OFF How to avoidscam Accessories ups, parents on site, chokes, 2 mags, $625. Sporting Goods all music equipment. Drainage tubing, 4" x 10' and fraud attempts 550. 541-306-9957 246 New Pap M92 semi-auto - Misc. Bend Pawn 8 Trading Co. long, solid, black, corruYBe aware of interAK pistol w/stabilizer Guns, Hunting 61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend gated, $5. 541-549-8908 German Shorthair purenational fraud. Deal s hort rifle, 2 0 0 r d s 14' kayak, very fast, 541417-5099 bred puppies, f)reat Furniture for Sale & Fishing Dyson vacuum like new locally w h e never 7.62x39 ammo, 3 mags, hunting dogs! 3 fem s, 2 $200. 541-593-0312 $125. possible. $750. 541-306-0166 DRUM SET males, ready to go 9/26. from Log Home: or 541-508-9226 1000 rds of 22LR fac541-549-8908 Y Watch for buyers 4 piece $195. Oak roll-top desk. $500. 541-728-1004 t ory a m mo, $ 9 0 . Little C h ie f do u ble ln-Iine skates, used who offer more than 541-389-3827 Coffee table,end Eddie Bauer women's sz 541-647-7950 smoker, $55. once size 9 , $ 2 0. Healer pups with tails, tables, 2 lamps. your asking price LA Beach Cruiser 8 jumpsuit, new w/ tags, 541-22i-8226 Kent electric pickup for 8 weeks, 2 m ales, All beautiful and and who ask to have 260 rds of 22-250 541-549-8908 Custom made, $100. 541-678-5407 acoustic guitar, $10. choc. 8 blue $225/ea. reasonably priced. m oney wired o r ammo, $200. one of a kind541-408-8346 541-390-8875 How to avoidscam handed b ac k to 541-647-7950 no 2 alike! and fraud attempts 541-549-0805 or them. Fake cashier Excellent condition. Jack Russell puppies, 5000 rds o f F e deral 541-588-2301 checks and money YBe aware of internaFun, fun, fun! high-grade 22LR ammo, purebred tails docked orders are common. tional fraud. Deal lo$850. $500. 541-647-7950 2 fem, 1 male, ready Futon bed/couch black sg'N ever give o u t cally whenever pos541-749-8720 9 /27/14 $ 30 0 e a . microfiber. personal f i nancial $50. 950 rounds .38 Special sible. 541-279-9935 Like new Necky Es541-548-9619 information. ammo $300.00 • New, never fired Y Watch for buyers ar' Trust your inMedium full-suspension 541-390-1755 kia 16' kayak with Weatherby Vanwho offer more than Lab 3ya-year male, pa- G ENERATE SPINET PIANO SOM E Santa Cruz Mtn racrudder. B ulkheads guardS2, synthetic your asking price and pers, neutered, chip, EXCITEMENT in your stincts and be wary Solo 1973 Fayett S Gable ing bi ke, good c ond, must water tight. Seat like stock, cal 30-06.$550. who ask to have g reat f a mily d o g . neighborhood! Plan a of someone using an sell, $2000. 541-480-2652 AK-47 7.62x39, made by Everett & new. Hatches, deck • New, never fired Needs lots of room to garage sale and don't escrow service or money wired or $600. Ruger 10/22 Sons, excellent conHowa,wood stock, cal lines and grab loops handed back to them. run, 100 lbs., $100. forget to advertise in agent to pick up your with 3x9 scope, dition, recently .300 Win Mag. $725 all in perfect condimerchandise. 541-447-3861 Fake cashier checks $175. Remington tuned. sounds great! classified! Must pass backtion. Orig i nally and money orders 11-87 Police 12ga $1000 541-385-5809. ground check. Please $1450, asking $700 The Bulletin 541-385-8367 are common. with rifle sights, sening cenggloregon sinn rggg call 541.389.3694, obo. P lease c a l l YNever give out perHide-a-bed by Basset, $800. Baikal Bounty leave message. 541-312-2435. sonal financial inforPeople giving p e ts while, mattress good Hunter 12 ga, 20" 260 away are advised to shape. good shape, double barrels with mation. RANS Stratus XP Misc. Items YTrust your instincts be selective about the $75. 541-382-6773 screw-in chokes, Ruger LCR .38 snub 248 2011 Recumbent new owners. For the nose revolver with $450.All like new! and be wary of Health & small sofa, 6', LWB; exc. cond. 27 275 Gallon Like New protection of the ani- Hideabed 541-550-7189 HiViz fiber optic front someone using an foam matt., tan/multicolor Beauty Items Plastic Totes, Overgears SRAM X9 mal, a personal visit to site, new D eSantis escrow service or $45. 541-728-0105 twist shifters; seat stock Sale: $109. for the home is recomagent to pick up your Bend local pays CASH!! pocket holster, & one Lowest Antique 1940 Beer EnP r i ce s on one tote, 2 to 5 totes mended. bag; specialized strip clip. $420 obo. merchandise. Kenmore washer front for all firearms & gine, from London, computer/odometer; Health & Dental Ina t $99.95/ea., 6 o r 541-977-3173 exc., $150. ammo. 541-526-0617 England, $250. The Bulletin loading, surance. We have the more at $89.95 ea. The Bulletin fairing, kick stand 541-548-1876. 541-749-8720 Servtng Cenrral Oregon rfnre 1903 and more. Benelli ARGO R1 Ruger Super Black- best rates from top GloryBee Foods 30-06 NIB, $950. hawk .44 cal mag, companies! Call Now! Eugene, OR. POODLE puppies,toy, Large freezer chest Antique hall tree with $1400 Infrared Sauna, 220-V 541-669-0913 or loving companions. 60x37x28h $ 1 9 5. mirror, exc. c o nd, 541-504-5224 Call or text Phil at pnstine con d ition. 877-649-6195. hook-up, no building, 541-475-3889 541-549-8908 1-600-456-7923 $500. 541-480-9783 (503) 880-4094 $525. 541-385-6163. (PNDC) $1000. 541-536-7790
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G2 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D
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BY TONY ORBACH AND PATRICK BLINDAUER / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ 20
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1 Sissy who's not a sissy 7 Benefits 13 Blade in the back? 20 Lost lady in "The Raven" 21 Refresher 22 Cleaning aid 23 Bid 24 Something given when solneone has been taken 25 Tranquil 26 Actor Michael's means of support? 28 Comic Tina recovered from her wound? 30 Early "Project Runway" sponsor 31No-see-ums 32 Obama caricature feature 33 Ocho (Jamaican resort) 35 Blood products 37 Big name in ice crealn 38 Positive signs of life in outer space? 42 Heir of martial artist Bruce? 46 Tennis champ Monica 48 Square 49 Hip-hop record mogul Gotti 50 Civil rights leader Roy 52 Annoyance for actor Colin? Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than4,000 past puzzles, uytimes.com/crosswords
($39.95 a year).
55 Org. that takes donations for the strapped? 56 Caroler's quaff 58 2007 3x platinum Alicia Keys album 59 2012 gold-medal gymnast Raisman 60 Person whose number is up 62 Ins 65 Sag 67 Flamencocries 68 Thunderstruck critic's review for actor Richard? 72 Studies: Abbr. 75 Ball-club position 77 Word in a Yale fight song 78 Popular airfare comparison site 7$ Trojan's home, for short 81 Sirs' counterparts 84 Thriller writer DeMille 87 The Judds, e.g. 88 What actor Martin calls his athletic footwear? 92 "His wife could lean" $3 Q.&A. part: Abbr. $4 Branch of Islam $5 Dental unit 97 Urban legend about rapper Kanye? 9$ "The Great White Hope" director Martin 100 It came down in 2001 102 Out of the wind 104 Bring down, in England 105 ' rMe, me, me" sort
108 Cleaning aid since 1889 110 Aquatic organism 114 Musician David's equestrian accouterments? 117 Tartcocktail named for colnic Amy? 119 Cornponents for
wireless networks 120 Philippine province with a repetitive name 122 "Good riddance!" 123 Suspected cause of Napoleon's death 124 Subject of a Scottish mystery, informally 125 Not totally against 126 Aces the test 127 Some mounts 128 Oil giant based in Memphis DOWN
I Piece of cake 2 Kind of code 3 Rural block 4 Creative word people 5 Folies-Bergere costume designer 6 "Don't stop'!" 7 Speedy Northeast conveyance 8 Leaps 9 They go around the world 10 " out?" (question to a pet) 11 Fail to keep up 12 Ian Flerning genre 13 Influenced 14 Polo grounds? 15 In accordance with
16 Partridge family member 17 Russia's Airlines 18 Teddy material 19 Kept underground, lnaybe 27 Oneway to break out 29 Casts out 32 "Eat, Pray, Love" setting 34More slick, in a way 36 Call 39 "Praise the Lord!" 40 German city on the Baltic 41 Surprisingly agile 42 Jargon 43"The Fog of War" director Morris 44 Ephemeral 45 San Francisco gridder 47 Tilne piece 48 Man, in Milan 51 Foot-long part 53 Stay out of sight 54 Set on a cellphone 57 Bandmate Barry, Maurice or Robin 61 Get-out-of-fullscreen button 63 As well 64 Dr. Spen g ler ("Ghostbustersn role) 66 pro n obis 68 Some chip dip, informally 69 List abbr. 70 Elation 71 Old NBC drama 73 Heckle 74 Little bit 76 Bygone Dodge
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118 Tug-of-war need 121 Call from the sidelines
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 inyour private party sd for only$15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any oui-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right io reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour adfor accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewil gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject anyadat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260
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Tools
Fuel & Wood
Lost & Found
Horses & Equipment
Nearly new set of silver- Wanted- paying cash Craftsman radial arm WHEN BUYING ware, service for 12, $35. for Hi-fi audio & stusaw, $195. • 8 r. 541-728-0105 54f -546-7144 FIREWOOD... dio equip. Mclntosh, REIIIIEMBEFEIf you JBL, Marantz, Dyhave lost an animal, avoid fraud, Propane stove with wall naco, Heathkit, San- Generator G e nerAC To don't forget to check The Bulletin thermostat, $80. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 5000w, runs g r eat The Humane Society recommends pay541 -549-8908 2001 Silverado $375. 541-221-8226 Call 541-26f -f 808 Bend ment for Firewood 325 3-horse trailer 5th 541-382-3537 Propane tank 5 gallon only upon delivery 261 wheel, 29'xs', deluxe Ladder: Werner 16' ext., Hay, Grain & Feed Redmond and inspection. like new and full. $20. Medical Equipment showman/semi living like new $55. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-923-0882 541-330-1 944 541-221-8226 quarters, lots of ex1st & 2nd cutting or4' x 4' x 8' Madras Power Wheelchard grass mix, small tras. Beautiful condiReduce Your Past Tax Broken 541-475-6889 chair or Scooter? We New Delta 10e bench saw • Receipts should tion. $21,900. OBO bales $235/ton. Madras, Prineville Bill by as much as 75 will repair your power w/dusl catcher, 2 leg exinclude name, 541-420-3277 OR. 541 -420-9736 Percent. Stop Levies, wheelchair 541-447-7f 78 phone, price and s i te.tension roller, $150 firm. or Craft Cats Liens and Wage Gar- Call for Repair,on kind of wood 1st Quality mixed grass Main- 541-318-8503 nishments. Call The tenance or Sales 541-389-8420. purchased. hay, no rain, barn stored, Horseshoeing for Tax DR Now to see if assistance with your • Firewood ads $250/ton Tools Qualify scooter. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! you MUST include Call 54f -549-383f 280 JHM 110-Ib certifier 1-800-791-2099. species & cost per Patterson Ranch, Sisters 877-787-4839 anvil, anvil stand Estate Sales Door-to-door selling with (PNDC) cord to better serve w/vise, all GE hand Grass hay mix, 60-Ib (PNDC) fast results! It's the easiest our customers. tools, hoof stand & GRANDMOTHER'S bales, no rain, $170/ton. Roll-around cart 6'x4' Wheel chair way in the world to sell. 541 -388-7598 forge tools, all in ESTATE SALE w ith 6 w h ls , $ 4 5. $40. The Bulletin Copper p e da l car Just bought a new boat? new condition, 541-549-8908 Sanvne Central Oregon since f9t8 541-548-9619 The Bulletin Classified 61600 Crank telephone Nat. Sell your old one in the or part trade for 262 541 485-5809 cash. reg. ¹2 Tin toys classifieds! Ask about our Swamp cooler/humidiAll Year Dependable generator. Super Seller rates! Lg coffee mills Burl fier, portable $ 20. Commercial/Office Firewood: Seasoned; wood tables Old adv. 541-385-5809 541-430-4449 541-549-8908 Equipment & Fixtures Lodgepole, split, del, signs Bixt time clock Quality Orchard/Mixed B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 Bear skin fur rug HarThe Bulletin Offers Grass hay, between Sharp cash register or 2 for $365. Call for rison Fisher painting FreePrivate Party Ad8 Bend & Redmond. $75. multi-cord discounts! Neon beer signs Mu- $230/ton, small bales. People Lookfor Information • 3 lines - 3 days 541-549-8908 541-420-3484. • Private Party Only sic boxes Primitives. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 About Products and • Total of items adverSept. 18-21, 145586 263 Services Every Daythrough Shopsmith tised must equal $200 L anewood Dri v e , Looking for your Pine & Juniper Split Tools The Bulletin Classifi8tts with bandsaw, Sunforest, La Pine or Less next employee? excellent condition. FOR DETAILS or to Cabover ladder rack, PROMPT D ELIVERY Horse stalls, pasture 8 Place a Bulletin Customized extras. PLACE AN AD, 542-389-9663 286 arena. Owner care. heavy duty with 6' tool help wanted ad Retired shop Call 541-305-5009 F amily ranch S W box each side, $295. Sales Northeast Bend today and teacher; Fax 541-385-5802 541-416-9686 Redmond. $150/mo. don't need anymore! reach over 269 541-207-2693. Pictures available. 60,000 readers Gardening Supplies ** FREE ** Woodburn AuctionConsigned 3475. each week. & Equipment Farm Machinery & Equipment Auction Call 541-598-6406 Your classified ad Garage Sale Kit 2 day sale Place an ad in The will also RINila o Sat & Sun • SEPT. 27 & 28 Bulletin for your gaappear on BarkTurfSoil.com at 9:00 am sharp! Tools power hand. 6 rage sale and rebendbulletin.com ass'd, like new. $90. WOODBURN AUCTION YARD ceive a Garage Sale which currently /2 mile S. of Woodburn, OR. on HWY 99 E PROMPT DELIVERY set 541-6-47-1819 Kit FREE! receives over 542-309-9663 SATURDAY Sept. 27: Small amounts of misc. 1.5 million page KIT INCLUDES: 265 tools • Approx. 50 tractors 8 forklifts of various views every • 4 Garage Sale Slgns sizes• Approx 70 cars, trucks, pickups, trail- • Building Materials month at no • $2.00 Off Coupon To For newspaper ers. Customers purchasing vehicles must have extra cost. use Toward Your delivery, call the 421 current proof of insurance before purchase of REDMOND Habitat Next Ad Bulletin Circulation Dept. at a vehicle. (No exceptions!!!!!!!!) All titled veSchools 8 Training RESTORE • 10 Tips For "Garage Classifieds 541-385-5800 hicles need to be checked in by 4:00 p.m. Fri- Building Supply Resale Sale Success!" Get Results! To place an ad, call day, Sept. 26th with the titles in consignor'3 Quality at IITR Truck School 541 -385-5809 Call 541-305-5009 name. Dealers need an updated certificate. LOW PRICES REDiviOND CAiviPUS or email or place your ad SUNDAY, Sept. 20:Misc. farm equipment. 1242 S. Hwy 97 PICK UP YOUR OurGrads GetJobs! cleeeified@bendbulletin.com on-line at Loading facilities & hauling available. Some 541-548-1406 GARAGE SALE KIT al 1-888-438-2235 bendbulletin.com items may have a reserved bid. Consign1777 SW Chandler WWW.IITR.EDU Open to the public. Sarvlne Ceneal Oregon slnce Saea ments are accepted until 5:00 p.m., Sept. 26. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 No loading out or no receiving on Tuesdays, 266 PLEASE!!!!! The Bulletin Fuel TransportDriver Serving Central Oregon since Ssoa Heating & Stoves Eds Trucking is looking for a regionalTRANSINSTANT GREEN Notice: there is a 5% buyers fee added to PORT TRUCK AND TRAILER DRIVER for McPheeters Turf terms of sale which are - CASH, CHECKS, NOTICE TO pickup and safe delivery of propane gas, fuel Lawn Fertilizer DEBIT CARD (debit card not over $500). No Garage Sale. ADVERTISER and/or other products as directed. Follow DOT money orders accepted, or Visa checks, Sat-Sun,9-4. Fabric Since September 29, and company safe driver guidelines while Cashiers Check, Credit Card checks. All perfor quilting, lots of 1991, advertising for performing duties. Performs daily inspections 541D89-9683 sonal checks with ID. misc. 63232 Peterused woodstoves has required by DOT to ensure that assigned man Ln. see craiglist, as Notice: credit cards terms of sale: See Below! been limited to modequipment is in safe and compliant operating 9% buyers fee on all credit cards, VISA, Masels which have been Prompt Delivery condition. Ensure all required paperwork terCard 8 Discover with proper ID on the day certified by the OrRock, Sand tk Gravel 288 including certifications, logs, etc is completed of the sale. Bills must be paid for the day of the egon Department of Multiple Colors, Sizes Sales Southeast Bend and is in compliance with company and sale. No exceptions!!!! Only two weeks to reEnvironmental Qual- Instant Landscaping Co. g overnment regulations. Adheres t o a l l 541-389-9663 move equipment: Daily fee charge $25 aweek, ity (DEQ) and the fedYard Sale Sat-Sun, 9-6, company safety policies and procedures. if equipment is not picked up before next sale eral E n v ironmental 61 856 Somerset Dr. 270 equipment, misc. etc., will be sold and money Protection A g e ncy The ideal candidate must meet DOT requireGuns, ammo, camp will be for storage to to Woodburn Auction (EPA) as having met Lost & Found ments, possess a valid Class 'A' CDL with gear, clothing, misc. Yard account. smoke emission stanHazmat and Tankerendorsement and have dards. A cer t ifiedFound: two fishing rods tractor/trailer experience. LUNCH ON GROUNDS. Not responsible for 290 w oodstove may b e with reels on Wed. accidents. Please no children under the age of identified by its certifi- 8/20. At East Lake hot Sales Redmond Area We offer competitive pay, new equipment, 13 years. Children 13 or older are welcome cation label, which is springs boat ramp. ability to be home most nights, medical and only if accompanied by a parent at all times! permanently attached Call to iden t ify Yard Sale & Free Stuff! dental plan, 401(K), Profit Sharing, paid to the stove. The Bul541-61 0-9832. Motorcycle I guy stuff, holidays and vacation, and Safety Bonus. Auctioneers: Skip Morin• Sale conducted by letin will not knowShabby chic, household, Woodburn Auction Yard. Inc. ingly accept adveitis- LOST: man's wallet vic. clothes, misc., all must Email employment©edstaub.com woodburnauction ©aol.com ing for the sale of Carino's rest. parking go! Sat.-Wed. 1 0-4. 503-981-8185-ext. 1 • fax: 503-982-7640 to get an application or you can fax resume to uncertified lot, Mon. 9/15, Re- 6489 S. Hwy 97. Call for 877-846-2516 www.woodburnauction.com woodstoves. ward. 541-617-1358 info: 541-408-f 397
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Fiscal Coordinator 2 Oregon State University-Cascades in Bend, Oregon invites applications for a full-time (1.0 FTE) Fiscal Coordinator 2 position. Duties include but ar e no t l i mited to f i nancial planning & analysis, budgeting, budgetary controls, forecasting, financial reporting and interpretation of revenue & data for OSUCascades. This position has a full-time monthly salary range of $4,182 - $6,413 (typically, the starting salary is at the lower end of the salary
range).
Minimum qualifications include a d emonstrated proficiency in Excel financial modeling and twenty four (24) quarter, f6 semester or 240 clock hours of accounting courses and three years of *accounting experience; OR a CPA or PA certificate and three years of *accounting experience. Preferred qualifications include a demonstrable commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. (the * in this ad is expanded in the online posting)
For a complete position description and to review additional minimum and preferred requirements, use the following link to view or apply for this position http://oregonstate.edu/jobs/ Use posting number 00f 3076 (or the location of "Bend") to apply on-line. The closing date is 09/29/2014. OSU is an AA/EOENets/Disabled.
Central Oregon Community College has openings lis t e d bel o w . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Campus CenterBuilding Specialist Serve as the first point-of-contact, providing general campus and building information to the campus community. 2yr customer service req $ 2,f 46-$2,554 for 9 - month c ontract f o r 40hr/wk. Closes Sept 21. Administrative Assistant, Natural Industrial Resources Provide administrative support to the Chair and Faculty members of the NIR programs. Prepare and process budget information, maintain fiscal records, and track data for scheduled programs. Associates + 2-yrs exp. req. $2508-$2987 for 9.5mo. contract. Closes Sept 28.
Part-Time Mazama Gym Open Hours Supervisor Provide supervision of the Mazama Gym and Fitness Center. Two position need. Must have prior experience for Supervisor II position. No n -benefited position 10-15hr/wk $9.57/hr. Open Until Filled. Part-Time Engineering Instructor Interested individuals should apply to COCC's Part-Time Engineering/Physics pool position, and contact department Chair, Eddie Johnson at ewjohnson©cocc.edu. This position requires a Masters' degree or Ph.D. in Engineering or Physics with relevant coursework. Open Until Filled.
Part-Time Instructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2014 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Banking- Accounting
MidOregon
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
S L Pest control S UBA R U . Newspaper-generI TERMINIX, a growa ted content is s o Sales valuable it's taken and ing pest control comC Sales professional to repeated, condensed, pany is seeking a Join Central broadcast, t weeted, SERVICE TECHNIOregon's l a r gest E discussed, p o sted, CIAN - Competitive new ca r d e a ler copied, edited, and pay, medical & reSubaru of B e n d. L emailed c o u ntless tirement p r ogram. Offering 401k, profit Must have: c lean times throughout the sharing, m e d ical I driving record; abilday by others? Displan, split shifts and cover the Power of ity to pass drug test; N paid vacation. ExpeNewspaper Advertis- background check rience or will train. G ing in SIX STATES and state licensing 90 day $1500 guarwith just one phone exams. Will t r a in a ntee. Dress f o r 0 can d idate. success. call. For free Pacific right P l e ase
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CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p Accounting/Operations Coordinator poriunities" include employee and indeMid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a pendent positions. detail-oriented team player with a positive I O K S Ads fo r p o sitions attitude to assist with general accounting that require a fee or C H I P duties and back office operational activities, upfront investment including data entry. Maintains accuracy of I S H H E R must be stated. With Credit Union accounting systems though any independent job E O G I A L Y verification of entries, posting, adjustments opportunity, please and reconciliations. Balances assigned GL R L I D P i nvestigate tho r accounts, performs necessary entries and Use extra assists w it h m o nth-end G L ac c ruals. oughly. G E B E P T S c aution when a pProcesses drafts, ACHs, and wires. Provides plying for jobs onComplete an appliO U B Y A K Northwest Newspaexcellent member service to internal business apply at 2060 NE line and never proper Association Net- cation at 4 0 SE partners and members. Processes and/or Hwy 20, Bend. See U M A S S D U O vide personal inforBl v d . , Bob or Devon. work brochures call B ridgeford disburses accounts payable checks and mation to any source Bend. 541-382-8252. 916-288-8011 or S N C A T T A N S provides administrative services on debit and you may not have email credit cards. Successful candidate must be S I O O E Y T H and cecelia©cnpa.com PC-proficient in a W i ndows environment, researched Get your deemed to be repuincluding Word and Excel. Previous credit (PNDC) Roofers Wanted R M A R table. Use extreme business union or operations experience preferred. Call River Roofing, c aution when r e G O S T O L G A 541-363-3569 s ponding to A N Y LABORATORY or applyin person ai B E T K L O U R online employment e ROW I N G DIRECTOR Excellent benefits package and competitive 697 SE Glenwood ad from out-of-state. FULL TIME R E R I L O S S Drive, in Bend. salary. V i s i t our web site at We suggest you call with an ad in www.midoregon.com for more details. A N I N E N T O the State of Oregon Wallowa Illlemorial The Bulletin's Consumer Hotline Hospital G A N S T S O N Please send resume, Call a Pro "Call A Service at 1-503-378-4320 cover letter and application to: Whether you need a For Equal OpportuLocated in Professional" Mid Oregon FCU PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 nity Laws c ontact Enterprise, OR fence fixed, hedges Attn: Human Resources Directory Oregon Bureau of P.O. Box 6749, trimmed or a house 476 Labor & I n dustry, BS Degree(Physical Bend, OR 97708 Employment General Civil Rights Division, built, you'll find Science Preferred) Jefferson Coun Job 0 o rtunities 971-873- 0784. Certified MT and Opportunities Mid Oregon Credit union is a drug-free workplace professional help in CPR Licensure The Bulletin's "Call a The Bulletin Technician II - Community Development Min. 5 yrs. Exp. chasing products or I sesteer central oseraasincesses Looking for your next Department$2,263.00 to $2,924.00 Service Professional" services from out of as a bench MT 541-385-5809 per month - DOQ Min. 3 yrs. In manDirectory I the area. Sending Placeemployee? a Bulletin help First Review - September 25th, 2014 Registered Nurses agement/Supervic ash, checks, o r 54$ -385-5809 wanted ad today and Add your web address sory position I credit i n f ormation reach over 80,000 For complete job description and application to your ad and readof a hospital lab Live and work i n t h e b e autiful outdoor I may be subjected to readers each week. form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on HuSa/es erson The Bulletin's Experience in FRAUD. recreation area of John Day, Oregon, home of Your classified ad man Resources, then Job Opportunities; or web site, www.bendFor more informaComputer Systems the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, g SM ART will also appear on call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson bulletin.com, will be and EMRS tion about an adverW IR E L E S S hiking, biking, hunting, fishing, camping, and bendbulletin.com County Application forms to Jefferson County able to click through I tiser, you may call boating - something for everyone year round. which currently Human Resources, 88 SE D Street, Suite E, automatically to your Excellent Benefit 2014 is our 5th year as the Oregon State Community Counseling Solutions is a 501(c)3 receives over 1.5 Madras, OR 97741. website. O regon's 100 B e s t I Attorney General's Package serving Gillam, Harney, Wheeler and Grant million page views Companies To Work Office C o n sumer I Visit our website at Counties by providing dynamic, progressive every month at JeffersonCounty isan For! W e h i r e the Protection hotline at l www.wchcd.org and diverse supports to improve the well ASSEMBLY: Part/Full no extra cost. Equal Employment Opportunify Employer " Smartest an d th e I 1-877-877-9392. time assembly peror Contact being of our communities. Bulletin Classifieds Brightest" salespeople son, and full time asLinda Childers at Get Results! that are capable of de- gThe Bulletin s embly lead. De 541-426-5313 We are recruiting for Registered Nurses to Call 385-5809 livering an exceptional ~TEs c, p endable, deta i l EOE work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center, a or place customer experience. oriented, able to work Check out the Secure Residential Treatment Facility DFÃHlllFS ~llllil 7 your ad on-line at S mart Wireless i s with small parts. Drug classifieds online providing services to individuals with a bendbulletin.com Manager seeking full time Retail Screen. Pick up appli~ CAREER OPPORTUNITIES severe mental illness. T hese positions c ation O 3 2 0 S E Lincare, leading na- Sales associates to www.bendbullelin.com provide mental h ealth n ursing c are Bridgeford Blvd. Suite tional res p iratory be part of our High Updated daily including medication oversight, medication 1 Bend, OR 97702 ja- company seeks Cen- P erformance S a l es related t reatment, f o llow p h ysician's sonOchapman-huff- ter Manager. Respon- Team for our AT&T Banking APPLICATIONS DIVISION MANAGER sibilities include: Di- Redmond location. prescriptions and procedures, measure and man.com (201 4-00095). Full-time position. Deadrect supervision of Hourly base + comrecord patient's general physical condition operations and man- m ission. Work 2 0 such as pulse, temperature and respiration line:MONDAY,09/29/14. ASSOCIATE IN agement of the sales hours and above and to provide daily information, educate and ENGINEERING 2 effort. Healthcare re- get exc. benefits inCreditUnion train staff on medication administration, and BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, lated field experience cluding medical, denensure documentation is kept according to OREGON DEPT OF strongly encouraged. tal, v ision, t uition Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for special PSRB Coordinator (2014-00086). Fullpolicies. Th i s p o s ition w orks w i th TRANSPORTATION Internal growth op- reimbursement and people to join our dynamic, growing team. the treatment team to promote recovery time position. Deadline Extended:OPEN portunities for perfor- e mployee dea l er Both positions require excellent customer from mental illness. This position includes (ODOT) is seeking mance results. phone program. service and sales skills, sound decisionUNTIL FILLED. t elephone c o nsultation a n d cri s i s an Associate in EnDrug-free workplace. making, and the ability to understand and intervention in the facility. gineering 2 (Traffic EOE, Fax resumes retain a variety of complex product and BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST Staging/Roadway to 916- 9 41-9075 services information. Successful candidates Qualified applicants must have a v alid Designer) located in or email to Apply atwww. II, Adult Intensive Outpatient (2014will be able to work in a team environment and Bend, Oregon. This Idepalma© lincare.com smaitwireless.comfobs be PC-proficient. Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's 00091). Full-time position. Deadline: position functions as license at the time of hire, hold a valid the traffic c ontrol Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal Mid Oregon Credit Union offers a competitive TUESDAY, 09/23/14. staging and p l an history background check. salary package and p r ovides excellent lead for the roadbenefits. S e e our web site at BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, design unit and www.midoregon.com fo r mo r e de t a ils Wages dependent upon education and way Serving Central Oregon since I903 to develop traffic School Based Health Center Consultant including application form. experience, but will be between $23.08 to control and roadway $34.62/hr. E x c ellent benefit package, design plans. To ap(2014-00092). Full-time, limited duraBend including signing bonus. ply o n line, v i s it tion, grant-funded POSitiOn. Deadline: • Member Services Representative (Teller) www.odotjobs.com The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful, self-moti25 hours week Do you havestudent loans? Make a 2-year and see job code SUNDAY,09/28/14. vated person to work in the newsroom, assist• Member Service Representative (Teller) commitment and you w ill r eceive an ODOT1 4-0648OC. ing the features staff in a variety of duties, in40 hours week additional $10,000 that you can use to pay Applications must be BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, cluding with the production of a weekly arts Bend received by 1 1:59 down your loans. Do you need to relocate and entertainment section. The right candi• Contact Center Member Services Residential Specialist (2014-00094). p .m., October 6 , and find housing? We can help with that, date will enjoy a fast-paced work environment, Representative40 hours week 2014. ODOT is an too! Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, be very detail-oriented, understand the imporEqual Opportunity tance of accuracy, meet tight deadlines and Please send resume, 09/28/14. Please visit th e O regon Employment Employer. exercise excellent grammar, spelling and orcover letter and application to: Department or the Community Counseling ganization skills. The position is largely cleriMid Oregon FCU BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST III, Solutions website for an application or in nature with some opportunities for writAttn: HumanResources s u a a au cal contact Nina Bisson at 5 4 1-676-9181, © ing, so solid writing skills are a must. College COmmunity SuPPOrt SerViCeS SuPerviP.O. Box 6749, nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, degree and/or previous related experience is Auto -Sales Bend, OR 97708 sor (2014-00081). Full-time position. preferred for this 30-hour-per-week position. Heppner, OR 97836. Sales professional to The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an Mid Oregon Credit unionis a drug-free workplace Join Central Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. Oregon's l a r gest equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment new ca r de a ler drug screening is required prior to hiring. HEALTH EDUCATOR II, Immunization Airport Office Assistant Subaru of B e nd. To apply, please emailresume and any Program (2014-00093). Part-time Offering 401k, profit relevant writing samples to: sharing, m e d ical Office Assistant II (60% FTE) position. Deadline:SUNDAY, featuresassistant© bendbulletin.com Airport Airport plan, split shifts and No phone inquiries, please. Salary:$3,999- $4,916 09/28/14. paid vacation. ExpeSalary: $2,842 - $3,493 Non-Exempt, rience or will train. Won-Represented 90 day $1500 guarMEDICAL ASSISTANT (2014-00096). Non-Exempt, a ntee. Dress f o r Chief Financial Officer Non-Represented Half-time position, bilingual English/ success to work in our drug free work Community Counseling Solutions (CCS) Spanish required. DeadlineMONDAY, place. Please apply has an opening for a Chief Financial Business Coordlnator 09/29/14. at 2080 NE Hwy 20, Performs responsible, varied or specialized O fficer that will b e b a sed i n o u r Assists the Airport Director with the coordinacustomer service, clerical or secretarial duties Bend. See Bob or Heppner, Oregon office. tion and support of the budgetary and fiscal Devon. PERMIT TECHNICIAN (2014-00097). for the Airport department; performs related management functions o f t h e Ai r port. work as required. CCCS is a 5 0 1(c)(3) corporation that Performs a v a riety o f h i ghly-responsible, Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, AVON - Earn extra in- provides an array of diverse and dynamic complex, non-routine administrative duties Mandato Re uirements: requiring con f identiality, ind e pendent iolosn4. come with a new ca- social services, i ncluding: o utpatient, High school diploma or GED equivalent, speresidential and inpatient mental health reer! Sell from home, judgment, and decision-making skills with cialized courses in office practices and procePSYCHIATRIC NURSE I OR II (PHNII) minimal supervision. w ork, online. $ 1 5 treatment, public health and primary care, dures; and two (2) years progressive experistartup. For informa- outpatient alcohol and drug treatment, (201 4-00040). Will COnSider full or Partence in office administration, or any equivalent tion, call: developmental disability services, senior Mandator Re uirements: combination of experience and training which time equiValent, tW0 POSitiOnS aVailable. 877-751-0285 High School diploma or GED equivalent; programs, rental assistance, prevention, demonstrates the knowledge, skills and ability (PNDC) Bachelor's degree in Finance or Business and peer support services. We employ 130 to perform the described duties. Possession Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. Administration and at least four (4) years' individuals. The majority of services are of, or must obtain, a valid Oregon Driver's Li- BANKING/FINANCIAL experience in a c counting/budgeting and PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER cense within thirty (30) days from the date of provided in one or more of the counties of any Morrow, Wheeler, Grant, and G i lliam lease/property m a nagement, or hire; must have a safe driving record. Must equivalent combination of education and (2014-00001). Will COnSider full or Partpass an FBI background check. Counties, with a few programs serving progressively responsible experience, with larger regions. time equiValent, tW0 POSitiOnS aVailable. additional work experience directly related to C OMMUNITY CREDIT VN I O N Desirable Re ulrements: this field, s ubstituting fo r t h e r e q uired Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. Associates Degree in Business Administration Financial Advisor Duties of this position are complex and education on a ye a r f o r y e a r b a sis, or related field; current Notary Public in State Joina winning team! varied, and will include: planning, organizdemonstrating the above essential main job of Oregon; one (1) year municipal government OnPoint recently joined ing, directing and control the functions of PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE PROGRAM functions. entity experience; one (1) year work experi- forces with Raymond the business/finance programs of CCS, MANAGER(2014-00090). Full-time Poence in an airport customer service/office James Financial Ser- development and implementation policies, Desirable Re uirements: vices, one of the leading administration environment. Sition. Deadline: ThiS reCruitment Will procedures and practices for the organizaFour (4) years experience in governmental B roker/Dealers in t h e country. Together our tions business and f i nance systems, accounting and purchasing; four (4) years' remain OPen until 8 SufSCiellt POOI HOW TO APPLY firms have a commit- oversight of f u nds a n d i n vestments, experience in contract/project management or Request application packet from of applications has been received. related field; two (2) years' experience with ment to proyide an expreparation and development of agency DeAnne Wakefield, budgeting an d s c heduling o f mu l tiple Applications will be reviewed weekly ceptional client experi- budget, oversight of purchases, accounting City of Redmond Human contracts/projects in the aviation industry. ence to support and build systems and services, financial analysis, Resources Department, a successful investment payroll and benefits, and the manager who beginning OII Friday AuguSt 29, 2014. via email onlyprogram by a ssisting oversees senior programs. P e riodically, Projects Coordinator deanne.wakefieldOci.redmond.or.us members tomake sound this position will need to perform duties that Coordinates the airport's capital improvement DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS Complete application packets investment and financial are typically done by those they supervise program (CIP) to include performing grant APPLICATIONSONLINE. TO APPLY FOR planning choices. To must be submitted by administration, airport planning, project design, view the full job descrip- due to high workload or vacancies. This Spm, Tuesday, September 30, 2014. and project management of capital projects. THE ABOVELISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE position will oversee a staff of 12 dedicated tion and apply, visit: www.on ointcareers.com and talented employees. VISIT OUR WEBSITE ATwww.deschutes. Mandator Re uirements: High School diploma or GED equivalent; org/jabS. All CandidateS Will reCeiVe T he qualified individual will fill a k e y BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Bachelor's degree in Airport Management or General position in CCS's administrative structure. Business Administration; at least four (4) an email response regarding their The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturSearch the area's most years' experience i n a i rport/construction/ comprehensive listing of They will need to be able to carry out the day night shift and other shifts as needed. We application status after the recruitment mission, philosophy and quality services business management; and at least two (2) currently have openings all nights of the week. classified advertising... years' experience in grant administration; or real estate to automotive, that CCS delivers, be a dynamic team Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts hasclosed and applications have been any equivalent combination of education and start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and merchandise to sporting player, possess strong analytic skills, have reviewed. Notifications to candidates progressively responsible experience directly end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo- goods. Bulletin Classifieds demonstrated excellence in finance and related to this field, with additional work sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. appear every day in the management, be mature, proactive and experience substituting for t h e r e quired are Sent Via email Only. If yOU need Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a print or on line. positive, an effective communicator, and education on a ye a r f o r y e a r b asis, assistance, please contact the Deschutes minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts adhere to a high standard of professionalCall 541-365-5609 are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of www.bendbulletin.com ism and ethical behavior. Mi n imum demonstrating the above essential main job County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall functions. loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackrequirements include a Bachelor's degree ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701, The Bulletin in business administration or finance. Ideal ServingCentral oregonsince sata and other tasks. For qualifying employees we Desirable Re uirements: candidate will be a CPA, have 10 years of (541) 617-4722. Bachelor's Degree in Airport Management or offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, broad financial experience, and h ave short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Business Administration; four (4 ) y e ars' Civil Unit experience working for or with nonprofit Deschutes County encourages qualified experience in contract/project management or vacation and sick time. Drug test is required Supervisor corporations. related field; two (2) years' experience with prior to employment. The Jackson County budgeting an d s c h eduling o f mu l t iple PerSOnS With diSabilitieS to PartiCiPate Circuit C o ur t in This salaried position is overseen by the Please submit a completed application attencontracts/projects in the aviation industry; two in it s p r ograms and activities. Medford, O r egon Executive Director of Community Counseltion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available (2) year's experience in accounting. seeks a Civil Unit To requeSt infOrmatiOn in an alternate ing Solutions. The salary range for this at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanSupervisor. Salary HOW TO APPLY dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be position is $89,100 - $140,000 based upon format, please call (541) 617-4747, $4554 to $7417 per obtained upon request by contacting Kevin the individual's education, certifications and Request application packet from month. For further fax to (541) 385-3202 or Send email tO Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). e xperience. Exc e llent b e nefits. F o r DeAnne Wakefield, info and to apply go No phone calls please. Only completed appliadditional information please c o ntact CityofRedmond Human accessibilit)/@deschutes.org. to h t t p://courts.orcations will be considered for this position. No Kimberly Lindsay, preferably by email, at Resources Department, egon.gov/OJD/jobs resumes will be accepted. Drug test is rekimberly.lindsay@gobhi.net. Phone: via email onlyand click on "paid EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER quired prior to employment. EOE. 541-676-9181. For more information about deanne.wakefieldOci.redmond.or.us positions" by OctoWomen, minorities, and the disabled our agency visit www.communitycounselComplete application packets ber 5, 2014. Equal The Bulletin ingsolutions.org. must be submitted by opportunity emare encouraged toapply. sessiarcentral oregon sincesacs EOE ployer. 5pm, Friday, October 3, 2014.
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G4 SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 21 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745
•
Homes for Sale
•
Sales Associate —Part Time — Bend, OR At Hancock Fabrics our mission is to be the authority in all things sewing. We entrust our brand to those who share our passion for sewing, decorating and crafts. We are fast paced and we work hard! Our store and field associates are the heart of our business and are the key to reflecting our culture and brand. If this sounds like the culture you crave, we want to hear from you.
Sales Associate- Part-time
Requirements: • Must be available to work evenings, weekends and holidays as needed. • High School Diploma • Excellent customer service skills required • Passion for creativity, a plus
860
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
FSBO Motiyated, Direct sale, Quick Escrow new move-in ready, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sq ft. Quality home at $205,000. Call 541-279-8783
NOTICE:
32'x36' shop for rent between Redmond & Terrebonne. RV / boat, storage, workshop? $300/mo. 541-419-1917 632
AptiMultiplex General CHECKYOUR AD
Please send resumes to rmoon@hancockfabrics.com Hancock Fabrics is an Equal Opportunity Employer on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.
EPIC AIRCRAFT CAREER NIGHT Thursday, September 25th 5:00 PM — 7/00 PM 22550 Nelson Road by the Bend Airport
All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, amilial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified 748
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $18,000or best offer. 541-318-6049
880
880
881
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
870
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-81 5-2523
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, Gulfstream 24' BT professionally winterCruiser, 2004,2nd ized every year, cutowner, 25K miles. Indusoff switch to battery, trial V-10, 4-spd transmission with overdrive. 35 hrs plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water on gen.; stove & oven heater 8 air condihave never been used. tioning seldom used; New micro, new LED TV, just add water and it's BlueRay/DVD, all new ready to go! tires, back-up camera, $22,000 obo. Serious new awnings. Excellent! inquiries, please. Unable to travel anymore Stored in Terrebonne. due to health. 541-548-5174 $35,000. 541-548-3595
Harley Davidson 883 Sportster
1998, 20,200 miles,
exc. cond.,
$3,800.
541-548-2672.
18.5' Sea Ray 2000 4.3L Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/ CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond,$9500. 707-484-3518
HOLIDAY RAMBLER
VACATIONER 2003 8.1L Vs Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEI/y 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
Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago 31 J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling 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 buyers~541488-7179
2007 Jayco Jay Flight 29 FBS with slide out 8 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 $18,500 which is lower range of Kelly Blue Book. Call Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r 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 $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993
2008 FXDL Dyna Low (Bend) Northeast Bend Homes HD Rider, 3200 mi. Stage1 & The Bulletin Classified Seeking highly motivated professionals who Vance & Hines pipes, FSBO: Remodeled 4 2 are quality-focused, team-oriented, and Senior Apartmentbdrm 2 bath, fireplace, $12,500. 541-306-0166 mechanically proficient. Prior experience Independent Living ITASCA 1989 34', 91k 1634 sf home on large lot. is highly desirable but not required for ALL-INCLUSIVE 2622 NE Shepard Rd. HDFatBo 1996 miles. Asking $9,900 Heartland P rowler all positions. For more information, visit with 3 meals daily Look at: 541-610-7259 2012, 29PRKS, 33', vvwvv.epicaircraff.com or email Month-to-month lease, $299,000. 503-760-1861 Bendhomes.com like new, 2 slides-livkellys@epicaircraff.com. check it out! 750 19' Pioneer ski boat, Jayco Escapade Class C ing area & l a r ge Call 541-318-0450 1983, vm tandem 2005, original owner, less for Complete Listings of Redmond Homes 15 power awCOMPOSITE TECHNICIANS: trailer, V8. Fun & than 40K miles, air/heat/ Area Real Estate for Sale closet, Small studio downtown ning, power hitch & Prep molds and forms, cut materials using fast! $5800 obo. en. Health forces sale. Old Mill area. No pets, 3 bdrm 2.5 bath custom s tabilizers, 18 g a l . templates or g u ides, l ay-up c omposite no smoking $495 mo., home on 1.48 ac in Ter541-815-0936. 23,900. 541-280-6456 Completely water heater, full size material, vacuum bag parts for oven cure, rebonne. 2450 SF, Mtn $475 dep., All util. inRebuilt/Customized queen bed , l a r ge maintain records, conform to standard operat, • eee = = cluded. 541-330-9769 views, canal, shop, with 2012/2013 Award shower, porcelain sink ing procedures. bonus room. By owner, Winner & toilet. • Experience in composite fabrication pre-preg, 634 $379,000. 541-923-4995 Showroom Condition $25,000or make offer. wet lay-up and tooling highly desirable. AptiMultiplex NE Bend Many Extras 541-999-2571 • Competent working to blueprints, templates, 763 Winnebago C 22' Low Miles. sample parts, process sheets and other Recreational Homes 2002 - $30,500 Call for Specials! Jayco 1999 10'tent authorized information. $15,000 Providence 2005 Limited numbers avail. Big engine, heavy camper, surge brakes, & Property 2007 Bennlngton • Must be quality-focused, team-oriented, 541-546-4807 Fully loaded, 35,000 1, 2 & 3 bdrms duty, many extras, bearing buddies, gd Pontoon Boat computer competent, and highly professional. miles, 350 Cat, Very w/d hookups, condition, $2500 obo. Cabin adj. to F.S. Iand 2275 GL, 150hp 21,000 miles, like clean, non-smoker, patios or decks. 541-280-0570 8 mi. from Sisters, mtn Honda VTEC, less new. Please call for TRIM & DRILL TECHNICIANS: 3 slides, side-by-side Mountain Glen view. 1/7th share than 110 hours, details Trim and drill aircraft parts per approved refrigerator with ice 541-383-9313 $49,500. 541-928-6549 original owner, lots specs. Coordinate with Quality Control for maker, Washer/Dryer, 541-280-3251 Professionally managed by or 503-260-9166 of extras; Tennesparts inspection. Provide Engineering Change Flat screen TV's, In Norris & Stevens, Inc. see tandem axle Requests (ECR's), redlines, and comments for 771 motion satellite. trailer. Excellent Winnebago Sightseer process improvement and development. HD FXSBI 2006 new $95,000 Lots 27' 2002. workhorse condition, $23,500 • Must be able to read and understand aircraft cond., low miles, 541-480-2019 Houses for Rent as motor, Class A, 503%46-1804 parts drawings. Stage I download, exFSBO - 16178 Hawks ' slide living rm/di- Keystone Laredo31' NE Bend • Must be able to cut, trim and sand to a scribe Lair Rd., La Pine, OR. tras, bags. $7900 obo. nette, new tires. spare RY 20 06 w i th 1 2' RV line using power and hand tools and have Honda 3.2 gallon fuel 541-447-0887 1 acre lot w/ grandfatire carrier, HD trailer slide-out. Sleeps 6, AVAIL. NOW! 4 bdrm, experience with trim shop equipment, includtank fo r o u t board, CONSIGNMENTS t hered septic a p hitch, water heater, queen walk-around 2~/~ bath, 3-car gaWANTED ing drill press, grinders, hand drills, sanders, $20. 541-647-2685 proval. Close to Bend, micro/oven, genera- bed w/storage underrage, pe t f r i endly. We Do The Work ... and routers. tor, furn/AC, outside neath. Tub 8 shower. $1995 mo., Call Chris, Sunriver Resort, Mt. HD Softtail Deuce 2002, 880 You Keep The Cash! • Must be quality-focused, team-oriented, with Bachelor skiing. shower, carbon diox- 2 swivel rockers. TV. 541-480-6042 On-site credit Motorhomes basic computer skills to support paperless job broken back forces ide & smoke detector, Air cond. Gas stove 8 $35,000. Call Sandra approval team, tracking system. sale, only 200 mi. on fiberglas ext., elect. refrigerator/freezer. 541-695-3515. TURN THE PAGE web site presence. 1997 Bounder 34' new motor from Harstep, cruise control, Microwave. Awning. We Take Trade-Ins! For More Ads w/slide. $17,900. 775 QUALITY ENGINEER: ley, new trans case sho w er. CB radio, 60k miles, Outside Primary responsibilities f ocused t o ward and p arts, s p o ke Excellent condition, The Bulletin awning, TV antenna w Slide through storManufacturedi BIG COUNTRY RV must see! Ford 460 nondestructive t e s ting of comp osite wheels, new brakes, booster, flat screen a ge, E a s y Lif t . Mobile Homes Bend: 541-330-2495 w/Banks, new tires, components. Other areas of s upport to Brand new 3 bdrm 3 n early all o f bi k e 23" TV. A M/FM/CD $29,000 new; Redmond: dual A/C, rear camAsking$18,600 include training, mentoring and assisting with bath, hardwood floors, brand new. Has proof stereo. $2 3,995. 541-548-5254 Special 54'I -4947-4805 era, triple axle, Onan the Material Test L ab, M aterial Review, granite counters, ra- New3 Dream of all work done. Re541-548-2554 bdrm, 2 bath gen, 63k miles. Composite Fabrication, Drawing Interpretation diant heat in baths, movable windshield, $50,900 finished 541-306-9897 as needed. Qualifications: wrap-around d e ck, T-bags, black and all on your site. • 5 years of Quality experience with at least 3 $1400. Oct. thru June chromed out with a J and M Homes years as a Quality Engineer. or July lease. No pets, willy skeleton theme 541-548-5511 • Bachelor Degree in Aerospace, Quality or no smoking. on all caps and cov541-318-1414 related field; Quality Engineering Certificate ers. Lots o f w o r k, (QEC) desirable. heart and love went 652 • Composite fabrication/process experience, into all aspects. All Call 54I3853809 tapromote yourservice• Advertisefor 28daysstortingcr'lf0 paSw~ag IeemniVSrmmrwem> Houses for Rent with nondestructive inspection using done at professional ultrasonic techniques. 2007 Winnebago NW Bend shops, call for info. • Familiar with ISO 9001 and FAA manufacMust sell quickly due Outlook Class "C" turing and inspection requirements. to m e d ical bi l l s, 31', solar panel, Cat. Quaint westside cotHandyman Adoption Landscaping/Yard Care • Highly motivated, adaptable, self-sufficient, heater, excellent tage 1 bdrm, walk to $8250. Call Jack at and able to work effectively under pressure. 541-279-9538. condition, more exdowntown, park and PREGNANT? CON • Strong knowledge of engineering principles, Old Mill, W/D, gas tras. Asking $58K. SIDERING ADO P practices, manufacturing, and design. Ph. 541-447-9268 COLLINS heat, fenced back860 TION? Call us first. • Strong teamwork, leadership and oral/written Can be viewed at yard, no dishwasher, Motorcyclss & Accessories Living exp e nses, communication skills; able to work effectively Western Recreation $ 1050/mo. $11 0 0 housing, medical, and with FAA. dep. 541-419-1161 or (fop of hill) continued support af Aeration/llethatching • Strong background in dimensional and in Prineville. 541-389-9062. t erwards. Cho o se Ask aboutFREE added process inspection of composite components HONDA SCOOTER a doptive family o f services with seasonal and assemblies. 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. your choice. Call 24/7. contract! RV Parking cond., $975 obo. (541) 855-970-2106 • Spring Clean-up DIMENSIONAL INSPECTOR: 593-9710 or 350-8711 (PNDC) • Mowing 'Edging Must have p rior e xperience as q u ality RV space for rent, NE 2001 Honda Goldwing • Prunhag 'Weedeating i nspector working w it h m a chined a n d Redmond, $350/mo., KAWASAKI KLX125, 1600cc w/2005 Cali• FertiMng ' H a uSng Building/Contracting composite parts; prefer prior experience using i ncludes water & 2003, gd cond. $1100. fornia side car trike • Grounds Keeping a Faro Arm or CMM and GD&T. sewer. 541-419-1917 Allegro 32' 2007, like 541-593-8748 conversion, 40K acOw4me or eeeNyseruuesoPtios new, only 12,600 miles. NOTICE: Oregon state tual miles, every opFREE ESTIMATES 865 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 law requires anyone MATERIALS TESTING LAB TECHNICIANS: tion imaginable! CD, Call norutoscbedule~ con t racts for transmission, dual ex- who Seeking qualified technicians experienced in EMI ATVs AM/FM, cruise, has 5' j41-480haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- construction work to P714 composite materials t esting p rocedures, I&rake, side rails, some BONDED & IN URED [Pp op ~Q eling system, 5kw gen, be licensed with the including DMA, DSC, Short Beam Shear, riding gear. Well serConstruction Contracpower mirrors w/defrost, Tensile and Compression. Experience with viced. Iocated in Mt. 2 slide-outs with aw- tors Board (CCB). An flow and gel measurements and equipment, Painting/Wall Covering Vernon, OR. Trailer license nings, rear c a mera, active load frame operation for mechanical materials optional.$22,500. means the contractor Landscaping/Yard Care trailer hitch, driyer door testing, and specimen preparation highly 541-350-5050 w/power window, cruise, is bonded & insured. desirable. exhaust brake, central Verify the contractor's All American H onda Bi g R e d vac, satellite sys. Asking CCB l i c ense at 713 UTV. Like new with $67,500. 503-781-8812 www.hirealicensedPainting Delivery Real Estate Wantedi just over 40 hours contractor.com CENTRAL OREGON • Interior and Exterior use. Includes winch, or call 503-378-4621. SERVING Since 2003 Seeking small piece of 5-foot snow blade, The Bulletin recom- Residential & Commercial • Family.Owned with hookups for 2005 HD Heritage Softhard roof, half windmends checking with • Residential & $upplement Your Income land my new mfd 1 200 Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of shield. L ists over the CCB prior to con- Sprinkler Blow&ut Commercial s q.ft. h o me. C a l l extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt $14,000; will sell for tracting with anyone. Sprinkler Repair • 40 years experience cond., $9750 firm 831-840-0301 (Bend) Some other t rades Back Row Testing b est o ffe r o v e r Now taking bids for an Independent Contract 541-316-8668 $11,000. Call also re q uire addi• Senior Discounts • WE BUY HOMES• Hauler to deliver bundles of newspapers from Beaver Marquis, 541-575-4267 tional licenses and • 5.year Warranties MAIWTIlVANCI Any conditionBend toLaGrande, Oregon on a weekly ba1993 certifications. Close in 7 days. sis. This will also include a monthly delivery • Fall Clean Up itsk aboutour 40-ft, Brunswick Scott L. Williams Real than is made en route to LaGrande. Must SUMMER SPECMI.I floor plan. Many Debris Removal • Weekly Mowing Estate - 800-545-6431 have own vehicle with license and insurance extras, well main8 Edging Call 541 337.6149 and the capability to haul up to 6000 lbs. tained, fire supCCB4193960 Candidates must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. • Bi-Menthlysc pression behind Selected candidate will be i ndependently Monthly Maintenance Harley Davidson refrig, Stow Master contracted. 2001 FXSTD, twin Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' OPEN 5000 tow bar, • Bark, Reck, Etc. To apply or for more info contact cam 88, fuel injected, bed, with ramps. $700 12:30 - 4:30 $22,995. James Baisinger at Vance & Hines short obo. 541-549-4834 or Sat. & Sun. 541-383-3503 LAMlSGLPING 'baisin er@bendbulletin.com shot exhaust, Stage I 541-588-0068 Will Haul Away 2839 NE Forum Drive • Landscape with Vance 8 Hines 3 bdrm, 2'/~ bath, large + FREE ® fuel management Construction 870 master suite, great 573 custom parts, Boats & Accessories For Salvage Y'. • Water Feature loft, family area, system, extra seat. Business Opportunities room, RIM(jICC) European Installation/Ma!nt. Lovely home Any Locatlon $10,500OBO. 5 l3z@zm $249,700. .4 Removal • Pavers Call Today WARNING The Bulletin Professional 16' Driftboat Call Steve © 541-516-8684 recommends that you • Renovations Also Cleanups Alumaweld 541-550-0333 Fleetwood D i scovery L4 Cleenouts Painter i nvestigate ever y • Irrigatfons Oars, anchor, 40' 2003, diesel, w/all phase of investment engine mount, REDUCED! Installation Repaint Open 12-3 options - 3 slide outs, opportunities, espeand trailer. $2950. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, c ially t h os e f r o m 19491 Sugar Mill Specialist! 54'I -546-7144 Senior Discounts etc., 32,000 m iles. out-of-state or offered Lp. Wintered in h e ated Bonded and Insured Oregon License Private Setting by a person doing 528 shop. $82,000 O.B.O. ¹ 1 861 47 LLC in River Rim business out of a lo541%15%458 Handyman 541-447-8664 cal motel or hotel. InShelley Griffin, Loans & Mortgages Lcl& s759 Harley D a vidson 541-815-2888 Broker vestment o ff e rings 2006, FXDLI Dyna 541-280-3804 must be r e gistered WARNING Low Rider, Mustang I DO THAT! NOTICE: Oregon LandThe Bulletin recomwith the Oregon Deseat with backrest, mends you use cau- partment of Finance. new battery, windscape Contractors Law USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! If you or a loved one tion when you proWe suggest you con16' West Coast shield, forward con(ORS 671) requires all Door-to-door selling with e suffered a st r oke, b sult your attorney or rheesrnereroup.com vide personal Aluminum, $3950, trols, lots of chrome, businesses that adheart attack or died information to compa- call CON S U MER 65 hp Mercury, Screamin' Eagle exvertise t o pe r formfast results! It's the easiest after using testosternies offering loans or HOTLINE, Shoreline Trailer, haust, 11K mi. SeLandscape Construc- way in the world to sell. one supplements you Open 12-3 1-503-378-4320, credit, especially 2014 Stickers, Fish nior owned, w ell tion which includes: may be e ntitled to Handyman/Remodeling 61076 Ruby Peak 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. those asking for adFinder. maind! $7950 L a l anting, deck s , The Bulletin Classified monetary damages. Residential/Commercial Ln. vance loan fees or 541-598-5111 ences, arbors, Pine (928)581-9190 541-385-5809 Call 8 6 6-520-3904! Hidden Hills companies from out of water-features, and inswaIJobsro (PNDC) DID YOU KNOW that Zero Energy Home state. If you have stallation, repair of irEIthv Roo>n Remndels not only does newsDavid Sailors, concerns or quesbuild your dream home at rigation systems to be Parking Lot Maintenanc Garage ~gasizalicm • 5 t Broker tions, we suggest you paper media reach a I l icensed w it h th e THE HIGHLANDS AT BROKEN TOP Home InsPection RePairs 541-420-3910 consult your attorney HUGE Audience, they Landscape ContracQuality, Horresl Work also reach an ENor call CONSUMER tors Board. This 4-digit Grandma Lorraine EdGAGED AUDIENCE. Fi number is to be inHOTLINE, 54t.31 7.9768 wards of Livingston, TX, aennis Discover the Power of 1-677-677-9392. caul51 573 Bondedl/esaed cluded in all adveris hoping to reach Justin, Newspaper Advertisrheearnereroup.com tisements which indiJaxon, Pearl or Shawn. in six states - AK, cate the business has Grandma's very con- BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS BANK TURNED YOU ing MT, OR, UT,WA. a bond,insurance and Lot 25 is one of the finest parcels of land avail- cerned about T hom. DOWN? Private party ID, Open 12-3 Search the area's most a free rate broworkers compensaable today with Ponderosas to the west and Please call 936-252-2168 comprehensive listing of will loan on real es- For 63178 Rfverstone tion for their employ- AB PARKING LOT~ call the meadow to the east. Where else can you or email LorraineEEdwards tate equity. Credit, no chure classified advertising... ees. For your protec916-266-6011 or Dr. MAINTENANCE find 10 acres of gorgeous land just minutes ~0 problem, good equity email Hear the Deschutes from downtown? Call for an appointment to Meet singles right now! real estate to automotive, tion call 503-378-5909 For all your parklng lot/ is all you need. Call cecelia©cnpa.com merchandise to sporting or use our website: From the Front Deck drlvewayneeds. see this lovely piece of land. Offered at Oregon Land Mort- (PNDC) No paid operators, goods. Bulletin Classifieds www.lcb.state.or.us to Ray Bachman, • Commsrclal Sweeper $695,000. gage 541-388-4200. just real people like appear every day in the check license status • CrackFlll • Seal Coat Broker you. Browse greetbefore contracting with • Strlplng • DustControl 541-408-0696 print or on line. ings, exchange mesthe business. Persons LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Call The Bulletin At • De-Iclng Call 541-385-5809 Holly Polis, Broker sages and connect www.bendbulletin.com doing secured trust deeds & lan d scape Call Scott Mays T«E~ 541-385-5809 541.419.8710 live. Try it free. Call maintenance do not note,some hard money Place Your Ad Or E-Mail PENNBROOK COMPANY 541%15-2382 loans. Call Pat Kellev now: 8 77-955-5505. r equire an L C B rheearnereroup.com The Bulletin ccs ¹2033ss 541-382-3099 ext.13. At: www.bendbulletin.com Servrng Cenlral Oregon srnce 19t8 cense. (PNDC) 541-385-5809
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MARTIN JAMES
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 2014 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 881
882
908
932
933
935
935
940
975
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Vans
Automobiles
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
Laredo 30'2009
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
882
Fifth Wheels
JEEP WRANGLER
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1974 Bellanca 1730A
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
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
$25,500
541-419-3301
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
IUU
TI •
II
5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, Reduced to $2500. OR For Hire
Call for quote Ask for Theo,
541-260-4293
Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them insomeway. This
advertising tip brought to you by
The Bulletin CHECKYOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. RSpellcheckR and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The BulletinClassified
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options - reduced by $3500 to $31,500. 541-420-3250
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w
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $19,995
(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)
1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $15,000. 541-788-0427 I
Mercedes 97K Miles $8999. 541-504-8399
hoses, camlocks, $ 2 5,000. p ump, 4 - 3
V W CONV.
925
Utility Trailers
931
00
Automotive Parts, ervice & Accessories
$150,000
(located @ Bend) 541-288-3333
=
2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt 8 cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.
1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399
120 gal, fuel tank for pickup bed, $85. 933 541-549-8908 Pickups 14 N rims great for this year's snow tires, $60 obo, 541-279-8908 1965 Corvair doors, $50. 541-549-8908 4 chrome whls & tires, P215/60R16 $ 1 4 5. 2005 Diesel 4X4 Chev Crewcab du541-549-8908 ally, Allison tranny, '65-'66 Mustang original tow pkg., brake conbucket seats, completely troller, cloth split rebuilt, better than new. front bench seat, 1957 DeSoto 341 cu. in. only 66k miles. dis. headers, unused. Very good condition, 390 Ford cu. in. dis. Original owner, headers, just like new. $34,000 Plus other older Ford & or best offer. Chevy parts. 541-408-7826 541-447-7272 Chiltons/Haynes manuals, 16, all fo r $ 25. PYo~ber/ 541-408-8346 leave msg
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech BoA36, new 10-550/ Dodge whls (4) 8-lug, Chevy Silverado 2004 Keystone Raptor, 2007 nanza 16x6 new w/trim rings, LS, 2WD, V8, 57k miles, prop, located KBDN. 37 toy hauler,2 slides, $65,000. 541-419-9510 $120. 541-549-8908 includes bedliner, hard generator, A/C, 2 TVs, www.N4972M.com satellite system w/auto Schauer aut o matic tonneau cover. Asking $10,750. 541-588-0131 seek, in/out sound sysbattery charger, $5. tem,sleeps 6,many ex541-408-8346 Where can you find a tras.$29,999. In Madras, helping hand'? call 541-771-9607 or Need help fixing stuff? 541-475-6265 Call A Service Professional From contractors to find the help you need. yard care, it's all here 1/5th interest in 1973 www.bendbulletin.com in The Bulletin's Cessna 150 LLC WANTED "Call A Service 150hp conversion, low older Dodge Ram time on air frame and Cummins turbo diesel Professional" Directory engine, hangared in pickup, 4WD 5spd, Ford F250 1984 4x4 King Kit Companion '94 26', Bend.Excellent perany condition, farm Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift 1 slide, new stove/fridge, formance & affordtruck okay. Private kit, 90% tires, good wood comes with gen. Reable flying! $6,000. buyer, CASH Dan, truck! $2000 or best ofduced to $4000. 541-410-6007 971-231-4241 541-389-5788 fer. 541-279-8023
ROBBERSON LIIIcNLN ~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 9/30/1 4
541-419-5980
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Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags,$5995. 541-61 0-6150
Chev E uinox
read a N e wspaper print copy each week? Discover the Power of PRINT N e wspaper Advertising in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, U t a h and Washington with just one phone call. For a FREE adv e rtising network brochure call
Ford Focus2010
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Nissan Murano 2012, AWD, auto, cloth, CD, pw, pdl. (exp. 9/21/14) Vin ¹229346 Stock ¹83013
C J5 1 9 7 8 V-8 , Lockers, new soft
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
ROBBERSON
obo. 541-519-1627
Just too many collectibles?
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 09/30/14
Dod e Nitro 2011
Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
(photo for illustration onlyi
top, power steering, oversized h e ater, many extras. $6,000
$15,979 S UBA R U .
916-288-6011
Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154827 $11,977 LINcoLN ~
or
ceceliaocnpa.com (PNDC)
l aaaaa
Dodge Avenger 2013, pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. (exp. 9/21/14) Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹83015
2003 Like New "Rare" 17' Trail-Lite. Pull with 6-cyli Good $13,979 tires, awning, spare, 541-385-5809 AC/heater+ central SUBAR LL SUBARUOSSRRD.COU ducts, flatscreen TV/ T oyota RAV4 2 0 0 1 CD, surround AM/FM/ Hwy 20, Bend. 4WD, 1 owner - auto, CD band radio, sleeps 2060 NE 877-266-3821 no accidents, 82,000 4, electric brks, EAZDlr ¹0354 miles, 4 cyl, 4 door, Lift hitch, battery, silver/gray. $3,900. for large frig, microwave, Ford FusionSE inquiries call or text stove/hood, smoke 240-397-6808 detector, 2 propane tanks, tub/shower, gaVolvo XC60 2010 raged, custom cover, tags good, owner's manual. Retails $12,890; sacrifice 2012. Low miles$6850. 541-593-1221 high miles per gallon$15,977 Vin¹302474 Camaro 2011 ALL THE FUN STUFF! - 4X4 ROBBERSON Vin¹019617 DNONL» ~ ~maaaa $28,977 541-312-3986 ROBBERSON Dlr ¹0205. Pricing D NSOLN ~ ~SSSS a a good thru 9/30/1 4 Convertible.End of 541-312-3986 Season Special! vin ¹213931 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 09/30/14 $23,977 ROBBERSON
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4x4 Looks as good as Its name! Vin ¹ 520014 17,977 ROBBERSON i LINCOL N ~
~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/14
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GMC Suburban 1997, fully loaded, daily driver, extra clean, $2650. 1997 Chevy Astro, runs good, $1300. 541-410-4596
940
~
Vans
mams ~
Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well main., very clean. 1 owner $9,500 obo. 480-266-7395 (Bend)
541-312-3986
(photo for illustration only)
Honda CRV EX 2007, AWD, 4x4, leather, moonroof. (exp. 9/21/14) Vin ¹097452 Stock ¹44639A
Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014
+~
%S! Chevy Express Cargo
CHECK YOURAD Van 2011, 2500. CD, on the first day of pubA/C, ps, with ladder lication. If a n e rror rack. may occur in your ad, (exp. 9/21/1 4) 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. p lease contact u s Vin ¹126159 877-266-3821 and we will be happy Hyundai Accent GL Stock ¹44535A Dlr ¹0354 to fix it as soon as we 1999, auto, CD. $22,979 can. Deadlines are: (exp. 9/21/1 4) Weekdays 12:00 noon VIN ¹584982 S UBA R U . for next d ay, S a t. Stock ¹44383B 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 11:00 a.m. for Sun$3,979 877-266-3821 day; Sat. 12:00 for Dlr¹0354 Monday. S UBA R U 541-385-5809 Hyundai Tucson, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. The Bulletin Classified 2011 l oaded, i m 877-266-3821 maculate, 39k mi., Dlr ¹0354 prem. pkg, bronze, I. panoramic sunroof, heated seats, Navigation, B l uetooth, Chrysler Town & AWD. great mileage, Country LXI 1997, Chevy Malibu 2012, h andles great i n beautiful inside & Lots of options; sunsnow. Wa r ranty, out, one owner, nonroof, 6 speed trans Inflnitl l30 2001 One owner, nonsmoker,. Ioaded with with manual option smokers, clear title. options! 197,892 mi. great condition/ $19,500 Service rec o rds bluetooth, o n Star, well maintained, satelite, (under Blue Book) available. $4 , 950. Sirius 127k miles. Call (805)610-6415 heated seats, pw, Call Mike, (541) 815$5,900 obo. in Terrebonne pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech 8176 after 3:30 p.m. 541-420-3277 engine, 20 MPG city, 35 MPG hwy, USB port, Ipod r eady, Jeep Liberty 2012 Toyota Sienna S. i $14,900 OBO. 2005
$23,999 S UBA R U .
®
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
®
$22,500.
©
SUBARUOSBRRD.OOD
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 SURARUOSSRUD,OOII Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 DID YOU KNOW 144 Dlr¹0354 million U.S. A d ults 975
2005. All the good-
ies. Must see only $18,998 Vin ¹192111
©
$23,979 S UBA R U
Automobiles
541-820-3724
541-771-7118
Columbia 400,
Cadillac Escsfad
(photo for illustration only) 200 LX 2012, Toyofa Sienna 2011, Chrysler pdl, tilt, CD, auto. LE model, 7 passen- pw, (exp. 9/21/1 4) ger, stow-n-go seatVIN ¹292213 ing alloy wheels Stock ¹83014 (exp. 9/21/14) $13,979 Vin ¹019106. Stock ¹43981A S UBA R U
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
541-385-5809
Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp N
0 S
Financing available.
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
450SL, 1975
Landscaping utility trailer, $1200.
1/3 interestin
Chevy Tracker 1998 New tires, stereo & speakers, Warn hubs, battery. Seats in great shape, hard top and soft top, interior floors have been line x'ed for easy cleaning. 5 spd manual trans no a/c, runs great! 30+ mpg, 100k mi., has been tow vehicle. $4800. OBO 541-389-1135, Gene
CHEVELLE MALIBU
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
S
908
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
916
SNUGTOP pickup canopy for Ford F250 short bed, white, like new, $400. 541-416-9686
Aircraft, Parts & Service
S UBA R U .
935 Sport Utility Vehicles
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
541-480-1687.
®
Garage Sales
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
Call Dick,
$22,979
BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - coid Jeepster Commando 1968 weather pkg, premium 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, com- pkg & technology pkg. pletely restored. $12,000 Keyless access, sunobo. 808-430-5133 or roof, navigation, satel541-382-6300 lite radio, extra snow Save money. Learn tires. (Car top carrier to fly or build hours Mercedes 380SL 1982 not included.)$22,500. with your own air- Roadster, black on black, 541-91 5-9170 c raft. 1968 A e r o soft & hard top, excellent Commander, 4 seat, condition, always gam i les, 150 HP, low time, raged. 155K Garage Sales full panel. $23,000 $11,500. 541-549-6407 obo. Contact Paul at Garage Sales 541-447-5184.
RV CONSIGNIIIIENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
$14,500 obo.
• a
Complete restoration, $32,900.
Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546
King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-41 9-0566
ready, Many upgrade options, financing available!
Toyota Tacoma 2012, 5 spd, xcab, pw, pd, bed liner. (exp. 9/21/1 4) Vin ¹014333 Stock ¹83077
Chevelle Mallbu 1966
HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.
885
Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003, 1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 80W solar panel, walkaround queen+ sofa/bed, loads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., brand new tires licensed 2015. Must see!$13,700. 541-389-9214
3300 sq.ft. Hangar Prineville Airport 60'wide by 55' deep with 16' bi-fold door. Upgrades include, T-6 lighting, skylights, windows, 14' side RV door, infra-red heating, and bathroom, $155,000, Call Bill 541-480-7930
MONTANA 3585 2008,
Canopies & Campers
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird
Ford F250 4x4 1996, x-cab, long wheel base, Buick Skylark 1972 brush guard, tool box, Dreams do come true! 541-771-1667 or Pampered from day one! $3000 541-633-3607 17K original miles. Photosathemmings.com $18,000. 541 323-1898
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541-504-6974
CN,
2011 Loaded and Super Clean 4x4. $23,977 Vin¹463850 ROBBERSON LIIlcNLII ~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014
Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149708
Leather, Loaded and AWD. 76k miles ¹044698 $18,977
21,977 ROBBERSON i LINCNL N ~
ROBBERSON y
~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 9/30/14
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
Countryman AWD Loaded - Get there in style! ¹H99552 $24,977 ROBBERSON
Sa a m a
541.312.3986
DLR¹0205 pricing good thru 09/30/14
D
'10 -3 lines, 7 days '16- 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014
SUNDAY
12PM-4PM Tour this b e autiful custom h o m e i n T hree P i ne s n e a r S hev l i n Pa r k . Prairi e s t y l e y e t contemporary. Many
N
exceptional features. 19 1 86 Mt . Shasta Dr.s 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, B<tttt OR bonus r o o m . F o r Directions: thevlfn Park Rd. ttiest, 9774 QQQ left on /fi/r Park CommonsDr, left on Homesites available! /e,gefferson p~, /e/t onie, thrtita Dr. and follovio ihe end. Bttt'/deri
D AVID RI N K
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541-948-2525 www.derink.com Lic.¹67716
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I
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Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SEGolden GatePlace,Bend of walking trails. Tour a DirortionsrFrom theparkway, east variety of single level and on Reed Market,south on 15th,then 2 story plans. follow signs.
TEAM DELAY
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SAT. 8r. SUN. 12PM - 3PM
THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
HOSted 6 LiSted byr
' I
Homes Starting Mid-$200s
Pr(ncipa/ Broker
JOHN TAYLOR Broker
541-480-0448 LiSted byr
E DIE DEI AY
MARY ELLAN SHAW
541-420-2950
Broker R 8 A L T 0
R 8
541-610-3976
$1,400,000 taM~ TAYLOR i S H A W
20781 NE Comet Lane
under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention Directions:North on Boyd Acres,
given io allow for tons o( ¹ight on Sierra, Le ft on Black PNtider, natural light a much more. Right on CometLane. Loo/tforugns. Come by the model home for starting in the low more information and plans.
HOSted 6LiSted byr NORTHWEST LIVING
$200,000s
This brand new home in NW Redmond's premier neighborhood oi Vista Meadowshas so much io offe¹ Featuring 3bd, 3Im. rr 1929SF, this floor plan includes amain floor office that could be used as bdrm. Great room offering a cotr fireplace w/custom mantel and kitchen with rons of cabinets and countertops that allow for storage and food 3150 NW 17thSt., Redmond rep. Master suite w/a / tray ceiling Directiorsrsfronh on Hwy 97, left on spacious walk-in closet. 3 car ft garage, front tt rear yardlandscaping iriy Qrnnce ArIec right on /rty 10th le o right on 1 7th house w/spltnkler system offer curb appeal. os f(rr rpnce Atve ghtPastTeakaeodlane HOSted Saturday byr os ri
JULIE FOUNTAIN Broker
MIKEJONES
Broker
Broker tt E A
I. T 0 R s
$278,900
541-788-2519 HOSted Sunday byr
RHIANNA KUNKLER
541-30G-0939
I
SAT f!k SUN 12PM - 3PM
Homes starting in the Iow
$200,000s. Brand new homes in Bend with the quality Pahliscb is known fo r stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with
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THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM
Contemporary new construction home byR,D,BuildingII Design. A 16 k, patiodoorbringsthe oustside in with full Qscademountain views! This home boasts 4700sq.ft. with 4 bedrooms, 3.5baths, heateddriveway, wine tasting room, media room, 2897 NW Horizon Dr. exercise room,office, wraparound Directions: M. Washing(on io deck,waterfeatureaiid muchmore! Summit, turn le P on Horizon.
HOSted & LiSted byr
I I
Ct
541-350-2226
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OREGO N
REAUT GROUP, uC. Adding vntAAe to trsARtEtosts