Bulletin Daily Paper 09-23-13

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75i t

MONDAY September 23,2013

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TODAY'S READERBOARD

U.S. CENSUS SURVEY

earesi ensre on ic ans

Body found —Thecarof a missing Bend manwasfound near Chemult, along with a body. Visitbendbuffetin.cnm for updates.A7

Black widow —Aman recounts howa shy, venomous

BEND POLICE

• The surveyalsoshows Central Oregoniansareearning lessthan in 2009

ea er

spider's bite sends him to the

hospital — and anexperimental new treatment.A3

Central Oregon statistics

Bend-Prineville Cemdined

Pac Am golf —competi-

According to the U.S.Census Bureau, Central Oregon residents are poorer andrely on publicly funded health insurance programsmorethan they did three years ago. TheBureau conducts the American Community Surveyeachyear, in which it samples asmall percentage of the population to estimate overall trends.

(All of Deschutes and Crook counties)

tion begins today in17th annual amateur golf tourney.B7

Statistical Area Ststers ~

By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

Pnnevllle •

• •

Redmond Creek

County g

Emmye —"Breaking Bad" denies onlineseries"Houseof Cards" top dramahonors; "Mod-

".'"' Deschutes County

ern Family" wins in comedy.A9

Total households:74,947 Households with children:20,646 Unemployed:10,139(7%)

Kenya update —Kenyan forces launch major operation to end the mall standoff, rescuing "most" hostages.A2

MEDIAN HOUSEHOLDINCOME OVER TIME FiSCal ShOWdOWn — Only eight days left for a solution.A2

PUBLICHEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE OVER TIME

$ 44,Q44

$45, 7 8 1

$45,5 8 9

22.5%

2010

2011

2012

2009

26.9%

26.2%

26.8%

2010

2011

2012

And a Wed exclusiveKindergarten isn't the play-

ground of fun it used to be,as most schools are shifting to direct instruction and testing.

bendduffetin.cnm/extras

2009

TYPE OFINSURANCE COVERAGE IN2012

INCOME DISTRIBUTION IN2012

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Consumers face imited choicesin hea th care

$150,000 to $199,999 22%

$100,000 to $149',999 11.3%

Coveragethrough a private arrangementsuch asan employer-sponsored plan or direct pay 47.7% (86,895)

18.5% (33,689)

$10,000 to $14,999 6.7%

Othercoverage arrangements (includes TRICAREand Veterans Health benefits)

$15,000 to $24,999 13.5%

$75,000 to $99,999 11.9%

$50,000 to $74,999 179'/

No health insurance coverage at all

Less than $10,000 8

)

9.2% (16,764) $25,000 to $34 999 9.3%

Coveragethrough Medicare or a combination of Medicare and a private insuranceprogram

$35,000 to $49,999 16.5%

12.7% (23,073)

Source American Community Survey

p

Coveragethrough the OregonHealth Plan ora combination of Medicare andthe OHP

11 9% (21,636)

By Mac McLean •The Bulletin

New York Times News Service

entral Oregon residents are using publicly funded health care plans like the Oregon Health Plan considerably more than they did in 2009, according to a recent report from the U.S. Census Bureau. They're earning less money than they did three yems ago as well. According to the 2013 American Community Survey, almost 49,000 residents of Crook and Deschutes counties — about 26.8 percent of the region's population — received their health insurance coverage from the Oregon Health Plan, Medicare or another public health plan like TRICARE in 2012. The survey found 47.7 percent of the population received private health insurance benefits through their employersor purchased insurance them-

selves, and 18.5 percent didn't have any health insurance at all. According to the survey's estimates, the number of Central Oregon residents who received their health insurance coverage exclusively through a private arrangement fell almost ll percentfrom 96,247 in 2009 to 86,895 in 2012. People made up this loss by turning to the state-managed Oregon Health Plan or the federally managed Medicare program for their health insur-

ance coverage. The number of Central Oregonians who received theircoverage exclusively through OHP or a combination of OHP and Medicare increased by 23.9 percent between 2009 and 2012, according to the survey's estimates, while the number of people who received their c o v erage e xclusively through Medicare or a combination of Medicare and a private health insurance plan increased by 14.9 percent. See Census/A6

Syria's Islamistrebelsrake in private funds By Joby Warrick The Washington Post

GAZIANTEP, TurkeyThe stream of U.S. weapons heading to moderate rebel

groups in Syria is being offset bya fresh torrent ofcash for Islamist extremists, much of it from small networks of Arab donors who see the Syr-

ian conflict as a step toward a broader Islamist uprising across the region, U.S. and Middle Eastern officials say. The private donors, who use Twitter and other social media to collect millions of dollars from sympathetic Muslims, are providing crucial backing for Islamist

militias that appear to be

gaining ground in northern and eastern Syria, even as fighting stalls elsewhere, the officials said. Dollars raised over the Internet are wired between private banking accounts and hand-delivered by courier, often in border towns like this

Page B10

city of 1.4 million, about 20 miles from the Syrian frontier, according to Middle Eastern intelligence officials who monitor the activity. Some fundraising pitches ask for specific pledges to cover the cost of a weapon, for example, or to finance an operation. SeeSyria/A5

INDEX

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly cloudy High 63, Low 39

Bend Police on Thursday accepted a $196,786 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice that will fund a program to hire an employee to manage and expand Deschutes County's crisis intervention team. In March, the department applied, in partnership with the Deschutes County Health Services Department and other local agencies, for grant funds from the Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Grant Program to hire a CIT coordinator. The coordinator must work with local law enforcement jurisdictions, social services and mental health services to identify individuals who have a high risk of mental illness and help them access appropriate support and services to reduce the risk of recidivism, said Bend Police Lt. Chris Carney. "There was a transient man who we had 50 contacts with before people realized the problem was that he was in a mental health crisis," he said. "We hope with this new position we will be able to identify individuals earlier before they're in major crisis mode and end up in jail." The coordinator will work to expand the CIT program to increase the number of officers trained in crisis intervention. See Grant/A8

Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin

By Robert Pear WASHINGTON — Federal officials often say that health insurance will cost consumerslessthan expected under President Barack Obama's health care law. But they rarely mention one big reason: Many insurers are significantly limiting the choicesofdoctorsand hospitals available to consumers. From California to Illinois to New Hampshire, and in many states in between, insurers are driving down premiums by restricting the number of providers who will treat patients in their new health plans. When insurancemarketplaces open Oct. 1, most of those shopping for coverage will be low- and moderateincome people for whom price is paramount. To hold down costs, insurers say, they have created smaller networks of doctors and hospitals than are typically found in commercial insurance. And those health care providers will, in many cases, be paid less than what they have been receiving from commercialinsurers. Some consumer advocates and health care providersare increasingly concerned. Decades of experience with Medicaid, the program for low-income people, show that having an insurance card does not guaranteeaccess to specialists or other providers. SeeHealth care/A5

0 I I' CI'ISIS

Calendar A7 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6De ar Abby Comics/Puzzles C3-4 Horoscope

C4 Local/State A 7- 8 SpottsMonday B1-10 A9 Movies A 9 Tee to Green B 7 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 110, No. 266, 26 pages, 3 sections

NASA'shunt for the elusive Martian By Joel Achenbach The Washington Post

Martian life is awfully cryptic. That's a scientific term: It means life that is out of sight, below the surface, burrowed into ecological niches not easily scrutinized by robotic sentinels from the planet Earth. Or perhaps it's not anywhere. Mars may be dead as dead can be. Going back to the 19th century, a persistent feature of hypothetical Martian life has been the way it has bewitched and teased earthlings but then refused to materialize. Time and again, scientists have detected signatures of Martian life, only to discover that they were written in vanishing ink. Most notorious were the canals on Mars promulgated in the 1890s by the great astronomer Percival Lowell, who saw them as evidence of an ancient civilization. They were purely an optical illusion. See Martian/A6

+ .4 We ljserecycled newsprint

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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013

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DEPARTMENT HEADS

NATION 4% ORLD

en an orces os ' os a esarerescue By Jason Straziuso

ter that security forces had and Tom Odula launched a "MAJOR" assault The Associated Press to end the bloody siege. "This will end tonight. Our NAIROBI, Kenya — Helicopterscircling overhead, Kenya's forces will prevail. Kenyans are military launched a major op- standing firm against aggreseration Sunday at an upscale sion, and we will win," Kenya's Nairobi mall and said it had National Disaster Operation rescued "most" ofthe hostages Centre said on Twitter. being held captive by al-QaidaThe Kenya Defense Forces linked militants during a twolater said it had rescued "most" day standoff that killed at least hostages and had taken control 68 people and injured 175. of most of the mall, though it At daybreak on M o nday, did not provide details. however, about five minutes Many of the rescued hosof sustained gunfire could be tages — mostly adults — were heard being fired out of the suffering from d ehydration, mall, a clear indication that Col. Cyrus Oguna, a military at least one gunman was still spokesman, told The Associfree and that the standoff con- ated Press. He refused to say tinued. And hours after Kehow many hostages were resnyan officials said most hos- cued or how many were still tages had been released, no being held. He said some of the furtherupdates were released attackers had "most probably" by authorities. been killed in the operation. The military assault began The assault came about 30 shortly before sundown Sun- hours after 10 to 15 al-Shabab day, with one helicopter skim- extremists stormed the mall ming very close to the roof of Saturday f ro m t w o s i d es, the shopping complex as a loud throwing grenades and firing explosion rang out, far larger on civilians. than any p r evious grenade Loud exchanges of gunfire blast or gunfire volley. rang out from inside the fourKenyan police said on Twit- story mall throughout Sunday.

PakiStan SuiCide bnmding —A pair of suicide bombers blew themselves upamid hundreds of worshippers at a historic church in northwestern Pakistan on Sunday, killing 78 people in the deadliest-ever attack against the country's Christian minority. A wing of the

Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the bombing, raising new questions about the government's push to strike a peace deal with the militants to end a decadelong insurgency that has killed thou-

sands of people. Mel'kel WinS re-8ISCtinn —Chancellor Angela Merkel led her conservatives to a stunning victory in Germany's election Sunday, a

Kenyan troops were seen carrying in at least two rocketpropelled grenades. Al-Shabab m ilitants reacted angrily t o the helicopters on Twitter and warned that the Kenyan military action was endangering

personal triumph that cements her position as Europe's most powerful leader. But she will need to reach out to center-left rivals to form

a new government after her coalition partner crashed out of Parliament. Merkel's Union bloc scored its best result in 23 years to put her on course for a third term, winning 41.5 percent of the vote, official

results showed. Election officials didn't immediately give aseat tally.

hostages. ISraeli SOldier'S death —Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel respondedSunday to the killing of an Israeli soldier by a

Kenyan authorities said they would do their utmost to save hostages' lives, but no officials could say precisely how many people were being held captive. Kenya's Red Cross said in a statement, citing police, that 49 peoplehad been reported missing. Officials did not make an explicit link but that number could give an indication of the number of people held captive. Kenya's Red Cross said the death toll rose to 68 after nine bodies were recovered Sunday. More than 175 people were injured, including many children, Kenyan officials said. Somalia's a l -Qaida-linked rebel gr o u p , al - S habab, claimed responsibility for the attack that specifically targeted non-Muslims, saying it was in retribution for Kenyan forces' 2011 push into neighboring Somalia.

Palestinian co-worker with a vow to fight "terror with all the means at our disposal," as other politicians suggested that the episode

threatened Israel's nascent peacetalks with the Palestinians. "The people of Israel share your loss," Netanyahu said in amessage to the soldier's family. "This atrocious act proves once again that the battle

against terror is unending."

China party leader sentenced —With oneof China's most divisive politicians, Bo Xilai, banished to life in prison Sunday,the Communist Party stepped up its efforts to convince a scandal-weary public that the spectacle of his trial proved that national leaders were

serious about rooting out official corruption. Guards took Boaway after a court in eastern China declared him guilty of accepting bribes, embezzling state funds and abusing his power in a failed attempt to

thwart a murder investigation involving his wife. SuiCide dnmbing in Iraq —A suicide bomber detonated his explosive belt amongSunni mourners attending a funeral in Baghdad on Sunday, killing 16 people and wounding 35 others, officials said, in the latest episode of the country's near-daily violence. Police officials

said the evening attack took placewhen asuicide bomber detonated his explosive belt inside a tent where the funeral was being held in Baghdad's southern neighborhood of Dora.

Airplane highway landing —Two hours after landing his airplane on LakeShore Drive in Chicagoearly Sunday morning, John Pedersen lookedout at rows of police cars and newsvans. Just two hours earlier, Pedersen, of Lombard, III., had been flying his two-seat plane over downtown when a stabilizing part broke loose, causing the

OBAMA CONSOLESNATION, FAMILIES AT D.C. MEMORIAL

aircraft to shakeviolently. Unable to regain stability, the 51-year-old

Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 CirculationandOperations ............................................54f -385-5805 FinanceHolly West...........541-383-0321 HumanResources

electrician radioed a mayday call to O'Hare Airport. Pedersen, who said he had been flying for five years, decided that Lake Shore Drive

was his best landing spot. If timed correctly, he figured, hecould bring down the plane while traffic was stopped at a red light. He brought the plane down in the northbound lanes, its nose facing north.

Traci Donaca ......................

Colorado flooding —State highway crews andNational Guard troops worked furiously Sunday to repair highways to Colorado mountain towns cut off by unprecedented flooding. Other teamswere assessing how much damage neededto berepairedonColorado's

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eastern plains before trucks begin hauling in the fall harvest.

ASinn typilnnn —Apowerful typhoon weakenedsharply Sunday

y" r •

and started veering away from Hong Kong, but local officials continued

to warn residents to takeprecautions for extremeweather. TheHong Kong Observatory warned ofpossible flooding in low-lying areas, strong winds and a storm surgefrom oceanwaters pushed higher up the shoreline thanusual bythe wind. Theobservatory raised its No. 8

ar'+„

signal, which warns of gale-force winds. The top signal is10. — From wire reports

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At each event, the president has sought to find the

Weekly Arts Br Entertainment Inside hG L GAZBiE

right balancebetweenthe sadness of a nation andthe

eBuuuettn

Charles Dharapak/The Associated Press

Obama honored the victims of the Navy Yard shoot-

ing in Washington, D.C.,during a memorial service Sunday, serving onceagain asthe nation's consoler after a mass killing.

The service washeld atthe Marinebarracks down

••p

anger of its citizens. But the memorial services have also served to provide Obama with the emotional power

to fuel his gun-control efforts. During each event, the

the street from the Navy Yard, where, the authorities said, a naval contractor armed with a shotgun killed 12

president has urged the nation to pass laws that would keep firearms out of the hands of criminals and men-

people andwoundedadozenmorelastweekbeforebe-

tally ill people. But inCongress, there is little evidence

ing killed by the police. It has become an all-too-familiar role for Obama,

that lawmakers' positions on gun violence have shifted much in the past several months. — New York TimesNews Service

who has presidedover similarly grim services.

t

Lawmakerspoint fingers over budgetdeadlock it back to the House, where Republicans will have little With eight days left to avert time to respond before the a possible government shut- Oct. 1 deadline. Complicating down, congressional leaders matters further,congressiofrom both parties on Sunday nal Republicans have threatpassed around blame and re- ened to refuse to raise the sorted to name calling, but government's borrowing limit offeredno clear path to a comlater next month, meaning the promise that would allow for country could default on some continued financing of govern- of its debt. ment operations. Cruz on Sunday called on In television appearances, R epublicans i n t h e H o u se Republicans and Democrats and Senate to unite around accused each other of being the repeal of money for the responsiblefor the impasse. health care law. "We've been On the CNN program "State of standing up, leading the fight the Union," Rep. Nancy Pelosi, to defund Obamacare," Cruz the Democratic leader of the said, adding later, "I believe we House, called her opponents should stand our ground." "legislative arsonists." Sen. Claire McCaskill, DSen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said Mo., accused Cruz and Rethat Democrats in the Senate publican leaders of refusing would probably use "brute to accept Obama's re-election political power," by trying to last November, which she deinvoke a simple majority vote scribed as in part a referenthat would not rely on Redum on Obama's healthcare publican votes, to block a bill law. "I don't think in A m erica passed by House Republicans last week that linked financ- we should throw t a ntrums ing for the government to the when we lose elections and elimination of f i nancing for threaten to shut down the govPresident Barack O b ama's ernment and refuse to pay the health care law, which is about bills," McCaskill said on "Fox to go into full effect. News Sunday." "The AmeriSenate Democratic leaders can people had a choice last are likely to respond to the November. They had a choice House bill in the coming days between someone who said, 'repeal Obamacare,' and Presby stripping out the health care provision and sending ident Obama."

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013•THE BULLETIN

M ART TODAY

A3

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

It's Monday, Sept. 23, the 266th day of 2013. There are 99 days left in the year.

SCIENCE

RESEARCH

HAPPENINGS

Sleepmay

U.N. SpeeCh —President Obama arrives in NewYork

relieve those fear memories

City to prepare for his speech to the United Nations set for

Tuesday.

Syria investigation

— Two British citizens charged

A professional outdoorsman studies black widows, finding them shy and retiring — until he endures the spider's venomous sting and an experimental treatment for it.

with conspiring to attend a terrorist training camp in Syria

set to appear in London court.

By Jackson Landers New York Times News Service

HISTORY Highlight:In 1952, Sen. Richard Nixon, R-Calif., salvaged

his vice-presidential nomination by appearing live on television to refute allegations of im-

proper campaign fundraising. (The address becameknown as the "Checkers" speech because of Nixon's on-air reference to the family pet, a dog

named Checkers.) In63 B.C., CaesarAugustus, the first Romanemperor, was born. In1779, during the Revolutionary War, the American warship

Bon HommeRichard,commanded by JohnPaulJones, defeated the HMS Serapis in battle. In1780, British spy John

Andre was captured along with papers revealing Benedict Arnold's plot to surrender West Point to the British. In1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to St. Louis more than two years after setting out for the Pacific Northwest. In1846, Neptune was identified

as a planet byGermanastronomer Johann Gottfried Galle. In1908, an apparent baserunning error by Fred Merkle of the New York Giants cost his team a victory against the Chi-

cago Cubsand left the game tied1-1. TheCubswon a rematch and with it, the National

League pennant. In1912, Mack Sennett's first Keystone short subject, a "splitreel" of two comedies both starring Mabel Normand and

Ford Sterling ("CohenCollects a Debt" and "The Water Nymph"),

was released. In1949, President Harry Tru-

man announcedtherewasevidence theSoviet Union hadrecently conducted a nuclear test explosion. The test had been

carried out onAug. 29,1949. In1957, nine black students who'd entered Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas were forced to withdraw because of a white mob outside.

In1962, "The Jetsons," an animated cartoon series about

a Space Agefamily, premiered as the ABC television network's first color program. In1973, former Argentine president Juan Peron won a landslide

election victory that returned him to power; his wife, Isabel,

was elected vicepresident. In 2001, President George W. Bush returned the American flag to full staff at Camp David,

symbolically ending aperiod of national mourning for the 9/11

attacks on New York's World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Ten years ago:Speaking at the United Nations, President

I lay on my back with my teethclenched and my hands

gripping the sides of a hospital bed.A crowd of strangers in white coats filled the tiny room. Waves of pain lapped from my abdomen into my chest as the venom worked its way toward my heart. An experimental antivenin drug was about to be injected into m y b l o odstream, and while I waited for the needle to go in, I reflected that if anyone in the world was the right person to be bitten by a black widow spider, I was that guy. As a professional outdoorsm an, I spend a lot of t i m e around things that can bite, claw, stab or o therwise attack me. I have been lucky with snakes and reckless with bears. I have had some close calls with lionfish. It figures that the thing to finally nail me would be living on my own front porch.

JacksonLanders/ New YorkTimes News Service

Mature black widows lie with egg cases. The first new treatment for the spider's sting since1895 is being tested. sexes carry the same venom, but thefemales have more of it and their fangs can inject it

deeper.

The bit e and the venom

One warm springafternoon, I decided to go fishing for dinMost recognizable spider ner. On the same front porch The black widow's graceful where I had removed so many form and red hourglass mark- black widows, I kept a pair of ing have made it America's water shoes and some fishing most recognizablespider.The tackle. I put the shoes and the Eastern species,Latrodectus tackle in my car and drove m actans, is c o mmon f r o m eight miles to my favored hole. Florida to New York and as far I donned the shoes before west as Texas. walking to the edge of the But despite their fearsome water. Within about a dozen reputation, black widows are steps, I felt a stinging sensasurprisingly shy and retiring. tion on the second toe of my Over the course of your life, left foot, as if there had been a you have probably w alked thorn inside the shoe. Then the past hundreds of black widpain increased to about that of a wasp's sting. I sat on a rock ows without even realizing it. Each one packs enough ven- and removed the shoe. The om to lay out a heavyweight squashed remains of a spider boxer for days, yet globally were smeared across the inonly a few people each year sole. I realized instantly what are killed by widow bites. must have happened: a black Widow webs are easy to widow from the porch had identify, messy and close to made its home in my shoe. the ground. I spotted the first For a long moment, I stared one knitted against the steps at my throbbing toe and wonof my front porch, in Albemar- dered what to do. le County, Va. A little black Some people are more afb allerina wa s b a lanced i n fected by t h e v enom t h an the back of it. I regretted killothers. Most healthy adults ing her, but she was too close experience a lot of pain and to an area where my children recover on their own. But othplay. I blasted her with wasp ers become incapacitated, and spray, and she dropped out of some die. Which group would her web. I fall into? Or had I been bitten I hunted for more to phoby something else entirely? tograph and eliminate. The Why make a big deal out of perimeterof my house turned nothing'? out to h arbor a v i l l age of I decided to wait and find black widow webs. I racked out before getting behind the up as many as a dozen little wheel. I dipped my foot into black-and-red trophies a day. the cool water and decided I Fascinated by our proximity, might as well pass the time by I sought to learn more about fishing. these deadly neighbors. T hree catfish l a ter, t h e The black widow is unfairly symptoms were progressing. named. Femalespiders rarely I felt a warmth in my abdokill the m ale after mating, and possibly only in captivity. The male looks very different srls2'x'2vwk ,ot s» from the mature female; he is IBVDS 8 )Q, DI t 2l t« t I feslyi smaller and brownish. (The hourglass marking i s q u ite Retire with us Today! variable in both sexes.) Both 541-312-9690 ZM j-lllI j

men. This turned into pressure, which became a painful cramping. There could be no more denial. I carried my fish up the hill to my car and headed for the University of Virginia hospital, in Charlottesville. Iknew the emergency room might not be able to do much. My research had taught me that while an antivenin exists, few patients actually get it. The medicine has changed very little since 1895, when it was discovered by a French physician, Albert C almette. By injecting spider or snake venom into a horse, Calmette induced symptoms of a bite, causing the body to produce a ntivenin. Blood c ould b e drawn from the horse, and the substance could be isolated and storedforlateruse. While the a ntivenin h as saved many lives, it carries dangers of its own. Some patients turn out to have a lifethreatening allergy to horse proteins. So the medicine is given only if the victim seems to be at death's door; most patients are expected to tough it out, an ordeal that can take days.

By Meeri Kim

The drug, Analatro, was made in sheep rather than horses, and was processed differently, so it had fewer impurities to which the body could react. It sounded promising, but there were risks. First, I could not take pain medications that w ould maskthe drug's effects: no muscle relaxers to fight the spasms that already gripped my rib cage like a vise. Second, the side effects were not well understood. Finally, there was a 50 percent chance that I would not get the antivenin at all but a placebo. I would be only the fourth patient to participate. Two of my predecessors had r eceived the placebo. It a l l sounded so interesting that I could not bear not to volunteer. (I was also promised a

Special to The Washington Post

It can take only an instant for fear to take hold in the brain.A fear of snakes after being bitten by one, or feeling anxious around bodies of water after witnessing a drowning. O vercoming t hat f e a r can take a long time, but now researchers are saying it can be done in your sleep. Scientists at Northwestern University say they have successfully lowered levels of fear in humans by using certain odors to trigger and reassociate frightening memories into harmless ones during a deep slumber. "Sleep sort o f s t amps memories in more strongly," said neurologist Jay Gottfried, senior author of the study, which was scheduled to be published online Sunday by the journal Nature Neuroscience. "That's when a lot of memory formation can take place." The r esearchers f i r st created afear of a certain face in their subjects by using conditioning — making them link together a certain face and smell in their minds with a painful electric shock. After some trials, the participants became afraid of the face, and the smell acted as a cue associated with that face. The r esearchers th en used the smell to trigger fear memoriesduring sleep as a way to acclimate patients without the stress of conscious terror. Gottfried and hi s c o lleagues have not attempted this on pre-existing fears, but theoretically it could be done — by creating a connection between a phobia and a distinct smell. He said the first kind of patients who could be helped by this process would be those who already have a smell associated with their fear — for example, the smell of gunpowder. "From a clinical p erspective, this can be a new approach to try and treat stressful or traumatic memories," Gottfried said.

payment of $60.) My symptoms progressed as I waited. My biceps cramped. I shivered and twitched uncontrollably. I thought of the stringer of catfish waiting on my front porch and regretted its waste. At m i dnight, the mysterious substance was ready. It had been six hours since I was bitten. The room was crowded with d octors, nurses and medical students who were silent as the substance was injected.

A hopeful treatment

I felt a warm sensation in my upper arm, followed by the kind of rush that comes from a recreational drug. A wonderful warm flow spread from my left arm into my chest, then my abdomen. "This definitely wasn't the placebo," I said in a dreamy voice. It could take years of study before the drug is ready, but if Analatro is approved, it could completely change the way black widow bites are treated. Instead of m a king p atients wait through days of pain to avoid an allergic reaction to Becoming a test subject the equine proteins, doctors With all the attention I was could administer a ntivenin getting, I w o n dered where immediately and d i scharge the good medications were. them within hours. Where was th e m o rphine? When I got home at 4 a.m., The muscle relaxers'? My an- I limped up the stairs and colswer arrivedin the person of lapsed into bed. The next afDr. Christopher Holstege, a ternoon, I hopped down to the calm toxicologist who had the kitchento make coffee. longest conversation with me There on the kitchen floor, that any doctor has ever both- I spied a little brown spider. I ered to have. dropped a jar over it and capHolstege finally explained tured an excellent specimen what was on his mind. The of a male black widow, dainty hospital was one of several and thinner than its sisters. conducting a study to test a I took a series of photonew form of a ntivenin and graphs, and then it, too, met its wanted me to be a guinea pig. end. Call for yourfreehome loanconsultation

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013•THE BULLETIN AS

Syria Continued from A1 For $2,400, a donor can pay for the travel, training

and arming of a single non-

Andrea Morales/New YorkTimes News Service

Peter Gosline, the chief executive of Monadnock Community Hospital in Peterborough, N.H., said his hospital hed been excluded from the WellPoint provider network — one of the nation's largest insurers — without any discussions or negotiations. In many states, insurers are driving down premiums by restricting the number of providers in their new health plans.

Health care

In New H a mpshire, Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Continued from A1 Shield, a unit of W ellPoint, Consumers should be pre- one of the nation's largest inpared for "much tighter, nar- surers,has touched offa furor rower networks" of d octors by excluding 10 of the state's and hospitals, said Adam Link- 26 hospitals from the health er, a health policy analyst at the plans that it will sell through North Carolina Justice Center, the insurance exchange. a statewide advocacy group. Christopher D u g an , a "That can be positive for spokesman for Anthem, said consumers if it h olds down that premiums for this "select premiums and drives people provider network" were about to higher-quality providers," 25 percent lower than they Linker said. "But there is also would have been for a proda risk because, under some uct using a broad network of health plans, consumers can doctors and hospitals. end up w i t h a s t ronomical Anthem is the only comcosts if they go to providers mercial carrier offeringhealth outside the network." plans in the New Hampshire I nsurers sa y t h a t wi t h exchange. a smaller array of doctors Peter Gosline, the chief exand hospitals, they can offer ecutive ofMonadnock Comlower-cost policies and have munity Hospital in Peterbormore control over the quality ough, N.H., said his hospital of health care providers. They had been excluded from the also say that having insur- network without any discusance with a limited network sions or negotiations. "Many c onsumers w i l l of providers is better than having no coverage at all. have to drive 30 minutes to Cigna illustrates the strat- an hour to reach other docegy of many insurers. It intors and hospitals," Gosline tends to participate next year said. "It's very inconvenient in the insurance marketplac- for patients, and at times it's a es, or exchanges, in Arizona, hardship." Colorado, Florida, Tennessee David Sandor, a vice presiand Texas. dent of the Health Care Ser"The networks will be nar- vice Corp., which offers Blue rower than the networks typi- Cross and Blue Shield plans cally offered to large groups of in I l l inois, M ontana, N ew employees in the commercial Mexico, Oklahoma and Texmarket," said Joseph Mondy, as, said: "In the health insura spokesman for Cigna. ance exchange, most individThe current concerns echo uals will be making choices some of the criticism that sank based on costs. Our exchange the Clinton administration's products will h ave smaller plan for universal coverage in provider networks that cost 1993-94. Republicans said the less than bigger plans with Clinton proposals threatened a larger selection of doctors to limit patients' options, their and hospitals." accessto care and their choice Premiums will vary across of doctors. the country, but federal ofAt the same time, House ficials said that consumers Republicans are continuing to in many states would be able attack the new health law and to buy insurance on the exare threatening to hold up a change for less than $300 a spending bill unless money month — and less than $100 a is taken away from the health month per person after taking care program. account of federal subsidies. "Competition and consumIn a new study, the Health Research Institute of Pricewa- er choice are actually making terhouseCoopers,the consult- insurance affordable," Obama ing company, says that "insur- said recently. ers passedover major medical Many insurers are cutting centers" when selecting pro- costs by slicing doctors' fees. viders in California, Illinois, Dr. Barbara McAneny, a Indiana, Kentucky and Ten- cancer specialist in Albuquernessee, among other states. que, N.M., said that insurers "Doing so enables health in theNew Mexico exchange plans to offer lower premi- were generally paying docums," the study said. "But the tors at Medicare levels, which use of narrow networks may she said were "often below also lead to h i gher out-of- our cost of doing business, pocket expenses, especiall y and definitely below commerif a patient has a complex cial rates." medical problem that's beOutsiders might expect ining treated at a hospital that surance companies to expand has been excludedfrom their their networks to treat addihealth plan." tional patients next year. But In California, the statewide many insurers see advantages Blue Shield plan has devel- in narrow networks, saying oped a network specifically they can steer patients to less for consumers shopping in expensive doctors and hospithe insurance exchange. tals that provide high-quality Juan Carlos Davila, an ex- care. ecutive vice president of Blue Even though insurers will Shield o f C a l i f ornia, s aid be forbidden to discriminate the network for its exchange against people with pre-explans had 3 0 ,000 doctors, isting conditions, they could or 53 percent of the 57,000 subtly discourage the enrolldoctors in its broadest com- ment of sicker patients by limm ercial network, an d 2 3 5 iting the size of their provider hospitals, or 78 percent of the networks. "If a health plan has a nar302 hospitals in its broadest network. row network t hat e xcludes Daniel Hawkins Jr., a senior many doctors, that may shoo vice president of the National away patients with expensive Association o f C o m munity pre-existing conditions who Health Centers, which rep- have established relationships resents 9,000clinics around with doctors," said Mark Rust, the country, said: "We serve the chairman of the national the very population that will health care practice at Barnes gain coverage — low-income, T hornburg, a l a w f i r m . working-class uninsured peo- "Some insurers do not want ple. But insurers have shown those patients who, for medilittle interest in including us cal reasons, require a broad in their provider networks." network of providers."

Syrian fighter. "You can even get a video afterward showing what it was you paid for," said one senior intelligence official based in the region. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss his country's intelligence collection. While radical groups such as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Jabhat alNusra and Ahrar al-Sham have long relied on charitable giving from Persian Gulf states, the flow of private cash has enabled the extremists to retain their battlefield edge despite the loss of support from key Arab backers such as Qatar, which cut off aid to the most radical groups under pressure from the United States and Saudi Arabia, U.S. and M i ddle Eastern officials said. The donations also have undermined Western efforts to strengthen the relative position of moderate and secularist rebel factions that are the intended recipients of U.S. weapons that began flowing into Syria last month, the officials said. Obama a d m inistration officials say that they were working with gulf allies to shut off private cash flows but that the efforts have b een complicated by t h e fundraisers' under-the-radar tactics. The organizers also take advantage of lax regulations in some gulf states that allow fundraisers to set up small religious charities and canvass in mosques and other public venues, U.S. officials say. "Much of t hi s f unding comes from private citizens in the gulf, particularly in Kuwait," said David Cohen, the Treasury Department's undersecretary for terrorism and f inancial intelligence. The country, a source of financial aid for extremist groups during the Afghan and Iraq wars, "unfortunately continues to be a permissive environment for terrorist fundraising," he said.

of money, just looking to give it away," said Ahmad, who requested that his last name be withheldbecause he feared he could be targeted for speaking publicly."Theybring moneybecause it's the thing that is most usefuL Finding weapons if you have money is not a problem."

Obscuredinformation Exactly how much is raised is impossible to say. A senior U.S. official with access to classified intelligence on rebel financing said gulfbased networkshave collected "hundreds of millions" of dollars, a sum that includes money donated to legitimate charities that help feed and clothe an estimated 2.1 million refugees. The proportion that goes to support radical Islamist groups is deliberately obscured by organizers who are adept at using social media such as Twitter and Facebook tocommunicate with potential donors and the rebelgroups they support,the official said. "Social media enables fundraisers to solicit donations from supporters in countries — notably Saudi Arabia — which have otherwise banned unauthorized fundraising campaigns for Syria," said the senior U.S. official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence assessments. He

The Associated Press file photo

Opposition fighters react on return from the battlefield in the neighboring village of Kafr Nabuda, Syria, last week. Intelligence information shows that while Western donations are intended for secular rebel factions, private donors are funding Islamist fighters.

one," he said. Such rhetoric is not uncommon, but the group's increasing involvement in the conflict has become a source of worry for Middle Eastern governments and Western officials. Some see 'Now they have a jihad' the Ummah Conference transThe Ummah Conference's forming itself into a version headlong dive into the Syr- of the Muslim Brotherhood, i an c onflict s t a rted w i t h which has been tarnished by fundraising but quickly extend- defeats in Egypt and perceived ed to the battlefield. irrelevance in Syria. For this 12-year-old Islamist Moreover, Diqqi, leader of organization, w h i c h was the UAE chapter and a veteran founded in Kuwait and boasts of the Syrian conflict, has sugchaptersin a dozen countries, gested that Islam's true enemies the Syrian conflict has served lie outside the Middle East. In as a recruiting tool, idea labora- a Twitter post in June, he desaid some groups hold regular tory and training academy, say scribed the Syrian conflict as cash-collectingevents atprivate U.S. and Middle Eastern ana- an important step toward emhomes and mosques, while oth- lysts who have studied it. The powering Muslims to challenge ers specialize in wire transfers group's leaders have formed U.S. influence in the region. "The Muslim people will not that use informal Arab bank- ties with a Syrian group of the ing houses known as hawala. same name — the Liwaa al- be able to confront American Western officials closely fol- Ummah, or Ummah Brigade terrorism without adopting a lowed the skyrocketing promi- — while showering money on comprehensivestrategy where nence of formerly unknown Islamist groups such as Ah- politics and jihad intersect," he Kuwaiti clerics such as Sheik rar al-Sham. Ummah Brigade wrote. Hajjaj al-Ajmi, whose Twitfighters coordinate tactics with To current and former U.S. ter appealsfor money forthe more radical groups such as counterterrorism officials, such rebelsthis year became so ef- the al-Qaida-linked Jabhat al- pronouncements have a disfective that a Syrian brigade Nusra and the Islamic State of tressinglyfamiliar ring, inviting adopted Ajmi's name. Iraq and the Levant. comparisonsto the 1970s and But more recently, some of A video posted in May depict- 1980s, when radical Islamists the fundraising networks have ed two of the Ummah Confer- throughout the Middle East ence's regional officials — Saudi rallied to the cause of Afghan sought to reshape the conflict in deeper ways, creating their branchleader Mohammad Saad Muslims waging jihad against own militia movements while al-Mufrih and the new UAE the Soviet Union. "Some of these groups have spreading money broadly to leader, Hassan al-Diqqi — surexpand theirinfl uence among rounded by gun-toting gradu- always held radical views, but dozens of Islamist rebel groups, ates of the newly opened Ab- before the Arab Spring, they said William McCants, a forduli Training Camp. Mufrih, the had no active jihad, but only mer State Department adviser. Saudi, appealed in the video for aspirations," said one former "They are like militia-group Muslims to aid the Syrian reb- U.S. intelligence analyst who venture capitalists," said Mc- els "by any possible instrument, worked extensively in the reCants, director of the Brookings with money and with men." gion. "Now they have a jihad. "There is no excuse for any- Now they are veterans." Institution's Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World. "They are trying to pick winners, seeing which groups are growing and performing welL And they have a lot of money and no real restrictions."

Seeking influence What is more worrisome, officials say, is a new tendency among fundraisers to seek influence over the Syrian paramilitary groups they support. Some have adopted their own rebel militias and sought to dictate everything from ideology to tactics. Officials at one gulf-based organization, which calls itself the Ummah C onference, have helpedpromote a campaign to recruit thousands of Muslim volunteers for Syria while openly calling for a broader struggle against secular Arab governments and what one of its leaders terms "American terrorism." "These are people who believe in the ideology and have more than enough money to help the groups in Syriathat sharetheirviews," said a senior Middle Eastern intelligence official whose government closely monitors Syrian rebel factions and their foreign supporters. He spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to grant interviews on the matter. "Such groups think it is more halal — permissibleto support the jihadists than to give tax dollars to their own governments," he said. "Unfortunately, it is a problem thatyou can never control. At least, not completely." In the border city of Gaziantep, w h ere m o d ern apartment blocks t o wer over the ruins of 6,000-yearold Hittite settlements, the waves of refugees who began arriving two years ago have given parts of the city a distinctive Syrian feel. Arab speakers now outnumber native Turks in many of the street cafes where men gather in the evenings to discuss the war over coffee and endless rounds of a tile game calledOkey. Butinrecentmonths,there has been a separate stream of foreigners headed toward the fight. Ahmad, a Syrian exile and interpreter who works inthe nearby Kilis refugee camp, said he regularly sees Arab businessmen, distinctive in their white dishdashas, speeding toward the border in rented luxury cars with hired drivers. "Some come in with bags

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013 PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Martian

The Mars Curiosity rover took this picture of what is thought to be an ancient streambed. However, extraterrestrial life on Mars is still uncertain.

Continued from A1 Extraterrestrial life is one of the greatest unknowns in all of science, and many scientists are sure it has to be out there, somewhere, with Mars an obvious place to look. But it's proving to be elusive. The latest buzzkill came Thursday when scientists announced that NASA's Curiosity rover had not detected methane in the atmosphere.Atmospheric methane is often a byproduct of living organisms. The new finding wasn't a total showstopper, but scientists would have been thrilled by a different result. "Naturally, I was disappointed," said Michael Mumma, a planetary scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. "It would have been nice if they haddetected an abundant signal for methane." Mumma had h igh h opes for a positive result because he and his colleagues believe they have d etected m ethane on Mars remotely, from telescopes on Earth that can discern the chemical nature of Mars' atmosphere. A European orbiter around Mars also spotted methane. But the methane has proved ephemeral — now you see it, now you don't. Mumma said he and his colleagues are reviewing their work to see if there is some error in the mix. Perhaps the methane simply d i sappears quickly on Mars, through some unknown chemical process. "It's possible that we don't understand something that's going on in the Martian atmosphere,"said Michael Meyer, lead scientist for NASA's Mars ExplorationProgram. Jim Green, director of the planetary sciences division at NASA headquarters, said the goal of Curiosity is to understand the full history of Mars, not simply to take a momentary snapshot. "Today is a small microcosm of time, and Curiosity is

Investigations by Curiosity, otherlanders and orbitershave led to a consensus that, billions of years ago, Mars was warmer and wetter, with the conditions necessary for life. Although the planet dried out and lost most of its atmosphere, life could have adapted and migrated to subsurface environments. On Earth, organisms thrive in exotic realms deep below the surface, even beneath ice caps. The astrobiological truism is that life finds a way. Curiosity's suite of instruments is not designed to detect life itself. NASA learned a lesson in the 1970s when it plunked two V i k ing spacecraft on Mars and performed much-ballyhooed tests t h at might have detected life. The results were ambiguous at best. NASA learned that it is hard to get funding for future robotic missions when the first wave of probes saw only a cold, dry,

dead-looking place. In the past tw o decades, NASA has chosen to study Mars in a more incremental fashion, looking at the geology and chemistry and trying to understand the broader narrative of the planet. One intriguing possibility is that life originated on Mars and spread to Earth through a meteorite — or vice versa. Chunks of Mars, blasted off the surface in impactsfrom asteroidsor comets, have wound up on Earth, and the same process has presumably happened in reverse. Scientists believe organisms can potentially survive inside ejectedrocks even during long transits in space. Robert Zubrin, head of the Mars Society, which advocates for human missions to Mars,

going for the geological record of the planet, which includes maybe millions or hundreds of millions of years when life existed," Green said.

Census

stayed about the same. When it comes to houseContinued from A1 hold i ncomes, th e s u r vey S tatewide, t h e nu m b e r found the typical household of people who receive their in Crook and Deschutes counhealth insurance exclusively ties earned $5,088 a year less through OHP or a combina- in 2012 than it did in 2009 and tion of OHP and M edicare about $200 less in 2012 than increased by 3 9.5 p ercent, in 2011. Crook and Deschutes while the number of people counties had a median housewho receive their health in- hold income of$45,589. surance through M e dicare Only three states, including or a combination of Medicare Oregon, saw a significant inand private insurance plans crease in median household increased by 13.2 percent. income between 2011 and The survey also found the 2012, according to the surnumber of Central Oregon vey's results, while two states residents who do not h ave saw a significant year-to-year healthinsurance coverage at decrease in t h e i r m e d i an all increased by 8.3 percent household incomes. between 2009 and 2012. The Broken down into categonumber of Oregonians who ries,28 percent ofthe region's do not have health insurance households earned less than fell by 10.4 percent over that $25,000 a year in 2012 while three-year period, while the 16.3 percent ofthem earned number of A m ericans who $100,000 a year or more. The did not have health insurance number of Central Oregon

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Searching elsewhere Although our solar system abounds with seemingly uninhabitable worlds, there are severalplaces other than Mars that pique the interest of astrobiologists. Europa, a moon of Jupiter, apparently has a deep subsurface ocean and is a likely site of future robotic exploration. Saturn's small moon Enceladus has drawn attention since the 2005 discovery that it has ice geysers erupting from what is likely a liquid source beneath the icy crust. "The interior of Enceladus would be dark and cold and not very pleasant for us humans," Chris McKay, a NASA planetary scientist, said in an email. "But we find microbes on Earth living under ice in remarkably similar conditions." Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, has an a t mosphere thick with hydrocarbons and could conceivably have life forms with biochemistry that is different from what we see on Earth, Green said. "We call that 'weird life' because it doesn't conform to anything we know," Green said. "Weird life has no bounds. There might be weird life in a variety of places in our solar system. There mayeven be life underthe ground in Venus."

households in this upper category stayed the same between 2009 and 2012, while the number o f h o useholds in the lower category has increased by 33 percent over the past three years. T he survey f o un d 2 5 . 5 percent of Oregon and 24.4 percent of the country's households earned less than $25,000 a year in 2012, while 18.5 percent and 21.6 percent of them earned more than $100,000 a year, respectively. Between 2009 and 2012, the number of Oregon households earning $100,000 or more increased by 13.2 percent, while nationwide that number increased 11 percent. The number of h ouseholds earning less t han $ 25,000 stayed the same over the three-year period. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

• 4 8 H OUR DISTRIBUTION BEGINS: Distribution hotlines open at 9:00am this morning for Bend residents only. Trucks are being loaded with new, leading brand, energy saving, infrared heaters and soon will be delivered to lucky state residents who find their zip code on the distribution list below.

Bend residents set to get new infrared heaters to save up to 50% on heating bills for only $159 and free shipping Compared to the Suggested Retail Price of $499.95 thisis a great opportunity for our residents to own one of the highest quality, energy saving, cool-to-the-touch, portable infrared heaters available today, and stop spending a fortune on heating bills. The first 362 callers who beat the 48-hour deadline are getting

these moneysaving portableinfrared heaters. BEND, OR - If you or a loved one has difficulty paying for heating bills, then this distribution of brand new portable infrared heaters

to be the most sought after brand of infrared heaters. iHeaters have been selling strong for many years, they have in-house customer service 10-

is your chance to make life a l i t tle easier. These infrared heaters warm

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end brands of in frared heaters that

heaters, so they are safe for pets and chi 1dren. Company spokesman, David Brinkman, says, "We have 362 of these brand new, high quality in-

use bulbs. Similar infrared heaters of this quality are expensive, the suggested retnil on this unit i s $499.95,

but state residents are being urged f rared heaters reserved f o r B e n d t o cal l t h e T o l l F r e e h o t l i nes at r esidents right now, so t h ose w h o 1-800-614-2840 because the first

find their zip code listed in today's paper need to call the zip code Distribution Hotline immediately to get

362 callers who beat the 48-hour deadline will be able to claim one of these infrared iHeaters and have theirs." it delivered directly to their door for These r e v o lutionary i n f r a red only $159 and the shipping is free. heaters are changing the lives for This is an extraordinary opportunity many that find it difficult to pay for for those in need of help on winter the high cost of heating a home. In- heating bills to take advantage of frared heat warms in a way similar this zip code distribution. "We're to the warmth we feel from the sun, bracing ourselves for all the calls it's been described by many as "bone because a program like this, for an warming" heat. It is completely safe infrared heater of this quality, has and does not deplete oxygen from never been released before. So if the air, which would make you tired, the lines are busy, keep trying. We'll nor dry out the air, which irritates answer every call in the order they your skin. The iHeater brand is said are received" Brinkman said. . rrrr ro 1000 rq fl. Heoting caPaclt r ra rrrcler x reinchesx 17 Inches Quortr Infrared prc Heating aemenl • Dscorative caenet LIFETIME washable rrir filter • C 0mmercial Groderhermortot rr • Advanced te over protectorr r (sautr offf AAUTOMATICALLY if Ilppedover • 5 fs around kidr or prrtr • No Flames. fumes or dead y

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• Come learn the ABC's and D's of Medicare and the often confusing process of the Medicare system. You'll find the information you need to make the right decisions about Medicare health insurance.

Free classes open to the public:

Si m p l y Plug it in: saving ~oney on

heating bills is very easy with an iHeater i nfrared heater. Today's distribution i s intended to help those in need of keeping w arm this w i nter w i t hout spending t o o much on heating bills.

The Toll Free Distribution Hotlines open at 9:00am this morning for Bend residents only. You must be one of the first 362 callers who beat the 48-hour deadline to have your infrared heater delivered to your door for only $159 and free shipping. ( ra,'ar tg4gg gs )

BEND — Thursday, October 3, 4:30pm Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road Thursday, October 3, 5:30pm COCC Chandler Learning Center, 1027 NW Trenton Avenue Sponsored by:

For more information call 541-241-6927

'C'

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Zip Code Distribution List: If your Zip Code appears below call toll free:

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

A7

LOCAL 4 T A TE OSU-CASCADES

BRIEFING

ro ramin e war S

Burning squirrel sparks drushfire A squirrel caused a small brush fire Sundaysouth of Bend, the second squirrel in

two weeks to sparksuch ablaze here. The woodland creature

touched apair of power lines Sunday alongU.S. Highway 97, creating a short circuit that electrocuted and ignited the animal,

said DaveHowe, battalion chief with the Bend Fire Department. The burning squirrel fell to the

ground andstarted the fire. Firefighters from the fire department, as well as the

U.S. Forest Service andthe Oregon Department of Forestry,

By Tyler Leeds

tional executive MBA program, this sequence aims to help those who aspire to reach managerial positions, not only those who are currently business leaders. OSUCascades will offer executive leadership courses in the spring if it generates enough interest. Tuition for the 45credit program is around $34,000, though financial aid is available. "In the first year, we would want to have around 12 students, and in the second

The Bul(etin

Oregon State University-

Cascades Campus is planning to launch an MBA program that blends online instruction with traditional classroom learning. The program, titled executive leadership, will be offered through the OSU College of Business. The target population is working professionals who need the flexibility online education offers. However, unlike a tradi-

year we would want to see that rise to around 20," said Marla Hacker, the university's associatedean of academic programs. "Based on the interest we've seen, I'm very optimistic about being able to offer the program." Fifteen prospective students attended an information session on Wednesday. Students entering the program are expected to have a foundation of business knowledge, though four classes are available online to students

who are lacking these skills. OSU-Cascades hopes to offer one of these classes in its winter quarter. The executive leadership program can be completed in 21 months, assuming a student does not need to take any foundational classes. The coursesare delivered largely online, though professors will come to Bend to meet with students at least twice each quarter, typically near the beginning and end of each term. See MBA/A8

responded to thefire at noon Sunday andkept it to a small grove of trees, Howe said. The fire caused a brief closure of the

highway, scorched apower pole and causedabout$50 in damage to a nearbytravel trailer. On Sept. 9, asquirrel atop

brush fire, leaving more than 100 homes in southwest Bend without electricity for around

four hours. The fire midday Sunday

only left one Pacific Power customer without power, said

Tom Gauntt, a spokesman for thecompany.Thecustomer's power wasback onaround 4:30 p.m. — Bulletin staff report

Third Street

~

/

underpass detour

Third Street is closed at the underpass between Franklin Avenue and Wilson Avenue, from 7

r

Photos by Andy Tullis/The Butlettn

Model train lovers of all ages crowd in to see an array of model trains pull cars through an intricate track system Sunday at the EasternCascades Model Railroad Club's annual open house in Bend.

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Detour -Thir Stre

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R d Market Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

EVENT CALENDAR TODAY

"TO EACH HEROWN": A screening of the 2008 film for LGBT movie night; $5, reservations requested; 7 p.m., doors open at6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-420-1562, payingitforward@ bendbroadband.com orwww. volcanictheatrepub.com. TUESDAY REDMONDFARMERS

MARKET:Freeadmission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket10 hotmaccom. DESCHUTESBREWERYCO-OP, FROMPITCHFORKTO PUB: Featuring small plates paired with fresh hop and fruit beers; donations benefit local nonprofit organizations through Rally Cause; free, donations accepted; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3829242 or www.deschutesbrewery. com. MATT THEELECTRICIAN:The Austin, Texas-based singersongwriter performs; $5; 7-9:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIA HISTORYNIGHT:"Comrade Johns: Oregon's Socialist Candidate for President in the 1920s"; free; 7 p.m., doors open at6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

A hunter discovered a body Sunday northeast of Chemult, along with a car belonging to a Bend man reported missing on Sept. 6. According to Klamath County District Attorney Rob Patridge, the Klamath County Major Crime Team is investigating the death. The body was found on Sunday, as well as the 1989 Toyota Corolla

a missing person flier sent out by Bend Police on Sept. 13, Sullivan-

fused after going off of

ood Ave. Franklin Ave.

0

of ChemLjlt

Shipley had been going

I I

northeast

through difficult times and might have been con-

underpass. Gre

discovered

year-old Jonathan Sullivan-Shipley. Patridge declined to say whether the body, which has not yet been identified, was found inside the vehicle, and said an autopsy would be needed todetermine the cause of death. Sullivan-Shipley was last seen at 9:30 a.m. Sept. 5, when he left his home on Marsh Orchid Court in Northeast Bend and headed for work at the High Desert Assisted Living facility. He was not in contact with family or friends after that day and did not take camping gear or other property with him. Sullivan-Shipley's bank accounts were not used and he did not suffer from any medical conditions, although according to

live wires andstarted a small

p.m. to 7 a.m., Sunday

man's car

W agon belonging to 42-

a power pole near the Athletic Club of Bend also contacted

through Friday, through the week of Sept. 23. The Third Street stormwater project will stop dirty storm runoff from draining into an injection well at the bottom of the

Body, Bend

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

hough the trains were only a fraction of the size of the real thing, there was big fun to be had at a model train club open house over the weekend in Bend. The 18th annual Eastern Cascades Model Railroad Club open house drew more than 1,200 visitors to the club's 20-acre property off Ward Road. There, people rode around a one-mile loop on trains that were one-eighth the size of a real train. They also went inside the clubhouse to check out dioramas that were oneeighty-seventh of life size. Isabelle Rice, 13, of Bend, loved the loop and the detail of the half dozen trains

T

chugging around it. "Everything looked really real," she said.

Families hold on tight as the small train they are riding circles a new track Sunday at an

Joiningthe modeltrainclub To find out more about

the Eastern Cascades Model Railroad Club, visit www.ecmrr.org or call 541-317-1545. The club meets at 7 p.m. Wednesdays at 21520

anti-depressants. The flier noted he was last seen at a US Mart and a Conoco gas station on U.S. Highway 97. An investigation is ongoing, and law enforcement from Klamath County are working with Bend Police. An autopsy is scheduled for Tuesday. — Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin/com

open house put on by the Eastern Cascades Model Railroad Club and Central

Modoc Lane.

Oregon Area Live Steamers.

The locomotives were painted to look like their larger counterparts for railroads like the Burlington Northern or Southern Pacific. Cars ranged from boxcars to flatbeds, including one loaded with a model bulldozer. It took the trains between 10 and 15 minutes to make the loop. SeeTrains/A8

Riversideopen to Galveston The intersection of Riverside Boulevard and

Tumalo Avenue, which is undergoingimprovements for pedestrians and cyclists, is partially open, allowing traffic to move between the Galveston

corridor anddowntown by way of Drake Park. Traffic

may be reduced toone lane at timeswhilework continues. Riverside will

remain closedsouth of the intersection, aswill Tumalo to the east.

KNOW ENDS:MOVIE SCREENINGS: A screening of the 2004 film "Shaun of the Dead" (rated R); free; 7:30 p.m.; TinPanTheater,869 N.W .Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-312-1032 or lizg© deschuteslibrary.org. "UNSTOPPABLE": A screening of the Kirk Cameron film investigating the moral origins of good and evil; $12.50; 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. WEDNESDAY

LUNCHANDLECTURE: Learn about ranching in the high desert; bring a sack lunch; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages65 and older, $9 ages5-12, free ages 4and younger; noon-1 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. BEND FARMERS MARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. KNOW ENDS: LIT PUB:Featuring zombie,pandemicand postapocalyptic books; free;6 p.m., doors open5 p.m .;VolcanicTheatrePub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3121032 or lizg@deschuteslibrary.org.

AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Featuringa reading of "Via Lactea," a verse novel by Ellen Waterston and preview of a mock-up of the art book with prints by Ron Schuitz; appetizers and wine; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Atelier 6000, 389 S.W. Scaiehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; 541-330-8759. KRIS ORLOWSKh The Seattle folkpop artist performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. "POMPEII FROM THEBRITISH MUSEUM":A view of the exhibit "Life and Death inPompeii and Herculaneum"; $15;7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium168 IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 54I-382-6347. TIM SNIDER:The Portland folk-rock musician performs; $5;8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. THURSDAY IRONMAN CHAMPIONLINSEY CORBINRECEPTION:Thethree-time Ironman champion andgraduate of Mountain View High School is honored, followed by aQ-and-A; free; 5 p.m.; Sisters Athletic Club, 1001 Desperado Trail; 541-549-6878. MARIAN CALL:TheAlaskan singersongwriter performs; $10 artist

donation suggested;5-7 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Bar, 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 400, Bend; 541-647-1402. BEND ROOTSFAMILY PARTY: Live music outside at TheVictorian Cafe and inside Parriila Grill; free;5:30 p.m.; The Victorian Cafe,1404 N.W. Galveston Ave.; 541-382-6411 or www.bendroots.net. BENDFILMKICKOFF PARTY & 10TH YEAR BREW PREVIEW: Featuring the tasting and naming of a BendFilm 10th-year Belgian IRA created by Deschutes Brewery to honor the festival, pius live music;receivetwo beer tickets, appetizers and the first available copies of the BendFiim Guide; proceeds benefit BendFiim; $20 in advance, $25 at the door; 6-9 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3883378or www.bendfilm.org. "CLEANGUYS OFCOMEDY" ENCORE: Ascreening of comedians Dave Coulier, JamieKennedy, Andy Hendrickson, Ralph Harris and Heather McDonald;$12.50;7:30p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium168, IMAX, 680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-382-6347. "THEDIXIESWIM CLUB":A comedy about five Southern women whomet on their college swim team andget together once a year; $19, $15 seniors, $12students;7:30 p.m .;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood

Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. REEL PADDLINGFILM FESTIVAL: The eighth annual international film tour featuring whitewater, sea kayaking, canoeing andmore; $12 in advance, $15 at the door, plus fees;8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wail St., Bend; 541-317-9407 or www. towertheatre.org. BUCK65:The Canadian alternative hip-hop artist performs, with Driftwood lnsomnia; $18 plus fees inadvance,$23atthedoor;9 p.m., doors open at8 p.m.; The Annex, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541408-4329 or www.randompresents. com. BUCKLERASH:TheAshland countrypunk band performs; $3; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. FRIDAY

RED DOGCLASSIC:A shotgunstyle golf tournament; includes cart, breakfast, barbecue lunch, auction and raffles; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal Center; $100, registration requested; 9 a.m.; Eagle Crest Resort,1522 Ciine Falls Road, Redmond; 541-9230882 or www.brightsideanimais. org/events/red-dog-golf-tournament.

SeeCalendar/A8

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Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

Well shot! reader PhotoS • We want to seeyour photos of clouds for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section.

Submityour best work atbenddulletin.com/ cloudsand we'll pick the

best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took lt, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpl) and cannot be altered.


A8

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013

Trains

Redmond, La Pine and Prineville. Model railroaders also Continued from A7 came to the open house from Like many of the visitors at other parts of Oregon, Calithe open house Sunday, Isa- fornia and Idaho. belle was there with her famiAt one-eighth the size of ly — dad, Greg Rice, 43, mom, regular train tracks, the rails Samantha Rice, 36, and sister, are 7Ãz inches apart. They're Shay Rice, 3. made from aluminum rath"Trains are pretty cool for e r than steel, but t hey d o kids," Samantha Rice said. s upport quite a load in t h e And for the members of the locomotives. club. Started in the 1990s, the The models weigh about club has 46 members all bound 1,000 pounds for the replicas by an interest in model trains, of diesel engines and about said club p r esident B r uce 2,000 pounds for the models of B lanford. M e m bers m e e t steam engines. The diesel repweekly and invite the public licas have a variety of motors, out once a year to see the big including electric and gasoand small model trains. line. Although scaled down, "We used to do it in Octo- the steam engines work just ber," he said, "but it was al- like the big locomotives. ways cold." The cost of model trains While it wasn't as cold Sun- varies, with d i esel replicas day as Central Oregon can be c osting about $ 9 ,000 a n d at the start of fall, it sure was s team engines costing a s blustery. The chilly, w i ndy much as $50,000, Blanford weather cut the number of said. The people who own the visitors from last year and led steam engines are often the to shorter waits, about 15 to 20 same people who build and minutes, for the train rides. maintain them. "There isn't a steam engine While the big model train track isa permanent feature shop you can take them to to on the club's property, club get them fixed," he said. members and guests brought M embers of th e club i n in extra trains for the event. volved with th e l a rge-scale Members hail f r o m B e n d, models call themselves the

C entral Oregon A rea L i v e Steamers. The costs are lower for the smaller model trains that run through dioramas inside the clubhouse. "Thank goodness I'm interested in the small trains," Jack McDonnell, 76, of Sunriver,

MBA

ment behind this concept," she said. "At the undergraduate level, certain courses within programs take this approach a lready. One p r ogram w e are looking to is a master's in public health, and we may be i nvestigating how t hat p r ogram would work in a blended format." OSU's executive leadership program launched in Portland last year with a program that mirrors what Cascades hopes to offer in the spring. "This year, we have grown to 20 students and we are running out of seats," said Jim Coakley, associatedean for academic programs in the college of business. "Central Oregon has told us there is a demand for this program here, and because Cascades is here, we'd like to bring the program to Bend."

Tom Standa, 47, attended the Wednesday information session and explained his interest in the program. "I've been in retail management for 27 years," he said. "I want to be able to reach other opportunities within my company, but the reality of it is that I'm a working person. This program would allow me to enhance my position while staying in my position." Hacker said if the program is successful, the university hopes to add more business tracks to complement the executiveleadership program. "As we add enrollment, we will absolutely expand, much like in a small business," Hacker said. "Which, when you think about it, is what we really are."

experiencethehighlife.com. BEND ROOTS REVIVAL:Afestival that celebrates andshowcases the musical, artistic and cultural character of our community; free; 5:30 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E.Armour Drive; 541-389-7047 or www. bendroots.net. CRUXTOBERFEST: A celebration featuring three newfresh hop beers and live music; free admission; 6-9 p.m.; Crux Fermentation Project, 50 S.W. Division Street, Bend; 541-3853333 or www.cruxfermentation.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Local author TedHayneswill read from hisbook"On The Roadfrom Burns: Stories of Central Oregon"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; PaulinaSprings Books,422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. BRADYTOOPS: TheNashville,Tenn.based singer-songwriter performs, with KasenandCo. and Chadthe Baptist; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum, 246 N. Main St., Prineville; 408-638-9348 or www.bradytoops.com. GUESTCHEFSERIES WITH ROBERT CURRY:Adinner anddemonstration with the guestchef fromAuberge

du Soleil in Rutherford, Calif; $120 for both events; 6:30p.m.for dinner; demonstration and reception onthe afternoon ofSept.28; Pronghorn Resort, 65600 PronghornClubDrive, Bend; 541-693-5300or www.pronghornclub. com/guestchefseries.html. GIRLS NIGHTOUT:Apampering evening for womenwith salon treatments, food andbeverages, raffle and silentauction; proceedsbenefit Healthy Beginnings; $45 in advance, $50 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road;541383-6357 or www.myhb.org. "THE DIXIE SWIM CLUB":A comedy aboutfive Southern womenwho met on their college swim teamand get together once a year; $19, $15seniors, $12students;7:30 p.m .;Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. NAOMI HOOLEY:The Portland rock singer-songwriter performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoor brewing.com.

Continued from A7

"Bringing this program to

Cascades isn't so much about Bend as it is about all of Central Oregon," Hacker said. "It's about helping those who live in Prineville, Madras and La Pine and who can't commute to our campus every day because they are working and maybe have families. With this blended approach, students can fit the course into their schedules and still get to interact with professors in the classroom and classmates online and through projects." Hacker said the blended approach is something OSU-Cascades is already using in other areas and may use for future programs. "There is a national move-

Calendar Continued from A7 MT. BACHELORKENNELCLUB FALL AGILITYTRIALS:Morethan 120 dogs of different breedsracethrough atimed obstacle course; free;1:30-5 p.m.; CrookCounty Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-388-4979 or www.mbkc.org. PICKIN' ANDPADDLIN' MUSIC SERIES:Includes boat demonstrations in the Deschutes River and progressive newgrass performed byTheGiraffe Dodgers; proceeds benefit Bend Paddle Trail Alliance; $5, free for children 12 and younger; 3:30-5:30 p.m. demonstrations, 5-9 p.m. music; Tumalo CreekKayak & Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 54t-317-9407 or 41t@tumalocreek. com. COMMUNITYFALLFESTIVAL: A celebration of fall featuring hay rides, a pumpkin patch, face painting, a treasure hunt and more; hosted by Mission Church; free; 4-8 p.m.; Taylor Ranch, 22465 McArdle Road, Bend; 54t-306-6209 or www.

r

' Y5. ."w~' U )'-( o U ~X ~ 24 PEOPLE to try new DIGITAL Technology in Hearing Aids.

joked. He said "toy train," or basic train sets, sell for about $40.

We need 24 people with difficulty hearing, especially in noisy situations, to evaluate the latest in digital technology from Miracle-Ear.

The costs may go up depending on the design and material, with some brass locomotives selling for a couple thousand dollars. During the open house, a mix of the small model trains moved along 1,933 feet of track — equivalent to nearly 33 miles worth if it were fullsized — connecting dioramas of 11 towns in upstate New York. The club's founder, Ernie George, lived in the towns and designed the layout. Sawyer Mazza, 6, of Bend, quickly picked out what he liked most about the display. He found an unloader that rolled a train car over to dump out wood chips. "This is my favorite part," he said. "When that flips over."

Miracle-Ear Hearing Centers will perform comprehensive hearing consultations FREE of charge to all callers. We will then choose 24 qualified candidates for this program. Please call immediately to schedule your evaluation to determine if you are a candidate for the program. Candidates selected will be asked to evaluate the latest nearly invisible hearing aid technology. Imagine a hearing aid that automatically adapts to your surroundings and reflects your specific lifestyle. Imagine a hearing aid that is so pleasant to wear that it gives a new meaning to the phrase "customer satisfaction." Well, imagine no more! With this breakthrough technology from Miracle-Ear, one of the world's largest hearing aid manufacturers, now comes the first hearing aid ever developed to address your most important needs. Not only does it fit your individual hearing loss, it fits the way you live. If you hear, but are having trouble understanding conversations, you owe it to yourself to take advantage of the FREE In-Office Demonstrations offered this week. Call your local Miracle-Ear Center today for a no obligation appointment.

srRemarkably discreet and comfortable beyondbelief v' Superior hearing in groupswith digital processing srEasy telephone useand virtually eliminates wind noise

Mirage features amazingly advanced and powerful micro-technology, all wrapped up in our tiniest hearing aid ever!

— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarlingC<bendbutletin.com

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yt>I „q-5.

hearing aids. Must be 55 years of age or older and complete hearing evaluation. Individual experiences vary depending on severity of hearing loss, accuracy of evaluation, proper fit and ability to adapt to amplification. Hearing test is always free and not a medical exam. Hearing aids do not restore natural hearing. Audiometric test to determine proper amplification needs only. A Miracle-Ear representative can determine which models and options may be right for you. If you suspect a medical problem please seek treatment from you doctor.

— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleedsC<bendbulletin.com

Grant Continued from A1 In addition, the coordinator will offer advanced training for identified CIT officers and be a liaison between jurisdictions to facilitate earlier and s moother i d entification o f mentally ill individuals within the law enforcement system. The CIT began in 2010 and was based on a m odel developed in Memphis, Tenn., in 1988. The team includes mental health professionals, criminal justice personnel and social workers who meet regularly to discuss how to best assist people in crisis. Police Chief Jeff Sale has expressed interest in increasing communication and information-sharing between law enforcement jurisdictions and local mental health agencies to better and earlier identify people suffering from mental illness. He hopes increasing c ommunication a n d i d e n tification rates will p r event incidents and reduce incarceration rates for community members who don't belong in jail but need help with mental illness. "It's so important to have this type of training for law e nforcement officers so w e can gain a better understanding of peoplesuffering from mental illness," Carney said.

and role playing. " Officers i n t r a i ning g o through p sychosis s i mulation where we put them in headphones so they can live as a person does who is hearing voices," said Molly Wells, inpatient behavioral h ealth m anager wit h S a g e V i ew Psychiatric Center who is involved with the CIT program. "It helps officers understand some of the things these voices say and experience what it's like to try to listen to instruc-

tions while also hearing voices in your head." Wells said expanding the CIT is important not only to protect those suffering from mental illness but to also protect the community at large and the responding officers. "Some of the front-line responders in cases where someone is having a mental health crisis are police officers, and they need the skills to intervene in a way that is safe," she said. "This program helps teach officers to maybe identify cues and recognize different types of mental illness." CIT officers ar e t r a ined to use different tactics when dealing with people who are in crisis due to mental illness. They're taught to take extra time with th e p erson, talk less and listen more, Wells explains. "If we can avoid taking them to jail, and instead take them to the hospital, get them to engage with their case worker or maybe take them to Deschutes County Mental Health, we're better addressing the needs of the person and the community," she said. "The CIT program allows us to come together from all jurisdictions to really help people with mental illness in a way that is beneficial to everyone." — Reporter: 541-383-0376 skdng@bendbufietin.com

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,'895 "People with mental illness aren't thinking clearly and if confronted by an officer who is assertive with commands they often won't comply and the situation escalates." E xpanding the CI T p r o gram and offering advanced training for CIT officers will save time and manpower, Carney said. "When officers respond to someone in crisis, it typically takes two, if not three, officers because the person is unpredictable," he said. "And those calls, like c alls fo r p eople threatening suicide, typically take a long time to resolve." CIT officers go through a 40-hour training course to become familiar with a variety of mental health issues. Trainees learn techniques to identify and deal with people in crisis through a combination of classroom time, simulations

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013•THE BULLETIN A9

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

Emmys or'Brea in Ba,"Mo ernFamiy' TV SPOTLIGHT Th8 EmmIIS — "Breaking Bad" may benearing the end of its fifth and final season, but the dark drama isgoing out with a flour-

By Lynn Elber The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES - "Breaking Bad," the brutal, drug-fueled saga of an everyman's ambition turned evil, captured its first best drama Emmy Award on Sunday, denying the online series "House of Cards" a history-making honor. "I did not see this coming," said "Breaking Bad" creator Vince Gilligan, tipping his hat to Netflix's political thriller "House of Cards," the first digital contender for top Emmy honors. Attention and acclaim for the A M C c a bl e c h annel's "Breaking Bad" has built as it nears the end of its five-season run next Sunday, with the final eight-episode arc eligible for next year's Emmys. " Modern Family" won i t s fourth consecutivetrophy for top comedy series even though itsoft-honored cast was shut out this time. Jeff Daniels won the Emmy for bestdrama seriesactor for his portrayal of an idealistic TV anchorman in "The Newsroom," w it h C l a ir e D a nes capturingtop actress honors for her troubled CIA agent in "Homeland." Daniels noted that he'd also receivedan age 50-plus acting honor from AARP, which represents the interests of older Americans. "With all due respect to the AARP, this is even better,"

ish. The AMC series won the award for best drama series Sunday, joining comedy series winner "Modern Family" and TV movie or

miniseries winner "Behind theCandelabra" in claiming top awards at the 65th annual Primetime Emmy Awards. Here are winners in

some of the major categories:

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• • • • • • •

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SERIES, DRAMA: "Breaking Bad" SERIES, COMEDY: "Modern Family" TV MOVIE OR MINISERIES: "Behind the Candelabra" ACTOR, DRAMA: Jeff Daniels, "The Newsroom" ACTRESS, DRAMA:Claire Danes, "Homeland" ACTOR, COMEDY: Jim Parsons, "The Big Bang Theory" ACTRESS, COMEDY: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, "Veep"

See a list of winners in all categories at www.emmys.tv. 65" EMMY'/r

65™ EMMY'A

Source: The Associated Press

ever with Don Roy King's directing award Sunday; its cuJeff Daniels celebrates with the award for outstanding lead actor mulative 40 Emmys top previin a drama series for his role in "The Newsroomn on Sunday at the ous record-holder "Frasier." Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles. Julia Louis-Dreyfus claimed her second consecutive best comedy actress award for her Daniels said. sets, defying the conventional role as an ambitious political Danes, who captured her wisdom in several categories, second banana in "Veep," with second trophy forthe terror- among them the best support- Jim Parsons again claiming ism drama, paid tribute to one ing acting comedy awards for the top comedy acting trophy of the series' writers, Henry Merritt Wever of "Nurse Jack- for "The Big Bang Theory." ie" and Tony Hale of "Veep." "This is so much good forBromell, who died last March "This just in . N obody in and who received a writing tune it's almost too much to Emmy posthumously Sunday. America i s w i n n in g t h e ir bear," sai d L o u i s-Dreyfus. The ceremony often struck a Emmy office pooL Surprises "I'm very grateful to have the melancholy note with extend- galore," said host Neil Patrick opportunity to make people ed tributes to stars and other Harris. laugh. It's a joyful way to make industry members who died in Danes' win ended the hopes a living." that "Scandal" best actress the past year. Parsons added to the awards "Well, this may be the sad- nominee Kerry W ashington he won in 2011 and 2010 for the dest Emmys of all time but would become the first Afrirole of a science nerd. "My heart, oh my heart. I we could not be happier," said c an-American to win i n t h e "Modern Family" e xecutive category. want you to know I'm very "Saturday Night Live" be- aware of how exceedingly forproducer Steve Levitan. The show also included up- came the most-honoredseries tunate I am," he said. Dan Steinberg / Invision /The Associated Press

Truth bestfor child of murderedmom Dear Abby: My granddaughter was murdered by her boyfriend. They had an 18-month-old daughter, "Bella." All three were living together when he shot her, but we don't know what room Bella was in when it happened. A nother fa m i l y member (I'll call her Lucy) took Bella into • EAR her home, and Bella ABBY calls her Mom. Lucy h as b ee n t a k i n g Bella to the prison to visit her father but has told her he is her uncle. I told Lucy I thought it would be better to wait until Bella is old enough to understand, THEN tell her what happened and let her decide whether she wants to visit her father. Bella went into the closet one day and came out holding a Tshirt with her mother's picture on it, asking, "Who is this'?" Lucy's only response was, "You know you aren't allowed in my closet. Take that back!" She never answered the question. I have a framed photo of Bella's mother on my wall. The last time Bella was here, I noticed her looking out of the corner of her eye and scowling at the picture. I was the only one who noticed.

Bella is now 4, and I can't accept that Lucy thinks it's OK to lie to her. I feel it should be Bella's decision whether to visit her dad. Am I wrong'? How should this be handled so Bella isn't traumatized any more than need be? Because of these i n cidents, I'm almost convinced s he s h ould h a v e some kind of counseling, but perhaps she's too young. This is why I desperately need advice, in the best interest of the child. — Bella's Great-grandma

Dear Great-grandma: Is Lucy a member of your family or the murderous boyfriend's? I find it hard to comprehend that a family member of the victim would drag a toddler to a prison to visit the lowlife who killed her mother. I do not think it is healthy to lie to children. This situation will explode when Bella finally learns that the woman she has always called "Mom" isn't her mother, and the man in the orange jumpsuit not only isn't her uncle but killed her birth mother. That poor girl won't know whom she can believe and could have trust issues that affect her relationships for the rest of

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, SEPT. 23, 2013: This yearyouoften

her life. Does she need counseling now? No. But will she when she finds out about the deception? You bet! Dear Abby: What is your opinion about females and car maintenance? My mother raised me alone and taught me to be independent. She would not let me drive an automatic car until I had mastered driving a standard (stick shift). I was also not allowed to drive until I was able to perform basic, essential tasks — changing a tire, checking the oil and maintaining all fluid levels. I am thankful and appreciate that I have these skills. However, I know many women today who can't perform t hese tasks and would rather make it a "man's job." I think every woman should have these skills. Where do you stand? — Independent Lady In Florida Dear Independent Lady: I stand beside you. There is no guarantee that a woman will have a man to "take care" of her — in fact, the opposite is more likely to be true. However,if she can'tlearn the basics of taking care of her car, she should be sure that she's a member of AAA.

YOUR HOROSCOPE

are emotional yet direct. You will make By Jacqueline Bigar sure others get your message. Youwill demandresponsesaswell,butyou won't always receive the answers you care a lot about. Try to avoid a bothersome want or need. topic. Tonight: Get someextra R and R Stars show the kind Others view you — you will need it for tomorrow. of day you'll have as an intimidating 21-July 22) ** * * * D ynamic presence. If you CANCER (June ** * * L isten to someone's positive ** * * P ositive a r e single, you are ** * A verage qui t e desirable. Youfeedback. Your ability to touch base with others and bring people together will ** S o-so know how to draw emerge. Youroptimism abounds.Keep a * Difficult someone in and strong sense of direction in a meeting. Help make this person keep your peers centered. Tonight: Join feel safe. If you are attached, the two of several friends, and catch up on news. you might become more argumentative than you have been in the past. On the LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * Understand what is happening with other hand, you will kiss and make up behind closed doors. CANCER'smoods a friend or relative. Tempers could flare with ease, and that might include you, too! could drive you crazy. Opportunities come out of the blue and ARIES (March 21-April 19) push you to decide just how involved you ** * You will be at the start of an want to be in other matters. Tonight: Your adventure and not even beaware of it. irritability could be close to the surface. Sometimes, whenyougetangry,you experience a revitalization of sorts. Others VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) might not be as aclear as you are about ** * * You might want to defer to what is happening. Tonight: Your treat. someone who appears to have abigger scope of the future than you do. You'll feel TAURUS (April 20-May20) as if you need to control your temper and ** * * T aking action and even yelling a avoid getting into any problems. Yousee bit will be healthier than holding in your the benefits, but do you seethe liabilities? feelings. You might be more expressive Tonight: Relax to a favorite pastime. and content in the long run as aresult. The people around you could be jolted at first, LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) but they will like the new, more expressive ** * * Deal with a key person in your you. Tonight: Let the party begin. life directly. You often might try to avoid having a discussion with this person. GEMINI (May 21-June20) You could be worried about some anger ** Listen to news, and bewilling to acceptsome good luck.You mightneedto emerging, but you will be a lot better off in the long run if you have this conversation. spend a little to make alittle. Understand what is happening with a close relative you Tonight: Togetherness is the theme.

** * * Others will say whatever they want, and as aresult, you could be taken aback by what you hear. Understand that there is much more going on here than meets the eye! News from a distance could force you to makeyet another decision. Tonight: Read between the lines.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.21) ** * * You easily could become irritated by news that points to a needfor change. You also might be frustrated — that is, until a close associate or loved one makes a caring gesture. Know that you can count on this person. Tonight: Put on a great piece of music and letyour mind drift.

Laura Linney was named best actress in a miniseries or movie for "The Big C: Hereafter." "The Voice" won best reality-competition program, and Tina Fey won for writing r 30 Rock." Michael Douglas was honored asbest actor for his portrayal of Liberace in "Behind the Candelabra," besting his co-star Matt Damon. The film also captured a top trophy as best movie or miniseries. "This is a two-hander and Matt, you're only as good as your other h and," Douglas said, then got really racy: "You want the bottom or the top?" In the variety show category, "The Colbert Report" broke a 1 0 - year w i n n i ng streak held by " T h e D a ily Show with Jon Stewart." It also won for best writing for a variety show.

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may beanadditional feefor 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after presstime. I

I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 2 GUNS (R) 1:25, 4:40, 7:40, 10:15 • BATTLE OF THEYEAR 3-D (PG-13) 12:40, 3:15, 6:25, 9:10 • BLUE JASMINE (PG-13) 1, 3:40, 6:05, 9 • DESPICABLE ME(PG) 2 12:45, 3:10, 6 • ELYSIUM (R) 2:50, 7:30, 10:10 • THE FAMILY (R) 1:05, 4:10, 6:50, 9:35 • THE HEAT (R) 9:05 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 2(PG-13) 12:55, 3:30, 6:55, 9:40 • LEE DANIELS' THE BUTLER(PG- I3) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 8:45 • PERCY JACKSON:SEAOF MONSTERS (PG) I:I5,4:30, 7:25, 10:05 • PLANES (PG) I2:35, 3 • PRISONERS (R) 12:30, 3:50, 6:10, 7:50, 9:40 • RIDDICK (R) I, 3:55, 6:40, 9:45 • THE SPECTACULAR NOW(R) 1:15, 3:35, 6:20, 9:30 • WE'RE THE MILLERS (R) 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50 • THE WIZARD OF OZIMAX3-D (PG) 12:45, 4, 7, 9:35 • THE WORLD'S END (R) 2:40, 7:20, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54I-330-8562 • Dueto Monday Night Football, no movies will I/e screened today. • After 7 p.m., shows are2f and older only. Younger than 21 may at tendscreeningsbefore 7p.m.ifaccompaniedby a legal guardian.

TV TODAY 8 p.m. onE3, "How I Met Your Mother" — Robin and Barney (Cobie Smulders, Neil Patrick Harris) make astartling discovery about a family matter as they head to Long Island for their wedding. Marshall's (Jason Segel) trip back east changes course, thanks to something he sees onthe Internet. Lily (Alyson Hannigan) confronts Ted (Josh Radnor) about his feelings for Robin in the season premiere, "The Locket." Another new episode follows. 9 p.m. on HBO, Movie: "First Cousin Once Removed" — In this heart-wrenching 2012 documentary, filmmaker Alan Berliner chronicles five years in the life of poet, professor and translator Edwin Honig — his mother's cousin — as he struggles with Alzheimer's disease. n

9:30 p.m. onE3, "Mom — Christy (Anna Faris), a newly sober single mother, tries to mend fences with her own mom, Bonnie (Allison Janney), who's got lots of issues of her own, in this enjoyable new sitcom from Chuck Lorre ("Two and aHalf Men"). Sadie Calvano and BlakeGarrett Rosenthal play Christy's children, and French Stewart ("Third Rock From the Sun") plays a colleague. 19:91 p.m. onH C), "Castle" — In the season premiere, Beckett (Stana Katic) struggles with two life-changing offers: a job in Washington D.C. and a marriage proposal from Castle (Nathan Fillion). Lisa Edelstein ("House") guest stars in "Valkyrie"; Susan Sullivan and Molly Quinn also star. 19:01 p.m. onH f3, "The Blacklist" — James Spader ("Boston Legal") stars in this suspenseful new dramaas Raymond "Red" Reddington, a fugitive who resurfaces after 20 years of brokering shady deals for criminals around the world. He turns himself in at FBI headquarters with an intriguing offer: He'll help the feds catch a terrorist they thought was dead, but he'll only work with one agent, rookie Elizabeth Keen (MeganBoone). 10:01 p.m. onl3, "Hostages" — This suspenseful new drama stars Toni Collette ("United States of Tara") as Dr.Ellen Sanders, a prominent surgeon who's scheduled to operate on thepresident of the United States (James Naughton). Before the surgery, she and her family are takenhostage in their home by arogue FBIagent (Dylan McDermott), who threatens to kill them all if the president comesoutalive.TateDonovanand Sandrine Holt also star. ©Zap2rt

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.DdemMedo Road, 54 I-548-8777 • THE FAMILY (R) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 2(PG-13) 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 • PRISONERS (R) 3:15, 6:15, 9: I5 • RIDDICK (R) 4:30, 7, 9:30

Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • THE FAMILY (R)6:15 • IN A WORLD (R) 6:45 • LEE DANIELS' THE BUTLER(PG- I3) 6:15 • PRISONERS (R) 6

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CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * T here is a distinction between someonesoundingoffbecausethey can rather than someone being angry and out of control. Observe what is happening with a partner. You need to beaware. Several people make very caring gestures toward you. Tonight: Defer to a loved one.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * Pressure builds on the homefront, mainly because you don't let others know your true self. You might feel off-kilter, butyou will choose not to share that with anyone. Make aneffort to complete a project, or at least give it a headstart. Tonight: Ever playful, letting off steam.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 29) ** * * * Y our imagination will resolve a fight, butyou might forget to tell the other party. Make sure everyone you deal with is on the samepage. Useyour ingenuity to take off a lot of pressure. Tonight: It is Monday,butkick upyourheelsanyway. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • THE CONJURING (R) 7: IO • THE FAMILY (R)4:50, 7:15 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 2(PG- I3) 5, 7:20 • PLANES (PG) 5:05 • PRISONERS (R) 3:25, 6:25 • WE'RE THE MILLERS (R) 4:30, 7

541-389-1429 2748/Vrf'Crossing Dr. ¹140 rrww./ci rsti wolfedesigns. cvm

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

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

I


A10

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013

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IN THE BACI4: WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 MLB, B3

Community Sports, B5

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013

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

Today

Tuesday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Major LeagueBaseball, final week of regular seasonbegins:There are

Prep boys soccer, Gladstoneat Madras, 4:30 p.m.:TheWhite Buffaloes

Prep football, Rldgevlewat Bend, 7 p.m.:The Ravenscarry their 3-1

Running, Central OregonWine Stomp 5K/1OK,Terrebonne:Therace with

plenty of playoff spots available heading

have won two straight, including a 2-0 shutout in their Tri-Valley Conference

College football, Cal at Oregon,7:30 p.m. (Pac-12 Network); Coloradoat OregonState, noon (Pac-12 Network): Conference playgets underway in earnest this week, asthe Ducks play their first Pac-12 opponent in a nighttime

Registration is still available for $30,

affair in Eugene.Thereare a couple of big SECmatchups: LSUat Georgia

includin gonraceday.Youcanpickup entry forms at Volcano Vineyards or

accounting for105 of the Bears'124

(12:30 p.m. PDT, CBS) and Ole Miss at

yards on the ground.

Alabama (3:30 p.m., ESPN).

Fleet Feet Sports in Bend. On the web: www.faithhopeandcharityevents.com.

into the final week. OnMonday, you can catch two teams that are in theAmerican

record into Punk Hunnell Stadium,

where they face the LavaBears (0-4). Ridgeview hasscored 30 or more points

League wild-card race — Baltimore and

win at Estacada last Thursday. Having outscored opponents18-4, Madras (1-0

TampaBay— playingatnoonPDT on

TVC, 3-1 overall) hosts the Gladiators (0-

in each of its three wins, but Bend's Chris Wallace comes off a100-plus-yard

MLB Network. At 5 p.m., MLBN will have Washington at St. Louis or Houston at

1, 3-2) as they strive for a TVC title.

rushing performanceagainst Marist,

Texas.

Vineyards in Terrebonneat11 a.m.

< Henrik Stensonwins TourChampionshipto take FedExCupand$10 milion, B7 • Calendar,scoreboard,BB

TEE TO GREEN: I ixgoiferIhIvep ayedi l nevery PacificAmateurGolf Classic,B7 MLB COMMENTARY

great views of the Three Sisters will take place at Faith, Hope and Charity

COMMUNITY SPORTS:RUNNING

Oregon picksup first place votes NEW YORK — With most of the top teams merely tuning up, there was little movement in The Associated Press college football poll this week. Alabama

remained No. 1,and

A's back on top of

the first14 teams in the rankings held their positions from last week. The Crimson Tide did

lose some support from the media panel, drop-

AL West

• With snow on the course atthe Flagline Trailfest, runnersare remindedthat trails at elevation might not be openfor long

By Monte Poole The Oahland Tribune

OAKLAND, Calif. — The on-field celebration was brief and relatively muted, players standing between the mound and second base for a few minutes,

sharing hugs and pulling

on gray T-shirts advertising a bright gold statement that is amazing and accurate: "We A'sOwn The West." The confirmation came Sunday, when Texas lost at Kansas City, but the party couldn't start for another two hours, not until the A's had dispatched Minnesota 11-7 at the Coliseum. Those who had raced onto the field after the final out then jogged back into the clubhouse, grabbing bottles and returning

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

MOUNT BACHELORLaura Flood is a high-altitude

kind of girl.

to spray champagne on cheering A's fans standing behind the dugouts. See A's/B10

Braves,A's,Cards reachpostseason The Atlanta Braves, Oakland Athletics and St. Louis

Cardinals can start planning for the playoffs. All three teams

clinched postseason spots Sunday. Theyjoined Boston and the LosAngeles Dodgers their first NL Eastcrown since 2005, and the Athletics took their second straight AL West title. The Cardinals are still trying to win the NL Central but are assured of at least a wildcard berth. With a week left in

is still tangled. TampaBayis a

No. 2 Oregon, which didn't play, received the remaining four first-

place votes. No. 4 Ohio State

was one of four ranked teams to score at least 70 points Saturday.

Never before hadmore than two ranked teams

reached 70 points on the same weekendsince

Lodge.

Cowboys 31 Ravens 30 R ams 7 T e xaos9

great because it's the last race of the season. After this it's time to ski." SeeFlagline/B10

for the two AL wild-card spots

quarter.

the ranklngs went to a top 25 in1989. No. 25 Fresno State was the only team to enter the rankings. Arizona State dropped out. For both the AP and

90 (degrees).... This (event) is

the regular season, the race

ping from 59 first-place votes last week to 56. Alabama beat Colorado State 31-6 on Saturday in a game that was 17-6 heading into the fourth

A regular runner on the singletrack on and around Mount Bachelor, Flood and several hundred other trail junkies said goodbye to some of Central Oregon's favorite high-elevation tracks Sunday during the 2013 Flagline 50K and High Alpine Half Marathon. Snow flurries and slush greeted early 50-kilometer race starters at 7 a.m. at Dutchman Flat Sno-park, while a light dusting welcomed runners at the Flagline Trailfest at some of the higher portions of the courses. Both courses started at over 6,300 feet and reached heights surpassing 6,900 feet before finishing at Mt. Bachelor ski area's Sunrise "The conditions were tough," said Flood, 33 and of Bend, whocompeted inthe half marathon, finishing 69th overall in 2 hours, 20 minutes and 34 seconds. "It's crazy. Last weekend up here it was

in the playoffs. The Braves won

half-game ahead of Cleveland, with Texas1~/egames behind the Indians. In the NL, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh are tied for the wild-card slots.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

the coaches polls, see Scoreboard,B2. — The Associated Press

NFL Seahawks45 Patriots 23 Jaguars 17 Bucs 3 C olts 2 7 49ers 7

S a ints 3 1 Ca r dinals 7

B ears 40 L i ons 2 7 Steelers 23 Redskins 20 Bengals 34 Panthers 38 P ackers 30 Giants 0

Titars 20 D olphins 27 Chargers 17 Falcons 23

Browrs 31 Jets Vikings 27 Bills

27 20

What's wrong with the Niners? San Francisco's offense stalls again, this time in a loss to Indy,B4

Inside Andy Tulhs/The Bulletin

Runners stride down the trail just after the start of the Flagline 50K at Dutchman Sno-park on Sunday morning. More than 140 runners took part in the 50-kilometer race.

• Results from the Flagline 50K and High Alpine Half, Community

Sports Scoreboard,B5

COLLEGE FOOTBALL COMMENTARY

C

'/

Beavers find a way to win again By Steve Gress Corvallis Gazette-Times

SAN DIEGOike Riley was all smiles talking to the media in the interview room at Qualcomm Stadium on Saturday night. How could he not be after watching this Oregon State football team come up with another thrilling vicAlex Gallardo i The Associated Press tory in the closing minutes? Oregon State wide receiver Brandin Cooks (7) celeSure, this one was tough to watch brates a fourth-quarter interception for a touchdown at times. by cornerback Steven Nelson (2) with linebacker And the Beavers still have plenty Darrell Songy (41) nearby against San Diego State of areas of concern. on Saturday. Oregon State won 34-30. But a win is a win.

M

And a win on the road is even better. "We're satisfied with the win," senior cornerback Rashaad Reynolds said. "But, we're not happy with it in the same breath. We know we're way better than that as a team on both sides of the ball." Thanks to Steve Nelson's 16-yard interception return for a t o uchdown, the Beavers rallied for a 3430 win over San Diego State. "That was huge," Riley said. "That play will go down in the history of this season, I think." It sure will.

Had Nelson not made that interception, the Beavers were staring a 2-2 start in the face. "It's a big play, a dramatic play for our team, for our season," Reynolds said. "If we had lost, we would be 2-2. But we pulled out the stops at the right time, we made plays, we stayed together, which is probably the thing I'm most proud of. We didn't give up. That shows the character of the team. Now we need to take that character and fight and move on and fix the stuff we can fix." See Beavers/B10

Indianapolis llnebacker Kavell Conner leapsover San Francisco puarterback Colin Kaepernlck.

PREP SPORTS

Look for prep SlideShOWOnline

O 0

The Bulletin

ta kes a look back at the week in

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

preppics.


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 20'l3

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY BASEBALL MLB, Baltimore at Tampa Bay MLB, Washington at St. Louis or Houston at Texas MLB, Kansas City at Seattle FOOTBALL NFL, Oakland at Denver BASKETBALL W NBA, playoffs, Phoenix at Los Angeles

TV/Radio MLB

5 p.m.

MLB Root

7 p.m. 5:25 p.m.

ESPN

7p . m.

ESPN2

Men, European Championship, gold medal game,Francevs. Lithuania (taped) 11:30 p.m.

ESPN

TUESDAY SOCCER

Time

UEFAChampions League, FC Barcelona vs. Ajax (taped)

11:30 a.m.

TV / Radio Roo t

VOLLEYBALL

Women's college, Colorado at Utah Women's college, Arizona at Arizona State BASEBALL MLB, Kansas City at Seattle

6 p.m. 8 p.m.

Pac-1 2 Pac-1 2

7 p.m.

Root

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL Broncos' Miller tried to maniPulate teSting —Von Miller was caught trying to manipulate the NFL's drug-testing

system, which led to asix-game suspension thatcouldhavebeen

Montecatini Terme to Florence,

finishing in1 hour, 4 minutes, 16.81 seconds. Martin teamed with Sylvain Chavanel of France, Michal Kwiatkowski of Poland, Niki Terpstra of the Netherlands, Kristof Vandewalle of Belgium

and Peter Velits of Slovakia.

longer. A person familiar with the case told The Associated

Press on Sundaythat Denver's All-Pro linebacker tried to avoid a positive test under the league's

substance-abuse policy. The person spoke oncondition of anonymity becausetheleague has not announced thedetails of Miller's violation. The manipulation attempt was first reported

by ESPN.Miller's six-game suspension wasacompromise among the NFL,the players union and Miller's representatives; the league wanted a longer penalty for the third-year player.

TENNIS Radwanska winsKorea OPOll —Top-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska rallied from a set down on Sunday to beat An-

astasia Pavlyuchenkova6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-4 and win the Korea Open in Seoul. Radwanska hit

five aces andtook advantage of 10 double-faults by the third-

seeded Russian player to win in 2 hours, 45 minutes at Olympic Park tennis stadium. Sunday's

last month, Miller said in a state-

win was Radwanska's first since winning the Apia International in Sydney in January.

ment, "althoughmy suspension doesn't result from a positive

Simon deatsTsonga-

When his banwas announced

test, there is no excuse for my violations of the rules."

Cincinnati freshmandies — A freshman offensive lineman for Cincinnati was killed

Second-seededGilles Simon beat two-time defending

champion Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 6-4, 6-3 on Sunday to win the all-French Open de Moselle final

in Metz, France, for his first

and two freshman receivers

title of the year. Simon had not

were injured in aone-vehicle accident following the Bearcats'

faced a single break point in the previous two matches but lost

14-0 win over Miami of Ohio on Saturday night in nearby Oxford.

his serve once in the first set

of the accident, which occurred

Guldis triumPhS — Sixth-

to Tsonga andsaved four other Ben Flick of Hamilton, Ohio, was break points in the match. pronounced deadatthe scene south of Oxford. Receivers Mark seeded Ernests Gulbis won his Barr of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and

Javon Harrison of Dayton, Ohio, were taken byhelicopter to the

fourth career title Sunday by rallying to beat Guillermo Garcia-

Lopez of Spain 3-6, 6-4, 6-0 at

University of Cincinnati Medical Center.

the St. Petersburg Open in Rus-

ClemSORSuSPendS line-

ranked Garcia-Lopez broke the Latvian twice to win the first set.

sia. After an exchange of breaks in the opening games, the74th-

man — Sophomore offensive lineman Isaiah Battle will miss No. 3 Clemson's next game

the second but Gulbis won five

against Wake Forest after he

consecuti vegames toeventhe

was ejected for punching North Carolina State defensive back Jarvis Byrd last Thursday night.

match. He then dominated the third setand sealed the victory on his first match point with a

Clemson coach DaboSwinney

service winner.

Garcia-Lopez took a4-1 lead in

said Sunday that Battle would sit when the third-ranked Tigers

(3-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) return home to face the Demon Deacons onSaturday. Battle, from Brooklyn, N.Y.,

— France won its first major

threw an uppercut that knocked Byrd to the turf late in Clem-

basketball title Sunday, beating Lithuania 80-66 in the final of

son's 26-14 victory over the

the Europeanchampionship in

Wolfpack. Swinney said Battle

Ljubljana, Slovenia. San Antonio

was wrong and would also face punishment at each practice this week.

BASKETBALL France takes Eurotitle

Spurs star TonyParker hada quiet game for France, which broke open aclose contest by closing the third quarter with a14-0 run that kept Lithuania

BASEBALL Phillies makeSandderg

scoreless for 4 minutes. France's lead grew to 22 with 3 minutes

manager —The Philadelphia

remaining in the third, and Lithuania never recovered. Nicolas

Phillies removed the interim

Batum of the Portland Trail Blaz-

tag from RyneSandberg, sign-

ers scored17 points for France.

ing him to manage the next

three years Sunday morning. Sandberg had beenserving as interim manager since the Phillies fired Charlie Manuel on Aug.

16. The Phillies havegone18-16 under Sandberg. Hesigned a three-year contract, taking him through 2016 with a club option for 2017.

CYCLING Omega winsteamtime

YACHTING OraCle StayS aliVe — ThIS has becometheAmerica's Cup that just won't go away, thanks to fickle wind and Oracle Team

USA's remarkable resurgence. Twice down byseven races, the defending champions no doubt have Emirates TeamNew Zealand onedge.SkipperJimmy Spithill and his mates with

Oracle TeamUSAwere master-

trial at wOrldS — Tony

ful in light air Sunday on San

Martin poweredOmegaPharmaQuick Step to its second con-

Francisco Bay, winning races

secutive title in the team time trial as the road cycling world

COREBOARD

14 and15 to cut the Kiwis' lead to 8-5. Oracle won Race14 by

23 seconds andthen took Race championships openedSunday 15 by 37seconds. Race16and in Florence, Italy. Omegaedged Race17, if necessary, are schedOrica Greenedge by0.81 seculed for today. — From wire reports onds over the 35-mile route from

ON DECK Tuesday Volleyball: Ridgeviewat Summit,6:30 p.m.;Sistersat Elmira, 645p.m.; Gladstoneat Madras, 6pm.; La Pine atCotageGrove,6:45p.m.; Culver atRegis, 6 p.m.; Horizon at Central Christian, 5 p.mzBendat CrookCounty,6:30 p.m.; SouthWasco County at Trinity Lutheran, 6:15p.m.; Redmondat Mountain View,6:30p.m. Boys soccer:SummitatRidgeview,3 p.m.; Sistersat JunctionCity,4:30p.m.;GladstoneatMadras,4:30 p.mz La PineatElmira,4:30 p.m.;Mountain Viewat Redmond, 3p m Girls soccer:SummitatRrdgeview, 4:30p.m.;Junction CityatSisters, 4:30p.m.;MadrasatGladstone, 4p.m.;Elmiraat LaPine,4:30 p.m.; Mountain View at Redm ond,4:30p.m. Boys waterpolo: SummitatRidgeview,TBA Girls water polo: SummitatRidgevrew,TBA Thursday Boys soccer:BendatSummit, 6p.m; Mountain View at Ridgeview, 3p.mzCotage Groveat Sisters, 4:30 p.m.; Madras at NorthMarion, 4p.m.; Junction City atLaPine,4:30 p.m.;RedmondatCrook County, 3 p.m. Girls soccer: MountainViewat Ridgeview,4 30p.m.; Sisters atCottageGrove, 4:30 p.mzNorth Marion at Madras,4:30p.m.; La Pineat Junction City, 4:30 p.mzBendat Summit, 7:30 p.mzRedmondat CrookCounty, 4:30p.m. Volleyball: MountainViewat Ridgeview, 6:30 p.m.; Sisters atLaPine,6:45 p.m.;MadrasatNorth Marion, 6 p.m.;Culverat ToledolWaldportat Santiam, TBA,Summit atBend, 6:30p.mzCrookCounty at Redmond,630p.m. Cross-country: Sisters,LaPrneatHarrier's Challenge at Schwarz Parkin Cottage Grove,TBA Boys water polo: BendatMountain View,TBA Girls water polo:BendatMountain View,TBA

1. SebastianVettel, Germany,RedBull, 61 laps, 15913132 96577mph 2. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 61,

IN THE BLEACHERS www.gocom cs comhnthebleachers

In the Bleachers cr 3013 steve Moore Dist by Universal Uclick

1:59:45 759. 3. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Lotus,61, 1:59:57.052.

4. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 61, 4/cs

2'00;04.287.

5. Lewis Hamilton, England, Mercedes, 61, 2:00:06.291. 6. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari, 61,2:00:17.009. 7. Jenson Button, England, McLaren, 61, 2'00;36.486

8. SergioPerez,Mexico, McLaren,61, 2:00:36.952. 9. Nico Hulkenberg, Germany, Sauber, 61, 2:00;37.393. 10. Adrian Sutil, Germany, Force India, 61, 2 00:37.800 11. Pastor Maldonado,Venezuela, Williams, 61, 2:00:41.611. 12. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber, 61, 2.00:51.026. 13. Valtteri Bottas, Finland, Williams, 61, 2:00:58.293. 14. Jean-Eric Vergne, France,Toro Rosso, 61, 2'01'06.644 15. Mark Webber,Australia, Red Bull, 60, +1 lap, retired. 16. Giedovander Garde,Netherlands, Caterham,60, +1 lap. 17. MaxChilton, England,Marussia,60, +1lap 18. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia,60, +1lap.

19. CharlePi s c, France,Caterham,60,+1 lap. Not Classfied 20. Pauldi Resta, Scotland, ForceIndia, 54,retired. 21. Romain Grosiean, France,l.otus, 37, retired. 22. DanielRicciardo, Australia,Toro Rosso,23, retired. Drivers Slandings (After 13 of 19races) 1. Sebastian Vetel, Germany, Red Bull,247points. 2. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,187. "It's fourth and inches ... Petersen! Get in there, 3. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes,151. Friday 4. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Lotus,149. take the snap and tip over flat on your face!!" Football: Ridgeviewat Bend, 7 p.m.; Redm ond at 5. MarkWebber, Australia, RedBull,130. Summit, 7 p.m.; Wilsonville at MountainView, 6. NicoRosberg,Germany, Mercedes,116. 7 p.mz Madisonat CrookCounty, 7 p.mzNorth 7. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari, 87. Marion atMadras,7 p.m.; Sistersat Sweet Home, 8. RomainGrosiean, France,Lotus, 57. 7p.m.;JunctionCityat LaPine, 7p.m.; Culverat 9.JensonButton,England,McLaren,54. Vernonia 7p.m.;Gilchrist atPowers,4 p.m. 10. Pauldi Resta, Scotland, ForceIndia, 36. Cross-country: Ridgeview atBridgette NielsonInvite 11. AdrianSutil, Germ any, ForceIndia, 26. BoiseSt. 4 4 151 37 8 25. (34)CaseyMears, Ford, 300,57.7,19, $110443 at The Da ges Scorosis Park,TBA 12. SergioPerez,Mexico, McLaren,22. Syracuse 4 4 1 50 37. 5 26. (35) Davi d Reuti m ann, Toyota, 300, 55.8, 18, Volleyball: Sherman at Central Christian, 5 p.m.; 13. NicoHulkenberg,Germany,Sauber,19. Rlinois 3 4 111 37. 0 $99,593. NorthLakeatTrinity Lutheran,5:45p.m.; ButteFals 14. DanieRi l cciardo,Australia, ToroRosso,18. 3 4 110 36.7 UCF 27. (21) DanicaPatrick Chevrolet 300 57.1 17 at Gilchrist, 4p.m. 15. Jean-EricVergne,France,Toro Rosso,13. Stanford 3 6 110 36. 7 $83,110. Boys waterpolo: MadrasatRidgeview,TBA 16. Pastor Mal donado, Venezuela, Wiliams,1. La -Lafayette 4 2 146 36 5 28. (30) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 300, 51.9, 16, Constructors Standings Rutgers 4 4 145 3 6 3 Bt04,968. Saturday 1. RedBull, 377points. Duke 4 I 142 35.5 29. (19)DavidRagan,Ford, 299,54.6, 15,$102,193. Boys soccer:CentralatBend, noon;Irrigon atCulver, 2. Ferrari, 274. Troy 4 3 141 35. 3 30. (27)MichaelMcDowell, Chevrolet, 297,43.4, 14, 3. Mercedes,267. 1p.m.;Central ChristianatNorth ClackamasChrislowa 4 5 141 35. 3 Bt00,832. tian, 1p.m. 4. Lotus,206. 4 2 139 34. 8 31. (38) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 297, 41, 13, 5. McLaren,76. Volleyball: Ridgeview at Cotage GroveTournament, Cincinnati 4 3 137 34 3 $79,085. TBA;Sistersat SantiamChristian Tournament,TBA; WesternKy. 6. ForceIndia,62. 4 4 136 34 0 32. (43)JoshWise, Ford,297,39.4,0,$78,810. Central Christian at North Clackamas Christian, MississippiSt. 7.ToroRosso,31. 3 8 101 33. 7 33. (37)J.J.Yeley,Chevrolet, 296,44.8, 12,$78,585. TBA; Triad atTrinity Lutheran,2:45p.mz Crook California 8.Sauber,19. Oklahoma 3 8 101 3 3. 7 34. (32) Landon Cassi g , Chevrol e t, 296, 43, 0, County atSouthAlbanyTournament, TBA;Moun9. Williams,1. $78,385. tain View atSouthAlbany,TBA;Gilchristat Mitchell, 35. (36) Joe Nemec hek, Toyota, 296, 33.7, 0, 1 p.m. Betting line $78,185 SOCCER Cross-country: Sistersat OutlawInvite, TBA;Sum36. (42)TimmyHil, Ford,293, 27.4,8, $77,955 NFL mit, Redmond,LaPine, Madrasat MadrasInvite, 37. (2) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 278, 97.6, 8, (Home teams in CAPS) TBA;Bend,Mountain View,Summit, CrookCounty MLS Bt03,241. at Nike PreNationals at PortlandMeadowsRace Favorite Opening Current underdog MAJORLEAGUESOCCER 38. (33) Kevin Swindeg, Toyota, 244, 32.1, 0, Today Track, 9a.m. All Times PDT BRONCOS 14.5 155 Raid ers $72,675. Boys waterpolo: MadrasatBend, TBA 39.(24) DavidGigiland,Ford,accident, 239,386, 5, Girls water polo:MadrasatBend,TBA $68,675 Eastern Conference TENNIS 40.(28) BobbyLabonte,Toyota, accident, 161,37.2, W L T P l sGF GA FOOTBALL 4, $72,675. NewYork 1 5 9 6 5 1 47 36 Professional 41. (39)TonyRaines, Chevrolet, brakes,128, 29, 0, S porting KansasCity 14 9 6 4 8 43 28 $60,675. Montreal 1 3 9 6 4 5 46 42 College St. PetersburgOpen 42. (41) Johnny Saut e r, Ford, brakes, 103, 31.4, 0, Houston 1 2 10 7 43 37 36 Sunday The APTop26 $56,675 N ew England 1 1 1 1 7 4 0 41 33 At SCC Peterburgsky The Top 25teamsinTheAssociated Presscollege 43. (40) Scott Riggs, Ford, brakes,92, 25.8, I, Chicago 1 1 12 6 3 9 36 43 St. Petersburg, Russia football poll, with first-placevotes in parentheses, $53,175. Philadelphia 10 10 9 39 37 39 Purse: $519,775(WT250) recordsthroughSept. 21,total pointsbasedon25 Columbus 1 1 14 5 3 8 36 39 Surface: Hard-Indoor points for a first-placevotethrough onepoint for a Race Statistics Toronto FC 4 15 11 23 25 44 Singles 25th-place vote,andpreviousranking: Average SpeedofRaceW inner:107573mph. D.C. 3 20 6 1 5 19 48 Championship R ecord Pts P v T ime of Race: 2 hours, 57 m i n u t e s, 2 se c onds . WesternConference ErnestsGulbis (6), Latvia,def. GuilermoGarcia1. Alabama (56 ) 3-0 1,4 9 6 1 Margin of Victory: 0.533 seconds. W L T P t sGF GA 2. Oregon (4) 3 -0 1,418 2 Lopez,Spain,3-6, 6-4,6-0. Caution Flags: 7for 37laps. Seattle 1 5 8 5 5 0 38 28 3. Clemson 3 -0 1 ,340 3 Lead Changes:19among11drivers. R ealSaltLake 1 4 1 0 6 4 8 53 39 Moselle Open 4. OhioSt. 4 -0 1,320 4 Lap Leaders:R.Newman1-2;K.Kahne3-31; M.Truex Portland 11 5 13 46 45 31 Sunday 5. Stanford 3 -0 1,270 5 Jr. 32; Jyeley33; K.Kahne34-35; M.TruexJr. 36LosAngeles 13 10 6 4 5 46 36 At Les ArenesdeMelz 6. Lsu 4 -0 1,167 6 108; M.Kenseth109; J Gordon110; B.Kesel o wski Colorado 1 2 9 9 4 5 37 31 Metz, France 7. Louisville 4 -0 1,088 7 111-112; J.Logano 113; D.Earnhardt Jr. 114- Vancouver 1 1 10 8 4 1 42 38 Purse: $621,700(WT260) 8. FloridaSt. 3 -0 1 ,049 8 129; M.TruexJr. 130-152; M.Kenseth 153-165; SanJose 1 1 11 8 4 1 31 41 Surface: Hard-Indoor 9. Georgia 2 -1 1,029 9 M.TruexJr. 166;J.Gordon167-201; D.Earnhardt FC Daga s 10 9 10 40 40 42 Singles 10. Texas ABM 3 -1 1,011 1 0 Jr. 202; C.Bowyer 203-207; M.Kenseth 208-246; ChivasIJSA 6 16 8 2 6 29 54 Championship 11. Oklahoma St. 3-0 8 4 9 11 J.Johnson 247; M. K en seth 248-300. NOTE: Three po i n ts ior vi ctory,onepoint for tie. Gilles Simon(2), France,def. Jo-Wiliried Tsonga Leaders Summary(Driver, Times Led, Laps 12. South Carolina 2-1 8 2 8 12 13. UCLA 3-0 7 9 8 13 (1),6-4,6-3. Led): M.Kenseth, 4timesior 106laps; M.Truex Sunday'sGame 14. Oklahom a 3-0 6 8 9 14 Jr., 4 timesfor 98 laps;J.Gordon, 2 timesfor 36 NewYork1, FCDallas0 Korea Open 15. Miami 3-0 6 8 7 16 l a ps; K.Kahne, 2 ti m es for 31 l a ps; D. E arnhardt Jr., Friday's Game Sunday 16. Washington 3-0 5 5 9 17 2 timesfor 17laps;C.Bowyer, 1 time for 5 laps; PhiladelphiaatSporting KansasCity, 5p.m. At Olympic Park 17 Northwestern 4-0 4 7 7 18 B Kesel o wski,1 time for 2 l a ps; R N e w m an, 1 t i m e Saturday, Sept. 28 Seoul, SouthKorea 18. Michigan 4-0 4 5 0 15 for2laps; JJohnson,1timefor1lap; Jlogano,1 D.C. United at Toronto FC,10a.m. Purse: $600,000(Intl.) 19. Baylor 3-0 4 4 1 20 time for I lap; J.yel e y, I time l o r I lap. Real Sal t Lake at Vancouver,4 p.m. Surface: Hard-Outdoor 20. Florida 2-1 4 1 4 19 Top12 in Points:1. MKenseth,2111; 2. KyBusch, Housto natNew England,4:30p.m. Singles 21. Mississippi 3-0 3 4 2 21 2,097, 3. J.Johnson, 2,093, 4. C.Ed w ards, 2,075; Montrealat Chicago,5:30p.m Championship 22. NotreDame 3-1 2 5 6 22 5. G.Biffle,2,073;6. K.Harvick,2,072; 7.Ku.Busch, Sunday, Sept. 29 AgnieszkaRadwanska(1), Poland,dei. Anastasia 23. Wisconsin 3-1 1 3 0 24 2,071; 8. J.Gordon, 2,069; 9. R.Ne w m an, 2,064; Los Angeleat s Portland,12:30 p.m. ova(3), Russia, 6-7(6), 6-3,6-4. 24. TexasTech 4-0 1 2 7 25 Pavlyuchenk 10. C.Bowyer,2,063; 11 D.EarnhardtJr., 2,049; Columbus at FCDallas, 5:30p.m. 25.FresnoSt 3-0 110 N R 12.J.Logano,2,042. NewYorkat Seattle FC,6p.m. Pan Pacific Open Dthers receivingvotes: ArizonaSt. 41, Georgia SanJoseatChrvasUSA, 8p.m. Sunday Tech 30 Maryland 24, UCF19, Nebraska13, N. INASCAR Driver Rating Formula At Ariake Colosseum linois 9, Arizona8, Virginia Tech4, Michigan St. 3, Amaximum of150 points canbeattained inarace. Tokyo Missouri 2,Navy1,Rutgers1. The formulacombinesthefollowing categories:Wins, BASKETBALL Purse: $2.37million (Premier) Finishes,Top-15Finishes, AverageRunning Position Surface: Hard-Outdoor USA TodayTop25 Poll While onLeadLap,AverageSpeedunderGreen,FastVVNBA Singles The USA TodayTop25tootball coachespoll, with estLap,LedMostLaps,Lead-LapFinish. First Round WOMEN'SNATIONAL first-placevotesin parentheses,recordsthrough Sept. SloaneStephens(9), UnitedStates, def. Stefanie BASKETBALLASSOCIATION 21, total pointsbasedon 25 points for iirst place Voegele, Switzerland,6-3, 6-2. NHRA Playoffs throughonepoint for 25th,andpreviousranking: Samantha Stosur (12),Australia, dei.AlizeCornet, All Times PDT Record Pts Pvs France, NATIONALHOT ROD ASSOCIATION 2-6, 6-4, 6-1. 3-0 1 ,547 I 1. Alabama (59) Texas Fall Nationals Kirsten Fipkens (14), Belgium, dei. Barbora lx-if necessary) 3 -0 1,480 2 2. Oregon (3l Sunday Strycova, CzechRepublic, 7-6(4), 7-5. CONFERENCESEMIFINALS 4 -0 1,399 3 Zahlavova 3. OhioSt. At Texas Motorplex SoranaCirstea(15), Romania, def.Julia Goerges, 3 -0 1 ,332 4 (Best-of-3) 4. Clemson Ennis, Texas 6-4, 6-4. Eastern Conference 3 -0 1,312 5 Germany, 5. Stanford Final Finish Order Dominika Ci b ul k ova (16), Sl o vaki a , dei . Urszul a 4 -0 1 ,161 7 Washington1, Atlanta 1 6. Lsu Top Fuel 7. Louisville 4 0 1 140 6 Radwanska,Poland,6-3,6-3. 1. Doug Kalitta. 2. ShawnLangdon. 3. Morgan Thursday,Sept. 19:Washington 71,Atlanta56 BelindaBencic,Switzerland, def. DariaGavrilova, 3 -0 1,121 8 Saturday, Se pt. 21:Atlanta 63,Washington 45 8. Flonda St. Lucas. 4.SpencerMassey. 5. Antron Brown.6.Bob x-Today,Sept.23: Washington atAtlanta,5 p.m. 3 -1 1,044 9 Russia,6-2,5-7, 7-5. 9. Texas ABM V andergri i f. 7. Brittany Force. 8. Tony Sch um ac her . L ucie Sai a rova, Czech R ep ubl i c , dei . Pol o na Her2 -1 1,020 1 0 Indiana 2, Chicago0 10. Georgia 9. ClayMigican.10. TJ.Zizzo 11.Billy Torrence.12. cog, Sl o veni a 6-4,6-7 , (6l,7-6(2). 3-0 9 0 9 11 Friday, Sept. 20: Indi ana85, Chicago72 11. Oklahoma St. J.R. Todd.13. LarryDixon. 14 SteveTorrence. 15. Maria-TeresaTorro-Flor, Spain,def. KlaraZako3-0 86 3 12 Sunday ,Sept.22 Indiana79,Chicago57 12. Oklahom a DavidGrubnic. 16.8randonBernstein. palova, Czech R epu bl i c , 7-6(Bi y 1-6,6-3. 2-1 8 2 5 13 WesternConference 13. South Carolina FunnyCar SvetlanaKuznetsova, Russia,def. PaulaDrmae3-0 7 3 1 15 Minnesota 2, Seattle 0 14. UCLA 1. CruzPedregon. 2.JohnForce. 3.JackBeckman. chea, Argenti n a,6-1, 6-2. 3-0 6 1 3 17 Friday, Sept. 20. Minnesota80,Seatle 64 15. Miami Elina Svitolina,ukraine,def. KurumiNara,Japan, 4. RobertHight. 5. BobTascaIII. 6. MattHagan.7. Sunday,Sept.22: Minnesota58,Seatle 55 4-0 16. Northwestern 560 16 TonyPedregon.8 JohnnyGray.9.CourtneyForce.10. 2-6, 7-5,6-3. 4-0 5 3 4 14 Phoenix1, Los Angeles1 17. Michigan AlexisDeJoria.11.JeffArend.12. BlakeAlexander.13. VenusWiliams,unitedStates, def. MonaBarthel, 3-0 4 6 5 19 18. Baylor RonCapps.14.TimWilkerson. 15. DelWorsham.16. Thursday,Sept.19: Phoenix 86,LosAngeles 75 Germany, 6-3, 6-1. 2-1 4 4 9 18 Saturday, Se pt. 21 LosAngeles82, Phoenix 73 19. Florida ChadHead. 3-0 4 2 7 20 x-Today ,Sept.23:PhoenixatLosAngeles,7 p.m. 20. Washington Pro Stock 21. Mississippi 3-0 3 3 1 22 MOTOR SPORTS 1.JasonLine.2.ShaneGray.3.JegCoughlin.4. 22. NotreDame 3-1 3 1 7 21 V. Gaines.5 AllenJohnson.6 RickieJones. 7 Erica DEALS 23. FresnoSt. 3-0 1 5 6 25 Enders-Stevens 8. I.arryMorgan. 9 MikeEdwards. NASCAR 3-1 9 8 NR 24. Wisconsin I 0. Vincent Nobile. 11.GregAnderson.I2. GregStan25. Texas Tech 4-0 9 2 NR Sprint Cup Transactions field.13. ChrisMcGaha.14. MattHartford.15. Rodger Dthers receivingvotes GeorgiaTech47; Central Sylvania 300 Brogdon.16.SteveKent. BASEBALL Florida35;Nebraska34; Arizona33;Northern llinois Sunday Pro StockMotorcycle American League 21; ArizonaState19; Maryland11;MichiganState 8; At New Hampshire MotorSpeedway 1 Eddie Krawiec.2. Matt Smith. 3.HectorArana. LDS ANGELESANGEL S—Sent RHP Daniel Rutgers5; Texas4; Virginia Tech3; Missouri 2, MinLoudon, N.H. 4 Hector AranaJr 5. LETonglet. 6.ScottyPogacheck. Strangeoutrrght toSalt Lake(PCL)andRHPDavid nesota1;Utah1. Lap length: 1.058 miles 7. MichaelRay.8. Jerry Savoie. 9.JohnHall. 10.Jim Carpenter outright toArkansas(Texasl. (Blart position in parentheses) Underdahl11. . AngieSmith. 12. MichaelPhilips. 13. TAMPABAYRAYS Recalled LHP Enny Romero Slatislics 1. (9) MattKenseth, Toyota, 300laps,141.5 rating, 48 ShawnGann. 14.AdamArana.15. AndrewHines. 16. from Durham (IL). Team Sc oring Offense points,$262,066. Mike Berry. National League FG Pts Avg 2. (12)KyleBusch,Toyota,300,1127,42,$210143. Final Results PHILADE PLHIAPHII.LIES—Signedmanager Ryne 3 G Baylor 2 2 0 9 69.7 3. (10)GregBiile, Ford,300,973, 41,$146585. Top Fuel— Doug Kalttta,3842 seconds,32043 Sandbergtoathree-year contract. Oregon 3 18 4 61 3 4. (11) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 300, 116.7,41, mph del. ShawnLangdon, 3.896seconds, 291.32 HOCKEY UCLA 4 1 5 8 52.7 Bt60,796 l mph. NationalHockeyLeague 4 3 Ohio St. 2 21 0 52.5 5. (23) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet,300, 94.2, 39, Funny Car —Cruz Pedregon, Toyota Camry, COLORADOAVALANCHE— Claimed F Marc-AnFloridaSt. 5 15 7 52.3 $142,005. 4.106,312.06def. JohnForce,FordMustang, 4.220, dre Clicheoff waiversfromLosAngeles. Texas A8M 3 2 0 1 503 6. (17) DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,300, 103 39 270.27. DETROIT RED WINGS— Assigned LW TomasJuLouisville 6 1 9 2 48.0 Bt 15,835. Pro Stock —Jason Line, ChevyCamaro, 6.590, rco, RWMartin Frk, RWAndrei Nestrasil, LWTrevor Missouri 2 3 4 3 1 4 1 47.0 7. (29)BrianVickers, Toyota, 300,91.1, 0, $105,235. 211.16dei.ShaneGray, Camaro, 6.595,210.44. Parkes, RW Mitch Cagah an, LWMarek Tvrdon, C Navy 3 92 46.0 8. (25) Jeif Burton, Chevrolet, 300, 91.7, 36, Pro StockMotorcycle—Eddie Krawiec, Harley-DaCage Jarnkrok,C David Mclntyre, LWJeff Hoggan,D GeorgiaTech 1 1 3 6 45.3 st 02,535. vidson, 6.951,191.87dei. MattSmith, Bueg,6913, GleasonFournier, DRyanSproul, DBrennan Evans,D OklahomaSt 1 1 3 6 453 9. (26)CarlEdwards,Ford, 300,861, 35,$127,360 194.55. 3 Max Nicastro, D Xavier Dueget, DRichard Nedomlel, FresnoSt. 5 1 3 4 44.7 10. (5) Martin TruexJr., Toyota, 300, 120.7, 35, Top Alcohol Dragster Jim Whiteley, 5.322, GTomMccollumandGCamLanigantoGrandRapids Indiana I 17 8 44.5 Bt35,060. 270.10def.Bill Reichert,5.327, 262.23. (AHL). Miami(FL) 3 4 2 1 3 2 44.0 11. (20) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 300, 102.1, 34, TopAlcoholFunnyCar—ShaneWesterfield,Chevy FLORIDA PANTHERS—Loaned FJon Matsumoto, Arizona 4 13 1 43 7 $140,826. Monte Carlo,5.555,259.66def.FrankManzo,Monte FGregRago,F Scott Timmins, DMikeCarusoandG Nebraska 2 1 7 3 43.3 12. (14) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 300, 93.6, 32, Carlo, 5.583,263.92. MichaelHouserto SanAntonio(AHL). Lsu 3 4 4 1 7 3 43.3 Bt05,785. Competition Eliminator —Donald Thomas, DragLDS ANGELES KINGS— Loaned RW Brandon KoWashington 3 1 2 8 42.7 13. (4) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 300, 818, 31, ster, 7451,147.31def. RickHord,GXP , foul. zun andDAndrewCampbell to Manchester (AHL). Ball St. 6 1 6 9 42.3 Bt 15,830. Super Stock —Anthony Bertozzi, Pontiac Grand MONTREALCANADIENS— Assigned G Dustin Utah 7 16 8 420 14.(6)JoeyLogano,Ford,300,90.5,31,$115,668. Am, 9.101,149.03dei. KevinHelms,DodgeChalTokarski toHamilton (AHL). Minnesota 3 4 5 1 6 7 41.8 15. (3) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 300, 105.7, 30, lenger,9.315,140.25. Wyoming 0 1 6 7 41.8 $131,696. StockEliminator—Jerry Emmons, Chevy Camaro, Northwestern 6 16 5 41.3 16. (1) RyanNewm an, Chevrolet, 300, 82.8, 29 10.131, 127.90def. DavidLatino, PontiacFirebird, FISH COUNT Wisconsin 4 16 4 41 0 $128,693. 10.139,12371 Oregon St 5 16 4 41 0 17. (I6) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 300, 76.9, 28, Upstream daily movement ofadultchinook, jackchiSuper Comp —Scooter Choate, Dragster, 8.938, utah St. 3 1 6 2 40.5 $124,793. nook,steelheadandwild steeheadatselectedColumbia 171.18dei.GaryStinnett, Dragster,foul. Georgia 3 1 2 1 40.3 18. (22) MarcosAmbrose, Ford, 300, 69.9, 26, R iver dams l a stupdatedonSaturday. SuperGas—JimmyLewis, ChevyCorvette, 9.884, Pittsburgh 3 1 2 0 40.0 $112,874 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd 155.78def.LukeBogacki, CorveNe,9.863,163.41. Marshall 4 15 9 398 19. (t5) JuanPabloMontoya, Chevrolet, 300,67.5, B onneville 13,789 1,780 1,371 3 9 6 Top Dragster —Lee Lightioot, Dragster, 6348, Maryland 10 159 39.8 25,Btt2,574. The Dages 16,993 4,399 3,406 1,080 219.40dei.JamesOgden, Dragster, 6.529,194.46. 3 2 4 Colorado 5 79 39.5 20. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 300, 73.9, 24, J ohn Day 13,649 2,248 1,523 4 9 4 NorthernIII. 7 11 8 39.3 Bt30,046. Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, Formula One TexasTech jack chinook, steelheadandwild Fridayat selectedCo9 1 5 5 38.8 21. (13)AricAlmirola, Ford,300,67.7,23, $121,746. 4 1 1 6 22. (7) Paul Menard, Chevrol e t, 300, 70.4, 22, lumbia Ri v er dam slast updatedonSaturday. Clemson 387 SingaporeGrandPrix ArizonaSt. 3 4 4 11 5 38.3 $114,451. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Sunday Alabama 1 11 5 38.3 23. (IB) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 300, 64.4, 21, Bonneville 970,495 146,193 216,356 93,625 Al Marina Bay street circuit 8 11 5 $127,660. The Dalles 603,688 118,384 136,289 59,668 Houston 38.3 Singapore Ole Miss 3 11 4 24. (31) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 300, 62, 20, John Day 41 4,364 110,598 90,111 38,097 380 Laplength:3.15 miles 4 Michigan 4 1 5 2 380 $130,471. McNary 322,627 62,273 73,858 30,520


MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings AH TimesPDT

x-Boston TampaBay NewYork Baltimore Toronto

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L 95 62 86 69

z-Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota

82 74 81 74 71 84

Central Division W L 91 65 86 70 82 73 65 90 61 94

Chicago

West Division

x-Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle Houston z-clinched playoff berth x-clinched division

W L 93 63 84 71 76 79 68 88 51 105

WILD CARD GLANCE TampaBay 86 69 Cleveland 86 70 Texas 84 71 Kansas City 82 73 NewYork 82 74 Baltimore 81 74

Pct GB 605 555 8 526 12'/t

523 13 458 23

Pct GB 583 551 5 529 8'/z 419 25'/t 394 29'/t

Pct GB 596 542 8'/z 490 t Bt/t

436 25 327 42

.555 .551 .542 1'/z .529 3'/t

.526 4 .523 4'/~

Sunday's Games Cleveland 9, Houston 2 SanFrancisco2, N.Y.Yankees1 Chicago WhiteSox6, Detroit 3 Boston 5, Toronto2 Tampa Bay3, Baltimore1 Kansas City 4,Texas0, 10innings Seattle 3,L.A.Angels 2 Oakland 11, Minnesota7

Today'sGames Baltimore(W.chen7-7) at Tampa Bay (Archer9-7), 12:10 p.m.

Houston(Lyles 7-8) atTexas(D.Holland 9-9), 5:05

p.m.

Detroit (Verlander13-12)at Minnesota(Pelfrey 5-13), 5:10 p.m. Toronto(Happ4-6) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Quintana 8-6), 5:10p.m. Oakland (Milone11-9) at L.A.Angels (Richards7-6), 7:05 p.m. KansasCity (Ventura0-0) at Seattle(Maurer4-8), 7:10 p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L x-Atanta 92 63 Washington 84 72 NewYork 71 84 Philadelphia 71 84 Miami 57 99

Central Division

W L z-St. Louis 91 65 Cincinnati 89 67 Pittsburgh 89 67 Milwaukee 69 86 Chicago 65 91 West Division W L x-LosAngeles 90 66 Arizona 79 76 SanDrego 72 83 SanFrancisco 72 84 Colorado 71 86 z-clinched playoff berth x-clinched division

Pct GB 594 538 8'/z 458 21 458 21 365 35'/~

Pct GB 583 571 2 571 2 445 21'/t

417 26 Pct GB 577 510 t Ot/t

465 17'/z 462 18 452 tg'/t

WILD CARD GLANCE Cincinnati 89 67 . 571 Pittsburgh 89 67 . 571 Washington 8 4 72 .538 5

Sunday's Games San Francisco 2, N.Y.Yankees I Cincinnati11,Pittsburgh3 Miami 4,Washington2,1st game N.Y.Mets4, Philadelphia3 Atlanta 5,ChicagoCubs2 Arizona13,Colorado9 L.A. Dodgers1,SanDiego 0 Washin gton5,Miami4 2ndgame Milwaukee 6,St. Louis4

Dozier2b 5 2 3 1 Lowriess 5 2 2 1 Plouffe 3b 4 1 0 0 Dnldsn 3b 4 0 1 1 Arcialf 4 1 3 6 Mosslf 4 1 I I Pintodh 5 0 I 0 Cespdsdh 5 0 0 0 P armel1b 4 0 1 0 Reddckrf 2 1 0 1 Mstrnnrf 3 0 0 0 Barton1b 3 3 3 1 F lormnss 3 0 1 0 Vogtc 3100 Fryerc 3 1 1 0 Sogard2b 3 2 2 2 Totals 3 6 7 127 Totals 3 3111111 M innesota 103 0 0 0 1 0 2 — 7 Oakland 061 111 10x — 11 E—Gray (1). DP—Oakland 2. LOB —Minnesota 7, Oakland6 28 Dozier (33),Fryer(1), Donaldson

Aviles 3b 3 0 2 2 Totals 3 3 2 9 1 Totals 3 59 139 Houston 0 10 100 000 — 2 C leveland 000 3 0 4 1 1x — 9 DP — Cleveland 1. LOB Houston 6, Cleveland

Cleveland (37), Moss(22), Barton(2). HR—Arcia (14), Crisp KiuberW,10-5 (22), Lowri(14), e Barton(3). SB—Crisp(20), Sogard Rzepczynski (9). SF—Moss,Reddick. ShawH,11 Minnesota IP H R E R BB SO Alen DeVriesL,0-1 Martis Roenicke

Duensing Thielbar

2 4 6 2 2 2 I 1-3 3 2 I 2-3 2 1 1 0 0

Oakland GrayW,4-3 5 7 Bre.Anderson 2 2 Cook I 0 Scribner 1 3 WP — Gray. T 3:03. A 30,589(35,067).

6 2 2 1 0

3 0 2 1 0

1 1 0 1 2

4 4 2

3

1 1 0 0 0 3 2 2 0

3 3 2

Royals 4, Rangers 0 IC10 innings) KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Justin Maxwell hit a grand slam with two outs in the10th inning and Kansas City beat Texas in a matchup of AL wild-card contenders. Texas dropped 1t/a games behind Cleveland for the second wild-card spot. Kansas City is 3t/a back. Texas

Kansas City ab r hbi ab r hbi Kinsler2b 4 0 1 0 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 Andrus ss 4 0 2 0 Bonifac 2b 4 0 0 0 Riosrf 4 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 3 0 1 0 ABeltre3b 4 0 2 0 BButlerdh 3 0 I 0 P rzynsc 4 0 0 0 Getzpr 0 1 0 0 Morlnd1b 4 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 1 1 0 Gentrylf 4 0 1 0 Mostks3b 4 0 0 0 D vMrpdh 3 0 0 0 L.caincf 3 0 0 0 JeBakrph-dh I 0 0 0 Kottarsph 1 1 0 0 L Martncf 2 0 0 0 Maxwllrf 4 1 2 4 AEscorss 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 0 6 0 Totals 3 24 5 4 Texas 0 0 0000 000 0 — 0 4 KansasCity 000 000 000 4 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. DP — Texas1, KansasCity1. LOB —Texas5, Kansas City 2. 28 —A.Beltre (30), Gentry(11), Hosm er (33). HR —Maxwell (7). SB—Rios(39). CS—Andrus

5 2 1

8 6 6 2 4 2 2 1 1 1 1 0

51 - 3 6 2 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 MAlbers 1-3 1 0 0 Rapada 1-3 0 0 0 C.C.Lee 1-3 0 0 0 Carrasco I 1 0 0 Rzepczynskipitchedto 1baterin the6th. Bedardpitchedto 3baters inthe 6th.

I 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

Rays 3, Orioles1 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Rookie Enny Romero and five relievers combined on a three-hitter and AL

wild card-leading TampaBay beat Baltimore. The Rays held their

half-game edgeover Cleveland in the race for the top wild card spot. Baltimore

TampaBay

8 2 1 6 0 1 2 1 0 1 1

HBP —byBedard (Y.Gomes). T—3:15. A—26,168(42,241).

White Sox 6, Tigers 3 DETROIT — Erik Johnson pitched

into the seventh inning in his fourth career start, andChicagobeat Detroit to end any chance of the Tigers clinching the AL Central title in their home finale. Detroit needed

a win and aCleveland loss to wrap up the division in the Tigers' final

scheduled homegame. Chicago

2 0

1 0 1

6 2 0

National League Reds11, Pirates 3 PITTSBURGH — Rookie Billy Hamilton got three hits and stole two more bases, and Cincinnati routed Pittsburgh to tie the Pirates

for the NL wild-card lead. The Reds and Pirates each have a magic number of two to close out

Washington and clinch a playoff spot.

Arizona

Colorado

ab r hbi ab r hbi Eatonlf 5 0 3 2 Blckmncf 6 1 3 1 Pollockcf 5 1 3 1 LeMahi 2b 6 0 1 0 G ldschlb 4 I I I T lwtzkss 2 2 I 0 A .Hill2b 5 2 3 0 Cuddyrrf 5 0 3 1 M Mntrc 3 3 1 0 Culersnlf 5 2 1 0 D avdsn3b 4 I 2 4 Heltonlb 5 I 3 4 GParrarf 5 2 3 2 Arenad3b 5 2 2 0 O wingsss 5 2 2 2 Torrealc 4 1 2 1 Corbin p 2 0 0 0 Nicasio p 0 0 0 0 WHarrs p 0 0 0 0 Francis p 1 0 0 0 Pnngtnph 1 0 0 0 Rutledgph 1 0 1 0 Roep 0 0 0 0 Pomrnzp 0 0 0 0 Putzp 0 0 0 0 CDckrsph 1 0 0 0 Campnph 1 0 0 0 WLopezp 0 0 0 0 DHrndzp 0 0 0 0 Outmnp 0 0 0 0 B lmqstph I I 1 1 Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 Cllmntr p 0 0 0 0 RWhelr ph 1 0 1 1 Z ieglerp 0 0 0 0 Bettisp 00 0 0 Corpasp 0 0 0 0 Pachecph 1 0 1 1 Totals 4 1 131913 Totals 4 3 9 199 Arizona 043 001 005 — 13 Colorado 0 01 120 014 — 9 E—Polock (2). DP—Arizona 2, Colorado 2 LOB—Arizona 7, Colorado11. 28—Pollock (27),

Goldschmid(34), t Davidson(4), G.Parra(41), Owings (3), 2 Culberson(5), Helton 2(21), Arenado(27)

ab r hbi ab r hbi M achd3b 3 0 1 0 DeJesslf 3 1 1 1

games left. Giancarlo Stanton and won the opener 4-2. Miami

Miami

Washington

ab r hbi ab r hbi D Solan2b 4 1 1 0 Spancf 5 1 2 3 Lucas1b 4 0 1 0 Zmrmn3b 5 0 1 1 Y elichlf 4 1 1 1 Werthrf 5 0 2 0 Stanton rf 4 1 2 1 EPerez pr 0 1 0 0 R uggincf 4 1 1 1 Harper f 5 0 0 0 Coghln3b 2 0 0 0 Dsmndss 3 0 I 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 1 1 WRamsc 4 0 1 0 K.Hillc 4 0 0 0 TMoore1b 1 0 0 0 Flynnp 1 0 1 0 Koernspr 0 1 0 0 Pierreph I 0 0 0 AdLRc1b 0 0 0 0 R Webbp 0 0 0 0 Rendon2b 4 I I 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 Strasrgp 1 0 0 0 Caminrp 0 0 0 0 Lmrdzzph 1 1 1 0 Morrsnph 0 0 00 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 D obbsph I 0 0 0 Tracyph I 0 0 0 S Dysonp 0 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 3 4 8 4 Totals 3 55 9 4 Miami 1 10 100 010 — 4 W ashington 0 0 2 0 0 2 001 — 6 Oneoutwhenwinning runscored. E—Coghlan2(3). DP—Washington2. LOB—Miami 5, Washington12. 28—D.Solano (13), Yelich

(12), Stanton(25), Werth(24), Lombardozzi (15). HR — Ruggiano (18). SB—Coghlan (1), Span(19), E.Perez(I), Desm ond2(21). S—Strasburg. Miami IP H R E R BB SO Flynn 4 4 2 2 3 5 R.Webb 1132 2 2 0 0 Da.JenningsBS,2-2 0 1 0 0 0 0 Caminero 2-3 0 0 0 0 I A.Ramos 2 1 0 0 I I SDysonL,0-2

1-3 1 1 0 1

Washington Strasburg 6 6 3 3 2 StammenH,7 1 0 0 0 I ClippardBS,3-3 I 2 I I 0 R.SorianoW,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 Da.Jenningspitchedto1batter in the6th. HBP byR.Webb(TMoore).WP Flynn2. T—3:21.A—34,824 (41,418).

0

6 0 2 1

Cincinnati Pittsburgh 38 —Bloomquist (I). HR—Davidson(3). CS—LeMa- Mets 4, Phillies 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi A.Jonescf 4 0 0 0 SRdrgzph-If 1 0 0 0 hieu (7).SF—Eaton. B Hmltncf 6 2 3 0 Tabatalf 3 1 0 0 C.Davis1b 4 0 0 0 DJnngscf 3 0 2 0 Arizona IP H R E R BB SO Heiseylf 5 3 3 2 NWalkr2b 2 1 2 1 PHILADELPHIA — Wilfredo Tovar 4 1-310 4 4 2 3 Today'sGames Vaencidh 3 1 1 0 Fuldpr-cf 1 1 0 0 Corbin MParrp 0 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 4 0 0 0 W ietersc 4 0 I I Zobrist2b 2 I 0 0 W Harri s W, 4 -1 2 3 0 0 0 1 0 produced the winning hit in his Milwaukee (Estrada 6-4) atAtlanta (Minor13-7), 4.10 N.Sotoph 1 0 0 0 SMartecf 0 0 0 0 Hardyss 4 0 0 0 Joycedh 2 0 0 I Roe 1 1 0 0 0 1 major-league debut andNew p.m. Ondrskp 0 0 0 0 Mornea1b 2 0 0 1 Markksrf 1 0 0 0 TBckhph 0 0 0 0 N.Y. Mets(Harang0-1) at Cincinnati (Cueto 5-2), Putz I I 0 0 0 0 V otto lb 4 2 2 I Byrdrf 4 0 0 0 4:10 p.m. Morself 3 0 0 0 Scottph-dh 1 0 0 0 D.Hernandez 1 2 1 1 0 0 York swept Philadelphia. Tovar B Phllps2b 3 1 2 1 JHrrsnrf 0 0 0 0 ChDckrlf 0 0 0 0 WMyrsrf 4 0 2 0 2-3 3 4 4 1 0 knocked in two runs with a single Collmenter Philadelphia(Halladay4-4) at Miami(Eovaldi 3-6), Brucerf 5 1 2 4 PAlvrz3b 4 0 1 0 Ziegler 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 B Rorts2b 3 0 0 0 LoneyIb 3 0 I I 4:10 p.m. Frazier3b 5 1 1 2 RMartnc 2 0 0 0 in the seventh to put the Mets KJhnsn 3b 3 0 0 0 Colorado Pittsburgh(Morton7-4) at ChicagoCubs(Samardzija C ozartss 5 I 2 0 Buckc 2 0 0 0 8-12), 5:05p.m. Longori3b 0 0 0 0 Nicasio L,B 9 2 1 - 3 7 7 7 2 1 ahead by one with his first majorHanignc 5 0 0 0 Barmesss 4 0 1 0 Loaton c 3 0 0 0 Francis 12-3 3 0 0 0 2 Washington (Roark 7-0) at St.Louis(Wainwright17A rroyop 2 0 0 0 Lockep 0 0 0 0 Pomeranz YEscorss 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 league hit. 9),515 p.m Simonp 0 0 0 0 JGomzp 0 0 0 0 W.Lopez 2 93 6 3 1 3 1 1 1 0 Arrzona(Mccarthy5-9) at SanDiego(Stults 9-13), T otals 2 9 1 3 1 Totals DRonsnph-If 2 0 1 1 Lamboph 1 0 0 0 New York Philadelphia B altimore 000 00 0 0 0 1 — 1 Outman 1 0 0 0 1 I 7:10 p.m. Cumptnp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Tampa Bay 1 0 0 0 0 2 Ogx — 3 Ottavino 1 2 0 0 0 0 Snider ph 1 1 1 1 E— Ke.Johnson (4). DP —Tampa Bay 1. Bettis 1-3 4 5 5 1 0 EYong f 5 1 2 0 CHmdzcf 5 0 1 0 P imntlp 0 0 0 0 American League LOB—Baltimore 5, Tampa Bay5. 28—Wieters (28), Corpas 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 F lores3b 5 0 I 0 Rollinsss 4 I I 0 Pieph 1000 D nMrp2b 4 1 1 0 utley2b 4 0 2 0 De.Jennings(31), W.Myers (19). HR —DeJesus (1). T—3:45. A—43,736(50,398). Mazzarp 0 0 0 0 SB — Zobrist (11). CS—A.Jones (3). SF—Joyce. ABrwnrf 4 0 0 1 Ruizc 4110 JI-lughs p 0 0 0 0 Mariners 3, Angels 2 B lackp 0 0 0 0 DBrwnlf 2 1 1 1 Baltimore IP H R E R BB SO Dodgers1, Padres 0 GJones ph 1 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Rufrf 3001 FeldmanL,5-5 61 - 3 6 3 3 2 7 Dudalb 3 0 0 0 Asche3b 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 4 3 111611 Totals 3 1 3 5 3 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Justin Smoak Matusz 620 0 0 0 0 31 — 11 SAN DIEGO — Adrian Gonzalez O'Day 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Cincinnati Lagarscf 4 1 3 1 Frndsn1b 4 0 2 1 hit a tiebreaking two-run homer, P ittsburgh 001 0 2 0 0 00 — 3 Reckerc 4 1 2 0 Berndnpr 0 0 0 0 TampaBay E—Barmes2(13). LOB—Cincinnati 9, Pittsburgh scored an unearned run and 42-3 I 0 0 4 0 T ovarss 4 0 2 1 CI.Leep 2 0 1 0 Felix Hernandez had10 strikeouts E.Romero 6. 28 — B .H a m il t on (2), Hei s ey (11), Vo tto (30), Bruce Zack Greinke combined with C Torrsp 2 0 0 0 Orrph 1000 B.Gomes W,3-1 2- 3 0 0 0 0 2 in a four-inning start, and Seattle lker (24). HR Frazier (18), three relievers on a two-hitter Satinph I 0 0 0 Rosnrgp 0 0 0 0 W.WrightH,9 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 (42), Cozart(28), N.Wa Atchisnp 0 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 beatLosAngelesinagame J.WrightH,6 11- 3 0 0 0 0 1 N.Walker(13), Snider(5). SB—B.Hamilton 2 (12). to lead Los Angeles over San dnDkkrrf 1 0 0 0 Galvisph 0 0 0 0 H,38 1 0 0 0 0 0 S—Arroyo. SF—B.Philips, Morneau. delayed twice by bees. Both teams Jo.Peralta Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO Totals 3 7 4 113 Totals 3 3 3 9 3 RodneyS,36-44 I 2 1 I 0 I ArroyoW,14-11 5 5 3 3 2 3 Diego. Andrew Cashner (10-gj retreated to their dugouts during a WP —Feldman. N ew York 000 1 0 0 2 10 — 4 Simon 2 0 0 0 I 0 had a two-hitter into the seventh P hiladelphia 0 1 0 0 0 1 010 — 3 23-minute delay in the third inning T—2:45. A—28,974(34,078). M.Parra 1 0 0 0 0 1 when Gonzalez singled with one E—D.Brown (5). DP—New York1, Philadelphia when swar a m ofbeesinvadedthe Ondrusek 1 0 0 0 0 2 1. LOB —New York 7, Philadelphia 8. 28—E.Young RedSox5, Blue Jays2 out, Matt Kemp struck out and Pittsburgh (26), Flores (5), Lagares(21), Recker (7), Rollins (32), outfield at the Big A,hovering over LockeL,10-7 I 3 5 5 2 1 Frandsen(10). SB—Tovar (1) S—Galvis Michael Young doubled off the right-center field near the wall. J.Gomez 1 3 2 2 0 0 NewYork IP H R E R BB SO BOSTON — David Ortiz and right-field wall. Will Venable Cumpton 3 3 0 0 0 3 C.TorresW,4-5 6 7 2 2 3 6 Bees briefly delayed thegame Jackie Bradley Jr. homeredto Pimentel 2 0 0 0 0 I bobbled the ball, and Gonzalez AtchisonH,9 1 0 0 0 0 2 again in the fourth inning before Mazzaro 2-3 3 3 3 0 1 lead AL East champion Boston to BlackH,4 1 1 1 1 1 1 came home after initially being J.Hughes 1 1-3 4 1 1 0 0 they dispersed. HawkinsS,12-15 1 1 0 0 0 2 a victory over last-place Toronto HBP—by Arroyo (Tabata) WP —Locke, Pimentel. held by third base coach Tim Philadelphia i n the regular-season finale at T — 3:13. A — 38,699 (38, 3 62). CI.Lee L,14-7 7 8 3 2 0 8 Los Angel e s Seattle Wallach. Rosenberg 1 2 1 1 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Fenway Park. Papelbon 1 1 0 0 0 2 A Almntcf 4 0 1 0 Shucklf 4 0 0 0 Braves 5, Ctibs 2 Los Angeles San Diego WP C.Torres, Bl a ck. F Gtrrzrf 4 0 I 0 Aybarss 5 0 0 0 Toronto Boston ab r hbi ab r hbi T—2'56.A—44,398(43,651). S eager3b 4 1 0 0 Troutcf 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi P uigrf 4 0 0 0 Amarstlf 2 0 0 0 CHICAGO — Atlanta clinched the KMorls dh 4 1 2 0 JHmltn dh 4 0 1 0 Reyes ss 4 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 4 0 0 0 Crwfrdlf 4 0 0 0 Denorfiph-If-rf2 0 0 0 Enchvzpr-dh 0 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 5 1 1 0 NL East title, and then rode two R Davisci 3 0 I 0 Victornrf 4 0 0 0 HRmrzss 3 0 1 0 Rcedenss 4 0 0 0 Interleague Smoak1b 4 1 1 2 Calhonrf-1b 4 1 1 1 Lawrie3b 3 0 0 0 D.Ortizdh 4 1 2 1 Withrwp 0 0 0 0 Venalerf-cf 3 0 0 0 homers by Andrelton Simmons Z uninoc 4 0 I I Congerc 2 0 0 0 L ind1b 4 0 0 0 Carp1b 3 0 0 0 VnSlykph 0 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 4 0 1 0 Frnkln2b 4 0 1 0 ENavrr1b 3 0 1 1 to a victory over Chicago. The S ierralf 4 0 1 0 Navalf 3 1 1 0 Giants 2, yankees1 Ethierph 1 0 0 0 Medica1b 3 0 0 0 MSndrslf 2 0 0 0 Cowgillpr-rf 0 0 0 0 DeRosa dh 3 1 0 0 Mdlrks 3b 3 0 0 0 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 Forsyth3b 3 0 0 0 game was in the sixth inning Triunflss 3 0 1 0 AnRmn3b 3 0 1 0 Goins2b 4 0 I 0 Drewss 2 I I 0 A dGnzl1b 4 1 1 0 Fuentscf 1 0 0 0 NEW YORK — After honoring when Washington lost 4-2 to T otals 3 3 3 8 3 Totals 3 32 5 2 P illarrf 3 1 2 2 Lvrnwyc 3 I I I Kempcf 3 0 0 0 Kotsayph 1 0 0 0 Seattle 0 10 002 000 — 3 Tholec 3 0 1 0 BrdlyJrcf 3 1 1 3 Miami, giving the Bravestheir first Mariano Rivera andcelebrating M yong3b 3 0 1 0 Blanks f 0 0 0 0 L os Angeles 0 1 0 0 0 0 010 — 2 Totals 3 1 2 6 2 Totals 2 95 6 5 division crown in eightyears. S chmkr2b 3 0 0 0 RRiverc 3 0 1 0 Andy Pettitte, the New York E—Triunfel (2). DP—Los Angeles 2. LOB —Se- Toronto 0 10 010 000 — 2 Fdrwczc 3 0 0 0 Cashnrp 1 0 0 0 attle 4,LosAngeles13. 28—K.Morales (33), Zunino Boston 040 001 Ogx — 5 Greinkp I 0 1 0 Vincentp 0 0 0 0 Yankees saw their AL wild-card (5), H.Kendrick(19). HR Smoak(18), Calhoun(8). Chicago DP — Toronto1, Boston2. LOB —Toronto 5, Bos- Atlanta HrstnJrph 1 0 0 0 Headlyph 1 0 0 0 hopes dim with a crushing loss to SB — Seager (9), Shuck(8), E.Navarro (1). ab r hbi ab r hbi ton 1. 28 —D.Ortiz (37). HR —Pillar (2), D.Ortiz(29) H owellp 0 0 0 0 Hynesp 0 0 0 0 San Francisco. Seattle IP H R E R BB SO BradleyJr. (3). SB—R.Davis (45). Heywrd cf 5 1 1 0 Stcastr ss 4 0 0 1 P untoss I 0 0 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 FHernandez 4 1 1 1 4 10 Toronto IP H R E R BB SO J.uptonrf-lf 5 0 2 0 Valuen3b 3 0 0 0 T otals 3 1 1 4 0 Totals 2 80 2 0 O.PerezW3-3 1 0 0 0 0 3 DickeyL,13-13 8 San Francisco N e w York 6 5 5 I 11 FFrmn1b 5 1 3 2 DMrphph-3b 1 0 0 0 L os Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 — 1 CappsH,9 1 1 0 0 1 2 Boston C Jhnsn3b 4 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 4 1 I 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi S an Diego 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 FurbushH,20 2 - 3 0 0 0 2 0 DoubrontW,11-6 7 4 2 2 2 2 J anish3b 1 0 0 0 DNavrrc 4 0 2 1 E—Ad.Gonzalez (11), Venable (3). DP—Los Pagancf 4 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 3 0 0 0 MedinaH,l8 I 1- 3 2 I 1 I 0 FMoralesH,4 .Perezlt 4 0 I 0 ARdrgzdh 4 0 I 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 M ccnnc 4 1 2 0 Schrhltrf 4 0 1 0 Angeles 1. LOB —Los Angeles 3, San Diego5. JBelt1b FarquharS,15-19 1 1 0 0 0 0 uehara 4 0 0 0 ZAlmntpr-dh 0 0 0 0 S,21-24 1 0 0 0 0 1 G attrslf 3 0 0 0 Bogsvccf 4 0 I 0 28 —M.Young (25), Greinke(3). SB—Venable (22) Los Angeles J Schafrrf 1 0 0 0 Lakelf 4000 Poseydh 4 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 3 0 WP — Doubront, FMorales. S—Cashner. C.WilsonL,17-7 8 1-3 8 3 3 1 9 T—2:13. A—37,020(37,071). Smmnsss 4 2 2 3 Bamey2b 3 1 2 0 LosAngeles IP H R ER BB SO P encerf 4 0 0 0 ASorinlf 3 0 0 0 2 -3 0 0 0 0 1 Kohn EIJhns2b 3 0 1 0 EJcksnp 1 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 2 0 1 0 Grndrscf 4 0 0 0 Greinke 5 2 0 0 1 3 Cappspitchedto1batter in the 7th. Tehernp 2 0 0 0 Russellp 0 0 0 0 HowellW,4-1 I 0 0 0 0 0 Noonanpr-3bg 1 0 0 Nunez3b 4 0 2 0 HBP—by F.Hernandez (Conger). WP—F.Hernandez, Indians 9, Astros 2 C onstnzph 1 0 1 0 BParkrp 0 0 0 0 HSnchzc 3 0 0 0 MrRynl1b 4 1 1 1 WithrowH,4 2 0 0 0 2 2 Medina.Balk—C.Wilson. A vilanp 0 0 0 0 Raleyp 0 0 0 0 JansenS,27-31 1 A breu2b 3 0 1 1 Ryanss 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 T—3:22.A—39,099(45,483). RJhnsn ph I 0 0 0 Sweenyph 1 0 1 0 A drianzss 3 1 1 1 CStwrtc 2 0 0 0 CLEVELAND — Michael Brantley San Diego Ayala p 0 0 0 0 HRndn p 0 0 0 0 Overayph 0 0 0 0 CashnerL,10-9 7 4 1 0 0 7 and Michael Bourn had two RBls A.Woodp 0 0 0 0 VWellsph I 0 0 0 Vincent 1 0 0 0 0 3 Athletics11, Twins 7 K imrelp 0 0 0 0 JMrphyc 1 0 0 0 apiece asCleveland, clinging Hynes 1-3 0 0 0 0 I T otals 3 9 5 12 5 Totals 3 3 2 8 2 Gregerson T otals 3 1 2 4 2 Totals 3 41 9 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 OAKLAND, Calif.— Coco Crisp hit tightly to a wild-card spot, became Atlanta 2 00 100 020 — 5 T 2 45. A 32,988(42,524). S an Francisco 000 001 010 — 2 the first team in 52 years to post Chicago 1 00 000 010 — 2 N ew York 001 0 0 0 0 00 — 1 a three-run homer, Daric Barton E—St.castro (20). DP—Atlanta 1, Chicago1 E—Cano(6). DP—NewYork 1. LOB—SanFransix sweeps of afour-game series in LOB and Jed Lowrie eachhad asolo —Atlanta 8, Chicago5. 28—Rizzo (39). HRMarlins 4, Nationals 2 cisco 3,NewYork8. 28—Sandoval (26), Abreu(10),

shot and Oakland wrapped up its second straight AL West title while

overpowering Minnesota. TheA's clinched their16th division crown

and 25th postseason appearance when Texas lost 4-0 at Kansas City earlier. Minnesota Oakland ab r hbi ab r hbi P reseycf 5 2 2 0 Crispcf 4 1 2 4

a season with a winover Houston. Houston Villarss Altuve2b Kraussdh Carter1b MDmn3b CroweIf Hoesrf Corpmc BBarnscf

Cleveland

ab r hbi ab r hbi 4 0 1 0 Bourncf 4112 4 0 1 0 Swisher1b 4 0 0 1 4 1 2 0 Kipnis 2b 5 1 3 0 3 1 1 1 JRmrz2b 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 0 CSantndh 5 2 2 2 4 0 0 0 Raburnrf 4 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 Mcarsn pr-rf 1 1 0 0 4 0 1 0 Ascarrss 2 2 1 0 3 0 0 0 YGomsc 31 0 0 Brantly f 4 1 3 2

FFreeman (23), Simmons2(17). CS—Constanza(3). (First Game) S—EJackson. Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO TeheranW13-8 6 Avilan H,26 Ayala A.WoodH,1 KimbrelS,49-53 I

Chicago E.Jackson L,8-17 Russell B.Parker Raley H.Rondon

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

7 1 0 0 3

D•

Christian Yelich homered as Miami

Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi C oghlnlf 3 0 0 0 Spancf 3 1 0 0 Ruggincf 1 0 0 0 Zmrmn3b 4 1 2 2 D Solan2b 4 0 2 1 Werthrf 4 0 0 0 sloppy St. Louis, hours after the elichci-If 5 2 2 I Harperlf 3 0 0 0 Cardinals clinched a playoff berth. Y Stantonrf 4 1 1 2 Dsmndss 2 0 0 0 Morrsn1b 4 0 2 0 AdLRc1b 3 0 1 0 St. Louis Milwaukee Polanc 3b 4 0 2 0 Lmrdzz 2b 3 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Hchvrrss 3 0 2 0 JSolanoc 2 0 0 0 M crpnt2b 3 2 2 I Aokirf 23 2 I M athisc 4 0 0 0 ZWltrsph I 0 0 0 Jaycf 5 0 2 0 Gennett2b 4 1 2 1 K oehlerp 2 0 0 0 Leonc 0000 Beltranrf 3 0 1 1 Lucroy1b 3 1 1 1 P ierreph 1 1 1 0 Harenp 1 0 0 0 MAdmsIb 5 0 0 0 YBtncrlb 0 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 CBrwnph 1 0 0 0 YMolinc 3 1 1 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 1 1 Q uallsp 0 0 0 0 Matthsp 0 0 0 0 Freese3b 3 1 1 0 CGomzcf 4 0 1 1 Dobbsph I 0 0 0 Xcedenp 0 0 0 0 D escalsss 4 0 1 0 LSchfrlf 4 0 0 0 C ishekp 0 0 0 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 SRonsnlf 3 0 0 1 Bianchiss 4 0 1 0 Tracyph 1 0 0 0 J.Kellyp 2 0 0 1 Maldndc 4 1 0 0 EDavisp 0 0 0 0 A xfordp 0 0 0 0 WPerltp 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 6 4 124 Totals 2 8 2 4 2 Chamrsph 1 0 0 0 D.Handp 0 0 0 0 Miami 2 01 000 100 — 4 JFrncsph 1 0 0 0 W ashington 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 00 — 2 K intzlrp 0 0 0 0 DP — Miami 3, Washington 2. LOB —Miami 8, Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 Washington 1. 2B —Yelich (11). HR—Yelich (4), Totals 3 2 4 8 4 Totals 3 16 8 5 Stanton (24), Zimme rman(26). SB—Pierre (23). St.Louis 0 01 002 001 — 4 SF — D.Solano. Milwaukee 220 0 0 0 2 0x — 6 Miami IP H R E R BB SO E—Y.Molina (4), Freese(11), J.Kelly (3). DP—St. KoehlerW4-10 6 3 2 2 1 0 Louis1, Milwaukee1.I.OB—St. I.ouis 9, Miwaukee M.DunnH,17 1 0 0 0 0 1 5. 28 — Aoki (17), Gennett (11), Lucroy(24). 38Qualls H,14 1 1 0 0 0 0 C.Gomez (10). HR—M.carpenter (11).SB—C.Gomez CrshekS,32-34 1 0 0 0 0 2 (37) S—W.Peralta. SF—S.Robinson,J.Kelly, Lucroy Washington St. Louis IP H R E R BB SO HarenL,9-14 6 8 3 3 1 5 J.Kelly L,9-5 7 7 6 3 2 2 Mattheus 1-3 1 1 1 1 0 Axford 1 1 0 0 0 1 X.cedeno 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee Storen 1 2 0 0 0 I W.PeraltaW,11-15 5 5 3 3 5 3 E.Davis I 1 0 0 0 2 D.HandH,2 2 0 0 0 0 3 HBP —byKoehler (Desmond). WP—Mattheus. KintzlerH,25 I 0 0 0 0 I T—2.39.A—35,101(41,418). HendersonS,26-30 1 3 1 1 0 2 W.Peraltapitchedto3 baters inthe6th. Nationals 5, Marlins 4 HBP—byW.Peralta (Freese). WP —W.Peralta. T—3.00. A—27,389(41,900). (Second Game)

HR — Fielder (25). SB—De Aza (20), Semien (2). SF—A.Jackson. scored twice and drove in two Chicago IP H R E R BB SO runs for the Diamondbacks. Er.JohnsonW,2-2 6 2-3 9 2

Nationals five games back in the NL wild-card race with six

scored three times and doubled home arun,and Milwaukee beat

Detroit ab r hbi ab r hbi DeAzali 4 I I 0 AJcksncf 4 0 0 I A IRmrz ss 5 0 1 0 Dirks rf 3 010 Gillaspi 1b 4 3 1 2 TrHntrph-rf 1 0 0 0 AGarcrrf 5 1 3 2 Fielder 1b 4 1 1 1 JrDnks ci 3 0 0 0 VMrtnz dh 4 0 I 0 Kppngrdh 5 0 3 2 D.Kelly3b 3 0 0 0 GBckh2b 5 0 1 0 HPerezph-3b 1 0 0 0 P heglyc 4 0 0 0 Avilac 3130 Diamonddacks13, Rockies 9 Semien3b 4 I 1 0 B.Penaph 1 1 I 0 infante 2b 4 0 1 0 RSantgss 4 0 1 1 DENVER — Matt Davidson hit a Ncstlnslf 4 0 2 0 Totals 3 9 6 11 6 Totals 3 6 3 11 3 three-run homer for the second Chicago 1 00 030 200 — 6 straight day, andArizona opened Detroit 0 00 100 101 — 3 E—Infante (10). DP—Chicago 1. LOB—Chi- an early six-run lead before cago 10,Detroit 7. 28—Keppinger (13), G.Beckham hanging on to beatColorado. (21), Avila (14), BPena(11). 3BMillaspie (3) Rookie Chris Owings doubled,

(8),L Martin(9).S—AEscobar. Veal H,lI 11-3 I I 1 0 Texas IP H R E R BB SO Lindstrom 1 1 0 0 0 Ogando 7 2 0 0 I 5 Detroit 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 3 Ani.Sanchez Scheppers L,14-8 5 8 4 4 2 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 E.Reed Cotts L,5-3 22-3 3 2 2 2 2-3 2 3 3 1 0 D.Downs Soria 11-3 0 0 0 0 KansasCity Veal pitched to 1baterin the9th. Shields 8 6 0 0 I 2 WP — Ani.Sanchez2. G.Holland 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—3:08.A—41,749(41,255). CollinsW,3-6 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cotts pitchedto1 batter inthe10th. WP — G.Hogand.Balk—Shields. T—2:53. A—27,899(37,903).

E.Jacksonpitchedto1 batter inthe7th. B.Parkerpitchedto1 batterin the7th. WP — E.Jackson. T—3.18. A—30,515(41,019).

8. 28 — Krauss 2 (9), Kipnis(34), C.San tana (34) 38 — Bourn (5). HR—Carter (29), C.Santana(19). Brewers 6, Cardinals 4 CS — Vilar (8). S—Aviles. SF—Swisher. Houston IP H R E R BB SO MILWAUKEE — Norichika Aoki BedardL,4-12 Humber De Leon

B3

WASHINGTON — Wilson Ramos'

ninth-inning grounder bounced off the leg of third baseman Chris

Coghlan for a game-ending error that allowed pinch-runner Eury Perez to score from third, and

Washington beat Miami 5-4 for a doubleheader split that left the

Cano(38),Ryan(12). HR —Adrianza (1), Mar.Reynolds (20) CS —I.Suzuki (4). San Francisco I P H R E R BB SO Petit 613 6 I J.Lopez W,4-2 2-3 0 0 S.casilla H,21 1 3 0 RomoS,36-41 1 0 0 New York Pettrtte L,10-11 7 2 2 D.Robertson 1-3 1 0 M.Rivera 12-3 1 0 0 Pettitte pitched to1batter in the8th. PB H.Sanchez. T—2:52.A—49,197(50,291).

I 0 0 0

2 0 0 0

7 2 1 1

2 I 0 0 0

6 0 1

Mary Schwalm/The Associated Press

NASCAR driver Matt Kenseth celebrates in Victory Lane with a lobster after winning Sunday in Loudon, N.H.

Kenseth

gets2nd Chase victory The Associated Press LOUDON, N.H. — Matt Kenseth just might win a championship with a touch of dominance, not dullness. Kenseth has firmly defended the style of his 2003 championship, stating his one-win season in the final year before NASCAR made the move to the playoff-style Chase format was as meaningful as all the titles collected by Jimmie Johnson or Tony Stewart. He probably won't have to justify anything about his Cup run this season. There are plenty of check-

ered flags. Kenseth made it 2 for 2 in the Chase, holding off Joe Gibbs Racing t eammate Kyle Busch to win Sunday at New Hampshire Motor

Speedway. He followed his win in the Chase for the Sprint

Cup championship opener at Chicagoland with his series-high seventh victory of the season. Kenseth made his 500th career start and built a 14-point lead over Busch before the s eries shifts to Dover. One win or seven, Kenseth will take a title any way he can. "If yo u 'r e for t u nate enough towin a championship, or another championship, I don't think there's a bad way to win it," he said. "I know it still gets brought up because it was the last year without the Chase and we won one race. But I was real proud of what we did that year. It was tough to accomplish." Kenseth was paired with owner Jack Roush for more than a decade and won 22 races, a pair of D aytona 500s and the 2003 championship. He's having a career year in his first season at JGR, obliterating his previous season best for wins — 5 in 2002. Neither side could have expected this kind of run. "We've known Matt for a long time but, in all reality, we wouldn't have guessed seven wins," team President J.D. Gibbs said. Also on Sunday: Vettel wins S i ngapore GP: SINGAPORE — Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel recorded yet another s tart-to-finish win a t t h e Singapore Grand Prix to further extend his lead in the Formula One championship. The German was in a class of his own under the Marina Bay lights, winning by a massive 32.6 seconds over Fernando Alonso and

boosting his championship lead on the Ferrari driver from 53 points to 60 with six races remaining. Lotus' Kimi Raikkonen was third, ahead ofthe Mercedes pair Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton. Kalitta gets Top Fuel victory: ENNIS, Texas — Doug Kalitta ended a 71-race winless drought with a Top Fuel victory in the NHRA Fall Nationals at Texas Motorplex. Cruz Pedregon (Fun-

ny Car), Jason Line (Pro Stock) and Eddie Krawiec (Pro Stock Motorcycle) also were winners at the second of six races in the NHRA Countdown to the Champi-

onship playoffs.


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013

Luc outs inesKae ernic in ots'u seto 4 ers By Janie McCauley

NFL

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Andrew Luck faked out the defense, ran untouched into the end zone for a 6-yard touchdown and emphatically threw down the ball with a little extra oomph. Even he thought it might be a career-best spike. "It was nice to score," he said matter-of-factly of the moment. Jim Harbaugh's former quarterback sure outplayed hiscurrent one, and i t w a sn't even close. Luck passed for 164 y ards while facing his college coach for the first time, and the Indianapolis Colts defeated the San Francisco 49ers 27-7 on Sunday. Trent Richardson scored a I-yard touchdown on hi s f i r st carry in his Colts debut after be-

4

I

yard TD run in the final minutes, and Adam Vinatieri kicked a pair of field goals. Luck kept c o ming t h r ough

again to give Indianapolis (2-1) more opportunities.

"I know he's grinning from ear

to ear," Colts coach Chuck Pagano said. "I've never seen him smile the way he was smiling after this one." This marked Colin K aepernick's first home loss at Candlestick Park as a starter. Frank Gore ran for 82 yards after going for 60 total in his first two games, but there were few bright spotsfor Kaepernick as

San Francisco (1-2) struggled to establish a passing game with tight end Vernon Davis sidelined

ing acquired on Wednesday from by a hamstring injury. The dethe Browns. He was drafted two spots behind top-pick Luck last

MarcioJose Sanchez/The Associated Press

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck spikes the ball after scoring in the second half of a win over the 49ers in San Francisco on Sunday.

fense committed numerous costly penalties for the third straight week. Luck completed his initial six

year. Ahmad Bradshaw added a I-

passes and spoiled the h ome team's reunion d a y b e t ween coaches on both sides who know each other's tendencies dating to their days at Stanford. The Colts sure appeared to be better prepared. Luck sent t h i rd-year coach Harbaugh to consecutivelosses for the first time. He was happier about the fact his two sisters who attend Stanford got to see him

play. "I wasn't caught up in, 'Oh my

gosh, I'm going up against Coach Harbaugh, (Greg) Roman and (Vic) Fangio," Luck said. "I fig-

driving under the influence and marijuana possession. 49ers CEO Jed York said after the game Smith would seek treatment and miss Thursday's game at St. Louis and perhaps be away from the team longer. Smith apologized to "everybody I let down" while acknowledging he has a problem and will fix it. Kaepernick had been 4-0 on his home field since becoming a starter last November. This time, his 49ers were 10'/a-point favorites, but looked nothing like the better team in getting thoroughly

outplayed.

ured any time you play this sport,

He completed 2 of his 8 first-

coaches and players come and go half passes and wound up just 13 for 27 for 150 yards with an interception and three sacks. "There's no one thing, we just didn't execute this offense," Kaepernick said. The 49ers had six penalties for 48 yards and didn't look much better than they did in their fiveturnover, 29-3 loss at division rival Seattle last week.

so much that you always end up going against someone that you played for or played with or had a good relationship with." Before Sunday, Harbaugh was 7-0 following a defeat — and Harbaugh faced criticism for playing and starting Aldon Smith two days afterthe linebacker was arrested and jailed on suspicion of

NFL SCOREBOARD Summaries

GB — Franklin 2 run(Crosbykick),11:40. GB J.Jones7passfrom Rodgers (Crosbykick),

American Conference

5'30.

San Diego Tennessee

7 3 7 0 — 17 0 10 0 10 — 20 First Quarter SD Gates 7passfromRivers (Novakkick), 9:34.

SecondQuarter Ten —FGBironas20, 13:00. SD — FGNovak44, 4:47. Ten —Locker 7run (Bironaskick),1:08. Third Quarter SD — R.Brown1run (Novakkick), 2:42. Fourth Quarter Ten FG Bironas 37, 6:07. Ten —Hunter 34 passfromLocker (Bironaskick), :15. A—69,143. SD

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntRetums KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet.

Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

NewEngland Miami

N.Y.Jets Buffalo

Cincinnati T e n Baltimore 23 Cleveland

L 1 1 2 3

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .6 6 7 .6 6 7 .3 3 3 .0 0 0

PF PA

Pittsburgh

W 2 2 1 0

KansasCity Denver Oakland San Diego

W 3 2 1 1

L 0 0 1 2

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t 1. 000 1. 000 .5 0 0 .3 3 3

PF PA 71 3 4 90 5 0 36 3 0 78 8 1

A—68,756.

TB NE 18 21 323 358 22-97 33-156 226 202 1 -12 2 - 2 9 0 -0 1 - 24 1-0 1-0 19-41-1 25-36-1 3 -10 3 - 23 3-49.7 3-42.7 0-0 0-0 4 48 6 - 50 26;59 33:01

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING — Tampa Bay:Martin 20-88,James 1-5, Freeman1-4. New England: Blount 14-65, Bolden3-51,Ridiey11-35, Brady5-5. PASSING —Tampa Bay: Freeman19-41-1-236. New England:Brady2536-1-225. RECEIVING —Tampa Bay: Wiliams5-65, Page 3-55, Jackson3-34, Dgletree 2-35, Martin 2-20, Leonard1-17, Wright1-6, Byham1-3,Lorig1-1. New England: Dobson 7-52,Edelman7-44,Bolden5-49, Thompkin3-41, s Hoomanawanui 2-31, Ridley1-8. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Tampa Bay: Lindeli 38 (WR).

Browns 31, Vikings 27 Cleveland Minnesota

7 17 0 7 — 3 1 7 10 7 3 — 2 7 First Quarler Min Peterson 2 run(Walshkick),913. Cle — Gordon 47 passfromHoyer(Cundiff kick), 4:42. SecondQuarter Cle — Cameron19passfromHoyer (Cundiff kick), 14:55. Min — Ponder6run (Walsh kick), 10:12. Cle — FG Cundiff38,6:07. Cle — Cameron 11 passfromLanning (Cunditf kick), 3:39. Min — FGWalsh 43, 1:08 Third Quarter Min — Ponder 8run (Walsh kick), 2:36. Fourth Quarter Min — FGWalsh30, 10:47. Cle — Cameron7 passfrom Hoyer (Lanningkick), :51. A 63,672.

Fumbles-l.ost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

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

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

A FC NF C Di v 2-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 1-0-0 0-2-0

Houston Indianapolis Tennessee Jacksonvile

PA 82 48 56 92

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

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

A FC NF C Di v 2-1-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 2-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

North 75 71 47 42

H ome Away A FC NF C

64 64 64 76

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

0 - 1-0 0 - 1-0 1 - 1-0 0 - 1-0

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

Di v 1-1-0 1-0-0 0-0 0 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

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

A FC NF C Di v 1-0-0 2-0-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-2-0 1-0-0 0-0-0

National Conference East W Dallas 2 Philadelphia 1 N.Y.Giants 0 Washington 0

L 1 2 3 3

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t .6 6 7 .33 3 .0 0 0 .0 0 0

PF PA 83 79 54 67

H ome Away NFC AFC

55 86 115 98

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

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

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

Di v 0-1-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

W 3 1 1 0

L 0 2 2 3

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t 1. 000 .3 3 3 .3 3 3 .0 0 0

PF PA

H ome Away NFC AFC

70 68 71 34

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

Chicago Detroit GreenBay Minnesota

W 3 2 1 0

L 0 1 2 3

T 0 0 0 0

Pc t 1. 000 .6 6 7 .3 3 3 .0 0 0

PF PA 95 7 4 82 6 9 96 88 81 9 6

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

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

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

Di v 2-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-1-0

Min 21

409 329 17-103 31-134 3 06 19 5 3-20 2-2 1 -26 3 - 78 1 -13 3 - 36 31-55-3 25-42-1 3 -26 6 - 33 5-46.8 7-46.4 1-1 3-2 5 -47 4 - 35 28:52 31:08

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING — Cleveland: Aubrey 1-34, Dgbonnaya2-23,Gordon1-22,Rainey4-17,McGahee8-9, Hoyer 1-(minus2). Minnesota: Peterson25-88, Ponder 546,Paterson1-0 PASSING —Cleveland: Hoyer 30-54-3-321, Lanning1-1-0-11.Minnesota: Ponder25-42-1-228. RECEIVING —Cleveland: Gordon10-146, Bess 767, Cameron6-66, Dgbonnaya4-30, Little 3-19, Rainey 1-4. Minnesota: Peterson6-27, Rudolph

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

NFC AFC Div 1-0-0 2-0-0 1-0-0 2-1-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-2-0 0-1-0 0-2-0

Seattle St. Louis

SanFrancisco 1 A rizona 1

P c t PF PA 1 .000 8 6 2 7 . 3 33 5 8 8 6 . 3 33 4 4 8 4 . 3 33 5 6 7 9

Thursday'sGame

H o me Away NFC 2-0 - 0 1-0-0 2-0-0 1-0 - 0 0-2-0 1-2-0 1-1 - 0 0-1-0 1-1-0 1-0 - 0 0-2-0 1-2-0

AFC 1 -0-0 0 -0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0

Thursday, Sept. 26 SanFranciscoatSt Louis, 5.25pm. Sunday, Sept. 29 N.YGiantsatKansasCity, 10a.m. SeattleatHouston,10a.m. BaltimoreatBuffalo, 10a.m. ArizonaatTampaBay, 10a.m. IndianapolisatJacksonvile,10a.m. CincinnatiatCleveland,10a.m. Chicago atDetroit,10a.m. Pittsburgh vs.Minnesotaat London,10a.m. N.Y.JetsatTennessee,1:05p.m. WashingtonatOakland,1:25p.m. DallasatSanDiego,1.25 p.m. Philadelphia atDenver,1:25 p.m. NewEnglandatAtlanta,5:30p.m. Open:Carolina,GreenBay Monday, Sept. 30 MiamiatNewOrleans,5:40p.m.

Kansas City26,Philadelphia)6

Sunday'sGames Tennesse e20,SanDiego17 NewOrleans31,Arizona7 Dallas31,St. Louis7 Cleveland31,Minnesota27 Baltimore 30,Houston9 Carolina38,N.Y.Giants 0 Detroit27,Washington20

NewEngland23,TampaBay3 Cincinnati34,GreenBay30

Miami27,Atlanta23 Indianapolis27,SanFrancisco7 Seattle45,Jacksonvige17 NY.Jets27,Buffalo 20 Chicago40,Pittsburgh23

Today's Game Oakl andatDenver,5:40p.m.

Cowboys31, Rams7 St. Louis Dallas

0 0 7 0 — 7 10 7 7 7 — 31 First Quarter Dal — Bryant2 passfromRomo(Bailey kick), 7:06. Dal — FGBailey19, 2:06 SecondQuarter Dal — Murray2run (Bailey kick), 9:10. Third Quarter Dal Escobar 24passfrom Romo (Bailey kick), 11:39. StL — Pettis 4 passfromBradford (Zuerfein kick), 3.20. Fourlh Quarler Dal — Harris 24 passfrom Romo(Bailey kick) 11:55. A—80,848.

Rushes-yards Passing PuntRetums KickottReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Green Bay: Frankin13-103, Starks 14-55, Rodgers3-24. Cincinnati: Bernard10-50, Green-Ellis10-29,Dalton4-3. PASSING —Green Bay: Rodgers 26-43-2-244. Cincinnati: Dalton20-28 1-235. RECEIVING — Green Bay:Nelson8-93,Cobb554, J.Jones 4-34, Franklin3-23, Quarless3-21, RTaylor 2-11, Ross1-8.Cincinnati: Sanu4-68, Bernard4-49, Green 4-46, Gresham4-27, M.Jones3-38, Eifert1-7. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Cincinnati: Nugent

52 (WL).

Lions 27, Redskins 20 7 10 0 10 — 27 7 7 3 3 — 20

First Quarter Was —Hall 17 interception return (Potter kick),

9:23. Det — Bell12 run(Akerskick), 5:14.

SecondQuarter

Det Fauria 5 pass fromStafford (Akers kick), 14:47. Was —Morris 30run(Potter kick), 3:29. Det — FGAkers32,:44. Third Quarter Was FG Potter43 1211

Fourth Quarter

Det — FGAkers28, 11:08.

3:56. Was FG Potter21,1:40. Div A—80,111. 1-0-0 1-0-0 D et W a s 0-1-0 24 27 0-1-0 First downs TotalNetYards 4 41 42 0 Rushes-yards 23-63 22-120 Passing 3 78 30 0 2 -9 2 - 11 PuntRetums KickoffReturns 1 -15 4 - 88 1 -4 1- 1 7 Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int 25-42-1 32-50-1 1 -7 2 - 26 Sacked-YardsLost Punts 6-52.5 5-46.2 0-0 3-1 Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards 8 -71 6 - 45 Time ofPossession 28;48 3 1:12

All Times PDT 5-28,Jennings 3-43,Wright 3-35,Simpson 3-29, Patterson2-49, Gerhart 2-14,Carlson1-3. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.

Cin

27 19 399 297 30-182 24-82 217 215 0-0 0-0 2-21 4 -111 1-1 2-9 26-43-2 20-28-1 4 -27 4 - 20 3-43.3 3-43.7 2-2 5-3 4 -55 5 - 43 31:51 28.09

Det — Johnson11 passfromStaford (Akerskick),

West L T 0 0 2 0 2 0 2 0

GB

First downs Total NetYards

Washington

NewOrleans Carolina Atlanta TampaBay

W 3 1

Fourth Quarter Cin M.Jones11passfromDalton(kick blocked), 10:55. Cin — Newman 58 offensive tumble return(Nugent kick), 3.47.

Detroit

South 38 36 74 57

3:50.

A—64,633

North

SecondQuarter NE — Thompkins16 passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), 7:31. NE Thompkins 5passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick),:47. NE —FG Gostkowski53,:00. Third Quarter NE FGGostkowski46,338 Fourth Quarter NE —FG Gostkowski33,8:19.

Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts

PA 34 53 50 73

PF 70 68 60 28

3 0 0 0 — 3 0 17 3 3 — 23

Cle 23

PF 59 74 55 65

Pet .6 6 7 .6 6 7 .6 6 7 .0 0 0

First Quarler

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet.

Pct 1. 000 1. 000 .6 6 7 .3 3 3

T 0 0 0 0

TB — FGLindell30,147

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

T 0 0 0 0

South

Patriots 23, Buccaneers 3

First downs TotalNetYards

L 0 0 1 2 L 1 1 1 3

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —San Diego: Mathews16-58,Woodhead5-31, McClain1-7, R.Brown5-6 Tennessee: C.Johnson19-90,Locker5-68, Battle4-12,Kem1-0. PASSING —San Diego: Rivers 20-24-0-184. Tennessee:Locker23-37-0-299. RECEIVING — San Diego: Woodhead 7-55, Gates5-55, Green2-48, Royal2-34, V.Brown2-11, Allen1-(minus4),McClain1-(minus6),Rivers0-(minus 9).Tennessee: Washington8-131, Wright6-71, Walker5-49, Hunter1 34,Wiliams1-9, Preston1-4, C.Johnson 1-1. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—San Diego: Novak 38 (BK).Tennessee: Bironas43(WR).

TampaBay NewEngland

W 3 3 2 1 W 2 2 2 0

19 2 77 45 2 27-102 29-170 175 282 1-7 2-6 1-21 4 -114 0-0 0-0 20 24-0 23-37-0 2 -9 2 - 17 5-42.4 3-46.7 1-1 2-0 5-45 11-116 28;22 3 1:38

Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost

Cin — Green 20 passtrom Dalton (Nugentkick),

East

Titans 20, Chargers17

Car—Tolbert 2run(Ganokick), 2:33. SecondQuarter Car — FGGano53, 6:44. Car—LaFel 16passfromNewton (Gano kick) :12.

Third Quarter Car—LaFel 20passfromNewton (Gano kick) 11:35. Car—Newton 3run (Ganokick), 6:58. Fourth Quarter Car—Ginn Jr. 47 passfrom Newton (Gano kick) 13:30. A—73,748.

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Detroit: Bell 20-63, Stafford 1-2,

Riddick 2-(minus2). Washington: Morris 15-73,

Griffin III 6-37,Garcon1-10. PASSING —Detroit: Stafford 25-42-1-385. Washington: Grittin III 32-50-1-326. RECEIVING —Detroit: Johnson7-115, Burleson 6-116,Bell 4-69,Broyies3-34, Scheffler 2-5, Durham 1-33, Riddick1-8,Fauria1-5 Washington: Garcon 8-73, Moss7-77, Reed5-50, Paulsen4-51, HeluJr. 3-35, Hankerson 3-21, Morgan2-19. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Ravens 30, Texans9 Houston Baltimore

3 6 0 0 — 9 0 17 7 6 — 3 0 First Quarter Hou — FGBullock27, 7:06.

SecondQuarter

Hou FG Bullock29, 14:56 Bal —FGTucker 28,4:11. Bal —D.Smith 37interception return(Tuckerkick) 2:39. Bal — Doss82punt return(Tuckerkick),:45. Hou FG Bullock47, 00 N YG C a r Third Quarter First downs 10 27 Bal —Pierce1run (Tuckerkick), 11:05. TotalNetYards 150 402 Fourth Quarter Rushes-yards 16-60 46-194 Bal —FGTucker 45,9.09. Passing 90 208 Bal FG Tucker43,1:08 1 -0 2 - 12 PuntReturns A—71,168. KickoffReturns 1 24 00 1-9 2-6 InterceptionsRet. H ou Ba l Comp-Att-Int 14-27-2 15-27-1 First downs 18 16 Sacked-Yards Lost 7 -45 1- 1 5 TotalNetYards 2 64 23 6 StL Dal Punts 6-40.8 2-48.5 Rushes-yards 23-94 3 1-75 First downs 17 21 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-1 Passing 1 70 16 1 Total NetYards 2 32 3 9 6 Penalties-Yards 6 -45 4 - 3 2 PuntRetums 2 -18 2 - 93 12-35 34-193 Rushes-yards Time ofPossession 23;13 36:47 KickoffReturns 2 -55 2 - 53 Passing 1 97 20 3 Interceptions Ret. 0 -0 1 - 37 PuntReturns 2 -16 4 - 16 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Comp-Att-Int 25-35-1 16-24-0 KickoffReturns 2 46 0-0 RUSHING —N.Y. Giants: Wilson11-39Manning Sacked-YardsLost 3 -24 2 - 10 0-0 0-0 InterceptionsRet. 1-14, Scott1-5,Jacobs3-2. Carolina: D.Wiliams 23- Punts 5-50.4 4-48.5 Comp-Att-Int 29-49-0 17-24-0 120, Newton 7-45, Tolbert 9-18 GinnJr.1-11, Brockel Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 Sacked-YardsLost 6-43 1-7 1-1, ASmith 3-0,Anderson2-(minus1). Penalties-Yards 14-113 10-87 5-47.6 4-48.8 Punts PASSING —N.Y.Giants: Manning12-23-1-119, Time ofPossession 30;36 2 9'24 1-1 2-1 Fumbles-Lost Painter2-4-1-16. Carolina: Newton15-27-1-223. 5 -41 6 - 72 Penalties-Yards RECEIVING —N.Y. Giants: Myers3-33, Cruz INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Time ofPossession 26:32 33:28 3-25, Randle 2-40, Scott 2-17, Murphy1-8,Hynoski RUSHING —Houston: Foster 12-54, Tate9-36, 1-5, Jernigan1-5,Pascoe1-2.Carolina: Olsen4-54, Wood 2-4. Baltimore: Pierce 24-65, Leach3-8, INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Ginn Jr.3-71, LaFell 3-53,S.Smith 3-40,Hixon1-8, Draughn4-2 RUSHING —St. Louis: Pead6-20, Cunningham D.Williams1-(minus 3). PASSING—Houston: Schaub 25-35-1-194. 4-16, Austin1-3,Givens1-(minus4) Dallas: Murray MISSEDFIELDGOALS—N.Y. Giants: J.Brown Baltimore: Flacco16-24-0-171. 26-175,Dunbar5-19, Tanner3-(minus1). 38 (WL). RECEIVING — Houston:Hopkins6-60,Johnson PASSING —St. Louis: Bradford 29-48-0-240, 5-36, Daniels5-29,Posey3-29,Tate3-7,Martin2-35, Hekker0-1-0-0. Dallas: Romo17-24-0-210. Foster1-(minus2) Baltimore: TSmith 5-92, Clark4RECEIVING —St. Louis: Pead7-43, Austin 6- Bengals 34, Packers 30 46, Leach2-11, Pierce2-7 M.Brown2-6, Stokley 1-9. 30,Cook5-44,Kendricks5-36,Givens2-54,Pettis MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. 0 1614 0 — 3 0 2-20, Quick1-7, Cunningham1-6 Dallas: Witten Green Bay 14 0 7 1 3 — 34 5-67, Bryant4-38,Murray3-28, Austin 2-22,Escobar Cincinnati First Quarter Saints 31, Cardinals 7 1-24, Harris1-24,Beasley1-7. Cin — Bernard3 run(Nugent kick), 9:20. MISSED FIELDGOALS —Dallas: Bailey 35 Cin Green-Ellis 2run(Nugent kick), 9:08. Arizona 7 0 0 0 — 7 (WR). SecondQuarter New Orleans 7 7 3 1 4 — 31 GB — FGCrosby 41,14:57. First Quarter Panthers 38, Giants 0 GB Jennings 24 fumblereturn (Crosbykick) Ari —Smith 3 run(Feeiy kick), 9:13. 11:22. NO — Meachem27 passfrom Brees(Hartley kick) N.Y. Giants 0 0 0 0 — 0 GB — FGCrosby19, 6:32. 5:28. Carolina 7 10 14 7 — 38 GB — FGCrosby 26,:00. SecondQuarter ND — Graham16 passfrom Brees(Hartley lack) First Quarter Third Quarter

2:52.

Third Quarter ND — FGHartley31, 4:03. Fourth Quarter ND — Brees7run(Hartley kick),14:42. ND — Graham 7 passfrom Brees(Hartley kick),

14:26. Sea—FGHauschka21,9:40

Sea —Rice 11passfromWilson (Hauschkakick),

:10.

Third Quarter Sea —Rice 23passfromWilson (Hauschkakick),

11:41.

5:25. A—73,057.

Jax Jones-Drew 2 run (Scobeekick), 6:20 Sea— Baldwin 35passfrom Jackson (Hauschka kick), 1:28. Jax — FGScobee33,:06 First downs 16 27 247 423 TotalNetYards Fourlh Quarter 16-86 24-104 Rushes-yards Jax — Todman3run(Scobeekick), 9:06. Passing 1 61 31 9 Sea—Jackson5run (Hauschkakick), 6:32. 2 -15 3 - 53 PuntReturns A—68,087 3-87 0-0 KickoffReturns 1 -0 2 4 9 InterceptionsRet. J ax Sea Comp-Att-Int 18-35-2 29-46-1 First downs 17 28 4 -26 4 - 2 3 Total NetYards Sacked-Yards Lost 2 65 47 9 8-40.8 4-49.5 Punts Rushes-yards 24-51 36-156 1-0 0-0 Fumbles-Lost Passing 214 323 3 -18 4 - 30 PuntReturns Penalties-Yards 2+3) 4 - 33 Time ofPossession 24;29 3 5:31 KickoffReturns 2 -54 2 - 45 Interceptions Ret. 1 -10 2 - 32 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Comp-Att-Int 18-38-2 21-29-1 RUSHING —Arizona: Mendenhall 9-29, Smith Sacked-YardsLost 4-21 2-8 3-27, Ellington3-19, Peterson1-11.New Orleans: Punts 7-42.7 4-35.0 K.Robinson 4-38, Thomas11-28, Brees6-21, Sproles Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-1 3-17. Penalties-Yards 4 -45 4 - 24 PASSING —Arizona: Palmer18-35-2-187.New Time ofPossession 27:25 32:35 Orleans: Brees 29-46-1-342. RECEIVING —Arizona: Fitzgerald 5-64, Floyd INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 4-49, Eiiington 3-36,Housler1-13, Mendenhall1-12, RUSHINGWacksonvftte: Jones-Drew19-43, Smith1-7,Roberts1-6,S.Taylor1-2,Peterson1-(miHenne 2-5,Todman2-5,Robinson1-(minus2).Senus2).New Orleans:Graham9-134,Thomas6-39, attle: Lynch17-69, Michael9-37,Tate2-29, Wilson Colsto n 5-71,Sproles4-39,Meachem 2-34,Watson 2-14,Turbin3-5,Jackson3-2. 1-14 Moore1-6,Coilins1-5, PASSING — Jacksonville:Henne 18-38-2-235. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None Seattle: Wilson14-21-1-202,Jackson7-8-0-129. RECEIVING —Jacksonville: Shorts 8-143,Burton 5-42,Sanders2-25, Jones-Drew2-19, Ta'ufo'ou Colts 27, 49ers 7 1-6. Seattle: Tate5-88, Rice5-79, Wilson 5-76, Indianapolis 7 3 3 1 4 — 27 Davis 2-31,Miler 2-5, Baidwin1-35,Kearse1-17. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None. San Francisco 7 0 0 0 — 7 First Quarter Ind Richardson1run(Vinatieri kick),1120. Jets 27, Bills 20 SF — Hunter13 run(Dawson kick), 4:13. SecondQuarter Buffalo 0 6 6 8 — 20 Ind — FGVinatieri 43, 700. N.Y. Jets 7 10 3 7 — 2 7 Third Quarter First Quarter Ind FG Vinatieri41, 6:46. NYJ—Smith 8run (Folk kick), 9.06. Fourth Quarter SecondQuarter Ind — Luck6run (Vinatieri kick),4:13. Buf — FGCarpenter 37, 13:45. Ind — Bradshaw1 run(Vinatieri kick), 255. Buf — FGCarpenter 23, 9:57. A—69,732. NYJ—Hil 51passtromSmith (Folk kick), 6:58. NYJ—FGFolk47, 00 tnd SF Third Quarter First downs 23 14 NYJ—FGFolk 34, 9.48. TotalNetYards 3 36 25 4 Buf — FGCarpenter 43, 8:18 Rushes-yards 39-179 23-115 Buf — FGCarpenter 26, 5:35. Passing 1 57 13 9 Fourlh Quarler 2 -16 1 1 4 PuntRetums Buf Chandler 33 passfrom Manuel(Johnson 0 -0 3 - 3 6 passfromManuel), 10:39. KickoffReturns 1-1 0-0 InterceptionsRet. NYJ—Holmes69passfrom Smith (Folk kick),9:23. Comp-Att-Int 18-27-0 13-27-1 A—76,957. 1-7 3-11 Sacked-Yards Lost Punts 4-48.0 7-43.6 B uf NYJ 0-0 1-1 Fumbles-Lost First downs 18 20 Penalties-Yards 1 -10 6 - 4 8 Total NetYards 328 513 Time otPossession 36:25 23:35 25-120 41-182 Rushes-yards Passing 2 08 33 1 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 2 -4 3- 1 8 PuntReturns RUSHING —Indianapolis: Bradshaw 19-95, KickoffReturns 1 -18 3 - 53 Richardson13-35, D.Brown3-25, Luck4-24. San Interceptions Ret. 2-46 0-0 Francisco: Gore11-82,Kaepernick 7-20, Hunter4- Comp-Att-Int 19-42-0 16-29 2 14, Dixon1-(minus1). Sacked-YardsLost 8-35 0-0 PASSING —Indianapolis: l.uck 18-27-0-164. Punts 7-51.0 7-42.0 San Francisco: Kaepem ick13-27-1-150. 2-0 1-0 Fumbles-Lost RECEIVING —Indianapolis: Wayne 5-63, Penalties-Yards 7-87 20-168 Heyward-Bey5-59, Bradsnaw3-16, Fleener 2-13, Time ofPossession 25:47 34:13 Hilton 2-13,Havili1-0. SanFrancisco: Boldin5-67, Gore 2-21, K Wiliams 2-12, Celek1 30, Miller1-10, INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS VMcDonald)-6, Hunter1-4. RUSHING —Buffalo: Jackson 7-72, Manuel MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Indianapolis: Vina6-40, Spiller 10-9,Choice2-(minus1). N.Y. Jets: tieri 51(WL). Powell 27-149,Green5-14, Smith4-14, Ivory4-5, Bohanon 1-0. PASSING —Buffalo: Manuel19-42-0-243. N.Y. Dolphins 27, Falcons23 Jets: Smith16-29-2-331. RECEIVING—Bu ffalo: Johnson6-86, Chandler Atlanta 7 6 7 3 — 23 5-79, Jackson4-37,Woods2-35,Graham1-5,Spiller Miami 0 10 10 7 — 27 1-1. N.Y. Jets: Holmes5-154, Hill 3-108,CumberFirst Quarter Atl — Snelling 7 pass from Ryan(Bryant kick), land 3-26,Keriey2-25 Powell2-9,Bohanon1-9. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None. 6:12. Ari

NO

SecondQuarter

Atl —FGBryant 52, 13:02. Mia — DanThomas5 run(Sturgis kick), 10:06. Atl —FGBryant 20,2:04. Mia — FGSturgis 46,:00. Third Quarter

Atl — Toiloo 2 pass from Ryan(Bryant kick),

12:40. Mia — FGSturgis 50, 9:12.

Mia — Hartline 18 passfrom Tannehil (Sturgis kick), 56 Fourth Quarter Atl —FGBryant 33, 11:39. Mia — Sims 1 passfromTannehil (Sturgiskick), :38. A 70,660.

Bears 40, Steeiers 23 Chicago Pittsburgh

17 7 3 13 — 4 0 0 10 10 3 — 23

First Quarter

Chi — FG Gould 47,8:02. Chi — Forte 5run (Gouid kick), 5:05. Chi Bush1 run(Gouidkick),2:01

SecondQuarter

Pit —FGSuisham27,13.36. Chi — Wright 38 interception return(Gouidkick), 8:57. Pit — A.Brown 33 pass from Roethlisberger (Suishamkick), 6:27. Third Quarter Chi — FGGould 32,10:54. Pit —FGSuisham36,5:38.

Atl Mia 24 16 Pit — A.Brown 21 pass from Roethlisberger (Su377 285 ishamkick), 1:50. Rushes-yards 30-146 15-90 Fourlh Quarler Passing 231 195 Pit FG Suisham 44,10 38 PuntReturns 3-4 0-0 Chi — E.Bennet17 passtromCutler (Gouldkick), KickoffReturns 0 -0 2 - 4 8 5.48. InterceptionsRet. 1-19 1 +2) Chi Peppers 42 fumblereturn (kick blocked), Comp-Att-Int 23-38-1 24-35-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 0 -0 5- 4 1 3:57. A—61,575. Punts 2-33.0 3-53.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 2-1 Chi Pit Penalties-Yards 7 -59 2 - 13 First downs 15 21 Time otPossession 37:09 22:51 Total NetYards 2 58 45 9 28-107 21-80 Rushes-yards INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 1 51 37 9 RUSHING —Atlanta: Rodgers 18-86, Sneging Passing 0-0 2-4 Punt Returns 11-53, Jones1-7. Miami: Miller 8-62,Dan.Thom as 5 -73 2 - 48 Kickoff Returns 5-21 Tannehil2-7 2-51 0-0 InterceptionsRet. PASSING —Atlanta: Ryan23-38 1231.Miami: Comp-Att-Int 20-30-0 26-41-2 Tannehi24-35-1-236. I Sacked-Yards Lost 2 -8 3 27 RECEIVING —Atlanta: Jones9-115, Snelling4Punts 6-47.0 2-29.5 58,Gonzalez4-24,White2-16,Rodgers 2-7,Douglas Fumbles-Lost 1-0 4-3 1-9, Toilolo1-2. Miami: Gibson 6-49, Hartline4-56, 3 -25 6 - 59 Matthews4 42,Clay4 40,Walace 2-22, DanThomas Penalties-Yards Time of Po s se s si o n 31:36 28:24 1-16 Egnew 1-8, Miler1-2, Sims1-1. MISSED FIELDGOALS —Atlanta: Bryant 35 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS (WR). RUSHING —Chicago: Forte16-87, Cutler4-11, Bush 8-9 Pittsburgh: Dwyer12-39,FJones7-34,

First downs TotalNetYards

Seahawks45, Jaguars17

0 0 10 7 — 1 7 7 17 14 7 — 4 5 First Quarter Sea —Miler 1 passfromWilson (Hauschkakick), 8:04.

Jacksonville Seattle

SecondQuarter

Sea —Miler 4 passtromWilson (Hauschkakick),

Roethlisberger 2-7. PASSING —Chicago: Cutler 20 30-0-159

Pittsburgh:Roethiisberger 26-41-2-406. RECEIVING —Chicago: Jeffery 7-51, Marshall 5 52, Forte 4-24, E.Bennett2-22, M.Bennett 2-10. Pittsburgh: A.Brown 9-196, Sanders 4-39, Cotchery 3-52, Miller3-35, D.Johnson2-51, FJones2-13, Dwyer1-9, Paulson1-6,WJohnson1-5. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.



B6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

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• The Swede finishes off awire-to-wire win to pick up a$10milion check forwinningtheseason-ending 'playoffs' for the PGATour By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

ATLANTA — Henrik Stenson knows better than most players how it feels to go from the depths of a slump to the elite in golf. He's done it twice now. And the second time was sweeter — and richer — than ever. Not even among the top 200 players in the L• world two years ago, Stenson capped off the best three months of his career with a command performance Sunday in the Tour Championship. With a birdie to thwart a late charge by Jordan Spieth, followed by three pars from kt, the sand, the 37-year-old Swede closed with a 2-under 68 on Sunday for a three-shot victory to capture the FedEx Cup. He walked away with $11.44 million — $10 million for the FedEx Cup ($9 million of that in John Bazemore/TheAssociated Press cash) and $1.44 million for winning the Tour Henrik Stenson poses with the trophies after winning both the Tour Championship and the FedEx Cup at Championship. "It shows that I never give up," Stenson East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, Sunday. 'I

said, who also moves to No. 4 in the world. "This is way beyond what I c o uld have imagined." Even with a four-shot lead, the final round was a battle. There were two trophies on display on the first tee. He knew he could still win the FedEx Cup even if he didn't win the Tour Championship. Ultimately, he figured good golf would take care of everything, and it did. Stenson became the first player to win the Tour Championship wire-to-wire with no ties since Tom Watson in 1987, the first year of this 30-man showcase. Spieth made him work for it. The 20-year-old Texan left one last impression on his remarkable rookie season by running off four straight birdies on the back nine at East Lake to pull within one shot after Stenson went well over the 14th green and made

his long bogey. SeeStenson /B9

LOCAL GOLF

GOLF ROUNDUP

Wiebe wins Hawaii event in playoff

• For six golfers, Central Oregon'Paci s fic Amateur Golf Classic is acan't miss event By Zack Hall

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Bend was a different place when Devon Bratsman first made the trip to Central Oregon to play in the inaugural Pacific Amateur Golf Classic. "The sign says 'Welcome to Bend' and I am almost sure it said '30,050' or something like that," recalls Bratsman, now 75, when in 1997 he first traveled from his home in Rexburg, Idaho, to Central Oregon for the Pac Am. Bratsman is the rarest of breeds at the annual amateur tournament. He is just one of six golfers in this year's field — out of more than 400 — to have played in all 16 Pac Ams leading up to this week's 17th annual Pac Am (now known as the Lithia Pacific Amateur Golf Classic). Like Central Oregon itself, the tournament has changed dramatically. The four-day golf extravaganza started with fewer than 300 golfers in 1997 and swelled to more than 800 in 2007 and 2008. Since then, the field has gotten smaller each year. "It really got big there for awhile," Bratsman says. Along the way, the tournament has shifted its dates from early October to late August. This year it was moved again, back to late September. But none of that has dissuaded the original six: Bratsman, Ronald Colarchik, of Oregon City, Jim Moore, of Seattle, John Murray, of South Lake Tahoe, Calif., Charley Spilker, of Portland, and Steve Turcotte, of Federal Way, Wash. What keeps them coming back? "It'sa fun event every year,"says Spilker, a 59-year-old graphics salesman. "Living in Portland, I don't get over to Bend nearly enough. I always love spending a week in Bend in the fall. And it is just a great way to end the season before the rainy season starts here on the west side of the mountains." Spilker says that most of the changes in the tournament's structure have been modest. Where he has seen the most change is in the participants themselves. In those early years the tournament was mostly made up of single men, Spilker recalls. Now? "It seems to be a lot more of people bringing families and making a vacation week out of it, and couples actually playing in the tournament," Spilker says. See Pac Am/B9

The Associated Press KAPOLEI, Hawaii — Mark Wiebe birdied the 18th hole to force a playoff and beat Corey Pavin on the second extra hole to win the Pacific Links Hawaii Championship on Sunday. Wiebe made a clutch par putt on the second playoff hole before Pavin missed a putt from inside 10 feet that would have forced play to continue. Both Wiebe and Pavin finished regulation at 11-under 205. Bernhard Langer, who shot in the 60s in all three rounds, finished third a t 1 0 u n der. Three-time major champion

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Vijay Singh, playing his first event on the Champions Tour, struggled to a 73 in the final round after starting the day one shot off the lead. Also on Sunday: Frenchman wins: TURIN, Italy — Julien Quesne of France made five birdies on the back nine to win the Italian Open by one stroke for his second European Tour victory. Quesne finished the tournament at 12under 276, one stroke ahead of David Higgins of Ireland and Steve Webster of England. Americans retain PGA Cup: HEXHAM, England — Dan Greenwood ofEngland holed a 5-foot par putt on the 18th hole as Great Britain 8z Ireland rallied in singles to end the PGA Cup in a tie. The trophy still goes home with the Americans in the biennial matches between club professionals becausethey were the defending

Courtesy of Central Oregon Visitors Assocratron

From left to right: Devon Bratsman, John Murray, Steve Turcotte, Central Oregon Visitors Association president Alana Hughson, Varsha Nelson (who is not in this year's tournament), Ronald Colarchik and Charlie Spilker. Bratsman, Murray, Turcotte, Colarchik and Spilker are all returning this year to the Lithia Pacific Amateur Golf Classic, the 17th consecutive year they have all played in the tournament.

Pacific Amateur scheduleof events The Lithia Pacific Amateur Golf Classic starts today and runs through Thursday at courses

around Central Oregon: TODAY

WEDNESDAY

9:30 a.m.:First round of competition, shotgun start

9:30 a.m.:Third round of competition, shotgun start

6-8:30 p.m.:Charity Casino Night at Sunriver Resort Main Lodge TUESDAY

5:30-7 p.m.:Awards dinner at Sunriver Resort, Great Hall Complex

7-8:30 p.m.:Awards ceremony, Sunriver Resort, Homestead Room

9:30 a.m.:Second round of competition, shotgun start After competition:Pac Am Dine Around

THURSDAY 10a.m.:Tournament of Champions, Crosswater Club atSunriver Resort

champion.

LOCAL GOLF IN BRIEF Local wins college tourney — Bend golfer Jesse Heinly won the first tournament of his cols~

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NCAA Division I Xavier University in Ohio where he played the fall

season. Heinly transferred back to Concordia after Xavier's fall semester. Nate Pujatee, a freshman

at Oregon Techwho graduated from Sisters High, finished the

Oregon Tech lnvite in a tie for sixth

place at11 under par. — Bulletin staff report



MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

B9

Tour's top award couldbe one of Woods' consolation prizes By Karen Crouse New Yorlz Times News Service

ATLANTA — A f ter signing his scorecard Sunday, Tiger Woods lifted his daughter, Sam Alexis, who had run out to greet him after he putted out at No. 18 for a 3-under-par 67. Woods' even-par 280 finish left him tied for 22nd in the 30-man field at the Tour Championship, meaning he would not lift the FedEx Cup trophy or receive the $10 million bonus check. Both were snatched by Henrik Stenson, who overtook Woods, the leader, in the playoff standings with a three-stroke victory at East Lake Golf Club. As far as consolation prizes go, a hug from his 6-year-old daughter is one that Woods will happily accept. "That's what life's all about," he said. "There are more i mportant things in life than hitting a little round ball and putting it in a gopher hole, you know."

Woods, 37, could have fooled us that anything mattered other than winning in the years from 1999 to 2009, when he averaged nearly six tour titles a season and won 9 of his 10 PGA Tour player of the year awards. He was like a world-class illusionist then, his focus so keen he could make the ball disappear into the hole. Age, injuries, parenthood and a highly public divorce have left Woods with infinitely more on his mind in recent years, adding weight to the one prize he is the prohibitive favorite to take home. When Stenson's last putt dropped on hisclosing 68, the season was all over but the voting for the tour's player of the year. It is difficult, but not impossible, to imagine someone other than Woods being the No. I choice on the ballots of his fellow tour members. He finished with five victories, three more than the year's five other multiple winners: Phil Mickelson, Adam Scott,

Matt Kuchar, Brandt Snedeker and Stenson. Mickelson, who flirted with a round of 59 on his way to winning the PhoenixOpen and came from behind to win the British Open less than a month after finishing second at the U.S. Open, has never won player of the year honors. "If I could have done well this week, I thought I had a really good chance," said Mickelson, who closed with a 68 to finish tied for 12th at 4-under 276. "But as it stands now, I'm not sure." Scott, the reigning Masters winner, was the only other multiple winner with a major title. For the fifth consecutive year, Woods failed to take one of the four titles that matter the most. He succeededin the next-best events, winning the Players Championship, which the tour bills as the fifth major, and two World Golf Championships events, at Doral and Akron. "I wish I would have been a little more consistent in some of the

Stenson

events," Woods said, "but overall, at the end of the day, you know, to add to the win total for the year, it's always a

Woods credited for jump-starting his season with a quick putting refresher that helped Woods win three of four starts during a three-month stretch beginning in March. The only tournament in that span that Woods failed to win was the Masters, where he tied for fourth. "I always wish I could play a little bit more consistent and have a chance each and every time I tee it up," Woods said. "That's the intent. Whether that happens or not, it doesn't always work out that way." As he strives for consistency on the course, Woods appears to have found stability off it. Woods, who went public in March with his relationship with skiing champion Lindsey Vonn, has come acrossas more lighthearted.On Sunday, Vonn waited for Woods with his 4-year-old son on her back and his daughter at her side. Woods' smile when he saw them gave away where his focus is these days.

good thing." Since 1990, when the PGA Tour began handing out the award, only two players other than Woods have finished with more titles than he collected this year: Nick Price, with six in 1994, and Vijay Singh, with nine in 2004. Both were voted the tour's player of the year. Kuchar, who finished tied for 26th at plus 3, said, without a moment's hesitation, he would vote for Woods.Steve Stricker,who closed with a 65 to tie for second with Jordan Spieth, three strokes behind Stenson, was less sure. "You know, I would think about Henrik," Stricker said. "I would think it would be up between him and Tiger, probably. Henrik's had an amazing year. It's a tossup, really." Stricker was gallant in his honesty. He was the player, after all, whom

Championship and the FedEx

to tie for 22nd, his worst finish ever at East Lake, and wound His amazing summer beup second in the FedEx Cup. g an with a ti e for t h ird i n That still was worth a $3 milthe Scottish Open. Stenson lion bonus. followed with a r u n n er-up Woods wrapped up the PGA at the British Open and the of America's points-based World G ol f C h a mpionship award for player of the year, at Firestone, third place at and he captured the PGA Tour the PGA Championship and money title and the Vardon Trophy for the lowest adjusted a win at the Deutsche Bank Championship. scoring title. Next up is a vote "Obviously, the work was of the players for PGA Tour done before," Stenson said. player of the year. He is the "It's not like I woke up in the heavy favorite with five wins middle of July and played this year. fantastic." T he award i s t o b e a n The Tour C h ampionship nounced on Friday. was his second win in three For much of the day, no one tournaments of the FedEx Cup got closer to Stenson than playoffs. three shots, and he answered "Since the Scottish Open, it's that early challenge with an been just an incredible run," he 8-iron to an elevated green to said. "I'm speechless. It was a 2 feet for birdie at No. 7. The tough day out there. To hang in Tour Championship came to life in the final hour, though, there the way I did, I'm really satisfied.... It hasn't quite sunk thanks to the youngest player in yet. I had to fight hard men- in the field. Fearless as ever, Spieth betally to keep all this aside, and I managed to do that. It's going gan a run of birdies starting to feel better as the week goes on the 13th hole that not only on. I'm pretty sure about that." moved him into second place, Tiger Woods, the No. 1 seed it put pressure on Stenson not going into the Tour Champion- to drop any shots. Stenson's ship, never recovered from his only bogey came on the 14th, 73-71 start. He closed with a 67

Cup.

ContInued from B7 S tenson could h ea r t h e c heers and k new w hat h e faced over the last four holes. "I'm not just a pretty face. I can put I - and-I together," the Swede said with his dry humor. He drilled a 3-wood into the fairway on the par-5 15th that set up an 8-foot birdie. Ahead of him on t h e 17th, Spieth was between clubs and chose to hammer a 9-iron that he caught heavy enough that it plugged in the front bunker. He made bogey and had to settle for a 64. "I was just looking up and seeing that I needed more instead of being satisfied with what happened," Spieth said of his four straight birdies. Spieth wound up No. 7 in the FedEx Cup, the highest ever for a rookie. He began the year with no status on any tour and finished at No. 10 on the PGA Tour money list, and No. 21 in the world. The last challenge came f rom Steve S t ricker, w h o rolled in an eagle putt on the 15th hole to get within two.

John Bazemore/TheAssociated Press

HenrIk Stenson celebrates after sInkIng a putt on the18th hole to win theTour ChampIonship on Sunday.

Strickersaved par behind the 16th green, and then missed two birdie chances from about 18 feet on the last two holes for a 65. He tied for second with Spieth. Stricker didn't realize that making any of those last two putts would have been worth an extra $1 million for finishing second in the FedEx Cup. He only cared about winning,

knowing he needed birdies and for Stenson to make a mistake. "I knew the putt meant a lot. I didn't know it meant that much," he said with a smile. He finished third in the FedEx Cup and received a $2 million bonus. Stenson, who f i nished at 1 3-under 267, became t h e first European to win the Tour

mPlements Hs.svs '3e1 i'cr is.a"J

PacAm

qualifying for that tournament, meaning he was free to make his 17th appearance. The shift in dates this year, from the week before Labor Day to late September, came as a disappointment, he says. But there are some advantages, too. "It was kind of nice in August," says Murray. "But the fall weather is pretty nice in Bend and the deals at Sunriver are a little better after Labor Day." Pac Am participants will play three rounds of golf, teeing off at a different course each day. Play through the first three days will be staged at Black Butte Ranch's Big M eadow course,Juniper Golf Course

Continued from B7 Because of the later date, the Pac Am will once again be played during a time when Central Oregon's weather is unpredictable. That is nothing new to the tournament's veterans, who have braved nearly every kind of weather imaginable over the years. Still, Murray nearly had to miss this year's Pac Am because the dates of this year's t ournament c o i ncide w i t h the USGA Senior A mateur Championship. But the 59-year-old small business owner fell short of

in Redmond, Lost Tracks Golf Club in Bend, Quail Run Golf Course in La Pine, and the Meadows an d Wo o d lands courses at Sunriver Resort. The top four golfers from each flight will play in the championship round Thursday at Sunriver Resort's Crosswater Club. Pac Am golfers are split into 20 flights by gender and handi-

cap; player handicaps range from scratchto nearly 40. The Pac Am is then scored using those handicaps, but golfers must follow strict USGA tournament rules. The purpose is to create the feeling of a truly competitive golf tournament. At 75, Bratsman says this

is likely the last year he will participate in the Pac Am. So he wants a good showing, he

when he caught a flyer over the green and missed a 20-foot putt. " Henrik o b v i ously wa s

playing phenomenal golf," Spieth said. "I felt like once a few putts started falling, we have a shot at it." Webb Simpson had the low round of the tournament with a 63 to finish fourth. Stenson, who only last week smashed a driver and his locker at the BMW Championship out of frustration brought on

by playing so much golf, finally gets a break. He was headed to his home in Orlando, Fla., for a four-week break before returning in Shanghai. Next up: A chance to become the first player to win the FedEx Cup on the PGA Tour and the Race to Dubai on the EuropeanTour in the same season. What a turnaround. S

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says. Even if he doesn't play well, the nearly two decades of Pac Am golf has been worth it. "I've always enjoyed the competition," Bratsman says. "I seem to be able to probably concentrate a little better. And I still probably have a half a dozen friends I see every year that otherwise I would have never met. "It is kind of a vacation for us, kind of one-sided, my wife keeps telling me. But we've enjoyed it over the years." .

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"The man owns me," Cy the Cynic told me. " He has a deed to me registered at the courthouse." Cy was referr ing to Ed, my club's expert, who regularly makes meal money off Cy in the penny game. When I watched today's deal, Cy was East, and Ed was declarer at four spades. West le d h i s s i n gleton diamond. I expected a profit for East-West. Cy would take his ace and return the queen, and West would ruff and lead the ace and another club. Ed would need a good guess in hearts to escape for down one.

and he bids two diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: You had minimum high-card values for your first response, and your partner's second bid hasn't improved your hand. Bid two spades, inviting game. In the method many pairs employ, a twoover-one response is forcing to game. In that style, a response of two clubs w ould b e a g g ressive b u t n o t unreasonable. West dealer N-S vulnerable

B ut w hen C y w o n t h e fi r s t diamond, Ed smoothly followed with the king! The Cynic shrugged and shifted to the jack of clubs; South might have held A I 10 8 5 4, A Q 9, K, K 5 3. Ed ruffed the second club, drew one trump and led a heart from dummy: four,nine, ace. He ruffed West's club return, took the queen of hearts, drew trumps and threw two diamonds (as Cy had apoplexy) on the K-10 of hearts. Making four! "He could take me public and sell stock in me," Cy groaned.

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09/23/1 3


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

~

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I •

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 2013 860

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HDFat Bo 1996

775

'.00 630

Rooms for Rent

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Homes for Sale

NOTICE

880

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747 -Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

Bxfl &iein

870

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon 541-548-5511 JandMHomes.com

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

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers •

Fifth W heels

/e/u eoucso!

541-379-3530

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

$25,000.

541-548-0318 20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L (photo aboveis of a similar model & not the V6 w/OMC outdrive, open 541-548-4607 actual vehicle) bow, Shorelander trlr, nds some interior trim work. Street Glide 2006 black $4500. 541-639-3209 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! cherry metal f l ake, good extras, 8 ,100 21' Crownline Cuddy Door-to-door selling with miles, will take some Cabin, 1995, only fast results! It's the easiest trade of firearms or 325 hrs on the boat, way in the world to sell. small ironhead. 5.7 Merc engine with $14,000. outdrive. Bimini top The Bulletin Classified 541-306-6612 & moorage cover, $7500 obo. 541-385-5809 541-362-2577 Suzuki DRZ400 SM 2007, 14K mi., 4 gal. tank, racks, Find exactly what recent tires, LII you are looking for in the $4200 OBO. 541-363-2647. CLASSIFIEDS Monaco Windsor, 2001, Ads published in the 40-ft, loaded! iwas "Boats" classification $234,000 new) include: Speed, fish- Solid-surface counters, ing, drift, canoe, convection/micro, 4-dr, house and sail boats. fridge, washer/dryer, ceFor all other types of ramic tile & carpet, TV, watercraft, please go DVD, satellite dish, levto Class 875. eling, 8-airbags, power Victory TC 2002, 541-385-5609 cord reel, 2 full pass-thru trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 runs great, many 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 accessories, new Serving Central Oregon since t903 Diesel gen set. $74,900 tires, under 40K 503-799-2950

$1 7,000

1

The Bulletin

miles, well kept. $5000. 541-647-4232

nuuu

•5 Beautiful

ATVs

Tra v el Trailers

CHECK YOUR AD

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1969 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for l ife $ 6 900 O B O .

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882

h o u seboat,

$85,000. 541-390-4693

Orbit 21'2007, used only 6 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual

Cougar 33 ft. 2006, 14 ft. slide, awning, easy lift, stability bar, bumper extends for extra cargo, all access. incl., like new condition, stored in RV barn, used less t han 10 t i mes l o c ally, no p et s o r smoking. $20,000 obo. 541-536-2709.

batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $15,000 OBO. 541-382-9441 RV

.4 Nk

CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

,. • a.

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000 Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat & air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003

t•

on the first day it runs to make sure it isn corn rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

Redmond: 541-548-5254

Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

tu

Keystone Laredo 31' RV 20 06 w i th 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w e r. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600

Keystone

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

Ch allenger

2004 CH34TLB04 34'

fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 16' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & o ut. 27 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details Only used 4

NATIONAL DOLPHIN www.centraloregon Furnished room in quiet 37' 1997, loaded! 1 real estate adverhouseboat.com. home, no drugs, alco- All Rent /Own slide, Corian surfaces, hol or smok i ng. tised here in is sub- 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes GENERATE SOME ex- wood floors ikitchen), times total in last 5 t/~ $450/mo. 1st & l a st ject to t h e F e deral $2500 down, $750 mo. citement in your neigyears.. No pets, no 2-dr fridge, convection F air Housing A c t , ref. 541-408-0646 J and M Homes borhood. Plan a ga- microwave, Vizio TV & smoking. High r etail which makes it illegal OAC. 541-447-4805 541-546-5511 rage sale and don't roof satellite, walk-in $27,700. Will sell for to advertise any pref$24,000 including slidPolaris Outlaw 450, 2008, forget to advertise in shower, new queen bed. 632 erence, limitation or classified! 385-5609. i ng hitch that fits i n White leather hide-aMXR Sport quad, dirt & discrimination based Apt./Multiplex General bed & chair, all records, your truck. Call 8 a.m. sand tires,runs great, low on race, color, relito 10 p.m. for appt to hrs, $3750 541-647-8931 Serving Central Oregon smce 1903 no pets or s moking. gion, sex, handicap, CHECK YOUR AD see. 541-330-5527. $28,450. familial status or naWEEKEND WARRIOR Call 541-771-4800 875 tional origin, or intenToy hauler/travel trailer. BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Watercraft 24' with 21' interior. tion to make any such Layton 27-ft, 2001 Search the area's most Sleeps 6. Self-conpreferences, l i m itaAds published in eWacomprehensive listing of tions or discrimination. tained. Systems/ Front & rear entry classified advertising... We will not knowingly tercraft" include: Kayappearancein good doors, bath, shower, on the first day it runs accept any advertisSuzuki powered custom aks, rafts and motorcondition. Smoke-free. real estate to automotive, queen bed, slide-out, to make sure it is cormerchandise to sporting ing for r ea l e s tate ized personal Pontiac G6 2007, low oven, microwave, air Tow with s/g-ton. Strong e rect. Spellcheck" and watercrafts. For miles, excellent tow car, which is in violation of • suspension; can haul goods. Bulletin Classifieds Sno w m obiles • mo t o r, 5-spd, with trailer, conditioning, patio human errors do oc" boats" please s e e has Brake Buddy, shield, appear every day in the this law. All persons $3500. 541-389-3890 ATVs snowmobiles, awning, twin proT owmaster to w b ar, cur. If this happens to are hereby informed • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 Class 670. print or on line. even a small car! Great pane tanks, very 870 your ad, please con$10,000. 541-548-1422 that all dwellings adprice - $8900. 541-365-5609 Call 541-385-5809 nice, great floor plan, EXT, $1000. tact us ASAP so that vertised are available • Yamaha 750 1999 Boats & Accessories Call 541-593-6266 www.bendbulletrn.com $6895. corrections and any on an equal opportu- Mountain Max, SOLD! RV 541-316-1388 adjustments can be 13'4 n Gregor, 1 5 h p nity basis. The Bulle- • Zieman 4-place CONSIGNMENTS The Bulletin Looking for your Serrrng Central Oregon sincelses made to your ad. tin Classified Johnson, 3 hp WANTED trailer, SOLD! 880 next employee? 541-385-5809 Evinrude great cond., We Do The Work ... All in good condition. Mallard 22' 1995, Place a Bulletin help Motorhomes The Bulletin Classified 746 $1750. 541-420-5655 You Keep The Cash! ready for hunting Located in La Pine. wanted ad today and On-site credit Northwest Bend Homes Call 541-406-6149. season! Sleeps 7, reach over 60,000 People Look for Information approval team, two twin beds, fully readers each week. 648 About Products and web site presence. equipped, very good Awbrey Road. area. 860 Your classified ad Houses for Services Every Daythrough We Take Trade-Ins! Rebuilt 3/2 on 3 City cond, $4000 obo. will also appear on Free Advertising. Rent General lots! quiet, convenient, Motorcycles & Accessories The Sullefin Classirteds 541-676-5575 bendbulletin.com Monaco Lakota 2004 BIG COUNTRY RV classy. Chickens inE which currently re5th Wheel Bend: 541-330-2495 PUBLISHER'S cluded. Only $440,000 ceives over 1.5 milFleetwood D i s covery Need to get an 34 ft.; 3 s l ides; imRedmond: Call Glenn Oseland, NOTICE 40' 2003, diesel molion page views evmaculate c o ndition; 541-548-5254 ad in ASAP? All real estate adver- Princ. Broker, Holiday ery month at no torhome w/all l arge screen TV w / tising in this newspa- Realty 541-369-6699 You can place it extra cost. Bulletin options-3 slide outs, entertainment center; per is subject to the Classifieds Get Resatellite, 2 TV's,W/D, online at: reclining chairs; cen750 F air H o using A c t 2013 Harley sults! Call 365-5609 14' LAZER 1993 sail etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. ter kitchen; air; queen www.bendbulletin.com which makes it illegal Redmond Homes Davidson Dyna or place your ad boat with trailer, exc Wintered in h e ated bed; complete hitch to a d vertise "any Wide Glide, black, on-line at c ond., $2000 o b o shop. $69,900 O.B.O. and new fabric cover. preference, limitation 541-385-5609 only 200 miles, 541-447-6664 bendbulletin.com Call 503-312-4166 $22,900 OBO. or disc r imination Looking for your next brand new, all stock, (541) 548-5886 TIFFIN PHAETON QSH emp/oyee? based on race, color, plus after-market 2007 with 4 slides, CAT religion, sex, handi- Place a Bulletin help exhaust. Has winter 350hp diesel engine, . i~un» %1 5 - N cap, familial status, wanted ad today and cover, helmet. Fifth Wheels $129,900. 30,900 miles, reach over 60,000 marital status or naSelling for what I great condition! readers each week. tional origin, or an inowe on it: $15,500. Extended warranty, Your classified ad Alpenlite 2002, 31' tention to make any Call anytime, dishwasher, washer/ with 2 slides, rear such pre f e rence, will also appear on 16'9 n Larson All AmeriG ulfstream S u n - dryer, central vac, roof Monte Carlo 2012 Lim541-554-0384 ited Edition, 2 slides, 2 bendbulletin.com kitchen, very good limitation or discrimican, 1971, V-hull, 120hp sport 30' Class A MONTANA 3565 2006, satellite, aluminum which currently renation." Familial staI/O, 1 owner, always ga- 1968 ne w f r i d ge, wheels, 2 full slide-thru A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps condition. exc. cond., 3 slides, Buell 1125R, 2006 15k raged, w/trlr, exc cond, TV, solar panel, new 6-8 comfortably, has ceives over Non-smokers, tus includes children basement trays & 3 TV's. w/d, dishwasher, many king bed, Irg LR, 1.5 million page miles, reg. s ervice, $2000. 541-788-5456 under the age of 18 no pets. $19,500 refrigerator, wheelFalcon-2 towbar and Arctic insulation, all well cared for. factory extras, fully l o aded. views every month or best offer. living with parents or c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W Even-Brake included. options $35,000 obo. Buell optional fairing $29,600 obo. Located 541-362-2577 legal cus t o dians, at no extra cost. g enerator, Goo d Call 541-977-4150 541-420-3250 in Bend. 682-777-6039 Bulletin Classifieds kit, Michelin 2cc tires, pregnant women, and condition! $18,000 Get Results! will trade for ie: Enpeople securing cusobo 541-447-5504 CAMEO LXI 2003, 35 ft. Nuyya 297LK Hitchduro DR 650, $5700 Call 365-5609 or tody of children under O nan g e n . 36 0 0 , Hiker 2007, All seaobo. 541-536-7924. 18. This newspaper place your ad on-line wired & plumbed for sons, 3 slides, 32' Nash 20'1999, clean, at will not knowingly acJAMEE 1982 20', I perfect for snow birds, Just bought a new boat? 17' Cris Craft Scorpion used very little, double W/D, 3 slides, Fanbendbulletin.com Ii cept any advertising low miles on it, tastic fan, ice maker, left kitchen, rear Sell your old one in the I/O & trolling motor. I'm bed, propane stove, Runs Winnebago Suncruiser34' for real estate which is classifieds! Ask about our too old - Wife says sell it. self-contained. r ange top & o v e n lounge, extras, must 2004, 35K, loaded, too tub/shower, table in violation of the law. Great, everything Help me o ut ! $ 4800 see. Prineville Super Seller rates! 763 inever been used) much to list, ext'd warr. folds for extra sleepO ur r e aders ar e works. $3,000. 541-316-7473. 541-447-5502 days & 541-385-5809 very nice; $29,500. thru 2014, $49,900 Dening. $3000. hereby informed that Recreational Homes 541-362-6494 541-447-1641 eves. nis, 541-589-3243 541-923-6987, Iv msg 541-548-0625. all dwellings adver& Property 17' Seaswirl 1966, tised in this newspatri-hull o pen bow, ~ per are available on PRICED REDUCED 20 h p out b oard an equal opportunity cabin on year-round I drive, 4 hp Evinrude ~ basis. To complain of creek. 637 acres sur trolling motor, like discrimination cal l rounded federal land t new E-Z lift trailer HUD t o l l-free at Fremont Nat'I Forest Health Forces Sale! with 3 tires, $2,200. 1-600-877-0246. The 541 -460-721 5 2007 Harley Davidson FLHX Street Glidetoll f re e t e l ephone number for the hear775 Too many extras to list! 6-spd, cruise control, steing im p aired is Manufactured/ reo, batt. tender, cover. 1-600-927-9275. Mobile Homes Set-up for long haul road trips. Dealership svc'd. FACTORY SPECIAL Only 2,000 miles. Need help fixing stuff? PLUS H-D cold weather Call A Service Professional New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished gear, rain gear, packs, 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, find the help you need. on your site. helmets, leathers inboard motor, g reat www.bendbulletin.com J and M Homes & much more. $15,000. cond, well maintained, 541-548-5511 541-382-3135 after 5pm $8995 obo. 541-350-7755

The Bulletin

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"Little Red Corvette"

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In TheBulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated lnternet advertising, we make every attempt to ensure that products sold in our classifieds are from a valid source.

Call 541-385-5808 to place your ad today.

Ntonaco Qynasty OADED! 2004 - L~ e solid Features includ counter, dace vection dr fridge, conv built-in washmicro, ; gle er/d6er, ceram er ~ D VD, satelf!OOrs air leveling, lite ass-through storag tray, » d a king size bed - All for on y $149,000

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Your auto, RV, motorcycle,

boat, or airplane

2004Corve fte Convertible Coupe, 350, auto with 132 miles 'es, gets mPg Add lots more description and interesting facts for $99I Look h uch fun a girl could have in a sweet car like this!

ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months

$12,500

(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon

assi je s

• Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


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

C6 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013•THE BULLETIN 975 • I •

BOATS 8 RVs 805 — Misc. Items 850 — Snowmobiles 860- Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870- Boats 8 Accessories 875 — Watercraft 880 — Motorhomes 881 — Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

Antique & Classic Autos

I

4

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AUTOS 8! TRANSPORTATION 908- Aircraft, Parts and Service

916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 — Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 — Automotive Wanted 931 — Automotive Parts, Service

and Accessories 932 — Antique and Classic Autos 933 — Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 —Vans 975 — Automobiles

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $28,000 King bed, hide-a-bed

sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 27 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new!

Michelin LTX mud& snow 35% tread, P265x70x17, 4 for $40. 541-504-3833

2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

Wild Country

LT255-85R16 mud & snow tires on 8-hole rims, 80% tread. $500. 541-923-0442

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

541-419-0566

Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' d eep,

w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent

Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th to Frontage Rd; great wheel, 1 s lide, AC, visibility for aviation busiTV,full awning, excel- ness. Financing availlent shape, $23,900. able. 541-948-2126 or 541-350-8629 email 1jetjockoq.com

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

Piper A rcher 1 9 80, based in Madras, always hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest ArRecreation by Design around. 1750 to2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. cher tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. Top living room 5th ask for wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 541-475-6947, Rob Berg. A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

RBB

( in La Pine )

WILL DELIVER

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

SuperhaM/kOnly 1 Share Available Economical flying in your own IFR equipped

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory

541-385-5809

1952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-B, 3 spd extra parts, 8 materials, $2000

obo. 541-410-7473 Door-to-door selling with Buick 1983 Regal, fast results! It's the easiest T-type, Project Car way in the world to sell. Cessna 172/180 HP for Transmission rebuilt & only $13,500! New 3000 rpm stall converter; The Bulletin Classified Garmin Touchscreen 750 Holley double 541-385-5809 avionics center stack! pumper w/milled air horn Exceptionally clean! (flows 850 cfms); turbo Hangared at BDN. rebuilt. Have receipts for RV Call 541-728-0773 all 3 items. $3300. CONSIGNMENTS Call for addtional info WANTED 916 541-480-5502 We Do the Work, (leave ¹ 8 message). Trucks & You Keep the Cash! On-site credit Heavy Equipment approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. Cadillac Coupe de Ville BIG COUNTRY RV 1979 Anniversary Edition Bend: 541-330-2495 79,000 orginial miles, Redmond: 1987 Freightliner COE 3- 1 owner, great condition. 541-548-5254 axle truck, Cummins en- $2800. 541-325-3376 gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo. 541-419-2713

I Canopies & Campers

Bigfoot Camper1993H, 9.5 ft., great cond. Rebuilt fridge, shower and toilet, furnace and oven. always parked undercover. $ 4 500. 541-388-3095.

Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb, loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell $75,000. 541-350-3393

Lance BI/2' camper, 1991

Great cond; toilet & fullsize bed. Lightly used. Recently serviced, $4500. 503-307-8571 I

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Price Reduced! Chev P/U 1968, custom cab, 350 crate, AT, new paint, chrome, orig int, gas tank under bed, $10,900 obo. 541-788-9648 Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669.

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MorePixatBendbuletincom

541-815-3636

Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades Please call 541-389-6998

Mustang 1966 2 dr.

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

8 Must Sell! Health forces sale. Buick Riviera 1991, classic low-mileage car,

garaged, pampered, non-smoker, exclnt cond, $4300 obo 541-389-0049

.' . I

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

factory wa r ranty, f ully l o aded, A l l Wheel Drive, GPS, sunroof, etc. $37,500. 541-550-7189

4

1996, 350 auto, 132,000 miles. Non-ethanol fuel & synthetic oil only,

garaged, premium Bose stereo,

2005 Buick LeSabre Custom, 101K, $6500. 503-807-1973 30+ mpg hwy, full-size 4-dr sedan, luxury ride ELK HUNTERS! 8 handling ... Mercedes Benz Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. Why not drive a Buick? owner, 87k only 3k on E500 4-matic 2004 Call Bob, 541-318-9999 86,625 miles, sunnew 258 long block. C lutch p kg , W a r nAUDI 1990 VB Quatroof with a shade, loaded, silver, 2 sets hubs. Excellent run- tro. Perfect Ski Car. of tires and a set of ner, very dependable. LOW MILES. $3,995 chains. $13,500. Northman 6 i/~' plow, 541-362-5598 Warn 6000¹ w i nch. obo. 541-480-9200. $9500 or best reasonable offer. BMW 525 2002 Mustang GT 1995 red 541-549-6970 or Luxury Sport Edi133k miles, Boss 302 541-815-8105. tion, V-6, automatic, motor, custom pipes, U loaded, 18 new 5 s p eed m a nual, tires, 114k miles. power windows, cus$8,800 obo tom stereo, very fast. (541) 419-4152 $5800. 541-280-7910

JeepGrand Cherokee 1996 4x4, automatic, 135,000 miles. Great shape - very Plymouth B a r racuda nice interior,$3,600. 1966, original car! 300 541-815-9939 hp, 360 VB, centerlines, 541-593-2597 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! PROJECT CARS:Chevy 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 way in the world to sell. ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, complete car, $ 1949; The Bulletin Classified Cadillac Series 61 1950, 541-385-5809 2 dr. hard top, complete w/spare f r ont cl i p .,Jeep, Wrangler, Sport, $3950, 541-382-7391 1998, 4.0 L, soft top, SILVER AUCTIONS w/ 9,000 lb. w inch, $5000. 541-382-8762 Presents Collector Car Auction Leave message. Sept. 27-28 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Portland Expo Search the area's most 300 Cars Expected comprehensive listing of TO BUY OR SELL classified advertising... 1-800-255-4485 www.SilverAuctions.com real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the Pickups print or on line. Almost Perfect Chev Call 541-385-5809 S10 long bed, 1988 www.bendbulletin.com 4.3 V6, professional r ebuilt engine, 4 7 k Ie UU Cent BlUMRUB I BceIBUS since installed, dual pipes, custom grill, sunroof, full canopy cab h i gh , C l a rion AM/FM/CD re m o te radio. Looks great, runs strong, always garaged. $3,550 firm. Nissan Pathfinder 1997 6cyl. 4x4, auto, air, elect. windows/locks, moon roof, heavy duty tow pkg. $2,700.

The Bulletin

Li~f

541-520-6450 707-280-4197

Chevy 2500 HD 2003 4 WD w o r k tru c k , 140,000 miles, $7000 obo. 541-408-4994. Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD Nissan Pathfinder SE SLT quad cab, auto- 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd matic, AC, high mileage, 4x4, loaded, very good $13,900. 541-389-7857 tires, very good cond, $4800. 503-334-7345 F350 4-dr diesel 2004

p ickup, auto, K i ng Ranch, 144K, excellent, extras, $16,995 obo. 541-923-0231

Toyota Highlander

Ford F150 2000 4x4 Super Cab XLT, 5.4 VB, 100K miles, exlnt cond, $6700. 541-317-2912

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190

I

What are you looking for? 150hp conversion, low M4 time on air frame and Peterbilt 35 9 p o table You'll find it in engine, hangared in water t ruck, 1 9 90, Bend. Excellent per3200 gal. tank, 5hp GMC Veton 1971, Only The Bulletin Classifieds U formance& affordp ump, 4 - 3 hoses, $19,700! Original low able flying! $6,500. camlocks, $ 2 5,000. mile, exceptional, 3rd 541-385-5809 541 -41 0-6007 541-820-3724 owner. 951-699-7171

Cessna 150 LLC

Automo b iles

Porsche 911 Turbo

Sa/e Pending!

Mazda MX5 Miata 2006 Grand Touring, 13,095 easy miles. Copper red w/tan uph olstery. Bose d eluxe sound. 6 -spd auto trans w / dual m ode shifting. A lw ays g araged 8 w ashed b y h a nd. Power brakes, steering, mirrors, door locks. Like new car! Selling due to health issues.$14,895

$1 i,000.

Ford F350 2006/ Brush Bandit XL 150 wood chipper T ruck h a s V-10, 21k miles, HD winch w/custom HD Aircraft, Parts front bumper, air load Corvette Coupe 1964 I nternational Fla t & Service bags w/12' dump bed. 530 miles since frame Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ChipperUis 2006 w/250 off restoration. Runs t on dually, 4 s p d. feed 'drum' and drives as new. hrs, 12 w/1 10hp Cat d iesel. Satin Silver color with trans., great MPG, Set up like new. Cost black leather interior, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, eerer new over $90,000. Sell mint dash. PS, P B, $60,000 obo. AC, 4 speed. Knock new brakes, $1950. 541-350-3393 offs. New tires. Fresh 541-41 9-5480. 1/3 interest in Columbia 327 N.O.M. All Cor400, $150,000 (located GMC 2004 16' r evette restoration parts O Bend.) Also: Sunri- frigerated box van, in & out. Reduced to ver hangar available for $59,500. 541-410-2870 gvw 20,000, 177,800 sale at $155K, or lease, m i, diesel, 6 s p d @ $400/mo. manual with on-spot 541-948-2963 automatic tire Toyota Tundra 2011 4x4, chains. Thermo-King double cab, 5.7L VB, reefer has 1,635 enloaded, SR5 pkg, $28,500 - ~ N a uu gine hours. $23,000. In Bend, 678-333-5204 541-419-4172. Ford Model A 1930 935 Coupe, good condition, $16,000. 541-588-6084 Sport Utility Vehicles 1 /3 interest i n w e llequipped IFR Beech BoFord Ranchero 1965 nanza A36, new 10-550/ Honda CRV EXL Rhino bedliner cusprop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 tom wheels, 302V-8 a uto. Runs g o od USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! JCB 2006 214 E diesel $9,995. backhoe with Ham541-771-4778 mer Master 360U rock Door-to-door selling with hammer 18 dig fast results! It's the easiest bucket, quick coupler, 2009, 3 3k mil e s , original owner, auto way in the world to sell. backhoe has 380 hrs, transmission, leather rock hammer has less The Bulletin Classified interior, sun r oof, t han 100 hrs. L i k e exc. tires, optional new, $40,000 o bo. 541-385-5809 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Can purchase Kodiak engine, power every- sport package, with GMC top kick 5 yrd oof c argo b o x , new paint, 54K rdealer dump and 28' trailer thing, serviced original m i les, runs for a d d' I $3 0 ,000 great, excellent condi- s ince n ew , F l a t , 541-350-3393 towable. $20,995. tion in 8 out. Asking 541-385-0753 $8,500. 541-480-3179 1/5th interest in 1973

. '.ue

541-923-1781

Ford 1965 6-yard dump truck, good

paint, recent overhaul, everything works! $3995.

e

Automobiles •

BBe

i MGA 1959 - $19,999 Convertible. O r iginal body/motor. No rust. 541-549-3838

Service & Accessories

1974 Bellanca 1730A

Au t o mobiles

,B

Utility Trailers Trailer 4'x5' mfg, utility, $100. 541-312-2448

Automobiles M My little red Coryetteu Coupe

908

Fifth Wheels

Sport Utility Vehicles

2 003 Limited A W D 99,000 mi., automatic $12,500 o bo . O n e owner. 816.812.9882

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809 940

Vans

GMC 1995 Safari XT, seats 8, 4.3L V6, towing pkg. 133K mi. $3000. 541-312-6960

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700.

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S UB A R U .

$4488 S UBA R U . SUBRRUOBBRBU COM

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

Looking for your next employee?

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928

Vin ¹207281 $23,888

Oregon

Vin ¹439189

541-322-9647

Subaru Legacy Sedan 2008, 6 cyl., spoiler, leather, under 45k mi.

B MW 5 - Series 5 5 0 i 2 007 4 9k mile s ¹P07078 $25,498

Volkswagon Bee t l e GLS 1999, 5 Speed, leather, air, roof rack,

Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

BUBBRUOBSSRU COM N issan Altima 2.5 S 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2004, 104K m i les, 541-385-5809 541-598-3750 877-266-3821 sunroof, a/c, power www.aaaoregonautoDlr ¹0354 w indows & do o r s , source.com good cond., service Subaru Outback 2008 The Bulletin recoml records, winter ready. Immaculate! mends extra caution i Buick 2006 silver CXS $6300. 541-593-7482 Original owner. 82K when pu r c hasing i Lucerne. Northstar miles, 2 new sets of i products or services 93k, black leather tires, service records, from out of the area. special wheels & tires, new brakes & struts, i S ending c ash , Guaranteed you'll be leather seats, loaded! checks, or credit inhappy with this fine car formation may be I Come drive 8 see for $15,900. 541-693-3975 yourself! $7,500 will do i subject toFRAUD. it. Bob, 541-318-9999 Nissan Versa S 2011, Toyota Avalon LTD For more informai tion about an adverGas saver, auto, air, 2007 Silver, 29k, Cadillac El Dor a do CD, a lloys, Vin ¹179439 $ 1 9 ,988. tiser, you may call 1994, T otal C re a m I the Oregon State I Puff! Body, paint, trunk ¹397598 i Attorney General's t $11,988 as s howroom, b l ue Office C o n sumer Oregon leather, $1700 wheels Autogonree i Protection hotline at S UBA R U . w/snow tires although 1-877-877-9392. 541-598-3750 car has not been wet in 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. www.aaaoregonauto8 years. On t rip t o source.com 877-266-3821 Serving Centra( Oregon since1903 Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., Dlr ¹0354 $5000, 541-593-4016.

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a ROW I N G Chevrolet Impala L S 2007, 4 Door sedan, auto, ps, pw, pl, A/C, CD. Vin ¹186346

$8,388

S UBA R U .

with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Lo)IIIN

RIl(ccjc@© Toyota Corolla 2011, auto, air, t ilt, M P3. FWD, 1.8 l iter, V in ¹630707

$13,788

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Legal Notices

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LEGAL NOTICE USDA Forest Service Deschutes National Forest Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District Notice of Decision Pontiac Grand Prix SE Mt. Bachelor Race 2001, V6, 3 . 1 l i t er, Toyota Matrix S 2009, Timing Building FWD, power window, a uto, F W D , Al l o y p ower l ocks, A / C . Project Wheels, rear spoiler. fPhoto for illustration only) Vin ¹023839 Vin ¹111417. On September 18, Chevy Impala LS 2000, $14,888 $3,888 2013, District Ranger V6, 3.8 l iter, autoKevin Larkin made a matic, FWD, power 4ggjj S UBAR U . ggbSUBARU. decision to allow Mt. seats, Bachelor, LLC to reVin ¹212021. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. place the race timing 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 $3,488 b uilding located o n Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 S UBA R U . C liffhanger ski r u n SUBMIUORBSRUCOll and construct a new 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Porsche 911 b uilding w ithin t h e 877-266-3821 Carrera 993 cou e existing dis t urbed Dlr ¹0354 area o f t h e Cl i ffM h anger run, on t he east side of the run Toyota Prius Hybrid a nd upslope of t h e 2010. 35K mi; 48-52 Blue Lodge. The new mpg; winter gray ext; building will be 16 feet leather int ; F U LLY by 20 feet and will al1996, 73k miles, LOADED: navigation, l ow b e t te r up h i ll Tiptronic auto. CORVETTE COUPE backup camera; blue- sighting by race offitransmission. Silver, Glasstop 2010 tooth; moonroof; so- cials. The building will blue leather interior, Grand Sport -4 LT lar ventilation; rear moon/sunroof, new require ground excaloaded, clear bra spoiler; CD/multidisc; vation for c onstrucquality tires and hood & fenders. keyless entry; add'I battery, car and seat tion. Utilities will be New Michelin Super set winter tires; bike covers, many extras. r e-routed from t h e Sports, G.S. floor tow package; original Recently fully serexisting building to the mats, 17,000 miles, owner; dealer s e rviced, garaged, new building. Crystal red. viced. $18 , 750. looks and runs like $42,000. 541-390-3839 new. Excellent conThis decision will al503-358-1164. dition $29,700 low race organizers to 541-322-9647 have a good view of the race course for safety of skiers, proGood classified ads tell I vide space needed for the essential facts in an timing of the races, interesting Manner. Write provide needed from the readers view - not Volkswagen Jetta GLI and 2004, 4 Cyl., Turbo, 6 storage space on the the seller's. Convert the Kia Roi 2011, Auto, gas speed, FWD, A lloy slope. This project is s aver, cruise, 1 4 K facts into benefits. Show categorically exwheel, moon roof. miles. Vin ¹927546 the reader how the item will cluded from d o cuVin ¹041213. help them in someway. $12,488 mentation in an EA or $6,288 This EIS as described in S UBA R U advertising tip 4@ SU B ARU. 36 CFR 220.6(e)(3). brought to youby 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. The Decision Memo is 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 The Bulletin available at t he Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Bend-Fort Rock Ranger Stat i o n, 63095 Des c hutes Market Road, Bend, O regon and on t h e Forest Service website at: http://data.ecosystemmanagement.org/neBUBRRUOBBRBU COM

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

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paweb/nepa project

exp.php? proiect=4003 3. This decision is not

subject to appeal pursuant t o

36

CFR

21512(e)(1). A 30-day comment period was provided and no comments were received. This decision may be implemented immediately. Implementation is expected to take place this Fall. For additional information contact: Rick

Wesseler, S p e cial Uses Administrator at (541) 383-4722 or by e-mail at rwesseler©fs.fed.us.

Tee

BSSl 1C S WWW.bendbulletin.Com

541-385-5809

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809


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