Bulletin Daily Paper 10-23-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75g

WEDNESDAY October 23,2013

rai ui e:ou eas in eo enPrepvolleyball OUTDOORS• D1

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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

HEALTH CARE

Spanking damage — A new studyaddsto the evidence

By Tyler Leeds

that spanking a child leads to aggression and cognitive prob-

The Bulletin

lems.A3

Prescription drugsMore U.S. citizens arebending the law to acquire drugs from other countries.A6

sc oo c ie ma receive onus Conger:

The Bend-La Pine School Board voted unanimously Tuesday to amend Superintendent Ron Wilkinson's contract and allow the board to grant Wilkinson a performance-based bonus.

Wilkinson's salary for the 2013-14 school year is $158,000, but the board now has the ability to award an additional $15,800, 10 percent of his base salary. Half of the potential bonus is tied to six quantitative key performance indicators, while

the other half relies upon the board's qualitative evaluation of his competencies in six areas. "We're not talking about incentivizing our superintendent," said board member Nori Juba. "We are rewarding him for

outcomes. We're looking at data aligned with board goals and competencies not aligned with numbers. It's reflective of what our teachers say about wanting to not just be measured based on test scores." SeeSuperintendent/A4

Cycling —TheU.s. AntiDoping agencyexposed Lance Armstrong, but what about

everyone else?C1

ec

Apple —New iPads introduced for the holidays.C6

OU

eCO01S

nuclear launch keyscaught leaving a security door open.A2

And a Wed exclusiveGlitches in online college applications frustrate students,

expose vulnerabilities. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras

EDITOR'SCHOICE

To the edge of space,via a balloon?

people, several weeks after its launch. "It would be a real loss if the public's perception was shaped by the problems with the Affordable Care Act versus what we're doing with the Medicaid system here in

The Washington Post

There's a new player in the bustling world of "commercial space," although the "space" part in this case is a matter of definition. A Tucson, Ariz.-based startup plans to use a helium balloon to lift big-ticket customers in a pressurized capsule to nearly 100,000 feet. That's a journey to the edge of space, if not into space as traditionally defined. The passengers would ascend for 1/2 hours, then spendtwo hours admiring the world from on high. Then the capsule would be disconnected from the balloon and begin a freefall, but a parafoil above the capsule would become increasingly effective in the thickening air and the capsule would glide to the surface, landing on skids. See Balloon/A5

Oregon," Conger, who served on the House Health Care Committee, said after his conference remarks. SeeCCOs /A5

New health co-ops are

in jeopardy By Jerry Markon The Washington Post

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

TODAY'S WEATHER

Nine-year-old Benji Hasha rakes up a pile of leaves to play in

Sunny

with his sister, Caitlyn, 8, Tuesday afternoon in Drake Park. "We

High 71, Low 37

Page B6

come down hereevery year because there are a lotofleavesto play in. Plus, it is really pretty," said Benji as he raked.

INDEX

See more pictures of fall foliage on The Bulletin's Well shot! page,

Business/ Dea r Abby D5 Stocks C5-6 Local/State Bt-6 Classified Et-6 Obituaries B5 Comics/ Outdoors D1-6 Puzzles E3-4 Sports C 1-4 Crosswords E4 TV/Movies D5

D2, and scores more online at bendbulletin.com.

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WASHINGTON — When the new health care law was being cobbled together, Congress decided to establish a network of nonprofit insurance companies aimed at bringing competition to the marketplace, long dominated by major insurers. But these co-ops, started

as a great hope for lowering insurance costs, are already in danger. While the debut of the Affordable Care Act this month has been marred by widespread computer problems, the difficulties facing the coops have been less obvious to consumers.

SeeCo-ops/A5

In a corner ofAlabama, a front-yardburial, no matter what By Campbell Robertson New York Times News Service

STEVENSON, Ala. James Davis figures that his first mistake was asking permission. If a man promises his wife he will bury her in the front yard, then he should -

n .S Weuse recycled newsprint

By Lauren Dake

having problems enrolling

By Joel Achenbach

Vol. 110, No. 296, 30 pages, 5sections

• He lauds state's efforts to overhaul care for thepoor PORTLAND — While website glitches continue to hamper CoverOregon, the state's efforts to overhaul the Oregon Health Plan through coordinated care organizations is showing signs of success. Speaking to hundreds of peopleata conference focusing on the state CCOs, state Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend, noted Oregon is leading the nation in transforming health care through the Oregon Health Plan, the state's version of Medicaid. "Maybe we should pat ourselves on the back a little bit, but alsothere's some pressure because we don't want to fail," he told the crowd Tuesday afternoon. The rocky start to the Affordable Care Act has been well documented. Cover Oregon, the online marketplace for health insurance, which is part of the federal law, is still

Force officers entrusted with

An lndependent Newspaper

working The Bulletin

ln national news —Air

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reform that's

just do so. But ever since Davis granted his dying wife's wish by laying her to rest just off his front porch, he and the city of Stevenson have been at odds. From City Hall to the

courts, the government of this little railroad town in southern Appalachia has tried to convince Davis that a person who lives in a town cannot just set up a cemetery anywhere he likes. On Oct. 11, the Alabama Supreme Court

affirmed a judge's decision saying as much. But Davis, 74, is not inclined to back down. "They're waiting on me to die," he said early last week, standing on the porch of the log house he built and

looking out over his lawn, which along with the grave features an outhouse and a large sign demanding that his wife be allowed to rest in peace. "I am not digging her up." SeeBurial/A4


A2 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

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trouble in the handling of the The Associated Press nation's nuclear arsenal. The WASHINGTON — T w i ce AP has discovered a series this year alone, Air Force offi- of problems within the ICBM cers entrusted with the launch force, including a failed safety keys to nuclear-tipped missiles inspection, t h e t e m p orary have been caught leaving open sidelining of launch officers a blast door that is intended to deemed unfit for duty and the help prevent a terrorist or oth- abrupt firing last week of the er intruder from entering their two-star general in c h arge. underground command post, The problems, including low Air Force officials have told morale,underscore the chalThe Associated Press. lengesof keeping safe such a The blast doors are never to deadly force that is constantly be left open if one of the crew on alert but is unlikely ever to members inside is asleep — as be used. was the case in both these inThe crews who operate the stances — out of concern for missiles are trained to follow the damage an intruder could rules without fail, including cause, including the compro- the prohibition against having mising of secret launch codes. the blast door open when only Transgressions suc h a s one crew member is awake, this arerarely revealed pub- becausethe costs ofa mi stake licly. But officials with direct are so high. knowledge of Air Force interThe officers, known as miscontinental ballistic m issile sileers, are custodians of keys operations told the AP t hat that could launch nuclear hell. s uch violations have h a p- The warheads on the business ends of their missiles are capened,undetected,many more times than in the cases of the pable of a nuclear yield many two launch crew commanders times that of the atomic bombs and two deputy commanders dropped on Japan in 1945. " The only wa y t hat y o u who were given administrative punishments this year. can have a crew member be The blast door v iolations in 'rest status' is if that blast are another sign of serious door is shut and there is no

possibility of anyone accessing the launch control center," said Lt. Gen. James Kowalski, the commander of Air Force Global Strike Command. He is responsible for the entire force of 450 Minuteman 3 missiles, plus the Air Force's nuclearcapable bombers. The written Air Force instruction on I CBM w eapon safety, last updated in 2011, says, "One crewmember at a time may sleep on duty, but both must be awake and capable of detecting an unauthorized act if ... the Launch Control Center blast door is open" or if someone other than the crew is present. The blast door is not the first line of defense. An intruder intent on taking control of a missile command post would first face many layers of security before encountering the blast door, which — when closedis secured by 12 hydraulically operated steel pins. The door is at the base of an elevator shaft. Entry to that elevator is controlled from an above-ground b uilding. I CBM f i e lds a r e monitored with security cameras and patrolled regularly by armed Air Force guards.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Tuesday night are:

g2o~gg@ 2@ig9 The estimated jackpot is now $65 million.

Syria COnfliCt —The United States and 10Arab and European nations expressed support Tuesdayfor the convening of a peace conference next month in Geneva to begin negotiations on a political

settlement to end the bloody civil war in Syria. But Secretary of State John Kerry acknowledged that the moderate Syrian opposition had not yet decided whether it would attend. "They have to make up their

mind," Kerry said at anews conference in London. "And none of us are going to prejudge or precondition what they will choose to do in

that process." NeVada SChOOIShOOting — The morning after a12-year-old boy opened fire at Sparks Middle School in Nevada, killing a teacher

and wounding two students before turning the gun onhimself, police said they do not have a motive for the seventh-grader's actions and did not release his identity "out of respect for his grieving parents."

"Everybody wants to knowwhy — that's the big question," said

Sparks Police Department Deputy Chief Tom Miller. "The answer is we don't know right now. We are proactively trying to determine

why." Police said the shooter's family is fully cooperating with the

investigation and believe the boy used a Ruger 9 mm semiautomatic from his parents' home.

China pnllutIOn —A large swath of northeastern China hasbeen virtually paralyzed for two days by severe air pollution that forced

dizzying array of militias, turning political feuds into armed conflict. Militias that include Islamic extremists are lining up with Islamist backed Prime Minister Ali Zidan and bring stricter Islamic rule. Other armed groups support Zidan's non-Islamist allies. The result is a

II.I I.i I:aL)JI.:i:<I)'III

fractured system wherepolitical rivalries havethe potential to erupt into civil war.

Florida prison dreak —Florida law enforcement officials, already embarrassed by the revelation that two convicted killers were

released from a state prison after forging documents, acknowledged Tuesday that they haddiscovered at least five previous instances of such forgeries. Thetwo most recent escapees, JosephJenkins and Charles Walker, both 34 and serving life sentences, were recaptured

at a motel in PanamaCity, Fla., on Saturday. Gerald Bailey, the commissioner of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, told a news conference in Tallahassee that investigators had "pinpointed" possi-

ble suspects who helped the two, but that no arrests were imminent. J. Scott Applewhite /The Associated Press

Weather and plain old age have left the U.S. Capitol like stains and rust, the architect of the Capitol said in

The cast iron dome was built during the Civil War and last had a face-lift in 1959 and1960. The "consistent bombardment of the natural elements" has allowed water to seep through the laminate coating of

TV PitChman held —A federal judge ordered TV pitchman Kevin Trudeautaken into custody Tuesday after repeated failures to pay a penny toward a $37 million fine imposed by the Federal Trade

the dome, causing rust andstains that threaten the art-

Commission. Before hewas escorted away by deputy marshals, Trudeau made a lengthy, last-ditch appeal to U.S. District Judge

a $60 million effort over several years to restore the Capitol to its "original, inspiring splendor," said Ste-

work inside, Eugene Poole, the project manager, said in a video that was released with the statement. Officials

Robert Gettleman to remain free, saying he had no assets to turn over. But the judge said he was unimpressed with Trudeau's efforts

phen Ayers, the architect of the Capitol.

said they hadidentified almost 1,300 deficiencies and

so far. The judge told Trudeauhis order to havehim locked up atthe

"As stewards of the Capitol for the Congress and the American people, we must conduct this critical

had collected hundreds of pieces of debris that had fallen from the dome and that they hoped to reattach.

Metropolitan Correctional Center would stand until he complies with federal authorities and reveals offshore accounts where his money is believed to be hidden.

work to save thedome," Ayers said. "From adistance the dome looks magnificent, thanks to the hard work

Workers will repair the cracks using a "lock-and-

of our employees. Dncloser look, under the paint, age

stitch" technique that involves filling the cracks with metal pins and installing locks to pull the sides of the

and weather have taken its toll, and the ADC needs to

cracks together andadd strength. — New YorkTimesNews Service

make repairs to preserve the dome."

SpnngeBOd graVeStane —The family of a slain Iraqi war veteran wants her towering SpongeBobSquarePants headstone returned to her final resting place in Cincinnati while the cemetery officials that removed it say that's the only thing they won't do, leaving both sides

at an apparent impasse that mayhave to bedecided in court. Despite

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three people and injured more than 260.

politicians in parliament, who havebeentrying to remove Western-

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shootout with police four days after the April 15 twin explosions killed

lamist and Western-backed factions are melding with the country's

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previously said they were investigating possible links between the bombing and the slaying case. Tamerlan Tsarnaev died following a

Gadhafi today, but instead of the freedom and development Libyans had hoped for, the country has fallen deeper into anarchy. Rival Is-

tt f(gJjitJIII'III IIIIII'„l~litII()tj))'

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was disclosed in agovernment court filing made Monday. Authorities

i.idya unrest —Libya marks two years since the fall of Moammar

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tors that Tsarnaev's slain older brother had been involved in a triple homicide. The alleged involvement of Tamerlan Tsarnaev in the killing

thick that visibility was reduced to 20 yards.

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BOStOn dOmndig SuSpeCt —Prosecutors in the case against BostonMarathon bombing suspectDzhokharTsarnaevsayaman shot to death during questioning by anagent in Florida told investiga-

The lack of wind and high humidity also contributed to the severe pollution, meteorologists told the state media. In Harbin, a city of12

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we must take the time to get it right," Daniel Werfel, the acting IRS commissioner, said in a statement. Under the delay, the IRS would

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shutdown, the agency said Tuesday. But taxpayers will still have to turn in their 2013 returns by April 15 as usual. "Readying our sys-

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IRS delay —The Internal RevenueService plans to delay the start of tax-filing season by aweek or two because of the government

Egyptiansabandoning hope andnow,reluctantly,homeland By Kareem Fahim New York Times News Service

CAIRO — In his years as a dissident, the book publisher had taken on Egypt's autocratic government and itscensors, aided revolutionaries during the uprising and protested in the streets to protect freedoms he thought he had helped the country win. But like many other Egyptians these days, the publisher, Mohamed Hashem, says he feels defeated by th e l atest tragic turn, toward growing violence, repression and civil strife after the military ousted President Mohammed Morsi in July. Tired of waiting for better days, the publisher announced last week that he would emigrate, stunning his friends and

a legion of young fans.

"I won't postpone happiness until I die," he said. Egypt, unable to p r ovide much hope or opportunity at home, hassurrendered citizens to more prosperouscountries for generations. But like Hash-

em, many Egyptians who say

they are joining a new exodus had been loath to give up on their country; some had postponed theurge to leave,hoping the uprising against President Hosni Mubarak in 2011 would pave the way to a better life. Theirchange ofheartsignals a dark moment. Many people said they saw no end to the conflict between the military and its Islamist opponents, and no place for those who did not profess loyalty to either side. Others lamented Egypt's narrowing political horizons and what seemed like the growing likelihood that a military officer will become Egypt's next leader. And for everyone, there was still no relief from the grinding frustrations of daily life: the traffic, the rising prices, the multiplying mounds of trash in the streets. There is no statistical evidence that more people are emigrating, and th e n o tion remains far from the reach of most Egyptians,reserved for those with the qualifications or connections to find opportuni-

ties abroad. In interviews over several days, though, people said their conversations had turned more frequently, and urgently, to leaving; those who considered travel possible were just deciding when. As he studied in a cafe for medical exams, Tareq Nour, 23, reeled from the headaches. His regular commute to work, at a public hospital, was blocked by protests by Morsi supporters and government checkpoints. H is salary, roughly $45 a month, was too measly to even call an insult, he said. He had faced peril to build a different future, volunteering in a field hospital during the 18-day revolt against Mubarak, when Nour was injured by birdshot. "We're going back to the old system," he said. "We didn't change the country." So he said he was preparing to travel to the United States, out of necessity more than choice. "I need to get out of here," he satd.

getting the cemetery's prior approval of the headstone design — a smiling SpongeBob in an Army uniform, with Walker's name and rank

— cemetery staff called her family the dayafter it was installed to say it would have to come down.

— From wire reports

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013•THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Wednesday, Oct. 23, the 296th day of 2013. There are 69 days left in the year.

RESEARCH HAPPENINGS DetrOit —A judge begins an unusual trial to determine whether the city indeed is eligible to scrub its books in the

Spanking islinked

anua e- a

S Ll Ol'

largest public bankruptcy in U.S. history.

Diplomacy —Leadersof

to cognitive problems By Deborah Netburn

from more than 1,500 families as part of the Fragile Families The majority of U.S. chil- and Child Well-Being Study dren have been spanked at (FFCW). The study followed some time in their life, despite children from 20 U.S. cities a robust body of evidence sug- from birth to age 10. Most of gesting that spanking a child the children were born beleads to problems. tween 1998 and 2000. The latest evidence of the Parents were asked quesnegative effects of spanking tions about their child's becomes fromresearchersatCo- havior and whether they had lumbia University. After ana- spanked their children within lyzing data from more than the past month. The answer 1,500 families, they found that was frequently yes: 57 percent children who are spanked in of mothersand 40 percent of early childhood are not only fathers reported spanking more likely to be aggressive their children when they were as older children, they are also 3 years old, as did 52 percent more likely to do worse on vo- of mothers and 33 percent of cabulary tests than their peers fathers when their children who had not been spanked. were 5 years old. The study was published When these kids turned 9, this week i n t h e j o u rnal parents were asked to assess Pediatrics. their behavior. The researchWhile several studies have ers also gave the children found a connection between a test that measured their spanking and aggressive be- vocabulary. havior, the finding that spankThe FFCW study also coling could be linked to cogni- lected other data that might tive ability is somewhat new. influence a 9-year old's behav"Only a few studies have ior and performance on the looked at the cognitive effects vocabulary test, including the of spanking," said Michael age of the mother when the MacKenzie, an associate pro- child was born, the mother's fessor at Columbia University self-reported stress l evels, and lead author of the study. her intelligence scores, and "We are still trying to learn if her own impulsivity. The respanking has a direct effect searchers also knew whether on early brain development, the child had a lo w b i r th or if families that spank more weight and what his or her are less likely to read to their temperament was like during kids and use more complex the first year of life, among language." other things. The researchers In this latest study, MacK- factored all of these into their enzie analyzed data collected analysis. Los Angeles Times

China and India are expected

to sign a defensecooperation agreement to limit the risk of further confrontations six months after a military stand-

A follow-up to research from two decades ago finds that at 18 months

off on their disputed border.

children from wealthier homes can identify images of simple words they

PaklStall —Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif meets President

know much faster than children from low-income families.

Barack Obama at the White

House.

By Motoko Rich New York Times News Service

HISTORY Highlight:In1983, 241 U.S. service members, most of them Marines, were killedin asuicide truck-bombing at Beirut International Airport in Lebanon; a

near-simultaneousattack on French forces killed 58paratroopers. In1864, forces led by Union

Gen. SamuelCurtis repelled ConfederateGen.Sterling Price's army in the Civil War Battle of Westport in Missouri. In1910,Blanche Scottbecame the first woman to make a public

solo airplane flight, reachingan altitude of12 feet at a park in Fort Wayne, Ind. In1915, tens of thousands of

women marched inNewYork City, demanding the right to vote. In1941, the Walt Disney

animated feature "Dumbo" premiered in NewYork. In 1942, during World War II, Britain launched a major offensive against Axis forces at El

Alamein in Egypt, resulting in an Allied victory. In 1973, President Richard Nixon agreed to turn over White

House taperecordings subpoenaed by theWatergate special prosecutor to JudgeJohn J. Sirica. In1980, the resignation of Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin was

announced. In 1987,the U.S. Senate rejected, 58-42, the Supreme Court nomination of Robert Bork. In 1991, Cambodia's warring

factions andrepresentatives of 18 other nations signed apeace treaty in Paris. In 2001, The nation's anthrax scare hit the White House

with the discovery of asmall concentration of spores at an

offsite mail processing center. President GeorgeW.Bush announced he had authorized

money for improvedpost office security following thedeaths of two postal workers from inhalation anthrax.

Ten yearsago:Asthousands of anti-war demonstrators protested outside, President George W. Bush thanked Australia for

sending troops to Iraqand Afghanistan as he spoke to the country's Parliament. Later in

the day, thepresident concluded his Pacific trip with a visit to Hawaii, where he dropped flow-

ers into thewater at thesunken battleship USS Arizona.

Five yearsago:Badgered by lawmakers onthe House Oversight Committee, former

Federal ReserveChairmanAlan Greenspan denied the nation's

economic crisis washisfault butconcededthemeltdown had revealed a flaw in a lifetime of economic thinking and left him

in a "state of shockeddisbelief." One yearago: In adebate with Democratic rival Joe Donnelly,

Indiana RepublicanSenatecandidate Richard Mourdocksaid that when a woman becomes pregnant during rape, "that's

something Godintended."

BIRTHDAYS Soccer great Pele is73. Movie director Ang Lee is 59. Country singer Dwight Yoakam is 57. Community activist Martin Luther King III is 56. Movie director Sam Raimi is 54.

Parodist"Weird Al" Yankovic is 54. CNN medical reporter Dr. Sanjay Gupta is 44. TV

personality and hostCatDeeley is 37. Actor Ryan Reynolds is 37. — From wire reports

Nearly two decades ago, a landmark study found that by age 3, the children of wealthier professionalshave heard words millions more t imes than those of l ess-educated parents, giving them a distinct advantage in school and suggesting the need for increased investment in prekindergarten programs. Now a follow-up study has

-X~L

found a language gap as early as 18 months, heightening the policy debate. The new research by Anne Fernald, a p s y chologist at Stanford U n iversity, w h ich was published in D e velopmental Science earlier this year, showed that at 18 months children from wealthier homes could identify pictures of simple words they knew — "dog" or "ball" — much faster than children f r o m lo w - income families. By age 2, the study found, affluent children had learned 30 percent more words in the intervening months than the children from low-income homes. The new findings, although based on a small sample size, reinforcedthe earlier research showing that, because professional parents speak so much more to their children, their children hear 30 million more words by the time they are 3 than children from low-income households, early literacy experts,preschool directors and pediatricians said. Inthe newstudy, the children of affluent households came from communities where the median income was $69,000; the low-income children came from communities with a median income of$23,900.

Growing gap Since oral language and vocabulary are so connected to reading comprehension, the most disadvantaged children faceincreased challenges once they enter school and start learning to read.

"That gap just gets bigger

and bigger," said Kris Perry, executive director of the First Five Years Fund, an advocate of early education for l owincome children. "That gap is very real and very hard to unclo. In the latest data available from the N ational Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University, 28 percent of all 4-year-olds in the United States were enrolled in state-financed preschool in the 2010-11 school year, and just 4 percent of 3-year-olds. The N ational G o vernors Association, in a report this month calling on states to ensure that all children can read proficiently by t h ir d g r ade, urges lawmakers toincrease access to high-quality child care a n d pr e k i ndergarten classes and to invest in programs for children from birth through age 5. In New York, the Democratic mayoral candidate, Bill de Blasio, has said he would ta x h i g h-income earners topay for universal prekindergarten in the city. "A lot of states are saying, let's get to the early care providers and get more of them having kids come into kindergarten ready," said Richard Laine, director of education for the National Governors Association. That way, he said, "we're not waiting until third

Ramin Rahirman/ New YorkTimes News Service

A transitional kindergarten student looks over a letter she wrote to a firefighter who visited her classroom at Gomes Elementary in Fremont, Calif. A Stanford psychologist has found that affluent children learn 30 percent more words than children from low-income homes by age 2, suggesting the need for increased investment in prekindergarten programs. cies requiring that third-graders be held back if they do not meet state reading proficiency s tandards, according to t h e Education Commission of the States. Now, with the advent of the Common Core, a set of rigorous reading and math standards forstudents in kindergarten through 12th grade that have been adopted by 45 states and the District of Columbia, educators say th e p r essure to prepare young children is growing more intense. Literacy experts have previously documented a connection between a child's early vocabulary and later success in reading comprehension. In a study tracking children from age 3 through middle school, David Dickinson, now a professor of education at Vanderbilt University, and Catherine Snow, an education professor at Harvard University, found that a child's score on a vocabulary test in kindergarten could predict reading comprehensionscores in latergrades. Dickinson said he feared that some preschoolteachers or parents might extract the message about the importance of vocabulary and pervert it. "The worst thing that could come out of all this interest in vocabulary," he said, "is flash cards with pictures making kids memorize a t h ousand words." Instead, literacy experts emphasize the importance of natural conversations with children, asking questions while

"Even in families that are low income and perhaps don't have a lot of education, there are some parentsthat are very engaged verbally with t heir kids," said Weisleder. "And those kids are doing better in language development."

.9 <v-

reading books, and helping children identify words during playtime.

Otherresearch Middle-class and more affluent parents have long known t hat describing fruit at t h e supermarket or pointing out the shape of a stop sign are all part of a young child's literacy education. But even i n l o w -income families, parents who speak to their children more fr equently can enhance vocabulary. In separate research, Fernald, working with Adriana Weisleder, a graduate student

in psychology, recorded all the

words that 29 children from low-income households heard over a day. The researchers differenti ated between words overheard from television and adult conversations and those directed at the children. They found that some of the children, who were 19 months at the time, heard as few as 670 "child-directed" words in one day, comgrade and saying 'oh my gosh, pared with others in the group we have so many kids over- who heard as many as 12,000. whelming ou r r e m ediation Those who had heard more system.'" words were able to understand Currently, 17 states and the words more quickly and had District of Columbia have poli- larger vocabularies by age 2.

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A4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

UPDATE: THE RIM FIRE

ANALYSIS: SHUTDOWN

Businessesbacked GOP lawmakerswho spurned them ondefault By Tom Hamburger and Jia Lynn Yang The Washington Post

W ASHINGTON — T h e l awmakers w ho vot e d a gainst r aising t h e d e b t c eiling l as t w e e k c o u n t among their biggest donors the country's most powerful

banking lobby and companies such as Honeywell and AT&T — not just the activist conservative groups that have roiled the Republican Party. The American Bankers Association, in f a ct, gave more money over the past two election cycles to GOP lawmakers who i n e f f ect voted to allow the United S tates to d e f ault o n i t s debt than those who voted against that scenario. The A B A co n t r ibuted $2.2 million to lawmakers who ultimately ignored the group's warnings, second only to the Club for Growth and just ahead of Koch Industries, both of which are leadingsources of funds for conservative candidates. The numbers, revealed in a joint analysis by The W ashington Post and t h e Center for Responsive Politics, illustrate the key role that big b u siness donors played in supporting lawmakers who w o ul d l a t er spurn one of the business community's most emphatic requests not to vote for a default by the United States. "Business lost this round" w ith R e p u blicans, s a i d Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, which has a n a l yzed d o n a tion patterns from last week's vote. "It remains to be seen whether this produces any real change among business donors." Some lobbyists said the arrangement between business and the lawmakers will not be easy to untangle because the groups have been investing for so many years in the Republicans and their current leadership. T he chief l o bbyist f o r the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Bruce Josten, said t he debt ceiling r ol l c a l l would be onlyone of many factors considered by the Chamber when it d ecides which candidates to support in 2014. "Everyone has their own number one issue, and in the Chamber's membership, again unlike any other association, we have a lot of members with a lot of dif-

ferent number one issues," Josten said. Similarly, Scott Talbott, senior vice p r esident f or policy at the Financial Serv ices R o u ndtable, s a i d : "This vote will be a factor in the future before we make contributions, though it will not necessarily determine the outcome." The Chamber made the Oct. 16 roll call a "key vote," meaning it will be used to determine future endorsements of candidates. Club for Growth an d H e r itage Action did the same from the other side. B ut t r ade g r oups a n d businesses may find it hard t o hold l a w makers f u l ly accountable. L awmakers s u c h as House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, voted a gainst r aising t h e d e bt ceiling — a position that, if adopted, would have likely resulted in a d e fault. But they are also considered important allies in traditional business f i g ht s ag a i n st higher taxes and stronger financial regulation. L obbyists say they a r e also aware that some of the Republicans may have voted against raising the debt ceiling to give themselves p olitical c over f r o m a n gry tea party constituents, knowing there were enough votes to avoid a default. The final t a lly s h owed that 161 Republicans, including potential presidential candidates such as Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, felt enough political pressure to vote against raising the debt ceiling despite dire warnings from business. Although public attention during the 16-day shutdown focused on financial support flowing from groups such as the Club for Growth and Heritage Action, the n ew analysis shows that banks, i nvestment h o u se s a n d other mainstream business interests also funded the Republicans who played a role in the latest brush with a default by the United States. At f i n a n cial s e r v ices

firms,

i n cluding h e dge

funds an d m a jo r b a n k s, contributions totaled more than $26 million over the past two election cycles to the Republican lawmakers who voted against a deal to reopen the government and avoid a first-ever debt default.

Superintendent Continued from A1 While such a performancebased system has been used in the statebefore, board members said Bend-La Pine will be the only district currently using such a system. "We could definitely see an increase in the percent of pay based on performance," Juba said. "But for now, we are tak-

cent and no more than 50 percent of any bonus he receives in the 2013-14 school

year. "With a sitting superintendent, we will need raises anyway," Helt said. "But with this structure, we can tie them to whether or not he is doing the job." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletinicom

Blaze put a dent in High Sierra

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habitat By Louis Sahagun Los Angeles Times

GROVELAND, Calif. The Rim Fire that scorched a huge swath of Sierra Nevada forestsalso severely altered the habitat that is home to several of California's rarest animals: the great gray owl, the Sierra Nevada red fox and the Pacific fisher. The fire burned 257,000 acres of High Sierra wild erness s t raddling t h e Stanislaus National Forest and Yosemite National Park that harbors a geographically i solated and g enetically d i stinct c l an -

Photos by Kendrick Brinson / New York Times News Service

James Davis stands by the grave of his late wife, Patsy, whom he buried in the family front yard in Stevenson, Ala., against a City Council ruling. The state's supreme court rejected Davis' request to take up his case after a circuit judge ruled against him in favor of the city, demanding he move his wife's remains to an approved cemetery. Davis, however, is not inclined to do so.

Burial Continued from A1 Alabama, like most states, has no state law against burying someone on private property, and family graves are not all that rare in the country. Sherry Bradley, the deputy director of environmental services for the state Department of Public Health, said people asked her about private burial several times a week. "You wouldn't believe the calls I get," she said, mentioning one woman who wanted to stage a "Viking burial" by putting her deceased husband in a boat and setting it on fire. ("The answer to that one was no," she

said.) While private burials are permitted in rural areas, cities and towns often have ordinances governing the burials, to which the state defers. Stevenson does not have such an ordinance, although Joshua S locum, the director of t h e Funeral Consumers Alliance, a nonprofit watchdog group based in Vermont, said this was not atypical. Many cities lack burialordinances because the issue of private burial hardly ever comes up, he said. "It's usually the case that people don't ask to be buried in city limits," Slocum said.

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James Davis and his wife, Patsy, in an earlier family photo. essary paperwork, and after two meetings, it voted to deny his request, speaking about its potential effect on property values and about who would take care of it in perpetuity. (The tombstone has Davis' name beside his wife's, and he planned to end up in the yard as welL) Parker Edmiston, the city attorney, said he was concerned about setting a precedent. "If you allow it for Mr. Davis, you allow it for Ms. Adams, Mr. Jones and everyone else," Edmiston said, adding that this was the most protracted litigation in the city since a case a few years ago involving something about plgs. According to court filings, Davis declared to th e C i ty C ouncil members t ha t h e would sue and take his case to the state Supreme Court if necessary. But instead, he just decided to ignore them. "I just got a backhoe and went ahead," Davis said, later arguing that the lack of a specific burial ordinance meant that they had no right to stop him. He installed a v ault, the funeral home put his wife in the coffin, and on a Saturday morning 10 days after the City Council vote, Patsy Davis was laid to rest before a gathering of family members.

Davis and his wife, Patsy, grew up in Dayton, Tenn., having met when she was 7 and he was 11. She was a teenager when he asked her to accompany him to a strawberry festivaL "We went on that one date, and it was me and her the rest of the time," he said. They were married for 48 years and had five children. In her later years, Patsy Davis came down with an array of painful ailments, including crippling arthritis, and James Davis retired from his job as an electrical worker to take care of her. Eventually, the doctors said Lawsuit and notoriety that extending her life would The city sued James Davis a only make it more painful. She month later. died in April 2009, and ever Davis waged the legal fight since he has slept in his easy for the next four years, running chair, finding th e b edroom up thousands of dollars in legal depressing. fees. At one point, he even ran Shortly before her death, for mayor but lost. In 2012, a James Davis said, his wife ex- Circuit Court judge found in fapressed her wish to be buried vor of the city and ordered Dain the yard of the house where vis to move his wife's remains they had spent three decades to a "properly licensed and together. So he went to work, approved cemetery." But the g etting approval f ro m t h e grave remained undisturbed county's Health Department as the case made it through the and pressing the City Council appeals process. for a permit. The neighbors, although adThe council told Davis that mitting that it is a little weird, he had not completed the nec- have gotten used to the grave

site up the road. "It's his wife," said Margaret Garner, 56. "He's got the right." But at least according to the courts, he does not. Over the weekend, after his denial at the Supreme Court had attracted national attention, he was contacted by twin brothers from Southern California:one a screenwriter,the other the director of an organization dedicated to producing a new translation of the Bible. The brothers encouraged Davis to protect his grave site by turning his house into a church, and they even created a website advertising the brand-new Stevenson Bible "family-oriented Church, a Bible-believing church: baptisms, weddings, on-site cemetery." Services were scheduled for every Sunday morning at 10, and Davis was referred to as the pastor. He was not sold on the idea. On Friday, Davis was back in court, and while he warned of "an incident" if the city came onto his property, he suggested a compromise: He would dig up the coffin, cremate his wife's remains and put the urn with her ashes back in the grave. In her dying days, Patsy Davis had said she was afraid of cremation, her husband said. But a lot of time has passed since then. "If she saw herself as she is now, I know she would not mind," he said. Edmiston acknowledgedthat there was no law against tombstonesor the placement of ashes, but he insisted that the coffin and the vault be removed. So if Davis fully complies with the city's order, the yard will end up looking exactly as it does now, only with an urn rather than a coffin underneath. This may raise the question as to what the whole fight was about. But Davis has no doubts. "There was never any couple in love like us," he said. "We was meant to be together."

owls. The blaze also c a me within 12 miles of 10 breeding pairs of th e subspecies of red fox clinging to survival in the cold, steep slopes above the tree line, raising fears they could have been eaten by coyotes trying to escape the smoke and flames. T he existence of t h e foxes, which were thought to have been wiped out in the 1920s, was confirmed in 2010. They are currently under consideration for listing under the federal Endangered Species Act. Federal wildlife b i ologists are also concerned about the loss of potential habitat for the Pacific fisher, a member of the weasel family. Pacific fishers, members of an isolated Southern Sierra group of about 500 individuals that live in dense old-growth forests south of Yosemite's Merced River, are under consideration for f e deral listing. "In the Rim Fire, only b irds that could fl y t h e farthest and animals that could run the fastest survived," said John Buckley, e xecutive director of t h e nonprofit Central S ierra Environmental R e source Center. "It killed squirrels and bears. For animals of which only a handful exist, it could be especially tragic." The exact toll on wildlife will not be known until biologists are allowed to survey severely burned areas, which, for safety r easons, c oul d r e m a i n c losed for m ore t han a year, federal forest officials said. Even without that information, federal agencies are developing post-fire management st r a tegies such as reforestationand

salvage logging projects to protect certain species from extinction. That effort has been interrupted by th e f e deral g overnm ent s h utdown, w h i c h furloughed federal wildlife biologists.

ing baby steps." The six key performance indicators are set to district achievement i n fi r s t-grade reading, t h i rd-grade r e ading, fifth-grade math, eighthgrade math,college readiness based on ACT scores and the f our-year g r aduation r a t e. The board w i l l d e t ermine what constitutes meeting a target. The six competencies are education leadership, administrative leadership, fiscal management, board relations, community relations and personal qualities. For both sets of measures, the board can award the maximum bonus or a lesser amount depending on how Wilkinson performs. The bonus will be awarded at the end of the school year. "This is a responsible way to handle public money, as we want to base the pay on what the district contributes to community growth," said board C hairwoman C h e r i He l t . "These measurescontribute to community growth." Future base pay will also be tied to the performance-based bonus. For the 2014-15 school year, Wilkinson's salary will increase no less than 30 per-

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013•THE BULLETIN

Co-ops Continued from A1 One co-op, however, has closed, another is struggling and at least nine more have been projected to have financial problems, according to internal government reviews and a federal audit. Their failure would leave taxpayers potentially on the hook for nearly $1 billion in defaulted loans and rob the marketplace of the kind of competition they w ere supposed tocreate.And if they become insolvent, policyholders in at least half the states where the co-ops operate could be stuck with medical bills. Although the co-op plan originated in the Senate, resistance to the initial proposal quickly materialized on Capitol Hill, in part because of pressure from insurance industry lobbyists. So Congress saddled its new creations with onerous restrictions that, experts say, doomed the co-ops to failure. Federal grants for th e co-ops were converted to loans with tight repayment schedules; they were barredfrom using federal money for crucial marketing; and they were severely limited from selling insurance to large employers, which represent the most lucrative market. And even as the Obama administration was setting up the program, White H ouse officials, who had no pride of authorship and feared it would

be risky, repeatedly suggested that funding for the co-ops be reduced, according to m ore than half a dozen people familiar with budget negotiations and the legislative debate. The funding was cut to a small fraction of what experts told Congress would be needed for the ventures to be viable. Brian Cook, a spokesman for the Centersfor Medicare

and Medicaid Services (CMS), the federalagency overseeing the co-ops, said it is closely monitoring t h ei r p r o g ress and is " confident that c o ops will be an important option available to millions of consumers." But while the program was meant to be nationwide, only two dozen co-ops have begun selling insurance on the new health care exchanges. The d ifficulties c onfronting t h e co-ops pose a challenge to the new law that is largely separate from the troubled rollout of the exchanges this month. But the problems, in particular the malfunctioning federal exchange website, are hitting the co-ops hard because they depend on the exchanges for business. The co-ops differ from traditional insurers in their nonprofitstatus, consumer focus and organizational structure; they are governed by boards controlled by policyholders. T hose co-ops t hat h a v e opened their doors are scrambling to prevail against the odds, sending their small staffs door todoor to educate people about what they do without violating a ba n o n e x plicit marketing. To get around what she called the "really difficult" restriction, J u li a H u t chins, chief executive of the Colorado Health Insurance Cooperative, was reduced to dispatching scantily clad models into the streetsof Denver to urge people to "get covered." The Obama administration has estimated that more than a third of the nearly $2 billion

2 parts of health site to take longer tofix

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WASHINGTON — The Obama administration

acknowledgedTuesday that two key parts of its

online health insurance marketplace will take longer

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than expected to fix, even as it brought backaformer

senior White Houseofficial to help diagnoseandcorrect the website's flaws.

A senior health official said that the insurance ex-

change, HealthCare.gov, is still unable toperform oneof its basic functions: making it

easy for low-incomeAmericans to enroll in Medicaid electronically. Daysbefore the exchangeopenedthree weeks ago,the administration said that feature was not ready but would be available by Nov. 1, at the latest. But in a phone call Tuesday with the nation's

state Medicaid directors, Marilyn Tavenner, director of the Centers for Medicare

and Medicaid Services, the agencyoverseeingthe exchange, said that this part

was still not working and she did not predict when it would be ready, said Matt

Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors. In the

meantime, thewebsite simply tells low-income Ameri-

cans whether theyappearto be eligible and then advises them to contact their state's

Medicaid agencies,where they must startapplications from scratch. Officials at the Health

and HumanServices Department, which oversees CMS, confirmed that the

enrollment portion of the Spanish-languageversion of the online exchangewasnot working, despite assurances in September that it would be ready by this week. HHS

spokesmanJoannePeters urged Spanishspeakersto call a toll-free phonenumber to enroll. — The Washington Post

it has lent to co-ops will not be repaid. The co-ops have been set up by health care organizations, such as hospitals and

Photos courtesy World View Enterprises

An artist's rendering illustrates a plan to use a balloon and pressurized capsule to give customers who pay $75,000 a view from nearly 100,000 feet up. The ride up would take 1/s hours.

Balloon Continued from A1 Price point: $75,000. The eight passengers on board w ould p r e sumably c o m e from the same customer pool that feeds high-end luxury vacations, such as round-theworld golf tours. "The sky's going to be completely black. You'll be able to see the curvature of the Earth," said Jane Poynter, co-founder of Paragon Space Development Corp., which has lined up investors for the new venture, World View Enterprises. World View hopes to begin the balloon flights in three years. The Federal Aviation Administration an no u n ced Tuesday that, for purposes of regulation, the World View capsule will be treated as a space vehicle, because it will be built to operate in outer space. "The FAA will not address the more difficult question of w h ether Paragon's p roposed altitude of 30 k i lometers constitutes outer space," the FAA stated. The World View website promises a "truly t ransformative human experience." A W o rld V i e w s t atement Tuesday said the company

a massive, greenhouse-like structure in the Arizona desert. Their company, Paragon, has had contracts with NASA for life-support technology. The field of c ommercial space has been growing in recent years. Virgin Galactic, backed b y b i l l i onaire g / wpsrp vlEI" businessman an d a d v e nturer R i c h ar d Br a n son, 'r hopes to carry passengers on suborbital flights in 2014. V irgin G a lactic w i l l us e An artist's rendering shows the capsule, which would have room a r o cket-powered v ehicle for eight passengers. called SpaceShipTwo, still in testing, that is designed to reach altitudes above the would offer "spectacular hu- ian American scientist Theo- Karman Line. The company man flight i nto nearspace, dore von Karman. That's at has sold nearly 650 tickets unlike any other suborbital 100 kilometers, or about 62 in advance. The company's spaceflight experience being miles, and is approximately ticket price recently jumped offered today, allowing pas- the altitude above w h i ch to $250,000 aseat,up from sengers to remain aloft for aerodynamic flight is impos- $200,0000. " Three years ago or s o , hours at a comparably afford- sible, even in theory. able price." B ut in the minds of t h e it became clear that there's There's no distinct bound- people behind World View, a space tourism industry. It ary between the atmosphere they're getting i nt o s pace seems to be bigger than Branson's personality," MacCaland space. Rather, the atmo- tourism. "In essence, we're a space- lum said. sphere steadily thins with altitude. On tourism trips, the craft.In fact,we're a spaceParagon also is working World View balloon would craft," said Paragon co-found- with billionaire Dennis Tito rise to a little less than 19 er Taber MacCallum. on his Inspiration Mars plan miles above the surface. (It Poynter and M acCallum — a 500-day mission that, if would go higher on scientific are well known in the entre- technically feasible, would missions, Poynter said.) preneurial space community. s end two a stronauts in a One commonly referenced Back in the early 1990s, they fly-by of Mars during a rare boundary of space is the Kar- spent two years as "bionauts," alignment of the planets five man Line, named for Hungar- sealed inside Biosphere II, years from now.

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doctors' groups, as well as by local businesspeople, unions and community groups, and are being run by a variety of people, including former hospital and insurance executives and two former state insurance commissioners. Despite the obstacles, coop leaders say that the federal loans will help them succeed and that it is imperative that they do. "It is truly a historic moment ... in the history of health care," said John Morrison, president of the National Alliance of State Health COOPs, the co-ops' trade group. But Karen Davis, a professor of health policy management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said the co-ops were not designed with the support they need to thrive. "One provision after another got stuck in there to limit their probability of success," she said. "It's a little ironic to say you are for competition in the free market, and then you don't make it easy for new entrants."

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ber of people who turned to emergency rooms for health Continued from A1 care and provide them with The federal government less-costly preventive care, loaned the state $1.9 billion to instead. get the coordinated care orEach CCO has discretion ganizations underway. The over how to spend its funds. stakes are high: Th e state The Lane County CCO is usmust reduce medical-related ing some of its funds to pay costs of the Medicaid popula- pregnant woman to stop smoktion by 2 percentage points or ing, said state Sen. Elizabeth be left with a devastating hole Steiner Hayward, a Democrat in its budget. representing parts of Portland "Again, time will tell if (the and Beaverton, and a family state's efforts are) really suc- physician at Oregon Health 8 cessful, but there is so much ScienceUniversity.She shared potential and so much good in the stage with Conger at the it, we just have to stick it out as conference. a state to give it long enough to Steiner Hayward called the really have an impact," Con- Lane County approach an "inger said. novative" way to spend funds, There are 15 regional CCOs. and as a family physician, she Some have been operating for said she knows those incenmore than a year. Each one tives help. has a fixed amount of money There will be tough chalthat it chooses how to spend lenges for CCOs, Conger notto keep the state's Medicaid ed. The turnaround is quick. population healthy. In a little more than a year, the CCOs were set up to be lo- state is on the hook to reduce cally designed and run. A lot those costs. "I don't expect that every of the early work went toward i dentifying people who a r e CCO is going to be successful costing the system the most in bending the cost curve," he and more affordably manag- said. ing their care. One CCO goal — Reporter: 541-554-1162, aimed to r educe the numIdake@bendbulletin.com

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A6 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

IN FOCUS: A NEW PARTY DRUG

Molly fuels late nights as worries are raised

UPDATE: PRESCRIPTION DRUG COSTS

cos s nse, more e ll

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By Elisabeth Rosenthal New York Times News Service

Lee Higman, a 71-year-old artist from Bellevue, Idaho, who considers here/i

self a law-abiding citizen, was shocked last month when she got a notice from

Ctista

InhalationBP loo mco aose

lturitasoneP ropionate InhalauonlP125 mrg/dose

the Food and Drug Administration telling her: "A mail shipment addressed to

flohale i nnoter ~

you from a foreign country is being held."

Asthalin

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Los Angeles Times

NEW YORK — After a long and raucous dinner party on a r ecent weeknight, guests decamped to a loft in Manhattan's TriBe-

Ca neighborhood, perhaps the most desirable chunk of real estate in the city that never sleeps. There was no music or dancing at this after-party, t hough. Instead, a h o s t distributed clear capsules of tiny white crystals that guests proceeded to swallow — a n i l l i cit dessert known as Molly, a synthetic stimulant that has suddenly become as much a part of the 24-hour-a-day New York lifestyle as cocaine was to another generation. In this case, two financiers at the party had just completed a multimilliondollar pact, a c ause not only for celebration but for bonding of the kind that only can occur in the netherworld after 3 a.m. Later that m o r ning, e v eryone drifted out to go to work. "In today's era, every-

one is popping pills," said a fashion company owner who was one of the guests but who feared using her name could put her job at risk. "Everyone wants to come to New York and succeed, but there's so much pressure, so much competition. With Molly, you're happy, you're free, there's no worries, no n egative talk."

ER visits and deaths Molly is marketed as a pure form of MDMA, the m ain i n gredient i n t h e street drug Ecstasy. Often associated with electronic dance festivals and shilled as a "safe" high, it is gaining fans across the country. But the national Drug Abuse Warning Network noted a 120 percent increase in the number of emergency room visits involving MDMA from 2004 to 2011. Public health o f f icials say the drug is often not as pure as its marketing claims, and its effects are increasingly proving fatal. Two people died at the New York Electric Zoo festival over the Labor Day weekend after ingesting Molly, and at least four others were hospitalized in critical condition. Two other deaths that weekend, one in Washington state and the other in Boston, were also attributed to the drug. Molly was a fixture at this year's Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, and is increasingly part of the Los Angeles club scene. Sam Torbati, co-chairman of the Department of Emergency Medicine at CedarsSinai Hospital, said Southern California physicians had seen an uptick in patients who had used Molly or MDMA, though precise n umbers had n o t b e e n compiled. In San Francisco, MDMA-related emergency room visits were up 30 percent between 2008 and 2011. "We are definitely seeing an increasein the number of people who say they've taken Molly," said Dr. Theodore Bania, director of research and toxicology at the emergency d e p artments of St. Luke's and Roosevelt hospitals in New York. Jean Mone, a therapist and substance abuse counselor in New York, says that in the last year or two, more of her clientshave mentioned using the drug. They range in age, but some of them are in their early 20s and take the drug to stay up all night and blow off steam after long, demanding days at work. Some take Molly to stay up at night and then pop Adderall, another stimulant, to get up in the morning and go to work.

Asthalin Inhaler 200

The 90 tablets of Vagifem she had ordered from a Canadian pharmacy that By Alana Semuels

Satbutam ol Pressunse d

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ei

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her physician prescribed had been impounded as an illegal drug at Los Ange-

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les International Airport.

m

Nathaniel Brooks/ New York Times News Service

First marketed in 1988, Vagifem estrogen tablets are used by millions of women to relieve symptoms of menopause. There is no generic version available in the United States, and brand-name drugs are priceyhere.So about fiveyears ago, Higman started ordering the tablets from Canada, where a year's supply that would cost about $1,000 in th e U n ited States sells for under $100. "The price went up. And we'd lost a lot on the stock market, and we're living on fixed incomes," Higman said in an interview. She and her husband, a writer, are covered by Medicare. In an email to the Food and Drug Administration, she sought the release of the package, explaining: "When it became economically imperative I ordered it from Canada, a country with strict drug requirements."

seas pharmacies are identical to products sold in the United States. When an FDA compliance officer told Higman that her order of Vagifem was held because it was an "unapproved" drug, she responded: "This drug might come from Turkey, however, it is in the same box, the same packaging, the same labels, the same manufacturer, Nordisk, as the outrageously priced Vagifem in the United States." Identical drugs sold in other countries may have different package inserts, slight variations in dose or different brand

names. But that is frequently a function of patent law and business decisions by drugmakers, rather than medical efficacy. Diana Simonson, 42, a freelance computer programmer in Glens Falls, N.Y., said she started orderingher inhalers from Canada after she nearly died of an asthma attack in the United States, where she cannot afford her preventive treatments. The process is simpler for patients who live near the border. Joshua Kalish, 70, of Silver City, N.M., said that before he was eligible for Medicare, he drove to Mexico to fill all his

Diana Simonson, a 42-year-old freelance computer programmer, began ordering asthma inhalers from Canada after she nearly died of an asthma attack, making her one of at least a million Americans getting prescriptions filled north of the border, according to data

from a Canadian pharmacy group. prescriptions, calling it a "common practice." Higman said she i s a l so heading for the border. Despite her pleas, the FDA told her that her Vagifem tablets would be returned to Canada or destroyed. To tide her over, she has spent $233 for two months of Vagifem at a local pharmacy.

"Fortunately my children and grandchildren live in Seattle, so the next time we go over there, I'll take a little trip up to Vancouver, British Columbia, to buy my medicine," she said. "I'll save enough money to get room servicein a five-star hotel there and still have enough left to claim I saved a couple of bucks."

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Many strategies for obtaining mnds The high price of many prescription drugs in the United States has left m i l lions of Americans telling white lies a nd committing f r aud a n d other crimes to get their medicines. In response to a New York Times article about the costs, hundreds of r e aders shared their strategies, from having a physician prescribe twicethe needed dose and cutting pills in half, to "borrowing" medicines from a friend or relative with better insurance coverage. But an increasingly

popular — though generally illegal — route is buying the drugs from overseas. The Canadian International Pharmacy Association, a 10-

year-old pharmacy group, said its members fill prescriptions for I million Americans each year. "It's the Americans who are seeking us out," said Tim Smith, the group's general manager. "Clearly there's a need." In surveys from 2011 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 2 percent of adults and about 5 percent of the uninsured said they had bought prescription drugs from othercountries.The figures likely underestimated the practicebecause people may be reluctant to admit to doing something illegal, even though the law is rarely enforced in such cases. The FDA says on its website that"in most circumstances it is illegal to import drugs into the U.S. for personal use" because the agency cannot guarantee they are safe and effective. The government also prohibits "reimportation" of drugs made in the United States because it cannot guarantee the medications were not tampered with or storedimproperly. The agency said it does not track the volume of such imports. However, it "typically does not object" to people buying imported medicine for personal use "under certain circumstances,"the agency said. Those include using the drug to treat a serious condition for which an effective alternative is unavailable in the United States and p urchasing less than a three-month supply. But those ambiguous edicts have left patients wary.

Pharmaceutical resistance D r. Stephen Barrett,a retired psychiatrist and health care advocate in North Carolina, said he has saved thousands of dollars buying medicines from overseas in the past decade. "It may be technically illegal, but I don't think anyone would ever get prosecuted," he said, adding that such laws reflected "protectionism" for drugmakers. Although the Obama administration initially proposed allowing some importation of drugs, the idea was dropped from the Affordable Care Act after intense opposition from the pharmaceutical industry. Some purchases from over-

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

BRIEFING

Arts committee seeks applicants The cityof Bendis seeking applicantsto serve on the Arts, Beauti-

fication andCulture Commission.

Two positionsareopen on the commission,which recommends to city officials how the city should

participate inandsupport thearts, according to a

press release.Thecommission alsoorganizesa biannual art show at City Hall.

Applicants mustlive in

www.bendbulletin.com/local

rescri e urnsse un i wee 'sen By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Prescribed fires are set to burn today around Central Oregon, from near La Pine to close to Camp Sherman to around Prineville. Whether they fill the air with smoke, as two did Tuesday in Bend, will depend on which way the wind blows. Southerly winds blew smoke into Bend Tuesday morning, causing air quality to spike to unhealthy levels for sensitive groups.

The smoke came from a mix of pile burning on private land and a smoldering prescribed fire, all near La Pine and Sunriver, said Lauren Miller, fire and fuels planner for the Deschutes National Forest. She said the private burning occurred Tuesday at the Vandervert Ranch and Thousand Trails subdivisions.

"The smoke from (those)

is tracking right into Bend," Miller said. Smoke also rose from 148

acres burned by Deschutes National Forest firefighters near Wickiup Reservoir Monday, she said. The crews lit another 110 acres there Tuesday. The smoke gathered in Bend throughout the morning, pushing a Department of Environmental Quality air sensor near the Deschutes River in the city to levels deemed unhealthy for select groups. Those groups include the very young and old, as well as people with respirator conditions. The DEQ's Bend Pump Sta-

tion sensor reached unhealthy for sensitive groups levels at 9 a.m. Tuesday morning, according to DEQ data. The air was back to good quality by about 11 a.m. Consider staying indoors and canceling outdoor exercise plans if smoke accumulates today, said Mark Bailey, eastern region air quality

manager for the DEQ. "If (you) are impacted by smoke, protect yourself," he said. A shift in the wind Tuesday afternoon brought relief from

the smoke to Bend, helping air quality to improve into the evening. The Forest Service plans more prescribedburning the rest of this week, Miller said, but will try to keep smoke from blowing into towns. Firefighters today plan to burn 158 acres near La Pine, about 10 miles northwest of Bend by Round Mountain, and 123 acres close to Camp Sherman, a mile south of Wizard Falls Hatchery, Miller said. SeeFire /B5

the city of Bend, and the

deadline toapply is 5p.m. on Nov.8. TheCity Council makes appointments to the Arts, Beautification

and CultureCommission. Anyone interested in

applying cancontact the city at 541-388-5505 and download an application

at bendoregon.gov/committees.

Applicationsare also available at City Hall, 710 N.W. Wall St., Bend.

Horse shooter reward increases The Humane Society of the United States posted

a$5,000 rewardTuesday for information leadingto the arrest and conviction

of anyoneresponsible forshooting ofsixwild horses this month in the Ochoco National Forest. That adds to the $2,000

already beingoffered by the Central Oregon Wild Horse Coalition. The total

could now be$7,000. Another $4,000 reward

forinformation onthe shooting deaths of six wild

horses inthesamearea in spring 2011also remains unclaimed. Hunters on Oct. 13

discoveredthreehorse carcasses,all shotto death, and a fourth, a ju-

venile, mortally wounded by gunfire. That horse was euthanized.

Forest Serviceinvestigators on Oct. 18

discoveredthreemore horse carcasses,again apparentlyshot to death, while combing the area.

"Wildhorses roaming free onourpublic lands are a nationaltreasureto be cherishedandprotected," said Scott Beckstead,

senior Oregonstate director for theHumaneSociety of the United States. Anyone with informa-

tion aboutthe casecan call Capt. DanSmith, of the U.S. Forest Service, at 541-383-5798, or contact the Crook County Sheriff's Office at 541-447-6398.

Liquor store burglarized An early morningstop ata westsideBendliquor store Monday netted a suspectabout30 bottles

of beverages,according to the Bend Police Depart-

ment. Thesuspect,seen wearing aheavy, dark colored coatwith a

hood, cargopantsanda baseball cap,smashed

JEFFERSON COUNTY

Attentive to seasons

Hospital collecting taxes after its transfer

kid's studies By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

At any given time, Redmond High School senior Brian Hicks can be found lugging around a stack of linguistics textbooks in his

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

The Mountain View Hospital District is continuing to collect property taxes from residents, nearly a year after the hospital was absorbed by Bend-based St. Charles Health System. Most Jefferson County property owners will pay 21 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value to the hospital district this year. Jefferson County Assessor Jean McClosky said the hospital district operates under a permanent rate — one that does not have to be periodically renewed by voters — which allows it to collect up to 25 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value. The hospital district will net nearly $286,000 from the tax this year, according to the assessor's office. McClosky said her office has received multiple inquiries since property tax bills began arriving in mailboxes earlier this month; many local residents assumed the taxing district would go away when the hospital ceased to be independent. Mountain View Hospital formally became St. Charles Madras on Jan. 1, in a deal that transferred an estimated $9.7 million in hospital assets to St. Charles Health System. Since 1967, the hospital had been operated as a nonprofit public entity with an elected seven-member boardof directors. It encountered financial difficulties in recent years. McClosky said she and others in her office were surprised when hospital district officials turned in the form that all taxing districts submit to county assessors to claim their portion of property tax proceeds earlier this

Languages propel 'bookish'

backpack. But these books aren't re-

quired reading for any of his classes. Brian carries them in case

hegets

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ment of free time

OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS spend so much Educational news and activities, and local kids time and their achievements. read

ing and • School Notes and talking su b mission info, B3 about linguistics, my friends get sick of hearing about it," Brian said. Unlike most students his age, Brian, 17, actually looks forward to language class. He has a passion for not only learning languages, but learning about their origins. His enthusiasm started

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simply enough. See Schools/B3

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

"Big Ears," a 2001 bronze sculpture by artist Joe Halko that sits at the Simpson Avenue-Mt. Washington Drive roundabout in Bend, is topped by a pumpkin on Tuesday. The installation is one of the seasonally decorated pieces featured at the city's various traffic circles. Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

To learn more about the sculpture and other public art in the city, visit artinpublicplaces.org or visitbend.com.

year. See Hospital/B5

In addition to Brian Hicks' rigourous academic schedule, he's set to appear in his schoors December production of "The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe."

the glass frontdoor with

arockat about5a.m., according to police. The

suspect reportedlycarried the bottles from the store

in a largesack. Anyone with informa-

tion cancall Officer Whitney Wiles at 541-3222960 or 541-693-6911.

Wyden visits classroom,fields health care,shutdown questions IIAik<"'-

" -

By Tyler Leeds

'

TheBulletin

Briefing, B5

Have astoryIdea or sudmission? Contactus! The Bulletin Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View p.o. Box 6020 Bend,OR 97708 Details on the Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, D-Ore., takes questions from students in Mike Huff's sixth-period AP government class about a variety of topics Tuesday at Mountain View High School.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., fielded a set of technical questions on health care reform and the government shutdown from young policy wonks in a Mountain View High School AP Government class on Tuesday. At the beginning of the class, Wyden joked: "If you're 16 and 17, I guess you're thinking a whole lot about Medicare and texting your friends about it." As the first hesitant hands raised and questions were asked, Wyden indicated he'd be willing to discuss college affordability and the National

Security Agency's surveillance policies — two hot topics that seem to appeal to young, techsavy students. But as the session unfolded, his opening remark appeared like a reality. The students focused on the nitty-gritty of health care reform and the government budget following the 16-day federal government shutdown. "We talk about the shutdown and health care reform daily. It's nothing really new for these students," said their teacher, Mike Huff. "I always try to tie in what's happening currently to the class." While they eventually asked about rising college tuition, the

students spent 40 of their 50 minutes with the senator on the government shutdown. Morgan Barron asked about the federal debt ceiling's historical context and whether similar policies exist elsewhere. Justin Hurworth evoked the Beltway practice of treating Medicarereform as an untouchable third rail, asking the senator how he intended to approach the budget and lower medical costs. Mackenzie Jeffcott, meanwhile, focused on the intersection of politics and bureaucracy, asking about the rationale behind granting furloughed

federal employees' backpay. SeeWyden /B5


B2

THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

E VENT TODAY 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. PUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. KNOW CULTURA:SUGARSKULLS: Prepare and decorate the traditional Day of the Deadtreat; grades 6-12; free; 1:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541312-1034 or tinad©deschuteslibrary. olg. "THETREMBLINGGIANT":A screening of the feature-length documentary about the beauties of elk camp and the passion for hunting, followed by aQ-and-A with the filmmakers; $6 in advance, $8 at the door; 6:30 p.m., doors at 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. "MERRILYWE ROLL ALONG": A screening of Stephen Sondheim's play from London's West End; $15; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. IGNITE BEND11:Presenters have five minutes to talk about 20 PowerPoint slides that are rotated every15 seconds; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St.; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. WORLD'S FINEST: The Portland Americana reggaeband performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W .Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. LAMP:The Salem blues-rock band performs, with Voodoo Highway; free; 9 p.m.; VolcanicTheatrePub,70S.W .

AL E N D A R

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

Century Drive, Bend;541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com.

TKH(SDAY PUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKET: Pick a pumpkin or visit the market; free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-5041414 or www.pumpkinco.com. KNOW CULTURA:SUGARSKULLS: Prepare and decorate the traditional Day of the Deadtreat; ages 9-12; free; 3:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-3121034 or tinad@deschuteslibrary.org. HISTORICALHAUNTS OF DOWNTOWN BEND: Walk to historical buildings that are said to have experienced paranormal events and hear their ghostlytales; $10, free for museum members andages 12 and younger; 4-7:30 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave.; 541-389-1813 or www. deschuteshistory.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Gregory Nokes will presentfrom his book, "Breaking Chains: Slavery onTrial in the OregonTerritory"; $3, free for members, reservation requested; 6-8 p.m.; High DesertM useum,59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. "THETREMBLING GIANT":A screening of the feature-length documentary about the beauties of elkcamp and the passion for hunting, followed by aQ-and-A with the filmmakers; $6 in advance, $8 at the door; 6:30 p.m., doors at 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. JON WAYNE ANDTHEPAIN: ACD release show for the Minnesota reggae, acoustic rock band performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W .Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174. RIFFTRAXLIVE:"NIGHTOF THE LIVING DEAD":Thestars of Mystery Science Theater 3000 give their take on the zombiemovie;$12.50;8 p.m.;

Courtesy photo

Jazz pianist Les Mccann, right, is set to accompanytenor saxophonistJavon Jackson and his ensemble Friday and Saturday during three sets at The Oxford Hotel's Jazz at The Oxford Series. Regal Old Mill Stadium168, IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 54 I-3 I2-2901. YOZA:The Hawaiian soul musician performs; free; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

deschuteshistory.org. VFW AUXILIARYANNUALCABBAGE ROLL DINNER: A community dinner; $9;5 p.m.;VFW Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. HAUNTEDHOUSE:Featuring scares, candy, prizes andhot chocolate; free; 6-9:30 p.m.; TerrebonneGrange Hall, 828611th St.; 541-788-0865 or myrna©threecreekscomputing.com. THE HARVESTMOON DINNER FRIDAY DANCE:Featuring a buffet dinner and CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN dancing to music by"The Notables"; $12, registration requested; 6 p.m. PATCH:Aneight-acre corn maze with dinner, 7 p.m. dance;Bend Senior pumpkin patch andmarket featuring Center, 1600 S.E.ReedMarket pumpkincannons,zootrain,pony Road; 541-388-1133 or www. rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages bendparksandrec.org. 6-11, free ages 5and younger for corn maze; $2.50 for most other "ARSENICANDOLDLACE": activities; noon-7 p.m., pumpkin patch Sunriver Stars Community Theater open until 6 p.m.; Central Oregon presents the play; proceeds benefit Pumpkin Co.,1250 N.E.W ilcoxAve., scholarships to Fastcamp for Three Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www. Rivers schools; $5, $25 for dinner theater (Saturday only); 6:30 p.m.; pumpkinco.com. Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & HISTORICALHAUNTS OF Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook DOWNTOWN BEND: W alkto Road; 541-593-4150 or www. historical buildings that are said to have experienced paranormal events sunriverstars.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jon and hear their ghostly tales; $10, Bell presents a talk and slideshow free for museum membersandages basedonhisbook"On Mount Hood: 12 and younger; 4-7:30 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum,129 N.W. A Biography of Oregon's Perilous Peak"; $5;6:30 p.m.;Paulina Springs Idaho Ave.; 541-389-1813 or www.

Books, 422 S.W.SixthSt.,Redmond; 54 I-526-1491. "THEPEOPLING OF THEAMERICAS" SERIES: Wilson Wewa, aNorthern Paiute elder andhistorian, explains how traditional legends, oral histories and observations support the ideathat Native Americans havealways been here and did not originate elsewhere; free, $5 day-use passpermit; 7-8:30 p.m.; Smith RockState ParkVisitor Center,10260 N.E.CrookedRiver Drive, Terrebonne;541-923-7551, ext. 21, or www.oregonstateparks.org. 16TH ANNUALCOMEDYBENEFIT FOR BIGBROTHERS BIG SISTERS: Featuring comediansToddArmstrong and AdamNorwest, live andsilent auctions, raffle and more;$50 or two tickets for $80; 7 p.m.;TowerTheatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3126047or wwwbit ly/1cdJG3Q. BENEFITCONCERT:Local bands featuring TheQuons,Hilst and Coffey and more; proceedsbenefit FeedThe Hungry; $5 suggested donation; 7 p.m., doors open at 6p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036N.E.Fifth St.; 541-390-0921 or thudson© bendbroadband.com. THE SCARE GROUNDS: Ahaunted house; recommended onlyforages 12 and older; $12for one haunt, $20 for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; 7 p.m., gates open at6:30 p.m.; old Parr Lumber buildings, 443 S.W.Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-548-4755 or www.scaremegood.com. TRIVIA NIGHTAT "THECAFE": Play three rounds of trivia with prizes; theme is holiday movies from the '80s, '90s and today; up tofour people a team; free, registration requested; 7-8:30 p.m.; Barnes 8 Noble Booksellers, 2690 E.U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242. AN EVENINGWITHEDGAR ALLAN POE:Alastair Morley performs theatrical readings from theauthor; $10 in advance,$12at the door; 8-10 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E.MainAve., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. JAZZ AT THEOXFORD: Featuring the Javon Jackson Bandand Les McCann; $49, $248.40 for series pass, plus

fees; 8 p.m.; TheOxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave.,Bend;541-382-8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. BEN RICE BAND:The Portland modern-blues bandperforms; free; 9 p.m.; Blue PineKitchen andBar,25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend;541-389-2558 or www.bluepinebar.com. E-40: Theveteran BayArea rapper performs, with OP1and Kid Caribbe; $25plusfees inadvance;9 p.m .,doors openat7 p.m.;LiquidLounge,70 N.W . Newport Ave., Bend; www.j.jp/e40info. JOHNATHANWARRENANDTHE BILLYGOATS:The Boise, Idahobased folk grass bandperforms, with Wesley Ladd; free; 9p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. KYTAMI:Violin meets dance beats from the former Delhi 2 Dublin member, with JayTablet, Boomtown, Matt Wax and DJHarlo; $5 (free for women until10:30 p.m.); 9 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 orwww. astroloungebend.com. MOONALICE: TheCalifornia rock band performs; $12 inadvance, $15at the door; 9:30 p.m., doors open at 9p.m.; Domino Room, 51N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www. randompresents.com.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT

Oct. 16 10:24 p.m.— Building fire, 13680 S.W. Rust Bucket Road, Powell Butte. 13 —Medical aid calls. Thursday 3:10 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 4355 W. Highway126, Redmond. 8 — Medical aid calls. Friday 12 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 5 — Medical aid calls. Sunday 3 — Medical aid calls.

SATURDAY HALLOWEEN CYCLOCROSS CRUSADE: Watch the obstacleladen bicycle racewith costumed competitors, a beergarden, live music and more; freefor spectators; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery, 901 S.W.Simpson Ave., Bend;www. crosscrusade.com. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: THE NOSE":Starring Paulo Szot as a bureaucrat, who hassatirical misadventures in search of his missing nose; operaperformance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901.

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 5:38 p.m. Oct. 14, in the 63400 block of Phoenix Way. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at1:24 p.m. Oct. 16, in the area of Southeast Davis Avenue and Southeast Third Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 7:52 a.m. Oct. 17, in the 3200 block of Northeast Saber Drive. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at12:05 p.m. Oct. 17, in the 800 block of Southeast Sixth Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:27 p.m. Oct. 17, in the area of Birchwood Drive and Alderwood Circle. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:50 a.m. Oct. 19, in the 500 block of Northwest Ogden Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:18 a.m. Oct. 19, in the 2200 block of Northeast Shepard Road. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11:10 a.m. Oct. 19, in the1400 block of Northwest Third Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11:49 a.m. Oct. 19, in the area of Northwest Newport Avenue and Northwest Sixth Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at12:23 p.m. Oct. 19, in the area of Northwest Wall Street and Northwest Idaho Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 6:25 p.m. Oct. 19, in the 500 block of Northwest Ogden Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 6:14 p.m. Oct. 16, in the 3100 block of North U.S. Highway 97. DUII —John Paul Betz, 44, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:18 p.m. Oct.17, in the area of Northeast Third Street and Northeast Burnside Drive. Theft —A theft was reported and arrests made at 4:39 p.m. Oct. 18, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 8:58 p.m. Oct. 18, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:59 p.m. Oct. 19, in the 20100

block of Pinebrook Boulevard. DUII —Justin Scott Letlow, 51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:57 p.m. Oct. 19, in the area of Northeast Seventh Street and Northeast Penn Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:55 a.m. Oct. 20, in the 20500 block of Barrows Court. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 9:45 a.m. Oct. 20, in the area of Brosterhous Road and Southeast Third Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 3:33 p.m. Oct. 16, in the 300 block of Southwest Columbia Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:42 p.m. Oct.17, inthe1600block of Northeast Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:29 p.m. Oct. 18, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:18 a.m. Oct.19, in the1400 block of Northwest Kingston Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:58 p.m. Oct. 19, in the 300 block of Southwest Century Drive. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 3 p.m. Oct. 19, in the 2400 block of Northeast Ravenwood Drive. Theft —A theft was reported and arrests made at 4:18 p.m. Oct. 19, in the 63400 block of North U.S. Highway 97. DUII —Steve Melo Teixeira, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:40 p.m. Oct. 19, in the area of Southwest Brookswood Boulevard and Southwest Porcupine Road. DUII —Nathanael Isaac Estrada, 32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:40 a.m. Oct. 20, in the area of Southeast Fifth Street and Southeast Gleneden Place. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at10:14 a.m. Oct. 20, in the 2200 block of Northeast Daggett Lane. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 3:25 p.m. Oct. 20, in the100 block of Northwest Lake Place. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 4:20 p.m. Oct. 20, in the 600 block of Northwest Colorado Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 6:47 a.m. Oct. 21, in the 400 block of Northwest Federal Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 10:06 a.m. Oct. 21, in the 1300 block of Northeast Hollinshead Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:47 p.m. Oct. 20, in the 19500 block of Amber Meadow Drive.

block of Northwest Upas Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 3:44 p.m. Oct. 17, in the 3000 block of Theft —A theft was reported Southwest Cascade Avenue. at 8:38 a.m. Oct. 14, in the 1100 Theft —A theft was reported block of Northeast11th Street. at 8:33 p.m. Oct. 17, in the 1100 Theft —A theft was reported block of Southwest 33rd Street. at 10:16 a.m. Oct. 14, in the 300 Vehicle crash —An accident block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. was reported at 8:59 p.m. DUII —Deborah Lynn Brough, Oct. 17, in the 1300 block of 51, was arrested on suspicion Southwest Canal Boulevard. of driving under the influence of Unlawful entry —A vehicle intoxicants at1:45 p.m. Oct. 14, was reported entered at 9:29 in the area of Northwest19th p.m. Oct. 17, in the 2200 block Street and Northwest Fir Avenue. of Southwest 29th Street. Criminal mischief —An act of Theft —A theft was reported at criminal mischief was reported 9:40 a.m. Oct. 18, in the 3300 and an arrest made at 2:26 block of South U.S. Highway 97. p.m. Oct. 14, in the 500 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported Theft —A theft was reported at 10:26 a.m. Oct. 18, in the 3300 at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 14, in the 1300 block of Southwest lndian Place. block of Southwest17th Street. Burglary —A burglary Theft —A theft was reported at 11:05 p.m. Oct. 14, in the 100 block was reported at10:32 a.m. Oct. 18, in the 200 block of of Southwest Second Street. Southwest Sixth Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle Theft —A theft was reported at was reported entered at 8:02 4:04 p.m. Oct. 18, in the 300 block a.m. Oct. 15, in the 1200 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. of Southwest 28th Street. Criminal mischief —An act of Theft —A theft was reported at 3:07 p.m. Oct. 15, in the 100 block criminal mischief was reported at 5:23 p.m. Oct. 18, in the 800 of Southwest Canyon Drive. block of Northeast Oak Place. Vehicle crash —An accident was Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 3:20 p.m. Oct. 15, in reported at 5:24 p.m. Oct. 18, in the area of Southwest 23rd Street the area of Southwest 23rd Street and Southwest Pumice Avenue. and SouthwestlndianAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported Unlawful entry —A vehicle at7:30 p.m. Oct.15, in the 500 was reported entered at11:22 block of Northeast Negus Loop. p.m. Oct. 18, in the 2000 block Vehicle crash —An accident was of Southwest Timber Avenue. reported at 7:19 a.m. Oct. 16, in Theft —A theft was reported at the area of Southwest12th Street 10:26 a.m. Oct. 19, in the 3900 and Southwest Glacier Avenue. block of Southwest 25th Place. Vehicle crash —An accident Theft —A theft was reported at was reported at11:43 a.m. Oct. 1:35 p.m. Oct. 19, in the 300 block 16, in the area of Southwest of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Fifth Street and Southwest Black Butte Boulevard. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 5:14 p.m. Theft —A theft and an act of Oct. 19, in the 2200 block of criminal mischief were reported Southwest Umatilla Avenue. and an arrest made at1:58 p.m. Oct. 16, in the 300 block DUII —Kelly Dale Mayo Jr., of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. 45, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence Unlawful entry —A vehicle of intoxicants at 2:26 a.m. was reported entered at 5:50 Oct. 20, in the 400 block of p.m. Oct. 16, in the 300 block Southwest Ninth Street. of Northwest Quince Avenue. DUII —Tiffany Marie Vincent, Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported 33, was arrested on suspicion and an arrest made at 2:26 of driving under the influence of a.m. Oct. 20, in the 400 block intoxicants at 10:43 p.m. Oct. 16, in the area of Southwest of Southwest Ninth Street. Fourth Street and Southwest Unlawful entry —A vehicle Evergreen Avenue. was reported entered at 3:01 Vehicle crash —An accident was a.m. Oct. 20, in the 2900 block reported at 8:31 a.m. Oct. 17, in of Southwest 25th Street. the area of Northwest Ninth Street Unlawful entry —A vehicle was and Northwest Birch Avenue. reported entered at 6:22 a.m. Theft —A theft was reported Oct. 20, in the 3200 block of and an arrest made at10:21 Southwest Reindeer Avenue. a.m. Oct. 17, in the 300 block Unlawful entry —A vehicle of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. was reported entered at 8:46 Burglary —A burglary was a.m. Oct. 20, in the 2600 block reported at10:47 a.m. Oct. 17, of Southwest 30th Street. in the 2600 block of Southwest Unauthorized use —A vehicle Fissure Loop North. was reported stolen at 6:36 Theft —A theft was reported p.m. Oct. 20, in the 1000 block at3:06 p.m. Oct.17, in the1200 of Southwest Veterans Way.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT

Theft —A theft was reported at 9:45 a.m. Oct. 21, in the area of Southeast Lynn Boulevard.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Isaac Charles Maxwell, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:50 p.m. Oct. 21, in the area of state Highway 31 near milepost 8.

REDMOND FIRE RUNS Oct. 14 2 —Medical aid calls. Oct. 15 7 —Medical aid calls.

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

Email ban mayhaveviolated labor law The Associated Press SALEM — T h e O r e gon Employment Relations Board says the state broke a labor law two years ago when it temporarily banned members of the Service Employees International Union from using work email for union-related matters. The state's Department of Administrative Services imposed the ban in 2011 after a contract with the largest block

of organized state workers expired and the state decided not to extend it. SEIU Local 503 filed a complaint, arguing t h a t u s ing email to discuss union-related matters was a long-standing practice and changes had to be negotiated. The union claimed that the state had committed an unfair labor practice by unilaterally changing policy. The employment board, in a decision handed down ear-

lier this month, said that employees have a right to discuss matters up for negotiation in their contracts, and restricting email use violates that right. "Email has become an essential part of today's workplace, surpassing yesterday's bulletin board, water cooler and mail room," the board order said. "Employees rely on this means of communication more and more each year to

communicate with each other and their designated representative about a wide variety of employment matters — particularly in bargaining units where employees are spread across multipleagencies and work sites." The state has stopped enforcing the rule and won't appeal the decision, said Matt S helby, spokesman for t h e Department of A d m i nistrative Services.

AROUND THE STATE PaSSenger rail —Although many say it's a longshot, Corvallis residents say their city should be astop when passenger rail service is improved between Portland and Eugene.Some1,800 people signed a petition, and testimony given at a hearing this week was in

favor of the idea. Residents said passenger service would be good for students, business and the environment. The Oregon Department of Transportation is studying options for improved service between the Columbia River and the Eugene-Springfield area, a

125-mile corridor. Current passenger service bypasses Corvallis, and only one of the four alternatives being considered would come through the town. The schedule calls for selecting a route by 2015.

EXplet'ittg e Cempelgtl —Clackamas County Commissioner Tootie Smith appears ready to challenge Congressman Kurt Schrader. Smith said on Tuesday sheexpects to decide in about a month whether to formally run. The Republican was elected to the commission last November. The county website bills her as the

"first conservative woman elected to the ClackamasCounty Com-

'Internee' name to aviation hall o ame By Paul Fattig

mission." She served in the state House from 2001 until 2005, and said that she can bring a problem-solving attitude to Washington

D.C. As for her opponent, Smith said the Democrat votes with the "very liberal minorities" nine times out of 10. Schrader's chief of

staff Paul Gageresponded, saying he isn't sure Oregon wants a congresswoman who would vote with the tea party nine times out of 10.

Medford Mail Tribune

MEDFORD — As a youngster, Michael Emmens never particularly looked f orward to the family's vacation each summer. "We would go to reunions of the Raiders — they had them every year," he recalled. "I remember saying, 'Do we have to do that again for our vacation?'" His father, Robert Emmens, who was inducted Sunday into the Oregon Aviation Hall of Honor at the Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum in McMinnville, was a co-pilot with the Doolittle Raiders, a group of 16 B-25 U.S. bomber crews ledby then-Col.James "Jimmy" Doolittle that successfully carried out a raid on Tokyo on April 18, 1942. "After my dad died (in 1992), my mom (Justine) wanted to continue going to the reunions — I would take her because she didn't want to fly alone," Michael said. That was when he came to fully appreciate what the Raiders had done to buoy Americans' spirits a mere five months after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Over the past 20 years, he has looked forward to attending the reunion and plans to attend the final reunion in Ohio next month. His mother died in 2006. "The Raiders bombed some oil refineries, which caused the Japanese to rethink their planned expansion in the Pacific," said Michael, a retired registered nurse. "That caused them to bring some of their navy back to protect the homeland. And that set up the U.S. victory at Midway (Island)." His father was a 1931 graduate of Medford Senior High

Schools

GreSham killing —A man accused of killing his wife in a Gresham apartment and abducting their child faces charges could lead to

the death penalty. Joshua Cavett appeared in court Tuesday to face an indictment charging him with aggravated murder in the killing of his wife, 27-year-old Jessie Doyle Cavett. The indictment says the killing was committed in the course of another crime — burglary. Cavett didn't enter a plea. Authorities said he shot his wife in the head and abducted their 2-year-old daughter on Oct. 12, triggering an Amber Alert. He was arrested that night, and his daughter was

found unharmed. Cavett is being held without bail. Jessie Doyle Cavett had obtained a restraining order against Joshua Cavett, and the couple had filed for divorce. — From wire reports

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Courtesy Mike Emmens/The Associated Press

Robert Emmens, a co-pilot with the Doolittle Raiders, a band of World War II pilots in the Pacific Ocean, was inducted into the Oregon Aviation Hall of Honor at the Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum in McMinnville. School. He attended the University of Oregon from 1931 to 1934, later joining the U.S. Army Air Corps and became a bomber pilot. Then a first lieutenant, co-pilot Emmens and his crew took off from the U.S. Hornet, an aircraft carrier in the Pacific Ocean. Fifteen of the five-man crews either bailed out after the bombing raid or crash-landed on the China coast. Emmens' plane, which had fuel problems, landed near Vladivostok in what was then the Soviet Union. Emmens, who later wrote a book, "Guests of the Kremlin," and his crew were held for 13 months beforethey escaped, eventually ending up in Iran. They were considered "internees," not prisoners of war, Mi-

chael said. "They were under house arrest," he said. "But they were treated fairly well. Like the native Russians, they ate cabbage and bread — a lot." Russia had a nonaggression pact with Japan at the time and didn't want to anger the Japanese at that point, he said. "The Doolittle Raid was the outstanding feature of his military career," said Michael, 66. "It defined his career, and his career defined him." Upon his retirement, Robert Emmens returned to his hometown, where he worked in real estate and also taught Japanese language courses at what is now Southern Oregon University in Ashland. R obert E m m ens w o u l d have been pleased to know he

was inducted into the Oregon Aviation Hall of Honor, his son sa>d. " My dad w ould b e v e ry proud. He would have also b een very humbled by t h e company of those honored," Michael said. "Something I 'v e l e a rned in going to these reunions is there is a lot of hero worship of the Raiders by the public," he added. "But every Raider, every time someone called them heroes, said, 'No, we are not heroes.We were just doing our job.' That's the way my dad felt, too." Also inducted on Sunday w as Ashland r esident B i ll Phillips, 65, an internationally known aviation artist. Phillips was also a friend of Robert Emmens.

other way to express himself person," Brian said. "But if you creatively. really look at language, you Continued from B1 He first joined Redmond see that it's all built on rules "It was a r e ally r a ndom High's theater group last year, — a lot like math. I like figurTeen feats:Kids thing," Brian s aid. "I just playing percussion for some ing out the structure of it, and recognized recently for walked i n t o si xt h - grade of thegroup's performances. I love the challenge it presents. academic achievements or Spanish, and I i m mediately The position quickly evolved I hate sitting in a class and not for participation in clubs, fell i n l o v e w i t h l e a rning into acting parts and his first feeling challenged." choirs or volunteer groups. "He's probably the most languages." role was in last year's "A Mid(Please submit a photo.) Brian, who is an Interna- summer Night's Dream." thorough and determined stuContact: 541-383-0358, "I played a goon musician tional Baccalaureate candident I've ever encountered," youth©bendbulletin.com date at Redmond High, has of some sort — I'm not really Roberts said. "When he goes Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend, already completed the high- sure what I was," Brian said. into something, he goes into it OR 97708 "But I loved the environment. est level Spanish language with his full heart. There's no classthe school offers,and is I t made me w ant t o k e ep holding him back." Other schoolnotes: currently taking second-year going." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, College announcements, French. This December, Brian will mkehoe@bendbulletin.com military graduations or But language isn't the only act in the high school's adaptraining completions, t hing h e e x cels at . B r i a n tation of "The Lion, the Witch reunion announcements. maintains a 4.0 unweighted and the Wardrobe," taking SCHOOL NOTES Contact: 541-383-0358, GPA and was recently com- on the role of the affable Mr. bulletin©bendbulletin.com mended by the National Merit Tumnus. At the prospect of Scholarship Corp. for his high playing a half man-half goat, TEEN FEATS PSAT scores. Brian is all enthusiasm. Jordan Hamilton wasnamed "I think they chose me to His goal, t hroughout all School briefs:Items and November'sHighDesert HerobyThe of high school and even be- playthe character because my announcements of general Center Foundation inBend.Hamilton, fore, has been to do well aca- personality is kind of similar interest. a senior atRidgeview demically in preparation for to Mr. Tumnus," Brian said. High School,maintains Contact: 541-633-2161, "I guess I'm kind of a booka 4.19GPA.Sheis active college. news©bendbulletin.com in student leadershipand His I B A d v i sor, D e nise ish person who wants to do council, dance and game Student profiles:Know Roberts, said Brian first came good. setup, thestudent-based of a kid with a compelling to her in 10th grade to find out Aside fro m t h e t h e ater, health centerandultimate story? more about the IB program. Brian p a r ticipates i n th e frisbee. She also volunteers withthe Taking up the rigorous course school's Speech and Debate RedmondHighSchool Health Center, Contact: 541-383-0354, Days ofCaring, National HonorSociety load meant that he would have Club, and placed second at mkehoe©bendbulletin.com volunteer services, theaterstageset and to drop his band class, some- the state competition last year tutors at elementaryschools. thing that he didn't want to do in radio commentary. He has unless absolutely necessary. also participated in the Model "Four months after our first United Nations since he was a meeting, I found out that he freshman. called every single univerLooking ahead, Brian says sity that he was going to ap- he wants to attend Pomona ply to and asked whether they College in C a l ifornia next "Quality Painting Inside and Out" thought it was a good idea to year. He spent three weeks J Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years give up band and go for a full at the Claremont-area school "I IB diploma," Roberts said. this summer, participating in couldn't believe that any 10th- a language camp, and ifacgrader would be so thorough. cepted, he wants to continue But that's kind of how every- his language studies there. "My parents always think thing runs with Brian." Insured Bonded and Licensed¹t56152 Phone: 54I-383-2927 In the end, Brian decided it's odd how much I love lan18633 R>verwaods Drive Email: hearuandllc@msn.com Bend, OR 97702 to give up band to pursue the guage because they think I'm Inquire about trading goods for services. diploma, but h e f o und a n - a very logical, math-oriented

Blade could berelated to unsolvedslayingcase The Associated Press MEDFORD — A h o memade hatchet found in a creek has been added to the tally of about 80 blades inspected by police in the 2-year-old investigation of the slaying and near-decapitation of an Ashland grocery clerk. Deputy Police Chief Corey Falls said that investigators have no active leads and very few loose ends to address in the Nov. 19, 2011, slaying of David Michael Grubbs on a bike path in Ashland, which runs past a park and a school. "It's slowing way down, but our lead detective still hasn't closed the case," he said. The hatchet was found in December in a creek in Talent that flows out of a pond that police and divers had searched nearly a year after the slaying. Ben Treiger found it behind his house after a rainstorm, when he was cleaning out debris. "I looked at it and I was like, 'Oh my God; that's what they

were looking for,'" his wife, Rachel Treiger, said. The couplethenturned over the hatchet to Talent police. "It's come onto our radar," Falls said. "We have all that information, and we're not going to comment on any of that." Since the slaying, police have talked to nearly 2,000 people and analyzed hundreds of hours of surveillance footage collected from area businesses. Grubbs was walking home from workwhen he was killed and a passer-by found the body. There was no indication that Grubbs tried to protect himself. His wallet and money were not taken. Michael Grubbs, the victim's father, said police have told him they have run out of things to examine but are ready to investigate anything new that comes up. "They're c alling it r a n dom," he said. "David was in the wrong place at the wrong time."

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B4

THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

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summertime discussion about allowing vendors in Bend's parks resurfaced last week as the Bend Park 8 Recreation District board heard an annual report on park use. The vendorsare not allowed in district parks, but Community Relations Manager Jan Taylor reported that some have started to "come in stealth." It has been a recurring problem, she said, even though it involved only a few vendors. While Taylor said the public has expressed a preference for vendorfree parks, at least one board member — Scott Asla — wants the district to consider allowing them. But the issue, it turns out, is not wholly in the district's control. Vendors with city licenses are entitled to pull up into any right of way outside the downtown core, Taylor told us. The district received complaints saying that duringthe summer, vendors parkedat the edge of McKay Park, played music and disturbed parents with children at the beach. Taylor said the district is holding talks with the city of Bend to try to find a resolution before next summer's busy park season. The only vendor now permit-

ted inside the parks is Sun Country Tours, which rents water equipment — including free life jackets for children — and provides education on water safety. That's a useful and needed service; an appropriate exception to the vendor prohibition. We hope the district keeps it that way, continuing to ban other commercial activity inside the parks. Although it might be convenient to buy bottled water, ice cream or sunscreen in the park, we think that convenience is far outweighed by the benefit of a vendor-free oasis in our hypercommercialworld. Outside our parks, food and other retail options abound. It takes only a small bit of planning ahead to bring what's needed for our comfort while in the parks. We should protect our green spaces, so we can relax amid the trees, grass and water. The issue on the edges of parks is clearly more complex, requiring compromise that respects a variety of interests. Limits, rather than bans, may be the answer.

Voters deservecontrol in new drivers' law regon voters who think illegal immigrants should not get driver's cards will have the chance to overrule their legislators next year. We hope they'll do just that. The opportunity comes from Oregon's initiative process. The Legislature passed Senate Bill 833 earlier this year, allowing those in the state illegally to get driver's cards. It was scheduled to go into effect in January. But last week, Secretary of State Kate Brown announced that opponents had collected enough signatures to put Referendum No. 301 on the November 2014ballot. If the majority of voters vote no, SB 833 will be overturned. In the meantime, its provisions are on hold. To get a driver's card under SB 833, a person must meet all the requirements for a driver's license except proof of legal residency. The cards are supposed to carry a distinguishing label to prevent their use to try to prove a person is in the nation legally.

O

Advocates of the law say it will encourage illegal residents to learn the rules of the road, get insurance and drive legally, thereby helping them get to and from work and participate fully in the economy. Unfortunately, granting the driver's cards will also further confuse the issue of legal and illegal residence. Depending on how prominently the cards declare their difference from regular licenses, they could be used inappropriately. The state should not be in the business of creating loopholes for those who break the lawbybeing in the nation illegally. Solving the immigration issue is a federal responsibility and shouldn't be handled piecemeal by the states. Oregon's initiative law has sometimes created governing challenges, as demonstrated by the state's complex tax structure. But whatever the outcome of the vote in this case, it's a good use of the initiative process. It gives voters a check on their elected representati ves and the chance to exercise some directdemocracy.

M Nickel's Worth Vote yes for hotel tax increase I urge anyone who values a vibrant economy, arts and culture, and public safety to vote yes on Measure 9-94. This measure would create a small increase in the tax tourists pay to stay in Bend hotels. It's a small amount, but over a 10-year period, it w i l l g enerate approximately $2.4 million for Bend's police and fire departments, $3.8 million for tourism promotion, as well as $1.8 million for the arts. That's a p a r ticularly v aluable amount for Bend's arts community, which constantly struggles to attract marketing dollars for its programming. As a member of the Arts & Culture Alliance, a group of 30-plus organizations in Central Oregon, I consistently work with small and large cultural organizations that have seen many funding options dwindle. The opportunity t o br o a den awareness of these programs to new visitors would not only be a proactive step i n d e monstrating Bend's support o f t h ese i mportant resources, but residents and visitors alike would benefit from a richer cultural landscape. The tourism promotion would be used to expand marketing in the winter and shoulder seasons; many of our arts and cultural organizations provide significant programs and servicesduring these months.

This measure would bring Bend closer to the tax levels in nearby cities, provide valuable funds for the services tourists and residents use and increase the rich cultural options Bend can offer to everyone. Please join me in voting yes on Measure 9-94. Renee Patrick Bend

The lesson of the goose that laid the golden egg When we were growing up, we learned Aesop's fable "The Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs." But clearly the Bend City Council and the Deschutes County Commission have forgotten the moral of that sto-

ry. The single largest employment area in Deschutes County and the city of Bend, after government, is recreation. We depend upon visitors coming here to enjoy our wonderful recreation. City and county leaders expect us to believe we can tax lodging establishments and visitors will still come. Unfortunately, these visionaries want you to think the tax will only affect visitors. But they are short-sighted. If you are a small business in food service,recreation or even local retail, you depend on visitors' dollars. If they stop coming, these businesses will stall even further. Even the city's own fiscal analysis acknowledges, there will be "some reduction" in tourism.

Further,the analysis says some of the money raised by the tax will be used to entice more folks to come here — so we cantax them more. This is the flawed economic thinking. The absence of major taxes has always been the preferred model for flourishing business. Vote no on 9-94 and 9-96. Let's continue to attract as many visitors to Deschutes County as we can — not try to chase them away. Larry Hinkie Bend

Justify government intervention The article in the Oct. 15 Bulletin concerning the inability of a local brewer and distiller to get the required approval of labels for productsfrom the federal government becauseof the federal government shutdown raises important questions. What is the compelling public purpose thatis served by the federal government review and approval of labels that go on beer and booze bottles'? Why are we paying people to do this review and provide approvals? Why ar e w e m a ndating that brewers and distilleries spend time and effort to get these approvals? This may not be the only thing that it is very difficult to justify the federal government doing. It is probably not the silliest. Dennis Sienko Bend

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Balancing affordable asthma medicines and the ozone By Cass R. Sunstein

were found to outweigh its economic

Bloomberg News

costs — by a large margin.

e Food and Drug Administration has outlawed the only over-the-counter asthma medicine in the United States. It has also banned a number ofother asthma medicines that patients like and that doctorshave prescribed forthem. In imposing these prohibitions, the FDA hasn't denied that the banned asthma medicinesare safe and effective for their intended use. (Disclosure: While serving as administrator of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs during President Barack Obama's first term, I participated in discussions of some issues examined here.) The FDA is supposed to help patients, not hurt them. Why does it ban asthma medicines? The answer lies in the Montreal Protocol, a treaty the U.S. ratified in 1988. Strongly supported by President Ronald Reagan, the Montreal Protocol was designed to phase out chlorofluorocarbons and other substances that deplete the ozone layer and increasethe risk of skin cancer and cataracts. The U.S. ratified the treaty in part because its benefits

product w i t hout o z one-depleting substances. If no such barriers exAt the same time, the Montreal ist, the FDA indicated that it would Protocol has produced some less- not deem the productto be "essenthan-ideal consequences. Asthma tial. n This is a difficult test to meet, medicineshave long been delivered because "technical barriers" can ofthrough inhalers that use CFCs. Un- ten be surmounted in theory (even if der the language of the treaty, there they aren't surmounted in reality). is a strong argument that such inAfter adopting its 2002 rule, the halers must be banned, even though FDA has taken numerous steps to they contribute very little to deple- ban asthma medicines. tion of the ozone layer, and even For severaldecades, Primatene though such bans can make asthma Mist was the only over-the-counmedicines more expensive and less ter asthma inhaler sold in the U.S. easily available. Several million people used it every Asthma inhaler bans turn out to year. For some of them, Primatene be a troublesome case study in "risk- Mist was a "fill-in" drug, purchased risk tradeoffs," which arise when a when their prescription for asthma well-motivated effort at reducing one medicine ran out. For those withrisk ends upincreasing or creating out serious or chronic asthma, Prianother risk. matene Mist seemed well-suited to The Montreal P r otocol a l lows occasional use. Asthma sufferers exemptions for "essential uses." In lacking health insurance or a regu2002, (duringthe George W. Bush lar doctor liked the over-the-counter administration, not usually known option because Primatene Mist was for regulatory overkill), the FDA is- inexpensive and easy to buy. This sued a complex rule intended to es- group included a number of poor tablish when an asthma medicine people. would count as "essential." It is true that many doctors, inAccording to the FDA, a central cluding asthma specialists, were unquestion is whether there are "tech- enthusiastic about Primatene Mist, nical barriers" to formulating the which could cause harmful side ef-

fects, including headaches and dizziness. In their view, asthma sufferers shouldbe under regular medical care, and p rescription medicines would do significantly better in addressing their problem. But when it b anned Primatene Mist (in 2008, in the closing months of the Bush a dministration), the FDA didn't act for that reason. Nor did it examine whether, for reasons other than the Montreal Protocol, the nation's only over-the-counter asthma medicine should be removed from the market. Indeed, the agency explicitly relied on the treaty and acknowledged that the resulting ban could cost "hundreds of millions of dollars annually, and increase hospitalizations and emergency department visits for asthma significantly." The FDA has also prohibited numerous p r e scription m e d i cines. Again during the Bush administration, it banned widely prescribed albuterol inhalers that used CFCs. The good news is that CFC-free substitutes are available. The bad news is that the substitutes have been significantly more expensive, and many asthmatics don't think they work as well.

By the end of this year, asthma suffererswill be unable to purchase the Maxair Autohaler, which has been used by hundreds of thousands of Americans who say they benefit from its unique delivery system. Giving notice of the ban in 2010, the FDA deservescreditfor providing consumers with ample time to seek alternatives. But some asthma sufferers won't be happy to learn t hat their o w n g o v ernment h as made their preferred asthma inhaler unavailable. Asthma is a serious problem in the U.S., particularly among the poor. We need to devote a lot of attention to how to make effective medicines both cheaper and more available. Neither the Montreal Protocol nor the FDA can be blamed for the current situation. But it isn't terribly helpful if the federal government is forbidding medicines that are significantly cheaper and, for some patients, more effective than those that are allowed on the market. — Cass R. Sunstein, the Robert Walmsley University professor at Harvard Law School, is a Bloomberg View columnist and co-author of "Nudge" and author of "Simpler: The Future of Government."


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

Wyden

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Clark L. Wetzel, of Bend Jan. 29, 1938 - Oct. 20, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemohalchapehccm

Services: A memorial graveside service will be held in Clark's honor at 1:00 pm on Sunday, October 27, 2013 at Deschutes Memorial Gardens located at 63875 N. Hwy 97 in Bend. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice House, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org in Clark's memory.

Donald Bousman, of Sweet Home (formerly of Redmond) Oct. 20, 1952 - Oct. 20, 2013 Arrangements: Sweet Home Funeral Chapel, (541) 367-2891 www.sweethomefuneral.com Services: No services are planned at this time.

Paul Martin Latham Oct. 1, 1965- Oct. 17, 2013 A fter a l o n g b a t tle w i t h multiple sclerosis and cancer, Paul passed away on the early morning of October 17, 2013. P aul wa s b or n i n L o n g B each, California t o B o b a nd Mary L a t ham. He at tended St. A n t h ony H . S ., a nd after m o v in g t o O r egon, graduated from Cottage Gr ov e H . S . I t w as here that he was awarded h is Eagle S cout w i t h a l l three palms. H e e n j o y ed b ackpacking , camp i n g , a nd b e in g o u t d o ors. H e continued h i s ed u c a t ion earning online college degrees. P a u l w or k e d i n m anagerial c a p acities i n the housing industry. P aul is s u r v ived b y h i s p arents, B o b a n d M ar y L atham of Ben d , h i s 99-year-old g r a n d m other, Marion Field of Bend, two younger si b l i n gs , A my Steigman and Eric, also of Bend, and t w o n e p h ews, Blake Steigman and Mas on Steigman. H e w i l l b e greatly missed. A Memorial Mass will be celebrated at t h e H i s t oric C hurch o f S t . F r a n cis o f Assisi Catholic Church on Thursday, Oc t o b e r 24, 2 013 at 10:00 am. I n u r n m ent w il l f o l l o w a t D e s chutes Memorial Gardens. D eschutes M emor i a l Chapel is honored to serve PauI's family.

Carma Jean Walker, of Redmond July 30, 1938 - Oct. 20, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Friday, Oct. 25:10:00am viewing followed by 11:00am service at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 450 SW Rimrock Drive, Redmond; interment to follow at Terrebonne Pioneer Cemetery.

Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Traci Lynn Clore-Mentgen

T raci w a s born January 9, 1961, in EnterTraci Mentgen nrise, OR, to h er arents, Dale W. and Coriss A. (Winters) Boner. She lived in th e communities of Bend, La Grande, and Joseph, OR. Traci was married to Kevin W. Clore until hi s p assing i n 2 0 02. She then married Louis R. Mentgen Jr. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r spouse, Louis o f J o s eph; her parents, Dale and Corliss Boner o f E n t e r p rise; a nd niece, M i c helle B u c zynski. T r a c i w as p r e ceded i n de a t h by h er b rother, B r ia n K . B o n e r ; grandparents, Lyle K. and Sylvia I. Boner; Arthur and Joy Bartmess and her husband, Kevin W. Clore. Memorial co n t r i b u tions may be made to the Kevin W. Clore Education Foundation in care of Loveland Funeral Chapel, 1508 4th St., La Grande OR 97850. Online condolences to the f amily m a y b e m a d e a t www.lovelandfuneralchapel.com.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld:

Larry Cathey, 34:The (Grants Pass) Daily Courier sports editor, a Michigan native, spent five years at the paper, starting as a sports reporter. He became sports editor in February 2012. Cathey started his career as a stringer at the Detroit News and worked at newspapers in Paris, Texas, and Hugo, Okla. He won best sports story in the 2012 Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association awards for a story about a University of Michigan football player wearing No. 11, of Al Wistert, a Grants Pass resident, who was an NFL All-Pro in the 1940s. Died

Walter Morris helmed first all-black parachute battalion duringWWII By Samantha Hogan The Washing ton Post

During World War II, Walter Morris became one of the first black paratroopers in the Army — an original member Wayne Douglas of the all-black 555th ParaDonaldson, of Bend chute I n f antr y C o m p any, July 21, 1945 - Oct. 10, 2013 which was activated on Dec. Arrangements: 30, 1943. Autumn Funerals, Bend Toward the end of the war, 541-318-0842 the group was tapped for a www.autumnfunerals.net secret mission called OperaServices: tion Firefly. A Celebration of Life will While o n a wes t bound be held Saturday, train in May 1945 from Camp October 26, 2013, Mackall, N.C., then-1st Sgt. from 2:00-6:00 p.m., at Morris thought he and t he the Comfort Inn, 62065 men under his command S.E. 27th Street, Bend, Oregon 97702. were headed to the Pacific; perhaps to join up with Gen. Douglas MacArthur. W hen t h e y a r r i ve d a t P endleton Fi e l d M or r i s hopped off to buy cigarettes Jan. 9, 1961 - Oct. 13, 2013 for what he thought was a Traci L y n n C l o r e -Ment- quick stopover. g en, 52, o f J o s e ph, O R , "There was this group of p assed away at he r h o m e loggers sitting around this big o n S u nday, O c t ober 1 3 , 2 013. A Cel e b r a tion o f potbellied stove," he recalled L ife w i l l b e h e l d a t th e in 2000. "And they said, 'Oh, New Life Center in I sland you're here. We've been waitCity on ing for you a long time. We Saturday, read in the paper that you October +i' . ' 2 6 , at 2:00 were coming out here'" to be

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybesubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

FEATURED OBITUARY

Saturday in Grants Pass. Lawrence R. Klein, 93: Predicted America's economic boom after World War II and was awarded the 1980 Nobel in economic science for developing statistical models that are used to analyze and predict global economic trends. Disputed the conventional wisdom that the postwar period would drive the U.S.economy back into a lengthy depression. Using his econometric models based on mathematical equations, he correctly forecast a flourishing economy built on surging demand for consumer goods and housing. Died Sunday in Gladwyne, Pa. — From wire reports

"None of the

commandinggenerals wanted to accept the black battalion because it meant integration, which had

"

.

BS

.. l talked about

Continued from B1 the employerOne student made the political p e r s onal an d based system of asked wh y h i s f a t h er's insurance coming small business was recent- from World War II. ly told it would have to pay l bet it's something more for employee health insurance. that affects a lot I n r e s ponse, W y d e n of Central Oregon asked the student to follow up with specifics so that he businesses; and could reply in detail at a is something we later point. should talk about " That was one o f t h e and understand." best questions I've heard" Wyden said after the event. — U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, "Obviously, I couldn't anD-Ore. swer in detail from the seat of my pants, not knowing the specifics. But t h a t 's w hy I t a l ked a bout t h e e mployer-based sy s t em nesses; and issomething of insurance coming from we should talk about and W orld War I I . I b e t i t ' s understand." something that affects a — Reporter: 541-633-2160, lot of Central Oregon busitleeds@bendbulletin.com

never been done." — Walter Morris, member of the 555th Parachute Infantry Company

sion. He joined the Army as a one-year volunteer in January 1941. After the Japanese attack on PearlHarbor that Decemb er, Morris c o ntinued h i s Army service as a clerk.

Officer school

In early spring 1943, he said he "washed out" of Infantry O f f i ce r C a n d idate School on the 12th week of a 13-week program. He had never attended basic training and attributed his failure to having never fired a rifle and his lack of combat training. smoke jumpers. He was relegated to guardMorris, who died on Oct. ing the parachute school at 13 at the age of 92, played a Fort Benning, Ga., with felpivotal role in a little-remem- l ow black soldiers from 4 bered theaterof war: the Pa- p.m., when the white paracific Northwest. trooper trainees left the field, As a s m oke j u mper, he until the students returned at parachuted out of airplanes 8 the next morning. to extinguish forest fires in Morris said the morale of remote areas that would take the African-Americans was days to reach by foot. The miserable. The post was weapon he most used was largely segregated, includa shovel, to dig trenches to ing its m o vie t heater and controlor stop the spread of exchange. "When w e w a l ke d p a st deadly fires. the post exchange, we could Triple Nickles see the German and Italian The Triple Nickles — as prisoners sitting at tables ... the 555th Parachute Infantry drinking and smoking, and Battalion was dubbed, with we, in the same uniforms, t he unusual spelling — r e could not go in," he said earsponded to more than 30 do- lier in 2013. mestic fires and made more Morris was determined than 1,000 individual jumps to boost the soldiers' self-esbetween 1943 and 1947, when teem. Under his command, they were augmenting the the men voluntarily began a U.S. Forest Service's smoke- daily regimen of strenuous jumper program. calisthenics similar to that of "None ofthe commanding white paratroopers. " Having just c ome f r om generals wanted t o a ccept the black battalion because O.C.S., I thought I knew how it meant integration, which to lead men," he said. "After had never been done," Morris all, I had just missed becomrecalled. ing an officer in the United By the time the 555th ar- States Army by one week." rived in Oregon, the threat of He later said that Lt. Gen. Japanese incendiary"balloon Ridgely Gaither, commandbombs" had largely ceased. er of the parachute school, Starting in November 1944, drove by one day and saw Japan sent more than 9,000 "50 black soldiers jumping such bombs across the Pa- up and down shouting, 'One cific, carried by trade winds. thousand one, one thousand A small portion reached the two.' He didn't know what to U.S. make of it, so he called me to Five children and a m i nhis office." ister's wife were k i l led by Gaither then confided in a balloon that exploded on him that a n e w , a l l -black May 5, 1945, at a picnic site parachute company was benear Bly. ing formed, and the general Mostly, Morris and his men invited Morris to be the first leapt out of planes to quell sergeant in the outfit. "I was fires started b y l i g h tning, elated," he said. "My heart althoughtless campers or ar- most burst." sonists. They underwent rigHe completed O.C.S. in Auorous training, learning how gust 1944 and was the only to use demolition equipment, black student in his class at how to climb trees and how Adjutant General School. to get out of a tree if a jumper Morris, who spent his postgot tangled with heavy gear war career as a bricklayer in during the descent. North Carolina and then a There was also training in construction project superhow to avoid ugly encounters visor in New York, settled in with bears and rattlesnakes, Florida in the mid-1980s. He w hich v ie d f o r t h e f o o d was a resident of Palm Coast, dropped into the wilderness where he died at a hospital. by parachute. The cause was cardiac arIn 1948, three years after rest, his family said. the wa r e n d ed, P r esident H is f i r s t wi f e , Rub y Harry S. Truman signed an Lovette, died in 1979 after 35 executive order desegregat- years of marriage. The next ing the military. year, he married Irma Page. "We didn't win any wars, She died in 1999. but we did contribute," MorSurvivors i n c l ud e tw o ris told the Associated Press d aughters f r o m h i s fi r s t decades later. " What w e marriage, Patricia W o r thy proved was that the color of of Washington and Crystal a man had nothing to do with Poole of Palm Coast; two stephis ability." daughters, Jean Lanier of OrWalter Morris wa s b o rn mond Beach, Fla., and VerneJan. 23, 1921, in Waynesboro, al Corbett of W o odbridge, Ga., and w a s t h e y o u ng- Va.; five grandchildren; and est and only male of seven eight great-grandchildren. children. One grandson, Army Maj. After high school gradua- Michael Fowles, graduated tion, he began an apprentice- from paratrooper school at ship as a bricklayer, but he Fort Benning in 2004 — 50 found construction work was years after Morrisreceived sparse during th e D e pres- his paratrooper wing pin.

Fire

Bend, 138 acres off China Hat Road and 80 acres withContinued from B1 in the Lava Cast Forest but The service also expects held off due to unfavorable to start the first of w h at winds and switched to the could be a w eek's worth prescribedfires near Wickof prescribed burning on iup. The hope was to keep a combined 1,372 acres in smoke away from Bend. the Ochoco National Forest Miller said f i r efighters around Prineville. The plan might light th e f i res of f includes 472 acres by Wild- China Hat and in the Lava cat Campground, 400 acres Cast Forest Thursday or 12 miles northeast of Post Friday. "Again, they have to wait and 500 acres 15 miles south of Mitchell. for the right time for those, Monday, fi re f i ghters so we don't push a bunch of planned to burn more than smoke into Bend," she said. 200 acres on the Deschutes — Reporter: 541-617-7812, N ational Forest south o f ddarling@bendbulletin.com

Hospital

erned by an elected board," she said. Continued from B1 Goodman and St. Charles "We kind of questioned it Madras CEO Jeanine Genjust like every other taxpay- try said they were unfamiler, how does this work now iar with the specifics of the that t h ey've t r a nsferred hospital district's outstandtheir assets to St. Charles?" ing expenses and did not she said. know when the district's Lisa Goodman, spokes- taxing authority might be woman fo r S t . C h a r les retired. H ealth System, said t h e Janelle Orcutt, hospital hospital district board will district board chairwoman, be using the property tax did not respond Tuesday income to pay legal and to inquiries regarding the accounting fees, which matter. r emain unpaid f rom t h e In addition to the Madras transfer-of-assets process. facility, St. Charles Health "None of the money goes System owns an d o p erto St. Charles. It's held in ates the hospitals in Bend, a separate account for the Redmond and Prineville. Mountain V iew H o spital — Reporter: 541-383-0387, District, which is still govshammers@bendbufletin.com

nator for theWalker RangeForest

Briefing

Protective Association, said11 fires were reportedbetween about

Continued from B1

1:30 p.m.and3:50 p.m., all within

Authorities investigate fires near LaPine

a mile of each other near Masten Butte. The largest of the fires

burned alittle more than anacre, she said. Murray saidfalling temperatures in theafternoon helpedkeep

An OregonStatePolice arson investigator is looking in to a

series of firesdiscoveredTuesday about10 miles southwest of La Pine along the DeschutesKlamath county line.

the fires from spreading. Shesaid

Echo Murray,dispatchcoordi-

theOSP hasopenedaninvestigation in to theorigin of the fires. — Bulletin staff reports

EDMOND ~ I ND O W

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• I

Join us for our annual...

PAR1T Cf COSTUME CONTItlIT Thursday • October31" at 11:30 am We invite local seniors, their

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I



IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Pr e p sports, C4 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C4 MLB, C3

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

PREP VOLLEYBALL

COLLEGES

MLB: WORLD SERIES

NCAA finally penalizes Miami

ar inas, ox

The NCAA on Tuesday cited the University of Miami for a decade of violations in its men's basketball and football

set to renew cto er riva

programs, penalizing the university with three

years of probation and a loss of somescholarships. A 102-pageinfractions report by the NCAA concluded that Miami "lacked institutional control" over the programs as itfailed

Nextup

By Ben Walker The Associated Press

BOSTON — Lance Lynn squeezed through a door leading into the Green Monster, shimmied along a cramped space behind the famed left-field wall and peered out through a tiny metal slot in the Fenway Park scoreboard. "A little snug for me," the burly St. Louis pitcher said. Plenty of Cardinals got their first look at the century-old ballpark during a workout Tuesday, a day before they open the World Series against the Boston Red Sox. Hardly the first time we have seen these old rivals together, however. From Stan the Man and the Splendid Splinter to Gibby and Yaz to Pedro and Pujols, the Redbirds and Red Sox have created their own history. Now, they are set to meet for the fourth time in "that Octobery kind of air," as Cardinals Game 1 starting pitcher Adam Wainwright described it. Jon Lester will oppose him tonight, facing a St. Louis lineup that got a late

to monitor a major booster, coachesand

student athletes. The penalties issued by the NCAA were in addition to the self-imposed penalties by Miami in recent

years, which included a ban on bowl games in 2011 and 2012. The NCAA's punishment, which was ac-

cepted by Miami, ends its lengthy, high-profile investigation into the university's athletics department. The football team, currently 6-0 and ranked seventh in the nation, will lose nine

ttt ~

I

scholarships over three years, and the men's basketball team will lose

a scholarship in eachof the next three seasons. The inquiry, which dates to 2009, centered on allegations that a booster, Nevin Shapiro,

f 41

gave hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, as well as other benefits, to Miami athletes. The Miami investigation was sidetracked for a time after NCAA

fl''

iijis~iti'

World Series, Game1, St. Louis at Boston • When:Today, 5 p.m. • TV:Fox • Radio: KICE-AM 940

Inside A breakdown of the World

Series,C3 Classlcmafchno

ii'i~il®I'.= =' '

= ' = '=

~-at ~aay, g f g I t.'f„.~.l

boost. Allen Craig, who hit a major league-leading .454 with runners in scoring position but has not played since Sept. 4 because of sprained left foot, is set to return. "I feel like I'm in a good spot," said the cleanup man, who will be the Cardinals' designated hitter. Weather couldbe a factor. Temperatures are supposed to dip into the low 40s, and rain is in the forecast. See Series/C3

, .

enforcement staff improperly obtained information for its case

from a criminal lawyer representing Shapiro.

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Crook County's Kathryn Kaonis (8) hits the ball through the fingertips of Ridgeview's Rhian Sage (5) during the second game of Tuesday night's match in Prineville.

• •

The NCAA president, Mark Emmert, announced the misstep

e

publicly in January, calling it"shocking" and saying the organiza-

• I

• Crook County rolls to victory against Class4A rival Ridgeview

the NCAA has been criticized for its handling of

a spate of recent cases,

By Emily Oller

including ones involving Texas A&M, Penn State, UCLA, Southern California and North Carolina, and for being uneven in

PRINEVILLE — In a matchup featuring a pair of top-10 Class 4A programs, Tuesday night belonged to Hannah Troutman. Totaling 25 kills and 14 digs, the Crook County senior led the Cowgirls to a t hree-set volleyball w i n o v e r Ridgeview 25-11, 25-15, 25-19 to • More prep clinch the top spot in 4A's Special s P o rts coverage,C4 District 1. "The game was fantastic tonight," Crook County coach Rosie Honl said. "Hannah Troutman worked her butt off so amaz-

the Miami punishments

seemed inconsistent in comparison with others levied by the NCAA in

recent years. — New York Times

ingly. She had agreatgame." But for Troutman, Tuesday's win — which featured 4A's No. 2-ranked Cowgirls and No. 8 Ravens, according to the Oregon School Activities Association — transcended her own performance. "Personally, I don't think tonight was individual," Troutman said. "Our whole team played so well. And we keep getting better everyday at practice. We work really well as a team and it was

MLB

Giants re-sign Lincecum Ridgeview's Chloe Ross goes for a kill past Crook County's Hannah Troutman.

a great game." See Cowgirls /C4

contract through the

CYCLING COMMENTARY

2015 season. The deal is pending a cum has a full no-trade clause in the new deal.

General manager Brian Sabeansaid when

the season ended that

among his top priorities was bringing back the two-time NL Cy Young Award winner, who also

indicated he cherishes familiarity and wanted to stay with the only

club he has known. Lincecum went 10-14 with a 4.37 ERA and193 strikeouts in 32 starts

thisseason.Lincecum is 89-70 with a 3.46 ERA

over seven major league seasons. — The Associated Press

O

David J. Philhp/TheAssociated Press

St. Louis pitcher Michael Wacha runs out of a scoreboard underneath Fenway Park's Green Monster during practice for the World Series on Tuesday at Fenway Park in Boston. Game1 is tonight.

The Bulletin

its penalties. To some observers,

physical, which had yet to be scheduled. Lince-

• •

®1

Miami inquiry cameas

Francisco Giants just as he hoped, reaching agreement Tuesdayon a $35 million, two-year

i

i •

tion would conduct an outside review of its enforcement arm. The results of the

SAN FRANCISCO — Tim Lincecum is staying put with the San

e

Drug agency exposedArmstrong, but what about everyone else? By Juliet Macur New York Times News Service

ome were cyclists who injected themselves with banned endurance boosters and popped testosterone pills. Some lay side by side with teammates while blood dripped from chilled IV bags and into their swelling veins. Others were doctors who helped cyclists dope or middlemen who ferried drugs for Lance Armstrong's U.S. Postal Service team. Those people — more thanthree dozen of them — were mentioned in the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency report that exposed Armstrong's long-lived lies and duplicity. But a year after the report was released, we still do not know the

S

identities of most of them. Their names were blacked outfrom the pages of evidence, replaced by labels like Rider-15 or Other-4. Travis Tygart, the chief executive of the anti-doping agency, said the names were not revealed because USADA was investigating those people for possible doping offenses. Common sense says their names were also not included in the report because they would not be good witnesses or because USADA already had the goods on Armstrong, its marked man. But now, 12 months later, none of those doping investigations have turned into official cases that punished people for breaking the rules.

SeeCycling/C4

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Ducks are still on top, but surprises abound in Pac-12 By John Marshall The Associated Press

PHOENIX — The Pac12 Conference just passed the midpoint of the 2013 season and one thing has not changed from previous seasons:Oregon isthe team to beat. The Ducks, third in the season's first BCS standings, have dominated through the season'sfirstseven games,

winning by an average of 40 points per contest while churning out more yards and points than all but one team in the country.

Beyond Oregon's dominance, the Pac-12 has been full of surprises through the first half of the season, from upsets, breakout performances and newfound depth across the conference. See Pac-12/C4

Don Ryan /The Associated Press

Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota has led the Ducks to a 7-0 record and a No. 2 national ranking.


C2

THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY SOCCER

Time

TV/Radio

9 a.m.

F o x Sports 1

COREBOARD

UEFAChampions League, CSKA Moscowvs.Manchester City

UEFAChampions League, Manchester United vs. Real Sociedad

11:30a.m. Fox Sports1

UEFAChampions League, RSC Anderlecht vs. Paris Saint-Germain BASKETBALL NBA, preseason, Brooklyn at Boston

11:30 a.m.

Root

4 p.m. ESPN NBA, preseason, Chicago atOklahomaCity 6:30 p.m. ESPN BASEBALL MLB, World Series, St. Louis at Boston 5 p.m. F ox, 940-AM HOCKEY NHL, Boston at Buffalo 5 p.m. NBCSN VOLLEYBALL Women's college, Oregon atStanford 7 :30 p.m. Pac - 1 2 GOLF PGA Tour, Cimb Classic 8 p.m. Golf Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship 1 1:30 p.m. ES P N2

THURSDAY GOLF

European Tour,BMWMasters LPGA Tour, Taiwan Championship PGA Tour, Cimb Classic SOCCER UEFA Europa League, FC Sheriff Tiraspol vs. Tottenham Hotspur FC

Time 3 a.m. 9 a.m. 8 p.m.

TV/Radio Golf Golf Golf

ON DECK Today Boys soccer:SweetHomeat Sisters, 4p.m.;Cotage GroveatLaPme,4p m. Girls soccer: Sistersat SweetHome, 4:30 p.m.; La Pine atCottageGrove, 7p.m. Cross-country: Madras at Tri-VaffeyConference champi onshipsinEstacada,2p.m. Thursday Boyssoccer: Mountain View at Bend,4:30 p.m.; Madras at LaSalle 4p m Girls soccer: La SaffeatMadras,4:30p.m.; Mountain View atBend,3 p.m.; Summit at CrookCounty, 3 p.m. Cross-country: Sisters, LaPineat Sky-EmLeague championships at LaneCom munity College in Eugene,TBA Volleyball: CentralChristianatHorizon, 5p.m., Bend at MountainView,630 pm. Boys water polo: Summiat t Ridgeview,TBA Girls water polo: Summiat t Rldgeview,TBA

Saturday Boys soccer:Uma tiffaat Culver,1 pm Cross-country: Ridgeview, CrookCounty atGreater OregonLeaguedistricts in Milton-Freewater, 11 a.mc Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Summit at Special District 1 championships inRedm ond, I p.m. Boys waterpolo: 5ANorth championshipsatJuniper Swim 8FitnessCenter,TBA

BASEBALL

10 a.m. Fox Sports1 noon

Fo x Sports1

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

WORLDSERIES

Three hours of answering every question tossedhiswayended their search rather quickly. After one interview, it was over. The

Reds stayed in-house for their next manager, giving Price a three-year deal Tuesday that came with expectations that he'll take them deep into the playoffs

right away. "Bryan is exceptional," owner BobCastellini said. "We've been fortunate to be with

himlongenough to know how exceptional he is." TheReds fired Dusty Baker with a year left on his two-year deal after a

NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AU TimesPDT

of14 players in a column posted last week onGolf.com. Hetold

of getting caught cheating on a math test in the fourth grade,

and how the teacher crossed a line through his "100" and gave him an "F." Chamblee followed that anecdote by writing, "I remember when we only talked about Tiger's golf. I miss those

days. He wonfive times and contended in majors andwon the Vardon Trophy and ... how shall we say this ... was a little cavalier with the rules." He then gave Woods a "100" with a line through it, followed by the "F." The 51-year-old Chamblee

day night. "My intention was to

The job carries enormous expec- note Tiger's rules infractions tations for the 51-year-old Price, this year, but comparing that to

— A judge hasrefused to over-

turn his ruling that UCLA must

give up its baseball stadium that is leased on land from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. But U.S. District Judge S. James Otero said Monday that UCLA could appeal. The national

FOOTBALL Harvin practices for Seattle — Percy Harvin was back on the practice field for the Seattle Seahawks onTuesday. When the receiver finally gets

into a game isstill unknown.

into a game assoon as hecan,

for veterans' housing and health

but wants to be smart and not

return too soon. Harvin has not played in a regular-season game since Week 9 oflast season when he was with Minnesota

and suffered anankle injury against the Seahawks.

Parent alleges dullying

after 91-0 game —Aparent at a Texas high school that lost

a football game91-0 has filed a bullying complaint against the winning coach. The Fort Worth

Wednesday, saying shemade

Star-Telegram reports that

up her mind after taking advice

Aledo High School coach Tim

from rugby player Israel Dagg. The LPGATour confirmed Oct.

Buchanan learned of the online complaint against him Saturday,

10 that it received a petition from Ko asking that it waive its mini-

the day after his team beat Western Hills in a 4A matchup. State

mum age requirement of18. Ko was also the youngest winner of

law requires Aledo's principal to

an LPGA tournament at15 when

she won the 2012Canadian

prepare a report. Western Hills coach John Naylor told the paper

Open, a title she defended this

he disagreed with the bullying al-

investigate the complaint and

year. She hasyet to miss a cut in 23 professional tournaments.

legation. Buchanan's team isaveraging 69.3pointsagameand

Analyst apologizes to

is on its way to a 7-0 record. He pulled his starters after 21 plays

Tiger —Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee apologized to

Tiger Woods onTuesdayafter insinuating the world's No. 1

South L T 1 0 3 0 4 0 6 0 North W L T

W 6 5 3 3

have the leasedproperty used

money. Ko, ranked No. 5 in the world, tweeted her decision on

Indiana107,Atlanta89 Detroit99,Washington 96 SanAntonio123,Orlando101 Phoenix88,OklahomaCity 76 L.A. Lakers108,Utah94

o 0

3

Today's Games MemphisatToronto, 4p.m. BrooklynatBoston, 4p.m. Minnesotaat Philadelphia,4 p.m. Washington vs. ClevelandatCincinnati, 4 p.m. NewYorkvs MilwaukeeatGreenBay, Wis.,5p.m. Miami atNewOrleans, 5p.m. AtlantaatDallas, 5:30p.m. PhoenixatDenver,6p.mi Chicagovs. OklahomaCity atWichita, Kan., 6:30p.m. GoldenStateatSacramento, 7p.m. Utah atL.A.Clippers,7:30p.m.

HOCKEY NHL

"And remember ... You're playing at the collegiate level now. The players are bigger, the game moves faster and you can be prosecuted as an adult."

during the game,andthe clock ran uninterrupted beginning in the third quarter. — From wire reports

2 4 4

0 .7 1 4 0 .4 2 9 0 .4 2 9

Quarterbacks Att Com Yds TD Inf 3 5

6 3

1 5 5 7 3 4

Rushers

Att Yds Avg LG TD 135 561 4 16 24 6 121 542 4.48 23 1 110 446 4.05 20 1 95 413 4.35 25t 8 86 380 442 59 5 115 366 3.18 23 0 90 366 4.07 2 7 1 90 362 402 54t 1 106 333 3.14 16 2 78 320 4.10 20 3

Receivers No Yds Avg LG TD And.Johnson,HDU 48 584 12.2 42 0 An. Brown,PIT

Edelman,NWE Cameron,CLE Welker,DEN

A.. Green, CIN Decker,DEN A. Gates,SND De. Thomas,DEN Ke. Wright,TEN

47 548 11.7 45 46 455 99 44 45 515 11.4 53 44 474 10.8 33 43 619 14.4 82t 42 627 14.9 61 42 497 11.8 56t 41 610 14.9 78t 40 433 10.8 32

2 2 6

8 5 3 2 5 I

NFC Individual Leaders Week7 Quarterbacks Att Com Yds TD Int

M Ryan,ATL 244 1 71 19221 3 A.Rodgers, GBY 220 143 1906 13 Brees,NOR 237 157 1958 14 Romo,DAL 265 181 2010 15 R. Wilson, SEA 18 7 115 1489 11 M. Stafford,DET 290 178 2129 15 C. Newton, CAR 170 108 1331 10 Cutler,CHI 225 146 1658 12

1 1.7 41 5 13.5 79 6 14.1 81t 2 14.8 70t 4 1 1.7 44 2 16.5 61t 5 16.0 56i 6 15.1 591 4 1 1.1 27 3 10.5 25 3

Top 25 Saturday's Games No. 1Alabamavs. Tennessee,12:30p.m. No. 2Oregonvs.No.12UCLA,4 pm No. 3FloridaStatevs N.CState,12:30p.m. No. 40hioStatevs. PennState,5 p.m. No. 5Missourivs.No.20SouthCarolina, 4p.m. No. 6Baylor atKansas, 4p.m. No. 7Miamivs.WakeForest, 9a.m. No. 8StanfordatOregonState, 7:30p.m. No. 9ClemsonatMaryland,12:30 p.m. No. 10TexasTechat No. 17Oklahoma, 12:30p.m. No.11 Auburn vs. FAU, 4:30p.m. No.13 LSU vs. Furman,4 p.m. No.14TexasA8Mvs. Vanderbilt, 9:21a.m. No.15 Fresno State at San DiegoState,7:30 p.m. No.16VirginiaTechvs. Duke,1230p m. No. 18Louisville at SouthFlorida, 9a.m. No.19 Oklahoma Stateat lowaState,9a.m. No.21UCFvs. Uconn,9a.m. No. 23Northernfflinois vs.EasternMichigan,12:30 p.m. No.25NebraskaatMinnesota,9a.m.

AFCIndividual Leaders Week 7

J. Charles,KAN A. Foster,HO U Ry. Mathews,SND Moreno,DEN F.Jackson,BUF Chr. Johnson,TEN B. Poweff,NYJ Spiller,BUF T. Richardson, IND Ridley,NWE

46 540 42 569 41 580 40 591 40 466 37 610 37 593 36 544 35 388 35 369

FAR WEST BoiseSt.atBYU,5 p.m.

West L T Pct 1 0 .8 5 7

289 207 2565 25 249 184 2132 15 152 94 1047 8 249 164 1924 11 224 136 1574 10 215 143 1655 7 138 89 1061 5 219 133 1577 9 150 85 985 5 250 145 1570 7

Receivers No Yds Avg LG TD

Friday's Game

Thursday'sGame CarolinaatTampaBay,5:25p.m. Sunday'sGames Cleveandat KansasCity,10a.m. Buffalo atNewOrleans,10a.m. Miami atNewEngland,10 a.m. Dallas atDetroit,10 a.m N.Y.GiantsatPhiladelphia, 10a.m. SanFranciscovs.Jacksonville at London,10 a.m. Pittsburgh at Oakland 105pm N.Y.JetsatCincinnati, I:05 p.m. AtlantaatArizona,1:25p.m. Washington atDenver,1:25 p.m. Green BayatMinnesota,5:30p.m. Open:Baltimore,Chicago,Houston, Indianapolis, San Diego,Tennessee Monday'sGame Seattle atSt.Louis,5:40 p.m.

P.Manning,DEN P. Rivers,SND Locker,TEN Dalton,CIN Luck, IND Roethlisberger,PIT Pryor,OAK TannehifMIA f, ManuelBUF , Ale. Smith,KAN

D. Martin,TAM De. Wiliams,CAR D. Murray,DAL Re. Bush,DET

Att Yds Avg LG TD 141 685 4.86 41i 3 138 578 4 .19 43 6 127 547 4.31 34t 5 116 533 4 59 55 6 115 511 4.44 78t 5 91 472 5.19 45t 3 127 456 3 .59 28 I 106 434 4 .09 27 0 91 428 4.70 41 3 98 426 4.35 39 1

Thursday'sGames SOUTH Marshall atMiddleTennessee,4:30p.m. Kentuckyat Mississippi St.,4:30 p.m.

Pct .6 6 7 .5 7 1 .5 7 1 .1 6 7

0 0 0 0

Rushers

L. Mccoy,PHL Lynch,SEA Gore SNF Forte,CHI A Peterson,MIN A. Morris,WAS

SOUTHWES T Louis iana-Lafayeff e23,ArkansasSt.7

Pct .8 3 3 .5 0 0 . 3 33 00 0

2 3 3 5

262 159 1687 14 4 132 71 1 185 5 2

(Sobject tochange) Tuesday'sGame

0 .3 3 3 0 .1 43

W 5 3 2 0

NewOreans Carolina Atlanta TampaBay

Seattle SanFrancisco St. Louis Arizona

lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union sought to

of16 after foregoing more than $1 million in potential prize

2 4 1 6

Chicago Minnesota

it was a "cut and dry" decision to have the surgery, but difficult to accept joining a new team. Harvin said he wants to get back

to turn professional at the age

Dallas Philadelphia Washington N.Y.Giants

4 4 4 1

since undergoing hip surgery in early August. Harvin said a bone in his hip was impacting his labrumandcausingpain.Hesaid

— Top-ranked amateur Lydia Ko has announcedher decision

Tuesday'sGames

e o

Schedule AU TimesPDT

South

East W L T Pct 4 3 0 .5 7 1 3 4 0 .4 2 9

Detroit

in Jackie Robinson Stadium for nearly 50 years. In February, Otero ruled the VA violated federal law by leasing part of its

GOLF Teen officially goespro

0

College

L T Pct Indianapolis 2 0 .7 1 4 Tennessee 4 0 429 Houston 5 0 .2 8 6 Jacksonville 7 0 .0 0 0 North W L T Pct Cincinnati 5 2 0 .7 14 Baltimore 3 4 0 .4 2 9 Cleveand 3 4 0 .4 2 9 Pittsburgh 2 4 0 .3 3 3 West W L T Pcf Kansas Cit y 7 0 0 1. 0 00 Denver 6 1 0 .8 5 7 S an Diego 4 3 0 .57 1 Oakland 2 4 0 .33 3 NATIONALCONFERENCE

GreenBay

championBruinshaveplayed

care.

W 5 3 2 0

cheating in grade school went too far," he wrote.

Harvin was limited in his return to practice for the Seahawks. It was his first work with the team

West L.A. property for commercial use to UCLA and others. A

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct 5 2 0 .7 14 4 3 0 .5 7 1 3 3 0 .5 0 0 3 4 0 .4 2 9

Woods for last in his report card

implosion by the pitching staff.

UCLA must cedestadium

o

B. Marshall,CHI D. Bryant,DAL Ju. Jones,ATL Cruz,NYG Garcon,WAS De. Jackson,PHL J. Graham, NOR V. Jackson,TAM Witten,DAL Gonzalez,ATL

player cheated during his five-

final-week fade that included an

successful pitching coaches in the majors but has nevermanaged at any level.

AU TimesPDT

0

FOOTBALL

win season. Chambleesaved

apologized in aseries of posts on his Twitter account on Tues-

who hasbeen one ofthe most

PreseasonGlance

E

S. Bradford,STL Vick, PHL

SPORTS IN BRIEF

list of manager candidates.

NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

c

(Best-of-7;x-if necessary) AH gamestel evisedby Fox St. Louis vs. Boston Today,Oct. 23 St. Louis(Wainwright19-9) at Boston (Lester15-8),07 5 pm. Thursday,Oct. 24: St. Louis(Wacha4-1) at Boston (Lackey10-13),5:07p.m. Saturday, Oct 26 Boston(Buchholz12-1)at St.Louis (Kely 10-5),5:07p.m. Sunday,Oct.27. Boston(Peavy12-5) at St. Louis (Lynn15-10),5:15p.m. x-Monday, Oct.28: BostonatSt.Louis, 5:07p.m. x-Wedne sday,Oct.30:St.LouisafBoston,5:07p.m. x-Thursday, Oct.31: St.Louisat Boston,5:07 p.m.

NFL

was first on the Cincinnati Reds'

BASKETBALL

PostseasonGlance AU TimesPDT

4:30 p.m. ESPN College, Marshall at Middle Tennessee State 4:30 p.m. Fox Sports 1 NFL, Carolina at Tampa Bay 5:25 p.m. NFL CFL, Winnipeg atToronto 4 :30 p.m. NBC S N BASEBALL MLB, World Series, St. Louis at Boston 5 p.m. F ox, 940-AM BASKETBALL 5 p.m. TNT NBA, preseason, Houston atSan Antonio

3 4 5 5 4 4 5 7

NewEngland atColumbus,1 p.m. Chicagoat NewYork, 2p.m Coloradoat Vancouver,5p.m. Los AngelesatSeattle Fc,6 p.m.

ro fxs

MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

College, Kentucky at Mississippi State

— Pitching coach Bryan Price

o

MLB

Valencia CF vs. FC St. Gallen FOOTBALL

Reds choosemanager

In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick

Friday Football: MountainViewat Bend, 7p.m., Roosevelt at Redmnd, o 7 p.mcSummit at Ridgeview,7 p.m.; Marshtie datCrookCounty, 7 p.m.; Madrasat Estacada,7 p.m.;Sisters atLaPine, 7p.m.; Culverat Toledo, 7 p.m.;ButteFallsat Gilchrist, 3 p.m. Boys soccer:SummitatSisters,4 p.m.

UEFAEuropa League,

BASEBALL

IN THE BLEACHERS

NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AU TimesPDT

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division

GP W L OT PtsGF GA 10 7 3 0 14 34 24 10 6 3 1 13 24 24 7 5 2 0 10 20 10 8 5 3 0 10 26 21 9 5 4 0 10 29 19 8 3 3 2 8 21 24 10 3 6 1 7 22 35 10 1 8 1 3 13 28 Metropolitan Division 7 USC 6.5 Utah GP W L OT PtsGF GA Tulsa 3 3.5 TULANE 7 2 0 14 31 20 WASHINGTON 24.5 25 Cal ifomia Pittsburgh 9 9 4 2 3 11 22 26 KANSAS ST 9.5 10.5 W. Virginia Carolina 3 3 9 29 28 Michigan St 11 11 ILL INOIS N.Y.Islanders 9 3 C olumbus 9 4 5 0 8 23 23 MIAMI-FLA 21 22.5 Wake Forest 4 5 0 8 26 29 FLORIDA ST 29.5 31.5 NcState Washington 9 NewJersey 9 1 5 3 5 18 30 OKLAHOMA 7 6.5 T e xas Tech N .Y. Rang ers 7 2 5 0 4 11 29 TCU 1.5 2 Texas Philadelphia 8 I 7 0 2 11 24 4 IOWA 4 N o rthwestem Western Conference NEVADA 6 6.5 Unlv Central Division 6.5 Wy oming SAN JOSEST 5.5 GP W L OT PtsGF GA Stanford 5 4.5 OREGON ST Colorado 9 8 1 0 16 28 12 W. KEN TUCKY 8 5 Troy 105 9 6 I 2 14 26 21 Notre Dame 20 20 AI R FORCEChicago 7 5 1 1 11 27 19 UL-MONROE 12 12.5 G eorgia StSt. Louis Nashvi l le 1 05 4 1 11 19 24 S. Alabama 2 2 TEX AS ST Minnesota 1 04 3 3 11 21 22 MISSISSIPPI 40.5 41.5 Idaho 10 4 5 I 9 26 30 N . Texas 1 0 . 5 11 S. MISSISSIPP I Winnipeg Dallas 8 3 5 0 6 20 28 5 FLORIDAINT'L La Tech 5.5 Pacific Division MISSOURI 3 2.5 S . Caro ina GP W L OT PtsGF GA Oklahoma St 13.5 13.5 IO WA ST 8 0 1 17 40 16 Baylor 35.5 35 KANSAS San Jose 9 9 7 2 0 14 32 23 N ebraska 1 0 .5 10.5 MINNESOT A Anaheim P hoenix 1 0 6 2 2 14 31 28 Louisville 20 20 S . FLORIDA 6 4 1 13 32 33 BOWLINGGREEN 3.5 4 Toledo Vancouver 11 4 0 12 26 25 O HIO ST 1 4 .5 14 5 Pe nn St Los Angeles 10 6 9 4 3 2 10 28 32 Lltep Calgary RICE 17.5 17 E dmonton 1 0 3 6 I 7 30 39 Fresno St 9 9 S AN DIEGO ST Twopointsfor awin, onepointfor ovedime loss. Colorado St 6 4.5 HAWAII NOTE:

TENNIS Professional WTAChampionships Tuesday At Sinan ErdemDome Istanbul

Purse: $6million (TourChampionship) Surface: Hard-Indoor Round Robin Group A SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates,def. Angelique Kerber(8), Germany,6-3, 6-1. Petra Kvitova(5), CzechRepublic, def. Agnieszka Radwanska (3), Poand,6-4, 6-4. Standings:SerenaWiliams1-0; PetraKvitova1-0; Agnieszka Radwanska0-1; Angelique Kerber0-1. Group B Singles VictoriaAzarenka(2), Bearus, def. SaraErrani (6), Italy, 7-6(4), 6-2. Standings:VictoriaAzarenka1-0; Li Na0-0; Jelena Jankovic0-0; SaraErrani 0-1.

Toronto Detroit Boston TampaBay Montreal Ottawa Florida Buffalo

Tuesday'sGames Chicago 3,Florida2, SO Washington 5, Winnipeg4, SD Toronto 4, Anaheim2 Vancouver5, N.Y.Islanders 4, OT Columbus 4, NewJersey1 Edmonton 4, Montreal 3 Minnesota 2,Nashville 0 Phoeni4, x Calgary2 Today's Games Ottawa at Detroit, 4.30p.m. Boston atBuff alo,5pm.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague

HOUSTO NAS)ROS—Named Brent Strompitching coach, PatListachlirst basecoach, Craig Bjornson bullpencoachandRalph Dickensonassistant hitting

coach.

MINNES DTATWINS—Added Paul Molitor to their maior league coaching stalf. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Announced the retirement of Swiss Indoors specialassistantto thegeneral manager DickBalderTuesday son. NameJef d f Schugel specia assistantto thegenAtSt.JakobshaUe eral mana ger/major leaguescout. Basel, Switzerland C INCINNAT I REDS—NamedBryanPrice manager. Purse: $2.72million (WTBO O) LOSANG ELES DODGERS—Agreed to terms with Surface: Hard-Indoor INF Alexander Guerrero on afour-year contract. DesSingles ignatedRHPPeter Moylan for assignment. Decined First Round to exercise the contract optionfor benchcoachTrey MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,def. BenjaminBecker, Hillman. Germany, 7-6(8), 6-1. SANFRANCISCOGIANTS—Agreedto terms with Ivan DodigCroati , a, def.CarlosBerlocq,Argentina, RHP TimLincecumonatwo-yearcontract throughthe 2-0,retired. 2015 season. Kei Nishikori (6), Japan,def. MarcoChiudineffi, Pac-12 Standings BASKETBALL Switzerland, 6-2, 6-4. AU TimesPDT National Basketball Association Denis Istomin,Uzbekistan,def HoracioZebaffos, D ALLAS MAVER ICKS Waived CFabMelo,FReArgentina, 7-5, 7-6(3). North Balkman,FDevinEbanksandG-FD.J.Kennedy. Edourd Roger-Vasselin, France, del. Stanislas naldo Conf. Overall Wawrinka FOOTBALL (4), Switzerland,6-4,6-3. 4-0 7-0 Oregon National Football League Daniel Brands,Germany, def. AndreasSeppi (7), 4-0 6-1 OregonState ARIZONACARDINALS— Signed WR Teddy WilItaly, 7-6(3), 6-3. Stanford 4-1 6-1 Ivo KarlovicCroati , a,def.TomasBerdych(2), Czech liams.Released LB Kenny Demens.Re-signed LB 2-3 4-4 Republic,4-6,7-6(4),7-6(2). KennyDemenstothepracticesquad.ReleasedLBZack Washington State Washington 4-3 13 Nashfromthepracticesquad. 0-4 1-6 California ATLANTA FALCONS—Signed LBThomasHoward. Valencia Open500 South W aivedLBJamar Chaney. Tuesday Conf. Overall CLEVELANDBROWNS— Signed WR Brian Tyms At Ciudad delasArtes y las CiencasValencia ArizonaState 3-1 5-2 off Miami'spracticesquad.WaivedWRTori Gurley. Valencia, Spain 2-1 5-1 UCLA DALLASCOWBOYS— SignedWRLanearSampson Purse: $2.97million (WT500) Arizona 1-2 4-2 to thepracticesquad. Surface: Hard-Indoor 1-2 4-3 USC DETROITLIONS —Released TETony Scheffler. Singles 1-3 4-4 Utah SignedDTBarry Richardson. First Round 0-3 3-3 Colorado GREEN BAYPACKERS—SignedRBMichael HiIto NicolasAlmagro(3), Spain,del. PabloAndujar, Saturday'sGames the practice squad.ReleasedWRReggieDunnfromthe Spain,6-2,6-3. Utah atUSC,1 p.m. Jerzy Janowicz(5), Poland, del. Pablo Carreno practicesquad. UCLAatOregon,4p.m. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS—Signed CBJalil Brown. Busta,Spain,7-5,7-6(7). ArizonaatColorado, 5p.m. TE Dominique Jones. Released FB Robert JoaoSousa,Portugal, def.GuiffermoGarcia-Lopez, Waived StanlordatOregonState, 7:30p.m. H ughes from thepractice squad. Spain,6-3,7-5. CaliforniaatWashington,8 p.m. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—Terminatedthe contract of Julien Benneteau,France, del. Feliciano Lopez, CB Jacob Lacey. ClaimedCBShaunPrater off waivers. Spain,6-3,6-1 SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Placed FBSpencer Ware Mikhail Youzhny,Russia, def. BernardTomic, AusBetting line on injured reserve.SignedFBMichael Robinson. Retralia, 3-6,6-4,4-1,retired. leasedWRJoshLenzfromthe practice squad Signed NFL MichalPrzysiezny,Poland,def.FernandoVerdasco, WR RicardoLockette andGZach Alen to the practice (Hometeamsin CAPS) Spain,6-3,7-6(1). Favorite Opening Current Underdog AlejandroFaffa,Colombia, def. GiffesSimon(6), squad. ST. LOUISRAMS—Agreedto termswith QBBrady Thursday France,6-1,6-0. Panthers Quinn. 6 6.5 Buccanee rs HOCKEY Sunday SOCCER I-49ers National HockeyLeague 17 1 6 .5 Jaguars ANAHEIM DU CK S — Recalled RWDevante SmithLIONS 3 3 Cowboys MLS EAGLES 6 6 PeffyfromNorfolk (AHL). Giants CHIEFS Browns DETROIRE T DWINGS AssignedDXavier Ouel et 7.5 7 MAJORLEAGUESOCCER SAINTS 12 5 1 2 5 Bills GrandRapids (AHL). AH TimesPDT Dolphi n s EDMON TO NOILERS—Recalled FBenEagerandF PATRIO TS 6.5 6.5 Tyler PitlickfromOklahoma City (AHL). BENGAL S 6.5 6.5 Jets EasternConference OTTAW A SENATORS—Recalled F Mika Zibanejad Steelers 3 3 RAIDER S W L T Pts GF GA BRONC OS 13 13 Redskins x-NewYork ton(AHL). 16 9 8 56 53 39 from Bingham CARDINA LS 2.5 2.5 PHOENI C XOYOTES—RecalledFBrandonYip from Falcons x-Sporting KansasCity 16 10 7 55 45 29 VIKINGS Montreal Porlland (AHL). AssignedFTimKennedytoPortland. Packers 9.5 9.5 14 12 7 49 50 48 COLLEGE Monday Chicago 14 12 7 49 45 47 NCAA —Placed Miamis athletic programon three Seahawk s 1 0.5 11 RAMS NewEngand 13 11 9 48 48 38 I-London years probati o n. Mi a mi 'sfootball teamwil lose nine Houston 13 11 9 48 39 40 Philadelphia 12 11 10 46 41 42 scholarshipsandthe men's basketball teamwiI lose three scholarshipsoverthe next threeyears.SusCollege Columbus 12 16 5 41 42 45 Thursday pendedMissouri men'sbasketball coachFrankHaith TorontoFC 5 17 11 26 29 47 MISSISSIPPIST 10 five games for inadequately monitoring hisformeras10 Kentucky D.C. 3 23 7 16 21 57 sistants' interactionswith MiamiboosterNevin Shapiro Marshall 9 .5 9 MID TENN ST WesternConference Friday W L T Pts GF GA and failing topromoteanatmosphereof compliance BYU 7 7 BoiseSt x-Ponland 13 5 15 54 49 33 with its ruleswhile coachof theHurricanes' men's basketbalteam. l Saturday x-RealSalt Lake 15 10 8 53 55 40 VIRGINIA x-LosAngeles GeorgiaTech 10 10 15 11 7 52 52 37 C. FLOR IDA 2 2.5 23 Connecticut x-Seattle 15 12 6 51 41 41 FISH COUNT Ball St 11.5 1 0 .5 AKRON Colorado 14 10 9 51 45 35 OHIOIJ Miami Ohi o 2 4.5 25 SanJose 13 11 9 48 33 41 Upstream daily movement ofadult chinook,jackchiBuffalo 2 2 KENTST Vancouver 12 12 9 45 50 45 nook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia W. Michigan Fc Dallas UMASS 3 3 11 11 11 44 47 50 RiverdamslastupdatedonMonday. RUTGE RS 85 7 Houston ChivasUSA 6 18 8 26 29 60 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd N. CAR OLINA 8 7.5 BostonCollege NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. Bonneville 7 4 4 127 66 25 Clemson 13 14 MARYLAN D x- clinched playoffberth TheDaffes 1,083 1 3 8 137 52 VIRGINIA TECH 1 3 13 . 5 Duke John Day 1,119 2 7 2 222 79 Piffsburgh 6 5.5 NAVY Today'sGame McNary 1 , 151 1 1 2 214 75 TX-S.ANTDNID 4 6.5 uab ChivasUSAat Real Salt Lake6p.m. Upstream year-to-date movement ol adultchinook, 11 12 Temple SMU Saturday'sGames iack chinook, steelheadandwild Fridayat selectedCoN.ILLINOIS 3 0.5 3 0 5 E. Michigan SportingKansasCity atPhiladeiphia, noon lumbia Riverdamslast updatedonMonday Arizona 15.5 1 4 .5 COLOR ADO MontrealatTorontoFC,1 p.m. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd TEXAS A8M 18 18 Vanderbilt Fc DallasatSanJose,2:30 p.m. Bonneville 1,122,060 169,901 232,447 98,524 AUBURN 2 4.5 2 4 .5 Fla. Atlantic Portlandat ChivasUSA, 7:30 pm. The Daffes 751,621 140,117 189,642 79,954 ALABAMA 28 28 . 5 Tennesse e Sunday'sGames John Day 564,194 136,826 149,143 62,813 21 23 OREG ON Ucla Houston at D.C.United,10:30a.m. McNary 573,998 90,535 142,261 54,783


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

S T.

L O U I S

CA R D I N A L S

T HE

1 0 9 TH

WO RL D

S E R I E S

B OS T O N

RE D

C3

S O X

Big Papi, beardedBoSoxtake on Beltran andyoung Cardinals arms inthis

The St. Louis Cardinals and Boston RedSoxare set to meet for the fourth time in a World Series. For the Red Sox, it's their third Series visit in the last decade.Andthey hope for a repeat performance from 2004, whenthey never trailed during a four-gamesweep of the Cardinals and wontheir first championship sjnce1918. The Cardinals will be trying for their third title since 2006, last winning in 2011. Led by NLCSMVPMichael

Carlos Beltran

Wacha, theCardinals haveformed the core of oneof the best pitching staffs in themajor leagues.

One of October's greatest performers has finally made it to his first World Series. Leads all players in the 2013 postseason with12 RBls.

series opens inBeantownwith thefirst two gamesat FenwayPark before traveling back to Busch IIQme The Stadium in St. Louis. TheRedSoxhold home-field advantagethis yearthanks to the American League

tg f f winning the All-Star Game. Home runs yielded at doth ballparks during the 2013 regular season: Busch Stadium• Opened •2006

Fenway Park • Opened• 1912

Spacious, butfairly typical dimensions.

TheGreen Monsterin left andPesky's Pole in right are enticing to hitters.

400 ft 375 ft.

375 ft.

335 ft.

336 ft

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS

SEATING CAPACITY

43,975

37,499

Catcher

projected starters

~3

8 0 ft.

310 ft.

SEATING CAPACITY

2013 record REG at home 54-27

420 ft

390 ft.

POSTSEASON 5-1

302 ft.

David Ortiz

2013 record REG at home 53-26

~ POSTSEASON 4-1

BATTING AVERAGE• HOMERUNS • RUNSBATTEDIN (regular seasonandpostseason)

Fir s t base S e cond base S h ortstop Third base

Le f t field Ce n ter field

Ri g ht field

No shortage of historic moments atFenwayPark where he has acareer .312 BA and.410 OBP. Led team in BA,HRs and RBis this season.

/

wh

Projected WIN-LOSSRECORD • EARNEDRUNAVERAGE

DH

rotation (regular seasonandpostseason)

r-i yadier Molina

Matt Adams

Matt Carpenter

Pete Kozma

3 19 12 8 0 256 1 2

.2 8 4 1 7 5 1 .268 1 4

3 18 11 7 8 167 0 2

. 217 1 .200 0

David

Matt Holliday

Freese 35 2

. 262 9 .189 1

6 0 . 300 22 94 4 .244 2 5

Jon Jay* . 276 7 .206 0

Carlos Beltran 67 3

~) Mike Napoli

. 273 14 6 5 .231 0 5 Molina is brilliant handling St. Louis' young pitching staff; rocket arm. "Salty" is a switch-hitter with power. Edge:STL

. 259 23 92 .242 2 3 Adams hasquick handsandasound swing. Defense is not a strength. Napoli haspatient approachand powerfulswing. Edge:BOS

Adam Wainwright 19-9 2.94 2-1 1.57 RHP

. 294 24 84 . 315 13 97 . 256 2 1 2 .000 0 0

* platoonswith ShaneRobinson

BOSTON REDSOX

Jarrod Saltalamacchia

Allen Craig

Dustin Pedroia

Steven Drew

301 9 84 . 253 13 6 7 .256 0 6 .086 0 2 Carpenter is Kozma'struevalue catalyst for theNL's is on defense,where highesthe really shines. scoring offense. Drewslumpedin Pedroia plays playoffs, butkept with a dirty uniform playing superb and anall-out defense. gusto. Edge:BOS Edge:EVEN

Michael Joe Lance Wacha Kelly Lynn 4 -1 2 . 78 1 0-5 2 . 69 15-10 3.97 3-0 0.43 0-1 4 .41 2-1 5.40 RHP RHP RHP

) Xander Bogaerts

Jonny Gomes*

.250 1 5 .500 0 0 Coming off amediocreseason, Freese remainsa threat. Rookie Bogaertsshowsa sharp eyeandpop atthe plate. Edge:STL

. 247 13 52 .200 0 2 Hollidayis streaky,butputs up consistent power numbers. GrittyGomes brings a power bat. Edge:STL

Jacody

Shane Victorino

Ellsbury

David Ortiz

. 298 9 5 3 . 294 15 6 1 .309 30 103 .400 0 5 .237 1 8 .200 3 7 Jay's best Beltran is still a Craig batteda attribute is a frightening forceat majorleaguequality glove;can the plate in clutch best .454 with hit and steal. situations. RISP.Ortiz hasa Ellsburyis Victorinois better long history of speedysparkplug than his statistics clutch hitting in that gets will ever show. October; Boston going. Edge:STL no better DH. Edge:BOS Edge:BOS

Jon Lester

John Lackey

15-8 3.75 2-1 2.33 LHP

10-13 3.52 2-0 3.00 RHP

Clay B uchholz

Jake Peav y

* 1 2-1 1.74 12 - 5 4.17 0 -0 5.40 0-1 8. 3 1 RHP RHP * includesWhite Sox

Starters:Cardsyoung staff is led byWainwright, often at his best inOctober.RookieWachahasbeenalmost untouchable. Boston rotation, with Lester (career2.39 inposteason), is much improvedover last year.Edge:STL Bullpen:Cardsdeeppenis ful ofdynamicandspecialist arms.CloserTrevor Rosenthalthrows100mph.Koji Ueharahasbeenalights-out savior in his first season with Boston.Corpshavebeenadominant strength inOctober.Edge: EVEN

* platoons with

Daniel Descalso

Managers I Cardinals: 165-139 (2012-present) ~1

TOTAL:165-139

Matheny

In2012,becamethegame' s youngestactivemanagerat age 41.

John Farrell

Blue Jays:155-169 (2011-2010) Red Sox: 97-65 (2013-present) TOTAL:252-234 World Serieschampionshipas Boston pitching coach in 2007.

Mathenyis smart, serious andverywell prepared.Heknows howto manage apitching staff andappearsto possess thegolden touch with young players. Farrell has beenthe perfect antidote toBobbyValentine in the Boston clubhouse. UnderFarrell, Boston madea complete turnaroundfromits last-place69-93finish last season.Edge:EVEN

Addition ofCraig makesCardsdeeperathomeandgive thema couple more options onaweakbenchthat lacks pop. Robinson is the bestavailable bat,andtheversatile Descalso providessolid defense.Pinch-hitter AdronChamberswent 0for 5with three K's inthe playoffs.

Berloh

~g

Ton of depth and poweravailable, including Daniel Nava or Gomes, Will Middlebrooks or Bogaerts, David Ross or Saltalamacchia, andMike Carp. Add inNapoli to the mix when Ortiz starts inSt.Louis, andthey haveplenty of desirable weapons toemploy.

g~

Between the lines BATTING (record) AVG H R :

Regular • Postseason

CARDINALS(97-65)

.269;

(7-4) .210; R ED SOX (97-65) .277 I

RU NS/GM:

125 : 8 I:

4.8 3.8

178

5.3 4.5

(7-3) .236 :

6

,I I,

FIELDING PITCHING SB (PCT) . : E .: ERA .: St a rters R e lievers 45(6 7 ( 67.2) I : 3/3 (1 0 0.0) I:

75 3

I

3.42 2.34

:. I:

3.42 2.57

:, I:

3.43 1.80

123/142 (86.6)I : 11/13 (84.6) I

80 3

:I I

3.79 3.05

I I

3.64 4.29

; I

3.70 0.84 AP

SOURCES:MajorLeagueBaseball;STATS LLC

Series Continued from C1 Boston was listed as a slim favorite in the matchup between teams that tied for the big league lead in wins. The clubs have not met in the regular season since 2008, and Red Sox speedster Jacoby Ellsbury, the center fielder from Central Oregon, was looking forward to this pairing that some are billing as the Beards vs. the Birds. "It will be exciting to see some unfamiliar faces," said Ellsbury, the former Madras High School and Oregon State University standout. David Ortiz, Dustin Pedroia and many Of their scraggly Boston teammates figure to get a good look at the Cardinals' crop of young pitching arms, led by postseason ace Michaei Wacha and relieversTrevor R osenthal, Carlos M a r tinez a n d Kevin Siegrist. Ortiz is the link to the Red Sox t eam that swept St. Louis in t h e 2004 Series — Boston never trailed at any point — and ended an 86year championship drought. "Obviously I'm aware of the history of the two teams," said Eiisb ury, who will b e p laying in h i s second World Series. "Once the first

The WorldSeries:Whattowatchfor Welcome to the show:One of the greatest hitters in playoff history, the 36-year-old Carlos Beltran has finally reached the first World Series of his 16-year career after three painful

Youthmovement.The Cardinals aren't the only team with an impressive rookie or two. Late in the ALCS, John Farrell benched slumping 3B Will Middlebrooks in favor of Xander

losses in Game 7 of the NLCS.Now, it's an evenbigger stage

Bogaerts, a touted 21-year-old prospect with a keeneye and

for the eight-time AII-Star, who can become a free agent after

pop at the plate. Showing poise and patience beyond his

the season.

years, Bogaerts has a.727 on-base percentage in limited

Lights out:Neither closer came into the season with that role, but both have been sensational. Featuring a100 mph fastball, Trevor Rosenthal has 3 saves and 9 strikeouts in

scored 7 runs.

7 scoreless innings this postseason. Koji Uehara inherited

this season, the second-best home record in the majors,

postseason action, with 3 doubles and 5 walks. He's also Home Turf:The Cardinals went 54-27 at Busch Stadium

and 5-1 during the playoffs. But they were 2-3 on the road vs. Pittsburgh and Los Angeles, and won't have the luxury was phenomenal all summer, compiling 27 straight scoreless of home-field advantage in the World Series. Meanwhile, outings and retiring 37 batters in a row during one stretch. the Red Sox went 53-28 at Fenway Park during the regular Previously a playoff flop with Texas, hegave up agameseason. They were 4-1 at home during the playoffs and 3-2 winning homer against Tampa Bay in the ALDS but took on the road. home ALCS MVP honors with 3 saves and a win against — The AssociatedPress Detroit. He is1-1 with 5 saves, 13 Ks and a1.00 ERA in 9 the job in Boston when former All-Stars Joel Hanrahan and Andrew Bailey were injured. The 38-year-old right-hander

innings this postseason.

pitch happens, all that goes out the window." The Red Sox are trying to win their third crown in 10 years. St. Louis is aiming to take its second title in three years and third in eight seasons. "Some of us have some pretty bad memories of being here in 2004, and

we're looking to kind of right that ship," St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. Matheny w a s t h e Ca r d i nals' c atcher that year, backed up b y rookie Yadier Molina. Now Molina is considered the best defensive catcher in baseball, charged with trying to stop Ellsbury and a Red

Sox team that has run a iot in the postseason. "It's fun to be part of this history, to be here in Fenway Park, to be part of this Series against Boston," Molina said. "It's different to play here overall," he added. "Playing defense, offense, p itching. It's different, but at t h e

same time it's fun." David Freese grew up in St. Louis and became Mvp of the 2011 series. He heard about Stan Musial vs. Ted Williams in 1946, knew about Bob Gibson facing Carl Yastrzemski in 1967, and recalled watching on TV when Red Sox reliever Keith Fouike fielded Edgar Renteria's tapper to finish off 2004. "I remember thecomebacker that ended it. The sweep. You don't expect a World Series to end in four games,"the 30-year-old third baseman said. Freese said he had always hoped to get a chance to play at Fenway, and he got his first look Tuesday. A fter Matheny stood near t h e mound and pointed out the particuiars of the dirt triangle in center field, Freese stepped in for batting practice. He launched a long drive that hit high off the Green Monster in left-center, the loud thwack echoing all around the ballpark. "That's my Wall ball," he hooted to teammate Matt Holliday. Good for a hitter, maybe not so great for a pitcher. "A ballgame canchange with one swing of the bat in this ballpark," Wacha said. "It's pretty crazy. Crazy dimensions, that's for sure."


C4

TH E BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

Sisters vo e a inis esun eateninS -Em Bulletin staff report COTTAGE GROVE — Sisters completed its perfect run through Sky-Em League volleyball play Tuesday, topping Cottage Grove 25-10, 24-26, 25-22, 25-10 to go 100 in league matches. Sophomore outside hitter Isabel Tara led a balanced Outlaw offense with 14 kills. Junior middle Nila Lukens and sophomore outside hitter Allie Spear contributed 12 kills apiece. "I was pleased with the way we came back," said Sisters coach Miki McFadden, whose club will host a Class 4A first-round state playoff match on Nov. 2. "We lost rhythm there for a while. But they pulled it together and came back

PREP ROUNDUP season by putting away the Cougars 25-12, 25-21, 25-22 for an Intermountain Conference win. Brenna Roy was 12 of 12 from the service line and had 12 digs for Summit (4-2 5A IMC), Dani Daylor collected 12 kills, and Emma Dahl and Kenzi Kitzmiller each recorded eight kills. For Mountain View (2-3 5A IMC), Jill Roshak led the way with 17 kills. Karlee Duncan posted two blocks, and Hayley Intlekofer finished with four aces.

Estrada added two goals and an assist as the Ravens blew past their crosstown rivals in what was both teams' final regular-season match of the year. Zoe Lash and Marta Rodes Guirao each contributed a goal and an assist in the Intermountain Hybrid win for Ridgeview (6-7-1 overall), which will play a Class 4A play-in game next week. The loss likely ends the season for the Panthers, who fell to 1-11-1 with the defeat. North Marion 3, Madras 0: AURORA — With the Tri-Valley Conference loss, the White Buffaloes

REDMOND — The Ravens, on their senior day, promptly fell behind after the Panthers' Carlos Montanez netted a strike fr om about 40 yards away just five minutes into the match. A pair of own goals put Redmond in a 2-1 deficit

before Ridgeview (6-4-4) pulled

away with four goals to seal the Intermountain Hybrid win in each team's final match of the season. Nakoda Sanders picked up two goals for the Ravens, and Oscar Jaidar and Jose Ochoa each scored once. All four came after the 57thminute goal by Jaidar. Ridgeview The Cougars wrap up the regular dropped to 0-6-2 in league play is guaranteed a play-in spot in the season with a m atchup against and 0-7-5 overall. Madras takes OSAA Class 4A state playoffs by visiting Bend High on Thursday. on Milwaukie's La Salle in its fi- virtue of its two victories against Madras 3, Molalla 0: MADRAS nal home contest of the season on Crook County. The Ravens will by playing together." — Shelby Mauritson tallied 22 Thursday. have to wait until the 4A rankFreshman setter Alex Hartford kills, eight digs and four aces, and Summit JV 9, Crook County 0: ings freeze next Tuesday to find dished out 20assistsand served the White Buffaloes polished off a PRINEVILLE — B r yley Wetzel out who theyplay.Redmond ends 20 points without a service er10-0 Tri-Valley Conference mark had three goals and an assist to its regular season 0-6 in 5A Interror. Lukens was also strong from with a 25-10, 25-19, 25-18 win over lead the Storm junior varsity to mountain Conference play and 0the line, ending the night with 15 the Indians. By finishing atop the a road win in its season finale. 14 overall. N orth Marion 2, M adras 0 : points and no errors. conference standings, Madras Meghan Day scored two goals and Mady Singer, Kalie McGrew, MADRAS — The visiting HusSenior libero Savannah Spear s ecures a home contest in t h e anchored Sisters' defense, leading first round of the Class 4A state Hanna Wilkins and Lila Reinecke kies scored midway through the the team with 26 digs. playoffs. Alexis Urbach posted 12 scored one apiece for Summit, first half and right after halftime kills, 12 digs and nine aces for the which concluded its season with to hand the White Buffaloes their In other Tuesday action: VOLLEYBALL Buffs, Elle Renault had 21 assists a record of 13-1. Crook County second Tri-Valley Conference deBend 3, Redmond 0: The Lava and six aces, and Karlee Simmons ended its regular season with an feat of the year. With two games B ears picked u p th e i r t h i r d chipped in with 11 assists. overall record of 2-11-1. remaining in league play, Madras (4-2-2 TVC, 6-3-2 overall) is tied straight sweep of a 5A IntermounJunction City 3, La Pine 2: LA BOYS SOCCER Summit 4, Crook County 0: tain Conference team by dispatch- PINE — The Hawks gave the Tiwith North M a rion for second ing the visiting Panthers 25-5, gers all they could handle, winPRINEVILLE — Cameron Weav- place in the TVC with Molalla sit25-7, 25-16. Amanda Todd posted ning the first two games of the er scored with a header off a Cam- ting in fourth at 3-1-3. Only the nine digs, five kills and five aces Sky-Em League match before fall- eron Ficher corner kick to give the top three teams from the TVC are to pace Bend (5-0 5A IMC), Brydie ing 22-25, 21-25, 25-23, 25-19, 15- Storm a 1-0 lead in the 15th minute, guaranteed state playoff berths. Burnham had five kills and five 12. "They battled," La Pine coach and Summit sealed its 11th win of BOYS WATER POLO Mountain View 16, Madras 4: blocks, and Carissa Scott finished Alice Zysett said about her team, the season with the Intermountain with five kills. Redmond ends its which finished 0-10 i n l e ague Hybrid win. Alex Bowlin logged Noah Cox recorded six goals, Nate regular season with an 0-6 mark play. "I was really proud of that." a goal for the Storm (II-I-2) in the Cox added three, and the Cougars against 5A IMC foes. The Lava McKenna Boen recorded seven 30th minute off a Conor Galvin as- cruised past the White Buffaloes B ears visit M ountain View o n blocks, Micaela Whittington post- sist, Ficher scored in the 48th min- at Juniper Swim k Fitness CenThursday for the final contest of ed 15 kills and Kinsey Pickney re- ute,and Miguel Paez capped the ter. Joe Murphy, Brandon Decker the regular season. corded 34 assists to lead the Hawks. scoring with a 65th-minute goal. and Tim Gorman each logged two Summit 3, Mountain View 0: Be- Maddie Fisher added 10 kills. Summit wraps up its regular sea- goals for the Cougars, who racked hind a 19-for-19 serving clip and GIRLS SOCCER son with a visit to Sisters on Fri- up 20 steals as a team. Quinn CorR idgeview 7, R e d mond 0 : day, while Crook County ends the rigan had one goal for Mountain four aces by Jordan Waskom, who also logged a 2.8 passer rating, the REDMOND — Bailey Simmons year 7-6-1 overall. View, and Tracy Pitcher finished visiting Storm ended the regular scored three times and Demaris R idgeview 6 , R e d mond 1 : with nine blocks.

Maple Leafs rally to stop Ducks'win streak The Associated Press

Also on Tuesday: Capitals 5, Jets 4: WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Martin Erat scored the winner in the sixth round of the shootout and Washington escaped with a victory over Winnipeg. Canucks 5, Islanders 4:UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Brad Richardson banked in a shot off goalie Evgeni Nabokov 2:16 into overtime to lift rallying Vancouver over New York. Blackhawks 3, Panthers 2:SUNRISE, Fla.— Jonathan Toews and Patrick Sharp each scored in the shootout to lead Chicago to victory over Florida. Blue Jackets4, Devils1:COLUMBUS, Ohio — Sergei Bobrovsky

stopped 24 shots and James Wisniewski had a goal and two assists to lead Columbus to victory over

brought a lot tonight." Katrina Johnson had 13 kills Continued from C1 and three blocks to pace the RaThe victory should earn Crook vens, which fell to Crook County County a first-round home match at home in a five-set thriller earlier in the 4A state playoffs. Ridgeview, this month. Rhian Sage racked up meanwhile, sits on the cusp of that 19 assists while going 11 of 11 from group — the top eight teams in the the service line for Ridgeview. final rankings earn f i r st-round Cowgirls senior Kathryn Kaonis home matches — but at the very said that clinching the Special Disleast, the Ravens are expected to trict I title in their last home game host a play-in contest next week. was the highlight of the season. The 4A rankings froze at 10 p.m. on "It was exciting for sure," Kaonis Tuesday night. said. "I was really nervous to begin The Ravens struggled against with and I was kind of nervous that Troutman'spowerfulkills, although was going to make me mess up, but they totaled 58 digs as a team — Ka- it ended up being great." tie Nurge was credited with 25. According to Ridgeview coach "I think Ridgeview got a lot toDebi Dewey, the Ravens struggled night," Troutman said. "We play offensively — an element, she addwell as a t eam, but Ridgeview ed, Ridgeview typically excels at.

"We're a more offensive team. But that didn't show tonight," Dewey said. "We had 58 digs, and that's a fair amount of digs for a match.

en Berlin had seven digs, and Kayla Hamilton finished with 20 assists. Abby Smith had 21 assists and fellow freshman Aspen Christiansen was credited with 14 digs and one ace while going 14 of 14 from the service line. "We cut down our errors," Honl said. "In the first game I think we had two errors. Other than that, we just played a flawless match." Still, while Honl recognizes the consistency her Cowgirls played with, there is work to be done. "We still need to work on serves and serve-receive," Honl said. "We are getting harder and h arder swings as the season goes on, but we'll still work on it."

Pac-12

ling numbers in his first season in Boulder andleads the conference with 9.8 tackles per game, 59 total. He has two sacks on a defense that has been battered since the Pac-12 season started.

TORONTO — Ph i l Ke s s el scored three goals to rally Toronto from a two-goal deficit and the Maple Leafs beat Anaheim 4-2 Tuesday night to deny the Ducks a club record eighth straight win. It was a Jekyll and Hyde performance for the Leafs, who were booed off the ice after a woeful first period that saw them outplayed, outshot 6-2 and outscored 1-0. Kessel struck twice in the second period sandwiched around a goal by Dion Phaneuf. Kessel completed his hat trick in the third

NHL ROUNDUP

the night, had a chance to make it 5-2 in the third period, but hit the goalpost with a backhand on a penalty shot after being interfered with on a breakaway. Kessel, whose offense had been sporadic at best this season, upped his goal total to five with the hat trick. The Leafs' sniper had a chance to go for a fourth late in the game but chose to pass it to linemate Tyler Bozak, who failed to period. convert. J ames van R i emsdyk, w h o Nick Bonino and Mathieu Perplayed provider to Kessel most of reaultscored forAnaheim.

Cowgirls

Continued from C1 Here is a rundown of some of the highlights and lowlights of the season so far: Best team: Oregon. As stated above,the Ducks are the class of the conference, their closest game so far a 21-point win. Oregon did not face a ranked team early in the season but blew past then-No. 16 Washington 45-24 on Oct. 12. The Ducks will be tested a little more over the final five games of the season. Oregon plays No. 12 UCLA this Saturday, then No. 8 Stanford and still has games against Utah, Arizona and rival Oregon State left. Best offensive player: A case could be made for several players in the conference, including Arizona running back Ka'Deem Carey, who is leading the nation in rushing yards per game for the second straight season. But for the best player on the best team, Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota has to be the choice. He has been superb in leading the undefeated

Ducks, accounting for 28 touchdowns and more than 2,500 yards without throwing an interception.

Our team was digging well." Tuesday's contest was Crook County's final regular-season home match. The Cowgirls honored their seniors,and they reciprocated by piling on the kills against the Ravens. Kaonis accounted for five kills, and her twin sister, Samantha Kaonis, totaled two kills. "I love my seniors," Troutman said. "They're an incredible group of girls. There are four of us and each one of them did well tonight." Crook County's juniors held their own, with Karlee Hollis stepping in with seven kills and one ace while posting a 17-of-17 serving clip. Lak-

struggling New Jersey. Oilers 4, Canadiens 3: MONTREAL — Jeff Petry and Ryan Jones scored in the third period to lift Edmonton past Montreal. Wild 2, Predators 0: ST. PAUL, Minn. — Josh Harding stopped 16 shots for his first shutout of the season in Minnesota's victory over Nashville. Coyotes 4, Flames 2: GLENDALE, Ariz. — Mike Ribeiro had two goals for the second straight game and Phoenixfought back after acouple of defensive miscues

to hold off Calgary.

— Reporter: 541-383-0375; eoller@bendbulletin.com.

victory and the Utes' biggest home upset in program history. Best coach: The t u r naround UCLA's Jim Mora has orchestratMost productive player: Arizona State running back Marion ed in Southern California the past two seasons is impressive enough, Grice is sixth in the conference in rushing yards at 79 per game. He Best turnaround:When Oregon but this season he also had to deal makes the most of those yards, State opened with a home loss to with one of the most difficult situthough, leading the nation with Eastern Washington, it l o oked ations acoach and team can go 15.4 points per game — more than like the Beavers might be headed through. Nick Pasquale, a walksix other teams in the FBS — and back down after last year's break- on freshman receiver, was killed he has scored 18 touchdowns. He is out season. Oregon State has on Sept. 8 when he was hit by a also closing in on Arizona State's bounced back nicely from that dis- car after going home to visit famcareer touchdown mark in just his appointing loss, winning its past ily. Mora helped hold the Bruins second season. six games, including a 4-0 start in together after the tragedy and still Best defensive player:Stanford conference, to remain in the hunt has them in position to win the linebackerTrent Murphy has been for the Pac-12 North title. Pac-12 South. one of the best defensive players Biggest surprise: Stanford won Biggest disappointment: Even in the country, not just the Pac- the Pac-12 championship and the after fading l ast season, USC 12. The fifth-year senior leads the Rose Bowl last season and ap- opened this season ranked and conference and is tied for sixth na- peared this season to be headed to- with return-to-glory expectations. tionally with seven sacks, and he ward a showdown with Oregon on It never panned out. The Trojans is second in the Pac-12 in tackles Nov. 7 after winning its first five struggled to find consistency on for losswith 10 per game. He had games. Then Utah got in the way. offense early, receiver Marqise Lee two sacks in Stanford's win over The Utes had struggled since join- has been plagued by injuries, and UCLA last weekend. ing the Pac-12 and were expected coach Lane Kiffin was fired after Best newcomer: Few players to be nothing but a minor speed a lopsided loss to Arizona State. have had as big an impact in a bump for the Cardinal. Instead, USC lost to r i val N otre Dame short amount of time as Colorado Utah stood its g r ound against last weekend and still has games linebacker Addison Gillam. The Stanford, beating the Cardinal at against Oregon State, Stanford freshman has racked up huge tack- their own power game for a 27-21 and UCLA.

Cycling Continued from C1 Tygart said that some were still in the works — he could not give details about open cases — but that others would not go anywhere becausethe evidence was so flimsy that it "won't stand up in court." So, where does that leave cycling, and us? Many of the people identified as taking part in doping are still working in the sport, profiting from the doping and cheating that got them to the top. USADA says it is not worried. It says it is looking at the big picture. Tygart said he had taken the initial steps to reaching his goal of "dismantling the doping that has corrupted a sport for decades." He spent a good part of the last year trying to help oust the International Cycling Union president Pat McQuaid, a member of the International Olympic Committee who tried to hinder USADA's investigation into Armstrong at almost every turn. Tygart spoke to the French Senate, the German Parliament and a gathering of European Union sports officials, criticizing the cycling union for failing to do more to clean up its sport — a big hint to sports officials that McQuaid had to go. Last month, McQuaid finally went — beaten in his bid for another term as cycling union president. In came Britain's Brian Cookson, who has already made significant changes to the sport's governing body, including reestablishing working r e lationships with USADA and the World Anti-Doping Agency in what seems to be a sincere effort to rid cycling of doping. Under McQuaid, those relationships were miserably tense at best. But leaders in anti-doping efforts and the sport still have much workto do to change the culture of doping in cycling's bloodstream. It is a culture that began more than 100 years ago, with Tour de France riders numbing their pain with substances like alcohol and the rat poison strychnine. That mentality remains, with some tired riders chugging socalled finishing bottles, liquids laced with crushed caffeine pills, nonbanned painkillers and who knows what else. It is a culture in which Armstrong's brand of bullying, intimidation and peer pressure might not rule the sport anymore but is likely to exist. At the 2004 Tour, Armstrong chased down the Italian rider Filippo Simeoni and kept him from winning the 18th stage. He did it to punish Simeoni for testifying against the Italian doctor Michele Ferrari, who had been under investigation for doping his riders. Ferrari was Armstrong's doctor. Armstrong told off Simeoni and made an ominous "zip the lips" gesture to TV cameras, later saying he stopped Simeoni's bid to win because it was "in the interest of the peloton." "All he wants to do is destroy cycling and destroy the sport that pays him, and that's wrong," Armstrong said of the code of silence that protected his secrets for more than 15 years. While riders like George Hincapie, Tyler Hamilton and Floyd Landis defied the code of silence with their confessions of drug use (and stories of Armstrong's drug use), that unwritten rule might still be alive. A bizarre moment inthe 2012 Tour de France suggested it. The plan among the teams in that Tour's peloton was to let Hincapie lead all riders onto the Champs-Elysees in the waning miles of the race. As the cyclists zipped down the grand boulevard in Paris, Hincapie would momentarily have center stage as he — the respectedveteran who had started the race a record 17 times — pedaled the last miles of his final Tour. Hincapie took off alone. But inexplicably, another rider took off after him. It was Chris Horner, an American on the RadioShackNissan team,who proceeded to have a conversation with Hincapie as millions watched on television. Last week, neither rider would tell me what was said. Horner — a Bend resident who would go on to win the 2013 Vuelta a Espana at 41, becoming the oldest Grand Tour winner in history — called it "nothing that can be discussed in the newspaper." A transcript of that conversation between Horner and Hincapie, former Armstrong teammates, would be fascinating. The timing of it raised eyebrows. Two weeks earlier, news leaked that Hincapie was one of the riders who testified against Armstrong, a rider Horner had defended as being clean. Only Hincapie and Horner know if Horner was following in Armstrong's footsteps that day on the Champs-Elysees. But two riders who testified to USADA — who did not want their names used because they did not want to be seen as "ratting out" yet another rider — said that they gave USADA details about Horner's doping but that the agency never followed up on the claims. Matt DeCanio, a former pro rider who is now an outspoken anti-doping advocate, said that Horner had told him years ago, "'If everybody's doing it, it ain't cheating.'" Horner hasnever tested positive, and he has denied ever using performance-enhancing drugs, most recently after his win in the three-week Vueltaraised suspicions. Before that Vuelta, he had never been a favorite to win a Grand Tour. At 41, he was also significantly older than anyone else in the top 10 — the averageage of those riders was just below 30. I asked him how he became one of the few U.S. riders of his generation to compete at the highest level of his sport without doping, about what was it like to race in Europe in 1997, when EPO (erythropoietin) use was so common that it might as well have been "tapedto everyone's forehead," as the former rider Jonathan Vaughters once said. Horner, who is strangely jobless after winning one ofcycling's greatest races,dodged my questions. A year after USADA nailed Armstrong, those questions, and so many others, remain unanswered. — Editor's note: The Bulletin contacted Chris Horner for his reaction to this story. Horner declined to comment.


C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsosee3recapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

3,929.57

Toda+

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1,76o

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Earnings growth?

T

35

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Price-earnings ratio:

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1,750

15,600

1,700

15,300

1,650

15,000

1,600 A

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StocksRecap NYSE NASD

S.

A

DOW DOW Trans. DOW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

$95

$88.43

$61.82 75

'13

55

Operating EPS

3 Q '12

Price-earnings ratio:

3Q ' 1 3

10

Dividend: $1.50 Div. yield: 1.7%

A

HIGH LOW C LOSE C H G. 15518.10 15394.22 15467.66 +75.46 6975.10 6866.39 6913.56 +56.06 504.21 495.64 502.46 + 7 . 01 10083.46 10016.88 10056.59 +73.90 3947.67 3904.06 3929.57 + 9 . 52 1759.33 1746.48 1754.67 +10.01 1302.41 1292.14 1 297.54 + 7 . 08 18807.55 18649.12 18747.21 +98.09 1121.53 1111.93 1115.63 + 3 . 15

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+ 27 . 2 18144 11 1 . 2 0 +10. 1 3 7 12 2 8 0. 8 8

Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, but are nct included. b - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid tn tast12 months. f - Current annual rate, wtttctt was mcreased by most recent dtvtdend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum cf dtvtdends patd tttts year. Most recent dtvtdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - imtiai dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid tn precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprcxtmate cash value on ex-dtstrtttutton date.Fe Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last I2 months

Harley-Davidson profit jumps Customers are still buying motorcycles in a big COrnpany a year ago. That's 73 cents per share, compared way. Harley-Davidson says its third-quarter profit $ petifght with 59 cents in the 2012 third quarter. Revenue rose 21 percent. rose 8.3 percent to $1.18 billion. The company The Milwaukee-basedcompany says U.S.sales matched Wall Street's expectations for the were up 20 percent from July through September quarter. Financial analysts polled by as buyers responded to its new model lineup, FactSet expected earnings of 73 cents per introduced in mid-August. The quarter share, on revenue of $1.17 billion. continuedthe company's comeback The companysoldalmost 71,000 from the 2008 economic meltdown. motorcycles worldwide during the 0 Harley-Davidson posted net income quarter, nearly 16 percent more than a year ago. of $162.7 million, up from $134 million

Total returns through Oct. 22

$43 Ann. dividend:$0.84

*Annualized

Gainers NAME Symetricm

ChinaSun h DirGMnBull UltraClean ARC Grp CardiovSys CerttAI

StdRegis rs MecoxLn rs PainTher s

LAST 7.21 8.09 39.79 8.47 11.90 26.75 9.89 12.87 4.58 3.77

CHG %CHG +2.44 +1.59 +6.43 +1.36 +1.80 +4.02 +1.48 +1.84 +.65 +.52

+ 5 1 .2 + 2 4 .5 + 1 9.3 + 1 9 .1 + 1 7 .8 + 1 7 .7 + 1 7 .6 + 1 6 .7 + 1 6 .5 + 1 6.0

Losers NAME LAST SwedLC22 54.01 P retium g 3. 3 6 Z ioo8 wt18 3 . 3 0 ZionsB wt20 5.22 DirGMBear 35.37

CHG %CHG -41.99 -43.7 -1.27 -27.4 —.85 -20.5 -1.18 -18.4 -7.93 -18.3

Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG + 18.51 + . 4 3 4,295.43 London 6,695.66 + 41.46 + . 62 Frankfurt + 80.24 + . 9 0 8,947.46 Hong Kong 23,315.99 -122.16 -.52 Mexico 40,813.48 +467.70 +1.16 Milan 19,371.93 + 109.24 + . 5 7 Tokyo + 19.68 + . 1 3 14,713.25 Stockholm 1,300.23 + 11.68 + . 9 1 Sydney + 19.70 + . 3 7 5,371.20 Zurich 8,214.76 +90.68 +1.12 NAME Paris

SelectedMutualFunds

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 23.54 + . 14+16.9 +18.1 +12.9+13.9 A A 8 CaplncBuA m 58.34 +.42 + 13.5 +14.4 +9.8+12.3 8 A 8 CpWldGrlA m 44.28 +.38 +21.1 +24.5 +10.6+15.1 C C C EurPacGrA m 48.37 +.32 +17.3 +22.1 +7.2 +14.7 C C 8 FrtlovA m 50.4 3 + .33+ 24.7 +27.2 +15.1 +17.2 8 C 8 GithAmA m 43.65 +.22 +27.1 +30.5 +15.7+17.0 8 C C A ston Funds MidcapN b CHT T X IrtcAmerA m 20.32 +.14+ 15.4 +16.2 +11.8+14.3 8 A A IttvCoAmA m 37.31 +.25 + 25.2 +26.1 +14.3+15.3 8 D D VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m 38.03 +.32 + 21.7 +25.5 +12.4+17.1 C 8 8 WAMutlttvAm 38.34 +.23 +24.7 +24.5 +16.5+15.8 C 8 8 ccC $$ Dodge 8 Cox Income 1 3.62 +.04 +0.5 + 0 . 8 + 4.2 +8.3 A 8 8 to IntlStk 42.88 +.38 +23.6 +30.2 +8.9 +17.0 A A A tc Stock 158.76 +.94 +31.8 +33.8 +18.2+18.3 A A A Fidelity Contra 98.07 +.56 + 27.6 +28.3 +16.1 +17.5 8 8 C $L cC $$ GrowCo 122. 71 +.43+31.6 +31.9 +19.6 +21.7 A A A to LowPriStk d 48 .57 +.17+ 29.1 +33.5 +17.8+22.0 8 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 62 .24 +.36+25.1 +25.1 +16.5+16.9 C 8 8 FrankTemp-Fraukliu Income C m 2. 42 +.02 +11.7 +11.8 +9.9+14.9 A A A «C $$ IncomeA m 2.3 9 +.01 +11.8 +12.5 +10.4+15.4 A A A FraukTemp-Templetou GIBondAdv 13.19 +.03+2.1 +4.8 +5.5+10.7 A A A «C Oakmark Irttl I 27.12 +.35 $.29.6 + 41.9 $.14.3$.21.4 A A A $o RisDivA m 28. 87 +.09+20.9 +21.2 +14.2+14.0 E D E Mornittgstar Ownership Zone™ Oppeuheimer RisDivB m 18. 89 +.09+ 20.0 +20.2 +13.1+13.0 E E E o Fund target represents weighted O RisDivC m 18 . 79 +.08 +20.1 +20.3 +13.3+13.2 E D E average of stock holdings SmMidValA m42.98 +.14 +32.4 +37.4 +13.8+17.8 A E D • Represents 75% of furtd's stock holdings SmMidValB m35.98 +.12+31.5 +36.2+12.9+16.9 A E E CATEGORY Mid-Cap Blend PIMCO TotRetA m 18 . 98 +.04 -1.3 -0.3 +3.4 +7.6 C C 8 MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 3 2.38 +.19 $-24.1 +24.9 $-15.9$-16.1 C 8 8 RATING™ * ** * f r GrowStk 4 9.17 +.17 $-30.1 +32.1 $.17.7$-20.4 A A A ASSETS $2,303 million HealthSci 58.33 +.54 +41.5 +41.7 +30.7 +26.0 8 A A EXP RATIO 1.11% Vanguard 500Adml 161.93 +.93 +25.1 +25.1 +16.5+16.9 C 8 8 5001ttv 161.92 +.93 +25.0 +24.9 + 16.4+16.8 C 8 8 MANAGER Marie Lorden Capap 45.96 +.43 +36.7 +43.3 +18.4+20.2 A A A SINCE 2009-03-01 Eqlnc 29.34 +.18 $.23.9 +23.5 + 18.1+16.6 D A 8 RETURNS3-MO +6.9 StratgcEq 28.63 +.15 +33.5 +38.4 + 20.5+20.8 A A 8 YTD +38.5 TgtRe2020 27.06 +.14 +13.6 +15.1 +10.1+13.2 A A 8 1-YR +43.2 Tgtet2025 15.68 +.08 +15.4 +17.0 + 10.9+13.9 8 8 C 3-YR ANNL +18.4 TotBdAdml 10.73 +.04 -1.2 -0.7 + 2.9 +5.6 D D D 5-YR-ANNL +24.9 Totlntl 16.91 +.15 $-15.1 +20.5 + 62+139 D D 8 TotStlAdm 44.49 +.24 +26.6 +27.4 + 17.0+17.9 8 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 44.47 +.23 +26.4 +27.2 + 16.9+17.7 8 A A Boston Scientific, Ittc. 4.4 USGro 26.96 +.11 +26.8 +29.0 + 17.2+16.9 8 A C Hospira, Inc. 4.08 Welltn 38.44 +.18 $-15.7 +16.2 $ -11.9 $-14.5 8 A A Staples, Inc. 3.7 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption DeVry, Inc. 3.55 fee. f - front load (satescharges). m - Multiple fees arecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or New York Times Company Class A 3.19 redemption fee. Source: Morningstac FAMILY

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WHR

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QEP

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InterestRates

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.51 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

. 03 .03 . 0 6 .07 .10 .12

2-year T-note . 2 9 .32 5-year T-note 1 .28 1 .35 10-year T-ttote 2.51 2.60 30-year T-bond 3.61 3.67

BONDS

... W L - 0.01 W L -0.02 V L

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-0.03 V -0.07 W

V W

T T

.31 .79

-0.09 w

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2.97

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO GTR AGO

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52-WEEK RANGE

Harley-DaVidSon (HOG) Tuesday's ciose:$64.71

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FundFocus

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1 0 DAY S

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

ALK 37.25 — 0 A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 8. 9 2 ~ BBSI 26 79 — 0 BA 6 9 .30 — 0 CascadeBancorp CACB 4.65 ~ Production update Columbia Bukg COLB 16.18 o Boeing reports third-quarter Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 ~ earnings today. Costco Wholesale COST 93.51 — 0 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5 62 — 0 Investors are likely to be FLIR 18 58 ~ interested in where the company's FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 ~ commercial airplane programs Home FederalBucpID HOME 10.26 ~ are headed. Boeing has a Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ huge backlog of orders for its Keycorp KEY 7. 81 — 0 commercialplanes and has had Kroger Co KR 2419 — 0 to boost production of both its Lattice Semi LSCC 3.54 737 and long-range 777 aircraft. LA Pacific LPX 14.51 It is also still working to speed up MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — 0 production of its new 787. Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 — o Microsoft Corp M SFT 26.26 ~ Nike Iuc 8 NKE 44 83 — 0 Nordstrom Iuc JWN 50.94 ~ Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 II— OfficeMax Iuc OMX 6. 2 2 — 0 PaccarIuc PCAR 39,55 — o Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 ~ Plum Creek PCL 40.60 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 161.00 ~ Safeway Iuc SWY 15,94 — o Schuitzer Steel SCHN 23.07 Sherwin Wms SHW 138.36 Staucorp Fucl SFG 32.14 — 0 StarbucksCp SBUX 44.27 — 0 Triquiut Semi TQNT 4.30 — 0 UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 Pulse on WellPoint US Baucorp USB 30.96 ~ How is the health care overhaul's WashingtonFedl WAFD 15,64 — o enrollment period affecting Wells Fargo &Co WFC 31.25 ~ WellPoint's business so far? Weyerhaeuser WY 2 4.75 ~

WLP

.....0 .

$97.80

Stocks finished higher on Tuesday as weaker-than-anticipated jobs data gave investors confidence that the Federal Reserve won't soon be dialing back its efforts to stimulate the economy. The Labor Department reported that the economy added 148,000 jobs last month, suggesting employers held back on hiring before a 16-day partial government shutdown began on Oct. 1. Economists had forecast 180,000 jobs would be added. Analysts are also expecting the coming October's job report to be weak because of the impact of the shutdown and that means the Fed is unlikely to curtail buying $85 billion in bonds a month.

14,700

Dividend: $1.80 Div. yield: 5.1% Alaska Air Group AvistaCorp Source: Factset Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

Investors find out today, when the company reports its latest quarterly results. Enrollment started earlier this month in new public insurance exchanges that are part of the health care overhaul, which is designed to cover millions of uninsured people. WellPoint has invested heavily in preparing for the exchanges.

$22.75

Change: 75.46 (0.5%) 14,680

+

SILVER

+26 80

Close: 15,467.66

1,800

NAME

based on trailing 12 month results

+

Dow jones industrials

3Q ' 1 3

27

$1 342 50

Close: 1,754.67

I

3 Q '12

10 YR T NOTE 2.51%

S&P 500 10 DA Y S

Vol. (In mil.) 3,729 1,816 Pvs. Volume 3,011 1,709 Advanced 2263 1395 Declined 832 1143 New Highs 4 30 3 0 7 New Lows 5 26

$35.32

+1001

Change: 10.01 (0.6%)

• 1 ,640

$35.23

$40

30

"

1 7oo

Wall Street anticipates that AT&T's earnings and revenue grew in the third quarter versus a year earlier. The telecommunications company is scheduled to report financial results today. Investors will be looking for the latest customer numbers for AT&T's wireless service.The company has benefited this year from increased use of smartphones, tablets and other wireless devices, which help drive wireless subscription revenue.

,'

"'"' + 1,754.67

NASDAO

DOW 15,467.66 ~

Commodities Oil finished at the lowest level since June on Tuesday, as recent data indicate that there is plenty of supply to meet current demand. Metals advanced,led by silver. Crops were mixed.

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 97.80 99.22 - 1.43 + 6 .5 -17.0 Ethanol (gal) 1.82 1.83 Heating Oil (gal) 3.01 3.01 -0.11 -1.2 $ - 6 .9 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.58 3.67 -2.37 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.62 2.65 -1.40 -7.0 FUELS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 1342.50 1315.70 22.75 22.23 1447.80 1435.70 3.33 3.30 751.90 749.25

%CH. %YTD +2.04 -19.8 +2.34 -24.6 +0.84 -5.9 -8.6 +0.99 + 0.35 + 7 . 0

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.31 1.30 + 0.75 + 0 . 9 1.12 1.13 -0.67 -22.2 4.38 4.44 -1.30 -37.2 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.82 0.83 - 0.73 + 9 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 356.40 352.10 +1.22 -4.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.18 1.17 + 0.17 + 1 . 3 Soybeans (bu) 13.02 13.03 -0.08 -8.2 Wheat(bu) -9.9 7.01 7.00 +0.14 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell versus the euro,

Japanese yen and other major currencies after U.S. jobs data suggested the Federal Reserve will be in no hurry to curtail its bond-buying efforts.

h5N4 QG

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6239 +.0093 +.57% 1 .6006 C anadian Dollar 1.0 2 87 —.0012 —.12% .9938 USD per Euro 1.3783 +.0105 +.76% 1 .3045 —.10 —.10% 79.89 Japanese Yen 98.10 Mexican Peso 12. 8 530 —.1286 -1.00% 12.9088 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3. 51 52 —. 0197 —. 56% 3.8180 0293 —. 50% 5.6848 Norwegian Krone 5. 8924 —. South African Rand 9.7238 —.1236 -1.27% 8.6578 6.3633 —.0347 —.55% 6.6092 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .8948 —.0073 —.82% .9275 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0304 -.0053 -.51% . 9 707 Chinese Yuan 6.0933 -.0007 -.01% 6.2557 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7527 -.0000 -.00% 7.7501 Indian Rupee 61.660 +.120 +.19% 5 3.475 Singapore Dollar 1.2354 -.0063 -.51% 1.2229 South Korean Won 1058.33 -4.01 -.38% 1103.70 -.00 -.00% 2 9 .27 Taiwan Dollar 29.43


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

BRIEFING Summit 103t

sentencing delayed Sentencing for Bend residents Mark Neuman

and LaneLyons, and Redmond residentTimothy Larkin, on charges

in wire fraudandmoney laundering conspiracies has beenrescheduledfor Dec.16, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

The co-owners of Bend-based Summit

1031 Exchangewere scheduled to besentenced today in U.S. District Court in Portland. A federal jury found the three guilty of the

charges onJuly3, after investing client funds in

personal realestatedeals across Central Oregon during the real estate

ewia issue aea o By Adam Satariano Btoomherg News

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple introduced new iPads in time for holiday shoppers, as it battles to stay ahead of rivals in the increasingly crowded market for tablet computers. Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook debuted a new iPad mini with a high-definition screen, as well as a thinner and lighter design for the larger iPad named the iPad Air. The device is set to go on sale on Nov. I, with prices starting at $499. "This is just the beginning for iPad," Cook said to a crowd of media and technology-industry insiders at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

Theater in San Francisco. "We have been busy working on the next generation of iPad." In the year since Apple last updated its product, companies including Samsung Electronics, Asustek Computer, Google and Amazon.com have unveiled new tablets, often at lower prices. The competition adds pressuretoApple because the iPad is its second-largest source of revenue after the flagship iPhone. Success of the new models will be critical as the Cupertino, Calif.-based company attempts to reignite revenue growth, which has slowed. Apple also introduced new free Mac software on Tuesday, called Mavericks. The com-

oi a s

pany showed an updated highend Mac Pro desktop computer aimed atprofessions needing extra computing power, such as graphic design and film editing. "We still believe deeply in this category and we're not slowing down on our innovations" in Macs, Cook said. Apple is updating its products ahead of the lucrative

holiday shopping season. As part of the lineup, new iPhones were released last month. Yet more than three years after Steve Jobs unveiled the iPad, the company is working to adjust to what he called the "post PC" era, where preferences haveshifted from personal computers to mobile devices.

MarcioJose Sahchez IThe Associated Press

On Tuesday, Apple unveiled its new, thinner and lighter tablet called the "iPad Air" in San Francisco. The new iPad weighs 1 pound, compared to the 1.4 pounds of its predecessor.

boom.

Tax-free trust gets new name

The change is meant to clarify the relationship

between theTax-Free Trust of Oregonprogram and Aquila Group, which

managesthetrust. The trust invests in

tax-free municipal bonds in Oregon.Thename change won't impact the trust's investment

approach, companyofficials said. The trust was founded

in1986 andhasmore than $500 million in as-

sets, according toAquila Group's website. — Bulletin staffreports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Resume Workshop: Learn howto updateyour resumeduring aninteractive workshop with stafffrom Goodwill JobConnection and DeschutesPublic Library system;registration recommended;free;1:30-3 p.m.; DowntownBendPublic Library, 601 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7080. • Business Alter HoursBusiness Showcase:Bend Chamber ofCommerce; registration required;free; 5p.m.;SeventhMountain Resort,18575 S.W.Century Drive, Bend;541-382-8711 or www.bendchamber.org. THURSDAY • October AdBite: Lynette Xanders will discussbrand artistry; registration required; $25 for members,$45for nonmembers;11:30a.m.-1 p.m.; St. CharlesBend conferencecenter, 2500N.E Nelf Road;541-382-4321 or www.adfedco.org. • BNI Chapter Deschutes Business Networkers: 7 p.m.; BendSenior Center, 1600 S.E ReedMarket Road; 541-6 I0-9125. FRIDAY • How to Take Control ol Your TimeandGel More Out of Life: Learnstrategies to help productivity, focus and efficiency, registration required; $65;8-9:30a.m.; webinar; info@simplifynw. com. MONDAY • Conversationwith National TourAssociation Chairman MarkHoffman: Changingneedsand demographicsoftravelers, smaller-sizedtour groups and working with tour operatorsto increase business; registration suggested;10-11:30a.m.; Phoenix InnSuites Bend, 300 N.W.FranklinAve.; 541-317-9292, kristine© VisitCentral0regon.comor www.visitcentraloregon. com. TUESDAY • Build a Professional Website for YourBusiness 2: Learnchangesto improve thelook andfeel of your website; registration required; $129;Tuesdays through Nov.19,6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270.

For the complete calendar, pickup Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/ttizeal

er sees

in OW

The municipal bond

mutual fundTax-Free Trust of Oregonnow operates underthe name Aquila Tax-Free Trust of Oregon, according to a news releasefrom Aquila Group of Funds.

uureo

1I' S SB

148K jobs added in September • Unemployment rate at 7.2 percent

By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

By Catherine Rampell

WindowAlert, a company located in southwest Bend, has developed a new ultraviolet liquid that can be applied to windows to help prevent birds from flying into the glass. Unlike humans, birds can see ultraviolet light, said company founder and CEO Spencer Schock. So when WindowAlert's UV Liquid is applied to windows as small dots or other shapes, it catches the attention of the birds but leaves the windows clear. Research published in The Wilson Journal of Ornithology estimates that billions of birdsdie each year worldwide

New York Times News Service

by flying into clear glass. To try and reduce the number of deaths, Schock started WindowAlert, located at 1020 S.W. Emkay Drive, in August 2003, selling coated decals that reflect the ultraviolet rays in sunlight. The decals, which are designed to be stuck on the outside of windows, caught the attention of homeowners, he said, but some commercial building owners didn't want to use them. So in 2010, Schock went back to the drawing board, in an effort to find a liquid solution. "I wanted to create a product that was more appealing to more people so that we could save more birds," he said. Chemical engineering began in 2011, and after more than $100,000 in product development, the UV liquid

Rob Kerr i The Bulletin

A handheld ultraviolet light illuminates Spencer Schock, founder and CEO of WindowAlert Inc., on Tuesday at Hand in Hand Productions. Schock is applying UV Liquid, the Bend company's newest product to help prevent birds from flying into glass, to the pane. Birds have the ability to see the drawings on the glass in plain light, but people see only clear glass. launched in April. "We experienced numerous setbacks that we had to overcome," he said. "The first (product) reflected UV light, was virtually clear, but you could not get it off the window. A second setback was ... it was easily removed, but if you sprayed it with water it would turn white. So if it rained it would ruin someone's view." The decals and liquid are sold at more than 500 wildbird stores and garden centers across the country, including

severalCentral Oregon locations. A 1.5-ounce bottle costs $19.45. Schock said a bottle should be enough for several houses. He hopes the product will attract not only home and businessowners,butthose in the window-washing industry. "We're hoping that window

vwashers nationwide will start to use UV Liquid as an add-on sale product," he said. "That would mean they would wash someone's windows and then use UV Liquid to protect those windows against bird strikes." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbultetin.com

U.S. employers added 148,000 jobs in September, a discouraging report that might still be too optimistic about the job market. The Labor Department report is based on data collected beforethe recent government shutdown even started, so it doesn't factor in the resulting furloughs. Adding to the uncertainty, the coming data releases will be delayed and distorted by the partial shutdown, making it difficult to assess the underlying health of the economy. Weakness in the hiring figures is expected to further delay the Federal Reserve's decision to start tapering its stimulus programs. "The labor market lost, rather than gained, momentum over the summer, leaving us with less than a desirable cushion just as the government w as shuttered in response to political shenanigans," said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial. The paceofemployment growth in September was slower than the average rate over the previous year, which was about 185,000 jobs per month. Theunemployment rate settled at 7.2, down from 73 percent, an insignificant statistical change. The biggest net hiring gains in September were in construction, wholesale trade, and transportation and warehousing.

Bill Gates acquires a stake in Spanish building firm By Manuel Baigorri and Esteban Duarte Bloomberg News

MADRID — Microsoft founder Bill Gates bought a stake in Spanish builder Fomento de Construcciones & Contratas SA, in a sign of optimism about an economic recovery. Gates, the world's richest man, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, paid $155 million for a 5.7 percent

holding, the Barcelona-based company said in a statement on Monday. FCC gained as much as 13 percent in Madrid trading, reaching its highest price in more than 18 months. Spanish assets such as FCC, a construction company with water and waste-management operations, are luring investors as the country's economy exited a two-year recession in the third quarter, according to government estimates.

Spain's extra borrowing costs compared with Germany's have more than halved from a peak. As foreign investors return to Spain's bond and equity markets, the main Ibex-35 share index has risen 23 percent this year. "The positive structural changes in Spain are far more evident than in other countries such as Portugal or Greece," Francisco Salvador, a Madrid-based analyst at FGA/

MG Valores, said by phone. "If Spain were a company, it would be a restructuring story similar to that of FCC, and investors usually like those stories." FCC said Tuesday that another institutional investor bought 0.26 percent. The stock ended trading in Madridup 8.3 percent, valuing it at 2.2 billion euros. Before Tuesday, the stock had gained 67 percent this year.

Gates,57,co-founder of Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft, recaptured the title of the world's richest person in May from Mexican investor Carlos Slim, as the software maker hit a five-year high. His fortune is valued at about $75 billion. Gates still owns a stake in Microsoft and his portfolio includes Ecolab Inc., a St. Paul, Minn.-based provider of sanitation and health services.

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed Oct. 14 • BrettA. Couch, P.O.Box 4483,Bend Filed Oct. 15 • Scott W. Gorman, 63123 Fresca St., Bend • Martin J. Runyon, P.O. Box 8575, Bend • Vickie K. Mondt, 417

N.W. Georgia Ave., Bend • Jeffrey M. Lockling, 986 N.E. Mahogany St., Prineville • Charla R. Murphy, P.O. Box 515, Redmond Filed Oct. 16 • Shannon M. Schaumburg, 3053 N.E. Canoe Court, No. 3, Bend • Susan M. Fowler, 555

N.E. Redwood Ave., Redmond • Neil B. LaSarte, 3003 S.W. Quartz Ave., Redmond Filed Oct. 18 • Carlos V.Rosan,70 S.W. Century Drive, No. 206, Bend • Aisha C. Gaut, 25 N.W. Gordon Road, Bend

• James N. Hall, 63698 Hunters Circle, Bend Filed Oct. 19

• Gabriel R. Ring, 209 N.W. Overlook Vista Drive, Bend Filed Oct. 22

• Lora L. North, P.O.Box OX 202, Prineville • Jamey Smith, 707 S.W. Black Butte Blvd., Unit11,

Redmond Chapter 11 Filed Oct. 11 • Danny L. Berrey, 17041 Lady Caroline Drive, Sisters Chapter 13 Filed Oct. 15 • Patricia A. Fletcher, 3334 N.E. Mendenhall Drive,

Bend • Nicole R. Rickart, 2444 N.E. Conners Ave., No. 1, Bend • Jenna Lee, 527 N.W. Elm Ave., No. 3 PMB135, Redmond • Keith H. Keiper, 1893 N.E. Taylor Court, Bend Filed Oct. 16 • Delano J. Hamberger,

63656 Cricketwood Road, Bend • Donna J. Long, P.O.Box 8117, Bend • Michael R. Eastep, P.O. Box 585, La Pine Filed Oct. 17 • Ned A. Herrera, 2932 N.W. Hemlock Lane, Redmond


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Reader photos, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D3 Fishing report, D4 THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6

BRIEFING

Bend Bikesto host community forum Bend Bikes is hosting a community forum tonight to highlight

some of the bicycle developments underway in Bend, as well as to

solicit feedback to shape a citizen-based bicycle

plan. The plan will serve to inform policy and fund-

ing advocacy, andfuture infrastructure efforts.

O www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

Ll Of 1 O O By David Jasper The Bulletin

«You had a very Japanese outing," said my wife, Catherine, after I got home from an outing last Wednesday. She had just gotten home from work, meaning a day cooped

SOB IA e OfeS Mrs. Map Guy, left, demonstrates her excellent "forest bathing" skills. ln Japan,the practice of leisurely visits to forests to de-stress is known as shinrin-yoku.

See additional photos onTheBulletin's website:denddnffetin.com/faffriver

Wednesday was early in the last week'sstreak of precious Indian summer days, during which, if you had OUTING up i n doors, and I was chosen to stay indoors, you should bragging/telling her have been forced outside, perhaps about the outing I took with our fam- placed in a pillory with a nice view of ily dog, Kaloo, along with Mr. and Mrs. the sun. Map Guy. After I w axed enthusiastic about We'd spenta good chunk of Wednesthe sunny day, the limpid waters, the day along the cold, clear Fall River, towering ponderosa pines, the phowhich gushes to life from the ground togenic everything, I then confessed east ofCrane Prairie Reservoir and some guilt: We'd covered a shameful flows eastward to its confluence with lack of distance. Just a hair over l t/z the Deschutes between La Pine and miles. Sunriver. SeeFall River/D3

David Jasper The Bulletin

The forum will take place at Bend Electric Bikes, 223 N.W. Hill St., from 6:30to 8 p.m.

HUNTING 5 FISHING

For more information, email info@bendbikes. org or visit www.Bend

a in

Bikes.org.

Monster Dash5K slated for Sunday

a uc

The second annual Monster Dash 5Kand Little Monster's Milea benefit for the Bend-La

in catte counti

Pine High School track and field teams — is scheduled for Sunday

at Highland Elementary School in Bend.

Costumes areencouraged. Participants can register online at www.fleetfeetbend.

com/events/monster dash. The 5K race starts at

r' .

10 a.m.

<

' ' Ij

For more information, call 541-389-1601 or

GARY LEWIS

email training©fleetfeetbend.com.

T

Local woman honored dyrodeo Kayla Vincent was

recently chosen asthe 2014 Miss Northwest

Professional Rodeo Association during an event in Prineville. Vincent is from Madras,

where she lives on her family's hay and livestock farm. She also won the

speech, horsemanship, knowledge, appearance and personality categories. Vincent is a junior

at Western Oregon University, where she is studying math and

business. She isalso a member of the school's dance team. — From staff reports

TRAIL UPDATE WITH CHRIS SABD WILDERNESSTRAILS Smoky conditions will occur throughout the area this week, with

MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL GUIDE

up to four prescribed burns in various locations. Tree blowdown has been reported on a number of trails and

roadways throughout the area. Snow conditions will vary above 6,000 feet, with patchy to sectional snow on

Green Lakes, Moraine Lake, South Sister Climbers Trail and

surrounding areas. Mild temperatures are predicted for the rest of

week with popular recreation sites maintaining their user numbers.

VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES Winter trail maintenance has begun with volunteer work available. Contact a volunteer trail coordinator at 541-383-5300.

ROAD UPDATE Road 370 near Todd

Lake remains openbut will close in the near future.

here were five bucks and a few does together when we spotted them. The biggest of the bucks was a four-point, and we wanted a better look. They were near the fence line, but we were on public land and two other hunterswere in a truc k on the road above the deer. Chances were good they didn't see the deer, although they were only 40 yards away. I folded the spotting scope and we eased along the fenceline road, took a left on the dirt road and entered the trees. I trusted to 16-year-old Hayden's instincts. He knew the land and I didn't. But I knew what I was looking for in a buck, and this might be the one. If he had said, "Eight-ball, corner pocket," he couldn't have called it any closer. We walked right in on them, and everywhere we looked we saw antlers. Three of the bucks were forked horns or twoby-threes; the biggest: a nice three-point and a large-bodied four-point with crab-claw front forks. Two nice bucks, broadside, but neither was the buck I had come for. Hayden had to go back to school and football. I had deadlines. All week, I thought about the ground we had covered.There were a lotofspots where a buck could hide, little basins, groves of mountain mahogany, folds in the ground where a big buck could post a little buck as a lookout. There was one spot I couldn't quit thmkmg about. Ancient floods had carved a narrow canyon. Over the centuries, wind, water and ice had done the rest and had left weird rock formations, little caves and lichen-encrusted boulders. To the ranch kids of thearea,the canyon came to be known as the "Dragon Rocks." On one side, the forest sloped down to sage; the other side was a barren, grassy slope with a few old junipers and a grove of mountain mahogany. Here, there was bitterbrushand other browse. Here, there was shade. Water was close, within a quartermile. A buck could eke out an existence here. But this spot, more thanany other,seemed a place of refuge. See Lewis/D4

• Horse Butte offers wide-open spaces where you can bask in the sunshine Editors note: Mountain Bike Trail Guide, by Bulletin sports and outdoors writer Marlz Morical, features various trails in Central Oregon and beyond. This is the final trail guide

of the2013 season.

ometimes, during our crisp, clear autumn days here in Central Oregon, it is better to seek out the open desert to soak up the warm sunshine rather than be tucked deep in the shade of

ponderosa pines. The Horse Butte area is the perfect place to ditch the pines — which line most of our region's singletrack west of Bend — and ride through open sagebrush country. Located just southeast of Bend, the Horse Butte Trailhead gives mountainbikers access

MARK MORICAL

D

See video coverage on The Bulletin's website:

denddnffetin.com/traifdiking

with dust. Last week, the Horse Butte trails, tinged with the frost of the High Desert fall, were in tiptop shape. And the sun shined on me for nearly all 12 miles of a memorable loop ride. The Coyote Loop Trail and Arnold Ice Cave Trail

(Trail 63) form a loop of to trails that can remain ridable throughout most of the winter. The area is to be avoided during the summer, though, when the trails are choked

about 10 miles that can be ridden in either direction. I started out on the Arnold Ice Cave Trail to ride the loop clockwise. See Horse Butte/D4 Photo hy Mark Morical r The Bulletin


D2

THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

I

er I

Spw~ ~W n,

r

Liz Wentzek

"A pretty colorful leaf collection on a rock in our backyard."

rtk

Ray DeBaun

Next month's topic is signs of winter. Submit at www.bendbulletin.coml signsofwinter

"Late afternoon view of aspens against Painted Hills backdrop."

„."P ss ~':, ur=.g - 'a' 's'

rv

Karen

"Autumn Dew" '?p,

"

8

V

Joe

"Quoting Henry David Thoreau, 'Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity!'"

I. $

• We want to seeyour photos of signs of winter for another

l» -

special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section.

Submit your bestworkat denddulletin.cengsignsefwinterand we'll pick the bestfor publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to

readerphetos©denddulletin.cemandtell us a bit aboutwhere and whenyoutook them. All entries will appear online, andwe'll choose the best for publication in print. Submission requirements:Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, 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 dpi) and cannot be altered. BitlMcD

"View From The Foot Bridge"


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

U TDOORS CYCLING BEND BIKESCOMMUNITY FORUM: Bend Bikes is hosting this event to highlight some of the bicycle developments already underway in Bend, as well as to solicitfeedback to shape a citizen-based bicycle plan; the plan will serve to inform policy andfunding advocacy,and future infrastructure efforts; at Bend Electric Bikes; today, 6:30 to 8 p.m.; info@bendbikes.org; www. BendBikes.org. CRANKSGIVINGSCAVENGER BIKE RIDE:Family ride for all ages in support of the Bethlehem Inn; no entry fee, but riders should bring $20 to cover the cost of items to be purchased and donated to the Inn; each cyclist will be provided a map of neighborhood stores and list of items the Bethlehem Inn requires; cyclists will finish back at GoodLife Brewing Company by12:30 p.m. with their donated items; an awards ceremony will celebrate the fastest man, fastest woman and fastest family; Sunday, Nov. 3, from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; kim@bethleheminn. org; www.bethleheminn.org.

FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For membersto meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; 6 p.m.; meets on the first Monday of each month; Oregon Natural Desert Association offices, Bend; 541-306-4509, communications@deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:A group of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509orbendcastingclub@ gmail.com.

A L E NDAR

THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: 7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www. sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.

Email events at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.

BIRD WATCH

Berry-loving birdsometimesgets a little tipsy Cedarwaxwing

eat cedar or juniper berries, the "waxwing" common namecomes from a reddish

Scientific name:Bombycilla cedrorum

substance secreted from the wing tips that

resembles small drops of sealing wax. The genusname comes from acombination

Characteristics:A songbird with reddish

HUNTING

brown upper parts and tannish underparts, asli cked-backheadcrest,blackeyemask

LEARN THE ART OFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learn how to identify and interpret tracks, signs and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; 8a.m.to noon; two or more walks per month; $35; 541-6337045; dave@wildernesstracking. com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meetsthesecond W ednesday ofeach m onth;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall. CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION:Meets certain Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m. at VFW HallinRedmond; Nov.13, Dec.4, Jan. 8 and 22, Feb. 5 and19, March 5,12,19,26,April2and9; big game banquet April 12; 541-447-2804 or facebook.com at RMEFCentral Oregon.

and yellow-tipped tail feathers. The wings

of Greek and Latin words meaning "silky tailed." A flock may sit on a limb and pass a

are grayish above and have red bead-

berry along the line before onebird eats the

like tips on some wing feathers. Often observed in flocks. Adults average 7 inches in length.

fruit. Often viewed flying in tight flocks, these birds fly with rapid wing beats and high-

PADDLING KAYAKINGCLASSES:Weekly classes and open pool; 4-6 p.m. Sundays; equipment provided to those who preregister, first-come, first-served; $3; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; 541-548-7275,

Breeding:Builds a bulky cup-shaped nest of twigs and grasses in atree. Thefemale lays two to six eggs, which take about two weeks to hatch. Range:Found throughout most of North America and Mexico during portions of the

year. May beirregular in their appearance; probably depending upon food resources in an area. Haditat:Prefers forest edges, woodlands,

orchards and residential areas. www.raprd.org.

SKIING AND SNOW B O A R D ING NORDICPROGRAMS MEETING: Parentand athlete informational meeting for all winter nordic programs with the Bend Endurance Academy; learn about program offerings, meet the coaches and get ready for the season; 500 S.W. Bond St., Bend; Tuesday, Nov. 5, from 6:30 to 7 p.m.; info© bendenduranceacademy.org; www. bendenduranceacademy.org. BEND SKICLUB KICK-OFF SEASON PARTY:At Anthony's Restaurant, Old Mill in Bend; Saturday, Nov. 2, 6 to 9 p.m.; for members and potential members; club-provided appetizers with a no-host bar available; RSVP requested; 678-333-5767; ker2@ bendbroadband.com; www. bendskiclub.info.

Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

pitched warbling calls. A flock is known asan "earful of waxwings." Current viewing:Throughout Central

Cedar waxwing

Oregon in parks, residential areas or areas

Food:Feedson berries of junipers, mountain ash, firethorn and other plants, as well as insects, flowers and tree sap.Maycome to a feeder to eat apple slices or peas. If the birds eat fermenting fruit, they maydisplay some FWI (flying while intoxicated) behavior. Comments:Although these waxwings will

RUNNING MONSTERDASH5K: The second annual Monster Dash 5Kand Little Monster's Mile is a benefit for the Bend-La Pine High School track and field teams; costumes are encouraged; register at Fleet Feet or online; 5K is $20 through September; Little Monster's Mile is $12; Sunday, Oct. 27, 5K starts at10 a.m.; at Highland Elementary School, Bend; 541389-1601; training©fleetfeetbend. com; www.fleetfeetbend. com/events/monster dash.

SHOOTING COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10;10a.m.; third Saturdayofeach

with berry-bearing trees. — DamianFaganisanEastCascadesAudubon Society volunteer andCOCCCommunity Learning instructor. Hecan bereached at damian.fagan© hotmafl.com. Sources: Oregon Department of Wildlife Resources and "The Audubon Society Encyclopedia of North American Birds" by John Terres

month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. BEND BOWMEN INDOORARCHERY LEAGUE:Traditional league; Wednesday evenings; Lenny at 541-480-6743;indoor3-Dleague Thursday; 7 p.m.; Bruce at 541-4101380 or Del at 541-389-7234. BEND TRAPCLUB:Trap shooting, five-stand and skeet shooting; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursdays and Sundays; milepost30,U.S.Highway 20, Bend; Bill Grafton at541-3831428 or www.bendtrapclub.com. CENTRAL OREGONSPORTING CLAYSANDHUNTING PRESERVE: Thirteen-station, 100-target course and five-stand; 10 a.m. to dusk Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. to dusk Monday,Tuesday,Thursday and Friday; 9020 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; www.birdandclay.

Fall River Continued from 01 That's 1.6 miles round-trip — an embarrassing distance to usually goal-oriented hikers. It was all the more embarrassing because we killed at least two hours there, strolling and standing and taking photos and gawking at the scenery. I'd call it "breathtaking" scenery, but we had a surfeit of oxygen, what with barely moving and ali. That'swhen Catherine referenced an article in the December 2012 issue of Outside magazine that's still f l o ating around the house: "The Nature Cure," a feature on shinrin-yoku, or forest bathing (read it yourself at tinyurL com/d3rvrz6). "The Japanese go crazy for this practice, which is standardpreventivem edicinehere. It essentially involves hanging out in the woods," writes Florence Williams. Forest bathers will take 75-minute train rides to escape heavily populated and hectic Tokyo just to decompress in a forest, touch a tree branch, smell the flowers. Online, the piece is titled "Take Two Hours of Pine Forest and Cail Me in the Morning," and reading it will make you grateful that, depending on where you live, you can get to ali sorts of places like Deschutes River Trail, Shevlin Park, Dry River Canyon, Peterson Ridge in minutes. A 75-minute drive co uld t ake yo u w e l l i n t o D e s chutes National Forest, or the Ochocos,even to the w est side of the Cascades, where green is in abundance year-round. I'm not sure how iong it took us to get to the Fall River's headwaters, though. It's about 30 miles from Bend to the old guard station adjacent to the river, but I lost track of the drive time because, well, I somehow drove right by them. In fact, we were almost to Crane Prairiebeforewe turned around, then on a whim took a detour to look at Pringle Fails on the nearby Deschutes River. The water level was so low we didn't bother to pause here. Aii the U-turns and K-turns I made began to make Map Guy car sick. He might argue I intentionally applied more force than necessary while accelerating and braking in reverse, but it was necessary — for making him sicker after he started complaining. Fortunately, he was in for a cleansing, medicinal forest soak. The health benefits of

D3

com or 541-383-0001. REDMOND ROD 8I GUN CLUB: Archery, pistol, rifle, skeet, sporting clays and trap; club is open to the community and offers many training programs; 3 miles east of Redmond on the north side of state Highway 126; www.rrandgc.com. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy actionshooting club;second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www. pinemountai nposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass. com.

s tt

Deschutes National Forest

Fall River Fish Hatchery

TofI nd

42

r Ranger Station,

t,l

RIVER

Campground

Fall River Falls

u«'

La PineStatePar Rd.

zsc>"

Headwaters

La Pine StatePark

TP LaPine Greg Cross/The Bulletin

David Jasper /The Bulletin

The roaring Fall River Falls is a must-see when visiting the area. The stretches above and below the falls are calm in comparison.

If yougo Getting there:Take U.S. Highway 97 south to Vandevert Road. At the stop sign, turn left onto South Century Drive. One mile

little more goal-oriented than I'm letting on: We were look-

ing fora geocache. Map Guy

had with him directions, but not the coordinates, for a geoc ache somewhere near t h e headwaters. He told me it was down, turn west to remain a new approach to geocachon South Century (Forest ing, one that was more like a Road 42). Proceed 10miles treasure hunt. to Fall River Campground, W e were looking for a n located at milepost15, or "ammo can painted a tan the headwaters about.8 color and hidden fairly well." miles farther, both on left. Among the cry ptic clues: "You Difficulty: Easy will see several large PonderCost:Free osa Pines that should impress you asthese large trees are far Contact:541-383-4000 and few between. Have you ever seen a Burl as large as immersing oneself in the out- that before'?" doors aren't just a necdotal. As we w andered around Williams writes of Japanese every ponderosa with a burl, researchers who have found those bubble-like growths that that "leisurely forest walks, are on (seemingly) dozens of compared with urban walks, trees around here, we argued yield a 12.4 percent decrease and debated things. Could the in the stress hormone corti- randomly capitalized words in soi, a 7 percent decrease in the description even be part of sympathetic nerve activity, a a cipher'? 1.4 percent decrease in blood Not so much, as Map Guy pressure and a 5.8 percent de- would say. crease in heart rate." A few days later, he emailed I like a trail ride, hike or run me his mea culpa: "Remember as much as the next stressed- how the geocache had no coout dad with three kids, a full- ordinates, so I thought it was time working spouse and two a new approach'? Not so much. pets, but it's nice to know that My computer hadlogged me just getting out and doing nada out ofgeocaching.com, and in nature is also beneficial. the numbers aren't there if After we parked, we peeked you're not logged in. Soooo." in the windows of the guard O n th e w a y b a ck , w e station — a c ozy, two-bed- stopped at Fail River Falls. room, 600-square-foot cabin Five miles back toward civiiithat you can rentfor $90 a zation on Forest Road 42, we night part of the year — we turned on gravel road 15415 moseyed a n d me a n dered (note: when heading east, the around the peaceful spring. road, which runs to the south, We had a reason to dilly- is located two-tenths of a mile dally, and in truth, we were a before milepost 10). The park-

ing area is about three-quarters of a mile down this bumpy road, on the left. The small but beautiful falls,

nestled amid lodgepole pines, are absolutely worth a stop. The river drops somewhere in the neighborhood of 13-14 feet before continuing on its way, a sunny meadow near the base providing an excellent viewpoint of the falls, not to mention surrounding foliage decked out in its fall wardrobe. Though it was a warm, sunny day, ice formed on shaded plants adjacent to the base of the fails. We gawked a while, the dog braving the frigid waters again and again as dogs are wont to do.

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I made vows of returning soon, just as I probably had after my last Fall River visit nearly two years ago. In actuality, I know it could be a while. There are just too many other options for a good soak in the forest. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbultetin.com

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D4

THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

Cutthroat restoration

FISHING REPORT For the water report, turn eachday to the weather page, today on B6 METOLIUS RIVER:Trout fishing has beengood.Insecthatchesshould for selected areas inand around offer lots of opportunities for good Central Oregon, provided by dry fly fishing. Fishing for bull trout fisheries biologists for the Oregon should be excellent. Large streamer Department of Fish and Wildlife: flies fished in the deeper pools and slots are the best bet. ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: The OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Dueto the low boat ramp is out of the water, making water levels, the ramp is no longer launching a boat difficult except usable and the reservoir is restricted possibly for small boats. Best success to nonmotorized watercraft only. will be had in the deeper water near Fishing forbass hasbeengood along the dam. the rocks near the dam. BEND PINENURSERYPOND: Fishing ODELL LAKE: Kokanee angling is fair for bluegill is good. with most fish in the 11-13 inch range. BIG LAVALAKE:Anglers are having Lake trout are available in the deeper good success, with rainbow trout in water. Bull trout are also present and the12to18-inch range making up must be released unharmed. Anglers most of the catch. All gear types are are reminded to be familiar with the producing fish. difference between these two species. CRESCENTLAKE:Opportunities for PAULINA LAKE: Kokanee and rainbow rainbow and brown trout are good. troutfishing is very good. Large brown trout are also available. CatchCROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN and-release only on all non-adipose DAM:Fishing for10-16 inch rainbow fin-clipped rainbow trout — all has been excellent. Anglers using rainbow trout with an intact adipose nymph patterns are having the greatest success. Trout over 20 inches fin must be released. are considered steelhead. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR: Opportunities for bass and crappie are FALL RIVER:Fishing is restricted to excellent. Anglers are reporting bigger fly fishing only with barbless hooks. smallmouth bass than in recent years. Fall River is periodically stocked with hatchery rainbow trout throughout the WALTONLAKE:Fishing has been summer months. Fall River below the good. falls closes at the end of September. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Fishing LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Bull trout for kokanee and brown trout in the and kokanee anglers should focus Deschutes River Arm has been on the upper part of the Metolius excellent. Kokanee areaveraging 2-3 Arm. Kokanee angling is slow. A pounds. Closedabovethe ODFW tribal angling permit is required in marker near the West South Twin boat the Metolius Arm. Please checkthe ramp. This includes the area around special regulations for this area. Sheeps Bridge.

is making progress

Here is the weekly fishing report

FLY-TYING CORNER

at Yellowstone Lake By Brett French

The lake used to be the cutthroat's stronghold, but Although the data hasn't since lake t rout n u mbers been officially tallied yet, this have swelled, cutthroat numsummer's netting efforts on bers have nose-dived as the Yellowstone Lake resulted predatory lake trout have in the capture and killing of dined on the smaller cutmore than 300,000 lake trout throat trout. for the second year in a row. Based on lakewide moni"The significant thing is toring this summer, though, we focused heavily through Koel is optimistic that cutthe whole season on large throat numbers are reboundfish," said Todd Koel, Yellow- ing, however slowly. "For a second year in a stone's supervisory fisheries biologist. row we saw large pulses of Removing l a rge a d ults young cutthroat trout comcan significantly depress the ing back," he said. population since big females The key w il l b e seeing can lay thousands of eggs cutthroat trout return to Yelwhen they spawn in the fall. lowstone Lake's spawning Including this year's catch, streams in the spring. the Park Service has r eThe park's fisheries crew moved about 1.4 million lake was also busy this summer trout from Yellowstone Lake poisoning Grayling Creek in since 1994. the northwest corner of the The agency is trying to park to r emove nonnative reduce the nonnative fish to fish and restore Yellowstone help restore native Yellow- cutthroat trout and streamstone cutthroat trout. dwelling arctic grayling. Billings (Mont.) Gazette

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Chrome Standard, tied by Pete Ouelette. When the weatherturns

let the current take the fly in

cold, steelheadseemto want brighter colors — oranges,

a sweeping arc. Hold ashock

loop of about 20 inches and, at the grab, let the line go, Chrome Standard is agreat then lift the rod. delivery system for mixing and Tie the Chrome Standard matching hues in a fly that has with orange thread on a No. reds, pinks. Pete Ouellette's

the kind of profileand action

4-1.5Alec Jackson or similar

needed in low temps. At the fly shop, check out the dyed

dyed guineafibers. Wrap

hook. For the tail, use orange-

guinea —black, blue,purple, chartreuse —andcomeup with your owncombo. This is a swinging fly.

the body with UTC wire and tie in a thorax of synthetic

Cast it quartering down and

dyed guinea for the hackle. — Gary Lewis

"peacock" dubbing. Useyellow marabou for thewing and

across, throw a mend,then

ul 1

Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin

An Eastern Oregon mule deer doe watches from a sage brush hilltop.

Lewis

'"/

'qt

i' k

s

Mark Moncal/The Bulletin

Horse Butte rises above the open landscape southeast of Bend, with Mount Jefferson in the background.

Horse Butte

I nott Rd.

BE

Billadeau Rd.

Contlnued from 01 The trails traverse the burn where the 1996 Skeleton Fire scorched 17,000 acres, open-

-

Arnol Mkt. Rd. 18

Horse Butte Rd.-

ing up sprawling views in every direction and leaving behind sagebrush and bare juniper trees. To the west, I c ould see nearly all the prominent Cascade peaks ofOregon: Mount Bachelor, the Three Sisters, Broken Top, Mount Washington, Mount Jefferson — even Mount Hood to the far north on the extremely clear day. The trails near Horse Butte include a relative dearth of climbing or elevation change, and they are not especially technical, making them ridable for all skill levels. But riders should be wary of rocks and thick brush along the trail that can smack their pedals and surprise them. I was caught off guard and sent sprawling over the handlebars by one such rock. I was uninjured, but I certainly felt it the next morning. Several years ago, I would ride by myself on the Horse Butte trails and not see another soul. This time around, I came across five or six other mountain bikers. The word is out, and more and more fat-tire enthusiasts are realizing that their sport is year-round in Central Oregon. Aside from H orse Butte, other locations such as Horse Ridge (southeast of Bend off U.S. Highway 20), M aston (southwest of Redmond off Cline Falls Highway), the Radlands in Redmond and Smith Rock State Park/Gray Butte in Terrebonne offer perfect mountain biking c onditions throughout much of the fall

Rickard Rd.

Horse Butte China HatRd.

,-".~ Parking

ggg Bessie~~ Butte ~

%

~~> Cabin Butte

llorse Btttte Irall

18 ', '

.

,

:g

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

HorseButte

miles. The Coyote Loop TrailArnold Ice Cave Trail loop is

DIRECTIONS

about10 miles; bikers can

in Bend, turn east on Rickard

combine other singletrack and dirt roads for much longer

Road.Go 2 m ileseaston Rickard Road, then turn right

found at www.adventure

From Southeast 27th Street

rides. A detailed map can be

on Billadeau Road,which

maps.net.

turns into Horse Butte Road.

RATING Technically easy, aerobically intermediate.

This road becomesgravel and is marked by aDeschutes National Forest sign. Continue until you see the Horse Butte

TRAIL FEATURES

Trailhead sign. Turn right and

High Desert singletrack riding

park. The Arnold Ice Cave Trail is just across the road from the

among sagebrush andsome juniper trees; expansive views of the CascadeRangeand

parking lot. TheCoyote Loop Trail is farther south down the I'oad.

LENGTH Loop options of10 to 30

and winter. It is extremely important that all user groups cooperate in areas like Horse Butte, where frequent users include hikers, trail runners, mountain bikers and equestrians. I came across one horseback rider last week and made my presence known, so as not to

other mountains; a few lava

caves are located in the area; trails should be avoided in the

summer, whenthey become quite dusty. startle her horse. She thanked me, let me pass, and I continued on my way. While the trails at Horse Butte are prime for biking this time of year, they also allow for access to lava caves. Sure, you can drive down China Hat Road to find some of these caves, but getting there via

mountain bike seems to add a sense of adventure. I followed the signs on the trail to B oyd Cave, located about a quarter of a mile north from the Coyote Loop Trail along Forest Road 560. Boyd Cave is one of three lava caves in the Deschutes National Forest that are open and accessible to the public, according to the U.S. Forest Service. The others are the Arnold Ice Cave and the South Lava Ice Cave. I walked down the access stairs and stepped into the dark cave — eerily dark. Unfortunately, I f ailed to pl an ahead and bring a headlamp or flashlight, but that did not affect the sense of wonder I felt while stepping down into thelavatube. The lava caves were formed thousands of years ago from crusts of solidified lava that grew over the top of flowing lava, according to the U.S. Forest Service. When the eruption that produced the lava stopped, the lava drained out of most of the lava tube, forming the cave. Boyd Cave is a w e ll-preserved lava tube with l i ttle collapse and a total length of about 1,880 feet, according to the Forest Service. I headed back up the steps, into the bright sunlight, and back on my way. On the ride back to the trailhead I stopped a couple of times, just to take in the quiet of the desert and the warmth of the sun. Before long, the bitter cold of winter will arrive. But hearty mountain bikers can count on places to ride in Central Oregon. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com

"Easy, big girl." A stampede

would kill my chances. From here Icould see the tops of the mahogany. Off the hogback, in the canyon, was a line of junipers. Through the trees, I ghosted from shade to shade. One last juniper. When I reached it, I saw a gray shape against the green of the trees and the silver of the sage. I saw antlers shine in the evening light. A quick look with the binocular showed me a fork well above the tops of its ears. There was time to range it — 252 yards. There was time to take a picture. There was time to take a rest on a juniper limb, tobreak away a couple of twigs, to dial the scope to 7-power. Once upon a time, this WinchesterModel 70 belonged to John Nosler, then it belonged to Ed Neff, one of John's longtime employees. There was a 150-grain Nosler Partition in the chamber.Ipushed the safety through to "fire" and found ground opened up. the buck and the crosshair, let When I began to drop them drift into perfect aligndown the o t her s ide, I ment andpressed the trigger. started to see cattle. Beef. Old John had spoken. A Black Angus: the wild card four-point mule deer lay in the I hadn't counted on. There mahogany. Now, the imporhad to be 50 cows between tant thing was to turn this fine me and the mahogany. If buck into a supply of winter there were cows, would meat. That's when I rememthere be deer? I weighed my bered my knife. It was still in options. If the cows stam- the truck, a half-mile away. — Gary Lewis is the host peded, it would alert the of "Adventure Journal" and deer. The cattle might have pushed the deer out. Then I author of "John Nosler — Going remembered. My best mule Ballistic," "Black Bear Hunting," "HuntingOregon" and other deer bucks have all come from cattle country. The titles. Contact Lewis at www. deer and the cows are there GaryLewisoutdoors.com. forthe same reasons:feed, water, salt, shade. "Hello, Bossy. Good lookSee us for FREE ing calf you got there." lifting system upgrades A calf bawled. A heifer and $100 mail-in rebates rolled her eyes and ran off a on select Hunter Douglas few yards and looked back. Continued from D1 Hayden had said our best bet was to work the edges on opening weekend and then start tapping the better spots as the pressure moved deer around. He was thinking of a huge canyon he called "Hole in the Ground." I was thinking smaller. All it takes is enough cover to hide one deer. One good deer. F riday morning, I h a d a sense that if I was going to get a buck, I had to leave town quickly, drive the 3 t/z hours to camp and ease into the canyon an hour before dusk. It was a half-mile hike from the road to the sidehill of the canyon. The pine trees cast long shadows in the bowl on the north side of the ridge. I slipped from tree to tree, then, at the top, scrolled over and glassed a s each new fold in t h e

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013• THE BULLETIN

DS

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

a e-ni

oes romsni e oswee

TV SPOTLIGHT

help guru.

ross- ressin us an cau t Dear Abby: I am a happily married, heterosexual cross-dressing male. My wife understands and is supportive, and we have a wonderful life together. During the past week I h ave been caught unexp ectedly b y t h r e e different neighbors, DEAR and we are now in a ABBY state of panic. We're not sure what to do. If you have any suggestions, we are all ears. — Caught In A Panic Dear Caught:Because you would prefer to keep your cross-dressing private and this is October, you could tell your neighbors your f emale attire is w hat y ou'll b e wearing to a costume party. It's plausible. H owever, when s o meone i s

ers as well as their spouses, partners and families. It has been in my column before and is the oldest and largest support organization for cross-dressers and those who love them. It promotes cross-dressing with dignity and decency, and treats spouses on an equal b asis w i t h the i r cross-dressers. You can learn more about it at www.tri-ess.org. Dear Abby:My best friend's husband has beentexting me. When he did it the first time, he had been drinking and my friend was asleep. Some of the things he said made me uncomfortable, but I also didn't like that he said his wife didn't know what he was doing. He stopped after I told him I was uncomfortable with it. "caught" engaging in a private acNow he has started up again, oftivity once — that's an accident. fering support because my mother When it happens three times in passed away recently. I am honestone week, I can't help but wonder ly not sure whether he's trying to be whether on some level you would a good friend or if he's looking for like to be more open about your something more, and that scares lifestyle. me. I don't want to start trouble beIf you're not aware, a resource, tween my friend and her husband, The Society for the Second Self especiallybecause they seem so (Tri-Ess International), offers sup- happy together. Any ideas on how port forheterosexual cross-dress- to handle this?

— Unset tled in Ohio Dear Unsettled:Yes. Your friend's

husband maybe a genuinely sympatheticperson — or he could be trying to take advantage of you while you're emotionally vulnerable. Listen to your gut. Tell him you appreciate his thoughtfulness, but you already have a support system in place and are receiving all of the emotional support you need. Dear Abby:My 17-year-old cousin died in 2010, and I'm still hurting. I have tried to get over it, but we were really close. When I walk the halls at school, I hear people say bad things about him. When I bring his name up, no one has anything good to say about him. It seems like they don't really care that he was my cousin and I loved him. How can I ask these people not to say bad things about him? — Hurting in lndiana Dear Hurting:Because people forget that the young man who died was your relative, feel free to remind them. All you need to say is: "You know, he was my cousin and we were close. I still miss him, and I wish you wouldn't say things like that about him when I'm around." — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

This year you relate far better and with greater depth than you have inthe past. Others note the difference, and they like it. Your ability to detach, empathize andbe imaginative is your Stars showthe kind strong suit. Your of dayyou'll have so lutions are most ** * * * D ynamic unusual. If you are ** * * P ositive si n gle, you could ** * A verage att r act someone ** S o-so who is very unique * Difficult and possiblyfrom a different culture. Relating to this person opensyou up to the many different approaches onecan have to an issue. Youwill evolve because of this tie. If you are attached, the two of you will go on more getaways together. Enjoy every moment. CANCER encourages your flights of fancy.

project. Tonight: Some midweekfun.

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

** * * You might want to handle a By Jacqueline Bigar problem quickly before it gets even bigger. You could be delighted by how the other have difficulty following you. Youseemto parties involved respond. Recognize that know your destiny and the direction you are these people really wantyour attention. headedin.Tonight:Getsome mu ch-needed Once you give it to them, problems will melt rest. away. Tonight: Make it cozy.

CANCER (June 21-July22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** You might want to continue distancing yourself, as you'll want to avoid distractions. More information comes through a superior or boss. Youmight not have the right answers just yet, but trust thatyou will, given time. Tonight: Center yourself, then decide. This is your night.

** * O thers seem determined to haveit their way. Honor a change in a situation, and accept a less-active role. Youwill see thatyou like your new part in a project, as it allows you more free time. Tonight: Out late.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * Pace yourself, and know how much you want togetdone.Youseem determined to accomplish a goal, no matter what it takes. Others help pavethe way. Take advantage of everyone's good will. You know what works, and others seethat. Tonight: Till the weehours.

** * Spend some time thinking about a personal matter before you join a friend. You might be takenaback byall the different conversation topics. Both of you ARIES (March 21-April 19) have beendoing your share of reflecting, ** * * Focus on individuals rather than which becomes quiteobviousand the group in ameeting. Your sense of what AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) gratifying. Tonight: Play it low-key. ** * * You might want to reconsider your is appropriate could change as aresult. Use VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) options with more careand sensitivity. Take care with a matter involving your home or ** * * You are goal-oriented, but to some a hard look at a professional situation that your domestic life. A conversation moves people you might come off as demanding. to the top of your priorities. Tonight: Havea involves dealing with a superior. You'll see You can't be distracted once youare events in a slightly more serious waythan lengthy dinner. focused. Others witness you bringing an you originally did. Tonight: Do your own TAURUS (April20-May20) idea or project to fruition. They could be thing. ** * C ontinue using care with your envious. Know thatyou don'tneed to say PISCES (Feb.19-March20) finances. Youcouldbetakenabackbya anything. Tonight: With friends. ** * * You have been under unusual new insight later in the day,which might LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) tension on the homefront. You might want change a lot of what you do from here ** * * C o ntinue the role of observer. Youto lighten up, butyou don't know how. Try on out. Communication accelerates as gain through the process andfeel much to let go of your concerns. Plan afun getthe day goes on, andyou finally will feel better than you thought possible. Lighten together with a loved one. Understand that understood. Tonight: Out andabout. up the moment by treating friends to a everything will work out. Tonight: Join a GEMINI (May21-June20) fun dessert or whatever feels right. You friend for munchies and drinks. ** * * You soar from one level to the next will need to take the lead in an i m portant and from one topic to another. Others could ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

8 p.m. on H f3, "Revolution" — When TexasRanger John Fry (Jim Beaver), a man from Miles' (Billy Burke) past, resurfaces, Miles sees an opportunity to bring down the Patriots. Now all he has to do is talk Fry into it. Aaron (Zak Orth) confides in Cynthia (Jessica Collins). Charlie (Tracy Spiridakos) has a surprise for Miles and Rachel (Elizabeth Mitchell). Secretary Allenford knows a secret of importance to Neville (Giancarlo Esposito) in the new episode "One Riot, OneRanger."

people, really." It may also be that the slyly s ardonic Letterman of t h e 1980s was an anomaly. Indeed, his style was trickier and harder to accomplish than it appeared. He didn't aim to be the bad guy. Nor was he. He invited you to join him as a fellow outsider, together tossing spitballs at phony show business targets. The clever trick of his rejoinder to Cher i s t h at, by emphasizing how others saw him as rude,he became more human, vulnerable and even likable. If you doubt it, consider that just last month Cher went on his show on the day her first studio album in more than a decade was released and made quick,fond mention of her quarter-centuryold insult. "That was a whole different time in our love life," she told him.

9 p.m. on (CW), "TheTomorrow People" —While at a party with Astrid (Madeleine Mantock), Stephen (Robbie Amell) learns that one of his classmates is in danger. After John andCara(Luke Mitchell, Peyton List) turn down his requestfor help, he triesto get Cara to change her mind, awakening some of her personal demons. John assigns Stephen to infiltrate Ultra's computer in the new episode "Girl, Interrupted." 9 p.m.on fj, "NOVA" — The "Making Stuff" series continues with "Making Stuff Wilder." Host David Pogue introduces viewers to scientists working on technology inspired by nature — from a robotic arm modeled after an elephant's trunk to robotic bees that can pollinate plants. 10 p.m. on BRAVO,"TopChef" — Judge Emeril Lagasse and guest judge EddieHuang give the chefs some lessons in Vietnamese culture, which has a strong presence in NewOrleans. Afterward, they're turned loose to create a multicourse Vietnamese meal. Padma Lakshmihoststhe new episode "Captain Vietnam."

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

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 12:30, 2:30, 3:35, 6:30, 7:30, 9:35 • CARRIE(R) 1:10, 4:15, 7:25, 10:05 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)12:25, 6 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 23-0 (PG) 2:45, 8:50 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) 12:50, 3:10, 7: IO,9:40 • ESCAPE PLAN(R) 1, 3:50, 6:35, 9:20 • THE FIFTHESTATE(R) I2:35, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 • GRACEUNPLUGGED (PG)3:20,9:05 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) 12:30, 6:10 • GRAVITY 3-0(PG-13) 12:55, 3, 3:15, 4:25, 7:50, 9, 10:10 • GRAVITY IMAX3-0(PG-13) I:25, 4, 7, 9:30 • INSIDIOUS:CHAPTER2(PG-13) 1:30, 4:05 • INSTRUCTIONS NOTINCLUDED (PG-13) 12:40, 3:30, 6:20, 9:15 • MACHETE KILLS (R) I:20, 4:35, 7:15, 9:55 • MERRILY WE ROLLALONG(no MPAA rating) 7 • ROMEO & JULIET (PG-13) 1:15 • RUNNER RUNNER(R) 6:05, 9:10 • RUSH(R) 12:45, 3:55, 6:55, 9:50 • WE'RE THE MILLERS(R) 12:40, 6:25 • Accessibility devicesareavailable forsome movies. I

10 p.m. on FX, "American Horror Story: Coven" —Fiona's (Jessica Lange) choice of a new protege raises some eyebrows in this new episode. Zoe (Taissa Farmiga), riddled with guilt, tries to make amends to Kyle (Evan Peters) by giving him his old life back. Madison (EmmaRoberts) has a heated exchange with new neighbor Joan Ramsey (Patti LuPone)in "The Replacements." ©zap2it

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WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066 MED- I I T

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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THE CONJURING (R) 9:15 • PLANES(G) 3 • 'VheTrembling Giant"screensat 630 tonight. • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 2f mayatt endscreeningsbefore 7pm.ifaccompaniedby a legal guardian. •

YOURHOROSCOPE

4:30p.m.on G~3,"2013 World Series" —The best-of-sevengame World Series starts tonight at the home park of the American Leaguechampion,thanksto the AL's 3-0 win in the All-Star Game. The World Series shouldn't creep into November this year, asGame 7, if necessary, is slated for Oct. 31. Joe Buck and Tim McCarver — in his last Fall Classic for Fox — call the action.

our current culture, there is a steady supply of meanness. Cruelty, you might say, has been outsourced to the Internet, not to mention Comedy Central roasts and w eekly shows like "The Jeselnik Offensive" (Comedy Central), which makes a c a rtoonish joke of the arrogance of its host, Anthony Jeselnik, a precise, skilled stand-up who has described his stint writing for Fallon's show as a bad fit. "He couldn't be the bad guy in the joke," he said in an interview. "He couldn't upset

Talk shows have always By Jason Zinoman been about personality as well New York Times News Service as comedy. And these are the In one of the signal mokind of approachable-seemments of th e g r eatest talk ing stars who are far more show in m y l i f etime, "Late likely to be silly than abrasive, Night With David Letterman," sunny than acerbic. No one on NBC, Cher called the host tests the limits of endearing a big jerk. charm more than Fallon, now She used harsher language, in the last few months as host of "Late Night" before moving but that was the idea. What's to "The Tonight Show." often forgotten in that 1986 exchange is how quickly LetWhereas his "Tonight" preterman defused the tension. decessor Johnny Carson kept "You know," he said, without a cool, elegant distance, and a smidgen ofdefensiveness, "I Jay Leno delivers a joke-dense LATE think a lot of people feel that monologue with the profesNIGHT JIMHI ~ way about me." FALLll+ sionalism of a n o l d -school What host of a nightly talk entertainer, Fallon has a much show would make such a conNBC via The Associated Press warmer, offhand p r esence. cession now? Jimmy Fallon, host of "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" on NBC, is Leaning on the superb "Late Stephen Colbert might, in the poster boy for a kinder and gentler late-night television culture. Night" band The Roots, he character. M a yb e C h elsea seems like the host of a party Handler. Letterman, who reas much as of a show. He is cently signed a deal to contin- butters up guests and gently screens at midnight: Pete Hol- not a gifted joke teller, but his ue as a host through 2015 on tells the audience of his syn- mes, whose half-hour TBS willingness to sing, dance, riff CBS, has become less caus- dicated show to r elax. The show has its premiere after or use social media suggests "Conan" on Oct. 28, and Chris a performer looking to get tic. In a nostalgic mood, he casually self-deprecating W. could muster it. But in an era Kamau Bell, who started proHardwick, w h ose c o medy laughs but happy to settle for when the most celebrated TV ducing "Totally Biased" night- show, "midnight," produced smiles. dramas ask viewers to iden- ly on FXX last month, outby Funny or Die, started MonAmong celebrities, Fallon tify with often repellent anti- sources the harshest comedy day, following "The Colbert sometimes adoptsthe persona heroes, the new stars of late to his writers, who make often Report" on Comedy Central. of a fan. At the MTV Video night are ingratiating sweet- quite funny cameos. When Holmes, a c a nny s tand-up Music Awards, he bowed in ies. We probably shouldn't Sarah Silverman, whom Bell who runs the podcast "You awebefore Justin Timberlake. even call the coming battle had called racist years ago, Made It Weird," has said he This week, he told Katy Perry he'd be part of her fan club. between Jimmy Kimmel and came on as a guest, he gave wants his show to be a "silly Jimmy Fallon, who is taking her a shirt that read "Mostly safe space." And Hardwick, The impression Fallon gives is over "The Tonight Show" in Not Racist" and told her that a comic whose show includes that he doesn't just want you February, a l a te-night war. if he did a roast of anyone, he comedians in a competition to identify with him. He also How about a pillow fight? might cry. for funniest take on a topi- identifies with you. Consider the newest playThis month, two exceed- cal subject, is so upbeat, amiPart of the reason late-night ers. Arsenio Hall, who is tech- ingly friendly faces will start able and inclusive that he can comedy has become kinder nically more retro than new, appearing on your television sometimes sound like a self- and gentler may be that, in

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR WEDNESDAY,OCT.23, 2013:

TV TODAY

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti Western" willscreen at630 tonight (doors open at6 p.m) and includes an aii-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I

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M XTTR E S S G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084

ig ) NORTHWEST i CR O S S I N G i

Featured Business

of the week:

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777

• CARRIE(R) 4:30, 6:45 • ESCAPE PLAN(R) 4:30, 7 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 5:30, 7:30 • MACHETE KILLS (R) 4: I5, 6:30

Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 6:15 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)6 • GRAVITY(PG-l3) 6:45 • PRISONERS (R) 6 Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CARRIE (R)5:10, 7:30 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF ME ATBALLS 2(PG)4:45,7 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) 4:50 • GRAVITY3-0(PG-13) 7:10 • MACHETE KILLS (R) 5, 7:20 • RUNNER RUNNER(R) 4:40, 6:50 •

UMPQUA B A

Elevation Capital Strategies 775 SW Bonnet Way Suite 120 Bend Main: 541-728-0521 www.elevationcap1tal.biz

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

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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) 6:30 • RUNNER RUNNER(R) 6:15 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.

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2755 NW Crossing Dr. ii ll3 www.umpquabank.com

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THE BULLETIN'SLOCAL,ONLINE AUCTION EVENT


ON PAGES 3&4:COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To place an ad call 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

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Pets 8 Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Misc. Items

Employment Opportunities

Oriental shorthair fem ale, $ 1 0 0 obo ;

1966 Winchester mdl 70 30-06 w/scope, fired 1x for sighting purposes, $700. Jerry,

541-279-3018

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Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, J BL, Marantz, D y naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808

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small animal and equine veterinary 541-480-9005 Commercial F, $250. 541-475-3889 practice located in upright Delfield Redmond. Wage B eretta 12 g a. , 0 / U , 470 528 6000 Series 325 261 depends on experience. mod./full, S685. Good Items for Free freezer, 20 cubic Domestic & cond. $500.541-419-9961 Medical Equipment Benefits include Loans & Mortgages Hay, Grain & Feed feet, stainless, medical, retirement, In-Home Positions Browning Citori 12 ga Flower bulbs: Autumn $1200. vacation and sick WARNING 1st Class Grass Hay crocus, grape hyacinth, engraved w/ pheasants & leave. Some eveThe Bulletin recomBarn-stored, 541-325-2691 Caregiver - I have 20 yrs etc. Pickup free at 2615 P oodle-Retriever m i x ducks, new unfired in $230/ ton. mends you use cauexperience & excellent nings and Saturdays. SW 21st St., Redmond. case, $ 2 450. J e r ry, Please submit tion when you propuppies, 4 m o nths,G ENERATE Patterson Ranch references. 530-409-5068 SOM E 541-480-9005 Treehouse/Playhouse, black, $1000 (dis- EXCITEMENT in Sisters, 541-549-3831 resume and handwritvide personal your you disassemble& haul. count for cash), have neighborhood! Plan a CASH!! ten cover letter to: information to compa476 For Guns, Ammo 8 FREE! 541-647-0295 had shots and basic garage sale and don't Box 20419746 nies offering loans or Employment USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Reloading Supplies. Go-Go Elite Travelc/o The Bulletin credit especially obedience and crate forget to advertise in Opportunities 541-408-6900. ler 3-wheel scooter, training. Photos at fa- classified! PO Box 6020, those asking for adDoor-to-door selling with Pets & Supplies cebook.com/SzmooModel SC40E, under Bend, OR 97708 vance loan fees or Double Tap Firearms 541-385-5809. fast results! It's the easiest Add your web address warranty, like new dles. 503-623-5282 or companies from out of 2075 NE Hwy. 20 Adopt a buddy! Adult hundwaldOaol.com to your ad and readcondition, used 2 way in the world to sell. Hidebed, full-sized, like state. If you have 541-977-0202 ROOFERS c ats/kittens over 6 ers on The Bu/fetin's new, rust brown color, Buy/Sell/Trade/Consign times. Health forces concerns or queswith experience, Puppies! maltese poodle web site, www.bendmos., 2 for just $40! - also 1 female yorkie/ $500 obo. 541-408-0846 sale. Purchased from The Bulletin Classified tions, we suggest you needed. Gamo Hunter 220, .177 October only. Fixed, Advanced Mobility bulletin.com, will be 541-385-5809 Call River Roofing, consult your attorney caliber pellet rifle, shots, ID chip, tested, maltese. Male $ 250 July, 2013 for $1295; able to click through 541-316-7663 or call CONSUMER $300. C a sh scope. $150. selling for $795 obo. more! Nonprofit group Female automatically to your HOTLINE, 541-647-7479 a t 65480 7 8t h S t . , only. 541-546-7909. 541-480-2700 website. 1-877-877-9392. Looking for your TRUCK DRIVER pattym51@Q.com Bend, open Sat/Sun Queensland Heelers Marlin 1895 SS Guide next employee'? Driver Needed. Night CDL needed; doubles 1-5; other days by Standard & Mini, $150 45/70, ported, sling, Where can you find a Place a Bulletin s hift, apply at O w l endorsement & good appt. Photos & info: & up. 541-280-1537 night sights, ammo, HANCOCK & helping hand? help wanted ad Taxi, 1919 NE 2nd, driving record required. www.craftcats.org. www.rightwayranch.wor MOORE SOFA as new $700. Springtoday and Bend. After 5pm. No Local haul; home every 541-389-8420, or like dpress.com From contractors to field X D 4 5 , n e w , in salmon/coral cheday! Truck leaves & reach over phone calls please. us on Facebook. Rodent issues? Free nille fabric with dia13+t, Pro Tech light, returns to Madras, OR. yard care, it's all here 60,000 readers Adopt a rescued kitten adult barn/shop cats, mond pattern. Tradi2 high cap. mags, all in The Bulletin's LOG TRUCK DRIVERS Call 541-546-6489 or each week. or cat! Fixed, shots, fixed, shots, s o me tional styling w ith access., in box, plus (Similar to illustration) 541-419-1125. for logging company "Call A Service Your classified ad ID chip, tested, more! friendly, some n o t. loose pillow back, Galco leather holster, in Florence, OR. ExPride Go-Go will also Professional" Directory Nonprofit sanctuary at Will deliver. 389-8420 down-wrapped seat and ammo. $700. Call perience r e q uired, 3-wheel scooter appear on 65480 78th St., Bend, St. Bernard Puppies, cushions, roll arms, 541-81 5-8345. CDL, current medical BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS with upgrades, bendbulletin.com Search the area's most BANK TURNED YOU open Sat/Sun 1-5; 1st shots, wormed. skirt, two matching Ruger MKI, 308 Win, 2x7 c ard. Great pay & absolutely like brand which currently kitten foster home by $400. 541-977-4686 DOWN? Private party pillows a n d arm benefits. Year-round, comprehensive listing of scope, like new, $595. new, hardly used receives over long-term em p loy- classified advertising... appt., call 815-7278. c overs. L i k e n ew will loan on real es541-604-5115 Vizsla AKC pups female condition. $1 500. $495. 541-548-5667 www.craftcats.org. 1.5 million page ment. Great p/ace fo real estate to automotive, tate equity. Credit, no merchandise to sporting 541-389-8420, or like $1100; m a les, $950. 541-526-1332 Ruger Mod. 10/22 carlive! 5 4 1-997-8212 views every problem, good equity active show & hunting bine, bull barrel, 22LR, goods. Bulletin Classifieds is all you need. Call us on Facebook. 265 month at no lines 541-367-8822 Just bought a new boat? Bushnell scope, laminate Building Materials appear every day in the Oregon Land Mortextra cost. A ussie, M i n i AKC , Sell your old one in the wood stock, like new, print or on line. gage 541-388-4200. Pups, exlnt The Bulletin Bulletin red/black Tri, shots, Weimaraner classifieds! Ask about our $500. 541-419-9961 recommends extra great famCall 541-385-5809 MADRAS Habitat Classifieds wormed, parents on temperament, Super Seller rates! p. -I LOCAL MONEyrWebuy ily 8 companion dogs. www.bendbulletin.com Savage 110left hand RESTORE Get Results! site 541-598-5314 541-385-5809 Parents ranch-raised; like chasing products or • secured trustdeeds & 243, $300. Building Supply Resale Call 541-385-5809 note,some hard money Black Lab AKC pup- water & hunt. Females, services from out of I The Bulletin 541-647-7479 Quality at Food Service - Bruno's or place your ad ServingCentral Oregonsmce 19l8 loans. Call Pat Kelley pies, born Aug. 18th $350. Please leave mes- I the area. Sending I Grocery/U-bake is taking LOW PRICES on-line at 541-382-3099 ext.13. Springfield XDS .45, 2 sage, 541-562-5970. • c ash, c h ecks, o r • $300.00 apps for Cashier 8 Pizza 84 SW K St. bendbulletin.com Maker. Apply: 1709 NE 541.508.0429 / credit i n f ormation magazines, o r iginal 541-475-9722 may be subjected to case and paperwork. 6th, Bend. No phone calls Open to the public. Pressroom Cat: Exotic s horthair Very clean. $450. Call f FRAUD. For more female $25. Night Supervisor 503-320-3008 267 information about an g Want to impress the NIGHT ATTENDANT 541-279-3018 The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oradvertiser, you may I Thompson Center Arms Whispering Winds ReFuel & Wood relatives? Remodel egon, is seeking a night time press superviI call t h e Ore g onI tirement is seeking a muzzleloader, 50 cal your home with the sor. We are part of Western Communications, Attor ney ' New Englander, exclnt All YearDependable person to work t he Whoodle puppies, 12 ' State Inc. which is a small, family owned group conhelp of a professional night shift (10 p.m. to O ff i ce wks, 1st shots, wormed, / General's shape, $295. Firewood: Seasoned from The Bulletin's of seven newspapers: five in Oregon 7 a.m.) Ful l -time, sisting 3 males, $900 each. Consumer P r otec- • 541-419-1604 Lodgepole, Split, Del. and two in California. Our ideal candidate will 541-410-1581 "Call A Service part-time and on-call t ion ho t l in e at I Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 ;;Pl,', a small crew of three and must be Wanted: Collector positions a v a ilable. manage i 1-877-877-9392. for $365. Cash, Check Professional" Directory able t o l e ar n o u r e q uipment/processes seeks high quality Chihuahua puppies, tea- Yorkie pups AKC, sweet, Duties include light or Credit Card OK. adorable, potty training, 2 quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for fishing items. cup, shots & dewormed, laundry, misc. office 541-420-3484. boys, 2 girls, $450 & up. our 3y2 tower KBA press. Prior management/ Call 541-678-5753, or $250. 541-420-4403 383 work, able to respond Health guar.541-777-7743 503-351-2746 leadership experience preferred. In addition to Juniper or Lodgepole or to resident emergenChi Pom mix puppies, Yorkie pups, female, Produce 8 Food 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuPine (some Hemlock)c ies if need e d . our ready now: 1 female merous commercial print clients as well. BeCut, split & delivered, male, $550, 8 wks, Former caregiving exAntiques 8 $200; 3 males $175 $650, THOMAS ORCHARDS Hot Tubs & Spas • sides a competitive wage and benefit pro$200/cord (delivery inAKC. 541-241-0518 perience helpful, but cash only. Kimberly, Oregon Collectibles cluded). 541-604-1925 gram, we also provide potential opportunity for not required. Apply in 541-934-2870 541-480-2824. 210 advancement. person to: WhisperFruit stand will be The Bulletin reserves If you provide dependability combined with a Donate deposit bottles/ Furniture & Appliances ing Winds, 2920 NE the right to publish all Gardening Supplies open through positive attitude, are able to manage people cans to local all volConners Ave., Bend. ads from The Bulletin Monday, Nov. 4 and schedules and are a team player, we unteer, non-profit res- A1 Washers&Dryers & Equipment Pre-employment drug newspaper onto The APPLES OUT OF BIN: testing required. would like to hear from you. If you seek a cue, for feral cat spay/ $150 ea. Full warBulletin Internet web65e per lb. Red Delistable work environment that provides a great neuter. Cans for Cats ranty. Free Del. Also site. BarkTurfSoil.com cious, Golden Delicious, place to live and raise a family, let us hear trailer at B end P et wanted, used W/D's Northwest Spa Hot from you. Express E, a c ross Cameo, Pinata, Ambro541-280-7355 Tub, seats 8 people, The Bulletin Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at from Costco; or dosia, Granny Smith. Fuji. Sening Central Oregon smre 19IB PROMPT D E LIVERY has cover, $400 or anelson©wescompapers.com with your comnate Mon-Fri at Smith BRING CONTAINERS! 541-389-9663 best offer. You haul! plete r e sume, r e ferences a n d sa l a ry Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or Closed Tues. 8 Wed. 541-385-0454 history/requirements. No phone calls please. at CRAFT in Tumalo. open Thurs. thru Mon. Prompt Delivery Drug test is required prior to employment. www.craftcats.org 10 a.m.-4 p.m. only. Production Rock, Sand & Gravel EOE. See us on Facebook Multiple Colors, Sizes Supervisor Doxie mix puppies, 8 Computers • Instant Landscaping Co. & Bend Farmers MarTree Top has an weeks, 1st shot, very 541-389-9663 ket on Wed., 3-7 p.m. opportunity for you cute. $175. Antique T HE B U LLETIN r e at our Prosser plant. 541-390-8875 SUPER TOP SOIL Registered Nurses quires computer ad- www.hershe soilandbark.com USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! As Production Dining Set English Bulldog, 3 yr old vertisers with multiple Screened, soil 8 comSupervisor you will 18th century legs, Community Counseling Solutions is accepting spayed female, $500. ad schedules or those post m i x ed , no Door-to-door selling with ensure lines run efmahogany topapplications for Registered Nurses to work at 541-382-9334 selling multiple sys- rocks/clods. High hu2005 Maverick ML7 ficiently, maintain 95"x46"x29"; Juniper Ridge located in John Day, OR. M ountain Bike, 1 5 " tems/ software, to dis- mus level, exc. f or fast results! It's the easiest quality, and mentor French Bulldogs, 1-yr 6 Chippendale style close the name of the flower beds, lawns, way in the world to sell. frame (small). F ull staff. For job details male; 1-yr & 2-yr females chairs, $2770. Juniper Ridge is a Secure Residential Treatsuspension, Maverick business or the term gardens, $1000 ea. 541-382-9334 straight and to apply, visit 541-639-3211 ment Facility providing services to individuals shock, S RAM XO "dealer" in their ads. s creened to p s o i l . The Bulletin Classified http://www.treetop.co with a severe mental illness. These positions drivetrain & shifters, 9 Private party advertis- Bark. Clean fill. De541-385-5809 m/JobSearch.aspx provide mental health nursing care, including speed rear cassette, ers are defined as liver/you haul. medication oversight, medication related 34-11, Avid Juicy disc those who sell one 541-548-3949. treatment, follows physician's prescriptions brakes. Well t a ken computer. and procedures, measures an d r e cords 270 c are of. $950 . patient's general physical condition such as 541-788-6227. Lost & Found German Shorthair pups, pulse, temperature and respiration to provide Misc. Items daily information, educates and trains staff on AKC, parents on site, 242 Advertising Account Executive Drexel Heritage Found Cat, black w/white 541-330-0277 medication administration, and ensures docuRewardingnew business development Exercise Equipment couch. 7 feet long. markings on face/paws, mentation is kept according to policies. Woodside area 1st week Great Pyrenees/St. BerVery good condiProform Crosswalk 380 of Oct. 541-389-4012 The Bulletin is looking for a professional and nard female puppy, 3'/2 tion, $400. This position works with the treatment team to driven Sales and Marketing person to help our mos old, $100 cash, obo. Call 503 781 5265 treadmill, like new, $325 I FOUND: set of keys on customers grow their businesses with an promote recovery from mental illness. This 541-546-7909 obo. 541-408-0846 lanyard, key fob had position includes telephone consultation and 4 expanding list of broad-reach and targeted crisis intervention in the facility. b een r u n over . Beautiful Gibson dishes, products. This full-time position requires a service for 10, perfect 541-383-7603 background in consultative sales, territory Qualified applicants must have a valid Oregon cond, $65. 541-389-1260 and aggressive prospecting skills. BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS management Registered Professional Nurse's license at the Two years of m edia sales experience is Buying Diamonds Search the area's most time of appointment, hold a valid Oregon preferable, but we will train the right candidate. /Gold for Cash comprehensive listing of driver's license and pass a criminal history Saxon's Fine Jewelers classified advertising... The p o sition i n cludes a com p etitive background check. 541-389-6655 real estate to automotive, compensation package including benefits, and merchandise to sporting W ages dependent upon education and experiBUYING rewards an aggressive, customer focused Bulletin Classifieds salesperson ence, but will be between $48,000 to $72,000. Lionel/American Flyer goods. with unlimited earning potential. appear every day in the trains, accessories. print or on line. Please visit t h e C o mmunity C ounseling 541-408-2191. Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend • Sales Other Areas • Email your resume, cover letter Solution website for an application or contact Call 541-385-5809 and salary history to: BUYING & SE L LING Nina Bisson at 541-676-9161 or P.O. Box 469, www.bendbulletin.com Liquidation sale of B&B Jay Brandt, Advertising Director All gold jewelry, silver Heppner, OR 97836-9161. e verything must b e ** FREE ** Moving sale + brandt©bendbulletin.com and gold coins, bars, The Bulletin sold! 2 fridges, twin Garage Sale Klt New items from Etsy or rounds, wedding sets, Sen«ng Cent~al Oregons nce 19IB and full beds, chairs, Place an ad in The 8 Ebay store - Come drop off your resume in person at class rings, sterling silSiamese Cat, DeAccounting sofas, w/d, pool table, Bulletin for your gado your Christmas 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; ver, coin collect, vin- Found schutes River Woods. leather recliners, bar rage sale and reshopping early! Huge Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 tage watches, dental Call 541-318-3319. stools, g r a ndfather ceive a Garage Sale selection of handNo phone inquiries please. gold. Bill Fl e ming, clock, exc. equip., lin- Kit FREE! made scarves & 541-382-9419. Lost "Duffy" big black serving central oregon since 1903 ens, towels, robes, misc items. Almost EOE / Drug Free Workplace male cat, friendly, 8 Cemetery plot at lamps, furniture, tools, new side-by-side KtT INCLUDES: charming, may need Accounting Position Available Tumalo cemetery. generator, shopsmith. • 4 Garage Sale Signs KitchenAid refrigmedical att e ntion. Reports to the Controller A bargain at $450. C hristmas and a n d • $2.00 Off Coupon To erator 8 Whirlpool Overtree Ranch area. Sawmill Supervisor 541-848-7436 H alloween dec o r , Use Toward Your dishwasher for sale 541-728-0258 Reception/Accounts Receivable Clerk kitchen stuff, way too Next Ad also. FRI 10/25 & Roseburg Forest Products Company, a LOST Lexus keys near much to list. Fri.Sat. • 10 Tips For "Garage SAT 10/26 from 8-12 leader in the wood products industry, is The right person for this position will be the Franklin St . u n derSale Success!" 9-5, 10/25-26, 67155 69550 Deer Ridge seeking to fill a Supervisor position in our initial face and voice of The Bulletin for pass. 541-410-7338 Sunburst St., Bend. Rd., Sisters Dillard Complex. employees and customers coming into the (between Tumalo and 541-719-1314 Lost on Reed Mkt., 2 PICK UP YOUR building or calling by phone. This accountSisters) follow signs GARAGE toy Schnauzers both The Responsibilities are: Provide leadership in SALE KIT at ing department position includes various f rom Hwy 126 a n d males, 1 curly silver, 1 safety and quality; Set clear expectations for 1777 SW Chandler administrative duties as well as the posting Fryrear Rd. or from USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Classic Stallion copper silver. answer crewmembers; Drive safety improvements; Ave., Bend, OR 97702 and reporting of a c counts receivable, Hwy 20 and Central. to Reggie and Jack- Support the company's vision and values; Boots Door-to-door selling with deposit preparation and management of the son. 541-480-7594 Ladies size 7y2, Implement continuous improvement; Maintain The Bulletin 282 cash r egister. T hi s p o s ition r e quires fast results! It's the easiest focus on customer needs; Strive to increase seldom worn, Want to impress the experience in basic accounting, Excel and Sales Northwest Bend way in the world to sell. Paid $1100; quality and efficiency; Interpret/enforce comrelatives? Remodel general office functions. selling for $290. pany policies and procedures; and Coordinate Annual Garage S ale your home with the The Bulletin Classified production activities between departments. 541-480-1199 Vima Lupwa Children's help of a professional We are looking for a team player with a 288 541-385-5809 Home in Africa - Sat. Oct. Sales Southeast Bend from The Bulietin's The Minimum Qualifications are: Prefer colpositive, professional attitude and strong COWGIRL CASH 26, 8:30-3:30 at 440 NW lege degree or prior supervisory experience; "Call A Service customer service skills. The right person Seasonal Garage Sale We buy Jewelry, Boots, Congress. Quality stuff! Comprehensive knowledge of a l l S a wmill will be detail oriented, great at multi-tasking, Professional" Directory HUGE SALE!! Moved, Christmas Sale! Vintage Dresses & machine centers; Excellent problem solving and able t o a d apt t o u s in g m u ltiple Multi-family: Sat. 8 a.m. downsized 8 cleaned Thurs-Sat, 10/24-25-26, More. 924 Brooks St. and communication skills; Good at multi-taskcomputer software applications as well as 541-678-5162 Golf, baby items, house- the attic! 3 g enera- 8am-4pm. Antique and ing and organizational skills; Must be availthe web. Must be able to communicate well hold misc. 2761 8 2779 tions of treasures! Fri- collectibles, decorated www.getcowgirlcash.com able for shift work schedules; PC operation NW Rainbow Ridge, end day 8 Saturday (25th/ Christmas trees, handboth verbally and in writing with customers REMEMBER: I f you (Word, Excel, etc.); Ability to coach and lead a made crafts, crystal of st. in Valhalla subdivis. 26th only) Sam-2pm. and co-workers. This is a full-time position have lost an animal, Home Security diverse workforce; and desire to advance. 61160 Manhae Ln, off glassware, old and new don't forget to check with benefits. Mon.-Fri., 7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. System 2GIG furniture. No clothes, no 284 SE 15th, Bridges subThe Humane Society We offer a competitive salary and benefits Brand new installed junk! 4504 SW Minson Sales Southwest Bend diwsion. Bend If you are interested in joining our by AbbaJay inRd., Powell ButteCall package. For mo r e de t ails g o to 541-382-3537 accounting team, please e-mail your Sue Dunn, 541-416-8222 cludes 2 hour inRoseburga.iapplicants.com and if interested, Yard Sale - Kitchen, Redmond resume to hwest@bendbulletln.com stallation and one please apply on line and attach a cover letter electronics, s porting Just bought a new boat? 541-923-0882 Sizing Down Saleyear basic security and resume. prior to Oct. 31, 2013. Pi goods, decor. 19699 Sell your old one in the A little bit of everything! service. $375. Human Resources Mountaineer Way 541-447-7178; classifieds! Ask about our Fri-Sat, 10/25-26, 9-5, (Valued at $850) Roseburg Forest Products Co. No phone calls or resume drop-offs please. follow signs. 9-3 Sat. Super Seller rates! 18589 McSwain Drive, or Craft Cats 541-382-3479 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER EOE/Drug Free workplace 1 0/26. 805-708-2847 in Sisters. 541-389-8420. 541-385-5809 POODLE puppies, AKC ALSO-7mo. M, $200;

Freezer

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i The Bulleting

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The Bulletin

The Bulletin


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

E2 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013 •THE BULLETIN

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletinscom

865

880

ATVs

Motorhomes

-~

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri • HUNTERS! Honda Fat Cat 200cc Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . Noon Mon. w/rear rack & receiver hitch carner, used very little, exlnt cond, $1875 Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. obo. 541-546-3330 Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, MXR Sport quad, dirt & tires,runs great, low Saturday • . • .. 3:00 pm Fri. sand hrs, $3750 541-647-8931 Sunday.. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • 870

T r a vel Trailers

Fleetwood Discovery 2009 40X, Corian counters, convection/ micro, 2-door fridge/ freezer, washer/dryer, central vac, new tile & carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, window awnings, levelers, ext'd warranty, multimedia GPS, 350 Cummins diesel, 7.5 gen. Many extras! $129,900. 541-604-4662

Starting at 3 lines

Placea photoin your private party ad for only$15.00 perweek.

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

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

I~ ~

*UNDER '500 in total merchandise

OVER'500in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days.................................................$33.50 28 days.................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days .................................

(cell for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

*Must state prices in sd

$2000. 541-788-5456

4iI3j &-

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

batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

Call a Pro •

Fleetwood D i s covery 40' 2003, diesel motorhome w/all options-3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. 16'9" Larson All Ameri- Wintered in h e ated can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp shop. $84,900 O.B.O. I/O, 1 owner, always ga- 541-447-8664 raged, w/trlr, exc cond,

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

Boats & Accessories

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Travel Trailers •

p~ r

Keystone Laredo31' 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 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside shower. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600

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

54 4 -385-5809

M

541-447-4805

Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer. 541-382-2577

CHECK YOUR AD

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

•I

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

G ulfstream S u n Tango 29.6' 2007, sport 30' Class A Rear living, walk18'Maxum skiboat,2000, 1988 ne w f r i dge, BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS around queen bed, Search the area's most inboard motor, g r eat TV, solar panel, new central air, awning, cond, well maintained, refrigerator, wheelcomprehensive listing of 1 large slide, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W classified advertising... Call Dick, bendbulletimcom $15,000 obo (or real estate to automotive, g enerator, Goo d 541-480-1687. trade for camper is located at: merchandise to sporting condition! $12,500 goods. Bulletin Classifieds that fits 6 t/e' pickup 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. obo 541-447-5504 Hitchhiker II 1997 5th bed, plus cash). appear every day in the Bend, Oregon 97702 541-280-2547 or wheel, 28 t/s ft, 1 slide, print or on line. $5900. 541-504-9720 541-815-4121 Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Sunchaser Pontoon PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction boat - $19,895 Get your is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right 20' 2006 Smokercraft to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these business cruise, S-8521. 2006 newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party 75hp. Mercury. F u ll Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. AIRE camping e n c losure. KOUNTRY 1994 37.5' motorG ROWI N G Pop u p cha n ging home, with awning, 648 750 860 room/porta-potty, BBQ, WEEKEND WARRIOR and one slide-out, with an ad in Houses for Redmond Homes Motorcycles & Accessories swim ladder, all gear. Toy hauler/travel trailer. Only 47k miles E(XiIRnlh Trailer, 2006 E a sy- and 24' with 21' interior. The Bulletin's Rent General good condition. loader gal v anized. The Jefferson - NW Layton 27-ft, 2001 Sleeps 6. Self-con"Call A Service $25,000. P urchased new, a l l Redmond - $289,900. tained. Systems/ PUBLISHER'S 541-548-0318 Professional" records. 541-706-9977, Desirable NW neighFront & rear entry appearancein good NOTICE (photc aboveis cf a cell 503-807-1973. doors, bath, shower, condition. Smoke-free. Directory All real estate adver- borhood, single level, similar model & not the queen bed, slide-out, Tow with t/e-ton. Strong tising in this newspa- 3 b drm, 2 . 5 b a t h , actual vehicle) 2020 sq ft. oven, microwave, air suspension; can haul per is subject to the Health Forces Sale! conditioning, patio ATVs snowmobiles, F air H o using A c t MLS¹201306374 2007 Harley Davidson 20.5' Seaswirl Spy627 Call J i m Hi n t on, awning, twin proeven a small car! Great which makes it illegal 541-420-6229 FLHX Street Glideder 1989 H.O. 302, pane tanks, very >zI "~ = "any price - $8900. Vacation Rentals to a d v ertise Too many extras to list! nice, great floor plan, hrs., exc. cond., Call 541-593-6266 preference, limitation Central Oregon Realty 6-spd, cruise control, ste- 285 & Exchanges $8895. stored indoors for or disc r imination Group, LLC reo, batt. tender, cover. 541-316-1388 ife $ 8 900 O B O . Keystone Challenger based on race, color, Set-up for long haul road l541-379-3530 Looking for your 2004 CH34TLB04 34' religion, sex, handi- Looking for your next trips. Dealership svc'd. NATIONAL DOLPHIN next employee? fully S/C, w/d hookups, cap, familial status, emp/oyee? 37' 1997, loaded! 1 Check out the Only 2,000 miles. Place a Bulletin help new 18' Dometic awmarital status or naPlace a Bulletin help PLUS H-D cold weather 21' Crownline Cuddy classifieds online slide, Corian surfaces, wanted ad today and ning, 4 new tires, new tional origin, or an in- wanted ad today and gear, rain gear, packs, wood floors (kitchen), www.bendbullefin.com Cabin, 1995, only reach over 60,000 Kubota 7000w marine tention to make any helmets, leathers reach over 60,000 2-dr fridge, convection 325 hrs on the boat, Updated daily readers each week. diesel generator, 3 Christmas at & much more. $15,000. such pre f erence, readers each week. microwave, Vizio TV & Your classified ad 541-382-3135 after 5pm 5.7 Merc engine with slides, exc. cond. inthe Coast limitation or discrimiYour classified ad roof satellite, walk-in outdrive. Bimini top will also appear on s ide & o ut. 27" T V WorldMark nation." Familial stawill also appear on shower, new queen bed. s = & moorage cover, = bendbulletin.com gp dvd/cd/am/fm entertain Depoe Bay, OR tus includes children White leather hide-a- str aa s" ~"55-Ilj I bendbulletin.com $7500 obo. which currently recenter. Call for more 2 bedroom condo, bed & chair, all records, under the age of 18 which currently re541-382-2577 ceives over 1.5 mildetails. Only used 4 no pets or s moking. sleeps 6 living with parents or ceives over lion page views evtimes total in last 5 t/s 12/22 - 12/29 or $28,450. legal cust o dians, 1.5 million page ery month at no years.. No pets, no Ads published in the Call 541-771-4800 Monte Carlo 2012 Lim12/23 -12/30. pregnant women, and views every month extra cost. Bulletin smoking. High r etail "Boats" classification ited Edition, 2 slides, 2 $1500 people securing cusat no extra cost. Classifieds Get Re$27,700. Will sell for 541-325-6566 include: Speed, fishA/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps tody of children under Bulletin Classifieds Harley Davidson sults! Call 385-5809 $24,000 including slid6-8 comfortably, has ing, drift, canoe, 18. This newspaper Get Results! 2011 Classic Limor place your ad i ng hitch that fits i n house and sail boats. w/d, dishwasher, many will not knowingly acCall 385-5809 or 630 on-line at your truck. Call 8 a.m. ited, LOADED, 9500 For all other types of extras, fully l o aded. cept any advertising place your ad on-line to 10 p.m. for appt to Rooms for Rent miles, custom paint bendbulletin.com watercraft, please go $29,600 obo. Located for real estate which is at "Broken Glass" by see. 541-330-5527. to Class 875. in Bend. 682-777-8039 in violation of the law. bendbulletin.com Nicholas Del Drago, Lrg. room eastside sep. O ur r e aders a r e 541-385-5809 Rexair 28-ft e ntrance & bat h , new condition, informed that motorhome, 1991furn. no smkers/pets. hereby heated handgrips, 763 all dwellings adverIdeal for camping or $ 365 m o + dep . tised in this newspa- Recreational Homes auto cruise control. hunting, it has 45K 541-389-0034. $32,000 in bike, only per are available on miles, a 460 gas en& Property $23,000 obo. equal opportunity gine, new tires, auBULLETIN CLASSIFIEBS an 541-318-6049 basis. To complain of tomatic levelers, PRICED REDUCED Search the area's most Call54I-385-5809 tc pramoteyour service Advertisefor 28dcysstarting at 'I41lrssspecalpsugesmtsetatteonsswetsrte discrimination cal l Onan generator, cabin on year-round comprehensive listing of HUD t o l l-free at king-size bed, awcreek. 637 acres surclassified advertising... 1-800-877-0246. The ning. Nice condition real estate to automotive, toll f re e t e l ephone rounded federal land, Beautiful h o u seboat, Sell or trade? $8700. Fremont Nat'I Forest. merchandise to sporting $85,000. 541-390-4693 Appliance Sales/Repair Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care number for the hear541-815-9939 541-480-7215 goods. Bulletin Classifieds ing www.centraloregon im p aired is appear every day in the houseboat.com. Johnson Brothers Home Repairs, Remod NOTICE: Oregon Land1-800-927-9275. 775 print or on line. Harley Davidson Sport- GENERATE SOME exTV & Appliance. els, Tile, Carpentry scape Contractors Law Manufactured/ The Builder's Choice. Finish work, M a inte (ORS 671) requires all ster 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0cc, Call 541-385-5809 People Look for Information citement in your neignance. CCB¹168910 businesses that a dMobile Homes 9,257 miles, $4995. Call borhood. Plan a ga541-382-6223 www.bendbulletin.com About Products and www.iohnsonbrotherstv.com Phil, 541-279-0846. vertise t o pe r form Michael, 541-310-9057 Services Every Daythrough rage sale and don't Landscape ConstrucSPECIAL forget to advertise in servingcentrai orego imce 19ts The Bulletin Classifieds FACTORY tion which includes: New Home, 3 bdrm, Building/Contracting classified! 385-5809. TIFFINPHAETON QSH HDFaf Bo 1996 Heating/Cooling p lanting, decks , $46,500 finished 631 2007 with 4 slides, CAT fences, arbors, 687 on your site. 350hp diesel engine, NOTICE: Oregon state Condo/Townhomes water-features, and inJ and M Homes Serving Central Oregon smce1903 Bend Heating 8 Commercial for $129,900. 30,900 miles, law r equires anyone stallation, repair of ir541-548-5511 Sheefmefal,lnc. for Rent great condition! who contracts for Rent/Lease 875 rigation systems to be CCB¹08653 Extended warranty, construction work to LOT MODEL licensed w i t h the 541-382-1231 Furnished 1 bdrm condo Fenced storage yard, Watercraft dishwasher, washer/ be licensed with the Landscape ContracLIQUIDATION www.bendheating.com Inn of 7th Mtn, utils + dryer, central vac, roof Construction Contracand o f fice Prices Slashed Huge Completely tors Board. This 4-digit cable & Wifi pd, deck, building Ads published in "Wasatellite, aluminum tors Board (CCB). An for rent. In connumber is to be i nSavings! 10 Year Rebuilt/Customized pools, $750 + dep. No trailer tercraft" include: Kay- wheels, 2 full slide-thru active license Redmond lo- conditional warranty. in all adver2012/2013 Award smkg/pets. 541-979-8940 venient aks, rafts and motor- basement trays & 3 TV's. means the contractor BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS cluded cation, 205 SE Rail- Finished on your site. tisements which indiWinner Search the area's most ized personal Falcon-2 towbar and is bonded 8 insured. road Blvd. $800/mo. cate the business has 632 Showroom Condition ONLY 2 LEFT! watercrafts. For Even-Brake included. Verify the contractor's comprehensive listing of 10/1. a bond,insurance and Many Extras classified advertising... Redmond, Oregon Apt./Multiplex General Avail. "boats" please see Call 541-977-4150 CCB l i c ense at 541-923-7343. Low Miles. 541-548-5511 real estate to automotive, workers c o mpensaClass 870. www.hirealicensedtion for their employmerchandise to sporting JandMHomes.com CHECK YOUR AD $1 7,000 contractor.com 541-385-5809 Tioga 24' Class C ees. For your protec541-548-4807 or call 503-378-4621. goods. Bulletin Classifieds tion call 503-378-5909 Motorhome Rent /Own The Bulletin recom- appear every day in the Bought new in 2000, or use our website: 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes print or on line. mends checking with currently under 20K www.lcb.state.or.us to $2500 down, $750 mo. Street Glide 2006 black the CCB prior to conCall 541-385-5809 miles, excellent check license status 880 OAC. J and M Homes cherry metal f lake, tracting with anyone. shape, new tires, www.bendbulletin.com good extras, 8 ,100 before contracting with 541-548-5511 Motorhomes Some other t r ades professionaly wintermiles, will take some the business. Persons on the first day it runs also req u ire addiized every year, cutdoing land s cape to make sure it is cortrade of firearms or off switch to battery, t ional licenses a nd maintenance do not "Spellcheck" and small ironhead. rect. certifications. plus new RV batterr equire an L C B $14,000. human errors do ocies. Oven, hot water 541-306-8812 cur. If this happens to Landscaping/Yard Care cense. heater & air condi732 your ad, please conDebris Removal tioning have never Nelson tact us ASAP so that Commercial/Investment Suzuki DRZ400 SM been used! Landscaping fk corrections and any JUNK BE GONE Beaver Monterey 2007, 14K mi., $24,000 obo. Serious Properties for Sale adjustments can be Maintenance 36' 1998, Ig kitchen 4 gal. tank, racks, inquiries, please. I Haul Away FREE ZOON dQuadriy Serving Central made to your ad. & sofa slide, perfect Stored in Terrebonne. recent tires, For Salvage. Also Burns, OR W ar e 541-385-5809 Oregon Since 2003 leather. W/D, elec. 541-548-5174 $4200 OBO. Zarerr gizr e /,c. Cleanups & Cleanouts 8 warehouse Residental/Commercial The Bulletin Classified house 541-383-2847. awn, dash computer, Mel, 541-389-8107 property. Prior used Managing 2 TVs. Always covas beer wholesaler. Sprinkler Blowoufs Just too many Central Oregon Want to impress the ered. Exterior = 8, 11,000 s q.ft. t o t al, Sprinkler Repair • Domestic Services interior =9. New Landscapes collectibles? relatives? Remodel 5 500 s q .ft . m e t a l• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 paint bottom half & Since 2006 warehouse. Misc. free EXT, $1000. Maintenance your home with the A ssisting Seniors a t new roof seal 2012. standing coolers in- • Yamaha 750 1999 Sell them in • Fall Clean up help of a professional Home. Light house300 Turbo CAT, 89K Fall Clean Up •Weekly Mowing cluded. $2 39,000. The Bulletin Classifieds keeping & other ser- Don't from The Bulletin's Mountain Max, SOLD! mi. Engine diagnostrack it in all Winter 8 Edging 541-749-0724 • Zieman 4-place v ices. Licensed & "Call A Service tic =perfect 9/20/13. •Leaves •Bi-Monthly & Monthly One of the only trailer, SOLD! Bonded. BBB CertiGood batteries, tires. •Cones Professional" Directory 541-385-5809 Maintenance counties in All in good condition. Triumph Daytona fied. 503-756-3544 • Needles All service done at •Bark, Rock, Etc. Oregon without a Located in La Pine. 2004, 15K mi l e s , • Debris Hauling Beaver Coach, Iy illl';.' JII. 634 microbrewery. Call 541-408-6149. perfect bike, needs Bend. $42,500, ~Landsca in Electrical Services nothing. Vin Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 541-419-8184 •Landscape Winter Prep 860 745 ¹201536. • Pruning Construction Mike Dillon Electric t Call for Specials! Motorcycles & Accessories $4995 •Aerating •Water Feature Homes for Sale I" USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Winnebago Suncruiser34' Electrical troubleshootLimited numbers avail. Dream Car •Fertilizing Installation/Maint. ing, Generator systems, 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Auto Sales •Pavers 2004, 35K, loaded, too new panel installations. NOTICE Door-to-door selling with W/D hookups, patios 1801 Division, Bend •Renovations much to list, ext'd warr. 24 yrs exp/ Lic./ Bonded Compost All real estate adveror decks. DreamCarsBend.com fast results! It's the easiest thru 2014, $49,900 Den- ¹192171 503-949-2336 •Irrigations Installation tised here in is subApplications 541-678-0240 MOUNTAIN GLEN, way in the world to sell. nis, 541-589-3243 ject to t h e F e deral Use Less Water Senior Discounts Dlr 3665 541-383-9313 F air Housing A c t , 881 Bonded & Insured Professionally Flooring $$$ SAVE $$$ The Bulletin Classified • which makes it illegal 2013 Harley 541-815-4458 Improve Plant Health managed by Norris & Travel Trailers to advertise any pref541-385-5809 LCB¹8759 Davidson Dyna Find exactly what Stevens, Inc. Prestige Hardwood erence, limitation or Wide Glide, black, 2014 Maintenance you are looking for in the Flooring, inc. Just bought a new boat? discrimination based only 200 miles, 541-383-1613 Package Available Painting/Wall Coveringj CLASSIFIEDS Sell your old one in the on race, color, relibrand new, all stock, www.prestwehardwoodsite.com classifieds! Ask about our gion, sex, handicap, CCB¹154136 plus after-market Weekly, Monthly & WESTERN PAINTING Super Seller rates! familial status or naexhaust. Has winter One Time Service CO. Richard Hayman, 541-385-5809 tional origin, or intencover, helmet. a semi-retired painttion to make any such • Han d yman Selling for what I 636 EXPERIENCED ing contractor of 45 Coachman Freelander preferences, l i m ita- owe on it: $15,500. Cougar 33 ft. 2006, 2008 32' Class C, Commercial years. S m all Jobs Apt./Multiplex NW Bend tions or discrimination. ERIC REEVE HANDY Call anytime, 14 ft. slide, awning, M-3150 - pristine with Welcome. Interior 8 & Residential We will not knowingly SERVICES. Home & easy lift, stability bar, 541-554-0384 just 23,390 miles! EffiExterior. c c b ¹51 84. Brand new 3 Bdrm, 2t/s accept any advertisCommercial Repairs, bumper extends for cient coach has Ford Senior Discounts 541-388-6910 bath, all new appliances. ing for r ea l e s tate Carpentry-Painting, extra cargo, all acV10 w/Banks pwr pkg, Victory TC 2002, Garage. Move-in ready! which is in violation of Buell 1125R, 2008 15k 541-390-1466 Pressure-washing, 14' slide, rear qn walkcess. incl., like new runs great, many $1500/mo. 503-686-0717 this law. All persons miles, reg. s ervice, Same Day Response Honey Do's. On-time Tile/Ceramic around bed, sofa/hidecondition, stored in or 971-404-7241. are hereby informed well cared for. factory accessories, new promise. Senior abed,caboverbunk, RV barn, used less Buell optional fairing tires, under 40K Discount. Work guar- Just bought a new boat? Baptista Tile Just bought a new boat? that all dwellings adducted furn/AC, flat t han 10 t i mes l o vertised are available kit, Michelin 2cc tires, miles, well kept. anteed. 541-389-3361 Sell your old one in the 8 Stone Gallery Sell your old one in the screen TV, skylight, c ally, no p et s o r or 541-771-4463 CCB¹19421 classifieds! Ask about our on an equal opportu- will trade for ie: Enpantry, 16' awning. No classifieds! Ask about our $5000. smoking. $20,000 541-382-9130 Super Seller rates! nity basis. The Bulle- duro DR 650, $5700 pets/smkg - a must see! obo. 541-536-2709. Bonded & Insured Super Seller rates! 541-77 I -0665 tin Classified obo. 541-536-7924. CCB¹181595 www.baptistatile.com 541-385-5809 $57,900. 541-548-4969 541-385-5809

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E4 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013•THE BULLETIN

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Bold bidding

i Highly

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"I'll admit the man played the hand w ell, as u sual," C y t h e C y n i c grumbled, "but I don't understand his bid." Cy had lost money to Ed, the club expert, in a penny game and was grousing about it in the club lounge. As declarer at four hearts, Ed won the first club and led a spade to dummy's queen. "I took the king and returned a club," the Cynic said, "and my partner won and led a third club. Instead of ruffing in dummy, Ed discarded a diamond. He won the diamond shift, took the ace of spades, ruffed a spade, drew trumps ending in dummy, and threw two diamonds on the good spades. Making four.

MINIMUM " Ed's hand w a s c lose t o a minimum," Cy went on. "How did he happen to bid four hearts when his partner bid only two?" "Maybe he added points for his dummy play," I suggested. North c learly h a d t r u e h e art support, but with six to nine points he would have raised directly to two hearts. So North showed 10 or 11 points, and Ed's bid was aggressive but reasonable. DAILY QUESTION

and he raises to four hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner suggests extra strength; with a minimum hand, he could have raised to three hearts. Since you have good trumps and side aces, a try for slam is in order — you could raise to five hearts — and a j ump t o s i x h e a rts w o ul d b e r easonable. Partner m a y ho l d A K Q7 6,A 7 4 2 , J 5,8 4 . South dealer Neither side vulnerable

NORTH 4 sAQ65 2 QA83 O 1052 A73 WEST 4 10 7 3 9962

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East Pass Pass

Youhold: 4 8 4 9 K Q J 10 5 Opening lead — 4 K 0 A73 4 A 6 2 . Yourpartneropens one spade, you respond two hearts (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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

A PE S ER HW O O IS R T E F MO V I E EX E E RA D P I SO C T T Y S

PSA AWN LV E S E L AW VO T E EV E R LA RS S WA R J EC T UA T E N K I ET Y OS E E R T AS

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DOWN i Home of the Senators 3Associate 3 Retire for the evening 4 Ear: Prefix s Atoner s Memorable hurricane of 2011 TWhat a constant channel-surfer may have s Lt.'s superior e One less than quattro io "Ben-Hur" theme ii Plant with fluffy flower spikes iz Writer's block buster 13 End of a doorbell sound zz Business card abbr. 34 "That's awful!" ze Heavy reading? 37 b adg e 3o London's Gardens 3i Slangy turndown 32 Buzz Lightyear, for one 34 Does away with

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PUZZLE BYPAUL HUNSBERGER

3s "Takes a licking ..." brand 3e Prov. on Hudson Bay 3e Bridal bio word 4o With skill 4i Block buster? 43 Green vehicle, briefly 47 Be inquisitive 4e Not the past or the future

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For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. ATBT users: Text NYTX to 386 Io download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscrlptlons: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytlmes.com/learnlng/xwords.

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THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23 2013 E5

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

Keystone Raptor, 2007 37' toy hauler,2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system, sleeps 6,many extras. $32,500. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or 541-475-6265 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

Pickups

Antique & Classic Autos

Aircraft, Parts & Service

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

1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

In Madras, call 541-475-6302 2011 Fliqht Design CTLS Light Sport, 75 TTSN NDH, loaded, h a nqared, Bend. $149K firm. 541-389-7108

975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

"i0y little red Corvette" Coupe

Buick CX Lucerne 2006, 82k mi., cream leather, Black Beauty - Stunning eye appeal, $6900. No charge for looking. Call 541-318-9999

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

Buick 1983

Regal, T-type Transmission rebuilt & 3000 rpm stall converter; 750 Holley double 928-581-9190 pumper w/milled air horn (flows 850 cfms); turbo rebuilt. Have receipts for Ford XL T F 250 all 3 items. Plus addi1977, long bed, a/c, tional work done. $3300 auto trans, 30K on obo. Call for addtional new engine, trans. info 541-480-5502 recently s e rviced, Chevy 1955 PROJECT original owner, nice car. 2 door wgn, 350 c ond. $4,00 0 . small block w/Weiand 541-508-9882/local dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + I nternational Fla t extras. $6500 for all. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 541-389-7669. t on dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.

The Bulletin

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Au t o mobiles

Mercedes Benz

E500 4-matic 2004 86,625 miles, sunroof with a shade loaded, silver, 2 sets of tires and a set of chains. $13,500. 541-362-5598

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

Cadillac El Dorado 1994 Total Cream Puff! Body, paint, trunk as showroom, blue reo, always garaged, leather, $1700 wheels $11,000. w/snow tires although 541-923-1781 car has not been wet in 8 years. On trip to Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., 2005 Buick LeSabre Custom, 101K, $6500. $4800. 541-593-4016.s 30+ mpg hwy, full-size 4-dr sedan, luxury ride Camaro 2001, V6 auto, 8 handling ... Why not drive a Buick? low miles, T-top $7495. Bend, 805-452-5817 Call Bob, 541-318-9999

Monaco Lakota 2004 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! People Look for Information 5th Wheel About Products and 34 ft.; 3 s lides; im- Door-to-door selling with maculate c o ndition; fast results! It's the easiest Services Every Daythrough l arge screen TV w / The Bulletin ClaseiBeds entertainment center; way in the world to sell. reclining chairs; cenAUDI 1990 V8 Quatter kitchen; air; queen The Bulletin Classified tro. Perfect Ski Car. bed; complete hitch 541-385-5809 LOW MILES. $3,995 and new fabric cover. obo. 541-480-9200. Executive Hangar $20,000 OBO. at Bend Airport (KBDN) 541-419-5480. BMW 525 2002 60' wide x 50' d eep, w/55' wide x 17' high bi- Chevy Wagon 195'7, Luxury Sport Edition, V-6, automatic, fold dr. Natural gas heat, 935 4-dr., complete, loaded, 18" new offc, bathroom. Adjacent $7,000 OBO / trades, Sport Utility Vehicles tires, 114k miles. to Frontage Rd; great Please call visibility for aviation busi$7 900 obo 541-389-6998 ness. Financing avail(541) 419-4152 MONTANA 3585 2008, able. 541-948-2126 or exc. cond., 3 slides, email 1 jetjock@q.com king bed, Irg LR, Piper A rcher 1 9 80, Arctic insulation, all based in Madras, aloptions $35,000 obo. BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K ways hangared since 541-420-3250 miles, premium packnew. New annual, auto Ford Model A 1930 Nuyya297LK HitcHiker age, heated lumbar pilot, IFR, one piece Coupe, good condition, supported seats, pan2007, Out of consignwindshield. Fastest Aroramic moo n roof, ment, 3 slides, 32' cher around. 1750 to- $16,000. 541-588-6084 Bluetooth, ski bag, Xeperfect for snow birds, tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. left kitchen, rear non headlights, tan & 541-475-6947, ask for black leather interior, lounge, extras. First Rob Berg. 1000 n ew front & rea r $25,000 buys it. 541-447-5502 days & brakes © 76K miles, Legal Notices 541-447-1641 eves. one owner, all records, Ford Ranchero 1965 very clean, $16,900. LEGAL NOTICE Rhino bedliner cus541-388-4360 Ne//ee BANK OF AMERICA, Take care of tom wheels, 302V-8 a uto. R un s go o d Bronco 1982, headers, N.A., ITS SUCCESyour investments SORS AND/OR AS$9,995. 541-389-0789 lift kit, new tires, runs Save money. Learn with the help from SIGNS, Plaintiff/s, v. great. $2000. to fly or build hours TAMMY J. 541-549-4563. The Bulletin's with your own airTHORSON; AND ALL "Call A Service c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o OTHER P E RSONS uce Reducedl Chevrolet Tahoe Commander, 4 seat, O R P A RTIES U N Professional" Directory 2001 4x4, 4.8L V8. 150 HP, low time, KNOWN C LAIMING Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Dark green w/gray full panel. $23,000 ANY RIGHT, TITLE, engine, power everyleather interior. obo. Contact Paul at LIEN, OR INTEREST thing, new paint, 54K Good condition. 541-447-5184. IN THE REAL PROPoriginal m i les, runs $3900. E RTY C O M M O N L Y great, excellent condi541-390-3326 KNOWN AS 749 NE 916 tion in/out. $7500 obo. QUINCE A V E NUE, 541-480-3179 Trucks & REDMOND, OR OPEN ROAD 36' Heavy Equipment BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS 97756, D efendant/s. 2005 - $28,000 Search the area's most Case No.: 12CV1166. King bed, hide-a-bed comprehensive listing of N OTICE O F S A L E sofa, 3 slides, glass classified advertising... UNDER W RI T OF shower, 10 gal. wareal estate to automotive, EXECUTION - REAL ter heater, 10 cu.ft. merchandise to sporting PROPERTY. Notice is fridge, central vac, GMC rreton 1971, Only goods. Bulletin Classifieds hereby given that I will s atellite dish, 27 " k:;c:-.= $19,700! Original low appear every day in the o n N o vember 2 6 , TV/stereo syst., front 1987 Freightliner COE 3- mile, exceptional, 3rd print or on line. 2013 at 10:00 AM in front power leveling axle truck, Cummins en- owner. 951-699-7171 the main lobby of the jacks and s c issor gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 Call 541-385-5809 C o u nty stabilizer jacks, 16' obo. 541-419-2713 www.bendbulletin.com Deschutes Sheriff's Office, 63333 awning. Like new! W. Highway 20, Bend, 541-419-0566 servingcenre oueon 5uu f903 Ford 1965 6-yard Oregon, sell, at public dump truck, good o ral auction to t h e GMC Envoy XLT 2003, paint, recent overWant to impress the h ighest bidder, f o r p remium pkg , 3 2 K , haul, everything cash o r cas h ier's GMC Sierra 1977 short relatives? Remodel $10,950. 541-549-6036 works! $3995. bed, e xlnt o r i ginal check, the real propyour home with the 541-815-3636 cond., runs & drives erty commonly known help of a professional great. V8, new paint as 749 N E Q u ince from The Bulletin's Avenue, R e dmond, and tires. $4950 obo. Ford F350 2006 "Call A Service 541-504-1050 Oregon 97756. Con--au • d itions of Sale: P o Professional" Directory tential bidders must I arrive 15 minutes prior Iniiniti FX35 2012, to the auction to allow Platinum silver, ru~t the Deschutes County I 24,000 miles, with le Office to refactory war r anty, Sheriff's view bidder's funds. Truck has V - 10, MGA 1959- $19,999 f ully l o aded, A l l Only U.S. c urrency 2 1,000 r n. , H D Wheel Drive, GPS, O r igiand/or cashier's Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th winch w / c ustom Convertible. sunroof, etc. nal body/motor. No checks made payable wheel, 1 s lide, AC, HD front bumper, $37,500. rust. 541-549-3838 to Deschutes County TV,full awning, excel- air load bags w/12! 541 -550-71 89 Sheriff's Office will be lent shape, $23,900. dump bed, dually, OO accepted. P a yment ~ 541-350-8629 4x4, new high promust be made in full file tires. $26,900 More Pixat Bendbulletij.com immediately upon the 541-350-3393 close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: GMC 2004 16' www.oregonsheriffs.c refrigerated box van, ELK HUNTERS! om/sales.htm gvw 20,000, 177,800 Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. Recreation by Design LEGAL NOTICE mi, diesel, 6 spd owner, 87k only 3k on 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Plymouth B a r racuda new 258 long block. FEDERAL NAmanual with on-spot Top living room 5th 1966, original car! 300 C lutch p kg , W a r n T IONAL MO R T automatic tire wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 hp, 360 V8, centerA S S O CIAchains. Thermo-King A/Cs, entertainment hubs. Excellent run- GAGE lines, 541-593-2597 ("FNMA"), center, fireplace, W/D, reefer has 1,635 enner, very dependable. TION P laintiff/s, v . LE garden tub/shower, in gine hours. $19,995. PROJECT CARS: Chevy Northman 6 i/e' plow, T. HAABY; great condition. $42,500 541-41 9-41 72. 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Warn 6000¹ w i nch. ONARD HOOL E or best offer. Call Peter, $9500 or best rea- DAVID Chevy Coupe 1950 LORE T T A 307-221-2422, offer. A ND rolling chassis's $1750 sonable ( in La Pine ) HOOLE: C O LUMor ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, 541-549-6970 WILL DELIVER BIA RIVER BANK; complete car, $ 1949; 541-815-8105. O CCUPANTS O F Cadillac Series 61 1950, SANDPIPER 2002 27' THE P R O PERTY, 2 dr. hard top, complete with hitch too many Defendant/s. Case w /spare f r on t cl i p ., extras to list, $13,000. No.: 12 C V 0 921. JCB 2006 214 E diesel $3950, 541-382-7391 541-923-8322. NOTICE OF SALE backhoe wi th HamU NDER WRIT OF mer Master 360 rock Need to get an EXECUTION hammer 18" dig r p ad in ASAP? REAL PROPERTY. bucket, quick coupler, Jeep Grand CheroYou can place it Notice i s h e r e by backhoe has 380 hrs, 0 0 kee 1996 4x4, autorock hammer has 80 given that I will on online at: matic, 135,000 miles. November 21, 2013 hours. Like new, Great shape - very www.bendbulletin.com at 10:00 AM in the $32,500 obo. nice interior, $3,900. 541-350-3393 main lobby of t he 541-815-9939 541-385-5B09 Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highe. Peterbilt 359 p o table est bidder, for cash Nissan Pathfinder SE water t ruck, 1 9 90, or cashier's check, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp VW Bug Sedan, 1969, 1998, 150K mi, 5-spd the real p r operty pump, 4-3" h o ses, fully restored, 2 owners, 4x4, loaded, very good commonly known as camlocks, $ 2 5,000. with 73,000 total miles, tires, very good cond, 21049 Don Street, 541-820-3724 $10,000. 541-382-5127 $4800. 503-334-7345 B end, Oreg o n 97701. C o nditions Subaru Outback 2.5i 931 1/3 interest in Columbia 2011 wgn. 19,457 mi., of Sale: P o t ential Automotive Parts, Pickups • bidders must arrive 400, $150,000 (located ¹339328 $17,995 15 minutes prior to @ Bend.) Also: Sunri- Service & Accessories 2003 Dodge Ram 1500 541-598-3750 ver hangar available for the auction to allow 4x4 single cab, 4.7 L, sale at $155K, or lease, the Desc h u tes auto, new tires, new Oregon @ $400/mo. County Sheriff's Offront brakes, 95,500 mi, Aurogource 541-948-2963 f ice to rev i e w exlnt cond, $7400 firm. www.aaaoregonautobidder's funds. Only Call 541-475-6901 or source.com U.S. currency 541-325-6147 and/or cas h ier's checks made payDodge 2007 Diesel 4WD 4 Studded Tires SLT quad cab, short box, able to Deschutes Seldom used, auto, AC, high mileage, County Sheriff's Of225/55R1798-G fice w il l b e ac$12,900. 541-389-7857 1 /3 interest i n w e llNokian. They have cepted. P a y ment equipped IFR Beech Boremovable studs, must be made in full nanza A36, new 10-550/ and Toyota Highlander were $740 new; i mmediately u p o n prop, located KBDN. 2 003 Limited A W D selling for $390. t he close o f t h e $65,000. 541-419-9510 F350 4-dr diesel 99,000 mi., automatic 541-480-1199 For more in2004 pickup, auto, $12,000 o bo . O n e sale. f ormation o n t h i s King Ranch, 144K, owner. 816.812.9882 sale go to: www.orHitch set-up, RV to tow excellent, extras, egonsheriffs.com/sa car, flat towing. $500 $16,995 obo. les.htm obo. 541-403-0114 541-923-0231 Vans LEGAL NOTICE FEDERAL NA1/5th interest in 1973 T IONAL MOR T Cessna 150 LLC GAGE A S S O CIASTUDDED 150hp conversion, low TION, (FNMA), e time on air frame and SNOW TIRES Plaintiff/s, v. THOengine, hangared in size 225/70-R16 MAS GRANDE IV; and Hyundai Santa Bend. Excellent perSTATE O F ORFord F250 1997, 7 .3 GMC 1995 Safari XT, formance & affordFe wheels, new! Powerstroke Diesel, auto, seats 8, 4.3L V6, EGON D E P ARTable flying! $6,500. $600. 541-388-4003 84,500 mi., exlnt cond. studs on rims, $2300 MENT O F EM541 -41 0-6007 obo. 541-312-6960 $16,500. 541-389-4608

KW~~<

975

Pontiac G6 2007, low miles, $8900. 541-548-1422

Automobiles • Porsche 91 1 Turbo

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. 541-322-9647

Carrera 993 cou e

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra

battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700

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

541-322-9647

Subaru STi 2010, 16.5K, rack, mats, cust snow whls, stored, oneowner, $29K, 541.410.6904

Porsche 911

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and

Automo b iles

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

Toyota Celica Convertible 1993

G T 2200 4 c yl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o n vertible around in this price range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., r emarkable cond. i n side and out. Fun car to d rive, Must S E E ! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993 Volvo C30 1008, red, 60k mi. ¹081324 $15,995 Oregon

Subaru Legacy 3.0 R Ltd. 2008, 32k mi, ¹21 0048 $23,995.

AutoSource

541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonauto-

source.com

Oregon

AutoSource

www.aaaoregonautosource.com

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

Legal Notices •

Legal Notices

541-598-3750

1000

Legal Notices PLOYMENT; O CCUPANTS O F THE P R O PERTY,

Le g al Notices agenda for the meeting will be posted under Legal Notices on the Housing Works web site www.housingworks.org.

FROM THE F E Dt he w r itten c o m ERAL DEP O SIT p laint, a c op y o f INSURANCE CORwhich was filed with Defendant/s. Case PORATION AS the a b ove-entitled No.: 12C V 1 129. RECEIVER OF Court. NOTICE OF SALE WASHINGTON You must "appear" in U NDER WRIT O F MUTUAL BANK t his case o r t h e EXECUTION If you have any ques- F/K/A W A S HING- other side will win REAL PROPERTY. tions or need special T ON MUTU A L a utomatically. T o "appear" you must Notice i s h e r e by accommodations, B ANK, FA ; A N D given that I will on please contact Lori O CCUPANTS O F file with the court a November 12, 2013 Hill at (541) 323-7402. THE PREMISES, legal doc u ment at 10:00 AM in the For s pecial a s sisDefendants. called a "motion" or "answer." The main lobby of t he tance due to motion, Case No. 13CV00616 "motion" or "answer" Deschutes County vision, speech and SUMMONS BY S heriff's Offi c e , hearing d i s abilities, P U BLICATION (or "reply") must be 63333 W. Highway the toll free number of given to the court 20, Bend, Oregon, C enturyLink's ser - TO THE DEFENclerk or administra sell, at public oral vices for customers DANTS: MARY tor within 30 days of auction to the highw ith d i sabilities i s SHRAUGER; the date of first pub1-800-223-3131. est bidder, for cash In the name of t he lication sp e c ified or cashier's check, State o f O r e gon, herein along w ith the real p r operty Tom Kemper, you are hereby rethe required filing commonly known as Executive Director quired to a p pear fee. It must be in 21163 Copperfield Housing Works a nd a n swer t h e p roper form a n d Avenue, Bend, Or(abn Central Oregon complaint filed have proof of seregon 97702. CondiRegional against you in the vice on the plaintiff's tions of Sale: PoHousing Authority) above-entitled Court a ttorney or, if t h e tential bidders must a nd cause o n o r p laintiff does n o t LEGAL NOTICE arrive 15 m i nutes before the expirahave an a t torney, HSBC BANK USA, prior to the auction tion of 30 days from proof of service on N.A., AS TRUSTEE to allow the Desthe date of the first the plaintiff. O N B EHALF O F c hutes Coun t y p ublication of t h is If you have any quesTHE HOLDERS OF S heriff's Office t o summons. The date tions, you s h ould DEUTSCHE BANK review bidd e r's of first publication in see an attorney imALT-A SEC U R If unds. Only U . S . this matter is Oct. m ediately. I f y o u TIES MORTGAGE c urrency and / o r 16, 2013. If you fail need help in finding L OAN TRUS T , c ashier's c h e c ks MORTGAGE PASS timely to appear and a n a ttorney, y o u m ade payable t o answer, plaintiff will may contact the OrT HROUGH C E R Deschutes County apply to the egon State B ar's T IFICATES, SESheriff's Office will Lawyer Ref e rral RIES 20 0 7 -AR2, above-entitled court be accepted. Payfor the relief prayed S ervice online a t through its loan serment must be made for in its complaint. www.oregonstatev icing agent S E in full immediately This is a j u d icial bar.org or by calling LECT PORTFOLIO upon the close of foreclosure o f a (503) 684-3763 (in SERVICING, INC., the sale. For more d eed o f t r us t i n the Portland metroPlaintiff/s, v. THOinformation on this which the p l aintiff p olitan area) o r MAS G. DEAN; GB sale go to: www.ortoll-free elsewhere HOM E EQ U I TY, r equests that t h e egonsheriffs.com/sa plaintiff be allowed in Oregon at (800) LLC; MORTGAGE les.htm to foreclose your 452-7636. ELECTRONIC interest in the folThis summons is isLEGAL NOTICE REGISTRATION lowing d e s cribed sued pursuant to G REEN PLA N E T SYSTEMS IN C 4 real property: ORCP 7. S ERVICING, LLC , O CCUPANTS O F RCO LEGAL, P.C. Plaintiff/s, v. THE P R O PERTY, B EGINNING AT A POINT 187.5 FEET By Alex Gund, MICHELLE B A KER; Defendant/s. Case EAST O F THE OSB ¹114067 MICHAEL B A K E R; No.: 13C V 0 246. NORTHWEST Attorney for Plaintiff M IDFIRST BA N K ; NOTICE OF SALE CORNER OF LOT 511 SW 10th Ave., AND PERSONS OR U NDER WRIT O F 15 OF B O WEN'S Ste. 400 UNPARTIES EXECUTION SUBDIVISION, ACPortland, Oregon KNOWN C LAIMING REAL PROPERTY. TO THE 97205 ANY RIGHT, TITLE, Notice i s h e r eby CORDING O FFICIAL PLA T T: 503-977-7840; LIEN OR INTEREST given that I will on THEREOF ON FILE F: 503-977-7963 IN THE PROPERTY November 14, 2013 AND OF RECORD agund@rcolegal.com DESCRIBED IN THE at 10:00 AM in the IN THE OFFICE OF COMPLAINT main lobby of t he LEGAL NOTICE T HE CO UN T Y HEREIN, Deschutes County JPMORGAN CHASE CLERK FOR D efendant/s. C a s e S heriff's Offi c e , BANK, NA T I ONAL CROOK COUNTY, No.: 13CV0556. NO- 63333 W. Highway ASSOCIATION, OREGON, THENCE TICE OF SALE UN20, Bend, Oregon, SUCCESSOR IN INEAST 187.50 FEET, D ER WRIT OF E X - sell, at public oral T EREST B Y P U R THENCE S O U TH ECUTION REAL auction to the highCHASE FROM THE 150 FEET, PROPERTY. Notice is est bidder, for cash FEDERAL DEPOSIT T HENCE WES T hereby given that I will or cashier's check, I NSURANCE C O R 187.50 FEET, o n N o vember 1 4 , the real p r operty PORATION, AS RET HENCE N O R T H 2013 at 10:00 AM in commonly known as CEIVER OF WASH150 FEET TO THE the main lobby of the 3462 SW Metolius I NGTON M UT U A L POINT OF BEGINDeschutes Co u n ty Meadow Ct., RedBANK, F O RMERLY NING. MORE ACSheriff's Office, 63333 m ond, KNOWN AS WASHOre g o n CURATELY DEW. Highway 20, Bend, 97756. C o nditions I NGTON M UT U A L AS Oregon, sell, at public of Sale: P o t ential SCRIBED BANK, FA, Plaintiff/s, FOLLOWS: THE o ral auction t o t h e bidders must arrive v. UNKNOWN SUCNORTH HALF OF h ighest bidder, f o r 15 minutes prior to C ESSOR(S) IN I N THE F OLLOWING cash o r ca s h ier's the auction to allow T EREST AND / O R DESCRIBED check, the real prop- the Desc h u tes HEIRS OF DAVID I. TRACT OF LAND: DEerty commonly known County Sheriff's Of- B EGINNING AT A EPSTEIN, to revi e w CEASED; UNas 52836 W ayside f ice POINT 187.5 FEET Loop, La Pine, Orbidder's funds. Only KNOWN S U C CESEAST O F THE egon 97739. CondiU.S. currency SOR TRUSTEE TO tions of Sale: Poten- and/or cas h ier's NORTHWEST E PSTEIN FA M I LY CORNER OF LOT t ial b i d ders m u s t checks made payT RUST A DAT E D 15 OF B O WEN'S arrive 15 minutes prior able to Deschutes S EPTEMBER 2 4, SUBDIVISION, ACto the auction to allow County Sheriff's Of1990; UNK N OWN CORDING TO THE the Deschutes County fice w il l b e acBENEFICIARIES OF FFICIAL PLA T Sheriff's Office to re- cepted. THE EPSTEIN FAMP a y ment O THEREOF ON FILE view bidder's funds. must be made in full ILY TRUST A DATED AND OF RECORD Only U.S. c urrency i mmediately u p o n S EPTEMBER 24, IN THE OFFICE OF and/or cashier's t he close o f th e 1990; THE EPSTEIN T HE CO UN T Y checks made payable sale. For more inF AMILY T RUST A CLERK FOR to Deschutes County f ormation on t h i s DATED SEP T E MCROOK COUNTY, Sheriff's Office will be sale go to: www.orBER 24, 19 90, OREGON, THENCE accepted. P a yment egonsheriffs.com/sa OTHER P E RSONS EAST 187.50 FEET, must be made in full les.htm O R P A RTIES, I N THENCE S O U TH immediately upon the C LUDING OCC U LEGAL NOTICE 150 FEET, close of the sale. For PANTS, UNKNOWN IN THE CIRCUIT T HENCE WES T more information on CLAIMING A NY COURT FOR THE 187.50 FEET, this s al e go to: RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, STATE OF T HENCE N O R T H www.oregonsheriffs.c O R I N TEREST I N OREGON 150 FEET TO THE om/sales.htm THE PROP E RTY IN AND FOR THE POINT OF BEGINDESCRIBED IN THE LEGAL NOTICE COUNTY OF NING. COMPLAINT Housing Works CROOK Commonly known as HEREIN, Regular Board MeetWELLS FARGO 725 Southwest CliffD efendant/s. C a s e i ng s c heduled f o r BANK, NA AS side Lane, PrinevNo.: 12CV1213. NOOctober 23, 2013 has TRUSTEE FOR ille, Oregon 97754. TICE OF SALE UNbeen cancelled. WAMU NOTICE TO D ER WRIT OF E X Housing Works will MORTGAGE DEFENDANTS: ECUTION - REAL PASS-THROUGH hold a Special MeetREAD THESE PROPERTY. Notice is ing on Tuesday, OcCERTIFICATES PAPERS hereby given that I will SERIES 2004-PR1 t ober 29, 2 0 1 3 a t CAREFULLY! o n N o vember 2 1 , 12:00 p.m. at HousTRUST, its A lawsuit has been 2013 at 10:00 AM in ing Works, located at successors in interest started against you main lobby of the 405 SW 6th S treet, and/or assigns, in th e a b ove-en- the Deschutes C o u nty Plaintiff, Redmond, OR 97756 titled court by Wells Sheriff's Office, 63333 and with e l ectronic V. Fargo Bank, NA as W. Highway 20, Bend, c ommunication w i th MARY SHRAUGER; Trustee for WaMu Oregon, sell, at public Board members. JPMORGAN Mortgage o ral auction to t h e CHASE BANK, NAPass-Through Cerh ighest bidder, f o r Principal subjects an- TIONAL ASSOCIAt ificates Seri e s cash o r cas h ier's ticipated to be consid- TION, SU C C ES- 2 004-PR1 Tru s t , check, the real propered include general SOR IN INTEREST plaintiff. P l a intiff's erty commonly known PUR C H ASE b usiness. A dra f t BY claims are stated in


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

E6 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013•THE BULLETIN

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Legal Notices as 6 1 19 8 Fo r e st Meadow Place, Bend, Oregon 97702. Cond itions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE J PMorgan Cha s e Bank, National Association, Plaintiff/s, v. David J . Gra v es, Other Persons or Parties, including Occupants unknown claiming an y r i g ht, title, lien, or interest in t he P r o perty de scribed in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 13CV0006. NOTICE O F S AL E U N D ER WRIT O F E X E C UTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is

hereby given that I will on November 5, 2013 at 10:00 A.M. in the main lobby of the Des chutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 13 6 SW 2nd Street, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i d ders m u s t arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's

checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE J PMorgan Cha s e Bank, National Association, Plaintiff/s, v. Jeffrey A . Nuf f e r; K elsey L . Bur c h , Other Persons or Parties, including Occupants, unknown claiming any r i ght, title, lien, or interest in t he P r o perty de scribed in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. C as e N o . : 13CV0484. NOTICE OF SALE U N D ER WRIT O F E X E C UTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is

hereby given that I will on November 5, 2013 at 10:00 A.M. in the main lobby of the Des chutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r cas h ier's check, the real property commonly known a s 1305 S W 3 3 r d Street, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i d ders m u s t arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE JP MORGA N CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff/s, v. BRANDY P E REZ; OREGON A FFORDABLE HOUSING A SSISTANCE C O R POR ATION; O C C U PANTS O F THE P ROPERTY, De -

fendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0371. NOT ICE O F SAL E U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that I will on November 14, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t he

Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p r operty commonly known as 3103 S W P e r idot Avenue, Redmond, O regon 9775 6 . Conditions of Sale: Potential bi d d ers must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bidd e r's

Legal Notices f unds. Only U . S . c urrency and / o r cashier's ch e c ks

made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriffs.com/sa

les.htm LEGAL NOTICE M IDFIRST B A N K , through its loan servicing agent MIDLAND MORTGAGE, A D I V ISION O F MIDFIRST B A N K, Plaintiff/s, v. MARK C. CHA M BERS; BONITA L. CHAMBERS; OCCU P ANTS O F T H E P ROPERTY, D e -

fendant/s. Case No.:

13CV0106. NOT ICE O F SA L E U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.

Notice i s h e r e by given that I will on November 19, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p r operty commonly known as 5 2295 Park w ay Drive, La Pine, Oregon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m i nutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Office t o review bidd e r's f unds. Only U . S . c urrency and / o r cashier's ch e c ks m ade payable t o Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriffs.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. BRANDON MCDANIEL; CREDIT SERVICES O R OREGON, INC.; STATE O F OREGON; JACY ANNE MARIE MCDANIEL A KA JACY A N NE M ARIE SMIT H ; CAPITAL ONE AUTO FI N A NCE, INC.; OCCUPANTS OF THE PR O P -

ERTY, Defendant/s. Case No.:

12CV0875. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.

Notice i s h e r e by given that I will on November 21, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the r ea l p r operty commonly known as 5 5855 Swan R d ., B end, Oreg o n 97707. C o nditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cas h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office w il l b e accepted. P a y ment must be made in full i mmediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation o n t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriffs.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE N ationstar Mor t gage LLC, P laintiff/s, v . T h e Unknown Heirs and Devisees of Robert L. Seavey; Marlowe K. Seavey; Occupants of the Property, D e fendant/s. Case No.: 12CV1149. NOT ICE O F SA L E U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.

Notice i s h e r eby given that I will on November 12, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p r operty commonly known as 15997 Fir Road, La P ine, Orego n 97739. C o nditions of Sale: P o t ential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow

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the Desc h utes the Deschutes County and/or cashier's checks made payable Sheriff's Office will County Sheriff's OfSheriff's Office to re- How to Comment and checks made payable to Deschutes County be accepted. Payf ice to revi e w view bidder's funds. Timeframe to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be ment must be made bidder's funds. Only Only U.S. c urrency Shenffs Office will be accepted. P a yment in full immediately U.S. currency and/or cashier's Written, fac s imile, accepted. P a yment must be made in full upon the close of and/or cas h ier's checks made payable hand-delivered, oral, must be made in full immediately upon the the sale. For more checks made payto Deschutes County and electronic immediately upon the close of the sale. For information on this able to Deschutes Sheriff's Office will be comments concerning close of the sale. For more information on sale go to: www.orCounty Sheriff's Ofaccepted. P a yment t his action w il l b e more information on this s al e go to: egonsheriff s.com/sa fice w il l b e acmust be made in full accepted f o r 30 this s a l e go to: www.oregonshenffs.c les.htm cepted. P a y ment immediately upon the calendar days www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE must be made in full close of the sale. For following publication om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE W ELLS FA R G O i mmediately u p on more information on o f a n otice in T h e LEGAL NOTICE Steven De Costa, in BANK, N.A., its suct he close o f t h e this s a l e go to: B ulletin, Bend, O r - Ocwen Loan Servic- his representative ca- cessors in interest sale. For more inwww.oregonsheriffs.c egon. The publication ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. pacity as Chairperson and/or f ormation o n t h i s om/sales.htm date in the newspaper John W. R e ynolds; of the Board of Trust- Plaintiff/s, ass i g ns, V. sale go to: www.orof r ecord i s the LEGAL NOTICE Persons or P a rties ees of United Public CAILEN J . MCegonsheriffs.com/sa exclusive means for NOTICE IS H E REBY unknown claimingany Workers, A F SCME, NAIR; ANNA MCles.htm calculating the GIVEN pursuant to right, title, lien, or inLocal 646, AFL-CIO, NAIR; WOODHILL comment period for LEGAL NOTICE ORS 130.365 that the terest in the Property M utual A i d Tru s t HOMES, LLC; AND this proposal. Those NATIONSTAR undersigned is suc- wishing to comment described in the com- Fund, Real Party in O CCUPANTS O F MORTGAGE LLC, cessor co-trustees to plaint herein, DefenInterest; United PubTHE P R E MISES, s hould not r ely o n P laintiff/s, v. W I L the RA L P H C. d ant/s. C as e N o . : lic Workers U nion, Defendant/s. Case LIAM E. JOHNSON; H ARVEY, JR . R E - dates or t i meframe 13CV0569. NOTICE AFSCME, Local 646, No.: 12C V 1 112. information provided O F S AL E U N D E R AFL-CIO, Mutual Aid MORTGAGE V OCABLE LIV I N G NOTICE OF SALE by any other source. ELECTRONIC TRUST dated July 25, WRIT O F E X E CU- Trust Fund, Plaintiff/s, UNDER WRIT OF REGISTRATION 2013 as filed in Des- Regulations p rohibit TION - REAL PROP- v. Gary W. Rodrigues, EXECUTION extending the length S YSTEMS, I N C . ; chutes County Circuit ERTY. N o t ic e is an individual, DefenREAL PROPERTY. of the commend hereby given that I will d ant/s. Cas e N o . : Notice i s HOMECOMINGS Court, State of O rh e r eby period. F INANCIAL N E T egon, as Case No. o n N o vember 1 9 , 0 9CV1268MA. N O - given that I will on WORK, INC.; OC13PB00114. A s e t tat 10:00 AM in TICE OF SALE UNNovember 14, 2013 com m ents 2013 CUPANTS OF THE l or of t h e T r ust i s Written the main lobby of the D ER WRIT OF E X - at 10:00 AM in the must be submitted to P ROPERTY, De KIMBERLY J U D ITH Deschutes C o u nty ECUTION - REAL main lobby of t he Resp o nsible Sheriff's Office, 63333 P ROP ERTY. Notice is Deschutes County fendant/s. Case No.: BRODIE. The Settlor the Forest W. Highway 20, Bend, hereby given that I will S heriff's 13CV0045. NORALPH C. HARVEY, Official, Of fi c e , John Oregon, sell, at public o n N o vember 1 2 , 63333 W. Highway T ICE O F SAL E JR. died September 2, Supervisor Allen, c/o Beth Peer, U NDER WRIT O F 2013. A l l p e r sons 63095 o ral auction to t h e 2013 at 10:00 AM, in 20, Bend, Oregon, Des c h utes h ighest bidder, f o r the main lobby of the EXECUTION having claims against sell, at public oral Market Road, Bend, REAL PROPERTY. settlor of the RALPH or cas h ier's Deschutes Co u n ty auction to the highOregon, 97701. FAX: cash Notice i s h e r e by C. HARVEY, JR. REcheck, the real prop- Sheriff's Office, 63333 est bidder, for cash given that I will on V OCABLE LIV I N G ( 541)383-4700. T h e erty commonly known W. Highway 20, Bend, or cashier's check, November 12, 2013 TRUST are required office hours for those as 20435 Rocky Top Oregon, sell, at public the r ea l p r operty submitting at 10:00 AM in the to present them with Court, Bend, Oregon o ral auction t o t h e commonly known as hand-delivered main lobby of t he vouchers attached, to: 97702. Conditions of h ighest bidder, f o r 3448 Sou t hwest comments are: 7:45 Sale: P o tential bid- cash o r Deschutes County KIMBERLY JUDITH ca s h ier's Metolius Ave., AM t o 4: 3 0 PM S heriff's Offi c e , BRODIE, Trustee ders must arrive 15 check, the real prop- Redmond, Oregon M onday thro u g h 63333 W. Highway RALPH C. HARVEY, minutes prior to the erty commonly known 97756. C o nditions Friday, exc l uding auction 20, Bend, Oregon, JR. REVOCABLE to allow the as 18045 S kyliners of Sale: P o tential holidays. Oral sell, at public oral LIVING TRUST Deschutes C o u nty Road, Bend, Oregon bidders must arrive comments ca n b e auction to the highc/o Sean M. Neary Sheriff's Office to re- 97701. Conditions of 15 minutes prior to provided to the project view bidder's funds. Sale: P o tential bid- the auction to allow est bidder, for cash Fitch Law Group, PC leader, Beth P e er, or cashier's check, 210 SW 5th Street, Only U.S. c urrency ders must arrive 15 the Desc h utes during normal busi- and/or the real p r operty Suite 2, Redmond cashier's minutes prior to the County Sheriff's Ofness ho u r s via commonly known as OR 97756 checks made payable auction to allow the f ice to rev i e w telephone 61482 Admiral Way, All claims against the to Deschutes County Deschutes Co u n ty bidder's funds. Only (541)383-4769, or in B end, Oreg o n RALPH C. HARVEY, Sheriff's Office will be Sheriff's Office to re- U.S. currency Those accepted. P a yment view bidder's funds. and/or 97702. C o nditions JR. REVO C ABLE person. cas h ier's of Sale: P o t ential LIVING TRUST dated submitting electronic must be made in full Only U.S. c urrency checks made paycopies must put the bidders must arrive July 25, 2013 must be immediately upon the and/or cashier's able to Deschutes project name in the 15 minutes prior to close of the sale. For checks made payable County Sheriff's Ofp resented to the a t subject line, and must the auction to allow the above a ddress either more information on to Deschutes County fice w i l l be acsubmit this the Desc h utes within four (4) months sale go to: Sheriff's Office will be cepted. P a y ment comments as part of County Sheriff's Ofafter the date of first www.oregonsheriffs.c accepted. P a yment must be made in full the e-mail message or f ice to revi e w om/sales.htm must be made in full i mmediately u p on publication of this no- as an attachment in bidder's funds. Only tice, or such claims one of the following immediately upon the t he close o f t h e LEGAL NOTICE U.S. currency may be barred. close of the sale. For sale. For more inthree formats: PROVIDENT and/or cas h ier's Date first published: more information on f ormation on t h i s FUNDING A S SOMicrosoft Word, rich checks made payOct. 9, 2013 this s al e go to: sale go to: www.orCIATES, L.P., text format (rtf), or able to Deschutes RALPH C. HARVEY, www.oregonsheriffs.c egonsheriff s.com/sa A dobe Port a b le Plaintiff/s, v. GRECounty Sheriff's OfJR. REVOCABLE om/sales.htm les.htm GORY A. SCOTT; D ocument for m a t fice w il l b e acLIVING TRUST LEGAL NOTICE (PDF), and must do TERREBONNE cepted. P a y ment KIMBERLY JUDITH ESTATES HOMEUSE THE CLASSIFIEDS! so o n l y to the must be made in full BRODIE, Trustee The undersigned has following email OWNERS A S S Oi mmediately u p o n LEGAL NOTICE been appointed per- Door-to-door selling with address: comments- CIATION; AND ALL t he close o f t h e Notice of Opportunity O CCUPANTS O F sonal representative fast results! It's the easiest pacificnorthwest-desc sale. For more inMOR N ING o f the E s t at e o f way in the world to sell. to Comment hutes-bend-ftrock@fs. 8982 f ormation o n t h i s Rocket Vegetation DRI V E , DORIS R. RASMUSf ed.us In case s G LORY sale go to: www.orTERREBONNE, Management Project SEN, Deceased, by where no identifiable The Bulletin Classified egonsheriffs.com/sa Bend/Ft. Rock Ranger name is attached to a OREGON 9 7 7 60, the Deschutes County 541-385-5809 les.htm Defendant/s. Case C ircuit Court of t he District, Deschutes comment, a LEGAL NOTICE National Forest 12C V 1 054. State o f Ore g o n, LEGAL NOTICE verification of identity No.: NATIONSTAR NOTICE OF SALE number probate will be r equired for FA R G O M ORTGAGE LL C , Opportunity to U NDER WRIT O F 13PB0107. A l l p e r- W ELLS objection eligibility. A P laintiff/s, v . KI M EXECUTION sons having claims BANK, N.A., its sucComment on scanned signature is in interest BERLY N. BRINSON; Environmental against the estate are cessors one way to p rovide REAL PROPERTY. and/or ass i gns, JACOB A. BRINSON, Assessment verification. E m a i ls Notice i s h e r e by required to p r esent Plaintiff/s, v. ALEC OTHER P E RSONS the same with proper L. JONES, aka Le containing viruses or given that I will on O R P A R TIES, i n - The Bend/Ft. Rock November 21, 2013 vouchers within four sent to other email G abriel Jone s ; cluding OCCU- Ranger District has (4) months after the addresses w il l be at 10:00 AM in the PANTS, UNKNOWN completed an e n vi- rejected. main lobby of t he date of first publica- JAMY L. J O NES, ka J am y L ynn CLAIMING A NY ronmental a s s essDeschutes County tion t o t h e u n der- a RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, Offi c e , signed or they may be Jones; FALL RIVER ment (EA) that conIt is the responsibility S heriff's A S S OO R I NTEREST I N t ains t he For e s t of persons providing 63333 W. Highway barred. Add i t ional ESTATES CIATION, INC.; and THE PRO P E RTY Service's proposal for comments to submit 20, Bend, Oregon, i nformation may b e CCUPANTS O F DESCRIBED IN THE conducting v e geta- them by the close of sell, at public oral o btained f ro m t h e O COMPLAINT tion man a gement the comment period. auction to the highcourt records, the un- THE P R E MISES, Defendant/s. Case HEREIN, through timber har- It is the responsibility est bidder, for cash dersigned or the atNo.: 12C V 0735. D efendant/s. C a s e vest, thinning, brush of persons providing or cashier's check, torney. NOTICE OF SALE No.: 13CV0439. NOmowing, and under- comments by the real p r operty UNDER WRIT OF TICE OF SALE UNburning in the Rocket electronic means to commonly known as Date first published: EXECUTION DER WRIT OF EXproject area. The e nsure t h a t the i r 8982 Morning Glory Oct. 9, 2013 REAL PROPERTY. ECUTION - REAL Rocket project area is comments have been Drive, Terrebonne, Lucinda A. Palmer, Notice i s h e r eby PROPERTY. Notice is located on the DesO regon 9776 0 . Personal received. given that I will on hereby given that I will chutes National ForConditions of Sale: Representative November 26, 2013 on November 5, 2013 e st, j ust s o ut h o f T his project will be Potential bi d d ers c/o Edward P. Fitch at 10:00 AM in the at 10:00 A.M. in the Fitch Law Group, PC B end, Oregon a n d s ubject to t h e p r e- must arrive 15 minmain lobby of t he main lobby of the De- predominantly east of decisional o bjection u tes prior t o t h e 210 SW 5th Street, Deschutes County s chutes Coun t y US 97. Suite 2 process outlined at 36 auction to allow the S heriff's Of fi c e , Sheriff's Office, 63333 Redmond OR 97756 CFR 218. Comments Deschutes County 63333 W. Highway W. Highway 20, Bend, F orests w i thin t h e received during this S heriff's Office t o 20, Bend, Oregon, Oregon, sell, at public Rocket project area public review of the review bidd e r's LookforInformation sell, at public oral o ral auction to t h e are overly dense and EA will be considered, f unds. Only U . S . People auction to the highh ighest bidder, f o r at risk to insects, dis- and if necessary the c urrency and / o r AbOutPrO duCtSalid est bidder, for cash cash o r cas h ier's ease, an d w i l dfire. EA will be revised and c ashier's c h e c ks cashier's check, ServicesEveryDaythrough or check, the real prop- The Forest Service a d r af t De c i sion m ade payable t o the r ea l p r operty erty commonly known has responded to this N otice will then b e Deschutes County known as TheBuletin Classit'feds commonly a s 1844 N W El m by formulating a plan released for a 45 day Sheriff's Office will 15042 River Loop Court, Redmond, Orto thin out trees and review and objection be accepted. PayDrive West, Bend, LEGAL NOTICE egon 97756. Condireduce fuels across a period. In d ividuals ment must be made O regon 9770 7 . tions of Sale: Poten- portion of the area. and W ELLS FAR G O org a nizations in full immediately Conditions of Sale: BANK, N.A., its suct ial b i d ders mu s t The project also adwishing to be eligible upon the close of Potential bi d ders arrive 15 minutes prior dresses the h a bitat to object must meet the sale. For more cessors in interest and/or ass i g ns, must arrive 15 minto the auction to allow needs of mule deer the information information on this u tes prior t o t h e the Deschutes County b ecause th e a r e a r equirements of 3 6 sale go to: www.orPlaintiff/s, v. KENauction to allow the NETH A . DOG Sheriff's Office to reserves as an impor- CFR 218. egonsheriffs.com/sa Deschutes County view bidder's funds. tant movement corriles.htm GETT; KAREN A. S heriff's Office t o WEAVER A ND Only U.S. c urrency dor for the animals. A nyone wishing t o review bidd e r's and/or cashier's The EA d etails the A. obtain additional Just bought a new boat'? KENNETH f unds. Only U . S . DOGGETT, AS checks made payable proposed a c t ivities, i nformation o n th e Sell your old one in the c urrency and / o r to Deschutes County how p ublic i s sues project should contact classifieds! Ask about our T RUSTEES UN cashier's ch e c ks DER THE KAREN Sheriff's Office will be have been addressed Beth Peer, P r oject Super Seller rates! m ade payable t o 541-385-5809 accepted. P a yment in the design of the A. WEAVER L IVL eader a t (541) Deschutes County ING TRUST, must be made in full project and a lterna- 383-4769. Sheriff's Office will LEGAL NOTICE immediately upon the tives, and describes DATED S E PTEMLEGAL NOTICE be accepted. PaySPRINGLEAF FI- B ER 6, 2002, O R close of the sale. For the expected e nvi- OCWEN LOAN SERNANCIAL SERVICES, THEIR S U CCES- ment must be made more information on ronmental effects. The VICING, LLC, in full immediately INC., FK A A M E R I- SORS IN T RUST; this s a l e go to: EA analyzes four alV. upon the close of CAN GENERAL F Iwww.oregonsheriffs.c ternatives: Al t e rna- Plaintiff/s, WILLOW C R E EK RE A R , NANCIAL SERVICES, HOMEOW N E R S' the sale. For more om/sales.htm tive 1 is N o A ction; M ICHELLE BANK OF AMERICA, information on this INC., D/B/A AMERI- ASSOCIATION, Alternatives 2, 3, and LEGAL NOTICE N.A., A N D PERsale go to: www.orCAN GENERAL F IINC 4 AND OCCUNOLAN TOWN CEN- 4 offer different ways SONS OR PARTIES egonsheriff s.com/sa NANCIAL SERVICES P ANTS O F T H E meet the purpose TER, LLC, an Oregon to N C L A IM- (DE), INC., Plaintiff/s, PREMISES, Defenles.htm and need by varying UNKNOW limited liability comI NG A N Y RI G H T , v. KIM GRAVERSEN; dant/s. Case No.: stand-level objectives LEGAL NOTICE p any, Plaintiff/s, v . TITLE, LIEN, OR INU NKNOWN H E I R S 12CV1248. NOWells Fargo B ank, PHD C O MPUTERS and addressing key TEREST I N THE O F I N G E GR A V - T ICE O F SAL E ublic issues. T h e PROPERTY NA, Plaintiff/s, v. Keith LLC, an Oregon Lim- p DEE RSEN; AN D O C - UNDER WRIT OF a lternatives ra n g e S CRIBED I N TH R. Defoe; Tandy S. ited L iability C o mE C UPANTS OF T H E 5,645 acres to EXECUTION D efoe; an d O c c up any, PH D C O M - from COMPLAINT PREMISES, D e fenREAL PROPERTY. pants of the Premises, P UTERS, INC., a n 9,940 acres of t r ee HEREIN, d ant/s. Cas e N o . : Notice i s treatments (including h e r eby D efendant/s. Case Oregon corporation, thinning, efendant/s. C a s e 12CV0068. NOTICE given that I will on cre a t ing D No.: 12CV0303. NOand W I L LIAM R. No.: 13CV0570. NOOF S AL E U N D ER November 19, 2013 openings, and TICE OF SALE UNPEACOCK, individu- small OF SALE UNWRIT O F E X E C U- at 10:00 AM in the ladder fuels). TICE DER WRIT OF EXally, Def e ndant/s. reducing DER WRIT OF EXTION REAL PROPclosures and main lobby of t he ECUTION - REAL - REAL Case No.: Road ECUTION ERTY. N o t ic e is Deschutes County of PROPERTY. Notice is P ROP ERTY. Notice is 1 1CV0149ST. N O - rehabilitation hereby given that I will user-created motorS heriff's Off i c e, hereby given that I will TICE OF SALE UNhereby given that I will o n N o vember 1 2 , 63333 W. Highway ized trails are a com- o n N o vember 1 9 , on November 5, 2013 DER WRIT OF EX2013 at 10:00 A.M. in 20, Bend, Oregon, at 10:00 A.M. in the ECUTION - REAL ponent of all alterna- 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of the sell, at public oral tives. main lobby of the DePROPERTY. Notice is the main lobby of the Deschutes Co u n ty auction to the highs chutes Coun t y hereby given that I will The EA is available Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office, 63333 est bidder, for cash Sheriff's Office, 63333 o n N o vember 2 6 , f or r eview a t th e Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, or cashier's check, W. Highway 20, Bend, 2013 at 10:00 AM in Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public the rea l p r operty Oregon, sell, at public Bend/Ft. Rock Ranger W. the main lobby of the Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e known as o ral auction t o t h e Deschutes Co u n ty Station, 63095 Des- o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r commonly 60816 Willow Creek h ighest bidder, f o r Sheriff's Office, 63333 chutes Market Road, h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s h ier's L oop, Bend, O r cash o r ca s h ier's W. Highway 20, Bend, B end, Oregon; it i s cash o r cas h ier's check, the real prop- egon 9 7 702-9305. also available on the check, the real propOregon, sell, at public Forest Service web check, the real prop- erty commonly known Conditions of Sale: erty commonly known o ral auction t o t h e erty commonly known as 16795 Pine Place, Potential bi d ders as 19915 Mahogany h ighest bidder, f o r site: as 1369 NE Sharkey La P i ne , O r e gon must arrive 15 minStreet, Bend, Oregon cash o r ca s h ier's http://www.fs.fed.us/n errace, Bend, O r 97739. Conditions of u tes prior t o t h e project exp T 97702. Conditions of check, the real prop- epa/nepa egon 97701. CondiSale: P o tential bidphp? project=38282. auction to allow the Sale: P o tential biderty commonly known .Additional tions of Sale: Potenders must arrive 15 Deschutes County information t ial b i d ders mu s t ders must arrive 15 a s 2 0 97 7 De s e rt minutes prior to the regarding this action S heriff's Office t o minutes prior to the Woods Dr., Bend, Or- can be obtained from: arrive 15 minutes prior auction to allow the review bidd e r's auction to allow the egon 97702. Condito the auction to allow Deschutes Co u n ty f unds. Only U . S . Beth Peer, P r oject Deschutes Co u n ty tions of Sale: Potenthe Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to re- c urrency and / o r Sheriff's Office to ret ial b i d ders mu s t Leader at the Bend/Ft. Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. c ashier's Ranger Station, ch e c ks view bidder's funds. arrive 15 minutes prior Rock view bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency m ade payable t o Only U.S. c urrency to the auction to allow 541-383-4769. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's Deschutes County and/or cashier's

Legal Notices

checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE W ELLS FAR G O BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR STRUCTURED A SSET MORT GAGE INV E S TM ENTS 1 1 I N C . , GREENPOINT MORTGAGE FUNDING T RUST 2006-AR3, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-AR3, THROUGH T HEIR LOAN SERVICING AGENT JP M O RGAN CHASE BANK, N ATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff/s, v. MARY POPPENHEIMER-H A NSON; NOEL HANSON AKA NOEL EDWIN HANSON 11; MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION S YSTEMS, I N C . ; GREENPOINT MORTGAGE F UNDING, IN C . ; O CCUPANTS O F THE PR O PERTY OF 54 9 N O RTHEAST LARCH AVE, REDMOND, OR 97756; OCCU P ANTS O F TH E PROPERTY OF 551 NORTHE

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